12/20/2007

HAHA WHAT

My teachers feel SO BAD for me.

If any doubt remained, it dissipated when I checked my grades, prayers having wound down to a request that God give me only the courage to carry on. In addition to my now mended Shelly grade (B), I saw two As and an A-.

Yeah.

I know better than to think that I somehow earned those, because I can remember each professor's grading system as set forth in their respective syllabi. Different percentages for each area of performance. "Effort" was not a category.

Whatever. Underneath all of the shock I am elated. Gordon MacKinnon's input has yet to appear (I'd be in no hurry to post a D, either), but the death cloud has been lifted. Who foresaw an A in Statistics? With my grades I could almost convince someone that I'm capable of understanding math!

Nothing like getting something good that you don't deserve. I guess I'm certainly one who knows by now.

12/14/2007

Be careful what you pray for

The best I could hope
Feels like a prayer
That suddenly woke
And scared me to bits
Wonderful broke
Over the skyline
Smashed me to dust
That swells on the wind
I have to be crushed
To be given a form
I want to be judged
And found needing
That your terrible presence
Obscures me some more
Is the one hope I have
To start being

11/08/2007

Beside you every day

129. I got an email from Jenny.
130. No matter what happens, I always always always have the promise of heaven.
131. I enjoy splitting infinitives.
132. When I listen to Mat Kearney, I remember when Jenny played "Girl America" on our stereo in the living room.
133. When I listen to Fred Hammond's Christmas cd, I remember Justin playing it in his car.
134. When I listen to Twila Paris, I get this incredible all-is-well twinkling feeling and it's like I'm with my mom.
135. Sometimes I'm still able to suspend disbelief and be in Narnia.
136. When Jordan was two years old, he got a bajillion presents but he still preferred to play in the big cardboard box with me.
137. It's great when I'm working on the same math problem for hours, to the point that I'm almost pulling out my hair, and suddenly I figure out what I was doing wrong.
138. Poppy Don took us to see Bill Cosby one year.
139. I really like my friends, even in the moments when I don't like them. The world would be a crappy place without them in it. Sometimes, when I step back, I realize how much I like about them that I can't even articulate.
140. Five Iron Frenzy is so funny.
141. When I think of someone like Sherrill, or Justin, or my dad telling me how much they love me, it's like I have a strong hand on my shoulder and I can do anything I need to do.
142. I enjoy it when my professors talk about each other. Makes me feel like an insider of some sort. Or something.
143. Handwritten notes of any kind are pretty much always fantastic. That's probably more insider stuff. WERE IN A STORY GUYS, DONT THROW AWAY UR TRASH ITS IMPORTANT.
144. It doesn't always matter when someone doesn't approve of me. Truly. (Thank you, Debi Rutledge.)
145. I'm infatuated with the way Kelly's basement is lit with Christmas lights.
146. I'm also infatuated with smelly lotions yay!
147. I'm really grateful for humor.
148. Even though sometimes I don't think I can handle life, I keep trying because I have enough reason to try-- the reason, pared down to its purest form, is the people who love me, and the people I love. (Thank you, God.)
149. I am not at the equator right now.
150. I have never been to the equator.
151. I think Dad and Marty still have these love notes on their fridge from, like, at least ten years ago.

11/05/2007

TAKE ME HOME

I love writing papers. Paper-writing is awesome! Holy cow!

And boy, did I write papers last night. I wrote papers so hard. I wrote papers like a baby. I think I could have paper-written through a thunderstorm. I paper-wrote the night away!

I was so busy writing papers, I almost didn't get up. I almost paper-wrote right through my classes. But it's great, because I feel so refreshed.

10/22/2007

Top 10s

Now if the others will just get with the program and post theirs... :)

Top 10 Favorite Disney Movies:
1. Beauty and the Beast
2. 101 Dalmatians
3. The Emperor's New Groove
4. The Little Mermaid
5. Robin Hood
6. The Aristocats
7. The Jungle Book
8. Fantasia
9. Aladdin
10. Dinosaur

Top 5 Favorite Disney Girls:
1. Ariel
2. Belle
3. Mulan
4. Aurora
5. Alice

Top 5 Favorite Disney Guys:
1. The Beast
2. Robin Hood
3. Baloo
4. Roger
5. Fagan

Top 10 Favorite Disney Villains:
1. Yzma
2. Prince John
3. Cruella de Vil
4. Edgar
5. Captain Hook
6. Lucifer
7. Scar
8. Maleficent
9. Jasper and Horace
10. Gaston

Top 5 Favorite Disney Sidekicks:
1. Flounder
2. Kronk
3. Sabastian
4. Iago
5. Chip

Top 10 Favorite Disney Songs:
1. Beauty and the Beast
2. Kiss the Girl
3. Something There
4. Cruella de Vil
5. Candle on the Water
6. Part of Your World
7. Whistle-Stop
8. Can You Feel the Love Tonight
9. Just Around the Riverbend
10. stuff from Fantasia

Top 10 Favorite Songs:
1. Blindside- After You're Gone
2. Twila Paris- Arise, My Soul, Arise
3. Five Iron Frenzy- Dandelions
4. Rich Mullins- The Love of God
5. Rebecca St James- Lord, You're Beautiful
6. Passion Worship Band- Fairest Lord Jesus
7. Watermark- The Purest Place
8. Anberlin- Dismantle.Repair
9. David Crowder Band- You Are My Joy
10. David Gray- Slow Motion

Runners Up:
Dead Poetic- Vices
Michelle Tumes- Christ of Hope
Placebo- Follow the Cops Back Home
Switchfoot- I Turn Everything Over
Ginny Owens- Who Are You Listening To

Top 10 Favorite Bands:
1. Blindside
2. Switchfoot
3. Skillet
4. Anberlin
5. Five Iron Frenzy
6. Watermark
7. Jars of Clay
8. David Crowder Band
9. Dead Poetic
10. Falling Up

Top 10 Favorite Artists:
1. Twila Paris
2. Rich Mullins
3. Yanni
4. Jill Phillips
5. Michelle Tumes
6. Mat Kearney
7. Michael Card
8. Derek Webb
9. Tim Hughes
10. David Gray

Top 10 Favorite Movies:
1. The Lord of the Rings trilogy
2. The Harry Potter series
3. Return to Me
4. 28 Days Later
5. Garden State
6. X-Files: Fight the Future
7. Batman Begins
8. Monsters, Inc.
9. Rain Man
10. The Game

Top 10 Favorite Comedies:
1. What's Up, Doc?
2. Waking Ned Devine
3. Fun With Dick and Jane
4. Orange County
5. Benny and Joon
6. While You Were Sleeping
7. My Big Fat Greek Wedding
8. The Trouble With Angels
9. Stepford Wives
10. Clifford

Top 10 Favorite Movie Characters:
1. Sam (Benny & Joon)
2. Judy Maxwell
3. Rachel Devery
4. Samwise Gamgee
5. Clifford Daniels
6. Faramir
7. Steven (Nacho Libre)
8. Inigo Montoya
9. Lance Brumder
10. Judge Maxwell

Top 10 Favorite Books:
1. Ruthless Trust
2. The Chronicles of Narnia
3. Harry Potter series
4. One Wintry Night
5. Mark of the Lion series
6. Jeeves & Wooster
7. The Phantom Tollbooth
8. The House of Sixty Fathers
9. A Bear Called Paddington
10. Eats, Shoots & Leaves

Top 10 Favorite Book Characters:
1. Aslan
2. Samwise Gamgee
3. Severus Snape
4. Lucy Pevensie
5. Edmund Pevensie
6. Reginald Jeeves
7. Penelope (The Odyssey)
8. Junie B. Jones
9. Winnie the Pooh
10. Shasta

Top 10 Favorite TV Shows:
1. NCIS
2. Lost
3. Everybody Loves Raymond
4. Conan O'Brien
5. X-Files
6. The Simpsons
7. The Cosby Show
8. Scrubs
9. A Bit of Fry & Laurie
10. Jeeves & Wooster

Top 10 Favorite TV Characters:
1. John Locke
2. Timothy McGee
3. Cosmo Kramer
4. Debra Barone
5. Robert Barone
6. Fox Mulder
7. Dana Scully
8. Principle Skinner
9. Dewey
10. Percival Cox

