Lyrical Lessons
June 27, 2012 § Leave a comment
New York City, you’re almost gone. I think that I’ve fallen out of love I think I’ve fallen out of love Think I’ve fallen out of love With you.
“Dear Chicago” – Ryan Adams
Our timing was never right, New York. But occasionally, I still think of you.
Friday Afternoon Pick Me Up
June 22, 2012 § Leave a comment
If you’re patient enough to take the time to browse through the self-indulgent crap on Thought Catalog, you’re bound to find a gem once in awhile. Like this one.
You Should Date An Illiterate Girl
By Charles Warnke
Date a girl who doesn’t read. Find her in the weary squalor of a Midwestern bar. Find her in the smoke, drunken sweat, and varicolored light of an upscale nightclub. Wherever you find her, find her smiling. Make sure that it lingers when the people that are talking to her look away. Engage her with unsentimental trivialities. Use pick-up lines and laugh inwardly. Take her outside when the night overstays its welcome. Ignore the palpable weight of fatigue. Kiss her in the rain under the weak glow of a streetlamp because you’ve seen it in film. Remark at its lack of significance. Take her to your apartment. Dispatch with making love. Fuck her.
Let the anxious contract you’ve unwittingly written evolve slowly and uncomfortably into a relationship. Find shared interests and common ground like sushi, and folk music. Build an impenetrable bastion upon that ground. Make it sacred. Retreat into it every time the air gets stale, or the evenings get long. Talk about nothing of significance. Do little thinking. Let the months pass unnoticed. Ask her to move in. Let her decorate. Get into fights about inconsequential things like how the fucking shower curtain needs to be closed so that it doesn’t fucking collect mold. Let a year pass unnoticed. Begin to notice.
Figure that you should probably get married because you will have wasted a lot of time otherwise. Take her to dinner on the forty-fifth floor at a restaurant far beyond your means. Make sure there is a beautiful view of the city. Sheepishly ask a waiter to bring her a glass of champagne with a modest ring in it. When she notices, propose to her with all of the enthusiasm and sincerity you can muster. Do not be overly concerned if you feel your heart leap through a pane of sheet glass. For that matter, do not be overly concerned if you cannot feel it at all. If there is applause, let it stagnate. If she cries, smile as if you’ve never been happier. If she doesn’t, smile all the same.
Let the years pass unnoticed. Get a career, not a job. Buy a house. Have two striking children. Try to raise them well. Fail, frequently. Lapse into a bored indifference. Lapse into an indifferent sadness. Have a mid-life crisis. Grow old. Wonder at your lack of achievement. Feel sometimes contented, but mostly vacant and ethereal. Feel, during walks, as if you might never return, or as if you might blow away on the wind. Contract a terminal illness. Die, but only after you observe that the girl who didn’t read never made your heart oscillate with any significant passion, that no one will write the story of your lives, and that she will die, too, with only a mild and tempered regret that nothing ever came of her capacity to love.
Do those things, god damnit, because nothing sucks worse than a girl who reads. Do it, I say, because a life in purgatory is better than a life in hell. Do it, because a girl who reads possesses a vocabulary that can describe that amorphous discontent as a life unfulfilled—a vocabulary that parses the innate beauty of the world and makes it an accessible necessity instead of an alien wonder. A girl who reads lays claim to a vocabulary that distinguishes between the specious and soulless rhetoric of someone who cannot love her, and the inarticulate desperation of someone who loves her too much. A vocabulary, god damnit, that makes my vacuous sophistry a cheap trick.
Do it, because a girl who reads understands syntax. Literature has taught her that moments of tenderness come in sporadic but knowable intervals. A girl who reads knows that life is not planar; she knows, and rightly demands, that the ebb comes along with the flow of disappointment. A girl who has read up on her syntax senses the irregular pauses—the hesitation of breath—endemic to a lie. A girl who reads perceives the difference between a parenthetical moment of anger and the entrenched habits of someone whose bitter cynicism will run on, run on well past any point of reason, or purpose, run on far after she has packed a suitcase and said a reluctant goodbye and she has decided that I am an ellipsis and not a period and run on and run on. Syntax that knows the rhythm and cadence of a life well lived.
