X … a work in progress

June 18, 2009 - Leave a Response

Smoke and Mirror. It smelled like my mother. I saw the remains of her face in the fragmented art-deco mirrors, now clouded with grime but that once turned daggers into her eyes. A beauty with her same caramel skin lounged at the bar, her limbs hung like they would pop right out of their sockets, slung across the counter, reaching desperately for the refreshing feel of frozen glasses overflowing with whisky and limes. Her silver sparkling dress looked cold like snow against the warm glow of her bronzed leg. She whined to the bartender, slowly and sensually twisting her leg, hopelessly; the bartender’s gaze was more often directed towards the smooth onyx cheekbones of the saxist.

She almost had my mother’s eyes though. Despite all the smoke and late nights my mother’s eyes were bright and brown and clear, flickering instantly from stimulus to stimulus, following my brother and I from game to game, always knowing what we were playing and all the rules we made up and broke. I felt sure her eyes were just as quick when she would nightly frequent the lounge in which I now stood. They would follow the music notes, knowing the rules but loving when they were broken, pursuing the tune from floor to ceiling to the bartender’s ear and up the dress of the soulful singer. She carried a tiny mirror in her fringed handbag (the one that once was covered in sequins that gradually fell away until only a single one still sparkled; we found them scattered around our apartment for years). The mirror was tarnished and distorted, but she would pull it out to pluck a stray eyebrow or line her cloudless eyes with black crayon, as if to underscore the consequence of her chocolate stare.

This caramel woman in the silver dress, though – her eyes were blue, an anomalous mark of white blood on burnt skin. They were blurred and bloodshot, the pupils like round, bloated whales, impaled and bleeding in the sallow froth along the shore. But beneath the film that protected her vision from reality, there was some painful knowledge, a faint twinkle composed of the same noble despair my mother embodied.

She was trying to hide it with her frail limbs sprawled towards the copper whisky and her red nails curled around the pennies she thought could pay for it. She was trying to look pathetic, and part of me ached to rip the sparkle from her and melt her skin to thick syrup, to mold a new body that would congeal into a stronger shape, slick and hard, and would clink when you tapped it until the warmth of your palm burned tiny holes in her shell. (And then she would let me lick the sticky soul that seeped out, her hand on my head, a caramel statue no longer letting us taste her for free). But she was trying to look pathetic, and she would look that way until she took all the syrup from you, leaving her bloated and repleted, full of all her men.

My mother had many men, but she would not fill herself up with them. She was hollow, and content in her emptiness. The men she took home sometimes thought she had filled them and brought her chocolates and wine and roses in attempt to return the favour. But the gifts moved right through her and after her hungry lovers left she would light a cigarette and laugh. We would laugh along. At the time we didn’t understand the joke, but now I know it’s because her lovers would never be sated; they would suck and suck but she was only hollow and dry, giving them nothing but a stomach full of air and maybe some of her blueberry pancakes. She would cook them naked, unashamed of her exposure because there was nothing to see or understand. Each man would think it was a special treasure, a privilege; that they were touching the outermost atmosphere of her heart. She would just laugh, wiping the sticky maple syrup from her fingers, for her heart beat only to get blood between her legs.

My name is Simon, but people call me Smoke because I smell of my mother. Andrew is my younger brother. People call him Mirror because he is like my reverse twin. He smelled like me and fished with me, and had my mother’s eyes, nose and lips like me. But his skin and hair were light as rain and he pattered while I thundered.

I learned the caramel woman’s real name was Mary, but once you entered the lounge you were baptized with a new name and a new meaning. Everyone called her Mel. It used to be Caramel but eventually she wasn’t worth more than one syllable, so she says. She was scared her name might soon be reduced to only a sound, like the short staccato swell on the saxophone. Mm.

This story isn’t about my mother. This story isn’t really even about me or my brother. This story – if you ask the general population – isn’t about the caramel woman, but her heart pumped to get blood to the brain and between the legs of this story. She was and was not my mother; she was and was not all our mothers. Her body lit our fire, and her eyes – the eyes of our mothers – cooled our hot faces. If her dislocated arms never reached and her soft body never devoured, I may never have met the true hero of this tale; none of us might have. And he, without her, might never have been able to fill her or us or anyone, and would not have left a mark of his existence.

