Tuesday, May 27, 2014

2 punk 4 u

Last year I had a whole lot of things to say about the writer's conference. Christine got sort of upset, saying that I had a lot of new friends that I liked more than the ones I already had. This year I don't have nearly as much to say. A lot was different this year I guess. Some of my friends didn't come back; no one was happy about that. And the me that went this year wasn't the same me that went last year. It also didn't rain as much this year. The sun came out (!!!!) and we had BBQ and sat next to the musicians. But in many ways it was the same. It's stressful to pack, drive, find a place to park (there were actually no spaces), park illegally, run inside and register, find a less illegal place to park about 10 miles away, find my dorm, find the door to my dorm locked, have a student call campus security to unlock the door, and find my room. Then my friends got there and it was a lot less stressful.

I was in this fantasy writing workshop and the only way I can put it is that cute boys don't write fantasy and girls that I'm good friends with don't write fantasy. So while my friend Margaret was staring at cute boys in poetry writing workshops (literally, they had to look at each other and then write about their faces), I was telling a girl named Tesla that her conversations between animals and humans seemed spot on.

But my friend Phoebe and I wrote a flash fiction story called "Draft in Anticipation of Murder." My friends and I shared a bag of marshmallows with the entire conference. And Margaret's mother sat with the car running for a long time because we would hug and say, "I'll see you, okay?" "We're gonna be okay, okay?" After deciding that we were in fact okay, we broke apart and then decide we weren't okay and hug again.

The last hours of the writer's conference always include everyone asking about everyone else's grade. "What grade are you in?" "Are you coming back next year?" This year I had to answer that I was a senior and probably not because I'm not sure if I'll be able to mentor, but I'd love to.

2013 (I have no idea why we're doing that thing with our hands, but we are.)

2014
Quotes

"This is not a clapping moment!"
-me to Margaret when she was the only one clapping

"We're so punk."
-literally all of us every ten seconds

"JESSSSSSS"
-Margaret when someone knocked on our door

"Her hips were like pistols and I was ready to die."
-Tessie

"Icecream?"
-Abby to me at the end of every meal

"Abby, I don't think they serve ice cream at breakfast."
- me to Abby at breakfast

"Sammi. I think you've had enough soda."
-everyone to me

"Oh my gosh. I'm shaking."
-Margaret and I after the poetry slam

"Sammi! Did you just say 'hella'?"
-Tessie

"I'm sorry I'm such an embarrassment."
-Me to Tessie because I did indeed say 'hella'

"Wanna see me do Voo-doo?"
-Some girl in my fantasy writing workshop

"No thank you."
- Me to the Voo-doo girl

"I write because I know I will fail. I write to turn my anger into passion. I write against my embarrassment."
-Terry Tempest Williams

"What you have to say is important. What you know, we need to hear."
-Terry Tempest Williams

"The minute you pick up your pen, you will betray someone, just make sure it's not yourself."
-Terry Tempest Williams

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah

Becca told me to post this. I called it "Dumb Idiots" when I handed it in (???????).


Becca Russel isn’t particularly tall, nor is she wide, but she always seems to occupy more space than you’d think, her personality deciding that it doesn’t want to be squished. Her laugh itself must be at least 30-lbs. of her existence. She makes up for it with her little feet and hands. She has a well-proportioned face with a sweet smile and slightly chubby cheeks all surrounding her bright blue eyes. She’s athletically built with strong legs and what she would call a big butt. (I don’t go around measuring people’s butts, so I’m not really an expert.) But, having been friends with Becca for two years, I hope I’m enough of an expert on her to encapsulate not only who she is, but also what she has been for me.

***

“Hey!” I half-shouted across the loud bus, “Becca!”

Eventually the freshman looked up from her book, glancing around and looking for whoever was calling her name. I kept saying, “Becca!” and started waving my arms. When she saw that I was beckoning her, she looked nonplussed. “Yeah?” she returned.

