9.20.2013

Dear Irony: Whatever You Are

It's been 10 years so I think it's finally ok to say: I don't get irony.  I don't understand the modern use of "irony" and all its social relevance/volume.  I don't get what it means when someone says something is ironic, I'm confused about how an entire person can be ironic, am in the dark as to why someone only "likes" something "ironically", and feel totally lost when I get called out for doing something based on its irony.  And I am mostly confused on this last point because as I mentioned from the jump, I can't possibly be doing something to be intentionally ironic if I don't even know what the application of irony is.

When I was 12 Alanis Morissette released "Ironic" and I thought I understood what that song was about.  She lists maybe 40 examples of irony so it makes it pretty easy to get.  Plus, I listened to "Jagged Little Pill" so very regularly, so I was truly familiar with the ins and outs of her ironic tales.  Ten thousand spoons when all you need is a knife = irony.  You're like "so many spoons and it's totally the wrong utensil!".  So.  Irony.  Man finally boards plane after years of fearing air travel and then dies in said plane when it crashes.  Sad.  Ironic.  And so on and so forth.  You were probably there.  You remember.  You likely also played pretend with your closest friends about who was which Alanis personality ridding around in that car (I was the squirmy dancy one in the back seat who eats some kind of snack she finds in her hair).  Many years later, around the time "irony" made its serious debut into my life, people started remarking about this song "none of it is ironic.  It's all just unfortunate coincidence".

I'm not stupid but I guess I figured Alanis Morissette wouldn't go around writing multi-plaitnum hits wrought with mis-information.  Too trusting? Perhaps.  Our bad, Alanis.

I distinctly remember my first experience with "new" or "cultural" irony.  It was 2003, I was 20 years old and in college.  There was a dance party in someone's room (as was the regular occurrence) and it was hot, loud, and full of good times.  Someone was rotating through songs on a playlist and they were coming--hit after hit--making us all cheer and sing along like partying in a tiny room was something we had invented.  A song ended.  The next song came on.  It was Phil Collins.  People started mildly bopping around but I, in my bald and joyful sincerity, turned to my friend and shouted "YEAAAAAHHHH! I LOVE PHIL COLLINS!".  My friend replied in the most casual of ways "Me too, but only ironically!".

What followed was a moment I have experienced thousands of times since then.  There was a look passed to me that wanted to know if I, too, was in on the irony.  It was a test with a silent question who's answer predicted everything that mattered about me in the social hierarchy.  That one answer would determine if I "got it" and was therefore cool enough to be cool, or if I didn't because presumably I was a dweeb who didn't know anything about cutting the edge of the cutting edge and should be left to eat alone at meals.  I failed the test that night.  Having been in this situation for the first time I was confused and shouted back "Cool!" and continued dancing.  Over time I learned that a new, mysterious movement was underway and as a means of hiding my embarrassing stupidity about what irony actually was, I started agreeing that I too liked things ironically.  I did this for some years, never knowing exactly why we were saying it.

Another conversation, later, when I got bold enough to ask someone more about this "ironic" phenomenon.
Them: "So, take Journey [the band]."
Me: "ok."
Them: "You like Journey, right?"
Me: "Yeah."
Them: "But you don't actually like them."
Me: "Yes I do."
Them: "No, you don't.  You like them because it's ironic."
Me: "I like them because I think their music is good."
Them: "No, you like them because it's ridiculous and you don't actually like them, but you just like listening to them because it's hilarious and ironic."

And that was about the best explanation I ever got on the matter.  I like something because it's funny and I will spend my time doing/using/listening to this thing but not at all because I actually like it or believe in it.  In fact, I don't really like it at all.  I like not liking it and putting on a show of how much I fake like it.

HUH?

I will be totally honest that for years of my young twenties I stayed silent about things like this because assimilation mattered to me, acceptance was important, and I was insecure about not "getting" something that my peers seemed to be so in on.  But now that I'm older and I don't give a shit about all that I'm going to come right out and say that that seems fucking RIDICULOUS to me.

We are a generation of people who made it our jobs to go around fake liking things, and essentially filled our lives full of stuff that didn't matter to us at all? Why would anyone do this? Isn't this just the grossest misuse of time?  Aren't you just playing a joke mostly on yourself for being so wrapped up in things you don't care for? Furthermore, how can you even distinguish between what you like and what you like "ironically" when the two occupy your life to the seemingly same capacity?  I'm still confused on this.  My survival strategy through the first few years was to continue liking whatever I liked but say that I liked it ironically when someone asked and that was the "correct response". In the following few years I replied with things like "who cares" and "whatever, man".  And finally, in the last few years I have gotten far enough away from it that it really doesn't come up all that often, but when it does I just ask "how is that ironic?".

I'm 30 and I don't get it.  Everything I do I do because I actually believe in it.  I listen to the music I do because it feels good and I enjoy it.  I wear the clothes I wear because fashion is the funnest thing and whatever I'm wearing is my actual, genuine, whole-hearted taste in fashion.  I have no idea why someone would waste their time doing otherwise.  But irony, being so lumped in with the also ever-confusing culture of hipsterdom, is expected somehow of people who like cartoon t-shirts and Baz Lurhman songs.  People now just assume I am in it for the irony. And I guess what bothers me the most about that is that I have no defense against it because I am, as I already said, confused by what it means.