Judy.                My skin looks cold, but it is white hot. No one can touch me without being scarred with the remembrance. Mel eats you whole so that you sit like a mouse in a snake’s stomach, so huge she digests you for days. But I consume like fire. I bear no mark of my last meal except a temporary blue flame, only hot enough to last until my next repast. There is no evidence except the excrement of ashes, the disfiguring scar left on your lips. I am neither empty nor full; I am barely a substance. I am not the fire in your hearth, or the one you sing around, no; I do not provide warmth – only violent, scalding heat.

Perhaps Mel is not a snake, but rather a salamander. When my blaze met with her hunger, she did not curl into white cinder like a serpent. She swallowed me, so that she burned from the inside out, and the tiny holes some man had rubbed into her skin glowed orange and blue. I would have been frightened if she had not been frightened too; she was worried the burns on her organs would heal to make her so tough that men could no longer melt and mold her. I told her fire could forge her too, into any shape she pleased.

But no matter what form I shaped her into, when Jesse X was around she was absolute butter. I can’t remember if she introduced me to him or he introduced her to me, but my first known memory of both of them is the same. Mel wore a slinky, low-necked, silver dress, just barely covering the top of her thighs. She was twisting to the erratic sounds of the saxophone, weaving her arms in the air as though they were swimming through an invisible maze. Her blue eyes were wide and scared, though her body moved smoothly, as if it were part of the music-filled air. She was barefoot and slipped a little along the floor as she wiggled towards Jesse, waving her arms out and squeezing her fingers, a motion to join her that he didn’t seem to understand.

He was talking to two men I didn’t recognize; one was darker and the other lighter, but they had the same face and smell. They had the posture of newcomers to the Babylon lounge, and Jesse was pointing towards John, the saxist who was currently absorbed in a particularly frantic song. I figured Jesse was telling them to get fresh names from John, who was in charge of determining your fate in the Babylon if you planned to stay. Your new moniker became your identity; you could be a fisherman by day (and by the boys’ smell that’s what they were – and also heavy smokers) but if he called you a blacksmith that was your true essence. You would need to learn to manipulate my fire to hammer Jesse’s iron eyes, and the resulting hot poker would burn more holes in Mel’s skin. Mel was always at the end of our long line of communal labour; every product worked to build or destroy her, so that she was never quite complete and never quite ruined.

Jesse signaled to the bartender, Bart, for drinks for the two boys and returned his mind to the music and to Mel’s writhing figure, still beckoning to join her on the empty dance floor. She pulled and pulled at him, draping her liquid limbs all over his pale body in a way that made me feel sick. I nearly went to halt her humiliation and dance with her, but Jesse seemed to sense my intentions before I made a move. He dragged her hand onto the floor, as if it were he demanding the dance. I was angry – maybe because they both embarrassed me, maybe because I wanted them both, and maybe because the desire itself embarrassed me – but I was smoothed by the harmonious discord of their dance. His white limbs shone vibrantly against her muted glow of polished amber. His intensity and her softness seemed to be born from John’s saxophone as they twisted together and apart, never just one but never wholly two.

Of course, I knew them well before then but I couldn’t pinpoint our first meeting, just as we can’t remember the first time we met our mothers, or the first time we knew they were our mothers.

After the song ended, Bart cooled John off with a gin and tonic. The two new boys went to speak with John. I could hear them praising his saxophone skills, and after that I lost interest. Jesse and Mel were still meandering across the floor in a way that seemed aimless but was certainly paired with some music they both heard and understood. Jealousy panged me, and Bart, seeing the tinge of green on my cheeks, poured me more red wine.

“On the house, Judy,” he smiled.

“You’re too good to me.” I lit a cigarette. Bart grinned weakly, looking at my glass of wine as if it were a regret.

The new boys approached me, walking with the same awkwardness with which we all entered the Babylon. They told me John had called them Smoke and Mirror, but that their real names were –

“It doesn’t matter what you were,” I said. “Your parents were blind. You were a bouncing baby, a bundle of fleshy joy with a soft skull that softened your parents’ minds. They didn’t know who you were or who you would become. They only knew themselves, and you cannot live by that label.”

