Monday, September 19, 2011

the disaffection of romance

Edit: this post doesn't reflect my personal life but more of an observation/amalgamation of thoughts from reading scripts, articles, and situations.

Of course you've seen it all before but you always forget until you get to that place again. Past romances which had slapped the hurt into you always become shrouded and cloudy, withered memories like an Alzheimer's patient, in the face of the new object of desire.

Yet eventually, the perfect little seed that you've kept close, polishing it like a pearl nightly with love and fevered breath, begins to stain with every verbal sling, every injured feeling that gets buried, only to bubble up when least expected.




In the face of a world where new love objects are a click away, albeit virtual and remote, how do we persevere when most other daily activities of our lives have been simplified? Considering the breadth of our access to a wider range of partners, is it easier for us now to dismiss potential relationships because of some perceived or imaginary slight, knowing that our physical and intellectual ideal could still be out trolling the web highway?

It's so much easier not to care. Love/like/sex is so much simpler. A groping towards some sort of mutual satisfaction with no side of emotion, no risks, no problems. After all, how many couples actually make it, who don't just maintain appearances to fool their children, where the appreciation and respect grows instead of falling by the wayside. Does the dissolution happen because two people were never a right fit from the start or do the ravages of monogamy chip away slowly but surely, like the waves beating against the rocks on the beach?

We do it because it's precious. When we find it, we resort primitively to guarding and defending it to the death. We do it because we want to feel needed, we want it to be realized when we're not around. We do it because it feels good- not just the physical benefits but those moments after an argument where you realize that little fightquakes aren't going to tear it apart.

Monday, September 12, 2011

we can cross rivers with our will

Usually these photographs that I post are an abstract image that I find captivating, an image that I think is "cool"- whereas this image is a literal depiction of my state of mind.



Off-kilter. Off-balance. Twisted and tumbled over.

I know this from certain tendencies. Eating the same foods over and over. Whenever my brother was feeling this way, that was the time that certain foods populated our refrigerator. Dozens of vanilla yogurts, a bunch of poppy-seed bagels, whatever made the chemical connection that united mood with taste buds was plentiful in our household.

I haven't listened to music in a week and a half. I always vacillate between listening to primarily podcasts or music. I'm in the podcast mood because music access a too raw and primal set of emotions. Podcasts are comforting and clinical- dispensing stories, information, or hilarity- I can choose the conversation I want, I can choose the company I keep.

I'm being irrational. I don't want to say it aloud because speaking words breathes life into it. So rather I will type. I'm allowing the demon of my past rear his ugly head. The victim is not a comfortable role for me to play, usually an awkward and cumbersome fit, yet for some reason I'm slipping into it comfortably. The devil's dance that I entertained for three years left more scars that I realize, scars that manifest themselves more prominently in the face of a relationship with the opposite of everything I have known. Time to rewrite my emotional neurons.

I know I will climb out of this.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

but a little fantastic, fleeting, and out of reach

I came to this realization. Just now. While watching ADAPTATION. The movie about a guy writing a movie-which is in fact the movie that you are watching.



I realized this while watching the movie while simultaneously searching for reviews on the movie I was watching. Reading other people's words, other people's perspectives. Because I was doing this, I didn't watch the movie intently. I wasn't fully engaged.

I also do this with restaurants and food. For some odd reason, I have to read these reviews and see how other people feel. I can't just experience anything for myself. I have this need to know something before I get in. I can't just leap before I look.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

i'd always known it would be like this

there's something so seductive about apathy. about disconnection.



if you really want to break it down, thoreau was the first hipster. he said (in a less eloquent way) "f*** this. i'm going to get away from our society and live in the wilderness". He broke away from the bullshit, from the socially established constructs, "to front only the essential facts of life and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." Okay, Bright Eyes.
I mean, look at the name of hipster bands lately: Fleet Foxes, Caribou, Wolfmother- if that's not an attempt to harken back to native roots then what else is it (perhaps the members really just enjoy nature)?

