tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-77754011286360543042024-03-13T11:04:04.950-07:00my daily toastNhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.comBlogger286125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-53655535026803338862020-03-31T17:07:00.001-07:002020-03-31T17:07:12.170-07:00I miss blogs.<br />
<br />
I miss the mundanity of them, the softness of the medium, not sharp-edged and in-your-face the way Instagram and Facebook are. Blogs don't demand your attention; you read what you are looking for. You stay in one place, and your attention continues on a straight line.<br />
<br />
I miss writing on blogs, where glimmers of profundity emerge from smallness and quietness. Rarely a sweeping proclamation or huge epiphany. No need to educate anyone or broadcast news.<br />
<br />
It's not journaling exactly—you might expect a few people to read it. But the exchange is mutually agreed upon; you're not blasting someone's inbox, shoving your newsletter into their brain.<br />
<br />
I don't write on this blog much, and I don't know if anyone reads this anymore, but I don't really care. (I'm not going to ask anyone to read this; I will not make any kind of announcement; I am fine remaining in a hole in this corner of the web where I can write demanding needing money or praise in return.)<br />
<br />
Something about being cooped up at home all day during this pandemic is forcing me to return to healthier ways of coping—my body is so tired of frenzy. Today I remembered blogging.<br />
<br />
It is day 15 of the covid-19 lockdown. The San Francisco lock-down was announced March 15, and began March 17.<br />
<br />
I am getting used to the rhythms of being inside all day, and I continually wonder what it would be like if we had to live the rest of our lives this way.<br />
<br />
I create a schedule for myself every night, wake up the next morning, and watch as each block of time goes tumbling down like a domino chain. I harbor an unhealthy amount of regret and disdain toward myself.<br />
<br />
I spend a lot of time making food. Less time eating it. I've resorted to eating cookies and tea for breakfast because I can only muster the effort to eat two whole meals a day. This is very unlike me.<br />
<br />
I am often anxious and jittery, but I can't tell whether that is from the existential angst of having very little direction in life, or if it's from the sudden pressure of feeling like I must seize every moment of every day, now that I, in some way, have every moment of every day to myself.Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-51060424009096297062019-04-29T16:43:00.000-07:002019-04-29T16:43:03.031-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<i><br />Quentin Bell’s biography told the story of his aunt, who happened to be the famous writer Virginia Woolf. But it was a family story really, about a woman with psychotic episodes, her husband’s coping with this, her sister’s distress. It had, as I said, the smell of a household. It was not about the sentences in Virginia Woolf’s books. The Wharton biography, though more a “literary” biography, dealt with status, not with the writer’s private heart. What do I mean by “private heart”? It’s probably impossible to define, but it’s not what the writer does—breakfast, schedule, social outings—but what the writer is. The secret contemplative self. An inner recess wherein insights occur. This writer’s self is perhaps coextensive with one of the writer’s sentences. It seems to me that more can be found about a writer in any single sentence in a work of fiction, say, than in five or ten full-scale biographies. Or interviews!</i></blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
-Cynthia Ozick, "<a href="https://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/2693/cynthia-ozick-the-art-of-fiction-no-95-cynthia-ozick" target="_blank">The Art of Fiction No. 95</a>," <i>The Paris Review</i></blockquote>
Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-47755237343819533052017-11-21T16:18:00.004-08:002017-11-21T16:20:57.072-08:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"It could be said, even here, that what remains of the self<br />Unwinds into a vanishing light, and thins like dust, and heads<br />To a place where knowing and nothing pass into each other, and through;<br />That it moves, unwinding still, beyond the vault of brightness ended,<br />And continues to a place which may never be found, where the unsayable,<br />Finally, once more is uttered, but lightly, quickly, like random rain<br />That passes in sleep, that one imagines passes in sleep.<br />What remains of the self unwinds and unwinds, for none<br />Of the boundaries holds – neither the shapeless one between us,<br />Nor the one that falls between your body and your voice. Joseph,<br />Dear Joseph, those sudden reminders of your having been – the places<br />And times whose greatest life was the one you gave them – now appear<br />Like ghosts in your wake. What remains of the self unwinds<br />Beyond us, for whom time is only a measure of meanwhile<br />And the future no more than et cetera et cetera ... but fast and forever"</blockquote>
-Mark Strand, "In Memory of Joseph Brodsky"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-5174202678381891122017-05-09T16:34:00.000-07:002017-05-09T16:34:36.034-07:00Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea<br />
But sad mortality o’er-sways their power,<br />
How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,<br />
Whose action is no stronger than a flower?<br />
O, how shall summer’s honey breath hold out<br />