Irony, according to dictionary.com (ultimate source, of course) is "the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning". Ok, I get that, kind of.  It's sarcasm essentially.  Sarcasm is fun, sarcasm has it's place.  "OK," I'm thinking, "maybe I do understand irony.".  I read about it on the internet.  I discuss it with others.  It seems hard to nail down but essentially comes back to being a large, social form of sarcasm.  Leading me to believe:

Irony is a safeguard against bullying and criticism.  It's a defense so no one makes fun of you for liking what you like.  People who are genuine are the most vulnerable to alienation, being the receiving end of a joke, scorn, and torment.  Irony makes you impenetrable.

Am I right, people? If all you dudes with your funky mustaches say you do it ironically because you fear being mocked, I urge you put down your pithy shield of irony and just come right out and believe in your funky mustache! If you are into drinking Fresca because it is a delicious and refreshing beverage I, for one, WILL NOT make fun of you for doing so.  I will say "Yes! Right on! You are allowed to do that sincerely, because you are a human being with feelings and choices to make!".  Tattooed adult ladies who like Taylor Swift can parade this as honestly as they please, because it does not make them less hip at the rock show or professional in the workplace, it just also means they enjoy sweet songs about puberty and heartbreak. (thank you, all the adult ladies) AND ANOTHER THING, asshole sitting at my bar, I wear overalls because I like them and have been wearing them literally since I had legs long enough for Osh Kosh and NO I don't at all get why that is ironic because "people in Portland are doing it or whatever", I'm pretty sure I do it with sincerity because my love of wearing overalls is sincere!


My dad told me I look cute.



Am I wrong?  Is irony not, in fact, a safeguard as I presume it is?  Is it another thing entirely? If it is then someone please explain it to me.  

We are all adults here.  People should feel brave enough to like what they like and be who they are, and people should remember if they are being taunted for it then the bully likely has some insecurities of their own.  
You do you.  

A couple of months ago I told a friend about a tattoo I wanted.  This friend is one of the coolest people I know so I was nervous to get her opinion.  "I'm thinking...would it be neat if I got a tattoo that just said 'sincerity forever' or would that be too dorky?" My face did the thing where everything squeezes together and I brace myself for laughter and eye rolling.  She presented me with a giant, full toothed smile and replied "I love that.  It's like, the most you tattoo there is.".

So there you have it.  Sincere sometimes despite myself.  Sincere because I don't really know how else to be.  I tried other ways: it sucked.  You can be sincere and be funny.  You can be sincere and be sharp.  You can be sincere and laugh at yourself.  You can be sincere and still use sarcasm.  You can be sincere and wear bart simpson shirts (I'm doing it right now).  You can be sincere and like Journey.  And if you ever feel alone in that, just remember I'm out here flapping in the breeze, too.  

8.27.2013

Dear self: we are who we are.

Pop, by Carlee 2013


My father inherited his paper collecting / memory hoarding from my grandmother, and I have, in turn, inherited it from him.  Memory hoarding is a McManus legacy.   One major component to memory hoarding is the keeping of papers.  Many kinds of papers.  School papers, news articles, cartoons, bills, and most importantly, letters.  Saving letters is something that a lot of people do, including my father and I.  If ever anyone wants to publish the notes passed back and forth in my high school years, I have them all.  It would likely make a boring and hard to understand book.

Anyway, the point is that when my father comes to stay with me he brings some of his boxes of papers, and occasionally sifts through them, like he did this morning.  What he found was a four page letter I typed to him in the spring of 2006, when I was 22 and still in college.  Attached to it was his hand written response, which neither of us is sure he ever sent to me.  He brought this finding up to me during lunch while we were eating cheeseburgers (if I was concerned about judgments on our health I would say this is a rare occurrence, but the truth is that the cheeseburger thing happens all the time).  He told me he re-read them and laughed and it made him feel happy.  He told me it was interesting the things that we talked about in that correspondence, and how we are still talking about many of those things today.  Before he went to go buy stamps he brought the letters to me and told me I should read them.

Because I'm mostly interested in how great slash terrible of a writer I was, I started with my letter.  I read about three sentences, started to cry, scanned the rest of the letter and cried some more.  Likely this fact surprises no one. I cry often.  We all get it: I have feelings.  But what made me cry on this occasion was the surprise I felt over what was said.  My father was right.  We have the same conversations today that we were having eight years ago.

Not only are we discussing the same things, but my revelations/feelings/struggles/social commentary is almost to-the-letter the same.  The EXACT same, you guys.

--I love Bruce Hornsby and that maybe isn't very cool, but I don't care who knows it.  Bruce Hornsby is great!
--Tried exercising a couple of times.  Maybe I finally like it now.  I think I will start being a person who exercises!
--I don't understand what kind of performer I am, what kind I'm supposed to be, or what kind I want to be.
--Discovering your parents are just regular people who don't have the answers to everything is hard.
--Adulthood is mysterious and weird and hard.
--Death is terrifying and grieving the loss of people you love is hard.
--I can never fall asleep.  Sleeping is hard.
--Trying to spend time by myself and enjoy it. I feel like I'm missing out on things, so it's hard.
--Change is hard, even when it's right.
--Fleetwood Mac and Ryan Adams blah blah blah.
--Dogs.