Of course, this was John’s creed, not mine, though I thoroughly believed it. If I didn’t believe it I’d tell you what my parents named me.

“But, John isn’t us either,” the one called Smoke said. I stared at him with dull incredulity.

“Not everyone gets a name, you know,” I examined my nails as if I wasn’t interested, but I was angry. “John isn’t you, and he isn’t me – but he’s part of the stuff that surrounds us. He can communicate with parts of you that you can’t even conceive of. Now you have your name, and now you are part of us.”

Smoke and Mirror didn’t seem to understand.

“You cannot turn back now,” I said, trying to dumb down John’s words. “So you must learn to understand John – or understand at least that you cannot understand him but he can understand you.”

“What about Jesse X?” Smoke asked again. Mirror was so quiet and his eyes were so empty I thought maybe he was blind.

“If you are patient, there might be parts of Jesse he’ll let you understand. But no matter what, you’ll always think you know him; that you’re kindred spirits,” I laughed softly with perhaps too obvious a tang of bitterness. “He doesn’t belong to this world.”

They nodded soberly, pretending to make a mental note of it. But I knew soon they’d want to swap best friend charms with Jesse, whose perfect face would make them feel the friendship was real.

“What do you want from me anyway?” I asked sourly. “A grand tour?”

They looked so ridiculous, so small against the cramped vastness of the Babylon. Suddenly their clothes looked many sizes too big, like starched hand-me-downs from giants. It was as if their new names had truly shrunk them back to the disproportions of infancy, their naïveté hanging from them like bulging dirty diapers. I bit my lip as I contemplated Smoke’s insolence; perhaps John did merely reduce us back to our voiceless births, our tiny, incapable fingers unable to take hold of our identities. I mentally shook my head, displacing the thought from my brain so that the particles of it drifted like dust in my skull. If I kept moving my head, they would not settle.

“Much will be expected from you,” I said viciously, as if wishing to scare Smoke and Mirror into expanding to fill their silly, huge garments. They only seemed to shrink further. I sighed, wanting at once to help them and to hurt them.

“But don’t worry,” I tried to sound reassuring. “You’ll be given the resources and encouragement to fill out your names and your destiny here. We’re family.” I almost patted them on the back, but refrained. I shuddered at what it would feel like to touch their baby skins in the shell of their large, crispy clothes.

John had started his music again and Mel began wiggling with increasing passion. Her red lips touched Jesse’s neck. She was either too intoxicated or too possessed by the music to form a proper pucker, so she just continually pressed her mouth against Jesse, leaving a trail of pink patches. Whether it was the music or the whiskey sours, she looked helpless and I felt like vomiting again at the sight of him being touched by her, and her wanting to touch him.

Smoke eyed me as if he wanted to dance, but even if I hadn’t felt so sick he and Mirror just looked like children to me, and I couldn’t overcome my belief that they reeked of baby shit.

Fortunately, I made it to the washroom before I finally retched.

Smoke and Mirror.           The Babylon was unlike I had imagined it to be when I was a child. My mother would come home flushed and hyper, the usual solemn glint in her eye polished to an intense, joyful shine nearly reaching the luminosity of hope.

My first impression of the Babylon was that it did not sparkle like the joyous luster it seemed to give my mother. The hole in the ground the Babylonians inhabited was not dirty; there were no rats, no dust, and while the mirrors were tarnished they were evidently regularly washed. But somehow it emitted an aura of filth that, despite their clean skin and sparkling garments, coated its patrons with an invisible grime.

Or perhaps the grime came from the patrons themselves, because it seemed as though each Babylonian had their own dirt and as they danced and drank and fucked with each other it would rub off, leaving each with an intangibly physical history of their nightly interactions. A golden aura of dirt meant Caramel, while a harsh blue meant Judy. Jesse was iridescent; the hard, metallic taste of iron or blood mixed with something black and smooth, at once seductive and safe, like the smell of vanilla. Perhaps all their filth got muddled up together and rubbed into the surface of the Babylon, mixing into a dull, muddy brown.

I wondered what my mother contributed to the dirt of the Babylon, envisioning her as sparkling silver that lured you in like a lost moth. I figured I was thick, heavy grey, more a smell than a substance. And Mirror – he wouldn’t leave a trace if he ever had the chance to touch somebody.

