Posts Tagged ‘Crumpet’

Threshold

February 4, 2010
bowels

crumpet on tri-x film pushed, in mamiya tlr

 

What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life?  The world would split open.

~Muriel Rukeyser   (found on this blog, upon which I am currently crushing.)

 

I often consider the concept of threshold, perhaps because I am drawn to dance alongside it.  I wonder about the paradox of a thing, and about the point beyond which the pendulum swings the other way.  Things like . . .

breaking point breakdown conception suicide insanity orgasm death critical mass critical condition trigger release love affair hibernation hope for salvation loss of balance fucked up childhood one or the other friendly or flirty funny or crude aloof enlightened condescending wise light dark fear pain belief ecstasy lithium saturation

the level of calcium in a cell of cardiac tissue that, when reached, causes the heart to contract.

the crescendo of a feeling or desire that is secret or repressed or denied or ignored and the little thing that breaks the shell, allowing it to wreak havoc on any pathetic attempt at pretense.

. . . and such.

(ahem)

 

It is this bottom of the stairwell, head in hands, on the threshold of insanity feeling that inspired this following little ditty a few months ago, and in turn, I decided to write Motherhood, The Musical.  (I’m totally kidding, of course, but it has a certain ring, doesn’t it?)  It seems the depths of winter are inspiring quite a few of these moments in quite a few of my friends.  I wish I could sing this for you, because I crack myself up, but I can’t figure out how to effectively upload music files.  Anyway.  It’s a waltz:

I’m deep in the bowels of / Motherhood / I’m fertile and sexed and it / Doesn’t feel good / I’ll take all these children / And feed them to wolves / Or I’ll eat them myself / If the damned dogs are full.

Tell me that doesn’t just scream Broadway hit. 

 

Ohmigod.  Please don’t call Social Services.  I’m just kidding.  About the wolves.  Thing.

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see? blue cast. photoshop fail.

Today I received a mini lecture about a homework folder.  I’m sure it was as simple as “Mowgli didn’t bring his folder to school today,” but I only heard: “You are a failure as a mother, and your children are destined to become even more terrible failures than you, thanks to your parenting ineptitude.”

When I got home, there was mascara all over my face.

Now, granted, it is a new moon today, plus, nature is just about as dark as she gets right now.  And however skeptical you might be about nature’s effects on the soul, the new moon does at least have physical implications for me.  (read: P. M. fucking. S.) 

Anyway.  I came home—drippy mascara, hungry kids, and all; and went online to place another photo order.  While the order was uploading, I (surprise!) went on to facebook, where a friend admitted to having a bad day.  It was a simple, honest sentence, but was more comforting to me, in that ridiculously depressive moment, than any other words or actions could have been.  Beyond support, advice, or sympathy, it sometimes is just nice to know that you’re not alone. 

I know. I know how obnoxiously weepy and sappy and whiny that sounds if your life is perfect and you are never sad.  (Seriously?  Your life is perfect, and you are never sad?  Wow.  Bitch.)  But for those of us humans, we actually find great comfort and connection in one another’s imperfections.  It’s true, isn’t it?  Don’t you feel closer to a person once you’ve seen their soft underbelly, their endearing (and not so endearing) flaws, their mistakes and secrets?  Or worse, their mundane?

So why in the world do we try so desperately to hide those things?  We flaunt what ”should” be flaunted, and hide what “should” be hidden (including our sadness).  And then we, wearing mascara and perfection, disconnect.

I had a similar conversation with a friend the other day, and she remarked on what a vicious cycle it is: the attempt to connect by appropriately flaunting and hiding and fitting into stereotypes, which, in turn, only causes more loneliness.  Counterproductive.

I was feeling all smug and non-people-pleasy then, like, psssh.  glad i’m not like that.  pssssh. 

Until I thought about what it would be like to meet, in person, some friends I know only through this here electronic device.  And it made me feel socially anxious–a feeling I am not at all familiar with.  I realized that this is totally different than the normal way of getting to know someone.  You people know me at my most manic depressive.  I flash my soul here, in words and pictures and drawings like I would never do over a casual cuppa, yet you would not even recognize me in passing.

Someone directed me to this post by Jen Lee that says it perfectly.  “Being new friends is sometimes about breaking the bad news to each other.”  My confession, my soft underbelly (no pun intended), is more about how normal and relatively boring I actually am.  And so, without further ado, I’m breaking the bad news, a few of my horrifyingly mundane attributes:

 (these will not be making it to the christmas cards.)

~ I have ugly feet.  I mean, who doesn’t have ugly feet?  But apparently, mine are even that much uglier.

~ My dreadlocks really have nothing at all to do with a spiritual journey.  It’s just another hairstyle.

~ I have really short, stubby fingers.  Bad for arpeggios, good for trills.

~ In a matter of minutes, I can be all three of these things: extremely happy, painfully sad, and completely apathetic.  Quite frequently, actually, this is the case.  (Did you know that already?)

~ Currently, my comfortable jeans are a size 12.  And I have neither ambition nor desire to change that fact.  I’m fine with it, but if exercise and dietary discipline are virtues, then fat is a fault.