Date a girl who doesn’t read because the girl who reads knows the importance of plot. She can trace out the demarcations of a prologue and the sharp ridges of a climax. She feels them in her skin. The girl who reads will be patient with an intermission and expedite a denouement. But of all things, the girl who reads knows most the ineluctable significance of an end. She is comfortable with them. She has bid farewell to a thousand heroes with only a twinge of sadness.
Don’t date a girl who reads because girls who read are the storytellers. You with the Joyce, you with the Nabokov, you with the Woolf. You there in the library, on the platform of the metro, you in the corner of the café, you in the window of your room. You, who make my life so god damned difficult. The girl who reads has spun out the account of her life and it is bursting with meaning. She insists that her narratives are rich, her supporting cast colorful, and her typeface bold. You, the girl who reads, make me want to be everything that I am not. But I am weak and I will fail you, because you have dreamed, properly, of someone who is better than I am. You will not accept the life that I told of at the beginning of this piece. You will accept nothing less than passion, and perfection, and a life worthy of being storied. So out with you, girl who reads. Take the next southbound train and take your Hemingway with you. I hate you. I really, really, really hate you.
On Repeat
June 18, 2012 § Leave a comment
Just an ass-ton of of Gregory Alan Isakov. My favorites:
Master and a Hound
If I Go, I’m Going
Unwritable Girl
Light Year
Friday Afternoon Pick Me Up
June 15, 2012 § Leave a comment
Yes, I have realized that “Friday Afternoon Pick Me Up” has become a misnomer, since I’ve picked pieces that aren’t necessarily the most uplifting. This week’s pick is no exception. I should probably change the name of this series. Oh well.
But anyway, it’s graduation season (Congratulations, graduates! Don’t fuck up!) and I’ve read/watched my fair share of speeches that have gone viral. Most graduation speeches aren’t terribly memorable, but filled with enough sappy motivation and nostalgia to get the job done. There’s really only one requirement of graduation speeches, which is that they should be well written and eloquent. The following was written by Marina Keegan, a recent Yale graduate who died in a car accident just days after her own commencement.
We don’t have a word for the opposite of loneliness, but if we did, I could say that’s what I want in life. What I’m grateful and thankful to have found at Yale, and what I’m scared of losing when we wake up tomorrow and leave this place.
It’s not quite love and it’s not quite community; it’s just this feeling that there are people, an abundance of people, who are in this together. Who are on your team. When the check is paid and you stay at the table. When it’s four a.m. and no one goes to bed. That night with the guitar. That night we can’t remember. That time we did, we went, we saw, we laughed, we felt. The hats.
Yale is full of tiny circles we pull around ourselves. A cappella groups, sports teams, houses, societies, clubs. These tiny groups that make us feel loved and safe and part of something even on our loneliest nights when we stumble home to our computers — partner-less, tired, awake. We won’t have those next year. We won’t live on the same block as all our friends. We won’t have a bunch of group-texts.
This scares me. More than finding the right job or city or spouse – I’m scared of losing this web we’re in. This elusive, indefinable, opposite of loneliness. This feeling I feel right now.
But let us get one thing straight: the best years of our lives are not behind us. They’re part of us and they are set for repetition as we grow up and move to New York and away from New York and wish we did or didn’t live in New York. I plan on having parties when I’m 30. I plan on having fun when I’m old. Any notion of THE BEST years comes from clichéd “should haves…” “if I’d…” “wish I’d…”
Of course, there are things we wished we did: our readings, that boy across the hall. We’re our own hardest critics and it’s easy to let ourselves down. Sleeping too late. Procrastinating. Cutting corners. More than once I’ve looked back on my High School self and thought: how did I do that? How did I work so hard? Our private insecurities follow us and will always follow us.
