Thursday, May 28, 2015

Favorites

I love hearing about people's random, pointless preferences. I don't know what people's favorite colors or ice cream flavors really mean, but it feels important. Why do we even pick the thing in the first place? I really couldn't tell you why I prefer Raisinettes over any other candy. Sure, I can list reasons, but it's really just because I like them. Simple as that.

I'm pretty open-minded about people's favorites, except when it comes down to 2 things. I just can't wrap my head around why people are so gung-ho about them!

Number One: GMAIL

Seriously, I need someone to write me an essay about why the world loves GMAIL. I started using it when I needed a more professional email address, and I still don't like it. Hotmail is so much prettier and easier to use. (Yes, I know this Blogspot functions off of a GMAIL account. It's what I'm stuck with because I'm basically illiterate when it comes to technology.)

Number Two: Filming Concerts

Okay, so I know this isn't really a "favorite." But I know some girl somewhere has at least thought to herself "...this is the best thing I have ever filmed...they're my favorite..." while fan-girling over the hot guy in a band. Why don't people just enjoy the moment and dance to the music? The bright, shiny screens ruin the atmosphere. Plus, the acoustics and recordings are so bad, no one ever wants to listen to it again. It makes absolutely no sense to me. It's amazing how music can create a community in a gross club--live in it people!

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

At 25


This is the first time in my life that I didn't want to be a year older. I still can't think about the number 25. It freaks and stresses me out to no end.

This picture was taken right after my parents sang a duet version of "Happy Birthday" just so I could make an official wish. Fingers crossed it comes true this year!

I now have 4 pairs of jelly sandals (plus a broken pair I can't quite part with), and it brings me unceasing joy. P.S. This Avett Brother's song is the best reference to 90s footwear ever.

A shiny new credit card now sits in my wallet. Building a credit history was a grown up decision, but was only a side benefit of wanting to spend my savings on an international trip and not pay exorbitant foreign transaction fees. I'm counting it as a win.

Lately, I've been thinking that I should become a mademoiselle librarian or archivist.

Going to concerts by myself is no longer a "feat." If I want to hear something live, I'm going to go either way.

Random people have started to set me up on blind dates. This confuses me because none of the guys I actually know have asked me out. I'll probably write more on this later.

I have tried persimmons and Sweetos.

I've lost a lot of my flexibility--I can't do the middle splits that well anymore--but I can still do back-handsprings and a respectable number of push-ups.

I'm working on learning to say no and do what's best for me. It's really hard for me to not feel overwhelming guilt when I let people down in any way. It's not because I want them to be pleased with me; it's just that I feel bad that they have to deal with extra or feel anything negative. I've realized that I would do anything if I had the excuse of doing it for my husband or family, but I can't make the commitment to move or switch careers or make any real changes just for me. And that's not right or fair, especially because I have no idea what my future timeframes look like. I'm continually trying to convince myself that I can create my own life.

I think art is the fastest way to change people.

This year next year I plan to read the Feminine Mystique to refine my arguments against the movement.

Seriously! I can't believe I'm reaching the mid-twenties mark. 

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Some Words

 via

HIGGINS. Would the world ever have been made if its maker had been afraid of making trouble? Making life means making trouble. There's only one way of escaping trouble; and that's killing things. Cowards, you notice, are always shrieking to have troublesome people killed.

I watched Pygmalion late one night on Hulu and couldn't get over the genius of George Bernard Shaw. I picked this picture because there's a man who isn't afraid of a making a mess or a fashion statement.

Monday, April 6, 2015

General Conference

This last weekend was The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' semi-annual General Conference. It is a chance for members of my church to hear from our living prophet and better understand the Lord's counsel. With so many social issues that bleed into religious life, these conferences can provide some clarity. In a world growing in darkness and festering in cruelty, it is also a boon to my optimism.

I read this scripture a few weeks before General Conference and found it to be right on time.

"Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves." (Matthew 10:16)

It's beautiful and powerful imagery. Never in the history of the world have the disciples of Christ had more outlets to spread the message. We have to be stronger than the opposition in order for this to work to its full advantage.

I have to strengthen my faith and standards. I cannot waver. I have to use my intelligence.

In my brief studies of world religions, I've never found a church that makes as much logical sense as the LDS faith. While we don't have all of the answers, we are promised that one day we will. We are also encouraged to seek answers now. The mysteries of God aren't hidden to man or reserved for the few. God's precepts are absolutely necessary for wisdom--they are eternal and transcendent.

I like the juxtaposition of the serpents and the doves. Peace infused with a bit of bite. The truth can be uncomfortable, but is often less-so with a kind delivery. I also like the idea that we we will come in unassuming but that a lot will be accomplished despite the perceived frailty. It's easier to bet on a winner if you have the truth of the matter, and I know that Christ's church is thriving on the earth today. Good people are doing good, wise things. I'm striving to share my part.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Some Words

"Can't you possibly be just a little bit glad that we are alive, and that all the year that's coming we can be together and work and love and get some peace for all the things we've paid so much for learning. Stop looking for solace: there isn't any..."
                      --Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald

Sunday, March 15, 2015

The End-All


"I fell in love with her courage, her sincerity and her flaming self-respect and it's these things I'd believe in even if the whole world indulged in wild suspicions that she wasn't all that she should be....I love her and that's the beginning and end of everything." --F. Scott Fitzgerald

I've always been intrigued by the idea of someone's only redeeming trait being love. It came to me while reading Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff and Cathy--him more than her--are only admirable because of their intense, and I believe, pure love. Despite the greatness of their love, it spoils their lives and hurts those around them. I think the power of love is hard for humans to handle. It makes them feel invincible, but it's not enough to save them from themselves and the demons they let in.