It's been almost a decade and I am STILL making declarations about how I love Bruce Hornsby.  Still.  Time to put that one to bed.

What was surprising was not only that the subject matter is still relevant, but that the "discoveries" I seem to have as the years go by are essentially the same discovery over and over again.  I am STILL trying to figure out how to enjoy exercising and every time I do it once or twice I'm like "maybe now is the time!".  I am STILL processing that parents are flawed humans just like everyone else and there is no such thing as "having all the answers".  I am still blown away, everyday, by something about growing up.  I am still battling with sleep and hoping for change.  I am still working through the labyrinth of death and loss and mortality and will likely be forever. And on and on and on.  You get it.  I am still obsessed with dogs, y'all.

I suppose I could feel disappointed that I have continued to learn about the same things in new ways over the last decade.  I could feel like my life is a boring mass of the same issues I just can't figure out and NOBODY LIKES RYAN ADAMS ANYMORE, CARLEE.  I could feel like a loser for not moving on yet.

But in fact, I feel a little impressed.  That after all this time I have been on a more focused journey than I realized.  That I have questions and obstacles and passions, and those things are parts of who I am, not just something I invented last week.  That I have changed so much but am still so much the same.  I am who I am but I am different.  That I guess there is a story I am telling with my life, and the memory hoarding proves it.  Also, ancillary bonus, I am a better writer--less enthusiastic but better.

In my father's response was the reflection of the man he is today.  The same passions, questions, obstacles, declarations of purpose, votes of confidence in his daughter.  The same use of exclamation points.  The same genuine expression of who he is that I have never witnessed anywhere else.  Two people being honest with each other and saving it for later, not because it will matter to anyone else but because it's who we are.

And maybe all of this is just to say I guess we are who we are.  We are just in ourselves, whether we realize it or not.  Odds are I came to this conclusion last month, last year, three years ago, and so on.  Which only proves the point that we are always who we are, doing what we do, learning what we need to learn, telling the story we are here to tell, eating cheeseburgers with our fathers.

**Update: when my dad came back from his journey to buy stamps he asked "did you get a chance to look at these?".  "Yes," I said, "It's crazy.  I'm writing about it right now." "Isn't that something?" he remarked, "Having the same conversations after all these years? It's like, we are who we are." "That's what my post is called!" "No WAY!!!" he exclaimed.  And then we both laughed, because, well, there it is.


Carlee, by Pop 2013

7.07.2013

Dear small moments: laying on the floor


A few nights ago I walked into our living room to find the Giraffe laying on the floor in the dark, listening to music.  "Remember when you used to just lay on the floor and be quiet and listen to music?" he asked.  I do.  "It feels nice," he said.  Then he closed his eyes again.  He looked remarkably peaceful.

I spend so much of my days "doing" or being preoccupied with what I should be doing, that standing there watching him it started occurring to me that I can't remember the last time I just let go of responsibility and laid on the floor and listened to some music.  Music has become an accessory to a busy life: working, commuting, cleaning, socializing, writing.  There, with his eyes closed, looking remarkably peaceful, he seemed to be on to something.  So I decided to put down my list of things to do and join him.  He picked song after song (I threw one in there) and we laid quietly listening for almost an hour.  No to-do's, no pressure to get up.  Just us, and the floor, and the music. 


We played: 
wonderful tonight -- eric clapton
shelter from the storm -- bob dylan
big sky country -- chris whitley
crazy mary -- pearl jam
lay lady lay -- bob dylan
solsbury hill -- peter gabriel
that's how strong my love is -- ov wright






And then we said goodnight to our neighborhood of Rainier Beach and went to sleep.  It was truly one of the nicest ways to spend an evening at home.

6.24.2013

Dear Carlee: a letter to my 15 year old self



Dear Carlee,


Now you are 30.
The first thing you need to know is that we didn't do it.  
Take a look at the list you've been making of all the things you plan on doing by the time you're an adult--say 30 years old--and try to understand right away that almost none of those things have gotten done.  Really hardly anything.  
I know.  It's disappointing.  You are upset.  And I'm sorry.  But I'm only sorry because it's painful for you and you are feeling hurt.  I am not sorry because I think I did anything wrong or because I have any regrets.  I don't.  

Listen, when you started making these plans for us I know that you really thought it out.  You had the best intentions and I know how confidant you felt that we could do it.  I don't think you were wrong.  A lot of things have happened between then and now, and we never could have planned for them, and being a little farther along than you I have to say that a very large part of life is bending to change, finding yourself, and embracing that the journey is a million little steps in a dozen different directions, not bullet points on a to-do list.  We've been really busy.  We haven't forgotten the goals you set, and we haven't given up, and we haven't decided they don't matter.  Not at all.  Carlee, we are trying to live life on life's terms.  The list you made was made on your terms, and that is a wonderful thing about it--that you were independent and strong enough to know exactly what you wanted and you reaffirmed that for yourself everyday.  I love that about you, I honor that about you.  You made those plans for us when you were safely inside a construct where the future meant nothing but what you imagined it to be, and that list in that time and place was the perfect thing for you to be creating.  But it cannot be our road map.  And I think part of why it is so painful for you to hear that we have not followed your road map is that for the last 15 years I have let that be the control in how we view our success.  And that is my fault.  Carlee, your plans for our success are useful reminders and motivation, but they are not healthy measurements for how well we are doing.  Unfortunately, today I am going to have to burn our list.