Whether the dirt was a product of Babylon or the Babylonians, it was there and didn’t seem capable of producing the fresh life force that hung around my mother anytime she returned from its depths. I pictured the Babylon as water rather than earth, returning its inhabitant to their sea creature origins and continually refreshing them so that they could evolve into something superior, stronger.

Jesse was the first face I distinguished out of the dirty chaos, and he seemed to perceive my doubt in reaching land instead of sea.

“Have faith, Simon,” he said. He placed his hand on my shoulder; it felt both delicate and tough and that’s when I first noticed the vanilla and blood that came from his hand, and – though less powerful – the gold shimmer on his neck and the harsh blue on his ear and various other colours covering his body.

He smiled at Mirror, then known to me only as Andrew. Andrew’s eyes were a green that would have been radiant, had a different soul occupied them. Instead, they showed nothing, not even a reaction to the Babylon or the blood between the teeth of Jesse’s smile. If he had already been named by John, perhaps I would have known that Andrew didn’t understand or judge, he merely reflected the world back onto itself.

“Your mother said you would come one day,” Jesse said, still smiling though its tone seemed to have changed and I wondered if the memory of my mother was a good or a bad one, until I realised Jesse must have been around thirty, and never would have met my mother. For some reason – maybe the aroma of black vanilla – I now felt the faith he asked of me too strongly to question his ability to know her entirely. I felt not only that he knew her thoughts, but also ours, and that his empire in the Babylon was built strictly in anticipation of our arrival predicted by some ancient prophecy, that we had come to fulfill some unfathomable gap in Jesse’s ultimate plan, though at that time I was not aware there even was a plan.

“I am glad that you did,” Jesse said warmly, though the metallic tang of blood still hovered around his words. “We never felt complete without your mother’s sons. Don’t let us down.”

I felt my chest swell with a pride that resembled patriotism. It was as if I had been assigned some grand mission and I was certain the ancient prophecy was what Jesse’s soft words referred to. Andrew still looked like a mirror, and Jesse’s clear blue eyes scanned him with something I thought was suspicion. In an instant, however, the warmness returned.

“If you’re serious, after this set go see John, the saxist,” Jesse pointed to a man as dark as the vanilla Jesse radiated playing passionately on the saxophone. “He’ll give you your names and you’ll begin your new life here.”

My visions of a watery Babylon suddenly seemed so inconceivably foolish and I marveled at my innocence; dirt was certainly the only means of renewal. Water might physically cleanse, but I knew the filth of the Babylon would teach me to live with the muck of the world, somehow bring myself above it in the midst of it and teach me to use the dirt for something larger than any of the elements. I felt the surge of joyous brilliance almost touching hope and knew I would not let Jesse or the Babylon down. I only hoped Andrew wouldn’t.

Jesse was finally dragged away by the caramel women, who he briefly introduced to us as Mel. We watched them dance until the song was done, and then approached John. He held up his hand to us in a motion telling us to wait while the bartender wiped his brow and John gulped down a gin and tonic. He introduced Bart and then waved him away. I started to speak, but he held his enormous hand up again.

“Jesse has told me. Just wait.” His eyes were small and looked as if they were in a permanent squint. Later, as I began to understand the immensity of his knowledge I believed he was indeed permanently squinting to see the small particles of spiritual intelligence the average human could not. It was if he saw the smoke hovering around me as I stood there and as if he truly saw his own reflection in Mirror’s muted face. He cleared his throat.

“Smoke,” he said, touching my head firmly but gently. “Mirror.” He did the same to Andrew, now Mirror. “Take them, learn them and soon you will understand them.” He said this mechanically, as if it were something he said in every baptism, but somehow I felt that it was an intimate moment, never before enacted. We stood for a moment – I basking, Mirror merely standing – in the new filth of our names. John stared at us quizzically, as if he had never before witnessed a rebirth. He waved his hand toward Judy – though we did not know she was Judy yet – and gulped down another gin and tonic. We turned around and looked at Judy, who was casually smoking a cigarette looking a dissonant combination of bored and passionate.

