harborshore: (Default)
Antilamentation
By Dorianne Laux

Regret nothing. Not the cruel novels you read
to the end just to find out who killed the cook, not
the insipid movies that made you cry in the dark,
in spite of your intelligence, your sophistication, not
the lover you left quivering in a hotel parking lot,
the one you beat to the punchline, the door or the one
who left you in your red dress and shoes, the ones
that crimped your toes, don’t regret those.
Not the nights you called god names and cursed
your mother, sunk like a dog in the living room couch,
chewing your nails and crushed by loneliness.
You were meant to inhale those smoky nights
over a bottle of flat beer, to sweep stuck onion rings
across the dirty restaurant floor, to wear the frayed
coat with its loose buttons, its pockets full of struck matches.
You’ve walked those streets a thousand times and still
you end up here. Regret none of it, not one
of the wasted days you wanted to know nothing,
when the lights from the carnival rides
were the only stars you believed in, loving them
for their uselessness, not wanting to be saved.
You’ve traveled this far on the back of every mistake,
ridden in dark-eyed and morose but calm as a house
after the TV set has been pitched out the window.
Harmless as a broken ax. Emptied of expectation.
Relax. Don’t bother remembering any of it. Let’s stop here,
under the lit sign on the corner, and watch all the people walk by.
harborshore: (kitty)
There is a love meme? And my thread is here?

I can't even tell you how much I could use some love right about now. Also you should go put your names in, because I am not the only one having a terrible 2012, and I'd love to tell you all about how fabulous you are.
harborshore: (freedom)
It's been a strange week. I haven't been doing especially well (semi-difficult news and continuous uncertainty will do that to the anxious heart) but today I realized something. A year ago, I was sitting in a subway station sobbing because I couldn't get myself to walk down the hill and join the conference dinner I was supposed to be at. The same dinner is happening in a week, and I'm fine with that. This weekend I joined my coworkers for a dinner and then a bunch of local bands in a pub, and that was mostly fine, too. It's been a year, and what a year it's been.

I wanted to talk a little about what that means. I'm using myself as an example, and I'm absolutely not saying my experience is universally applicable. At all.

on anxiety and getting better )
harborshore: (reading)
Hi all! It's Friday. It's finally finally Friday. Tonight I'm going to a Songs-of-Edith-Piaf concert, and I'm very much looking forward to it. And to the weekend. Oh my god, the weekend. *naps on you all*

It's been--someone smart told me I'm kind of running on empty right now, and that's true. Many parts of my life are very excellent (upon being told I'd applied to take the UN aptitude tests, my boss said, "I'm going to hurry the negotiations for next year up, because we certainly don't want to lose you"; I'm going to see my sister in a WEEK; I have somewhere to live; I got into the choir I auditioned for) but there are no breathing spaces and I find myself longing so hard for next Saturday night when I can curl up on a couch next to my sister and not move. I can make it another week. I can, I can.

So that's why I'm not here much, either. I'm very tired, and there is so very much to do all the time. But I'll be back, yeah? I love this space, I love you guys.
harborshore: (joy)
I appear to be experiencing the only good thing to ever come from period cramps: they improve your circulation, and consequently my crick in the neck (that had me in such pain yesterday I could barely move off the couch and had me going home an hour early from work) is improving. Mobility, you guys, I kind of like it. (Even if I'm in a different kind of pain right now.)

Today is World Poetry Day, they're telling me (♥), and so, here, because it's late and I'm rather tired:


The Sciences Sing a Lullaby


Physics says: go to sleep. Of course
you're tired. Every atom in you
has been dancing the shimmy in silver shoes
nonstop from mitosis to now.
Quit tapping your feet. They'll dance
inside themselves without you. Go to sleep.

Geology says: it will be all right. Slow inch
by inch America is giving itself
to the ocean. Go to sleep. Let darkness
lap at your sides. Give darkness an inch.
You aren't alone. All of the continents used to be
one body. You aren't alone. Go to sleep.