Top 5 Favorite Musicals:
1. The Nutcracker
2. Fiddler on the Roof
3. Yentl
4. The Sound of Music
5. A Charlie Brown Christmas

Top 10 Favorite RC Teachers:
1. Sarah Reddick
2. David Brackney
3. Brian Stogner
4. Keith Huey
5. Vivian Turner
6. Keeley Weber
7. Pam Cox
8. John Todd
9. Gordon MacKinnon
10. Xander Waites

Top 10 Favorite Quotes:
1. "I have not begun to know. Everything I have ever written, spoken or experienced of the love of Jesus Christ is barely a hint, a straw, or dry leaves blowing in the wind." -Brennan Manning
2. "This life of ours is a very enjoyable fight, but a very miserable truce." -G. K. Chesterton
3. "The great thing to remember is that, though our feelings come and go, His love for us does not." -C. S. Lewis
4. "'What is a chicken doing in the potions dungeon?' snapped Snape. 'Chickens do not belong anywhere near the subtle science and exact art that is potion making!'" -Potter47
5. "Since when have you taken bubble baths?" "It came out of the faucet that way, Eunice." (What's Up, Doc?)
6. "Grace binds you with far stronger cords than the cords of duty or obligation can bind you." -E. Stanley Jones
7. "I have a scathingly brilliant idea!" (The Trouble With Angels)
8. "I like talking to Rabbit. He talks about sensible things. He doesn't use long, difficult words, like Owl. He uses short, easy words, like 'What about lunch' and 'Help yourself, Pooh.'" (Winnie The Pooh)
9. "A whole gang of chocolate! I need it badly!" (Clifford)
10. "And I bought you a packet of your favorite Mexican crisps." (Waking Ned Devine)

Top 10 Favorite Websites:
1. google.com
2. wikipedia.org
3. purevolume.com
4. ebay.com
5. youtube.com
6. sxc.hu
7. xkcd.com
8. theonion.com
9. quotation-marks.blogspot.com
10. pogo.com

Top 10 Favorite Restaurants:
1. Subway
2. Pizza King
3. Cracker Barrel
4. Fazoli's
5. Wendy's
6. Taco Bell
7. Panera Bread
8. Rax
9. A&W
10. Qdoba

Top 10 Favorite Cereals:
1. Frosted Shredded Wheat
2. Raisin Bran
3. Honey Nut Cheerios
4. Smart Start
5. Cocoa Pebbles
6. Lucky Charms
7. Honeycomb
8. Golden Grahams
9. Apple Jacks
10. Cracklin' Oat Bran

Top 5 Favorite Dinners:
1. Chicken
2. Soup and sandwich
3. Salmon
4. Taco salad
5. Pasta

Top 5 Favorite Breakfasts:
1. Banana
2. Strawberries
3. Oatmeal from scratch
4. Scrambled eggs
5. Tiger tail

Top 5 Favorite Snacks:
1. Sun Chips
2. Soft pretzel
3. String cheese
4. Doritos crackers
5. Turkey jerky

Top 10 Favorite Desserts:
1. Sno-cone
2. Orange
3. Monkey bread
4. Angel food cake
5. Dreamsicle
6. Blizzard
7. Dark chocolate
8. Snickers pie
9. Cinnamon roll
10. Ice cream

Top 10 Favorite Boy Names:
1. Ben
2. Camon
3. Barry
4. Charlie
5. Joel
6. Lucas
7. Ethan
8. Colin
9. Brennan
10. Evan

Top 10 Favorite Girl Names:
1. Julia
2. Kathleen
3. Caroline
4. Evelyn
5. Aiden
6. Norah
7. Maggie
8. Anna
9. Alexis
10. Trine

Guess what?

So I wake up and it's 12:30pm. Stats class started at 12:15pm; therefore, I have missed Stats class. I have missed Stats quiz and Stats lecture, and I cannot turn in Stats homework. And also I missed Kenneth Starr, who spoke in assembly. Assembly was at 11:00am. I wasn't there.

I stayed up late working on Stats, hence the fateful nap from 9:15am to 12:30pm, the nap that ruined my day.

Then, as I'm dry-crying (because of the Prozac I took in, like, 2003) and resetting my alarm, resigning myself to another nap to mollify the pain, I hear my phone ring.

I bolt up the stairs and end up on speakerphone, talking with Dad and hearing my family's wonderful voices in the background.

We have a new Landon Garrett Webb.

I'm all crazy go nuts inside. I thank God a bazillion times.

And then I drive to the school, ready for the droopy side of the day, because Brian Stogner is a very kindly oldish Stats teacher, but he is in no way obligated to give me a break of any kind. The school is crowded with people who came to see Kenneth Starr.

And what do I see on the door? A piece of paper!! And it says,

DR STOGNER WILL NOT BE HAVING STATS CLASS TODAY DUE TO THE KEN STARR LUNCHEON, ALL STUDENTS SHOULD WEBCT QUIZ TAKEHOME ETC, ETC

And I walk out saying to myself, "Dear Kenneth Starr, I love you and I want to have your nationally infamous baby."

Except guess what? I don't actually because I get to see Brayden and Landon in a few weeks!

Update: I return to campus and pick up two packages at the bookstore: a Michelle Tumes cd and my Halloween costume, which is AMAZING.

And then, in Ethics class, Rubel Shelly proves that he does remember what it was like to be human. He gives me a chance to finish the exam I completely flopped.

His round, mechanical eyes are almost warm as he humiliates me in front of Robyn Lampel and Stephen Bone, saying the essay I did write was the best among the essays he received for that exam.

And he says in at least nine slightly different ways that he doesn't want to penalize students for running out of time.

I want to cry. Shame I can't.

10/13/2007

Balloons

I'm sorry the party has ended so soon
I hear the rain beating down hard on balloons
I think I gave up long before my chance passed
Just dreaming of things that I never should have
I danced for the gods and they granted my wish
It left me a scar, I expected a kiss

I see through the grey to the reds and the blues
Can I say that it's just someone else's deluge
Oh, can I pretend I'm not crushed by disgrace
And the softness and love that I see in your face
And if I turn up at the door where you are
A kiss where I had expected a scar

10/03/2007

I just figured out the name for something that I have known for most of my life, but have never been able to articulate. It explains (for my own satisfaction) a lot of the neurotic, depressing things I do. Essentially, what I realized is that I like to be heard.

One of the worst feelings I've ever had is the feeling that I'm talking, but nobody's listening. It happens to everyone sometimes-- there's the group of people, and Person #1 has just begun talking when the pet bird goes up in flames and distracts everyone, or something. And that's fine.

But say Person #1 is talking, and Person #2 suddenly remembers something HILARIOUS that came up during the day, and starts explaining it while Person #1 is still talking. And no one seems to mind.

Or perhaps Person #1 is talking, but Person #3 disagrees with him. Person #3 is important, meaning that he holds some position of authority, or some academic degree, or some quality that causes people to regard him as especially spiritual. Or maybe he's just the sort who commands a lot of attention. And so no one dares defend the argument Person #1 is making, or even suggest that it be given equal consideration.

Growing up, I often seemed to be at or near the tail end of the priority scale. It was fairly likely I'd be heard if I was one of two people. But bigger groups meant I would just sort of be there, no matter how hard I tried. I was too young, or too silly, or I didn't like the right things, or I was already an outsider because I was the newest one there.

Three was decidedly the worst number, because the other two people would pair off, and that left me alone, but without an excuse to leave.

So I focused on friendly adults, or younger kids, who seemed a little more willing to hear me. Eventually I tried something new-- I talked loudly, and occasionally even interrupted, to compete with dominant personalities. That didn't work.

If I tried to contribute, but no one responded, I would become frustrated and angry, which scared me. I had no idea what to do with those feelings. So I avoided them. I turned them into cynicism. When I believed people were not giving me so much as a toehold on their attention, I used my favorite strategy: I stopped trying. It didn't matter whether I looked silly, or disrespectful, or asocial, if the people who saw me that way were people who would never have cared much about me anyway.

