Archive for the ‘ writings. ’ Category

bish got blog.

Listening to: Phoenix — Rome

It’s that time again. Yes, portfolio-building time. I told you recently that I just updated my Carbonmade portfolio, but apparently that wasn’t good enough — my photography teacher has now tasked me to create TWO portfolios, one of my best fashiony work and one of my best randomosity. With 50 freaking photographs each. Did I mention it’s due tomorrow, and I haven’t even started yet?

But the main point of this post was to tell you that I’ve started an auxiliary blog, The Ridiculous Things Store, since apparently the writings. page on here isn’t quite as functional as it could/should be. The Store should be updated more frequently than authoraiINK here (because have you noticed how posts have been slowly waning? school does that to you.) with snippets of writing and poetry. But don’t worry, I will still post my rants/photography/occasional sartorial choices here. And maybe one day Blé will post too.

 

interest in colors, I discover myself.

Listening to: Asa — So Beautiful

Early in the morning, especially on Sundays, sunlight streams through my window and makes everything light. I am unable to rearrange my room because I need my head by the light when I sleep; I need to be able to peer out out the window as I work; and I need my window perfectly unobstructed. I hate artificial lighting. As long as there is sunlight it is bright enough to read, to write, to type. But I also hate dusk. I hate when it’s too dark to go on without additional light but still too light out to close the window; I hate when the glass in my window goes from clear to glossy reflective black and the walls of my room go from white to an ugly, florescent-induced yellow.

Tonight I’m sending out the first chapter of my novel. It’s kind of nerve-wracking, especially because I can’t help but think about inevitable rejection. The more I write and edit, the more wrong I find, but I can’t stop editing because what if I miss something then. My social life has, for the most part, withered away over the past week, and every time I try and restart it I feel uncomfortable and go back to my room to lie on my bed, bask in the sunlight, and pretend I live in a different written world.

it’s uncomfortabling out here.

Listening to: Mates Of State — Get Better

This morning it was neither snowing nor sleeting. So we decided that it was “uncomfortabling,” because it was very. Tonight, though, we’re supposed to get 20-ish inches/ 50cm of snow between now and midday tomorrow, so it will be more “impossibling” by then. At photography class today, we spent ten minutes trying to figure out the MSN weather app, and then I was dismissed.

Also today I presented my proposal for an independent study (in novel-editing), which OMG GOT ACCEPTED and was probably the most nerve-wracking ten minutes of my recent life. My new military dress from Delia’s came in the mail yesterday (and I was assigned a new mailbox, since the lady at the post office decided that I was too tall to open my old one), so I’d totally have an outfit photo for you if I were physically capable of taking one right now (trust me, I’m not). But, in its stead, here is something over which I am currently obsessing: After Dark by Haruki Murakami. It is so amazing and unsettling and beautiful that I’ve basically been slinging it at everyone who’s passed me reading it over the past few days, yelling, “THIS IS SUCH A GOOD BOOK I KNOW YOU HATE READING BUT YOU NEED TO READ THIS.” Also the song “FlyPaper”  by K-OS, which just kind of fits the mood.

Another nice development is that the Powers That Be have decided that, since our entire campus is sleep-deprived, the class day will start a half-hour later on Wednesdays. Since Wednesdays are already my sleep-in, I will be enjoying my 1.5-hour naptime… awake, probably. Stupid breakfast.

we are bonded like superstrong artificial polymers not to be separated by acetate and tide-to-go.

Listening to: … Other people writing, ho hum.

Yesterday I was being fifteen minutes early to photography class when the heel of my little brown vintage-ish boot popped off. So, thinking I had fifteen minutes to spare, I hobbled back to my room to superglue the heel back on. Bad idea. The superglue was clogged, so I used the point of my earring to open it up. It wouldn’t come out, though, so I squeezed and squeezed it until… it exploded all over me. My blue vintage vest was untouched, luckily, but my blue babydoll dress that was the first dress I honestly enjoyed wearing on a regular basis was ruined, because try as I might I could not use an old toothbrush and nailpolish remover and my neighbor’s detergent to scrub the glue stains out. And my hand was covered in superglue, which only added insult to injury when I arrived at English class to find that someone had stolen my seat.

The night before, though, I was reading and writing poetry, and I came across the poem “They are hostile nations” by Margaret Atwood. My favorite part is, “surviving/ is the only war/ we can afford, stay” but really I love the entire poem because it’s so tender (even though “tender” is an awkward word that ruins touching moments, like when two of your friends are holding hands and you comment on how tender it is). Something that is also tender is subtly grainy photos and snow, and grainy photos of people in snow and, just to complete this ranting sentence, you should know that it’s snowing here and no matter how much snow the groundskeepers blow away there’s always more, blanketing the walkways and the awkward stairs.

Also, and because the “writings.” page could always use an update, I have a poem for you. It’s very short.

“anxiety.”

there is a tightness in my chest

I have difficulty expressing

the words I cannot speak.

a boulangerie for your literate soul.