“Um…” I stalled, feeling intrusive. “Is that—is that a graphic novel?”


It was Becca's 16th birthday on Sunday, April 13th. When I showed up, late for her sleepover party, at 3:30 on Saturday, Becca burst out of her room, her friend Josie in tow, and then roared, "Well look who decided to show up!" To this I said, "I got you cupcakes, you little turd. Shut up." She quickly dropped the angry act and bounced up and down exclaiming, "Cupcakes!?!?!" then she decided that we needed to go to Ben and Jerry's for a Vermonster.

A Vermonster is about 20 scoops of ice cream. Twenty. They brought out the tub for us while Becca cackled maniacally, half-shouting, "I REGRET NOTHING!" before spooning copious amounts of whipped cream into her mouth. I laughed as I told her she had ice cream on her face.

The next morning, after a night of horror movies, because they’re Becca’s favorite, and a breakfast of donuts, because it’s a birthday tradition in the Russell household, I asked Becca what she wanted to do on her birthday. I listed off the options, barring another game of Scrabble because Becca is a cheater. After mulling over the choices, she said self-consciously, “Whatever you guys want to do is fine.”

“No, Becca,” I insisted. “What do you want to do? It’s your birthday.”

“Yeah… it is,” she said, flopping the tattered book shut, keeping her hand on the page.

“What’s it called?”

“Watchmen.”

“Can—can I see?”

She nodded and then came to share a seat with me.


Maybe it’s her affinity for superheroes or her spastic way of being, but I’ve always liked Becca. Everything that she’s interested in, she’s passionate about. For instance, she made me drive twenty-five minutes out of the way, making us late for softball practice, so she could play with her hamster because she was so excited about her new pet. Even though she didn’t play more than a few innings all of last softball season, she was still invested in how the team did: instead of being offended by her lack of playing time like some of her teammates, she cheered us on and was visibly upset by our predictable loss at the semi-finals. Despite this, she is also capable of approaching things with a lack of seriousness. She jokes and goofs all through softball practice, being distracting and endearingly counterproductive, standing in centerfield and begging for one more pop-fly after her turn is over.

Becca always comes to practice in something other than the prescribed softball uniform: without long songs and generally opting to wear her Converse All-stars that have the Flash, her favorite superhero, printed on them, instead of her cleats. Flash is her favorite superhero “because he's a happy person even though he didn't start out that way. ‘Cause his mom died. Also ‘cause he could kick any other super’s ass.” (I have no evidence to the contrary.) Her superior knowledge of superheroes gives her the upper hand in any superhero-based discussion we have, but she’s always kind when I don’t know something. She treats ignorance with sympathy; hoping only to educate, not ridicule a lack of knowledge.

“Who’s he?”

“That’s Rorschach. That’s Doctor Manhattan. That’s the Comedian,” she explains as I read over her shoulder. She is smaller than me and her mousy-brown hair plaited into a braid falls over her shoulder and chest. Becca’s words quickly fly into one ear and out the other as she launches into long explanations of each character and their backstory, where they came from and why they’re doing what they’re doing, also touching on the plot line of Watchmen itself; she smiles the whole while. It’s an 1000-watt smile and her cheeks grow on her round face as her grin stretches. Peering from under her perfect eyebrows, her blues eyes are excited: slightly wet with all the wind on the bus, they twinkle in the sun.

“Whoa,” I said, my brain not able to keep up with the speed and fervor with which the words were leaving her mouth. I don’t think she can tell, the glint of excitement in her eyes blinding her from my bewilderment. I used to be very interested in superheroes as a kid and I had forgotten how complicated their lives could be.

“I know,” she says. “I’m doing a report on Rorschach for English class soon, but you can borrow it for now.”


