Workers of the World Unite!

6.23.2007

Yesterday we flew from Rio to Salvador, but the employees in the Sao Paulo airport were on strike, so everything was delayed. Workers of the world unite!

We are staying with an ex girlfriend of Griffs here. Apparently there is a big festival going on so everyone is out of Salvador. I think we are going to remain pretty chill for a while. I got to spend the entire day yesterday with my little brother, which was great. I feel a sense of home with him.


Pictures to come, and hopefully surfing...

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Sleep deprivation

6.20.2007

Sunday night--stay up late excited about the trip.
-wake up at 3:00 somehow convinced that my flight leaves on Monday, not Tuesday
Monday night--Get an hour and a half of sleep because of packing and saying goodbyes.
Tuesday-Get to the Portland airport at 5:30. Fly to San Fran. Two hour layover. Fly to Chicago. Accidentally leave airport and have to go through security again. Three hour layover. Fly to Sao Paulo arriving at 10:30 am. Meet Griffin hop on a bus that takes us to the metro which takes us to another bus. Eight hour bus trip. Hop on another bus to get to the apartment of the person we are staying with. 10:00 pm- thirty minutes to shower before we go out dancing. 3:30 am, come home and collapse into a heap of nothingness.

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Going, Going, Gone!

6.19.2007

Yep.

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The Latest Wynn Spotting

6.18.2007


My nephew is now 5 months old. Here's a picture of him and his fabulous mother.

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Writing Poems on Antidepressents

Writing Poems on Antidepressants
Nikki Moustaki

Writing poems on antidepressants
is hard. You can appreciate the difficulty
by reading the previous two lines.
Metaphors are easy
to come by when you're aching
or pining or wounded in love,
which scientists have proven is a type of madness
and madness can be cured with a pill.
Not everyday
is Paris. Not everyday
does a bird come winging
out of a carpet to give you a free metaphor,
especially if there are oranges on the table
and you're on your meds.
Each day offers some little irony or a dream
or a blind albino woman
sitting next to you on the train
with eyelashes like white silk threads
attached like broom-straw to her one closed eye
as she taps her cane against the window
and you, the poet on antidepressants,
thinks: look at that, hmmm, interesting.
Did I buy dog food? Here's my stop.

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Abe Louise Young

6.17.2007


It's official! As of five minutes ago, the plans are finalized for Abe to join the Griffin/Adelaide troupe in Mexico. Yay!

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6.16.2007

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Forget your personal tragedy. We are all bitched from the start and you especially have to be hurt like hell before you can write seriously. But when you get the damned hurt, use it-don't cheat with it.

-Ernest Hemingway

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I gotta start reading these things

6.15.2007

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Good tidings and jubilations!

6.12.2007

I got my visa! Blessings on the Brazilian consulate!



(This would happen, as fate would have it, now that I've delayed my flight from Thursday to next Tuesday, but I really don't mind at the moment.)

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And, in case you're wondering

Oral sex between consensual teenagers is a misdemeanor in Georgia. As is intercourse.

For more information (as if you really need it) click here.

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If Flannery O'Connor had a Blog

She doesn't, being dead you know. But if she were alive, she'd post this:

From "Habit of Being", pg. 457

[Nathaniel] Hawthorne interests me considerably. I feel more of a kinship with him than any other American, though some of what he wrote I can't make myself read through to the end.


http://flanneryoconnor.blogspot.com/

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The Latest Adventures of Our Hero

6.11.2007

It's official. I've had to delay my flight to Brazil due to the dastardly deeds of the Brazilian consulate. Or at least, the Brazilian visa service I am using. As a result, I am throwing my attention into the world of Ed Reed. Our hero is now in High School. And too sophisticated to label his picture "me" anymore. But apparently not too sophisticated to put "Basketball" in scare quotes.

My favorite: "Don't bump your head Tom." Tom, as you can see, is the tall fellow in the middle of the picture. I'll apply this to myself, "Don't bang your head forcefully against the wall, Adelaide, while you wait for your visa." Nope, just doesn't have the same charm. Damn you, Ed Reed!