Listening to: Modest Mouse — March Into The Sea

I will tell you now that I take notebooks very seriously. I take them so seriously, in fact, that I know brands; my favorites are Iquelrius and Moleskine and occasionally Paperchase (though I find their lines rather wide for my tiny handwriting). I will walk into Barnes & Noble or the local art boutique not with the intention of finding a new book or spiffy art markers, but with the aim of purchasing a new home for my stories. I will admit now to having shelled out up to $17 for that *perfect* notebook. So you can probably imagine my joy when, while out shopping the other day, I stumbled upon (well, I’ll admit having gazed longingly across the street at it for several months prior) the papeterie nota bene* and found myself wondering why I’d never been to a notebook/stationery boutique before. I even bought a new notebook:

And yes, I already know what I’m going to write in it. Except that I’m back at school now, so I won’t be able to lurk at nota bene* for another month at least….

Curse small town America.

russia is likely more photogenic, though the snow here sparkles like flakes of glitter.

Listening to: Frou Frou — Breathe In

IT’S SNOWING HERE! But of course my joy had to be dampened with the knowledge that there’s more than 15cm of snow back at homsies. Sigh. Yesterday was exciting;  I learned how to play squash (but I will still call it squish); our boy’s varsity team won 1-0; and it seemed that between 9pm and 11:30 too many people were a bit too tipsy. But now everyone’s awake and not-expelled, so all is well in the land of Über-Prep.

As promised, I have a short story for you. It’s not the one that’s being published tomorrow, because that one’s far too long (4+ pages!) for a meager blog post such as this. This one is titled the soulcage.

They awoke early to the rooster’s nasal caw. He strutted up and down the hall, pecking them out of their cubbyholes, nipping at their sore heels. The girls emerged from their nests like bees from a hive. some stepped down on their toes like the ballerinas they’d once longed to be; others slumped and slipped and slithered like mud snakes. When they were all out, the rooster swaggered about them in a few loose circles, examining with a dull black eye the sad and tired countenances on their beautiful faces. Then, with the order to prepare themselves, he sent them out a small hatch door hidden behind their cubicles.

–You’re lucky. You look so ugly today.

–What are you talking about? We’re all super pretty, remember? We’re beautiful.

–IF YOU DO NOT PREEN WELL, WE WILL DISPOSE OF YOU.

The girls washed their faces above cracked mirrors in a tiny room with walls of peeling lead paint. They searched, hopefully, for new blemishes on their flawless skin, complimenting each other on their bed head and morning breath. They sighed over the beautiful clothes that the weaverbird gave them, clothes that in another life they would have coveted. This splendor only reinforced the irony of their plight: they were imprisoned because of their beauty; this was meant to be a gift. If they had been less appealing to the eye, they would be free.

–My feet! They expect me to walk all day in these?

–Well, you did it yesterday, didn’t you?

–QUIET! NO ONE COMES HERE TO HEAR YOU SPEAK.

When they started walking, the sky was gray. Nobody fed them at all that morning, which was okay with the girls – if they became emaciated and their hair began to fall out, they might be sent home, and anyway it was difficult to walk on a full stomach. Even though there were few observers beyond their glass cage, the girls filed out of the hatch door and down the hall in a long procession of stiletto heels and Fabergé eggs in birds’ nests of hair. Their footsteps echoed off the checkerboard marble floor, bouncing off the endless walls and ringing deep within their eardrums.

Ohmigod!

–Is she okay?

–WHO ASKED YOU TO STOP WALKING?

One of the models dropped with fatigue halfway through their first walk of the hall. The crow who stood guard by the singular door became enraged, screeching that it was their task to please the audience. Not that the audience was unentertained by the young girl’s plight – catastrophe was drama, after all, and watching humans simply walk was amusing for only so long.  From where she lay on a moldy couch near their cubbyholes, the sick girl watched her compatriots promenade. The clouds pressed against the windows above them, heavy like a sheet of dark lead poised to drop and bury shards of glass into their souls. But they knew that the glass would never break, just as they knew that only such a death would ever end their torment.

If it rains, and the birds leave, do you think that they’ll let us go back to sleep?

The idea is that you’re supposed to be able to read the left-aligned stuff with the right-aligned italics like fragmented thoughts/overheard words in the back of your mind. It works for some people, not so much for others.

I’m reading Animal Farm right now. It sucks how well-intentioned governments devolve, no? Hobbes is right; everyone fails at morality. Life sucks.

But not really. And that’s because we have PHOTOGRAPHY, which those poor saps on the Animal Farm never had. Here is a little blurb about said art form that I wrote for the art mag:

My camera is a gun. Sometimes people duck before I shoot, but I don’t shoot to kill — I shoot to capture. With my weapon of mass depiction, I hunt down beautiful moments. If they’re not beautiful to begin with, I’ll make them that way or fill my SD card trying. That’s part of why I love photography: with every picture I take, I can save something fleeting and make once-in-a-lifetime last a lifetime. I can rewrite history, stop time, and make fiction a reality. And after spending so much time behind a lens, life becomes more photogenic. I lift my spirits with the knowledge that even my darkest moments could look great on film. Then I can remind myself that life isn’t always so dark; in photos, all the world is a play of light.

