April 22, 2010

Little Voice



I spent days with Sara Bareilles and sweat dripping through every bodily crevice that summer.  Scorching hot D.C. weekend afternoons with Little Voice crooning and soothing and rocking my hips, my shoulders, my heart - peaceful and bursting in the same moments.  All those sun drenched weekends with slathered sunscreen on the tip of my nose, sunglasses and ipod creating a solitary world of running notes and companion thoughts, I walked and walked and walked through the city streets.  Shimmering concrete under blue skies, I felt each step forward and the growing strength that comes from a dedication to joy.

I baked in glorious sunshine and cooled my toes in the fountain behind the sculpture garden.  Shifting breezes sprayed the arches of water over my dewy skin and wet ink.  Drying together by the end of the song and the end of the page and the end of that thought.... When the heat became almost unbearable, I would duck into the Museum of American Art and the air conditioned Kogod Courtyard with the glass ceiling and the overpriced-but-worth-every-penny coffee, with my blue leather bound journal and write and write and write under the sun in the chilled air.  I would walk through the halls of new and old exhibits with graffiti spray-painted walls and oil-painted landscapes, memorizing feeling and breath and running notes that would carry me across the city that summer.  To Eastern Market, through the brightly colored jewelery, past the old man saxaphone player who became the only reason I would ever press pause on Sara Bareilles, behind the fresh fruit and to the painted glass, ceramic bowls, collage wall hangings, and oil canvasses with my summer stretched across the frame.  Bright reds, yellows, greens, blues, and purples.  Vibrant and alive.

Weekdays held professional vocations and weekends delivered independent joy, vibrant and alive.  I loved every. single. moment. in D.C., but I am deciding not to start my next chapter there.  I believe another city that will hold my joy this season.

April 20, 2010

On Elephants and New Beginnings


Lately I have been thinking a lot about elephants.  Solid and steady, yet graceful and gentle.  Wise.  A favorite professor in college reminds me of elephants and of an elephant.  He had the same heavy grace and solid gentleness of an elephant.  And the wisdom.  Oh, the wisdom.  Wisdom that still orients me years later.  He stood tall and lean with a straight nose and average size ears, but overtime I came to see him as an elephant.  His long arms had a slow sway and he gathered his students into his reach, protectively and tenderly.  With calm demeanor he taught the coursework and life lessons.

He introduced me to Ganesha, the elephant deity in Hinduism.  I didn't retain the specifics of Ganesha much longer after turning in my final Rel 210 paper, but I did hold onto some form of Ganesha, combined with the love of my favorite professor.  Somewhere in a deep mental filing cabinet where I keep all the most important college classroom lessons, I must have accurately preserved the specifics, because I have been thinking a lot about elephants, and Ganesha, and Professor Favorite this week.  It's appropriate.  I'm 75% certain that Ganesha is the god of obstacles and new beginnings.  Rubbing his trunk brings good luck.

Transitions in my life often occur quickly.  I over extend myself too much to allow time for slow transitions.  I devote myself too much to the task at hand to prepare for the next one.  I transition and reflect much, much later.  In some difficult ways, this entire last nine months has become an accidental transition period.  (Talk about a shock and new experience!)  In easier ways, the past few days and upcoming weeks are an intentional transition period.  I'm thrilled that I have the time and space to think about elephants, Ganesh, and Professor Favorite.  I get to plan (or at least try to because, heh, life is what happens while you're making other plans!) what I want my new beginning to look like, and how I am going to soar past obstacles (strategy #1: positive thinking).

I admit to not knowing a lot about elephants (they live in Africa, right?), or Ganesha (does he have five arms that all symbolize something?), or even all the life wisdom Professor Favorite imparted, but I know enough to let my mind wander over thoughts of elephants.  In some ways, that is more than I could have even hoped for after three years of briefing cases and separating dicta from holdings.  So these days I walk around with elephants in my thoughts all day with comfort and hope.

April 17, 2010

from tumblr: trying something new

the saturday mornings i forget to drink my coffee after i pour it are always the saturday mornings i get lost on tumblr reading the archives of my favorite tumblrs thinking to myself “ohmygod there are people out there like me” and i’m pretty sure that the reason nothing in my life right now seems to fit properly - it’s really that experience when you go into a dressing room and put on that shirt that looked great on the rack but doesn’t look so great on your rack (probably because yours is nearly non-existent) - is because i do not BELONG here.  (hit “repeat” on this realization.)

no matter how pretty and interesting and patterned and in some ways prestigious (kinda?) this place (and my almost-life here) is, it does not fit.  it looks great on the rack.  it looks amazing on somebody else.  so great that sometimes i’m jealous of how good life here looks on them and damn how good it looks on the pages of a glossy magazine but  why-oh-why doesn’t fit me.  ugh.

so i opted out a while ago, i know this, and sometimes i am so sorry for just checking out of this place, but i had to do it you see, because it was my first step in saying, “yeah, i don’t think this is a good fit”.  it doesn’t mean that i don’t love it.  that i don’t love you in it.  that i don’t love you.  because i do.  love you.  so much.  but i’m naked right now, trying to find what fits, because i know, i know, i know, that something out there is a better fit. and i had to opt out first.

so i’m sitting here on a rainy saturday morning recovering from a hectic four weeks that, hell, come off of such a hectic four years that they actually make the last four weeks look mild, and that are ever so slowly coming to an end with a much anticipated transition to follow, flipping through the tumblr archives of someone that you probably know because she is kinda the face of a mid-twentysomething female tumblr figuring out where she fits in this world - thankgod i am not alone - who i think has at least a few of the life pieces that would fit me well too, (or, who knows, maybe i am totally wrong in that description because i’m newish to tumblr and kind of a lurker but i think i want to change that and yes, maybe that is what this is a little bit about too) so imagine my shock followed immediately by OF COURSE when I took a sip of my coffee and it was ice cold.