“Should I rename you Dumb and Dull?” John asked viciously. “You’re not one of us yet, so go talk to Judy.” We shuffled away, embarrassed. As we approached, her expression barely changed, except that her eyes – the same hue as Jesse’s – shifted towards us and perhaps a bit more boredom entered their stare as they laid themselves upon us.

After lecturing us, teaching us an ambiguous lesson about Jesse, and performing what seemed like a strained attempt to comfort us, she resumed her observation of Jesse and Mel. I eyed her quietly, wondering why she seemed so frightened of us, and was about to ask her more about the Babylon when she ran to the washroom in a hurry.

When she returned she smelled faintly of vomit. She asked Bart to bring her something to eat, and he returned with a few slices of bread and a small plate of various cheeses. It looked elegant and fresh, something I would not have suspected from the muddy innards of the Babylon. I glanced around again, though, and the Babylon seemed not to hang with imaginary dirt any longer, or rather the dirt didn’t seem as repugnant.

Bart refilled Judy’s glass of wine as she gracefully ate a slice of bread topped with brie. She pushed the plate towards Mirror and me, and gestured us to take some. I said I had no money and she looked as if she were about to laugh.

“I suppose Jesse and John haven’t taught you anything about the Babylon?” she asked rhetorically after swallowing a mouthful of bread and cheese. I looked at Mirror, who was reaching for a piece of cheese. Judy laughed, seeming significantly cheered by our ignorance. I felt ashamed.

“Well,” she started, as if preparing to tell an epic tale. “John and Jesse will collect your fees monthly. When you come here, you are welcome to all the food and drink you can handle, and can stay the night when you can’t face the outside world. And believe me; once you enter the Babylon the outside world is never satisfying and most often unbearable. But what you will gain here will make up for what you have lost in what you once called reality.”

Around two in the morning, the Babylon began to empty. John, however, continued playing and a handful of individuals including Jesse, Judy and Mel did not look inclined to leave soon. Bart cleared away the abandoned empty glasses that scattered the joint and wiped down the surfaces viciously. Jesse whispered something in his ear and he nodded. A few minutes later he went in behind the bar and reappeared with a few bottles of dusty red wine and another plate of bread and cheese, this time along with cold slices of meat, a couple bowls of plump olives and a platter of smoked fish. John’s saxophone wailed its last note, and the handful of people who remained chatted in hushed voices while the band packed up. The Babylon was eerily quiet, as if all the noise and hubbub of the usually crowded music lounge served to disguise some immense secret. As John signaled to the band to go, Mirror tugged on my sleeve and tilted his head towards the door, implying we had overstayed our welcome. I turned to leave with him when Jesse clamped us both on the shoulder.

“Stay and eat and drink with us,” Jesse said. “We want to get to know our new recruits – and I’m sure you have lots of questions.”

His grin was so welcoming I again felt childish at having believed the food and wine weren’t brought out solely in honour of our arrival. Jesse took a seat in the middle of the table, and the others – except for John who remained leaning on his saxophone case – sat on either side of him. Mel, falling clumsily onto a stool, beckoned to me (or perhaps Mirror, I suppose) to sit near her. Jesse began to distribute wine and food, and soon the life of the Babylon returned to the room as everyone laughed and drank and talked together. When we had eaten our fill, Jesse poured more wine and stood as if to propose a toast.

“I would like everyone to meet our two new members, Smoke and Mirror,” he held his palms out in our direction and there was a murmur of greetings. I hoped they knew which of us was which. “They are the children of Magda.” I did not recognize the name; of course our mother did not go by her Babylonian name when at home.

“While it would not be a disadvantage to judge them on their basis of their beautiful mother, I ask that you receive them without any preconceived notions,” Jesse continued and then turned to address us. “We hope you will learn lots from us, and that we will likewise learn from you.”

Mirror and I both bowed our heads awkwardly, unsure of how to respond. Jesse then went along the bar, re-introducing Bart, Judy, Mel and John and naming the new faces.

“So what do you two do for money?” Bart asked. I looked to Mirror, attempting to give him a chance to speak and establish himself in their presence. He merely stared back.

“We’re fishermen,” I answered, unsure of whether it was an acceptable profession in their eyes. “A next door neighbour was kind enough to give us employment as boys when we were hard up for money and we haven’t found a reason to leave.”

