Wednesday, September 26, 2012

brainstorm

In a month or two I will buy a house.  I've 'pinned' (what feels like) a million beautiful rooms via interior design blogs.

However, it just dawned on me that instead of focusing on colors/patterns, or modern v. traditional, or shabby-chic v. country living - I'd much prefer instead to focus on highlighting memories and blessings.  I'd like to avoid spending a bajillion dollars to make it all come together, and instead incorporate pieces from the lives of myself, Charlie, Corey and Mom in certain ways that are visually appealing and uniquely ours.  I'd also like to avoid the go-to mode of capturing memories (via photos) and instead think of other items that can be placed throughout the house, so that we can walk through on the day-to-day and interact with those memories.

I have no idea where this thought just came from; it feels a bit like a wild hair, and a tall order.

However: Challenge accepted.


{something within this is what it's really all about}

Thursday, September 20, 2012

solipsism and sabbaths

Not sure how they relate, but it was all I could think about yesterday in Statistics class.


We all have our little solipsistic delusions, ghastly intuitions of utter singularity: that we are the only one in the house who ever fills the ice-cube tray, who unloads the clean dishwasher, who occasionally pees in the shower, whose eyelid twitches on first dates; that only we take casualness terribly seriously; that only we fashion supplication into courtesy; that only we hear the whiny pathos in a dog’s yawn, the timeless sigh in the opening of the hermetically-sealed jar, the splattered laugh in the frying egg, the minor-D lament in the vacuum’s scream; that only we feel the panic at sunset the rookie kindergartner feels at his mother’s retreat. That only we love the only-we. That only we need the only-we. Solipsism binds us together, J.D. knows. That we feel lonely in a crowd; stop not to dwell on what’s brought the crowd into being. That we are, always, faces in a crowd.

{DFW in Girl W/curious Hair, p308}


and


Sabbaths

He wakes in darkness. All around
are sounds of stones shifting, locks
unlocking. As if some one had lifted
away a great weight, light
falls on him. He has been asleep or simply
gone. He has known a long suffering
of himself, himself sharpen by the pain
of his wound of separation he now
no longer minds, for the pain is only himself
now, grown small, become a little growing
longing joy. Something teaches him
to rise, to stand and move out through
the opening the light has made.
He stands on the green hilltop amid
the cedars, the skewed stones, the earth all
opened doors. Half blind with light, he
traces with a forefinger the moss-grown
furrows of his name, hearing among the others
one woman's cry. She is crying and laughing,
her voice a stream of silver he seems to see:
"Oh William, honey, is it you? Oh!"

II
Surely it will be for this: the redbud
pink, the wild plum white, yellow
trout lilies in the morning light,
the trees, the pastures turning green.
On the river, quiet at daybreak,
the reflections of the trees, as in
another world, lie across
from shore to shore. Yes, here
is where they will come, the dead,
when they rise from the grave.

III
White
dogwood flowers
afloat
in leafing woods
untrouble
my mind.

IV
Ask the world to reveal its quietude—
not the silence of machines when they are still,
but the true quiet by which birdsongs,
trees, bellows, snails, clouds, storms
become what they are, and are nothing else.

V
A mind that has confronted ruin for years
Is half or more a ruined mind. Nightmares
Inhabit it, and daily evidence
Of the clean country smeared for want of sense,
Of freedom slack and dull among the free,
Of faith subsumed in idiot luxury,
And beauty beggared in the marketplace
And clear-eyed wisdom bleary with dispraise.

VI
Sit and be still
until in the time
of no rain you hear
beneath the dry wind's
commotion in the trees
the sound of flowing
water among the rocks,
a stream unheard before,
and you are where
breathing is prayer.

VII
The wind of the fall is here.
It is everywhere. It moves
every leaf of every
tree. It is the only motion
of the river. Green leaves
grow weary of their color.
Now evening too is in the air.
The bright hawks of the day
subside. The owls waken.
Small creatures die because
larger creatures are hungry.
How superior to this
human confusion of greed
and creed, blood and fire.

VIII
The question before me, now that I
am old, is not how to be dead,
which I know from enough practice,
but how to be alive, as these worn
hills still tell, and some paintings
of Paul Cezanne, and this mere
singing wren, who thinks he's alive
forever, this instant, and may be.

{Wendell}

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

In what way?

Life is what happens to you when you're busy making other plans.  -John Lennon

How so?
-> As in, 'pay attention to the present?'
-> As in,  you can think you're going to spend the next two years of your life in ABC city, doing DEF vocation, with GHI people, soaking in JKL season, only to find out that's not at all the case and instead you will be doing the last thing you ever envisioned doing, especially in this phase of life?

Either way, the statement kind of annoys me because it's trite and absurd.  But, it came to me on a recent weekday afternoon, and something about it feels true (and still equally overwrought and trivial).

Also, I really miss my books.  Everything is in storage, and I didn't anticipate it, but I really miss sitting by my books.  Not sure where I first heard it, but a book really is like an old friend.  This simple revelation made me realize why I'm so adverse to E-readers....

Anyway, with a lack of proximal close friends, I miss sitting by my old book-friends and having access to my familiar things, which are currently all boxed and inaccessibly buried in the abyss of the garage-storage.

Ahhh American materialism, I am deep in the throes.