April 11, 2010

"I want to be
like the waves on the sea,
like the clouds in the wind...
but I’m me.
One day I’ll jump
out of my skin.
I’ll shake the sky
like a hundred violins."
— Sandra Cisneros (The House on Mango Street)

April 8, 2010

From the Department of Internet Dating

It rained the day I painted my nails black. Hard, pounding rain. Against the screen in the windows, sliding down the panes, splattering into dark mud... We sat on the couch, nursing colds, disappointment, and lonely failure, together. She slid the nail polish brush over her nails while flipping through a magazine. The television blinked in the background. I watched her almost-absent-minded strokes fill with blood red color. I watched the rain stream down the window. I took a deep breath and willed a new beginning, a new identity, a new life that knew nothing of the past three years. A life that knew nothing of professional identity and personal sacrifice. I walked to the kitchen and rummaged through her nail polish collection, grabbing the darkest color I could find. She tossed me a magazine, and I concentrated on long strokes, round edges, and the sound of the rain. A match.com ad came on the television, and she threatened to sign me up. She always did. I always rolled my eyes. This time, I said OK.

She made my profile for me. Checked the boxes, answered the questions, uploaded the photos. Most days she knows me better than I know myself. I get lost in the maze of quiet, layered conversations ongoing in my head. I chose a user name, and she completed the rest. I watched with my head on her shoulder as she easily navigated the questions, identifying my most patterned behaviors and personality traits. I wondered how I manage to complicate things so much in my head; she had all my answers so easily, but I supposed she had never heard the options, choices, don'ts, doubts, worries, and wonder. It all must be so much clearer without some of that white noise and shrilled screeching. She hit submit, and we waited for verification. I waited for verification - I waited for an unknown computer to say, "Yes, go ahead, you are suitable for dating."

I can't say that I hated it from the start, but it didn't feel like the unexpected smile that comes when when someone new catches my eye. Or the way silent intrigue scans for the absence of a wedding band, hopeful. It didn't feel like soft sweatpants at the end of a long day, a sigh of relief, the waiting is over and the best part is about to begin. Instead the muscle across my shoulders tightened with each click of the next number on the bottom right of the page. The same way I browse for bathing suits every other summer - wrong fit, wrong fit, wrong fit - I flew through pages and profiles.

Inevitably, she stopped me. I knew she would. She slid the computer from my lap, reminded me to have an open mind, and hit the "wink" button on somebody's profile. She navigated every initial interaction I had on that site. I'd take it from there, of course. Reply to messages, delete messages, and judge, judge, judge every face that popped up on the screen. I called upon skills I learned during the summer after seventh grade, when we would flip through the yearbook, critiquing the person behind each face. I hated it at twelve; I grew to hate it again at twenty-six. Wrong fit, wrong fit, wrong fit, but I'll try to charm you with my words, part with my phone number, and agree to meet you out - because I have an open mind while I silently judge, judge, judge.

The muscle across my shoulders never relaxed. I never figured out how to blend my old life with the new. I was a wrong fit for my current life. He popped up on the screen the evening I decided to delete my account. I can't say that I smiled or felt hopeful. It was still internet dating; I was still nursing disappointment from weeks prior; my life and I still didn't match. But I didn't think wrong fit. I took my computer downstairs to her, undecided as to whether I would show her his face or tell her I was deleting my account. I showed her his face, she hit the wink button, I promised myself I would keep my account for twenty-four more hours, he responded.

Of course, this story doesn't have a fairytale ending. It doesn't have a fairytale ending because I don't believe in fairytales, and I don't believe in internet dating, and I don't believe in much from those days other than black nail polish and the sound of pouring rain. I didn't want to spend time writing back and forth with him. I wanted to spend as much time as possible away from that website and my judging, my pained shoulders, and the identity I can paint with words. He suggested we meet and I didn't hesitate to say yes, although I knew I would still miss the unexpected smile, the hopeful intrigue, and the relieved comfort.

We met for a drink. He showed up with a mirror. The type of mirror that reflected back at me every wrong fit I had tried on for the past month. We talked for three hours while I tried to navigate my misfits while soaking up everything that he had already figured out and that I struggled to grasp. I smiled more in those three hours than I had in the past three weeks. That says a lot and not very much at the same time. He asked me out again, and I agreed.

I spent the week cultivating my new life. He showed up with the mirror again. I hated what I saw in it. I couldn't navigate my misfits well this time. My inner monologue carried on at higher volume than our conversation. I went home and stripped down to only my black nail polish. I cried the way I should have cried the day the rain slammed its fists against the window pane. I deleted my match.com account.

He told me a week later that he didn't think things were going to work out between us. He said he didn't have enough time to get to know me. I wanted to tell him that was part of the everything he had already figured out and that I struggled to grasp. I wanted to tell him that I know how long it takes to get to know me, I'm walking that path now. It's a path worth traveling down. The view is best from the center of the woods, among the the options, choices, don'ts, doubts, worries, and wonder. I promise. But I didn't tell him that, and I don't think I will get a chance. Because I don't believe in fairytales, I don't believe in internet dating, and I don't believe in much from those days other than black nail polish and the sound of pouring rain.