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  • It all started with chocolate cake covered in fudge icing...

    ...which I bought on Saturday night to go with my bottle of cheap, delicious white dessert wine. I had made plans on Saturday night to drive to Philly to see a friend of mine who now lives in another state. He comes home infrequently so it was to be a treat to see him, to talk. To drink, probably. But Saturday was nothing more than a massive torrential downpour, the likes of which I haven't seen in some time. Beautiful. Eery. Old-testament-esque. I had quite decided to stay indoors all day and all night. For forty days if need be. But it stopped just in time for dusk and a pink sunset. I set out to buy some wine, in some sweat pants, still very determined to stay indoors. I canceled on my friend.

    Tonight I came home from work contemplating my lesson plan for tomorrow. I poured a glass of cheap dessert wine, squinted my eyes and furrowed my eyebrows and wrote out a magical set of activities for my 8am class. And I sipped. And I got up and cut a piece of chocolate cake with chocolate fudge icing with a butter knife, which I promptly licked. And licked. And I thought, "This could be dinner." And it would have been, had I not decided a half hour later that I wanted bacon. And so I fried up some bacon. And then an egg. And I ate it while sipping my dessert wine.

    And I thought, "So this is what it's like to be an adult."

  • Really Long...and Introspective

    When I was young and my sister was younger she accidentally tipped a hot iron over onto my exposed right knee. It was an unpleasant experience, to say the least. Within a few hours I had the largest blister I had ever seen, and for the next few days I had to make every effort not to puncture it for fear of getting it infected. Inevitably, however, the blister broke open. The wound got infected, which left me with a fever for about a day, then it soon scabbed over and eventually healed. In its wake was a large, shiny new scar, and for a long time afterwards whenever my sister was near me and my knee I would point to my scar and blame her. She, of course, denied any culpability.

     

    But there are other scars, scars we don’t see but feel, scars we are sometimes unaware exist but experience the effects of regardless, much like the way a physical scar leaves its effect on the skin. Despite their relative invisibility, these scars are often prominent, manifesting themselves in manner, in words, in demeanor. And they too are memorable. 

     

    Some considerable time has passed since that physical scar, and I have since garnered some other scars. For a while I felt like the most memorable ones were the ones I got as a child, the physical, visible scars. There is, for instance, the slightly raised scar in the middle of my forehead from when I, dizzy from spinning in circles, stumbled and hit my head on my great-aunt’s unusually spiky flowerpot.  Or the little indented scar perilously close to my left eye, probably caused by a loose stone from some dirt road I was running down as a child.

     

    Before long I realized that life has a way of hurting, of scalding and biting and pulling at us so hard that soon enough, and often before we realize it, we are scarred, marked in ways we didn’t expect, and often cannot or do not acknowledge. I sat looking at my legs one evening, rubbed the marked places and remembered the circumstances surrounding them, sometimes even smiling at them. The experience, the pain, as unpleasant as it was at the time, is now a memory, a part of my life.

     

    I cannot yet say the same for my invisible scars which, I will admit, took me some time to identify and admit to. I cannot yet smile at those circumstances that left me feeling inferior; I cannot look and smile sincerely at the faces, either in person or in my memory, which are still able to cause that unmistakable painful, pounding, heavy feeling at my very center. I cannot help the sometimes empty feeling of missing someone from a different time, a different experience. I cannot help feeling that my scars are still pink and raw, still sensitive to the touch, still unhealed.

     

    This is, of course, because the healing process varies. Small wounds heal quickly and without much care. Larger wounds need cleaning, protection, time. And time really makes all the difference. We often don’t clean our larger wounds properly, once identified, and we don’t leave them alone long enough, give them enough time to heal. Instead, we tease the memories of lost friendships, of failed relationships, of ruined opportunities, of the wounds, the circumstances that can create scars. We do not give them time; leave them alone to heal. And sometimes even after the scar has healed we point to it, place blame because of it, are immobilized because of it, fearing that somehow down the line we’ll get another one just like it.

     

    But scars are meant to be badges of honor. They are meant to be flaunted, talked about, even bragged about. They are meant to represent an experience, a situation, a circumstance which, inevitably, we survived and, though it may have caused some pain, healed. Scars are proof of mending, of the healthy process by which a wound rights itself with time.

     

    My knee healed eventually, and soon so did my impression of the experience. My scar now represents something else, and I don’t mind exposing my knees. Soon, once they heal completely, I’m certain I’ll feel the same way about the scars I can’t see. And soon I’ll flaunt those too.

