Posts Tagged ‘Mowgli’

doldrums schmoldrums

February 20, 2010

Alternative title:  February is the F-word.

It is still February.  February somewhat sucks.  For a while there, I had decided that I was going to pump Wellbutrin into our village water system, and maybe try to transmit it electronically, as well.  Or Prozac.  Or Heroin.  The other day, a friend read a phone-text and shook her head, laughing.  “Everyone’s depressed!”  And it’s true.  There is some hard core depths of despair happening ’round here.

We are deep into the dark season here in Wisconsin.  I’ve seen other bloggers talk about the signs of returning spring, and I want to throw a chunk of ice at them.  Oh no, honey.  Not here.  Here we do not mention the S word, for fear of a collective breakdown.  Except, shit.  I just mentioned it, didn’t I?  I will now pause for my fellow Doldrum-experiencers to cry with longing for the season that lingers in the distance too far beyond hope.

*  *  *  *  *

Everyone OK?  Yes.  See, that’s the thing.  I think that everyone is OK.  (I’m OK, you’re OK, OK now I’m sounding like a self-help book.  ack.)  I just think that a turn toward darkness in winter is a healthy, natural movement.  Remember?  It is when we fight it that we cause ourselves harm.  I shouldn’t be feeling this way, it is his/her fault, how can we fix this, what is the problem . . . 

There is no problem.  There is no spoon.  These Winter Doldrums have brought me some really nasty-but-good, awful-but-helpful, raw-but-fresh stuff.  Stuff that productive spring will do great things with, surely.  (shoot!  S-word!  hope!  sorry!) 

But, oh . . . . . spring.  Spriiiiiiiiiiiiing.  Maybe it is not actually so far off?  I mean, it is currently snowing.  And everything is still deader than dead.  And the sun does still set before 6 pm.  But . . . shoot!  I’ve done it again!  Sorry!  Moment of silence.

*  *  *  *  *

And in case that pathetic little attempt at inspiration doesn’t do it for you, here are some pictures that might.  They are not spring-ish in the least, but they are happy, I think.  (?)

crack

Do you know the joy of this? Can you hear it? Feel it under your feet? yesssssssssssssssssss. This is, perhaps, the best part of winter. (aside: I asked my husband, showed him the pictures, and he said, "that just looks sad." So maybe I am totally off on this?)

crackshoes

Ecstasy, I tell you. Sheer bliss. crrrrrack.

lick

And, of course, there is the licking of a big hunk of snow. (Dimples) Who can resist that?

And a few more.  I gave up putting them into nice little black rectangles for you:

callick

I'm just going to assume that this was not in the driveway. (Mowgli)

walk

And I learned something last weekend. Running in the winter can be fun! Avoiding the poorly-shoveled spots was honestly fun. Like an obstacle course. I'm serious! (Shortcake)

name

And name-spelling in the snow. There are few things in life as thrilling as a big stretch of undisturbed snow that you are about to have your way with. (Kiki)

 

Use Your Illusion

February 19, 2010
Illusions are art, for the feeling person, and it is by art that you live, if you do.  (Elizabeth Bowen)
tri-x film in mamiya 645af.  mowgli and a girlie friend.

tri-x film in mamiya 645af. mowgli and a girlie friend.

Today I’m thinking about illusions.  The illusions of vision, of art, of social role, of relationship, of should, of connection, of separation, of possession, of acceptance, of proper, of religion, of comfort, of security, of emotion, of praise, of beauty, of insult.  Hey!  Another one of those lists.  I haven’t gone all there-is-no-spoon yet, but I do think I’ll go on a quantum physics kick, now that you mention it.

I’m thinking about how we can become so governed by those illusions, and about what would happen if we . . . weren’t.  If we accepted their function when appropriate, loved the illusions for what they were, and then gratefully let them go in due time.  “Arigato Zaisho,” if you know what I mean

I’m thinking, and letting go of a few other . . . thinkings.  Oooh, I have a lot more to say here, but I’m operating under the illusion of time, so I must go.

Have the illusion of a happy weekend!

. . . and post a cute picture of my kid.  See?  Just like you thought I couldn’t.  Suckas.

Except in the shot, he has just told me that he is Anakin, who he likes because, of course, Anakin goes to the dark side and becomes Darth Vader.  And maybe that’s not normal.  And maybe it’s not normal that it makes me proud when he says these things.  And so, just forget the whole normal thing, already.

mini-me + light saber on tri-x in mamiya c330

mini-me + light saber on tri-x in mamiya c330, neg scan

I’m glad my villain-loving genes run strong in him.  There are other similarities, too.  heh.

DSC_0565xx

And to quote Nina’s little boy, “I like being negative; that’s my favorite of all!  Oh OK, I’ll be positive when I’m done being negative.  Now, as I was saying…”

And so as I was saying, the villain is almost always my favorite, too.  Not only are they just plain cool, but they’re also just so beautifully complex.  Right?  Surely you have a favorite villain.  Tell me.  And your answer can’t be Terri Fischer.