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Collage: Or "The Attack of the Giant Baby"

I've been in a women's art group this Spring. It's mostly a wu-wu earth mother love goddess thing, but I've enjoyed doing collage. Here's my favorite one:


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On Being Friends with a Supermodel














This is from when Alisha and I went cliff jumping, although the pictures make us look like we are significantly less hardcore than we really are.

More on flckr. Bcs vwls r drky.

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Stupid Doorknob

6.10.2007



My sentiments exactly.


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A small note

6.07.2007

I turned in a chapter of my novel on Tuesday to have it critiqued by the other students. They really liked it and gave me some great suggestions. I still have a long way to go in my writing, but it was encouraging to get some positive feedback.


Margaret Atwood said, "Blank pages inspire me with terror." I understand that. For a long time now, I've said that I like to write, that I want it to be my vocation, that I feel in some way called to do it. But I wasn't writing, not much at least. Perhaps the triumph of today and of the last five months is that now I am writing, painful as it is. To quote another writer, John Steinbeck, "I suffer always from the fear of putting down the first line. It is amazing the terrors, the magics, the prayers, the straightening shyness that assails one." The other students liked my scenes and some of the language, but said I need to work on transitions and pace. Once I got over the initial disappointment that they didn't find my work to be the most brilliant thing they had ever read, I began to appreciate the clarity of knowing my shortcomings--that it gives me a direction in which to grow.

One more quote. "All my life; I've been frightened at the moment I sit down to write." That one is from Nobel prize winner, Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Knowing that he felt this way helps me feel slightly less crazy. Which is a good thing. I think my being able to write centers on accepting, even embracing, failure. As Lamott would put it, writing "shitty first drafts." I think I've written some magnificently shitty first drafts, and will probably churn out another one in the coming weeks. This is heartening--I'm writing.

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Lakeview: The Case of the Laughing Teacher

I was speaking to a middle aged friend of mine today and mentioned the town Lakeview (of Honker fame). He told me that his grandmother had been a teacher there and was fired for laughing too much. The school officials believed that it was improper for a woman to laugh.

I believe that is improper for men to wear leather pants. So there.

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There is nothing left for me to do with my nervous energy

I've already called the Brazil visa company four times today.
It was supposed to be here a while ago.
And, well, it's not. Here, that is.
Don't panic.


I've written a haiku on the subject:

Waiting for visa
Blogs endlessly to distract
Tufts of hair will fall

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Lakeview: The Tallest Town in Oregon


After a bit of research, I've found the Ed Reed was from Lakeview, dubbed the tallest town in Oregon. This weekend in Lakeview citizens will be participating in the Junior Rodeo which involves: "Riding events for senior boys, ages 14-18, include bareback, saddle bronc, calf roping, bull riding and team roping. Senior and junior girls — ages 14-18 and 8-13, respectively — events will include barrel racing, pole bending, breakaway, goat tying and team roping.
Junior boys events will include steer riding, steer stopping, goat tying, breakaway and team roping." (Courtesy of the Lake County Examiner) I'm not sure why the older boys rope calves and the girls rope goats--an egregious double standard. I'm protesting this by refusing to rope anything, goat or otherwise. And, in case you were curious, pole bending is essentially slolem skiing on a horse. Barrel racing is racing around a barrel, and should you want to "Discover the Rush and Reward" of this fascinating sport you may click here to purchase a video of the 2006 US Barrel Racing Championship.

These two lovely ladies are the featured beauties of the Lakeview Junior Rodeo. Nothing creates a rip roaring good time like a crown on a cowboy hat. Yee-ha!

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Junior High Places Third In Tournament

6.06.2007

In 1949, the Lakeview Junior High Basketball, the Honkers, traveled to Alturas and placed third in a tournament. Here is a picture of them. Note the young man in the upper right corner with "ME" written by his face. His name is Ed Reed, and for a measly three dollars at Goodwill, I acquired a scrapbook of his athletic accomplishments from Middle School to High School. This is the first in a multi part series entitled: The Life and Legacy of the Honkers.


If you click on it, you will see the picture with greater clarity.

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e.e. cumings courtesy of Abe

let it go - the
smashed word broken
open vow or
the oath cracked length
wise - let it go it
was sworn to
go

let them go - the
truthful liars and
the false fair friends
and the boths and
neithers - you must let them go they
were born
to go

let all go - the
big small middling
tall bigger really
the biggest and all
things - let all go
dear

so comes love

~ e. e. cummings ~

(Complete Poems 1904-1962)

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Newest Chapter

6.04.2007

If the urge should strike you to read the latest chapter for my work in progress, click here.