  • Blame September

    Babies always make me feel better. Even the babies who aren't smiling, the ones who can only manage to stare in that eery,wide-eyed way babies stare. It cures all my ills. I will not have any of my own any time soon though (for various reasons, including the fact that immaculate conception isn't nearly as cool as it was the first time). Instead,  I'm considering adopting a kitten. The only reason I don't yet own a pet is the fact that I am truly terrified of being soley responsible for a living, breathing thing's well being. Especially a brand new living, breathing thing. Animals are high maintenance in my book, even relatively independent animals like cats. I'm moving in the direction of being ready to be a cat mommy.

    I blame my current ills on  September. Yes, I am placing blame on a month, a concept of time that certainly has no feelings, and even if it did it, could care less about its culpability. I blame it for the hot days and contrastingly cool evenings characterized by haunting, whispering trees. Subsequently, I blame those trees for my reminiscing. I blame September for my flurry of fevered dreams, fantastic and confusing and consistent. Night after night, morning after morning, probably due in part to my partially opened bedroom window which, when I lay down, is directly over my sleeping head. I blame September for the slowly falling leaves, very slow now and indeed not really September's fault, but enough material for me to imagine the eventual sparseness of winter. And snow. After all is said and done, September must be stopped.

    Still, September has brought a new batch of 22 eager young students on which I can impart my writing genius. September has also made me delusional obviously, since, even if I were a writing genius (the jury is still out on that), imparting this on other people is an almost impossible task. Nonetheless, they are a very pleasant group and I, less nervous and neurotic (see entries about my first semester teaching) in general, seem to be getting along well with them all. Of course it helps that there is a proportionate amount of males and females in the class.

    And none of them seem prone to hitting on me.

     

  • The last days of summer

    About two weeks ago a classmate of mine, one of our newly appointed grad student liaisons (don't quite know what all the job description entails), started sending out emails reminding us about peer tutoring meetings, grad student receptions etc in the upcoming weeks. He ended his emails with "enjoy your last days of summer". The first time he did this I was bitter. I recoiled a bit, bristled. My summer was not over. It was not in the "last days", as though it was aging and sickly and in need of bed rest and weekly family visits. I was in denial.

    These are indeed the last days of summer though. The days are hauntingly beautiful, with cloudless skies and a preponderance of delicate flowers everywhere, as though the trees themselves sense the end and, with their last bursts of energy, attempt to fool the weather into thinking there could be another month of summer. Or maybe they could work out a deal where they skipped fall and winter and reinstated spring.

    Today is one such cloudless-sky-and-pretty-spring-like-flowers day. I know it is the last days of summer because there is a clashing of dimensions, a mixing of realities going on. The summer reality, the one where random anythings can, and have happened is still here, as is evidenced by the continuous random happenings of my life. But the other reality, the one that involves responsibility and logical thinking has begun to appear, shimmering in and out like the wizards in Harry Potter whose images can appear , shimmery and vague, in fire and talk normally as though they weren't in a ball of flame. Sorry. My summer reality allows to me to try to intelligently refer to the makings of the Harry Potter saga in a metaphor, though I should, in all likelihood, be embarrassed to admit to having even read of the boy wizard and liking it.

    I know it is the last days of summer because even as I sit in my mother's backyard in suburban New Jersey I can sense the changing of the sun, and I can sense the earth's slow rotational shifting away from the sun too, like the cooling off of a once very passionate and close relationship now reduced to sporadic phone calls and the occasional visit. And though it is still visible, still warming the trees at 6pm, the sun's light is already different. Soon there will be no sun past 5pm.

    The last days of summer have me in a similarly weird in-between place, more so than the normal in-between place that all twenty-somethings exist in. I am contemplating various things under this cloudless sky on a back porch, which isn't unusual. I am also sore and tired from too many nights festivities in close succession, living as a summer-reality person and not an otherwise-reality person. The truth of the matter is I am approaching a reality (perhaps permanently) that means I am too old to enjoy the summer-reality of much younger folks. As I sit here lamenting the ever present pain in my left knee, the soreness of my thighs from dancing in ways I should probably no longer dance in establishments I should, perhaps, no longer dance in, I feel the death of something, the loss of a way of being. And yet there is a bit of a lightness, a rejoicing at the thought of getting older, of doing away with the emotions that so ruled me as a teenage girl, including the irritating, and yet deliciousness of unwarranted jealousy (which I felt fleetingly last night in said establishment which I should, perhaps, no longer patronize). Then again, I suppose some emotions, some ways of being never age. And they never die.

    In any case, things are always as they should be. In relative chaos certainly, as my summer seems to sometimes have been, but as it draws to a close I know that the sometimes chaos is a part of the very ordered way of being, of growing, of living. And maybe I'm wrong about the realities, and the bits about aging and the inappropriateness of my summer revelry (as infrequent, except as of late, as it was). The last days of summer only gives way to the first days of fall, and that's an entirely different way of being, just as confusing and delightful and random as any other.