Astronomy says: the sun will rise tomorrow,
Zoology says: on rainbow-fish and lithe gazelle,
Psychology says: but first it has to be night, so
Biology says: the body-clocks are stopped all over town
and
History says: here are the blankets, layer on layer, down and down.

--Albert Goldbarth

First given to me (and I do think of it as a gift) by [livejournal.com profile] novembersmith. Thank you, dearest.

If you want to add your own calm or joyful or sleepy or spring-like or thundery poems, feel free. Or just read that one over, let it help with the breathing.

home safe

Aug. 2nd, 2010 01:52 am
harborshore: (crossed the dunes)
Hey, darlings. Am home, am a little too awake for 2 AM in the morning, especially considering I'm getting up in five hours, but I can live with all that. Tomorrow there is a birthday party, I have a million books to read (for fun), a thesis to write (for, er, academic purposes) and six weeks to do it in, and an apartment for four out of those six weeks. London was the best of all good things.

PSA

Jul. 21st, 2010 03:29 pm
harborshore: (crossed the dunes)
I'm kind of mostly not here. On actual vacation, you know the drill. I might make a couple of entries, and I'm absolutely available via email (homeless dot sky at gmail dot com) but mostly I'm going to be off doing my own thing. ♥, darlings. Email me if you want to make sure I see something, ye olde flist-reading will be a bit spotty.

I'm off to a park now; here's hoping I can find the train station without walking in eleven million circles this time.
harborshore: (Default)
It's been a bit of a strange week, with many many ups and downs. The weekend was incredible, the heat is overwhelming, my city is beautiful, I had bad news and good news and now I'm a little tired. I would like the thesis and the election to be done, please. Also, I'm trying to get myself together enough to write a job application. And studying for GREs.

petra is hosting a wonderful Be Excellent to Each Other meme, and that might be precisely what I need. It's on dw, but openid is easy and anon commenting is on. My thread is here. Positive reinforcements/reminders of my awesomeness/etc. would not go amiss. ♥
harborshore: (the sea the sea)

  1. nightswimming. cool, dark lake. mosquitoes. peace of mind.

  2. playing impossible-to-keep-track-of card games.

  3. no one remembered their keys.

  4. i painted a door. nearly stung by inch-long wasps; nearly got heatstroke.

  5. no ticks. minor miracle. innumerable mosquitoes, five moths, two daddy-long-legs, at least twenty horseflies, a mayfly, no snakes.

  6. warm buses, cooler cars. forgot my hat at home.

  7. the most riveting book i read was part one only. DAMMIT.

  8. connie willis is amazing.

  9. being capable is addictive. apparently i know how to deal with sprained ankles.

  10. no really, the heat.

  11. still can't write. thesis progressing slowly, however.
harborshore: (kitty)
But double-posting is okay when one post is a very serious video and the other is minutiae about my life, right? I mean, I really couldn't combine them.

At any rate, I would like to tell you about the food I had today.

Breakfast: yoghurt, broken crackers as cereal, fresh strawberries.
Lunch: pasta, fresh spinach, avocado, beans, and a mustard/olive oil/apple cider vinegar dressing.
Snack: see picture under cut. Om nom nom.

AMAZING )

But about food! I wish to know more about your food habits, flist.

or perhaps I was just practicing making polls )
harborshore: (something more)
There is so much snow here. So much. Today we skied for two and a half hours, through a forest where the silence was only broken by us and the occasional bird chirping happily in the distance. It looked like--well, the Canadians among you probably know what it's like, cross-country skiing for hours through the woods covered in snow and quiet. I don't know how to describe it except to say it's like a fairytale, a strange land that bears no resemblance to the normal forest.