Here are the beginning paragraphs:

"Randy liked to watch the slow brown waters of the Mississippi River. When he and Ava were first married, they had taken a trip to the Delta, to the place where the river flows into the Gulf of Mexico. It had been hot there, smelling of dead fish washed up on the shore. They walked along the beach together holding sticky hands. He had caught a puffer fish in a bucket and brought it to Ava. She had laughed, looking at its little face. The spaced apart eyes staring blankly as if it were all the same to him, Gulf or bucket.

They had made love that night, he still remembered it. She had tasted like salt, and he ran his mouth up her neck sucking it off her. She had seemed so beautiful to him then, full, like a ripe plum. He loved to take parts of her between his fingers and squeeze as if he were expecting juice. "

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I've been Flickrfied

I'm officially a convert and have uploaded some old pictures.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/68164225@N00/

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Nausea and Nauseating

Feeling a little vindicated. From the good folks at Merriam Webster:

Nauseous:

1
: causing nausea or disgust : NAUSEATING
2 : affected with nausea or disgust

"Those who insist that nauseous can properly be used only in sense 1 and that in sense 2 it is an error for nauseated are mistaken. Current evidence shows these facts: nauseous is most frequently used to mean physically affected with nausea, usually after a linking verb such as feel or become; figurative use is quite a bit less frequent. Use of nauseous in sense 1 is much more often figurative than literal, and this use appears to be losing ground to nauseating. Nauseated is used more widely than nauseous in sense 2."

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nauseous

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For the Sake of a Single Poem

6.02.2007

"... Ah, poems amount to so little when you write them too early in your life. You ought to wait and gather sense and sweetness for a whole lifetime, and a long one if possible, and then, at the very end, you might perhaps be able to write ten good lines. For poems are not, as people think, simply emotions (one has emotions early enough)--they are experiences. For the sake of a single poem, you must see many cities, many people and Things, you must understand animals, must feel how birds fly, and know the gesture which small flowers make when they open in the morning. You must be able to think back to streets in unknown neighbourhoods, to unexpected encounters, and to partings you had long seen coming;to days of childhood whose mystery is still unexplained, to parents whom you had to hurt when they brought in a joy and you didn't pick it up (it was a joy meant for somebody else--); to childhood illnesses that began so strangely with so many profound and difficult transformations, to days in quiet, restrained rooms and to mornings by the sea, to the sea itself, to seas, to nights of travel that rushed along overhead and went flying with all the stars,--and it is still not enough to be able to think of all that. You must have memories of many nights of love, each one different from all the others, memories of women screaming in labor, and of light, pale, sleeping girls who have just given birth and are closing again. But you must also have been beside the dying, must have sat beside the dead in the room with the open window and scattered noises. And it is not yet enough to have memories. You must be able to forget them when they are many, and you must have the immense patience to wait until they return. For the memories themselves are not important. Only when they have changed into our very blood, into glance and gesture, and are nameless, no longer to be distinguished from ourselves-- only then can it happen that in some very rare hour the first word of a poem arises in their midst and goes forth from them."


Rainer M. Rilke

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Skinny dipping with Rilke

Today Alisha and I went cliff jumping in Mosier (pop 430). Afterwards, we laid on rocks in the sun and read Rilke to one another.

My favorite from today:

Spanish Dancer

As on all its sides a kitchen-match darts white
flickering tongues before it bursts into flame:
with the audience around her, quickened, hot,
her dance begins to flicker in the dark room.

And all at once it is completely fire.

One upward glance and she ignites her hair
and, whirling faster and faster, fans her dress
into passionate flames, till it becomes a furnace
from which, like startled rattlesnakes, the long
naked arms uncoil, aroused and clicking.

And then: as if the fire were too tight
around her body, she takes and flings it out
haughtily, with an imperious gesture,
and watches: it lies raging on the floor,
still blazing up, and the flames refuse to die -
Till, moving with total confidence and a sweet
exultant smile, she looks up finally
and stamps it out with powerful small feet.


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Brasilia




It's almost time! So excited to see my big little bro!

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