Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

December 31, 2011

New Year's Wishes

Mr. Neil Gaiman always writes beautiful things for the New Year, and he has something of a greatest hits blog post which I fully recommend. Here's this year's wish:

I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes.

Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things, trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, changing yourself, changing your world. You're doing things you've never done before, and more importantly, you're Doing Something.

So that's my wish for you, and all of us, and my wish for myself. Make New Mistakes. Make glorious, amazing mistakes. Make mistakes nobody's ever made before. Don't freeze, don't stop, don't worry that it isn't good enough, or it isn't perfect, whatever it is: art, or love, or work or family or life.

Whatever it is you're scared of doing, Do it.

Make your mistakes, next year and forever.

While it's a fine and lovely wish, I hope that none of my mistakes in the coming year involve paperwork at the airport. Anything else is pretty much fair game, but I'd like getting through customs to be mistake-free. 15 days until I head off for Ireland!

I hope everyone had a really lovely 2011, and that you have great parties tonight, and an even better 2012!

October 6, 2011

And now for... A Poem?

Found this poem on Monkey Mind this morning. I've been thinking about feminism and body image lately, and this seemed fitting.

God Says Yes to Me

by Kaylin Haught

I asked God if it was okay to be melodramatic
and she said yes
I asked her if it was okay to be short
and she said it sure is
I asked her if I could wear nail polish
or not wear nail polish
and she said honey
she calls me that sometimes
she said you can do just exactly
what you want to
Thanks God I said
And is it even okay if I don't paragraph
my letters
Sweetcakes God said
who knows where she picked that up
what I'm telling you is
Yes Yes Yes

Have a good day everyone!

November 12, 2010

Weird.

Something I was just pondering at work...

A significant amount of my daily interactions with friends and family, much of my writing, and almost all of my online reading takes place on webspace run by one of two giant corporations that both probably pretty much have the entire story of my life saved in a database somewhere in China or the Midwest or something. Google and Facebook have between them all of my photos from the past five years or so, much of my writing and blogging, records of who I'm friends with and what I like, everything I've ever searched for online, random family home movies on YouTube... And these two massive coorporations who combined have all this information about me hate each other and periodically duke it out in epic battles of one-upsmanship.

That's really bloody weird. That's, like, the plot of a sci fi novel right there, except for the part where it's currently normal.

Am I the only one who finds that thinking about this stuff makes my head spin?

October 20, 2010

Poetry and A Room of One's Own

We've read two things lately in my Women's Studies class that have gotten me thinking about women and writing.

First, we read excerpts from A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf. This is the essay that the name of one of my favorite blogs comes from (whoo, Shakesville!), and while I've never read the entire thing I really love the parts I've read. In case you've never read it (and if you haven't, you should read at least parts of it, though I can't find a link to point you towards the excerpts I read for class), here's a sample:

Yet [Shakespeare's sister's] genius was for fiction and lusted to feed abundantly upon the lives of men and women and the study of their ways. At last — for she was very young, oddly like Shakespeare the poet in her face, with the same grey eyes and rounded brows — at last Nick Greene the actormanager took pity on her; she found herself with child by that gentleman and so — who shall measure the heat and violence of the poet’s heart when caught and tangled in a woman’s body?— killed herself one winter’s night and lies buried at some cross-roads where the omnibuses now stop outside the Elephant and Castle.

That, more or less, is how the story would run, I think, if a woman in Shakespeare’s day had had Shakespeare’s genius. ... When, however, one reads of a witch being ducked, of a woman possessed by devils, of a wise woman selling herbs, or even of a very remarkable man who had a mother, then I think we are on the track of a lost novelist, a suppressed poet, of some mute and inglorious Jane Austen, some Emily Brontë who dashed her brains out on the moor or mopped and mowed about the highways crazed with the torture that her gift had put her to.

So we read that, and about how unless women have a room of their own and some financial security they won't be able to write the amazing things that men were able to write.