We came to a clearing where you could see the ocean (the cottage is on an island) and you can't see any water right now, it's just miles and miles of ice straight out into nowhere. So I stood there in the sun, thinking about everything and nothing at once, the future and my thesis and impending plane rides, two boys and a girl running away to find the underground rebellion but mostly finding another girl on the way, happy endings and open endings and holding on to what is right.

I thought about love, a little bit, trying to coax my muscles into working better. I thought about my brother and his pianist's hands that are finally getting back to where they were before he strained his right hand, and how much I hope Bob's wrists are still letting him play drums at a professional level. I thought about dreams, about how sometimes my dreams look like books on a shelf bearing my name, and sometimes I'm in a classroom and I get to talk about what I love as much as I want. Despite how wonderful those pictures are, the future scares me. All kinds of futures scare me. But it's easier to think about them when you're sliding through those sheets of white, endless miles of white, the kind that catches you when you fall. (And fall I did, because my new skis are faster than me, sometimes. My mother fell and that was much scarier, what with her hips and her knee being what they are, but she's fine.)

I'm learning to crochet. Pulling at yarn, my fingers take over from my head and it gets a little easier to see patterns, to hear rhythm. I forget to count sometimes and then I get lost, like a beginner in dance, losing her way among the steps. There's a metaphor in that, but I suspect it's a little obvious. It's about finding your own way, your own rhythm, the one you can't lose. So I'll tell my stories, and then the cards can fall as they may. Be still my beating heart, be calm my worrying mind, for I will make things alright.
harborshore: (something more)
life is a rollercoaster )


So, like, what does one do with days like this? *feels wobbly*

I'm going to post a poem, that's what I'm going to do.

From [livejournal.com profile] egelantier (when you see this, post a poem--or feel free to post one in comments, should you feel so inclined)

Daphne

And if I was changed, what was the difference?
And if I was strung – myself and not myself,
a double thing, there was a consequence.
When I was a girl, I was a girl.
And now I’m a tree, I’m a tree.

Seasons don’t arrive. There’s just a shifting.
We move. I see it now. The staid worlds move,
and the sun is no dragged lamp. The gods die,
or never lived. They crawl home, damp and slow,
to the subtle, shallow sea that made them.

I’m not that happy. It’s not important.
And I’m not sad. It’s good to be a girl,
and a tree, with the wind in it. It’s good
to move in the wind, and to move the wind.
My leaves all move. They sing, and make the world.

--Emma Jones
harborshore: (music)
Too tired. Not really here. If I am late answering things, this is why. If I'm not commenting, this is why. ♥
harborshore: (smarterthanyou)
Tagged by [livejournal.com profile] halflinen:

- List 7 habits/quirks/facts.
- Tag 7 people to do the same.
- Don't tag the person who tagged you or say that you tag 'whoever wants to do it'.


I'm a little odd and I know it... )

Oh, I'm supposed to tag people, am I? Um, very randomly (and only do it if you want to!): [livejournal.com profile] novembersmith, [livejournal.com profile] blindmouse, [livejournal.com profile] erraticonstilts, [livejournal.com profile] fleurdeliser, [livejournal.com profile] torakowalski, [livejournal.com profile] lordessrenegade and [livejournal.com profile] jubella.
harborshore: (BFF)
In the continuing saga of "How My Body Hates Me: Let Me Count The Ways," I'm pretty sure I have the flu on top of my Mystery virus right now. Possibly it's a horrendous version of my sister's mild cold, but the joint aches and headache are horribly suggestive. I guess I will know in the morning.

But in the meantime, because I could use a distraction from the joint aches and the possibility of imminent swine flu, you lot should come ask me things. Like, we could do that meme that's been going around again:

Ask me for my top 5 anything: fandoms, ice cream flavours, cartoon moments, women in my fandoms, OTPs, ideal holiday destinations, goals for the future, celebrity crushes, books I wish would be made into movies, love songs, ANYTHING.