Everyone nodded silently. I felt a combination of relief and disappointment; none of them seemed disapproving of fishermen, though none of them looked impressed either. They asked us a few other questions about our family and lovers and seemed satisfied to hear we had none. They talked of Magda a little, until Jesse told them that the past is gone, in a tone that implied he had reminded them of the same many times before. They quieted after that, and there were a few moments filled only with the soft sipping of wine until John announced he was leaving, asking Bart to come with him. Everyone filtered out shortly after, each embracing Jesse as they left. By the time we departed, Jesse and Mel were the only ones left behind, Mel tugging at Jesse’s shirt and humming an unidentifiable tune in his ear.


Something I’m working on, finally feeling productive. Comments welcome, if anyone reads.

Deja Vu

May 27, 2009 - Leave a Response

This somehow looks familiar…

Oh, I think I’ve got it…

The Hey Ocean video just screams Lykke Li. And not in a good way – I’m all for artists inspiring each other, but this doesn’t scream inspiration, it screams like a straight-up rip off. The song is even a similar theme. Oh, and then I saw the little dancing girls…

I am trying to find good music that I like – and I think I might actually enjoy the Hey Ocean song if the video didn’t leave such a bad taste in my mouth. The taste of an attempt to be artistic and different that just comes off pretentious and weak because I can’t help but think of Lykke Li. And it’s not just a similar style – there is no way Hey Ocean did not have Lykke Li in the very front of their minds when they made that video. I wouldn’t believe it.

Le sigh.

Coming Soon.

May 22, 2009 - Leave a Response

Pitter patter: Movies I cannot wait for.

Egads. Can. Not. Wait.

Where the Wild Things Are has been an inspiration to me as long as I can remember. And the clip of the crying Wild Thing? Heartbreakingly adorable!

Looks good. Star-studded cast, but doesn’t seem to have the feel of a star-studded movie.

Yay! I miss the traditional, 2D Disney movie. I’m more looking forward to the 2010 Rapunzel, but this will keep me sated.

Piqued: Movies that interest me.

I try to have a policy of reading the book before the movie, but as my book list has become impossibly long (though it does include this), I’m guessing I’ll be seeing the movie first.

When I dislike a movie musical, I find it dreadfully boring. When I love them, I love them! So I’d be interested to see where this fits in.

PO’ed: Alas, there are some disappointments.

For some reason this doesn’t really scream “Sherlock Holmes” to me. I guess it’s kind of a neat concept – modernizing it but still keeping it a “period piece.” But somehow I just don’t think it’ll really translate. For some reason I really wanted to see this, but now I don’t.

That’s all for now, folks.

I get by with a little help from my friends.

April 4, 2009 - Leave a Response

Christoph is visiting with A., and they were kind enough to think of sending me a little something to cheer me up while I work on my last ungrad essay ever!!

trolls

Thanks Christoph and A.! It makes the long nights ahead of me seem brighter. The thought that I am almost done my BA also illuminates the daunting all-nighters to come. Almost there.

More when I can say I am officially done!

In the meantime, check out Christoph’s blog!

Daily Inspo: Purple.

March 16, 2009 - Leave a Response

MiuMiu001

miumiu002

miumiu006netapmiumiu007netapMiu Miu - Net-A-Porter.com

It’s lovely weather out today, which makes me want to wear bright colours and sparkles. I felt lazy and sloppy over the weekend, but I’m hoping the weather will inspire me to be more active and productive. Though it was nice this weekend, so that theory will likely fall flat.

greenhem

greenhem

I just realized those are my university’s colours. Speaking of which, I will be leaving soon and continuing my studies elsewhere. I can’t decide if I’m nervous, excited, sad, all of the above, or something else all together. It will be odd for sure.

Raw.

March 10, 2009 - Leave a Response
Yum.

Yum.

Mmm. Yummy, fishy, raw Reading Week culinary experimentation. More about it at Christoph’s recently updated blog.

As for me – school is busy. I got into grad school, which is a relief. Now just to wait to hear about the funding! :S

More soon when I have more time!

upside-down

Ciao for now!

In all chaos there is a cosmos, in all disorder a secret order.