I’m sure that I’ve mentioned before that almost all of my favorite photographers are Russians/ Eastern Europeans, which really doesn’t help with my obsession with that part of the world. One film photographer in particular goes by the name Oprisco; I don’t know his real name, but his stuff is kinda awesome, even if his entire website is pretty much gibberish to me ‘cuz it’s in Russian. But here is some of his work:

Stunning,  no? He also makes me really want a medium format camera so that I can shoot with 120mm film. Maybe one day I’ll ask for a Diana, even if the people on Flickr would disapprove. Yes; if you hadn’t noticed, the photographia link has been changed from my Carbonmade portfolio to my newly-created Flickr account. Never fear, though — you can still find my Carbonmade via our du sujet de… page.

airplanes.

Listening to: Christmas Music, GAH!

I’m back in Nowhere now, and all the radio is playing is Christmas music, while all I’ve been playing is my new Sims game. I walked into WalMart last night and it was the LAST ONE on the shelf, sort of calling “Anwa! I’ve been waiting for yooooou!”

But anyway, when I was on the plane I had a burst of cloud-induced inspiration, and I wrote a free-verse poem and a bunch of haikus. And since the writings. page desperately needs a update, here’s the free-verse poem.

airplanes.

heaven is a place in the cumulus clouds

without turbulence

and

from there you can tell that the rivers run

with quicksilver

but

the sky is so dark and the stars burn bright

too close.

….If only taking pictures in airplanes weren’t frowned upon.

on rejection.

Listening to: Modest Mouse — Whale Song

I just got another rejection letter. Sigh. ANOTHER ONE. I know that as a writer, you’re supposed to develop a thicker skin, but it’s really, really hard when it’s practically your baby you’re sending out to be rejected. It just hurts a bit. A lot a bit. Luckily for me, Merit Badger chose today to release the rejection badge, so I guess that I can add it to my sash and go cry in a hole now.


tire swing.

Listening to: Simon and Garfunkel — El Condor Pasa (If I Could)

Just a really quick poem that I wrote for English class — I’ll have an actual post soon.

“tire swing.”

and then

with one great push

I am soaring

I spin

like some UFO

on a course

for collision

with the stars.

-

their luminescence

grazes my nose and

they are beautiful

like small

points of happiness

of stunning brilliance

they wink

as I pass.

-

but then

I am whirled away

by my momentum

I wave

the stars goodbye

my feet graze

the earth

grounded by gravity.


lady.

I’m still getting used to the look of my Lomo prints. I’m used to (and I usually try to take) photos that are sharp and bright, with contrast so high it blinds you. The soft, dim fuzziness of my LC-A+ photos is a huge change for me, but I like it. It’ll take a while to get used to, and I’m not giving up my SLRs, but it’s nice. It makes me want to go out and buy vintage floral-print dresses… which is strange, because I usually wear very modern black. Hmn.

But, anyway, the initial point of this post was that I have more writing (yes, finally, I know).  Inspired by the song “Lady” by Regina Spektor. So enjoy… or pretend that you’re enjoying, so that I feel better about myself.

“lady.”

“You singing today?”

She looks up at the man who posed the question, a large, surly bartender by the name of Ivan.

“What’s it to you?” she retorts. “You’re not goin’ to listen, anyway.”

Ivan flashes her a fleeting grin. They are friends; they go through this routine every night, sitting at the bar of this musty, smoke-filled lounge. Sometimes, the lady wonders if there will ever be a day when she doesn’t sing.

“I don’ think I will today,” she tells him, butting her cigarette out against her yellowed sheet music. Watching a circle burn through the paper, she continues, “Actually, I don’t think I’ll ever sing again.” She sighs and flicks the butt into someone’s open beer.

It is winter in the city. Smoky snowflakes drift down from the hazy dark sky, dusting every surface in a powder of grayish off-white. Last winter, she moved from the countryside to become a cabaret singer. She hasn’t made enough money to move back yet.

But this was her dream, wasn’t it? As she leans against the side of the building, staring up at the almost-black sky, she can’t help but to think that it wasn’t. She takes a puff of her dying cigarette and looks around, gazing morosely at the blank-eyed passers-by who hurry by, all trapped in their own hell of a dream. No, she doesn’t regret it, not at all….

“You’re up, lady.” Ivan stands at the open doorway, gazing down at her with a sort of pity in his dark gray eyes. “Comin’?”

“I’m not singin’ today. I told you that already.”

“You don’t get paid if you don’t sing,” he reminds her. “How’re you going to put your sister through school if you don’t get paid?”

Her sister. The only reason she’s still in this washed-out city of bleak realities and broken dreams.

“You’d support her, wouldn’t you?” she asks Ivan.

He sighs, shaking his head. “You know I can barely support you.”

“I know.” After one last drag on her cigarette, she lets it drop onto the ashtray. Maybe, one day, her sister will come and see her sing.

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