Becca’s not one of those kids that likes school very much; she complains about the simple act of going and her mother nags her about her grades and effort in school regularly. Only art class seems to entertain her. She also enjoys art outside of school, her paintings and sketches covering the walls of her room; she has the Flash drawn in red and yellow on her chalkboard. “When I'm bored or upset I do art. I like it because it's kind of a way for me to vent how I feel.” Becca’s also one of those people who’s sort of good at everything. She plays softball, basketball, mountain bikes, and she’ll be playing volleyball at the start of her junior year next fall. She’s an artist, a good singer and cook, intelligent, athletic, and funny; she’s simultaneously cool and a total dweeb. She makes a fool out of herself to make people laugh, but is sweet and compassionate when you have a problem. Always understanding and willing to listen, her passion shines through again when the people she cares about are in distress; her voice turns from its normal, loud, sarcastic self into something quieter and her eyes lose their gruffness.

That being said, Becca can be a bit rough; punching and pushing are not uncommon even when interacting with her amicably. She’ll say, “Goddammit Sammi,” when I’ve made a bad joke that she found funny anyway or poked a hole in her logic. She says it while laughing so it’s easier to accept it as an expression of endearment. She’s rough on the things she cares about as a way to show that she cares about them, using them over and over again; loving them by having them constantly in use, near and around her. Her Flash converse’s lightening bolts are faded and the cover of Watchmen is tattered and folded. Her Deadpool (he’s this rogue, sort-of-superhero guy) videogame won’t work; I assume from scratches. But this roughness evaporates immediately when you demonstrate that you are in need of kindness. She can be either one, whatever you need her to be. She’ll be calling you a “dumb idiot” one minute and declaring her love for you the next. This caring, sweet Becca requires more energy to embody, I think, so that’s why she falls back on her gruff act, but she doesn’t consider herself a rough person.

We arrived at the softball field early. I put my bag down and watched as Becca walked from the dugout toward the field, kneeling where the grass met the dirt and drawing on the infield. I walked up behind her; her fingers traced the outline of the Flash. I knelt next to her and drew a rudimentary cube. Eventually we were running around the entire infield, drawing in the dirt as more people started arriving, giving us strange looks, but generally accepting our weirdness. Becca and I knelt on the sandy field until the coach yelled at us to run. We joined the tail end of the group of girls running out to right field, laughing about something I don’t remember.

Becca hops into my car regularly and promptly promotes herself to the position of DJ/Navigator. Mostly she just plays the same five pop songs on my iPod and forgets to tell me directions to wherever we’re going. She’ll laugh when I half-shout her name because I’ve heard the same song fifteen times this week. If I put up a big enough fuss, she’ll change the song, but I’d rather not ruin her fun like that. She puts on a light, bouncy song. It obviously puts her in a good mood and she easily puts the singer’s voice to shame; the same sort of music used to be what I listened to and her affinity for those songs reminds me of why I used to like them, her passion rekindling mine. When we eventually arrive at our intended destination, after having to turn around at least once and definitely making a few sudden, hard turns because of Becca’s inability to stay focused on giving directions, Becca always leaves my iPod plugged in, letting the songs play and the battery die. She always leaves the sunvisor down on the passenger side and frequently leaves her shoes, sunglasses, or backpack in my car. Needless to say, she’s forgetful, but not in a disrespectful way.

Last week, at the drive-in movie theatre, which Becca begged me to take her to, she ordered a large popcorn, which she promptly spilled all over my front and back seats. (How she spilled in both places is beyond me.) As soon as a cascade of popcorn kernels soaked in fake butter and salt (because how could Becca ever eat anything without an extra helping of salt?) hit my upholstery, Becca was apologizing and promising to vacuum my car. I let her pick up the kernels from the backseat. Gently and earnestly, she assured me that my car would be clean; her knees ground some of the kernels further into the fabric.