January 19, 2009 - Leave a Response

A talk with my Oma followed by laying in bed awake far later than I had hoped, led me to this realization: I would not be alive if Adolf Hitler had never been born.

Baby Hitler

Baby Hitler

My Oma’s family came to Canada after WWII. My Oma was saying that the only reason her father chose to leave Germany was because of his hatred for Hitler and the Nazis. Otherwise, they might have stayed in Germany. Thus, my Oma never would have met my Opa, my father would have never been born, therefore he would have never met my mother and thus I would never have been born. If Hitler had never existed, I would most likely not be alive.

My mother went to university in Nova Scotia, but then decided to return here to finish her degree, which is where she met my father. I used to like to think back on the series of events that created my existence, and be thankful that my mom was homesick and so returned to Ontario. It meant that any mistakes I might make would only contribute to my future self, and that I’d be entirely different if I had not made them.

I never before have traced the events quite back this far. And this bothers me. Perhaps because I can’t look back and say, “Oh well, this mistake just contributed to my existence!” when it wiped out that of many, many, many others. I can’t very well say my life is worth the lives lost at the hands of Hitler.

I should write a movie script about this. I have a chance to go back in time and ensure Hitler was never born (the details of how exactly I would do this aren’t ironed out yet), but it will cost me my existence. And that of my father, my uncle, my cousins and my sister. I suppose movies like this have already been made and the lesson has always been  not to toy with history. But usually it’s some small tragedy – like don’t go back and save your girlfriend because it’ll mess everything up. Can anything get more messed up than the Holocaust? Probably not; at least not on a grand scale. But my life would be messed up – that is, gone.

I suppose I shouldn’t let this bother me, because the good news is I’ll never be faced with the decision and will never have to learn what my decision would be. I just feel a bit guilty that my life is so happy and safe and privileged and I never would have had any of this if it weren’t for Hitler, who destroyed the lives of so many other people and basically altered society.

Reading over the title of this post (a Carl Jung quote, by the way), I feel a bit obnoxious. In no way do I think that the chaos and disorder created by Hitler’s life was all a secret cosmic plan leading up to my life. Unless maybe I’m supposed to do something really important. Like give birth to the second coming of Christ. But I doubt that.

I don’t really know why I posted this. I can’t really articulate what thoughts have been triggered by this discovery. It’s just a bit bizarre to discover that your life depends on the most prominent figure of evil of Western civilization.

Sorry – what I thought was a profound insight into the chaos of existence turned out to be a rather mundane musing that didn’t go anywhere. I guess that’s what you get in the wee hours of the morning.

Arthur Hugh Clough.

January 11, 2009 - Leave a Response

RichardLowkes

RichardLowkes

The Latest Decalogue.

Thou shalt have one God only; who

Would be at the expense of two?

No graven images may be

Worshipped, except the currency:

Swear not at all; for, for thy curse

Thine enemy is none the worse:

At church on Sunday to attend

Will serve to keep the world thy friend:

Honour thy parents; that is, all

From whom advancement may befall;

Thou shalt not kill; but need’st not strive

Officiously to keep alive:

Do not adultery commit;

Advantage rarely comes of it:

Thou shalt not steal; an empty feat

When it’s so lucrative to cheat:

Bear not false witness; let the lie

Have itme on its own wings to fly:

Thou shalt not covet, but tradition

Approves all forms of competition.

The sum of all is, thou shalt love,

If any body, God above:

At any rate shall never labour

More than thyself to love thy neighbour.

Happy New Year!

January 5, 2009 - Leave a Response

Well, I certainly have been on an unintentional blogging hiatus, but it’s been a fairly uneventful holiday break. At least not full of events that most would be interested in reading.

I started the holiday off with a trip to A’s cottage where we just relaxed and read. I read The Great Gatsby, which unfortunately disappointed me a little. I didn’t dislike it, I just didn’t really understand all the hype to be honest. Though it did somehow make me want to go out and buy a flapper dress and attend some swanky party full of rich and famous people falling over themselves drunk. I think the moral of the story is that’s not the way to live, but despite the end results, books such as these always make me even more convinced that that lifestyle is still glamourous.

Then I got my wisdom teeth out, which is neither an interesting nor fun story, so I shall skip, except to say that my jaw still hurts two weeks later, which is somewhat irritating.

