Posts Tagged growing up

’cause you got a good thing going baby

sleepy eyed

Another semi-eventful weekend has passed by. There are four or so weeks left in the semester. Every day I feel a little more like a completely different person than the person last fall, all giddy to be moving into my big old room in far east.

I left dinner tonight with a mild smirk on my face, with a biting, “I’m a beast!”

rusty metal

We (Z. and I) wandered around the Shenandoah rd. factories, took pictures of old cars and rusty metal. It’s weird doing old things with new people. I grew up taking long drives with my dad into farm country where people would leave their 1950s chrome-edged restoration projects by the side of the road, and we’d take pictures with his behemoth 1st generation digital camera.

I stood up for myself in a new way this evening, I feel as though I say something like this every night, but it’s fun to recount what small victories I make these days. I spent last night mutually bitching with an acquaintance over the injustices of the world, how Hollins is often like a middle-school and people need to grow up sometimes.

one of my favorite photos of zachary

I wish that I could say it all to them, though it now remains as unfinished letters in this journal. I’d like to say that “you didn’t win,” and “I know all about how you operate (because I have more friends than you think),” — mostly I wish that I could say that “I am happy where I am, and people can discern between that and people with bitter vendettas.”

I took the photo of Z. in the fading light at Mill Mountain; I’ve spent a few nights there now recounting what used to be a nightly ritual. Again, it comes down to old traditions with new people, and how it feels like upgrading from the beta to the new version.

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in your heart there’s a spark that just screams

Today has been interesting, a nice day to say the least. I spent the morning at the writing center, then posed for some portrait photography for this senior’s photography thesis or something. It was certainly an interesting experience, having never been asked to model before. I had this distinct feeling of, well, not dejavu per se, but you see I was clutching a fur coat around my neck, my hair somewhat teased, with a relaxed look on my face. I felt like my great grandmother posing in some portrait. I felt old and young at the same time. It helped that the camera a modern version of a very old accordion-looking camera. The kind where you use a blackened sheet to keep out the light.

I hope they come out well.

Then I had a lovely lunch with El. Without delving too much into a romantic image (which is to say this is NOT romantic) she’s the first friend I’ve felt safe around in a while. Z. noted that I have recently begun to be distrustful of all of my close friends, pointing out when they have asked me for rides as if it is some proof that they’re only using me for my resources, for my push-over nature.

Later, as fate would have it, I wound up visiting M. at his new and stole music (amicably, of course) from his impressive 200gb collection.

And now I am laying in wait for Z. to come visit me for the weekend (back to consistency, I like it.) He’s taking a different route, so we’ll see if it’s faster. Instead of the normal 421 to 77 to 81, he’s going through Tennessee.

We’ll get IHOP with El. tonight after her shift. We’ll watch tv-on-dvd and sleep and enjoy how spring is overtaking the campus.

I plucked a pinkish seed pod from a tree as I walked back to Main from my car, tucked it in my thrifted 1939 copy of Anna Karenina that I need to read (it has watercolor illustrations!) I’ve felt in a vintage (19th c.) mood today.

One of the album’s that M. gave me was one I’d already heard a lot at home: Matthew Sweet – Girlfriend. What a brilliant album. There are a few albums and songs that give me vivid memories of home, anything by The Church, The Hollies Greatest Hits, Hanson – This Time Around (little known facts: they’re still around, they’ve done other songs than MMMBop, they are all married, they are all in their twenties, how about that!), The Moody Blues – whatever album Nights in White Satin is on, the Left Banke’s Walk Away Renee.

There is this one album that I put on my iPod, Anisa Angarola’s Irish Air’s & Dances, that my dad would play at EVERY. SINGLE. dinner party we’d have at the house. It’s so weird how the mind works, how memory will pull up a very specific image (my dining room before being redone, egg-shell linoleum floors and a giant 1970’s cylindrical chandelier that rarely ever worked right) and scent (garlicky dinners, Italian bread being toasted in the oven).

Well, M. also gave me a Tullycraft compendium which made the inner twee kid squeal. I saw them at Athens Pop Fest ‘07, heard them first in M.’s car as we drove down to Floyd for no apparent reason but to shoot the breeze, watch the sun set, cut slick down a mountain side where Virginia was tucked neatly and glittering into a valley.

Time has progressed since I began this entry. Z. gets closer and closer to Roanoke, and I find myself unable to clean up the room. I’ll greet him in my pajamas, it’s ok.

Did you know I can type 79 wpm? I learned this morning. Fascinating stuff.