During a water break, Becca noticed an injured bird. After catching the rendered-flightless robin, she dried it off. Eventually, she placed it on a perch and some time later, toward the end of practice, we watched it take off, gliding gently on its newly-dried wings. It flapped for a bit before flying over the cars and away. Becca waved good-bye to her bird-friend who she had held gently, cooing and petting it until it had stopped shaking. At the end of practice, Shannon, a girl on our team, shouted, “Becca! You’re goddamn bird shit on my car!” Becca could do nothing but laugh.

Becca is sweet, kind and ridiculously mean, innocent, naïve and terribly perverted, she’s outrageous and goofy, serious and intellectual; she is so many wonderful things, and all at once. She’s simultaneously extremely passionate and able to take a joke. She is fantastically contradictory and yet her personality is easy to pin down and not only identify, but to identify with. Becca is younger than me, experiencing high school as I have already done. She has so much time left to change and grow into an entirely new person and everyday she is reminding me how I became who I am.

Everything Becca does in an effort to help someone or something ends up having ramifications that she wouldn’t have imagined as she promised to vacuum my car while simultaneously grinding kernels into my car’s seat or as she dried off a poor, helpless bird who would in time come to defecate on a friend’s car. She would not understand how she has rekindled my love for superheroes and bouncy, pop music; I like looking at her art because she loves it so much; I don’t mind driving halfway across town just to see her new hamster, the light in her eyes making me want to get there as fast as possible. These things are not omnipresent, but remembering that I don’t have to give up everything that I was to continue becoming who I want to be, has been fantastic. There is so much in Becca that I have been, that I am now; she is a better version of me and she reminds me all the time how to be tender and rough, artistic and crude, but most of all she reminds me of what it means to love something purely and wholeheartedly with an innocent, seemingly never-ending passion and what the effects of caring so deeply and unreservedly about something are: inspiration. 

***

Wow, who would have thought it would rain the weekend of CCYWC? Certainly not all of us who spent the weekend inside because of the torrential fucking downpour last year...

Source


Tuesday, May 20, 2014

You're a Godsend. Do You Want a Boyfriend?


I have this recurring nightmare that you and I are on a boat. You keep remarking how nice of a day it is but the sea is churning, thunder booming in the distance. I keep yelling that we need to get somewhere safer, and that if you’d listen to me, we might get out of this alive. You stand up near the bow, tipping our already unstable vessel, I grip the sides of our lifeboat, squinting and hoping not to die; arms outstretched, you compliment the sky’s beauty and my wondrousness, claiming to have tamed the sea and brought upon an eternal summer, when really you have only half-drowned us, our boat weighed down with excess water. I scream at the top of my lungs, yelling over the gale swirling around us that we have to go; we can go together, but we have to go if we want to live. You don’t seem to realize that my voice is going hoarse from all of this screaming about impending doom. It is then I realize that you are on a different boat, a different ocean. We are looking at different skies, different waters. It is then that I realize that I have been whispering and you weren’t talking about my wondrousness, just the wonders you wished to see in yourself. It is then that I realize that you have not tamed my sea; I have only tamed yours. You selfish bastard, I am drowning.


Sunday, May 18, 2014

[Witty Blogpost Title] [Audience Laughter]

My mother always told me to be nice: “If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.” She never told me that sometimes nice people get taken advantage of. My mother always told me that I wasn’t a quitter, making me finish out the first, last, and worst soccer season of my entire life. (It was terrible when I was five, and it’s terrible now. Please, someone tell me, what is enjoyable about soccer, because it certainly isn't the "running" portion) She didn’t tell me that sometimes you have to give up on people who only aid in deteriorating your mental health; that sometimes you have to save yourself before saving someone else.