New Year's Eve

New Year's Eve

Then Christmas, of course. I spent Christmas Eve with A’s family up at his cottage and ate a great deal of food. I love taken pictures of food and I should have taken pictures of it all, but I his family would probably think I was somewhat deranged. Christmas Day was with my family, and the next day (my birthday) was spend with A, my sister, her boyfriend and my parents, eating sushi, drinking champagne and playing board games.

Time for friends finally rolled around on New Year’s Eve. I bought a new pair of shoes that I am in love with. I think we all looked pretty good (to your left).

I can’t find my glasses though, which is upsetting. I have contacted the host of our NYE in hopes that they are there, but alas, have not heard from him.

Tomorrow school begins again, which means less time for leisure, which certainly is unfortunate. I hope I enjoy my classes and don’t stress out too much. Though the main thing on my mind is grad school applications, the first of which I have to send out this week. Preferably Thursday, if I get my transcripts on time. Dear, this is all morbidly boring.

Zink Canada with another new obsession; diet gingerale and lime (and my new leopard print glasses from Mother Dearest!)

Zink Canada with another new obsession; diet gingerale and lime (and my new leopard print glasses from Mother Dearest!)

I mentioned before my goal to expose myself to new, alternative magazines. I

think I have found one that I will likely subscribe to, called Zink. I picked up Zink Canada, actually, which is nice because their are few Canadian-focused fashion magazines, it seems. Though I’m not really sure if there’s much of a difference between the Canadian and US versions, it does mean lower subscription fees which are fine by me. Anyway, it has articles on a variety of things, but mainly focuses on fashion. I especially like it because there’s pages and pages of just good solid fashion spreads with no ads in between or text even. Just wonderful pictures to look at. I didn’t want to bother scanning but I took photos of a few I especially liked (so pleas excuse the blotched of flash-induced light and the occasional glimpse of poorly groomed fingernails):

photographed by Mike Rosenthal

photographed by Mike Rosenthal

photographed by Mike Rosenthal

photographed by Mike Rosenthal

photographed by Rasmus Morgensen

photographed by Rasmus Morgensen

photographed by Martin Tremblay

photographed by Martin Tremblay

photographed by Jamie Nelson

photographed by Jamie Nelson

photographed by Jamie Nelson

photographed by Jamie Nelson

(the shoes!!)

photographed by Chris Haylett

photographed by Chris Haylett

photographed by Anouk Lessard

photographed by Anouk Lessard

photographed by Byron Mollinedo

photographed by Byron Mollinedo

photographed by Bryon Mollinedo

photographed by Bryon Mollinedo

photographed by Chloe Crespi

photographed by Chloe Crespi

photographed by Hama Sanders

photographed by Hama Sanders

photographed by John Londono

photographed by John Londono

Well, now I should probably go shower and head to bed to be well rested for my first day of school tomorrow. Hopefully in the future I’ll be able to come up with some more interested posts than this. I’m a little brain dead right now, though the prospects for that getting any better during the semester do not look good.

(Also, since I have been out of commission for a while, Christoph did not have his trusty – or not-so-trusty – typist. But now that I am back on the blogosphere scene, Christoph has updated too!)

I always fight with wearing a beret.

December 9, 2008 - One Response

Fashions fade, style is eternal. -YSL

"Fashions fade, style is eternal." -YSL

There I am in my cool octopus necklace from Chrys Designs Jewelry. She also sent a bonus pair of little leaf earrings! :)

I don’t really consider myself a fashionista or knowing anything about fashion; I do love clothes, though. I really look forward to picking out ensembles each day. And I don’t think that’s shallow; what you wear can say a lot about who you are, and I like to feel like I’m evoking a sense of myself even if I’m just going to the grocery store. I feel similar effects when I draw or paint or even write.

Lately I’ve been really wanting to develop my own style and take it beyond the basics and few “signature” pieces I have in my wardrobe. I tend to buy anything I like. Though that would seem to make sense, there are so many garments I like…but on other people. I’ve been trying to really focus on my purchases and figure out what I truly feel comfortable and myself in.

I came across this little survey, and as I am having difficulty sleeping, I thought I’d let you all suffer through it.

Read the rest of this entry »