Against the wrackful siege of batt’ring days,<br />
When rocks impregnable are not so stout,<br />
Nor gates of steel so strong, but time decays?<br />
O fearful meditation! where, alack,<br />
Shall time’s best jewel from time’s chest lie hid?<br />
Or what strong hand can hold his swift foot back?<br />
Or who his spoil of beauty can forbid?<br />
O, none, unless this miracle have might,<br />
That in black ink my love may still shine bright.<br />
<br />
Sonnet 65 by William ShakespeareNhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-39156717614167880392017-05-08T11:42:00.003-07:002017-05-08T11:42:15.631-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"It’s the fact that once again you were joyfully facing the harsh limitations of reality, admitting that it all had to be taken and turned into a story of some kind. Otherwise, it would just be one more expression of precise discontent. And expressions of discontent—you think in the car, sitting in front of your own house now—no matter how beautiful, never solve the riddle of the world, or bring the banality of sequential reality to a location of deeper grace."</blockquote>
-David Means, "Two Ruminations on a Homeless Brother"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-66946493416646677942017-05-04T17:58:00.000-07:002017-05-04T17:58:04.007-07:00<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<iframe width="320" height="266" class="YOUTUBE-iframe-video" data-thumbnail-src="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/7AGrNWA-Xn8/0.jpg" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7AGrNWA-Xn8?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
<br />
Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself," Verse 1, by read by Virginia Mae Schmitt for Jennifer Crandall's project "Whitman, Alabama." I love this so much.Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-29880599484286693532017-04-27T11:26:00.002-07:002017-04-27T11:26:22.288-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"And so he sang of the love that is not so fearful of ending<br />
that fear ends it love that admits the flavor of pain<br />
the pulling apart of ivy-tendrils ripped from a tree<br />
love that lays itself in the grave of another body<br />
sweetened by loss as we lose ourselves in our lover’s arms<br />
given completely over to pleasure the dark flower<br />
that opens petal by petal unfolding us to the utmost<br />
pitch of surrender lost in the joy of self-forgetting"</blockquote>
-Craig Arnold, "Hymn to Persephone"<br />
<br />Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-24955008327737189652017-04-27T11:23:00.000-07:002017-04-27T11:23:10.295-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"The people there had an expansive, natural, spontaneous relationship to God that made his own faith feel intellectual and disembodied by comparison. This, he thought, was a function of how they lived: to really know God, one had to feel as much love as possible, and to really feel love one had to live among loved ones."</blockquote>
<br />
-Joshua Rothman's <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/05/01/rod-drehers-monastic-vision" target="_blank"><i>New Yorker</i> profile of Rod Dreher</a>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-88564575761337488732017-04-27T10:44:00.000-07:002017-04-27T11:23:50.927-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Olive, on the edge of the bed, leans her face into her hands. She can almost not remember the first decade of Christopher's life, although some things she does remember and doesn't want to. She tried teaching him to play the piano and he wouldn't play the notes right. It was how scared he was of her that made her go all wacky. But she loved him! She would like to say this to Suzanne. She would like to say, Listen, Dr. Sue, deep down there is a thing inside me, and sometimes it swells up like the head of a squid and shoots blackness through me. I haven't wanted to be this way, but so help me, I have loved my son."</blockquote>
<br />
-Elizabeth Strout, <i>Olive Kitteridge</i>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-5233701127341216342017-04-26T12:44:00.001-07:002017-04-26T12:44:13.091-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Now I must tell you this much more, dear Gloria: whenever I smell fresh lemons, whether in the market or at home, I look around me — not for Gweneth Lawson, but for some quiet corner where I can revive in private certain memories of her. And in pursuing these memories across such lemony bridges, I rediscover that I loved her."</blockquote>
<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"I want to remember that she smiled. I know I smiled, dear Gloria. I smiled with the lemonness of her and the loving of her pressed deep into those saving places of my private self. It was my plan to savor these, and I did savor them. But when I reached New York, many years later, I did not think of Brooklyn. I followed the old, beaten, steady paths into uptown Manhattan. By then I had learned to dance to many other kinds of music. And I had forgotten the savory smell of lemon. But I think sometimes of Gweneth now when I hear country music. And although it is difficult to explain to you, I still maintain that I am no mere arithmetician in the art of the square dance. I am into the calculus of it."</blockquote>
<br />