(Interesting side note: As I was reading this I was listening to a song called "Things you Think" by Ben Folds, with the line, "That's why I'm not Dickens, kids. Dicken's wife would have done the school run. I'm all for feminism but it's cost me my one shot at immortality." I thought it fit rather nicely.)

But then we read "Age, Race, Class and Sex: Women Redefining Difference" by Audre Lorde, which talks a bit about poetry.

Recently a women's magazine collective made the decision for one issue to print only prose, saying that poetry was a less "rigorous" or "serious" art form. Yet even the form our creativity takes is often a class issue. Of all the art forms, poetry is the most economical. It is the one which is the most secret, which requires the least physical labor, the least material, the one which can be done between shifts, in the hospital pantry, on the subway, and on scraps of surplus paper. ... A room of one's own may be necessary for writing prose, but so are reams of paper, a typewriter, and plenty of time.

A couple of years ago, I won a poetry contest and got to go give a reading of my poetry in Washington, DC. I introduced myself by saying "I'm not a poet." I write poetry, but I don't think of myself as a poet; Poetry is something I do in the margins of my notes at school, walking home from the bus stop, or on the way to work. My real WRITING, I've always felt, is the prose that I spend hours drafting and revising and editing, even though I'm much less successful at that than I am with poetry.

I've been complaining all week about this story that I'm working on, with the hope of submitting it to a magazine. It's 10 pages, I've re-written it entirely at least 3 times, and I have about 6 different drafts of it sitting on my computer. That I have enough free hours to do that, for something that will in all likelihood never get published, or if it does will never earn me any income, is absolutely a privilege, but I'd never thought of it that way before.

Don't really have a conclusion for this post, but I thought it was a rather striking way to look at it. I promise not to scoff when I see that we're reading poetry again in Women's Studies anymore.

November 8, 2009

Gone Novelin', BRB

It's National Novel Writing Month! Blogging will be slim to none for the rest of November while I crank out 50,000 words.

September 1, 2009

A Corset Manifesto

My essay A Corset Manifesto is now available in the recently-released and TOTALLY AMAZING Steampunk Magazine #6, which is available for free download on the publications' website. Also included are other fabulous authors too numerous to list, though I'll name Margaret Killjoy, John Reppion, and Dylan Fox as awesome people you will find included. After I get done internet-ing, I plan to curl up in my dorm and spend the night reading it cover to cover.

This is only partially to avoid the pro-life protestors currently praying outside my dorm, in protest of the Health Care Town Hall going on here on campus this evening. "Abortion is the worse poverty!" Urg. I'm not even going to go there.

An excerpt from my piece:


Were you to seek an international measure of a woman's value, you would need look no further than her appearance. Across history, women have been treated as china dolls in glass cases, judged only for their beauty, and no era is more guilty of this than the one we build upon: the smog-choked alleys of Victoria's Empire that are our inspirations hid women trapped in parlors and kitchens, bound in gilded cages of silk and steel.

The costumes we create from ruffles and tea-stained lace summon images of the garment-restraints worn by the women we claim as our inspiration. Their identities were bound in laces criss-crossing up their spines; their creativity and passions were labeled hysteria and locked away, leaving them with musty parlors and parasols to keep their delicate skin from the sun should they, God forbid, find the need to step outside. Their young daughters were dressed like dolls in heavy skirts, and quickly learned that the price of a stain or tear outweighed any wish to climb a tree.


But wait, I like pretty ruffled things AND climbing trees! Whatever shall I do? Go read the whole thing to find out!

May 17, 2009

Upcoming Awesome!

So where have I been the past month, you wonder?

Oh, nowhere special. Just off getting famous.

Come see me read my poetry at the Word Works Miller Cabin poetry series in Rock Creek Park, Washington DC on Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 at 7:30pm. I was one of two winners in their Young Poets Contest.

One of those poems will also be published in Susquehanna University's Apprentice Writer, a literary magazine for work by high school students.

And look for my essay The Corset Manifesto in Issue #6 of Steampunk Magazine.