    Then again, I'm rambling now, as cloudless skies tend to make me do. And this summer reality may have resulted in a personal spilling of the brain that makes little sense at all in any reality.

  • Unrelated subjects...

    Because of an episode I had yesterday evening which ended with me to leaving work abruptly while clutching my stomach, I now ponder what the food I eat will look like if it decides it doesn't want to stay down. Makes one think about what one eats no?

    Aside from that interesting bit about my week, I attended the first orientation meeting at my department in order to welcome and awkwardly mingle with the incoming M.A.'s and a few of my old professors. I am a mentor, as I may have mentioned (though I get the sense that I'll end up being mentored myself by her since she has that academic earnestness I lost a while ago...or perhaps never had). I fianlly met my mentee today, and she didn't look like I expected. I'm not quite sure what I expected really...someone shorter maybe. A little more nervous. She didn't seem nervous, though perhaps she was (in which case she'll have to teach me a thing or two about body language).  She seemed nice though, and it shall be interesting getting to know them all.

    Now, I'd like to mention that I don't often talk about race, race relations or ethnicity because quite frankly I'm almost certain any conclusion or thoughts I come up with will have already been said.We are interesting people, humans, and we will, I think, always find a way to label and title and categorize because its the easiest way for our brains to understand. Anyway, I say all this to segue into the interesting fact that there is a new black male in the English dept. This is exciting because he's probably the first black man (student anyway...there's one black male professor) to be in that place in...years. This is also exciting because he is unconventional in his interests (SciFi and fantasy...which are right up my alley). What I'm wondering though, is if this is also exciting because he's a black male and I'm a black female...and well we tend to gravitate towards people who look like us (though, romantically I can't say I discriminate)? And he's male? LOL. This is ridiculous. I don't even want to entertain the thought of dating or even casual evenings talking about science fiction. The fact of the matter though, is that I am excited. I texted two people after I left the meeting to let them know of my new found discovery. All I said was there's a new black male in the department! I sent it to my sister and one of my best friends. My friend told me to calm down. My sister responded "Hmm. Is he cute?" Apparently the assumption on both ends was that I was interested. In the end I agree with my sister. It's simply...refreshing to see a different kind of face. Yay for diversity.

  • Contents of...

    Contents of my stomach:
    -one average sized black plum
    -two bagels (with tuna salad, one eaten for breakfast, the other to prevent starvation before my very late dinner)
    -a half a cup of rice
    -one salmon steak (seasoned and cooked rather quickly)
    -one cup of very red generic fruit punch
    -one cup of water

    Contents of my day:
    -woke up at 1pm wishing I didn't spend four hours on the phone last night
    -slow shower..again wishing I didn't spend four hours on the phone last night
    -ate plum and bagel (not at the same time)
    -got dressed and headed to the neighborhood Borders
    -read non-academic magazines at the neighborhood Borders for two hours
    left the neighborhood Borders feeling guilty for the frivolousness of magazine reading
    -came home and cooked a very, very late salmon dinner

    Contents of my mind:
    -wondering why I had a dream about Q Tip, notorious for "Vivrant Thing"
    -contemplating whether I should read the rest of The Woman Warrior, begin Tristam Shandy (both for school, and neither exciting my fancy) or crack open the new magazine (again non-academic) I bought
    -mentally laughing at myself for even pretending like I planned on being productive
    -finally admitting that I think Barack Obama is very attractive..and...wondering vaguely about my attraction to older men
    - to watch "Hidalgo" with sexy Viggo from "Lord of the Rings" or not?

    *All this brought to you by the idle beauty that is summer vacation.....

  • I kinda sorta think I have an addiction

    Before we venture into the vast morass of my mind, let me just preface this all by saying I do not have a drug problem. I do, occasionally, spend too much money on caffeinated beverages, and yeah ok so I definitely eat more Cocoa Pebbles in a week than is healthy for anyone. I do not, however, mess with the illegal substances...mostly because they are illegal and with my luck I'd get caught and punished in some odd way.

    That being said I am totally addicted. I even think I have an addictive personality (by that I mean I think I have a tendency to do things in a repetitive manner...not that my personality incites addiction..though come to think of it that's a great pick up line). My addiction is leaving the country. During my younger years I left my island of birth frequently (to visit my grandmother one island over) and then left permanently when I was a little older to move to New Jersey (yes, random state. I know). Now there's something in my spirit that requires the occasionl airport visit. I'm not blaming my childhood ( I don't quite know where I stand on the nature vs. nurther situation) but I'm sorta used to it.