So here is some disappointment:
We have not starred in any feature films.  We have not had our own television show.  Sorry, we haven't even had a guest role on a television show.  We don't have anything published.  No one has made our movies, read our stories, or done our plays.  We have not had tours, reading our works for thousands of people whom we have inspired.  We don't have a rap career.  We aren't rich.  We don't own couture shoes or diamonds or a new car.  We aren't even a little well to do.  We don't vacation.  We don't have children.  We aren't married to Leonardo DiCaprio or Ryan Gosling or Matthew Lillard.  We aren't married at all.  We have not won a single award for our performance abilities.  That also means we haven't won an Oscar.  No accolades for writing, either. We aren't a member of a successful theater group.  We aren't on Saturday Night Live.  We have never done stand up comedy.  No one interviews us about our opinions on things.  We do not get VIP seating at shows.  We are not friends with Ani DiFranco.  We have not bought our parents their retirement homes.  We don't own vacation properties or a ranch in Montana.  We don't live in LA with "a little place" in New York.  We have no tangible way to prove we are helping to change the world in a positive way.  

Did I get it all? Have I missed anything? Look over it one more time.  Not one of those things has gotten done by a benchmark you so faithfully believed was far enough away that there was ample time.   So that's some bad news.  On top of which you can add: we still have acne and a jiggly belly, we suck at doing laundry and keeping things tidy, we have debt, we run late, we sleep poorly, we still have a "day job", we live in the city we grew up in, and sometimes we still feel afraid and uncertain.

But there is good news:
We have friends--actually enough people like us that there are friends we go for years without seeing but still love very much.  We are decent looking (for a while there in our mid twenties we were not feeling so certain it would work out this well).  We have dogs.  TWO dogs.  Remember how voraciously we anticipated the day we could get a dog? We went to college and it was the one we wanted and we graduated.  Our voice is in a museum.  We sing in front of other people and sometimes they seem to really like it.  We have a career, ok? We HAVE a career.  It doesn't look the way you thought it would, but I've worked really hard at it and I'm proud of it so I'd appreciate if you didn't judge our progress on that too harshly.  We are a working actor.  What you didn't quite know yet was how much "working" and how little glamour was involved.  We've kept writing and we are trying to figure that out but it's a lot harder to navigate than "writing then publishing" something, so it's taking some time.  We are healthy.  Actually, the healthiest we've ever been.  We have a healthy relationship.  The kind that you were always really hoping for but feared didn't exist?  We have that.  And he's really good looking and funny, so don't worry.  We also love ourself.  I know you don't want to hear about how hard that was to work through and you think it's a little embarrassing to share, but I have done a lot of work to get us to a place of actually enjoying who we are and believing we are ok, so just take a moment and appreciate that.  We bought a house.  We bought it with our non-celebrity handsome-man-partner and we make payments on it every month.  We have health insurance.  We have a job where we have responsibility and we feel fulfilled.  We own just a ton of clothes (more than even you imagined).  

And the best news of all:
It gets better.  We feel inspired and touched and moved all of the time.  We can openly admit that we are sensitive and that is ok--great, even.  We don't feel quite so overwhelmed by the pressure to always do the right thing.  We are available  to other people in a way not even you knew was possible because now we are also available to ourself.  We accept rejection as a daily part of what we have chosen to do, and not as a measurement of our worth.  We take more chances.  We treat ourself kindly; with compassion; with forgiveness.  We spend time alone.  We help other people and we allow them to help us.  We are a lot happier now, doing a million little steps in a dozen directions, than you are at 15 feeling so overwhelmed and anxious by all the things you are supposed to achieve.  We are excited to get older, and to see what happens next.

Let me leave you with this: Life is not a movie.  I've tried--like, really tried--and it just doesn't go that way.  Life is unceremonious change and disappointment and surprise and changing your mind and crying on the bus and trusting yourself and being present and unfiltered joy and weddings and funerals and babies being born and always learning.  Life is a journey.  You know that Dan Eldon book you are obsessed with?  The one that says "the journey is the destination"? That's true.  We are doing it right now.  We are doing it, Carlee.

So.  I know you are determined.  And I love you.  Stay determined.  I know I will.
It's been really wonderful getting to know you.  
I'm making a new list.  And it's full of things you don't really understand yet.  But when you get here, you will.