-James Alan McPherson, "Why I Like Country Music"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-2518174233795507922017-04-21T11:08:00.001-07:002017-04-21T11:10:44.417-07:00I think at this point Blogger is completely obsolete but it's nice to look back at 6.5 years-worth of posts here, the very first being on November 28, 2010, when I was a junior in college, studying abroad in Florence, Italy. The picture I posted that day is of a bread platter at a restaurant in Rome. I remember that day so clearly. Our Michelangelo art class led by a grouchy mustachioed old man—he was thin and wiry and narrow-shouldered—had traveled to Rome for a two days. The day we arrived—actually it was night—we had a private tour of the Sistine Chapel. The day after we ran around Rome frantically trying to cram in as many Michelangelo-related stops as possible before heading back to Florence: the Campidoglio, St. Peter's, Santa Maria deli Angeli. And then finally, in the afternoon, we stopped for lunch somewhere, and the first thing they brought out was this platter full of hot, steaming bread—all different types: breadsticks, rolls, sliced baguette. In my head I remember the platter resembling a flower arrangement, each thing artfully placed, but when I look at the photo now I see that the bread was haphazardly strewn. Time and memory distort even the most trivial of things.<br />
<br />
And I remember how nervous I felt then, at that meal, when the bread platter arrived. I was so hungry, yet so fearful of what I might to do to myself. I started this blog when I was at a very low point: abroad in one of the most romanticized cities in the world, and yet completely depleted of life. Starving myself. Unhappy. Lonely.<br />
<br />
A lot has changed since then, but I'm not ashamed of that time of my life. It is very much a part of me, and I know, when I look at that picture, exactly what it meant to me at that time, and what it means to me now, even though those meanings have shifted. Nothing here is literal. Personal significance is embedded in everything—every quote, every photo, every word. A compendium of buried meanings.<br />
<br />
Two years ago, I started working at a small magazine—not exactly a traditional magazine. I would call us a story production company. I have learned a lot about how to tell a story; my instincts for what constitutes good writing have certainly been sharpened. Yet working here has also made me, perhaps excessively, self-conscious of my own writing—so much so that when I sit down to write, I begin to criticize myself before I've even put words down on the page. I kill any thought, any idea that arises. I demean even the quietest whispers of my own mind, constantly.<br />
<br />
As a remedial measure, I began writing "morning pages" a few months ago. This is a practice from Julia Cameron's <i>The Artist Way</i>. I'd tried it now and again, after hearing about it back in college, but I'd never abided by it as a strict daily practice. But after months of being exasperated by my own inability to produce any work, and by my lack of confidence to try, I knew I needed an exercise small and trivial—but consistent—enough that would help release some of the inhibitions, mental and emotional, blocking my way. My morning routine now takes much longer than it has ever taken, and consequently I am the last one in the office, but it has all been worth it. The goal all along was to turn "morning pages" into a compulsion, and now it is.<br />
<br />
Begin small, and up the stakes as you go.<br />
<br />
I've lately been inspired by the <a href="http://www.road-dog-productions.com/weblog/" target="_blank">blog</a> of film director David Lowery, and <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/culture/personal-history/david-sedaris-the-ihop-years" target="_blank">this cross-section</a> of David Sedaris' journals, to write on this blog more often. The writing here is slightly more polished than that of my morning pages, but it is still rough and inchoate, which is not a bad thing, I think. I like Lowery's blog as a chronicle of his process, and perhaps this can serve as that too. David Sedaris practices sharply wrought observation and narration in his journals—something that does not come naturally to me as a chronicler, but that I want to practice. I tend to be chronicler of feelings, rarely writing a sequence of events, but recapitulating how I felt in the wake of those events.<br />
<br />
But sometimes those feelings can become more powerful when not stated so explicitly: left intact in the action, the dialogue, the silence. Leave them buried. Say what you see, and say no more.Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-16691952633292260712017-04-18T16:13:00.001-07:002017-04-19T12:29:18.522-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Willfulness is a strange optimist. It turns the inevitable into the desirable. If aloneness is inevitable, I want to believe that aloneness is what I have desired because it is happiness itself. It must be a miscomprehension—though I have been unwilling to give it up—that one's life could be lived as a series of solitary moments. In between, time spent with other people is the time to prepare for their disappearance. That there is an opposite perspective I can only understand theoretically. The time line is also a repetition of one's lapse into isolation. It's not others who vanish, but from others one vanishes."</blockquote>