    I'm thinking about visiting Peru for a month next year once I'm done with my M.A. I was toying with with idea of getting certified as an ESL teacher, but I think I've settled on volunteering at a school which will involve teaching English.  I'd be living with a Peruvian family and eating the meals they cook. It's all through a program that does cost some money (yeah, paying to volunteer does sound a bit off, but the money is donated I believe. Probably to the families that feed people like me). I'm starting to get slightly obsessed with the idea, a bit like I did with my Costa Rica trip before I went. Peru has some beautiful Incan ruins (Machu Picchu!).465px-Sunset_across_Machu_Picchu

    I must go. Traveling solo is...an experience, and I think the more I do it the more I like it. It requires some self reliance, some introspection, some level of appreciation for how small we really are in a much larger world (literally and figuratively). I'm ready for more mountains. More green. I need to feed my addiction. And soon.

  • My private moon

    For the second night in a row I sat in my car gazing at the full moon as it gazed at me and felt ridiculously vulnerable. In ways only the moon can make one feel. Tonight though, as I got out of my car and walked to the door I felt, alongside the vulnerability, invincible. Strong. Wise. And with no explanation. The moon followed me to the door.

    I said good night and went inside.

  • What to say?

    I've had so much to say. I guess what I should say is that I've been talking alot in my head (and sometimes outloud). I have had things to say about dreams, both the beautiful and disturbing (often simultaneously) effect of them on one's mood. I have things to say about the fact that I honestly have no idea what to do with my life, that planning for life feels like rolling dice. I have had things to say about my alternating desire for cats and/or children. Most importantly, I have had so so much to say, to ask even, about the notion of marriage. This, I think, is the curse of the twenties. Very many people in my peer group, for better or for worse, are getting engaged, getting married and getting babies. I would have thought that I succumbed less to peer pressure as I grew out of the teenage years, but I have to admit I've been affected.

    Now, don't misunderstand. I have a healthy enough fear of marriage to keep me sufficiently away from it for just a little bit (the same could be said of babies...they are very fragile and can break). I do, however, like practically every other human, have a desire to not be too different. In essence, I don't want to be unmarriageable. I don't want to be barren either. These fears are unfounded. I know. Logically no one really knows if they are far from marriage material (what does that mean anyway?), and until I try I won't know if my lady parts are capable of making a baby.

    I think the problem is just that..thinking. I'm finding it hard during my quarterlife crisis (I'm quite certain that's what this is) to stop thinking. To enjoy what may just be my physical apex (which..is a little disturbing because I already have a regular pain in my left knee when there's precipitation...seriously). I find that I look forward to being 30, which apparently is odd for a woman to do, because I feel like I'll know myself a little better, have some more confidence, or at the very least be able to idetify my faults and be comfortable with them. That I'll know what I want. I suppose that's a bit like rolling dice too, because for all I know 30 will look just like 25 (which isn't far away). I suppose the difference will be me...thinking differently, which I could essentially do...now.

    That's so much easier to type and to say than to do. Yeah yeah...no one said it would be easy...

  • Sometimes...

    Life can seem so surreal. Like a weird mixture of things that have little relation to one another. Like the massive hail and thunderstorm that occurred just as I was prepared to leave NJ to head to work in DE. Now I am at work, after having arrived about 45 minutes late due to efforts of trying to remain alive while on the highway, and the sun is now shining. I can see it from the large window ahead of me. There's a light breeze because the leaves are fluttering, and it looks like it never rained here, like the thunder never rumbled once, nor did the sky spit frozen water and lightning.

    There's also the matter of watching part of the Olympic ceremony with my mom, of hearing about the horrible stabbing of the parents of a former Olympic vollyballer, the death of her father due to the stabbing and the critical condition of her mother. Their murderer, who appears to have had no familiarity with this family before attacking them and their Chinese guide, subsequently jumped off the building they were all on to his death. Surreal. And not in a good way.

    It's surreal that I am about embark on my last semester at school, surreal because I distinctly remember my first. Actually, I still distinctly remember my freshman year at my undergraduate school, so I guess my entire graduate career has been surreal. I happened to visit my old campus in Philadelphia the other day, and it was such an odd feeling. A little like visiting one's junior high and wondering why everything seemed so small. The difference with revisiting one's undergraduate school after some time away (not that long away because I live close enough to see it every week if I wanted to...but its been a while since I was a student there) is the memories that are in every corner I walk, even outside. The late night walks. The lunch trucks. The streets even. Ahh the streets.

    During my visit I had another surreal experience, of seeing someone from my past that reminds me of a very unpleasant time. The odd thing is that there are almost two people now. The current person, and the person that represents that unpleasant time of my life. Time manages to do that very well. To create simultaneous images of people so that even if you are staring directly at them you see two images, two people. I suppose this occurs to parents all the time. Looking at your now adult child and seeing, among other things, the simultaneous-ness of that individual, the baby who needed to be held, the child who begged for hugs, the teen who begged for less hugs. I imagine being a parent is such a bittersweet sort of experience.

    But I digress.