Thursday, July 31, 2008

your darling imperfections, your dear particularities

As a child, I enjoyed the story of the velveteen rabbit. I especially loved the part about love's roughness. Do you remember what I'm talking about? As time passed, the child's unbridled affection took a toll on the rabbit. Love dulled the rabbit's fur, rubbed the pink out of his nose, unraveled his threads and unloosed his stuffing. But the child didn't care that his rabbit was dirty and worn. The child's heart clung to the rabbit's imperfections, and loved him all the more for it. And the child's love made the rabbit Real.

I've been thinking about how I love the people who cross my path at work. By necessity, so much of my loving is "sisterly" and "dutiful." By this, I mean that I can have a "heart for the homeless population" in general, but I must remain professional – keep my distance.

I'm in a public role -- I work in Development for a large organization -- so that's fine. But I am sick of trying to represent people in the abstract. So today, while maintaining my distance, I am going to do things a little differently. Today, from my car window, or from across the table, I will look hard for funniness in your walk. I will listen for the quaver in your voice. I will watch for the expression you wear when you think you are alone, and I will use the most specific language I can to describe it. I want to see the damaged and frightened and imperfect and beautiful you. I don't want to just love my idea of you. I want to stop, breathe, and really see you. And then I want to write about that.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

you rolling river

Why are the saddest songs always about rivers?

Think about it. "Just remember the Red River Valley, and the one who has loved you so true." Audrey Hepburn cooing on the balcony: "Old dream maker, you heartbreaker." "River" by Joni Mitchell. "Watching the River Flow" by Dylan. Even Gertrude's river song in "Hamlet."

And, of course, "Shenandoah."

Why do rivers provide such rich, loamy song-writing soil? Well, we all know rivers are beautiful. Also, their mossy, shady banks provide an idyllic (pastoral) setting for laughing, loving, and longing. Most of all, rivers' elusiveness adds to their pathos. For rivers cannot be stopped. They rush on and on and on, like time, like our little lives, never pausing for breath or regret.

If you haven't heard the famous jazz pianist Keith Jarrett play Shenandoah on his album "The Melody, At Night With You," please find the album and give it as a listen. As a high school student, my dad introduced me to this song, and I used to listen to it over and over again. Jarrett's arrangement still breaks my heart today. From the very first few notes, one feels that this song's beginning was borne out of a painful "goodbye."

In "Shenandoah," in our relationships, in our days on earth, there is no "hello" without a "goodbye." Anyone who has paid any attention to the Way of Things knows that music and life possess rules and rhythm: Death comes, and Time marches forward. As we grow older, we learn to work and love within this world.

As I listen to Jarrett play piano, I hear and feel that he holds nothing back. He does what he can with the time he's been given, but this power is tempered by his unwillingness to get to the "goodbye." His chords become increasingly fumbled. He is resisting the river's swift and insistent currents. You can even hear his raspy humming, coming from the pit of his stomach, and you think, this man's instrument is an extension of himself. Truly.

But before we know it, the song fades away. The melody, at night, with you is whisked away, and dissolved in the river, just like the minutes of our lives. The piano whispers. The chords slow. I think he's begging for just a moment more.

Hold it dearly when you have it, hold it dearly when you have it. That's the lesson of these mournful river songs.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

so much for being an adult

Here is a list of items I left at the Carwells' house in villa park, IL:

my cell phone charger
half the computer cord for my work laptop
running shoes

This morning in my kitchen, I lamented my absentmindedness to Mel, my roommate, who sympathetically said, "Well, that's beyond the point of being frustrating. It's just funny!"

Maybe so, maybe so. There does seem to be a "forgetfulness" gene in our family. My dad called me a year ago to ask me, "What's wrong with you kids?" My sister had left an iron plugged in, face down, on the hardwood floor of our living room. Now, we conceal the dark burn with a house plant.

A few weeks ago in church, I reached into my purse for my Bible, and instead pulled out the DVD remote. I have no idea how it got there.

In the sixth grade, I lost six pairs of shorts in one summer.

I must conclude that my genes have made me this way.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Friday, July 18, 2008

"life is supposed to be epic"

Life is supposed to be epic. Even just glancing over the Psalms this morning, I see that David lived in a gamut of color and terror, praise and desperation. Three thousand years later, my life questions sometimes echo his.

God. Where are you?
Why is my flesh so confoundedly weak?
Why is this world so heartbreakingly lovely?

Thursday, July 17, 2008

writing and translucency

In my acting program, we learned some basic moves on the trapeze. Flying was fun, but as we swung through the air, I wondered "Why are we doing this? Because it looks cool? How does this help our acting? "

One of the more blunt class members voiced this question to our (famous) instructor, who, in characteristic fashion, stared over our heads with parted lips, and smiled as if greeting a ghost.

He then whispered a word through clenched teeth: "Translucency."

Translucency, he went on to explain, is the ability to let go of the "process" behind the work, and to live honestly in the moment. In trapeze work, translucency manifests itself as a graceful weightlessness. Nobody can see the effort behind your leaps, your twirls, the bend in your back. You are transcending your own work.

Obviously, translucency becomes easier with skill and strength, as you gain confidence in your body, your instrument. You can be honest, spontaneous and messy in the moment without strain, over-thinking, self-analysis. Because, really – who wants to see someone thinking about their next move? You want to see the music take over: the dancer is propelled by the cello's tender growl. The lover is driven, not by the list of things she "wants in a man," but by the cracking open of her chest.

Lately, I have been thinking about how the concept of translucency, or rather practice of translucency -- it isn't just an idea, that's the point -- applies to writing. I have been thinking about this because I often edit my writing into oblivion. My voice loses its freshness and immediacy. I kill my own writing by trying too hard.

This isn't unique to me. I used to see this "trying too hard" in others' stories and essays when I worked in the writing center. I would ask the students to tell me about what they wanted to communicate, and they would verbally express clear, engaging ideas. On the paper, however, their thoughts were convoluted. Their effort had obfuscated their work, rather than strengthened it.

So now, I ask myself, where is my work most beautiful and clear? Well, this week, I reread some of my old journals, and I found lyrical, but effortless, writing – in other words, translucent work. And it just sort of comes out like that. Beauty in trying less.

By contrast, whenever I try to write anything longer or more "serious," I stumble and trip. My work becomes thought out instead of felt. So today, I am wondering how to work hard at writing, but eventually move beyond the struggle. I want my sentences to float buoyantly, gently, as if on currents of air, as if I'd only just caught them with a butterfly net.
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