-Yiyun Li, <i> Dear Friend, from My Life I Write to You in Your Life</i>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-79378021170180741702017-04-18T10:50:00.000-07:002017-04-18T10:50:47.819-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"I did not know what I was doing, and what I also did not know, facing my computer screen and a white wall, slowly turning pale, was that I was becoming a writer. Becoming a writer was partly a matter of acquiring technique, but it was just as importantly a matter of the spirit and a habit of the mind. It was the willingness to sit in that chair for thousands of hours, receiving only occasional and minor recognition, enduring the grief of writing in the belief that somehow, despite my ignorance, something transformative was taking place. </blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
It was an act of faith, and faith would not be faith if it was not hard, if it was not a test, if it was not an act of willful ignorance, of believing in something that can neither be predicted nor proved by any scientific metric.</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
...<br /><br />At a time in which the demand for productivity and the measuring of outputs has increased in the university — indeed, everywhere — it is important to acknowledge how much of what is crucial in the work that matters to us, no matter what our field, can neither be quantified nor accelerated."</blockquote>
-Viet Thanh Nguyen, "<a href="http://www.latimes.com/books/jacketcopy/la-ca-fob-viet-thanh-nguyen-20170414-story.html" target="_blank">In Praise of Doubt & Uselessness</a>"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-89678399856934477032017-04-05T17:57:00.002-07:002017-04-05T17:57:23.796-07:00<br /><br />They say the universe is expanding,<br /><br />not staying in one place.<br /><br />I, though, have a small rental room<br /><br />somewhere in it.<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
-Bill Knotts, "Poem"</div>
Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-90147548018171132382017-04-05T17:18:00.000-07:002017-04-05T17:18:00.441-07:00And he woke up alone in the other world and he was<br />
walking down a familiar street and it had been raining<br />
all night and the boughs of the trees were black and heavy<br />
and the first cars of the morning passed with their tires hissing<br />
over the blacktop and under his feet he felt the pavement<br />
slither a carpet of petals battered down by the raindrops<br />
and each puddle swirled with a slick of green-gold pollen<br />
and though he couldn't remember how or when it happened<br />
his heart had been spilled and at its quick was planted a wet<br />
seed that he'd never known before and it was spring<br />
<br />
<br />
-Craig Arnold, "Hymn to Persephone"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-66242895499598139292017-04-05T10:11:00.001-07:002017-04-05T10:11:08.431-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Myth deals in false universals, to dull the pain of particular circumstances."</blockquote>
<br />
-Angela Carter, <i>The Sadeian Woman</i>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-26640664390968942882017-03-17T14:48:00.000-07:002017-03-17T14:48:16.170-07:00<span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">On the fire escape of your rented room<br />we sat and felt the empty city<br />sweat and fret we passed a cigarette<br />back and forth as once we passed<br />words like these between us without<br />hope of keeping<br /> Now I write<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />without hope of answer</span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"> </span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">to say<br />that what we gave each other nakedly<br />was too much and not enough<br />To say that since we last touched<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />I am not empty</span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"> </span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">I hear you named<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />and my heart starts</span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"> </span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">the pieces of your voice<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />you left</span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"> </span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">are interleaved with mine<br /><br />and to this quick spark in the emptiness<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />to say Yes</span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"> </span><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">I miss how love<br style="margin-bottom: 0px;" />may make us otherwise</span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"><br /></span></span>
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;"><br /></span></span>
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><span style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #404040; font-variant-ligatures: normal; margin: 0px; orphans: 2; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">-Craig Arnold, "Asunder"</span></span>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-43504013120325955022017-03-17T12:31:00.002-07:002017-03-17T12:31:48.798-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"The posts on Stump the Bookseller are far more utilitarian than they are sentimental, but reading them, which I now do for hours every week, routinely brings tears to my eyes. Each one forces an overwhelming rediscovery of just how real other people are, a confrontation with the fact that everyone’s mind is cluttered with images that are incidental, almost always partly lost, affecting in ways that are subtle, unpredictable and impossible to explain. How can you not marvel at a person who has thought of a kitten carved from soap repeatedly and with agony for years? Or someone who has spent her whole life wondering why a fictional princess, encountered decades earlier, so hated being made to embroider? It’s enough to make you feel as though every obscure thing you’ve ever forgotten is still with you somehow, waiting to be recovered and maybe even shared."</blockquote>