I think these feelings, and the ways I have dealt with them, are the source of a lot of my habits and ideas. I tend to embrace a sense of isolation and independence, because at times it seemed those things were my best buddies. They replaced the feeling that I just didn't belong. My basic line of reasoning: if someone won't give me his attention, why should I bend over backward getting it?

As far back as I can remember, people do not interest me by merit of being popular or respected-- although I do not reject them because of it-- rather, they earn my respect by showing that they are willing to genuinely listen to people like me. I distrust the people who are important to me, afraid that their devotion to people they don't even know will surpass devotion to their own families and friends.

I feel trapped in the obligation to impress certain people, to profess sentiments that do not belong to me. Every once in a while, I want to say something highly offensive, just to see how many people would notice. I'm unnaturally drawn to what is forbidden or ignored.

The fascination with breaking away from the confines of society extends to a number of my interests, and to the way I usually do friendships, and it has seriously colored my thoughts about what is "romantic". For example,

"Just one more round before we're through / More psychedelic yuppie flu [i.e., alcohol] / It's such a silly thing to do / Now we're stuck on rewind [...] Let's follow the cops back home / And rob their houses" --Placebo

"Can we get away / Far away / Let's leave this place / Will you come with me / Are you down / To turn your world around [...] Get in my rocketship / We'll leave the light of day / Staying on the turning away" --Shiny Toy Guns

"I want to take you far / From the cynics of this town / And kiss you on the mouth / We'll cut our bodies free / From the tethers of this scene / Start a brand new colony" --The Postal Service

"While the rest of the girls are drowning in roses and songs he composes / And while the rest of the guys are all trying, trying so hard / Oh girl, let's crash the party / El Dorado on the lawn / Let's burn holes in the carpets / Kicking, shouting, dancing on the tables all night long" --Ok Go

(Returning to practical things.) When thrown a curve ball in the form of a good friend who unexpectedly stops listening, I find myself talking MORE, jabbering in hopes of regaining that attention. The longer it goes on, the shallower and less sincere my talking gets. Sometimes the difficulty in self-disclosing is not "Will you still accept me after I tell you this?" but "Do you really even care to know?"

When I feel listened to, I end up talking relatively less-- no need for it. And I end up taking chances, involving myself in other people's lives. For instance, because I feel important to God, I'm a much better person when I've been talking with him frequently. I'm able to let down my defensiveness and look at the big picture. And joining a small mentoring group, where I actually feel like an equal, was a fantastic move for me.

And all of this is convincing me that I really need to work on my own listening, and be available to other people, because this is a big deal. It affects everything. To know that someone cares to know me is to know that I matter, and if I matter as a person, then my choices matter, too.

10/01/2007

Dad

Darling, in your frightened state
Don't worry we will separate
Come back and find you're still alive
Better naked than dressed in lies
And darling, you can't know
        (I turned, you didn't see me)
Your face was at the window
        (You watched as I was leaving)
My eyes became so blurry
But I could see you clearly
I wanted you to hear me:
My darling, don't you worry

9/24/2007

Zomigosh

There's no feeling quite like it when you're 100% sure you're gonna die, and then you don't.

But it's really close when you think you have an exam the next day, and then you don't.

9/14/2007

Memory #12

Late March. An attractive little parcel, filled with trinket toys: lying unwrapped on a table next to the door in the sewing room.

"Muffitt?"

The sewing machine quiets momentarily.

"Yes, Amanda?"

"What's this?"

My grandmother turns. I am pointing at the toys. I hope the desperation doesn't show on my face.

She returns to her work. "It's a present."

"For who?"

"For a girl I know," she says. "I like her a lot."

A long pause, filled with strange humming and clacking noises from the machine. I feel confused and a little jealous. Some girl? This is my grandmother, after all.

"Why?"

"It's her birthday soon."

I think I hear a smile in her voice, but I cannot read between the lines without risking grave misinterpretation. "Oh," I murmur. "When's her birthday?"

"The same day yours is. Isn't that neat?"

For a few more moments I stand in the doorway, watching the back of her head. Then I retreat into the hallway.

Darn it.

Lice and rats. HAHA

I borrowed a thought from Captain Obvious.

I've been thinking that just about every moment of my life could be characterized as a moment of conflict. Rarely am I not conflicted. Every time I do something, it's because one value or feeling motivates me more than another. For example:

1. I pause and look at the first round table in the cafeteria. I want to talk to a couple of the people sitting there, but I haven't been able to shower yet, and I might smell. My perception is perhaps skewed... I suddenly feel like I'm crawling with lice and rats. So I sit by myself and eat quickly, but it is a hard decision. My desire to be viewed as "clean" and "considerate" just barely outweighs my desire to socialize.

2. I'm at Meijer, and I see a freshman student who is quiet and shy. I have had a couple of conversations with her. She's walking with a friend, and she doesn't see me. I want to acknowledge her, to wave cheerily. But sometimes I feel uneasy when someone calls attention to me in front of other people. Maybe she would feel that way? I continue shopping. My fear of offending her surpasses my desire to affirm her.

And so on. So I guess if, instead of just doing what I currently believe I want to do, I concentrate on what I actually want most, then I'll end up doing less stupid crap.

The semester's first House of God session was Tuesday night. The panelists discussed baptism. I heard very little that I hadn't already thought about, and very little that I really wished to think about again, as the topic is lacking in the "clear answer" department, and everyone seems to want a clear answer. By the end, the panelists were so tense and stiff that you could've tied a hammock to them and taken a nap. I bit off most of my nails.

I miss my family.

8/25/2007

Ooh, what's that smell

N.B. This is a harsh reality kind of thing. I almost didn't post it. But then I did anyway.

I guess there's a lot of truth in Newton's Law. What goes up must come down, and for every action there's a reaction, and the glass that's half empty is another man's treasure or whatever.

What I mean is, I spent a very long time being not angry. Now the tide is coming in. Some of my anger is legitimate, and most of that gets resolved, so that everybody ends up better off. But something UGLY is going on.

At least I realize it, right? At least I smell the fishiness...

When I do the wrong thing, over and over, that is the result of a special magical curse set aside just for me. I can protest this injustice by shaking my fists at the sky.

I find myself feeling lonely and bitter because my professor doesn't like me, my friends are putting me in a box, and no one else has a rash, ever. I begin to feel tired. It's really draining, when I encounter people who are standing on pedestals they do not deserve, to personally unpedestal them.

At certain moments, I want to say something like,

    "How clever the sarcasm in your voice, and how stupid."
    "Everyone respects you. I don't know why, because I think you treat lots of people like crap."
    "You're talking low, but I can hear as you rip me apart."
    "Wow, did you attend a board meeting yesterday and make some more arbitrary decisions?"
    "I realize what I'm saying doesn't matter to you, but it'd be nice if you'd pretend."
    "You seem to hate me as much as I hate myself."

But I rarely say these things, because when I'm being a victim, it's hard to give people the dignity of knowing what I really think. I wanna let them figure it out for themselves.

OKAY ANYWAY. Basically, the fact is, I'm not going to make things better by being contrary, and bristly, and harboring a sekrit depressive anger like they do in movies.

I need not expect my peers to inwardly remark, "Amanda's quiet today. She must be feeling inadequate and frustrated. I should make several of the jokes she likes best."

My teachers will not say to themselves, "Amanda refuses to do any more than the naked, trembling minimum in her course work. This is a sign that I need to cultivate a sense of good will in the classroom. Her improved letter grade will be a reward to both of us."

Actually, God gave me the oars. I get to choose what I think, how I feel.

I am at liberty to whine about my circumstances. When I'm having one of those days, I can lament the pointlessness of everything I do. I can call myself a waste of time and space. I can focus on the blind shallowness of people who call themselves believers.

Or I can focus on the unfathomable graciousness of God. I can trust that he's making us Christians into a very good thing. I can be enamored with (or at least devoted to) what God is giving me to do in this moment.

In other words, life is full of small horrors, and I think I need to utilize the fine art of getting over it. That should be possible, since I know the secret: God hanging, bleeding, unable to breathe-- for us.