My mother never told me that other people have rules. I never really had a bedtime and no one told me to brush my teeth twice a day (I did anyway; don’t worry about my dental hygiene.) So when someone took away my independence, I was upset. (My babysitter didn’t believe me when I told her that I could go to bed whenever I wanted (9:30pm), watch whatever I wanted on TV (O, Brother Where Art Thou), and make whatever I wanted for dinner (Mac ‘n Cheese with hotdogs)) I wasn’t prepared for people to think of me as something other than responsible and independent enough to make my own decisions. I didn’t fit easily into submission and that wasn’t a problem for my mother,  as long as what I was doing wasn't hurting anyone else; it was a problem for other people who were upset when they couldn’t easily put me into a box. It became a problem for me when my decisions started to have effects on other people that I could see; there was a conflict of morals. What matters more: what I want to do, whether or not it's good for me, or how what I do will affect other people? It became a problem for me when I wasn’t confrontational and aggressive enough because I cared more about other people's reactions.

I remember one Easter there was an Easter Egg Hunt at the ski club. I cried because I didn’t get any eggs. It’s not that I hadn’t looked; I had let other people go ahead of me. I had let a boy push me into the snow, falling and getting up slowly instead of rising quickly and pushing him back, which I was more than capable of doing. I cried, and my father, merciless, yelled at me because I wasn't assertive enough.

My mother wanted me to be the kind of person that would make the world a better place, were the world to adopt my moral code. Last Thursday, she apologized for failing me, but it was the kind of apology where I was supposed to assure her that she hadn’t failed me. I didn’t tell her that she hadn’t failed me; I didn’t accept her apology. I didn’t say anything for a very long time. I was so angry and if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all, right? I took a deep breath. Then I told my mom that it was both of our faults, that I had never wanted to be helped. I wish I would have told her how no matter how hard she tried she would have failed me, that every child gets screwed up despite every good parent’s best effort and how that's not necessarily a bad thing. I wish I had told my mom that she had done her best and that I always knew she loved me. I wanted to say that we’re all so divergent, with so many different idiosyncrasies and neuroses, that there’s no way that any one child is going to be perfect. I want her to know that I’m a human, and the fact that she loves me unconditionally despite this makes her a much better mother than she thinks she is.

Friday, May 16, 2014

"I Ain't Gotta Do Nothing"

After my game the other night, I fell asleep and had a dream that I played softball. Except in the game in my dream, Shannon caught, Spit pitched, Sarah played 3rd, I got to play short (fucking finally), Emily was back at 2nd base, and Noods was at 1st. Sabrina and Kassy were in left and right, respectively; Becky took centerfield. We made routine plays and got the lead runner. Sarah never dropped the ball at third when it was thrown to her; Sabrina caught pop-flys with ease and made the plays to third and home. Kassy fielded a short-hopper and got the girl out at first. But I kept wondering about Becca sitting on the bench.

After my game the other night, Shannon and Noods (Her nickname is Noodle and Noods is short for that even though her real name is Allison. It's not my fault she's get spaghetti for legs okay? Gosh.) and Becca and I went to Dairy Creme. I had a chocolate peanut butter milkshake and Shannon decided that regular peanut butter ones were better. Noods won two bouncy balls (for the price of one). Becca tried pushing trees into the river (?????). Noods shamed Shannon for hooking up with a relief pitcher. "A relief pitcher, Shannon. I'm disappointed." "He's cute." "No. I don't care." "He's got a good body." "A relief pitcher." Shannon remarked of a mutual acquaintance, "She's definitely got those girls at attention." She quickly cupped her boob and then saluted and then I choked on my milkshake.

I love my softball friends. Shannon used to drive me everyday from Harwood to GMVS and then from Waterbury to GMVS when we started practicing outside. Sarah drove me all the way to Ben and Jerry's from Middlesex and then back to GMVS before she went home, which is past Middlesex. (I know that doesn't mean anything if you don't know where those places are, but she drove me a long while.) Katie gives me more Cheetos than I can eat. Becca invites me over for dinner and trampolining and Adventure Time marathons and video games regularly. Kassy is always offering to make me hotdogs with mac and cheese. Becky is always there with a good movie reference. I love my softball friends. I think I've said that already, but I don't really care. I just like the fact that the only thing they care about is how good you are at softball and if you have food. I happen to be pretty alright at softball and I like sharing my food. I like that there's no pressure on any conversation I have with them.