-Alice Gregory, "<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/16/magazine/letter-of-recommendation-stump-the-bookseller.html?_r=1" target="_blank">Letter of Recommendation: Stump the Bookseller</a>"Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-69892206909404768612017-03-15T12:04:00.001-07:002017-03-15T12:04:15.483-07:00chicago, march 13<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<b>manuel espinosa:</b></div>
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<b>carlos cruz-diaz:</b></div>
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<b>gego: </b></div>
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<b>leon ferrari:</b></div>
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<b>lygia pape:</b></div>
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<b>lygia clark:</b></div>
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<br />Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-24919754494125991862017-03-15T11:43:00.000-07:002017-03-15T11:44:11.015-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"Sometimes I'm ... walking along the street and a shaft of sunlight falls in a certain way across the pavement and I just wanna cry. And then a second later, it's over. I decide because I'm an adult, to not succumb to the momentary melancholy; And I thought that sometimes with Tony, she just had a moment like that. A moment of not knowing how or why, and she just let herself go into it and there was nothing anyone could do to make it any better. It was just her and the fact of being alive, colliding."</blockquote>
-Margot, <i>Take This Waltz</i> (Sarah Polley)Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-76137975701413061192017-03-12T13:52:00.000-07:002017-03-15T11:43:26.848-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"...and he prayed fundamentally as a gesture of love for what had gone and would go and could be loved in no other way. When he prayed he touched his parents, who could not otherwise be touched, and he touched a feeling that we are all children who lose our parents, all of us, every man and woman and boy and girl, and we too will all be lost by those who come after us and love us, and thus loss unites humanity, unites every human being, the temporary nature of our beingness, and our shared sorrow, the heartache we carry and yet too often refuse to acknowledge in one another, and out of this Saeed felt it might be possible, in the face of death, to believe in humanity's potential for building a better world, and so he prayed as a lament, as a consolation, and as a hope..."</blockquote>
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-Mohsin Hamid, <i>Exit West</i>Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-6492219347954351632017-03-11T10:54:00.001-08:002017-03-11T10:54:21.911-08:00"And I Was Alive"<br /><br /><blockquote class="tr_bq">
And I was alive in the blizzard of the blossoming pear,<br />Myself I stood in the storm of the bird–cherry tree.<br />It was all leaflife and starshower, unerring, self–shattering<br />power,<br />And it was all aimed at me. </blockquote>
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What is this dire delight flowering fleeing always earth?<br />What is being? What is truth?</blockquote>
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Blossoms rupture and rapture the air,<br />All hover and hammer,<br />Time intensified and time intolerable, sweetness raveling rot.<br />It is now. It is not.</blockquote>
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- Osip Mandelstam (translation by Christian Wiman)<br /></div>
Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-35360710420250498272017-02-14T22:21:00.003-08:002017-03-15T11:46:06.171-07:00this is The Life-Writer by David Constantine<i>The Life-Writer </i>by David Constantine is a story within a story. It is the story of Katrin as she mourns the death of her husband, Eric, and it is the story of Eric as a young man, as he falls in love with a French woman named Monique.<br />
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The novel opens with Eric on his deathbed. Then, a memorial service. Katrin is a broken woman, a woman who does not know if she will survive her grief. She is a biographer of minor figures of European Romanticism—and this is interesting: they are "the lives of men and women who have the allure, the passion, the structures of imagination, the longings, the disappointments, the hectic ambition, the devotion, the folly, the grief of their great contemporaries, but not their talent... they lived their lives without the thing they needed an could not acquire: the gift ... Therein ... lay their poignancy"—but following Eric's death the only person she wants to write about is him.<br />
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So she does. She attempts to write about his life before they met and married. Eric is much older than Katrin and was married once before. But it's not this previous marriage that interests Katrin. It is a storied love affair that came before that—what might be <i>the</i> love of his life (in modern parlance, "the one who got away"). Through interviews with Eric's brother Michael and best friend Daniel, as well as love letters exchanged between Eric and Monique, Katrin pieces together a tumultuous love affair, scene by scene. She is captivated by the affair, and yet undoubtedly this history is painful to explore. After all, she is not a neutral party. She cannot help but compare the loves of Eric's life, and sometimes his love for her seems undermined by the passions that preceded it.<br />