Love,
Carlee


6.08.2013

Dear Dreams: A Serious Announcement

For a long time I didn't understand that there was, or could be, a difference between goals and dreams. I thought they were the same thing.  Goals = dreams.  That all of the things you imagined, enjoyed recreationally, played-make believe about were in the same category as things you sought after with intention.  That you were somehow beholden to achieving your dreams the same way you were beholden to achieving your goals.  Which, in some cases, can be true, but certainly not always and it led to feeling quite overwhelmed by all the things I was *somehow* going to have to manage to cram into my life.  But THEN I eventually realized that dreams and goals are not always the same.  Goals are something you can tangibly work towards, and dreams can be absolutely anything that makes you feel good, regardless of its likelihood of ever coming true.  What a relief! Dreams have no boundaries.  Dreams are whatever the hell you want them to be. Dreams are dreamy.

A goal is "I want to be an accomplished writer", a dream is "I want to be Jay-Z's best friend" (true story).

So, here I am, everyone.  About to turn 30 years old.  I am wearing a fashionable ensemble of adult acne and a Garfield nightgown and I want to share with you a life dream.

It has been a dream of mine, for some time, to be a professional mascot.  A PROFESSIONAL MASCOT.  There it is.  I want that.  That is a DREAM.  Professional mascot.

Dreams in action 

I finally admitted this to my mother a couple of weeks ago and she laughed for over 20 minutes.  With each detail I added into this dream she laughed harder.  When I demonstrated some of my dancing skills, she wept.  And it felt really good to share that with her.  We laughed together, she doubled over on the ground, me gesticulating wildly as a moose or bird or dolphin.  It felt so relieving to say "I have a dream...to one day be a professional mascot, and YES that is hilarious, and that's ok."  Because it's a goddamned dream, and that dream is real.

I think I would be a great mascot.  It is an excellent combination of my inherent skills and serious interests.  It involves marginally embarrassing oversized dance moves, people pleasing, performing, getting crowds totally psyched up, inciting laughter and joy, being involved in sports teams without possessing any athletic abilities, amazing costumes, and the best 90's dance songs.  You get to wear that luscious plush head so you are totally anonymous and just free to get out there and rock that crowd so hard.  Some people dream of being Justin Timberlake, I dream of being the Mariners Moose.

If I got to be a professional mascot I would make everyone so proud.  I would just really dedicate myself to making the funniest, most passionate routines the game has ever seen.  I would cry.  Sometimes I work on my dance moves.  Sometimes I explore character development and my "signature style".  Sometimes I imagine the stories I could tell through the art of the mascot.  Sometimes I build my catalogue of mascot songs ("Y'all Ready for This" "Whoop, There It Is" "Who Let the Dogs Out" "Good Vibrations" "Might As Well Be Walking on the Sun" etc).

The Wheedle is the best

I know this is not a "cool" dream.  I know I don't get any street cred for un-ironically announcing this on the internet.  But I don't care.  It is something I carry around with me that brings me so much joy to think about.  I realize now that if you don't tell people what you want and how you feel no one is able to really share your life with you or celebrate in your successes or support you in times of need.  So I'm telling you all, people everywhere, that I dream of being a professional mascot and NOW if I ever get the thrill of actually becoming one you will know how truly powerful that is.  You will know that for this pizza faced cry baby, it is a dream come true.

And I think it's important to say that before I turn 30.  Just put it right out there.  Come clean.

This Seahawks mascot is doing a triumphantly epic job

Maybe someday I will get an opportunity to be a mascot.  I sure hope I do.  As I've already said, I'm pretty sure I would do a first class job.  But maybe I won't.  And that's ok, too.  Being a mascot is a dream.  It lives in my head and heart along with being Jay-Z's best friend, having diamonds in my teeth, and wining an Oscar along side Philip Seymor Hoffman.  It lives with dreams.
And having dreams is important.

3.12.2013

Dear Writing: the Death of Ideas + Content



It's pretty simple, really.  I sometimes have this fear that if I write too much, I will use up all my good ideas.  And there will be nothing left.  Like I have a predetermined amount of funny jokes, witty references (still waiting to use those), insights, snarky remarks, social commentary, plot lines, characters, experiences, morals, questions, big words.  Like a female has eggs.  I only have so many of all those things to use, and I can't acquire more, and if I use them up too quickly, I will be done.  I will go into writer's menopause.  And that will be it.  There will never be another thing for me to write ever again.

I have realized I am actually afraid of that.  Isn't that crazy?
Wait.  Let me rephrase that.  Is that crazy?
Is it a subconscious tactic in procrastination? Like if I hold onto all my ideas because I have a fear of running out of them then it presents a fairly logical reason to ration writing of any kind.
Maybe it's a subconscious act of self-protection. That, in keeping all my ideas to myself, I am protecting myself from ever being exposed to failure and the possibility I'm really not good at writing at all and the long drawn out existential crisis that would surely follow.

I mean, these are all possibilities. Simply discovering the fact that I have been walking around believing I only have a limited number of things to say for the rest of my life was pretty incredible. The realization of this fear has made it easy to see the humor in it and takes away the power of its potential truth.

And on the other hand, some of the writers, comedians, storytellers, and musicians I admire most spend their entire career telling the same kinds of stories, just with different details, circumstances, and feelings. So maybe it's not such a bad thing.