But the thing is, we’re all like that. Nobody wakes up when they want to. Nobody did all of their reading (except maybe the crazy people who win the prizes…) We have these impossibly high standards and we’ll probably never live up to our perfect fantasies of our future selves. But I feel like that’s okay.
We’re so young. We’re so young. We’re twenty-two years old. We have so much time. There’s this sentiment I sometimes sense, creeping in our collective conscious as we lay alone after a party, or pack up our books when we give in and go out – that it is somehow too late. That others are somehow ahead. More accomplished, more specialized. More on the path to somehow saving the world, somehow creating or inventing or improving. That it’s too late now to BEGIN a beginning and we must settle for continuance, for commencement.
When we came to Yale, there was this sense of possibility. This immense and indefinable potential energy – and it’s easy to feel like that’s slipped away. We never had to choose and suddenly we’ve had to. Some of us have focused ourselves. Some of us know exactly what we want and are on the path to get it; already going to med school, working at the perfect NGO, doing research. To you I say both congratulations and you suck.
For most of us, however, we’re somewhat lost in this sea of liberal arts. Not quite sure what road we’re on and whether we should have taken it. If only I had majored in biology…if only I’d gotten involved in journalism as a freshman…if only I’d thought to apply for this or for that…
What we have to remember is that we can still do anything. We can change our minds. We can start over. Get a post-bac or try writing for the first time. The notion that it’s too late to do anything is comical. It’s hilarious. We’re graduating college. We’re so young. We can’t, we MUST not lose this sense of possibility because in the end, it’s all we have.
In the heart of a winter Friday night my freshman year, I was dazed and confused when I got a call from my friends to meet them at EST EST EST. Dazedly and confusedly, I began trudging to SSS, probably the point on campus farthest away. Remarkably, it wasn’t until I arrived at the door that I questioned how and why exactly my friends were partying in Yale’s administrative building. Of course, they weren’t. But it was cold and my ID somehow worked so I went inside SSS to pull out my phone. It was quiet, the old wood creaking and the snow barely visible outside the stained glass. And I sat down. And I looked up. At this giant room I was in. At this place where thousands of people had sat before me. And alone, at night, in the middle of a New Haven storm, I felt so remarkably, unbelievably safe.
We don’t have a word for the opposite of loneliness, but if we did, I’d say that’s how I feel at Yale. How I feel right now. Here. With all of you. In love, impressed, humbled, scared. And we don’t have to lose that.
We’re in this together, 2012. Let’s make something happen to this world.
“If my life is for rent and I don’t learn to buy, well I deserve nothing more than I get, cause nothing I have is truly mine”
June 11, 2012 § 1 Comment
I don’t care how financially extravagant you are or have been, chances are that at one point in your life (one, or like, you know, twelve), you’ve hit up an IKEA to furnish your dwellings. For many, it might have been a few small items, like the ubiquitous paper lamp, or a coffee table, or a $4 wall clock. Maybe after college, you bought your couch there, or a bed, or upgraded to a $16 wall clock, I don’t know.
If you’ve weaved through the masses in the showrooms, you’ve undoubtedly gotten lost in the warehouse, trying to find the correlating numbers to the items you want. Suddenly, the items don’t look as magical as they had in 300 cubic feet of living space, but rather, depressing and daunting in their packaged, unassembled state. Once you’re home, those feelings of intimidation are quickly replaced by frustration and anger when you realize how much freaking work it takes to put together one fucking bedstand.
Despite the fact that my boyfriend and I had moved into a place that was larger than my last three apartments combined, the walk-in closet was incomprehensively small: it could barely contain my wardrobe, let alone both. We contemplated using the second bedroom closet but it was just so inconvenient (my brother stayed with us for a few months) that we were forced to turn to IKEA for a solution. That’s when we stumbled upon their closet systems, becoming wooed by a mirrored version of the Pax wardrobe. When we opened up the boxes and began to assemble, we became near-inconsolably disheartened (and pisssssssed) at the number of times we had to backtrack (ie. unscrew, dismantle, start over, etc.) because we had misread or obliviously skipped the most minor of steps.