~ I’m not terribly good at photoshop (obviously?).  AND I use (prepare yourselves, photographers!!!) Photoshop Elements.

~ I don’t wear sunscreen because I like how I look with a tan.

~ I am likely the messiest person you’ll ever know.  Seriously.  (Tell ‘em, real life friends.)

~ I live in the most standard ranch house ever.  And I don’t.  Have.  Anything.  Hanging.  On.  My.  Walls.  (except something I will tell you about later.)

~ I don’t at all take care of things like DVDs (Hi, Jessica!), TVs, laptops, carpets, . . . oh, anything really.  I don’t take care of material things.

~ I was the homecoming queen.

~ I don’t send Christmas cards.

TGIF and F stands for…

October 23, 2009

 

I tell you, we are here on earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different.

(Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.)

Is that not one of the best quotes you’ve ever read?  Ooh, I love it.  When it comes to farting around, this kid, this little Mowgli of mine, has got it down.  Here are a few recent digital shots of him doing  just that.  I hope it inspires a weekend of farting around for you.

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digital

 

This last shot was from a corn maze (or as Crumpet says, a “maize maze,” har har) this past weekend.  I love how he is off the ground in this one.  I had a hard time, though, releasing the shutter at all because a) Hercules was yelling “no running!”; and b) I could not help but think of fellow film photographer Suzanne Revy.  (Click here to see her iconic-to-me photo blogged.)

Vomit And Poo

August 27, 2009

a.k.a., excuse yet another nonsensical rant, and, why i give a shit.

–>digression, before I have even started (is that possible?): it irks me that some people find words for natural bodily functions, like the aforementioned S-word, to be offensive, but have no qualms about using racial slurs or words like “retard” as insults.   This digression brought to you by…  a self-righteous jerk on Twitter that I’ve just unfollowed.

I am a bit embarassed about my previous post.  This feeling has me thinking that I should have kept my thoughts under wraps, and waited until I could present them in a nice, orderly fashion.  This was just like… blahhhflubbadubbawonkaboo.  I made my point, or at least, I clarified that I am not pregnant, which was my intent.  But I feel like…  I dunno, I guess it’s like when someone comes to visit your newborn baby for the first time.  You give her a bath, probably, and put her in her cutest outfit.  You at least don’t hand her over to your guest with a diaper full of meconium and a face full of breastmilk spit up.  Which brings me to…

Vomit  (regarding the rant)

So, I’m sorry.  All I did was vomit at you.  My dear friend Crumpet, who I keep around especially to listen to her speak British English in her pretty pretty accent, uses this analogy.  She will call, occasionally, to spew the random things that simply must get out: motherhood rants, frustrations, gossip news, etc.  When our conversation has ended, she will say, “thank you for letting me vomit all over you.”  Vomit sounds so much prettier with an English accent, I swear.

And now, I think I am making it worse!  Like that time when I was a kid, and I was sick, and I ran down the hall to throw up in the bathroom, except I didn’t make it to the bathroom, and puked on the tile, but kept running, so I slipped on it and fell into it and just continued to puke all over myself.  Yeah, it’s like that.

Let’s move on, shall we?

Poo  (Why I give a shit.)

In regards to my recent “motherhood and creativity” obsesssion, you’re likely wondering:  Is this just some pitiful mommy chick, feeling pathetic and noncontributive?  That should just put those offsprings in daycare and get a friggin’ job?  Or take a watercolor class at the senior center?  Is she trying to make herself feel important?  Because she knows what an f-stop is and has ink and a sketch pad?  Or is this simply an excuse?  A justification for laziness?  As if a knitted hat can cancel out a mountain of dirty laundry?  Yes you are.  (Wondering.)

And yes I am, occasionally, feeling all of those things.  But those insecurities are not the driving force behind this motherhood/creativity thing.  Really, it is its own force.  It just keeps flooding my brain.  I let it, though, because I think it’s important.  I give a shit because I think it actually matters.

However ambitious it sounds, I think it matters for my kids’ future, and not just my daughters’.  I think it matters for all of us, and not just my fellow mothers.  We are trying, as a society, to right our many wrongs.  We are scrambling to fix, save, or cover it all up.  We have laws, solutions, formulas, organizations, charities, ideas, philosophies, plans.  These are good things, though empty, many formed from good intentions and pumped with masculine power.  And, aye, there’s the rub… 

There is a significant lack of feminine power: creativity, receptivity, intuition, depth.  {And I mean feminine power, not to be confused with “girl power,” that bitter battle cry that has women yearning for equality with (or worse, victory over!) men in a man’s world, on man’s terms.  But I think that will have to be another post…}  It seems that what is absent (or at least on hiatus) in this story is feminine power, which I believe is, at it’s heart, creativity.  Perhaps I have a different definition of it (mm-hmm, yet another post), but in this culture, the word creativity seems to border on cutesy, silly, frivolous.  Really, creation is a powerful force, the essence of… well, everything.  And it’s available to us—and through us—all; especially, I think, as mothers.

 So, yeah.  It matters.

 

tri-x, Mamiya 645af, That Neighbor Chick at an LHC meeting.

That Neighbor Chick and babe, tri-x, Mamiya 645AF (negative scan)