Sarah's known me since the fall of my freshman year. Immediately after showing up in the Harwood gym for the first practice of my freshman year, I had made friends with Emily. Then Katie. Then Becky. Then Sabrina and Kassy. Then Shannon. Then Courtney. Then Noods. Then Hailey. Then Becca and Megan.

These girls have made my time at GMVS better. I could show up at Harwood and walk around shamelessly until I found one of them. Last year, we weren't a fantastic team. We were pretty good, especially for Vermont, which is only a disadvantaged state because the season is so short. We were only as good as we were because we had been playing together for so long. We weren't fantastic, but I miss stepping out onto the field and have a chemistry with everyone on the field. I miss not being scared out of my mind every time the ball gets hit to the outfield. I miss doing all of those stupid fucking cheers. I miss being proud to put on my uniform.

My friends made a lot of it worthwhile: the long drives and the late nights and the piles of homework. My friends made a lot of it worthwhile and this post wasn't meant to be nostalgic, because they're still in my life. I just wish they were stepping out onto the field with me.

Prepare yourself for an onslaught of pictures. None of this was on purpose. I'm so sorry.

Bangs were a bad idea. What were you thinking?

You wanna talk about 9th grade?

Dark times: freshman year.  Point of interest: What is my face?


Uh.



Prom. Hella.

We all have pink shoelaces :)



Uh. It's pronounced "dissel."

Dairy Creme, all day, everyday


2012 Softball Season.  Back row, far right: Fred LaRock

Sunday, May 11, 2014

The Deep-Sea Diver's Complex

The top of the letter read: "Dear Future Me."

Then I stopped. I had to go to class I think. Kerry asked us to write a letter to ourselves and then let her know when she should send it to us. I folded up my "Dear Future Me" letter and it sat on my desk for a week and a half. Whilst organizing, I picked up the forgotten letter and glared at it. Fuck you, Future Me. What the fuck? Why haven't you invented time-travel yet? That's the plan. 1. Invent time-travel. 2. Come back in time. 3. Tell me how to be okay. Goddammit Future Me. I hate you. Then I refolded the letter and tucked it behind my CCYWC letter.

Eventually, I pulled the letter out again. I wished Future Me the best and hoped she was doing alright. I forgave her for not being a time-traveler. I told her that if she had it all figured out, then I was so happy for her, but if she didn't that was okay too; we could have it not figured out together. I told her that the deep-sea diver's complex was not so great, the water cold and all-encompassing, and that I was scared no one was going to pump me oxygen and that I'd drown on the bottom of the ocean.


The last thing I need is a goddamn hero. Just a friend.

Look! A music video that made me sad.

“The deep-sea diver’s complex,” he said, “is . . . It’s a pathological state in which a person withdraws into himself when he’s faced with problems that seem insurmountable. But in fact the person doesn’t really know what’s going on, and his behaviour is . . . instinctive. He senses that he absolutely has to protect himself, so he withdraws into the diving suit: first he pulls on the rubber suit that looks like the costume on the character in the Michelin tire ads, then the bronze helmet that’s as round as a ball and has three little windows covered with a mesh, and finally he puts on his heavy lead soles, otherwise . . .” “I know, I know,” said the girl. “And then?” “Then he slowly goes down the ship’s ladder into the water. He’s safe inside the diving suit. The water doesn’t seem too cold. He goes down deeper and deeper and the light dwindles. The half light is very pleasant, and it’s also very comforting to know that there’s someone on the surface of the water watching over you and operating the pump to give you air. You feel safe and you keep descending. Finally you come to the bottom of the water: it’s calm and you feel very comfortable. There’s just a tiny bit of light. You hardly feel like moving. You’re in a new world. You’re really very comfortable. You’d like to stay there forever . . . And that’s it. That’s the deep-sea diver’s complex.”