Cue Obsession

February 2, 2010

grace1914

This is a photo of my great aunt Grace on the beach in 1914.

How gorgeous is this?  I could stare at it all day.

Except instead of stare at it, I’m going to develop a roll of film and print out staff paper. *

Because I’ve got my music back. 

I don’t know what happened, but some dam burst in my head.  And suddenly, it is all MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!

Actually, it’s rather annoying.  I mean, seriously.  I must have ADD.  Just do one thing already, right?

But the damn . . . dam.  It’s as if it was always there, the MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC! building and building and building, and it just reached this threshold, and fwooooosh.  I can’t really stop obsessing about music right now.  It’s quite obnoxious.

I do tend to be fickle, of course.  And so, surely this too shall pass.  But for now, there is nothing more pressing in my life than to learn to play the electric guitar, and more specifically, to play this one song on it.  And maybe one or two more.  Luckily, I know a guy.**

It was impossible to not be musical growing up in my family.  For as long as I can remember, up until I left the house, it was always MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!  For the rest of them, it still is.  But it hasn’t been, for me, for whatever reason.  I mean, I’ve got a piano sitting in my living room.  And I play it sometimes.  And I’ve even played this one song on it.  But the full moon, and the thought of an electric guitar, these were the last two straws.  Or water molecules.  Or whatever.

fwoooooooooooshhh.

I’m not predicting future mother-of-four rockstardom or anything.  Just, MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!MUSIC!  until I’m bored.

 

* You should know that I forgot to pick up Mowgli from school while searching for this.  Doesn’t the red flag for clinical psychosis have something to do with being unable to perform daily tasks?  shit.

**I’ve known these people for a couple years, and never took the time to listen to their music.  Don’t make the same mistake, go listen right now.  Scroll down and find Hello, Hospital.  RRRRRRRRRRRROCK!

Moving On?

January 22, 2010

I’m just sayin’.

It could be summer now, if it wanted to be.

I’d be O.K. with that.

img456x

holga tri-x early fall '09

Nina

January 11, 2010
You’ve met my friend Nina before, haven’t you?

This is the illustrious Nina:

img440x

Nina + crew, tri-x in the mamiya 645af

 

And Nina’s Palette is her new website.

Nina is my friend Jessica’s sister.  You’ve met her before, too.  And here she is, headless.  Ain’t she purty (despite the dust on this negative scan)?

img401

Jessica and her Yashica. Me, and my tri-x and my Mamiya. Arigato.

And to complicate things, they also have a younger sister who is also gorgeous and fabulous.  (And she’s my little brother’s age, so I’m working on a set-up plan, because then we’ll be related.  Except she would be all, “Yeah, dude.  Get in line,” and he would be all, “whatever.”  So forget it.  Forget it, already!  And anyway, this is all about Nina.)

BECAUSE, LOOK!!!  She is featured in OnMilwaukee.com today!

A few weeks ago, Nina and Jessica kidnapped my children and helped them make self-portraits on 16×20 canvas.  And besides being blown away by the joy of it (the art, of course, not the missing children), I felt a little inkling of you are on to something here, my friend.  It was the collaboration with kids that I sensed, I think, and I knew she was in her element. 

fischer kid's self portraits 11-21-09

Shortly after, she created this beautiful painting with her son, Malachi.  When I saw it, I had chills.  And also maybe I cried a little.  Or a lot.  Do you ever get that feeling, when someone you love touches something within themselves that you know is soul, and is purpose, and is divine . . . and then shares it with the world?  Oh, it is a really good feeling.  An all-is-right-with-the-world feeling.

Go read her story.  I think you might just cry.  A little.

ninas

collaborative acrylic painting by Nina and her son, Malachi

name that emotion

January 3, 2010

hello.

i am feeling

exceptionally

(fucking)*

crabby

today.

and also sorta like this:

TAF_1220x

 and in the good moments,

more like this:

TAF_1270x

 

(*yes, mom.  necessary.)

The End

December 29, 2009

 

in celebration of 2009 (such a good year),

TAF_0809x
(mowgli)

as it teeters on the edge of december,

0TAF_0188x
(dimples)

and then escapes into 2010.

TAF_1069x
(kiki)

. . . the end.

0TAF_0213x
(shortcake)

Be Merry

December 22, 2009

 

TAF_1047x

. . . and I’ll see you next year.

TAF_1231x

Do you remember saying that as a kid, before winter break?  I’ll see you next year.  Get it?  Because it will  be next yeeeear?  I remember marvelling at the fact that the year would soon be 1985.  Hadn’t it always been 1984?

And now I’m feeling childish.  So let’s play a game, for the rest of the entire year!  Let’s write a story in the comments.  One sentence per comment, but write as often as you’d like, anonymously or not.

If you comment before January 1st, and email me (terri @ terrifischer .com) or facebook/twitter me with your address, I’ll send you something!

Once upon a time . . .

DSC_0627x

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.