Maybe, a person should just do what they feel moved to do.
Maybe a person should just do what they feel moved to do and fight the critical voice inside of them that says it's repetitious or boring or old or recycled or not any good at all.
Because maybe the bigger point is not weather what you do is any good or not, but that you have a thing that you feel moved to do at all.
Maybe having that thing is part of success, and just doing it is the other part. Maybe its goodness or abundance or popularity is an ancillary bonus.

Maybe I should write because I like to write, and if I only have five stories to tell I will just spend the rest of my time telling them over and over and that will be the truth of my life. And at least there will be a thing that I enjoy doing.
Ok. Yeah. Maybe that's it. I feel comfortable with that.

Champion voice: 1
Critical voice: 0

See you next round, fear breeding critic.



3.11.2013

Dear Relationships: We Missed Our Anniversary

*It took 3 weeks to post this because that's how long we looked for a photograph of the two of us that was nice.  We are historically terrible at taking pictures together.  So here's one from a date last spring that has been spliced together. *





So the thing is that right now I am feeling really grateful and sentimental and reflective but you have to understand that last night I was at work, starving, building cocktails into a keg while the Giraffe and I passed a couple of texts back and forth about how we were pretty sure it was our anniversary.  And being elbow deep in simple syrup and coconut cream I got really disappointed in our lack of planning, and feeling hangry (hungry + angry, in case you've never been there) I sent this text:
This is dumb.  Who cares.  Let's just pretend we don't even have an anniversary.

Because I am a grown up wordsmith who is at all times deft at communicating feelings!

Needless to say we spent the rest of the evening discussing it, eating tacos, and watching tv in bed with our dogs. As you do, when you are at the end of an anniversary you forgot to celebrate.

I felt confused about the whole thing, really.  One thing about me is that I love celebrations.  I love holidays, weddings, birthdays, ceremony, tradition, sentiment expression, pinatas, everything.  I love occasions to do something different and exchange your feelings with a loved one.  So it seems quite odd that I would have let a day like this arrive and pass without any planning or preparation or love notes.  But it just kind of...happened.  I thought about things we could do all year, we talked about how it was coming up, and then, whoops, there it was.

This is in part due to the fact that my intentions come from the best place, but I easily build expectations that cannot possibly be met.  So in worrying I won't meet the expectations I have created I wind up doing absolutely nothing instead.  If we can't go to Palm Springs and learn to play golf in funny outfits looking totally tan and beautiful for our anniversary then we will do nothing! (side note: playing golf sounds really hilarious but I have no serious interest in doing it. I mean, it's golf.)  It is also due to the fact that for the last two anniversaries we have been in flux.  It always falls during that time of year when money is tight, there is no routine or schedule to our lives, and we are just focusing on the fundamentals of survival.  It's kind of inconvenient to spend money and time doing something that doesn't matter the way paying bills, working, making career goals, seeing family, or fixing our furnace matters.  If our anniversary was in August we would be golden.  So, I guess it's our bad for melding our universes in the dead of winter. (Hey, single people! Shack up in the summer! It will likely be more convenient later on!)

I think it is also due to the fact that when you finally reach the day you are supposed to celebrate the fact that you have this awesome relationship you realize that it is kind of meaningless to point it out on one day above all others.  It's like Valentine's Day.  Why do we celebrate that?  Shouldn't we be celebrating love all year long? I don't know how it is for other people, but I am blessed to be in a relationship with a partner who communicates his love to me on a daily basis.  We are thoughtful and romantic (ew) with one another on days that don't mean anything and not because we have to but because we want to.  Every day for the last two months the Giraffe has come to me in the morning when it is time for me to get up, knelt down beside the bed, kissed me, and handed me a cup of coffee.  That is some thoughtful romantic shit!  That is not a thing that he is obligated to do. (although I am getting quite accustomed to the luxurious treatment.)  That is a thing he does because he loves me and wants to add to my happiness.  We say thank you for things we are thankful for in the other person.  We talk about feelings, special memories, and plans for the future.  We do this at the grocery store, walking the dogs, and aimlessly looking at the internet on our respective computers.

It was our 5th anniversary yesterday, and in five years I can say that expressing sentiments and celebrating our relationship has not faded in the slightest.  To be honest, as we continue to become more grounded mature human beings it has probably gotten better.  It is an inherent part of our relationship.  Exchanging feelings of love is woven into the fabric of our relationship like some sappy, embarrassing sweater that you can't take off. I feel self-conscious to admit that because I am afraid it sounds like I am saying things are perfect, and they are not.  Our relationship is real, and therefore imperfect.  I am just very very blessed to be with someone who naturally communicates feelings with a similar frequency to me.  (I said similar, not equal!)

So it was our 5th anniversary yesterday, and I was feeling disappointed that we didn't do anything and then also feeling confused about why it mattered.  Because honestly, aside from the implied societal pressure to give a shit about it, I don't think it actually matters that much at all.  What really is special is that we have been together that long, and have done all the things that we have done, together, and when you're our age five years still seems like an impressive amount of time. But there is nothing pertaining to love or gifts or feelings that I need from him that I don't already get.  Except maybe some lavish gifts.  What can I say, I love presents.