Whatever, back to the main subject of this post. Now I've read number upon number of articles bemoaning that our increasingly virtual lifestyle causes depression because of the lack of real human contact. I grew up in the time where AIM was prominent and numerous soap operas of the teenage era unfolded in the minutes of those exchanges therefore I can understand the assertion of these articles and the logic. Despite the fact that what we write on Facebook posts/blogs/comments etc is essentially like tattooing yourself with the inanity that you post on the web, we do it because its easy, instantaneous and seemingly harmless. Also the problem with this shift in living also causes ourselves to critically and fully construct our identity via likes, dislikes, music taste, and quotes. Everything we post, every sentence we write continues to label our identity in this vast space.

But the vastness is appealing. The remoteness is freeing. The fact that we can say what we really, truly, in the deepest and darkest recesses of our mind think without fear of immediate societal repercussion- I mean is that nothing but truly freedom. Although Thoreau's journey was much more of the kind of a confrontation of natural forces and the human fallibility in face of those, I think that what we are dealing with now is the struggle to force oneself to be heard in the face of the abyss of empty space. And although people may respond favorably, you know the emptiness of their validation. It's all a lie.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

gluttony

In other random news, I tried to type in the address for my blog and lo and behold I get re-routed to a Bible Study website like some practical joke. The agnostic in me say this might be some sign- that my frequent imbibing, carousing, and living in sin with my boyfriend has caught the big guy's attention. That "He (JC) may be reaching out to me right now". The atheist in me tells the agnostic to shut the fuck up.



Anyways back to the point of this entry. At about the point of our second mimosa, Ken made a decent point as my Southwestern scramble and his crab cake Egg Benedict arrived. I am consciously preoccupied with food-why not start a food blog? I had to admit, the thought has crossed my mind before and after all, it would be a nice hobby of sorts to make me feel fulfilled beyond the soul suck that is work (which I love like a BDSM addict). Yet I always steered away because I don't think my tastes are broad enough (I tend to stick with creamy, salty food or carbohydrates of any kind really) and also although I am a voyeur and frequent visitor of food blogs, I kind of think the people who create them are sad desperate housewives who substitute fleeting culinary pleasures in lieu of frequent sex with their husbands.

However, I'm ruminating on making frequent but not constant entries in related to food/cooking/restaurants for the budget conscious. Who knows- this might fall by the wayside like so many of my projects. List of the following projects who have passed on:

-Photography portrait project of attendees at racetracks (using Polaroid camera)
-Starting singing/songwriting (the most action my voice sees is the good ole car sesh)
-Taking UCLA extension course in something nonrelated to my work-but something I never could in college
-Writing a script

These might/might not be resurrected at some point soon only to die once again. I'm painting every weekend which feels nice and fulfilling but my drive to create something...ANYTHING is getting stronger.

Monday, April 4, 2011

thanatos



Suffering is pleasurable. Rollercoasters, scary movies, extreme sports-the appeal is all the same.
These visceral experiences of a Russian roulette variety allow us to flirt albeit briefly with our demise. Some go further.
They destroy their mind and body with toxic substances, starve themselves to fit an illusion, some careen into the abyss rather than face society's responsibilities and expectations. It all points to the same thing: a subconscious longing to return to an inanimate state.

Although you would think that people would seek to avoid these experiences and instead pursue the path of most pleasure, we still continually find ourselves consciously putting ourselves at risk. Willing self-destruction is the death instinct- Freud posited it as the opposing force to the pleasure principle. Initially when I discovered the theory, I scoffed at its implications. Why on earth would I want to be dead? What happened to the survival instinct? Maybe this toying with the ending of existence allows one to feel "more alive" after surviving the risk. Living is hard after all- trying to satisfy your desires while working to maintain a means for economic survival, find someone to love, procreate, the never-ending exhausting circle of life.

Maybe that's why I like to drive fast and recklessly. Maybe that's why I like to drink and go out constantly on the weekends. Maybe that's why I "go there"- prudence has never been my thing. I can be reckless and misguided but maybe deep down I just want to get in my two cents.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

as i scan this wasted land

This is horrifying.



After an hour of watching videos and images, a process that left me feeling dirty, like I'd been watching some sort of destruction porn, it came to me.

All the stepping stones we try to follow in life, go to school, get a good job, settle down, buy a house- it's all so tenuous in the face of the forces of nature. We are insignificant specks in the face of the yawning abyss. Watching the water swallow factories, farms, towns...it reaffirms my moderate hedonism. Enjoying life's little moments of pleasure whether it be in a bite, a song, or an orgasm is the true gateway to heaven. There's only so much you can guarantee until the big one comes.