That love is the be all, end all. The one reason anything matters in the first place. The reason I don't have to live on the defense. The reason I can relax enough to take a breath, have a conversation, talk to God, do something difficult, and get all excited about rocketships. The reason I'm okay. The reason I can love you.

6/14/2007

Note to a loved one

If your writers go on a coffee run
you'll be trying not to breathe in
you'll be choking out silent letters and
if you're anything like me then
you'll put your happy memories all in a bottle
you'll turn to see them drifting off on the water
and you'll watch as you lose your last friend
and soon you'll be writing the end.

You won't even find your hanging rope
but someone will throw you a line and
then you will feel the pressure of hope
when hope is a flood in your mind and
across the ocean floor he will write of his heart
so that you begin aching to get in that far.
You can hope to start hoping again if
you don't panic and if you don't swim.

5/30/2007

1 comments, continued

Re Kelly's post:

You're right to point out that almost nobody is really that pleased with their own looks. But the catch is unfailing-- when people are kind and I start to feel a little safer, something happens to make my stomach plummet and I may even get that strange pain in my chest... possibly some joke that came across the wrong way, or a comment he surely would not have made, had he thought a bit more, and suddenly it's like I'm the only person in the world with this problem. You're right: the trouble is in our focus. The trouble is not that I'm believing the wrong people, but that I am believing people. The only one who's always, always, always going to know the truth about me is God.

Thank you for encouraging me on the "job dedicated to helping people" front. I am really shocked, over and over again, at the way some people love and even respect me. It will never make sense to me, but it gives me the push I need to take risks and do what I can. They see things that are hidden to me. I suspect that's how it's meant to be for all of us.

"You get lots of tickets when you talk." Ha ha. Thanks. :) Truth is, though, you do too. You're just a little less abtruse.

About the expectations and being myself... I'm learning. I just regress sometimes.

What drugs am I using? Primarily an ancient depressant known as REM.

Maybe you're going to have to get me into Lost. If we have that kind of time.

Things do change really fast, don't they? I've recently seen it in Jordan. Wondered where my little brother had gone. And God reminded me that I had made those same transitions and then some more. It helps me see the whole thing, including my own future, in... perspective. Yes, Jenny will probably have kids by the time I get married, if I do. And what you said about me being a mother-- I hope you believe that for yourself.

Funny, all those thoughts about planes are ones I've had.

Nice bit about comets. :)

I hope you'll excuse the raised pitch here but YOU DO NOT HAVE A BUTCH VOICE. Honestly, I have tried to wave away many an envious thought on the subject. I like your voice.

Thanks for not minding my singing too much.

"I swear, kids do not like me." = Almost verbatim what Justin always said before Brayden came. Now, freed from the death grip of fear because this is his own child, he's ridiculously loving and Brayden loves him ridiculously. When the baby is at our house and Justin's jingle comes on the radio, Brayden searches the room in excitement, eyes wide, head still wobbling a little bit. Don't you remember yourself in NY? Kids will like you if you talk to them. Maybe for a while (like me) you'll have to be in the right sort of situation so you don't feel awkward, but I know we can both get past that.

You are not too intellectual. Here and there your analyses may cast a long shadow that makes some people feel uncomfortably like a Dorothy Gale who just landed in Oz. There is nothing wrong with that. As long as you shun arrogance, treat people with grace, and choose to see the beautiful-mysterious side of things as well, your practical intelligence will be a blessing.

I mean, my somewhat analytical personality helps me. When I was a kid, a friend tried to tell me that "people who ride bikes are not as good at running." As though biking is bad for your stamina. I guessed she was telling me some distorted outgrowth of the fact that biking and running use different muscles. 'Cause I have to think about why stuff is the way it is.

"Don't confuse laziness with not constantly adhering to what everyone else things you should be doing." Thanks.

"You can't help but change. You are alive." You're right.

5/28/2007

Permanently saddled with this

I really, really don't want torturous to be a word. I don't like it. It's like a person with a third leg.

I do enjoy the word tortuous. So free and graceful without that ridiculous "r".

But the ugly word has its own definition and cannot be discarded.

TORTUOUS: convoluted, tangled, involved

TORTUROUS: excruciating, ...SATAN

5/27/2007

God's joke on us?

I promised to "keep in touch", and Kelly says "stories = keeping in touch", so here's a story.

Last week Jenny and I went to Shadyside Park to speedwalk the trails. While we walked we discussed a variety of things, not least, of course, the pressing topic of exercise.

And then somehow the conversation turned to types-- you know, things that attract us. I pictured Jason standing high over the stove and cooking something so peppery it should burn holes in their palates, and I asked her whether she'd always been into men who are tall and lean. She told me there were a couple of things she'd been into:

A. Tall skinny guy.

B. Rugged natural guy who looks like he farms.

C. Black guy. Dancing black guy, even better.

I was pleased to find out about that last one; it makes three siblings who have harbored the same quiet thoughts of rebellion.

We were taking a long curve where the foliage forms walls that hide the path ahead. Jenny told me how a friend had commented on her marriage to Jason.

"Brittney said, 'Well, you didn't get your hot dancing black guy, but you got your farm boy.'"

She was just beginning to clarify that while her husband has never actually lived on a farm--

A shirtless man appeared jogging round the corner in a blur of copper-brown glory. In relaying the story to our mother, Jenny described him as "sculpted". I can't confirm that, because I was looking at his face, searching in vain for an expression. His face was deadpan. As we passed him, my sister and I glanced at each other in disbelief, and then I cracked up.

"Manda!" she scolded under her breath, but she was smiling big and then she was laughing too.

I love the way Jenny laughs.

5/22/2007

Erythraeum, pt II

I wait by the water and stare at the sea
The light on the water is glaring at me
Surprised when the breath of the desolate east
Treads dry on the edge of an unmoving sea
It shakes like it sees something coming
Or I'm making believe and it's nothing
This has got to be where I start losing my mind
I cannot really stare into something this bright
But in all of my dreams you are waking me up
So fall on the water that waits between us

5/20/2007

I'm fine, why?

If you ask me whether I'm worried about something, I'll usually say no. I don't mean to lie. It's just I regularly cohabit with such a wealth of preoccupations that a little extra does not seem worth mentioning.

The fact is, I'm distressed by the size of my waist, the shape of my knees, the dryness of my elbows, the asymmetry of my eyelids, the angle of my forehead. I slave away over my skin and hair and eyes, and never feel very good about them at all. I worry that people loathe me for taking long, scrupulous showers and being a smelly lump of oil anyway. I know some people have one outfit, but I have a hard time appreciating my wardrobe because surely people disapprove when I have to wear the same shirt twice in one week.

I worry that I'm not worthy material for a job at McDonald's, let alone a profession in social work. I worry that if I need to make change for customers, I'll never get used to it. I'm afraid I'm going to be one of those grown-up kids who don't move out until they're kicked out. I know I'm going to cause a brutal car accident eventually. I wonder how each person will reject me in his own way when word finally gets around that I'm not good at anything.

I worry that I use too many words to make my point. I worry about insulting a professor by doing badly on a test. I wonder when my professors will confer with each other and finally give up on me, when the Dean of Students will stop smiling at me, when she will ask me whether I'm using substances or having trouble at home.

I worry that I'll never be mature enough to be married. I fear that my husband will love me a little bit. I wonder whether I'll really be able to stand up for myself or sacrifice for his sake. I worry that we'll have differing opinions about sex and that he'll be right. I feel sure most of what I cook will be burned or slushy or both, and he'll opt for Chinese takeout when he can.

I wonder how I could ever get through pregnancy and childbirth. As I watch parents, I say to myself, "What a lack of discipline!" and "When I have a kid, I'm never going to talk at him that way," and all the while my gut tells me that when the time comes, I will be Monster Mom.

I live a couple of minutes from an airport, but since I was a kid I've got a sick feeling when a plane passes low overhead. I worry that scientists will succeed in their attempt to impregnate a man. I wonder when a comet is going to crush one of our continents. I worry that communists will overrun the country and put a ban on mascara.