The real magic of IKEA lies not in its ability to provide home décor and furniture for the fiscally challenged/conservative, but their ability to make their items look deceptively simple when there are like a bazillion little pieces that make it. Those seemingly no-brainer instructions leave very little room (zero) for deviation; it’s either DO EXACTLY WHAT WE SAY or, smash your face into a particle board.
Not unlike those draconian furniture instructions, I thought the same applied when it came to the succession of literally moving on with your life: you move away for college, you move to an apartment, you buy an overpriced condo, you move to the suburbs, you retire to somewhere with less than twelve inches of rain a year. I remember it was midway through my freshman year in college when the reality had hit me that by moving two hours away from home to start school, I had initiated a series of events that would ultimately mean that never would I again live with my parents, under the same roof. My room would remain my room, frozen with all the tokens of the life I had lived for so long: photos of fresh faced kids wearing lettermen jackets at football games and prom dresses that we’d cringe at years later, tubes of lip gloss that instead of finding their way to the trash bin, remain in drawers for a decade, and closets packed full of failed experiments.
And this notion of “flying the coop” became reaffirmed when I moved into my first apartment the following year, and I was buying a new bed and the aforementioned paper lamps. And while paying for my own utilities felt oddly liberating, I felt saddened that this milestone in my life seemed to have happened without much notice or warning, abruptly yanking me away from the sheltered life in which I had only known.
But you know, life plans lack discipline to stay on course. And for that year I was trying to figure my shit out, I too, like many others, moved back home. At the time I considered it a huge setback, a major divergence from where I thought I should be, emotionally and environmentally. It is only now that I can view that year as one of the most important in recent history, as it became the one I could finally be honest with myself.
Moving back to Seattle symbolized a lot, and driving away with my parents shrinking in the rearview mirror was most certainly heartbreaking – but unlike that initial depart for college, this one felt acutely prepared: an indication that despite what I had thought, I was most definitely growing up.
In the past couple of years, I’ve flown home a handful of times but not nearly enough as I would like. Each trip feels unfairly short, but I always leave feeling just a little bit more revitalized than when I arrived. My room, despite having moved 3,000 miles away, has remained remarkably similar, save for new sheets (I think some of that same lip gloss made the journey). Among the yearbooks collecting dust, new additions have been made over the years, having migrated down to my parents’ whenever they cease in function but linger in emotional attachment (I mean, everyone feels this way about their general chemistry books, right?) My closet has surprisingly thinned out as Honie grows older and finds salvageable pieces to make relevant again.
Consistency. That’s all home is, really. A consistently packed fridge/pantry that’s stocked prior to our arrival with everything Costco could offer. A consistent amount of sweating that occurs when my dad gets cheap about the air conditioning so we’re forced to sit in a room at 79 degrees. Consistent stack of paperwork that has gone conveniently neglected. Consistent burning of the ass on leather seats because the car has been out in the sun. Consistent meals. Consistent laughter. Consistent love.
I’m down here in Florida now, sitting in front of the air conditioning and flipping through Honie’s Teen Vogue. I never bother to put my clothes away when I’m here, no matter how long the stay is, instead opting to let it sit in the most inconvenient spot on the floor as clothes get thrown on and around it. At some point, living out of a suitcase at home became totally normal, as has showering in my parents’ bathroom instead of the one right next to my room. It never feels odd, no matter how long I stay away or how little I am here. I don’t live here anymore but it’ll always be home. I’ll always belong.
I moved away. I moved back. And then I left again. I didn’t follow the instructions. But unlike that monstrous wardrobe system, deviation didn’t mean devastation. Life was a lot more forgiving than a bargain piece of furniture. IKEA could learn from that.