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I was entranced by this book at the start. Its paratactic style—a kind of lyrical breathlessness—is jarring at first, but is ultimately evocative and poetic once you are absorbed in its rhythms. The style accurately reflects the frenzy of grief (David Constantine is also a poet, FYI). The continuous stream of consciousness and intense feeling submerged me into the mind—and also the grief—of Katrin (She is drowning and you feel like you are too and every period at the end of a sentence is like a moment when you finally came up for some air).<br />
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The bouts of anxiety, of helplessness, of sadness that terrorize Katrin are familiar—anyone who has mourned anything would be able to relate to the torrents of all-consuming emotion that can paralyze a person completely. I will admit, however, that sometimes reading the book felt like I was cutting myself—a form of catharsis predicated on the infliction of harm and injury upon oneself. And I suppose that accurately describes Katrin too: addicted at once to the pain and catharsis of immersing herself in her deceased husband's love affairs.<br />
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In the wake of any kind of separation between loved ones, whether by death or by other circumstances, there can emerge a desperation—one that is visceral and extreme—that spurs a person to find intimacy and closeness in any form, no matter how small a thing. Whether an object as a remembrance or the compulsive reading of messages and letters (or these days, stalking social media accounts), a person finds any way she can to bridge the gap. Anything will do. It is the only way to quell a lingering desire. But not only that—it inflames the desire, keeps it alive. Katrin realizes this as she decides to write about Eric's past: "She did not want to live a life without desire."<br />
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Emotional melodrama—whether depicted onscreen or in literature—often frightens me. Perhaps it is too earnest, discomfiting. Sometimes it feels manipulative, as if it is feeding off of my need to feel <i>something</i>, anything, as a distraction from (or transference-channel for) all that I do not want to feel. Yet this book felt so precise and specific in its depiction of Katrin's emotional turmoil and the contours of her grief that it felt more like an honest confrontation than escape. I could absorb and justify Katrin's loneliness and sorrow; I could sense those things in myself, and viewing those things through someone else's life was comforting (being able to articulate a feeling makes the feeling far less daunting and powerful). There is something calming about watching someone go through emotions you do not let yourself experience in their fullest expression; it gives you some distance from your own and makes you feel a little less insane because of it. Most of all I could identify with Katrin's need to find a story: any story, even a painful one, would be better than darkness, emptiness, uncertainty.<br />
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I think I read this book at the right time. Sometimes books feel like that—a gift (I don't even know how I first heard of this book!). The best ones make you feel a little less lonely. This one certainly did for me.<br />
<br />Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-90543000878492138052017-02-12T15:53:00.001-08:002017-03-15T11:47:31.351-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
"North Richmond Street, being blind, was a quiet street except at the hour when the Christian Brothers’ School set the boys free. An uninhabited house of two storeys stood at the blind end, detached from its neighbours in a square ground. The other houses of the street, conscious of decent lives within them, gazed at one another with brown imperturbable faces."</blockquote>
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<i>-</i>"Araby," James Joyce</div>
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(Three perfect sentences... a perfect opening to a nearly flawless short story.)</div>
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Nhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7775401128636054304.post-84488744294061212472017-02-08T11:46:00.003-08:002017-03-15T11:47:49.654-07:00<blockquote class="tr_bq">
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A kind of thrill—to lie on a road<br />and flatten yourself,<br /><br /><br />white fur like a ball of winter,<br /><br /><br />like the March blossoms on the fruit trees,<br />each one folded in like<br /><br /><br />the fledgling that never made it<br />from the nest.<br /><br /><br />They do this when they feel threatened,<br />remain motionless<br /><br /><br />even when curious people come prod<br />them with sticks,<br /><br /><br />stiffening their pearly claws as a tree stiffens<br />its twigs for winter. What is it to be dead?<br /><br /><br />The possums know—that eternal watchfulness<br />by which the dead in their stately wisdom<br /><br /><br />watch us<br />who keep moving.</blockquote>
-"Possums," Sheila BlackNhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12789862971326167986noreply@blogger.com0