I worry that my voice is loud and nasal, and I worry that I irritate people when I speak softly. I wonder whether I should stop making jokes, since people don't get them. I worry that I talk too much, don't reveal enough, and don't listen well. I doubt I'll ever have a conversation with more than two people at once and walk away feeling good about how I handled it. I feel I should adhere more closely to others' expectations, and I'm horrified by my capacity for bootlicking, fakery and cultural absorption. I sometimes doubt anyone actually likes me.

I feel like I'm too boring for children, too slow for people my age and too frivolous for people who are older. I feel like a prodigal spender who doesn't know how to have any fun. I want to believe it when someone says I can do something, but it's so much safer to let people set all kinds of limits on my potential-- you know, just to avoid being cocky. I consider myself a hardened criminal in disguise, and when asked whether I've ever committed a felony, I scour the darkest recesses of my memory-- just to be sure.

Sometimes I think I'm the only person in the history whose personality has no upside. I worry that my part-time laziness is an indication of what truly lies beneath the corroding surface of my character. I fear my acts of kindness just keep me from realizing that I am completely selfish. I'm scared I'll never change. God help me.

5/10/2007

Surprises

111. The house always looks and smells and feels so welcoming.
112. Soft water for the summer!
113. I got much better grades than I expected.
114. I think my professors feel bad for me. Actual... pity, not just a vague sense of sympathy, "Well, you're a nice kid"-- no, I can hear the distinct gurgling, "You wound the heartstrings I didn't know I had." And I mean, it's kind of a weird, uncomfortable feeling, to be pitied, and I don't know what I'm doing to cause it, but I can't deny it helps me out sometimes.
115. Mrs Reddick is so cool that I actually miss being in her class.
116. My second year of college was really good. It scared me.
117. I'm glad I went on that trip to West Virginia. It scared me.
118. I'm trying to get a second job, though that scares the heck out of me too.
119. Mother bought me flowers, and they're really big and pink and soft and smell so wonderful I want to eat them, and I think this is the first time she's ever got flowers for me.
120. She is so patient with me.
121. So is Sherrill. And he's so gentle.
122. Sherrill likes Brayden, and Brayden likes Sherrill.
123. I keep finding out that I underestimated the incredibleness of my brothers and sister.
124. Jason Power seems to be kind of a miracle.
125. I like my car a lot.
126. Dad called me to find out when I'd be coming home.
127. He wrote a sweet card to Jenny and Jason.
128. Marty talks to me like an adult.

5/04/2007

Advice

Advice people have actually given me, and which I have come to appreciate

"Don't speed."

"Always, always, always look over your shoulder before changing lanes."

"When you pass a parked car, always watch for little feet behind it. One day, I assure you, you will be glad you did."

"Don't ever think about what it 'would' be like if you had just been given a different life, a different body, whatever it is."

"If the Spirit of God suggests that you hug someone, do it."

"People love you the way they want to be loved."

"Don't withhold a compliment because you wish it were you instead."

"Whatever assignment looks the most impossible, do that first."

"Don't try to make everyone happy."

"Don't file your nails into a point."

Memory #11

Once Stephanie and I stayed at her grandpa's house, which was actually really close to mine. When her mom dropped us off, it was nighttime and he was nowhere to be seen. There is something fun about being alone in someone else's house, especially one that is unfamiliar and dimly lit, so I was pretty pleased to be there.

We set down our bags and kind of stood there for a minute, then Stephanie started looking for the TV remote and asked whether I'd ever seen Dr Quinn.

I hadn't, and subtly indicated a lack of interest.

Her shock was excessive, I thought. But I still didn't really want to watch the show, and began listing other possible activities.

We watched Dr Quinn.

I wore my hat the next day-- my favorite hat at the time, a plain black one with the Nike logo in white on the front.

Her grandpa was... either cleaning out his garage, or getting ready to sell the junk it contained. Because old stuff becomes more interesting right before you discard it, we nosed around in the boxes during the afternoon. I found a bottle of bubbles and secretly wished I could have one of my own.

Then we took a ride around his large backyard. The lawn mower we were sitting on was quite close to the ground and not a "riding" mower, but it was big enough to hold two kids. It traveled at a mind-bending five or ten miles per hour. My hat fell off as we swung into a particularly sharp curve, and the mower mutilated it before I knew what was happening. I yelled out, "Hey!" and somehow we stopped in about twenty excruciating seconds, but by that time we were several yards away from the small, pathetic black lump in the grass. I ran to it, picked it up, and stared at the shreds for a few moments, then returned in silence to the hat mower.

4/26/2007

Sneaky McSneakington

Things that fascinated little Amanda:

Secret symbols and signs. The flower in "Scarlet Pimpernel", for instance. Or hieroglyphs. Or hand gestures. I read a historical fiction about ancient Egypt in which a character (as I interpreted... I may have been wrong) placed his right hand on his left shoulder in a gesture of surrender or resignation-- like saying "Uncle". Long afterwards I felt more comfortable praying that way.*

Sneaking. I thought it would be great to be either invisible or very, very small, or maybe to become an animal of some kind, in order to sneak unnoticed.

Plain loaves of bread, which I associated with Palestine; and plain rice, which I associated with Asia.

Burying stuff. Like (I'm sure) practically every other kid, I buried stuff in my backyard. Had I found something already buried, I would not have been displeased.

Moats, drawbridges, and rope ladders that can be drawn up. Sherrill replaced the wooden ladder to my playhouse with a rope ladder, making himself even more a hero than before.

Sharks, tigers, hawks, other predatory animals and, to some degree, cannibals. It was more a sense of awe, less one of fondness.

Mud. Second best to clay. I tried making "Egyptian bricks" once, with mud and sand and dry weeds. It... kind of worked.

Flying or being able to swim underwater endlessly.*

Hidden passages and underground chambers. Yes, I mapped them out. Many of my dreams involved secret passages. For example: I was sleeping in the cupboard under the sink in some house and, when I woke up, instead of coming out, I went the other way and discovered a network of passages YAY.

Signet rings. I wanted one so very badly. I wanted to seal envelopes with it.*


*still haven't really given up on this one

4/16/2007

Doors

Did you think you were meant for a room with no doors
We found you without ever knocking
We could never have made you or kept you around
Couldn't have everyone talking

Did it take you a moment to adjust to the truth
The human one that we have told you
When the dark flooded in and you felt the first touch
Did you really expect it to hold you

4/13/2007

Complainish

I write a lot of happy stuff in here, which is the way I like it. But there's a time for this and also for that and whatnot. So here are some of the things I don't like.

I don't like it when someone magnifies an aspect of a person (one event, one characteristic, one behavior) until it eclipses everything else about that person-- especially when they successfully misrepresent that person to a gullible third party. Obviously I don't like it when people do it to me; I also get defensive when I see it happening to someone else.

I don't like it when someone uses a joke to humiliate, disparage, expose, or otherwise cut someone else down. Jokes are useful that way. You can use one to make your point, then disown it. It gives you the upper hand. The object of the joke knows that if he objects or tries to clarify, several people will turn to him with reasonable expressions on their faces, and they will tell him not to be so serious. And whether or not you mean a joke to harm someone, you can't undo it.

I don't like highly sexualized Latin pop/hip hop. Shakira. Fergie. I know it's weird to be so specific, but this one type of music seems to personify almost everything I grieve, regret, or fear in my life. It is to me perhaps what a giant ketchup-filled blender is to my mom... to George W, a huge walking military thesaurus... to Augustine, a throng of Manichaean students making out in a pear tree. And I don't even like the way the music sounds.

Personal preferences are natural, but I don't like it when men think they know how women "should" look, what they "should" wear, what "should" interest them (also applies to women with regard to men). That is idiocy at a tall and glorious peak.

I don't like sensing that someone is worried about me, or angry, irritated, or bothered about me-- and they say nothing. It's even worse when they start implying.

I don't like shopping for clothes. It takes a long time; it's complicated; it's disheartening; it's expensive and tiresome and I come out sweaty, my eyes red with what must be huge, boulder-like particles of dust.

And while I'm on the topic, I have a confession to make: When I'm around a man who is gay, I may feel (very uncomfortably) that my choice of clothing is under a harsh critical eye. Beastly of me? Yes. Stereotyping? Yes. I don't like stereotyping and it's even worse to realize that I've done it.