I just finished a biography on the life and marriage of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald by Kendall Taylor that got me thinking abut this again. It's called Sometimes Madness is Wisdom: Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald: A Marriage, and I highly recommend it. Through reading his novels and short stories, I have felt similar to the Fitzgeralds. I want grandeur and adventure and acceptance. I see myself in both of them after learning more about their lives. Zelda was a great dancer and worked to get to a professional level in her late twenties. I wish I could afford to train in dance or gymnastics in this same way. She also saw the world in a magnificent light with a quirky sense of things; something I think I also foster in my own quiet way. I think Scott and I have similar views on the privileged rich. They get to be reckless and eccentric with fewer consequences. I've just never encountered someone that lit me up like they did each other or ignited the desire to let everything go and conquer the world. That I feel I need a partner to do this is the Scott in me--nervous and lacking courage to be confident.

"I am so outrageously clever that I believe I could be a whole world to myself--if I didn't like living in daddy's better." --Zelda Fitzgerald.

If you have any intentions of reading Tender is the Night and don't want the ending spoiled, stop reading this post. There will be major spoilers. The ending killed me. Dick Diver is a psychiatrist who fell in love with and married one of his schizophrenic patients, Nicole. The book chronicles their marriage and life in Europe. It's Scott's most autobiographical novel. At the end of the book Nicole learns to separate her identity from Dick and end her dependence upon him. She divorces Dick for another man. The doctor had finally cured his patient--not with his treatment but with his distance--and lost his life in the process. He'd stood by his wife for so long, and she was so willing to walk away and leave him alone to fight his own demons. It seemed so unfair to me. She ends up living a more fulfilling life, while the doctor flounders back in America and doesn't even keep in contact with his children.

It wasn't until I read Taylor's book that I understood the emotional depth of this novel. I think it's one of the single greatest signs of his love for Zelda. He borrowed greatly from their experience with mental illness and Zelda's own words--which kept her from using their experiences in her own creative work and was probably not the best thing a husband could do--but the ending shows his true hope. He wanted her to be cured, despite what he recognized as near impossible. I think Fitzgerald was acknowledging his role in their downfall, but wanting a different ending. While Zelda was eventually institutionalized for her illness, Scott still did all he could for her without completely destroying himself. A heavy drinker, he'd already ruined his chances for a long, happy life, but he felt that being her sole caregiver would be an even earlier demise. They needed each other though. It wasn't a one-sided help-meet. Their correspondence is touching toward the end of his life. I can't imagine seeing the woman who had been your muse drift into an incomprehensible shell of her old self. How helpless he must have felt. And although Zelda had delusions, she was very astute to her condition and reality. How frustrated and helpless she must also have felt. I can't even tell you how much I learned about love from their story.


“And in the end, we were all just humans...drunk on the idea that love, only love, could heal our brokenness.” --F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby


I believe the Fitzgeralds decided on their love throughout their entire lives. It didn't just swallow them up and take them for prisoners during the happy days as newlyweds, never to escape again. They continually chose each other despite the flaws they saw in the other and themselves. Their rise and subsequent fall had to have intricately bounded them together forever. Love isn't enough to save us, but I think it's a catalyst. For good and bad. Ultimately we have to save ourselves--a great love story isn't enough. 

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Staunch Characters

I am now obsessed with the Beale family of Grey Gardens.


You need to watch this cult-classic documentary from the 1970s! I was blown away. Here's the basic run-down: Big Edith and Little Edie lived a privileged life as rich beauties in their younger years, but later found themselves in squalor and poverty in their East Hampton mansion. You get the sense that these women are immensely educated and created a unique, empowering paradigm. Little Edie even had a brief run as a cabaret dancer when she was in her 60s. [Late-bloomers around the world applaud.] I was especially struck by the scene I posted above. Don't you love the way she speaks? The diction and word choice are superb.

Am I a staunch woman?

Not yet. I can't even bring myself to call myself a woman. I'm still a girl...occasionally a lady.

The other day I had this daydream of me at 101 showing my posterity pictures of my life and memories in the form of grandmotherly trinkets. They were so impressed by the personality I'd become and the things I'd done. And I could feel my future thoughts as that woman. You silly kids. I didn't come into my own until I was triple your age. Until I'd sparred with life and learned to love. Learned to let myself be loved.

My personality profile is INFP. The nickname for this type is often "the idealist" or "the dreamer." Sure this means I have high ideals, but it also means I'm willing to work to attain what I feel is possible and to help others reach their potential too. One of the online tests lists fictional and real people that could have the same personality type. Guess who was on my fictional character list?

E.T.

I'm basically an alien. What's stauncher than an extraterrestrial? There's hope for me yet.