In the end we wound up eating a bag of tacos (not a euphemism) and reading the email I sent him with his flight itinerary so many winters ago, when he met me in New York and our relationship began.  And sharing a moment of acknowledging that the journey thus far has been incredibly special, and we want to continue on it together.

Maybe someday when we're married we'll "do" more "things" to celebrate.  But for now, it turns out discussing our forgetfulness, a sack of Mexican food, and an email is just as meaningful and a WHOLE LOT cheaper than a weekend away. To walk away from yesterday feeling disappointed would be to miss the point.

I would also like to take this moment to publicly thank the Giraffe for "hanging in there" all this time.  I'm sure that I'm nice or whatever, but just ask any of my exboyfriends, being with me can be a real THING.  It takes a lot of patience, driving me around, doing the laundry (I'll just let it go unwashed forever), listening to me talk my way through everyyyyyyything, reminding me it's time to go to bed (and get up), planning, processing, problem solving, navigating feelings (all the feelings), and picking up after me (tiny tornado) to be in this relationship.  So, thank you Cary.  Your incredible patience and kindness does not go unnoticed.

And now that I've sufficiently grossed myself out with the public displays of affection I'm going to go listen to some super hard rap songs and act really tough.

It's ok to admit that love is nice and feelings are real.
It's just a little embarrassing to be all about it out loud.
I'm working on appreciating as much as I practice complaining.

3.09.2013

Dear Mom, thank you for the small moments




I come home from work tonight, at the end of a long day that comes at the end of a long week and I am so exhausted. Cary puts on my mom's vinyl copy of Crosby Stills Nash and Young's "so long" and goes into the kitchen to make dog food. The fancy lights I bought for our living room six months ago, that we finally installed six days ago, are on and they make the house feel warm. It is a golden womb. Sadie sits watching Cary cook for her with intrigue and patience. Walter is laid out majestically on our shaggy rug, practically camouflaged, and he wags his feathered tail each time I look at him. All I can think of is how much I have just done, how much more I have to do, and how badly I have to pee. Then, "our house" comes on.

"I love this song," Cary says. "I used to always listen to this song when I was a kid, and just imagine that what they were talking about was exactly what being a grown up was going to be like." Then he quietly goes back to cutting carrots.

I am standing here, in the golden light of our living room, in a house that I have bought with a man that I love, exhausted, covered in sticky sugars from work, looking at a little dog wagging his little tail at me, listening to the record play, and something washes over me.

Growing up I listened to my mother play and sing this song countless times. Hearing it makes me think of her singing it, and it feels safe. I am thinking of this song, and my mother, and my mother singing this song to me smiling, and it hits me. In this small, insignificant moment, it hits me. My mother has passed the torch to me and this song is my life now. The possibilities in this song are now open to me. The opportunity to have a home and share a life of work and joy and small moments with the people I love is now mine, and I am taking advantage of that opportunity. I am nearly 30. I am the age my mother was when she sang this song. She has handed it off to me. I am an adult now.

I have always looked at my mother as a person I will never catch up to but dream of being like. She is unparalleled to anyone else in her beauty, humor, love, zeal, authenticity, talent, and kindness. In my mind my mother is IT. She is the beginning and the end and knows secrets I will never know because she is other worldly and I am a regular human. I love my mother beyond measure.

Tonight I discovered that she was raising me to be the woman that I am, and that I am, right now, in this moment, in the golden light and music, a woman. I discovered that she has given me the secrets. With a voice like vibrating honey and a spirit full of radical joy, she raised me with this song and was preparing me for a life of happiness and success. I inherited humor and wisdom and grace (well, some grace) from her because she gave it to me. She gave everything she has to me. Because she loves me beyond measure.

And tonight I discovered that my respect for this woman is now matched by a new level of gratitude for the life I have, in such great part, to her. Under her care I unearthed my life's purpose at age 4. Under her care I found I was a (loud) feminist at age 15. Under her care I chased after my dreams and fell down over and over and over and over and did not give up. Under her care I found a partner who is so loving, thoughtful, respectful, wise, and funny he is nearly fictitious. Under her care I have been able to work on viewing life and it's successes as a long game, full of failures and unexpected changes. Under her care I have evolved.

I cannot think of a funny way of saying what I want to say. I suppose it's just not very funny. This song is playing and I know something I didn't know before and it makes me love, respect, appreciate and understand her in a new way. It makes me know her better than I did five minutes ago. And that is a gift she has given me.

To the most radiant, kind, strong, warm, beautiful woman, with the most beautiful voice and happiest eyes, thank you. Thank you for helping me to become what I am. In this small moment, I have so much to be grateful for.
Love,
Your daughter

2.11.2013

Dear Things



I started writing a Christmas post, and then it wasn't Christmas anymore.  I started compiling a list of 12 things about 2012, and then it was the end of January.  These unfinished posts sit in my blog folder with dozens of other in-progress entries I have never bothered to finish and "publish", or whatever.  Usually I look back through them and see they are all terrible, or the moment has passed, or I have no idea what I am talking about (often), so there is no point in re-investing in them.  They just sit there, like little tiny failures, looking at me every time I sign in.  Like little tater tots making up a side dish on a plate of everything I don't follow through with.