I don't like being a hypocrite. At times I criticize something and don't realize the irony until later. Other times I just sit miserably, under a cloud of obligation, and I condemn, fully aware that I'm condemning myself and that few others know about it.

I still don't like idle radio talk. It depresses the crap outta me.

4/09/2007

Repentance

Where I am the cold is growing
Nights forget to wake the morning
One into another flows
Far away the sky is snowing
Distance makes it fall more slowly
Fall on faces no one knows
Thousand bodies in repose
Now the distance only grows

How it haunts me in my dreaming
Thousand saints beneath the evening
Lit by Your nomadic spheres
Call on winds to speed my leaving
Call on winds to leave me freezing
Now I have become my fears

3/24/2007

A week full of epiphanies

SUNDAY
The geese think it's spring. Haha.
They don't have calendars.
Haha.

MONDAY
Crispin is a funny name.

TUESDAY
I'm finishing my second year of college already.
I missed my first class.
In my second class, I submitted a paper containing punctuation with which I do not agree. To please Mrs Reddick.
Success has its price.

WEDNESDAY
On careful consideration, it is amazing that I'm still alive, have all my faculties, and am doing okay in school.
Because of this miracle I was able to skip assembly, wake up at two this afternoon, have some chocolate for breakfast, stare at the computer screen, type a longish blog entry with my arms at the wrong angle, take the interstate, play my music almost loud enough to melt my ears, and threaten an angry goose at a close distance.

THURSDAY
I miss the smells of my house.
Courtney is a phantom suitemate. I think she comes into room 304 about twenty percent more often than I'm aware.

FRIDAY
I can't always predict a Kelly reaction.
If you are familiar with the geese that make frequent use of our sidewalks, think of the noises those geese make.
Now recall "the Abominable", if you are familiar with him. Think of him laughing-- the louder sort that often occurs in crowds.
In pitch, in quality, in salience--
SIMILAR NOISES, REALLY.
Aww.

SATURDAY
I have a lot in common with Winnie the Pooh.
If I were an animal, I would probably be either a bear or a goose. (More on this later.)

3/21/2007

Like burrs or bee stings-- but mostly happier

Some things people have said that I will never forget:
(I will spare everyone by not stating the obvious themes.)

Of course I have a drawer for you.
Are you going to sleep tonight at all?
How can you not be able to do a cartwheel?
You know how a caterpillar has to disappear for a while before it becomes a butterfly?

Yeah, it was funny at first, but it's just annoying now.
You don't have to be a tomboy to be a nice person, Amanda.
Amanda, did you say to him what he says you said to him? --because that would be a very bad thing to say.
Like the shirt; hate the face.
[whispered] He says it's not a joke.
Will your mom homeschool me, too?

What exactly do you think you're doing? You two can go listen to the sermon or you can go to class.
I can see it. [i.e., Your ears make you look weird.]
It's just... the ponytail that bothers me.
He thinks you're cute.

I forgive you.
I hate it when they fight.
I already knew about it then. I saw you out the kitchen window.
I was impressed: she was really good with the kids.
I will never, ever, ever do it again.

No summer tan yet, mmm?
I'm so glad you're my daughter.
Wait patiently and I promise you'll get hips. And you really won't like them when you do.
I am privileged to know you.
No. She was always beautiful.

[alarmed] Does this have to do with me? Are you compensating for a missing father figure?
You're Carol's daughter? You don't... look like yourself.
I would have wanted to be your friend.
All my children have surprisingly small noses, considering.

I was joking, actually. I don't have a girlfriend.
If I was able to do it, you most certainly can.
[creepily] Hey there.
But Amanda doesn't need to see that. She's still innocent.
I pulled you over for speeding.
I'm proud of you.

You'll make a good social worker.
Her mom tells me she handled it like an adult.
I'm going to tell you something I haven't told anyone else, and you have to promise not to tell them.
Ha. Hahanghhghguhh.

3/17/2007

Scintillating

111. My hair is getting long.
112. I can honestly look up to-- enjoy and respect-- both Jenny and Justin.
113. I am finally beginning to let go of certain fears, resentments, false desires and sins that have held me back for weeks, months or years because
114. God is incredibly faithful.
115. Brittany made sure I got one of the gift boxes from Jenny's bachelorette party, even though I couldn't be there.
116. I wouldn't trade my friends for anything.
117. There are points at about 1:30 and 2:58 and 3:37 on the song "Dismantle.Repair." by Anberlin that give me chills.
118. A Bit of Fry and Laurie, season one, episode five, at 21:50-- "What about Maureen Limp-Whippy-Pippy-Doh-Doh?"
119. Sherrill built me a playset in the backyard when I was little.
120. Courtney or Kelly playing Brain Age is really cute.
121. I still remember how pleased I was when my mother picked me up from preschool, and I told her about the finger painting we had done, and she smiled at me.
122. I think I more enjoy playing cards when I'm not winning, which is quite the good fortune considering the circumstances.
123. The sunset today was maybe even more gorgeous than usual. If it had been a flavor, it would have been... whatever flavor is best described as a spot of gold within a bright, warm magenta set on a perfect backdrop of purples and blues, chalky in texture but smooth and clean and full of sunny, gushing, scintillating life.

3/03/2007

It was Seymour, actually

I was driving home for spring break, and I felt like a failure. To quote Rabbit: "My mornings are just not complete without at least one major catastrophe." I had wanted a nice day, the kind full of nonevents issuing soundlessly from a conveyer belt.

And then the person in front of me hit his brakes, and I did wild circles across two lanes of traffic. Somebody honked. I found myself in a ditch, somehow very alive, uninjured, and in such utter disbelief that I couldn't even be mad at myself.

And then I was standing outside looking at the wheels on my car, the mud and the snow, at people groaning as they passed, men emerging from tow trucks, police officers raising their eyebrows at me. And I was on my cell phone, talking to a new person every twenty minutes. I was scouring the map for "Nichol", "Bristol" and "Seymour", taking notes about where exactly I might be, adding insurance papers and phone numbers to the impossible mess in the passenger seat. I was sighing and huffing and making low growls.

Over an hour passed, and I was asking God to just be there, and I was wringing my hands in despair-- when suddenly I noticed the warmth of my hands and remembered how Brayden would clutch my finger. I remembered how he trusts the people who love him.

And I was okay.

2/27/2007

Snowflakes keep falling on my head

101. Priston's crush on Courtney is really funny, as is Courtney writhing in feigned terror.
102. Shalmar reminds me of Sharon Binkerd. A lot.
103. I enjoy Kelly's lists.
104. Elaine cooked for us. Those green beans were remarkable.
105. My family seem to like me for some reason.
106. I think I sort of understand, now, how adults feel when they return to their parents' houses.
107. Even though Kelly long ago removed her scarves from the lamp in our room, one of the (five) lights is still pathological.
108. Mrs Reddick really cares about people.
109. The last time I saw him before driving to Michigan in August 2006, Dad cried.
110. Falling snow is so pretty.

2/23/2007

Food of the gods

87. I really, really like oranges. When eating one, I almost believe I'm eating ambrosia, or nectar, whichever one is the solid and not the liquid, you know.
88. I have my hearing and my vision can be corrected with contacts.
89. Nails or no nails, or an annoying combination of both, I have ten fingers.
90. Chioma has a unique way of phrasing things. (It tends to be very funny.)
91. Dr Keller always smiles at me from his seat when I'm entering or leaving assembly, even when I'm too frazzled to properly acknowledge him.
92. Kelly usually has to talk herself into getting out of the bed to brush her teeth before she goes to sleep.
93. I'm going to see Barry again.
94. Jeeves books are so funny.
95. Water is so yummy.
96. Jason calls Jenny "Spanky".
97. Courtney braided Kelly's hair.
98. Courtney capitalizes the most random words.
99. I like watching plays.
100. Jeremy lets me sit upside down on the recliner in his room.

By this

John 13:35   By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.