And if you like, I'll ask you a top 5 in the comments!
harborshore: (BFF)
If anyone actually wanted to read the silliest holiday cookie ficlet in all the land, it's there now. I shouldn't be trusted near a computer when I'm really tired (back when I was posting my big bang, it led to some Really Entertaining Typos). ♥, you all, I'm going to go pick up a concert ticket and do a translation rough draft.
harborshore: (come here)
It's been a strange ten months-give-and-take-a-few-days since I got this journal. I've gotten an A in terminology and a C in legal translation; I've gotten my heart broken; been fairly seriously ill; written ficlets and longer stories in many, many universes; read twelve Georgette Heyers and two translations of Sappho's poetry; I turned 25; I've learned to put on eyeliner but not nailpolish; I've gone to six London bookstores and four London museums; I've been to Singapore and Malaysia; I've been depressed; I've gone dancing; I've learned so many new songs by heart; I've been learning, I am learning, I'm here.

And I met you lot. A gang of bright, beautiful, kind people who came to the tiny space I was making for myself and said, "Hi, we like it here too." I'm so grateful for all the support, the stories, the all-night-chatting sessions, the beta readings, the art, the letter, the love, the love. Thank you for sticking around.

I have some holiday wishes, big ones and small ones, and it feels odd to write them down, when I'm actually really fucking grateful to be right here, who I am, where I am. But maybe that's where they belong, too.

number the stars )
harborshore: (come here)
Tonight I leaned hard on some wonderful people and then I went off to do something that I was anxious about, and while it didn't go smashingly it was at least okay, and then I left, cried on my friend's shoulder, said goodbye to her, walked down into the station, sat down on a bench between a biker chick and a teenage boy, pulled out my novel, but couldn't actually stop myself from starting to cry again.

But here is where the miracle happens.

After I've been crying for two minutes or so, the biker chick turns to me and says, "Do you need help with anything? Are you okay?"

She's a stranger. In Sweden.

And I manage to say something about no, it's not anything that happened tonight, it's just old stuff.

She says, "Oh, I'm really sorry to hear that you're sad. Are you sure you don't need help? Are you going home now?"

"Yes," I say, "I'm going home."

We talk for a while, about why love hurts and why life hurts; why we take on the hurts because it means we get to have the moments when things are soaring as well. She doesn't say anything new (except of course that initial kindness, as rare as it was sweet), but she's tall and reassuring and I find myself talking about why I'm hurting in more abstract terms, calming down. Then she boards her train and says that she hopes my night clears up and that things keep getting better, and I smile as she goes.
harborshore: (serious)
Auma Obama just bitchslapped Skavlan (Norwegian talkshow host) on live TV. It was glorious. She didn't literally slap him, but he was being an idiot about the fact that her organization focuses on giving money to women (it's kind of Development 101 that the money given to women generally goes back to a family) and then she explained how things work without calling him an idiot, which was impressive. Then, oh, then, she talked about how people always see Africa as one country, and he proceeds to ask, "So you showed your brother Africa?"

And she looks at him and goes, "No, now we're there again! I showed my brother Kenya, which is a part of Africa."

WIN WIN WIN WIN. Her whole appearance was so much win--she was herself and so goddamn articulate that he fumbled for anything to say and came off like an idiot while she lectured him (and Sweden) about development and working with disadvantaged youth and the image of Africa that gets perpetuated in the media. Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. Kitty would have loved it.

In other awesome news: I figured out how to get an additional thesis advisor in case I end up having to work with the one from last semester, and without either of us losing face!

Mango is currently writing me the BEST CHATFIC IN THE WORLD, and it is all mine! And now she is done. It was about Bob coming home after the SPACE WAR to Brian and the shop where he works with accident-prone Frank and the Weird Ways, and oh, it was glorious.

I've had two glasses of wine. Yes, I'm still a lightweight. OOOPS.

ETA: The awesomest thing of all, I forgot it! Graham crackers with Nutella. MMMMMM.

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