Which just reminds me that I don't really write enough. It's a hugely important part of my life and it gets more neglected than anything else. Hell, I even floss more than I write and that's terrifying (sorry, dentist). I was telling a writer friend just yesterday that writing is something I don't know what to do with. I have never been good at writing without deadlines and accountability. And that's what my life with writing is right now: no deadlines, no accountability. It's kind of lame, really. I have three screenplays, two plays, and one novel that have all been started and just gnaw at the edge of my conscience every couple of days like dirty laundry that I really want to wear but have no energy to wash. Writing + clothes. Way to bring all the interests together.

Tonight at dinner I told the Giraffe that I haven't instagramed anything in four days. "Oh my god. What's wrong?" He shared my concern. Hi. Have you met me? I am on Instagram all the time. Arguably too much. I love that Instagram. Love that Instagram very hard. It's a thing I love to do that doesn't really matter but makes each day more enjoyable. It's not like me to neglect my 'grams. I guess other kinds of life are just happening instead. And that can't be a bad thing. Right?

I mean the point is that I haven't written in too long and that's fine because other kinds of life have been happening but I feel like I have to do it now, so here are some things that don't really matter that you can read if you want.

+ I really admire people who seem like they tirelessly work towards what they want, or manage to fit like 30 things into each day and I feel like I want to be one of them but I'm not sure that I am. I get really tired. I get really sluggish. I have to watch tv and take baths and play at least 90 minutes of solitaire or mah jong every day. I get tired just thinking about all the things some people do every day. I have a lot of energy and a strong work ethic but my energy has a daily expiration date and if I don't pace myself my work ethic gets extremely unfocused. I want to be a machine the way I see other people being glorious, productive, well oiled machines. But I'm starting to think with increasing certainty that I am the tortoise and if I am going to get "there", wherever there is, it's going to be slow and steady or nothing at all. Slow and steady is way less glamorous.

+ the terrariums I made six months ago have completely died and are now just bowls elegantly layered with rocks and dirt and moss and succulent corpses. I keep looking at them thinking I should throw them away or try again but they feel somehow permanent. Like I can't let them know they're dead. Maybe I'll just leave them alone, call them "desert terrariums" and create a new cool trend. The dried up, sparse landscape is like, a metaphor for the struggles of the modern man. Or something.

+ I have pretty much stopped showering and moved exclusively to baths. Sometimes this makes me feel like I'm living a really luxurious lifestyle and that I'm getting better at practicing relaxing (it's best purpose). Other times it makes me concerned I'm reverting, becoming some adult baby, only moments away from needing help into my jammies and drinking from a cup with a lid on it.

+ the other day I started wondering if I could put my therapist on the list of my best friends. I mean, I know I pay her, but she's like, a REALLY good listener you guys. It's like she really cares. And sometimes we high five and sometimes we both cry and sometimes we laugh so hard. We have a real time together. Make some real memories. Just kidding. Boundaries, am I right? But seriously, if I get married someday is it appropriate to invite her to the wedding? She's just so lovely.

+ there are times when I don't want to watch "good" movies or plays or read "the best" books because it makes me feel frustrated at my own progress, afraid of my own future, and depressed at my current station in life. Gross honest truth. One of my biggest fears is being an old woman who never did the things she set out to do, sitting on a pile of past-due bills, in 30 yr old sweat pants with the crotch blown out, with kids that never call, eating turkey chili from the can because fuck it it's just cold chili, wearing foundation that's three shades too dark, watching television and just weeping at movie trailers, shouting "IT COULDA BEEN MEEEEE!". I feel like watching good films should inspire me, and it does, sometimes, but I have to be honest that it is not all the time. Sometimes you just have to watch "bridezillas season 7" on Netflix watch instantly again and again.

+ the "Golden Girls" theme song lowers my heart rate. One of my goals for 2013 is to get better at relaxing and this show might be my gateway. As soon as the opening credits start and that song comes on my face cracks into a smile and my bones turn to jelly and everything gets all warm and cozy and I know that it's all going to be ok. I am fairly certain this is a universal feeling and am surprised I never learned about the healing properties of Blanche, Dorothy, Sophia, and Rose in any of my college studies.

+ when you don't want to decorate your home in a way that is too "on trend" and in danger of needing to be redecorated in a year or two, your best bet is to go with swans. Swans are timeless.

+ one of the greatest mysteries in life is what dogs are thinking. Do you know what I mean? I spend so much time talking with my dogs, and petting them, inferring that we are having some sort of meaningful interaction. But what goes on in there? Can they hear you? Is it like that Simpsons episode where it's all "blah blah blah"? Are they like stroke victims where they can understand what you're saying they just can't communicate back? I don't know. We have no idea. So I just keep saying supportive and communicative things like "you are a really important guy" "thank you for doing such a good job showing love and kindness" and "have I told you lately that you are the best? You are excellent at being you" because, well, better safe than sorry.






EDIT: this has sat in my drafts pile for two weeks. Would Alanis Morrisette categorize that as ironic? I'm publishing it now, because, well, follow through.