I recall a time when this was easier to obey. Not that I had the beast mastered. But I didn't try to establish my devotion through Word and Deed of Astonishing Maturity. I had not yet learned to comfort myself with a plan to Do Something with My Life. I had a healthy interest in Having Friends, and a greater interest in Being a Friend. I felt it was important to talk with God before I left, while in the car, upon arrival, and at rough spots along the way-- and by "felt it was important", I mean that I generally did it, however poorly. I wanted to love better.

I'm not a different person now. I love better than ever, in some ways. I've just become... more watered down, submerged in other things. Not growing so fast. I guess there will be times when I'm slower than others. But I don't ever want to stop.

2/21/2007

Memory #10

I think I entered a new stage in the process of maturity around the time I was ten. It was the winter after fifth grade, and I was at Crystal's house.

Her brothers and... some adult (her family were a little too complicated for my understanding)... were watching Beavis and Butthead on TV. I wasn't interested in the show. I really wasn't.

I felt a little self-righteous about it.

I knew it was rotten for me to feel that way at all. Imagine that a man, standing on the back end of the Titanic, looked down at all those poor, waterborne souls with pity. Imagine he felt another lurch beneath his feet, and imagine it drew his attention elsewhere.

It's the first time in memory that I was tempted to judge, and it's the first time I took responsibility for changing the way I was thinking.

2/20/2007

CRIMIDA

Confessions Ranging from Innocuous to Moderately Incriminating, Depending on the Audience:

Some days I just wake up really apathetic.

When I'm watching a movie, and a chase scene or a fight scene begins, I invariably stop paying attention and don't even realize it until the scene is over.

I am concerned about global warming. About 30% of this is benevolence, but about 70% of it is a preference for cold weather.

I usually hate adrenaline rushes, but not the kind I get from music with a heavy beat.

I keep quiet about random things because I feel, vaguely, that it gives me leverage.

Sometimes, when I have an itch, I purposely keep myself from scratching it.

I am, in fact, very attracted to the stereotypical butler/valet.

Beginning with a frightening magazine article when I was nine, lots of adolescent thought was devoted to the future avoidance of gynecologists.

I hate being blamed for something, especially if it is my fault.

2/15/2007

Disclosure

Column standing silent, still
Too magnificent to reach
One string waiting to be seized
To begin unravelling
Miles waiting to descend
Ribbons to the ground beneath
Leaves that loosen in the wind
Graves that wait to take them in

2/14/2007

Memory #9

I was seven or barely eight. I have no memory in my mind of the movie itself, just the clearest portrait of the view from my seat. The theatre was almost empty; the lights had just gone out. We were settled in the second- or third-highest row, to avoid the straining of the neck and bursting of the ear. I in the second seat left from the center aisle. My mother to my left, quite a head taller. A slight dip down again to the face of my grandmother, who was probably lamenting the effects of the cold on eight-year-old children. My mom was probably waiting for things to really begin before she revealed snacks in plastic bags from the smuggling depths of her purse. They were talking about something and, peering at them through the dark, I would never figure out what it was. They continued to generate wonderful effortless warmth, as always. It was perfect.

2/08/2007

To my family

Rock
Paper
Scissors
Bomb
My world has a shape in the lines of your palm
Lines curling up in the crux of your thumb
We
Are
Some
One

Toilet brush

Courtney rinsed the poop brush in our sink.

...In our sink.

...The poop brush.

...Sink.

...Poop brush.

...Sink.

...Poop...


Yeah.

As the truth (giving new birth to the phrase "stranger than fiction"!) sank into my mind, my throat began to constrict excruciatingly. It finally closed in on itself with an unprecedented force such that it shattered and fell into my stomach.

2/06/2007

Pinnacle

A human being is a kind of pinnacle, is he not? Miniscule details. Lips. Legs. Arms. Fingers. Face. Soul. Whole. Always the one who stands out in a picture, no matter how small, like a furious little storm in space. Rocks, flowers, animals begin and end their passive lives in near-blindness. But at any given time, a man never does any less than he always does, even when he's doing nothing but sitting and talking with his friend. Even when he's alone, he's not. The second most intensely beautiful thing God ever did, as far as I know.

Memory #8

I always felt displaced in Ben Wash's house, like nobody actually lived there, even when one of his kids had a birthday with a pinĂ£ta downstairs, which should have clinched it for me.

One room once contained a very large portrait of two tigers, and if I remember correctly, it was propped against the wall. There were a couple of rooms into which I never ventured, which, in my experience, were kept dark. I was wary of them, and I wasn't allowed in one of them anyway.

Two big dalmatians were fenced into the back yard, behind the kitchen, and they always barked at me. I usually avoided the kitchen.

Bria taught me how to play a board game that originated in Africa, I think; it had little colored stones that you moved among compartments on the board.

Tabitha (who couldn't have been older than ten) had a Britney Spears cd and Ben made a sarcastic comment about how wholesome it was for her. I remember thinking, "You're one to talk."

He made us pasta once, for dinner. For some reason (and what follows is simply my thought at the time) it seemed surprising that someone so tall and thin, and so immature, could do something so parental as making a meal. Go figure.

One conversation sticks out in my mind, I guess because it startled me so much. I hadn't been to the house in a while. I sat down on one of the kids' bed and was talking to Bria when Ben walked in. He stood a couple of feet away and gave me a funny look.

"Who's this?"

Bria filled him in. "Amanda. You remember? She came over a few times before."

A pause. He stepped back and raised his eyebrows.

"...The Amanda? The girl with the ponytail-- that Amanda?"

It took me about three seconds to get it. Trying to hide my revulsion, I stared at him dryly.

He fake-laughed and said in a patronizing tone, "Oh, God, don't be scared. I'm not that sick."

As a thirteen-year-old, I had lofty dreams of converting Ben-- mostly through indirect, almost subliminal means such as cleverly worded Christian cds, because I knew I couldn't hold up my end of an argument with him. But whenever I actually stepped inside, all my fervor dissolved into bewilderment. He made half-jokes that I had surely heard terrible lies about him. He must've really thought I was horrified in his presence. I wasn't. I told him I wasn't. But I was sad.

Memory #7

I was up "late" one night (late would be around one in the morning when I was around ten or eleven) at Dad's house, and everyone else was asleep except Dad, who was somewhere in the back, working. None of the lights were on in the living room. I was sitting on the ground in front of the TV.

Dad had cable. I never had cable at home.

I turned on the television and started scanning the channels. Gave a couple of seconds of attention to each channel, but nothing held my interest. A cartoon I'd never seen, some movies nobody will ever remember, the news, a variety of equally boring talk shows.

I passed channel 100 and eventually landed on the Howard Stern show. He had two female guests and was talking and joking about their boobs. I was intrigued-- not by boobs, but by this guy with the hair and the headphones and no tact, and by the forbidden aspect of it all. Not quite half a minute in, my guilt overcame me and I turned off the TV.

Memory #6

I went to Dad's baseball games a couple of times. Once it was in the early evening, and once it was at night. The whole thing feels surreal and isolated because, to a little kid, the immediate surroundings were the only surroundings: the patchy and appealing face of a tiny hill; the smell of dirt and wet grass; the sickly halos of ten or twelve lights high in the air.

For a couple of minutes, once, I stood and tried to figure out what was happening in the game, but was baffled and quickly abandoned it.

I remember making a necklace from dandelions. Must have learned that from Jenny. I also liked to sneak around beneath the bleachers, which were the bare metal kind used outdoors, and were always a bit cold to the touch.

I felt so very by myself, like no one was watching me or telling me what to do (and I guess they often weren't), almost like no one was there except me. I was a little lonely, but I kind of liked it.

Memory #5

I used to make mud pies and mud cubes and other mud things with Shelby, who was my neighbor (to the right, or south) at the time.

I was thrilled that she had a huge play structure in a sandbox. I liked mine, but it was smaller and set on the grass. It was also older, and seemed to house a lot of insects.

The swings were meant for swinging and singing, for participating in how-high-can-you-get contests, and occasionally for reciting Disney movies. We twisted the chains around so much that their blue plastic covers ripped open, and we had to be careful not to get our fingers pinched in the links. Once when I was swinging high on the middle swing, the right chain snapped. I fell backward. That didn't do much damage, but it scared the heck out of me.