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Protected: we’ll forget for a moment we got tired of life (another screenplay idea)

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this is life, and everything’s alright

Oh, why didn’t they tell me at birth, all prune-skin and piercing scream (I was the loudest in the maternity ward they said, a little foreshadowing for you,) that life would be difficult.

Some of my earliest memories are silly games, movies about dinosaurs and sing alongs, finger food, play doh, swing sets, infinite back yards, recess, all of these innocent moments that I miss so much. The clink of summer rec baseball bats hitting tee-balls. The smell of wet grass, the feel of mud in the creek, collecting tadpoles from fields of puddles after a long rain.

Some Sunday afternoons we would go to Fisher’s Bakery in Ellicott City and have donuts. Sometimes we’d just take a long drive to get me to sleep and stop screaming. Sometimes we’d go feed the ducks, though they had been spoiled early on by people who brought cake and pastries; no ducks wanted our wonder bread.

The first time I had Wonder Bread actually was at my own seventh birthday party; it was Victorian themed so I don’t actually know why Wonder Bread was involved. We all made little boxes with Victorian clip art, line drawings of cupid-lipped women with pin-curls and laced bodices. We had tea with sugar-cubes (another first, I stole more than were humanly necessary) and small sandwiches (perhaps this is where Wonder Bread came into play?)

I asked for it repeatedly after that, now bored of the usual wheat-bread and potato-bread fare. We never got it again though after that party, my dad preferred the family to stay away from white foods, and not in a crazy OCD way but more in a “my generation was the white-food generation.”

I don’t know where these tangents are going. Personally I’ve felt overwhelmed lately, school and travel and internship hunt and doctors and doctors and doctors. Driving takes a toll; my room is still mostly unpacked because I’m never there. The building smelled like a skunk in a chemical fire this morning, I’ve heard stories of students getting sick because of it.

I really miss home now, I’ve been looking at some Baltimore-based internships with the vague notion of scraping together a last summer with the bffs (best friends forever, lest you not speak Hollins-speak) before we all part ways for our wide variety of lives ahead of us. It’s almost devastating to think of the prospect of living through postcards and emails, those newsletter like family updates. That’s what we’re all doing, forming families and units of our own, and moving outward like starbursts from this little section of Baltimore.

I’ll be moving to the (people’s republic of) Chapel Hill after Hollins, this much has been decided. Who knows where everyone else will go.

I have a love-hate relationship with my computer class, taken out of desperation to get out of an econ class that I would undoubtedly fail. The semester is already overwhelming the first few weeks in; I can say with confidence my favorite things about school now lie mostly in the Writing Center. I feel my best when I’m tutoring, engaging students in conversation about stylistic choices, about “have you thought about this,” and “what if you put this here,” and all the tips, tricks, and mnemonics in between.

So I now am seriously considering teaching as a profession, though not on the collegiate path. I’ve thought maybe elementary level, but then again that’s so much foundation building and bureaucracy; from my few ventures back to high-school I’ve found connecting with the students is not as hard as I’d think.

In fact, I received an email yesterday saying that a certain advanced-creative-writing student had commented on my visits, listing me as who he thought to be the most talented of the alumni poets to come and read. The comment, an aside added to the end of an email, made such a phenomenally awful day so much better.

/end ego, insert abrupt ending.

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city living (from saturday)

It’s always nice to go back to Baltimore for the weekend, to have the niceties of home like free laundry and delicious food. My bed here is 2x the bed at school, and 10x as soft. But it’s also nice to know I have a car and a five hour drive to get me back to some semblance of independence, not being hawked for what I do.

The difficult thing is this: parents always want to shield you from mistakes. They look at your life with this sort of ‘I-can-see-the-future” power granted only to those who have had children, and tell you that the biggest dream you’re working towards is not going to work out so “why don’t you just wait.”

I don’t know whether to be mad or not, I vaguely knew that my parents would react this way: feign some sort of surprise and excitement and then in the wake of the novelty of it, try to talk me out of it. It’s unfortunate, because it’s something they should be happy about; and it’s almost worse to see them play the happy role before reverting back to, “what’s the rush?”

And I completely understand the question what’s the rush, it’s the most cliche question when your son or daughter presents the idea. But to not understand when they in turn reply, “There is no rush, but this is when I am going to do it,” I don’t understand.

Well, that’s enough soap opera drama for one entry. I meant to do a photographic representation of my day, but it was cold and rainy and gross and I don’t want to take pictures of grey skies.

So instead I leave you with this, found from the weekly feed of Postsecret

That sort of killed me emotionally; it’s deserving of a poem but I have to go get some bagels before I decide when to leave Baltimore.

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