The vast expanse of sand was for burying things at first. My other neighbors' cat (to the left side) found a similar use for it, and eventually enough hard, old poop accumulated in the sand that we stopped digging.

We used the slide for everything but its intended purpose-- sat under it, buried things under it, dropped a variety of things down it, and so on. It was often coated in rainwater.

The "fort" part was a great place to sit and feel exclusive. It was especially convenient for secret snacks, such as raspberries that grew on the fence behind the sandbox. Technically the bush belonged to the other neighbors (to the back). We felt justified in eating its fruit, though, when we were told we couldn't have cookies because dinner was approaching.

I once told Emily, Shelby's little sister, that we wouldn't let Shelby "ruin our day" (she was being grumpy). She overheard me and I felt kind of bad, went inside later and told my mother, who told me I could have shown more benevolence. I felt even worse then, and I think I tried to make it up to her in kind gestures, but I never apologized.

We used to play tag a lot. Hide-and-go-seek was also really fun because there were so many places to hide: all around their big house, and behind trees, and around the shed, even inside it. We rode bikes and in the summer we watched for the boys across the road, when they stayed with their grandparents. The younger one, Duke, cried frequently. His grandma yelled at him even more frequently. I didn't respect her much, although I didn't show it.

Shelby's dad would stand outside after work and smoke. I remember his moustache and his voice. Kind of gruff, but not especially deep or scary. He was a nice guy, as far as I could tell; and I liked Denise, Shelby's mom, although she was rather tall and intimidating. When they divorced, I felt miserable for their kids. The dad moved out, and the others moved away a year or two afterward.

Memory #4

During the first semester in Rochester, I was lost for maybe twenty minutes before I finally scrapped my self-importance and stopped at a gas station. The cashier was Middle Eastern; he gave me perfect directions with an accent. I was almost pleased I'd got lost.

Memory #3

One Christmas, when the tree was in the living room, Justin started to talk about the possibility of sleeping under it. I was about six, and once the idea was in my head, I couldn't let it go. With some pestering we got permission from our mother. Jenny (about fifteen then) only stayed under the tree for a while, and I felt a fair amount of distress when she got up to go sleep in her bed, but the feeling passed.

All I could see from the floor were those convincing plastic tree branches in the dark, and dangling ornaments (half of them our own creations), all glowing with the light of a hundred little blue and green stars. My favorite ornament, a trio of iridescent glass bells, hung close to the bottom of the tree. I played with it before I fell asleep. I didn't think things could get much better.

Memory #2

When I was around twelve I heard a new name on television, and I skated into the kitchen on my socks, where my mother was stirring something in the brownish-tinted glass pot on the stove. "Who's Marilyn Manson?" I asked. Her expression of pain almost made me sorry I'd brought it up.

Memory #1

At Lindsey's house we played Nintendo games like Donkey Kong-- well, more like I watched Lindsey and Tyler play them, because I was a terrible player myself.

And then there was Rickers, which was a lot closer to her house than to mine. We'd scrounge for change to get food there.

Her garage felt secluded and a little frightening, the walls were partially covered in bare insulation material, and it was usually cold in the winter, but it was worth staying in there just to consume our food in privacy. And the computer was in the garage, and that meant Photo Safari, Mudball Wall, Stickerworld, and made-up games in Microsoft Paint and Word.

I distinctly remember, one afternoon, playing the Life game in the dim clutter of her room (she had a lot of knickknacks, many of them cat-related, and posters and pages torn from magazines, mostly of the Backstreet Boys). I would act embarrassed and make jokes if I ended up with a lot of the tiny blue and pink plastic pegs which represented children... but inwardly I was pleased with the idea. I definitely wanted to be a mom someday.

Sometimes we'd go outside until it got dark, and anywhere from one to four of the neighborhood kids would come out and we'd use chalk and play games on the street.

Once when it was snowy I threw a snowball toward a car, not meaning to hit it at all, but kind of experimenting with my own audacity. It brushed the back wheel on the right and rolled down the street. The driver backed up (a messy task in that weather) to tell me off, and I just kind of looked at him. I don't remember anything he said, because I didn't care much. After that one of the girls went home and told her mom, and the next time I went to that girl's house to meet her and Lindsey, their heads appeared at the door and told me I wasn't allowed to come in. That felt scummy.

I think it was the next year that Lindsey told me her winter gloves were always coming apart and her dad wouldn't buy her new ones, so I bought her some at Kohl's.

2/04/2007

Yeah, no

When I was 6, people thought I was obedient, when actually I was usually oblivious to other options.

When I was 7, people thought I was gifted, when actually I was weird crap.

When I was 8, people thought I was unmotivated, when actually I was forbidden to work ahead.

When I was 9, people thought I was sleeping like I'd been told, when actually I was reading under the covers with a booklight.

When I was 9, people thought I was interested in drawing aliens, when actually I was interested in Jeff Romelsbacher, who was interested in drawings of aliens.

When I was 9, people thought I was drawing a blank at the spelling bee, when actually I was hard of hearing already.

When I was 10, people thought I was deep in thought, when actually I was staring blankly at the teacher.

When I was 10, people thought I was messy, when actually I was ...not? what the heck.

When I was 10, people thought I was finding a dropped pencil, when actually I was searching inside the bus seat for makeup.

When I was 11, people thought I was reading schoolbooks while reclining, when actually I was sleeping with my head propped up on my fists.

1/26/2007

On purses

Tonight Courtney reminded me of freshman year, when I started out still carrying my purse around all the time. And at the time, I liked it a lot. I didn't even feel complete without it oh MAN DO I HAVE TO RETYPE EVERY WORD WITH AN "H" IN IT AND WHAT EXACTLY GOT UNDER THIS KEY?

Anyway. Looking back, I know that that purse was cumbersome, unnecessary, inefficient; it restricted my movement, my lifestyle. And for better or worse, the sad fact is that I don't love it anymore.

This is not an ethical issue for others to judge. This is part of my life, and in my life I am glad to have moved on. Maybe someday I'll settle down with another purse that meets my needs. In the time being, I'm happy with a cheap wallet.

Stuck!

Driving the interstate on my way back to Michigan this year, I came across one of the species that could be called the law-abiding train-- recognizable by the police car embedded in the midst of several normal ones. This particular one travelled at about sixty-four miles an hour. (The speed limit was seventy.)

I couldn't really get to the alarm clock stuffed into a laundry bag in my back seat, but I had an idea of the time, and I was already running late.

I have passed police car trains at perfectly legal speeds.

"I'm gonna pass this thing," I said to myself. "See ya."

Well, I would have done exactly that... before. Before the first pull-over and probably even after it. But probably not after the third one and definitely not the fourth.

I couldn't do it.

I'm losing my edge.

Seen and unforseen

Early January: In a discussion over the kitchen table with Dad and Marty, I revealed that I had flunked an English class. That is pretty flammable material. My revelation was deliberate, if not... planned, and I'm very pleased to say that I wasn't afraid of their reactions at all.

Dad actually surprised me. As I'd predicted, he couldn't help but get in a little dig by the end of the night, but I think he sees me as more human since coming into such knowledge. I think his mild distaste was combined with a new warmth.

I guess there are other ways I could have shown him I'm human, such as dismantling my torso and handing him my organs, but I see elements there that might distract from the main point.

1/17/2007

Gold in the clay

Not sure if it matters
But you're still magnetic
When your pieces are scattered
And have no direction
It must be the way
Of the stuff you're comprised of
Like gold in the clay
When it loses its shine
Love is diseased

1/01/2007

Erythraeum

Seven shadows grim and tall
Grow and focus on the wall of
Water sculpted in the sky
Thicker than our blood

If creatures breach the fluid dam
And in the ancient cradle land
Clay will fill the vacant eyes
Bones lie in the mud

Turn the fevered wails to ash
God, the demon faces laugh
Stitched with cravings of our past
Vomiting our grime

To our backs the sun erupts
Scalds a name into the dust
Were our faces not our masks
We could see it climb

Mottled clouds of frosty black
Of what we carried on our backs
Our captors' monuments and tombs
A stranger's barren spires

Will we hold the children's hands
Turn in feeble trust again
Feel the rush of light consume
Flood our eyes with fire