Saturday 29 October 2011

Roll Over Beethoven






Retro, rockabilly.  Winged liner, red lips and nails, high-waist.  Waiting. 
I'm pretty sure I was meant for another era.  Born 30 years too late

Friday 28 October 2011

River's Edge



Maybe I'll wake up from this.  Find myself in waist-high weeds, wild flowers, black-eyed susies.  Ducking down between the trees in my old backyard, hiding from everyone, content by myself.

Music to Run Through Paris

I woke up this morning and almost immediately thought of this song.  Is that weird? 

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Half Right

Lying down, knees bent, we stared at the shadows on the ceiling and walls.  The candles went out, one by one, but we stayed still for hours, watching.  Each flicker and lick made new shapes, and I couldn't keep my eyes off them.  It was warm, and the late night air eased itself through the window screen, filling the room with the smell of leaves and the change of seasons.  I didn't want to move.  So I didn't.

I thought about life and love and possibilities, and hope filled me up, right to my fingertips, my toes, the ends of my hair.  He wrote and wrote, scribbling down every thought, idea, and word that jumped through his head.  After every poem, he'd show me, and I'd wonder how this person ever entered my life.

Hours and hours.  Night turned to morning and I stayed still.

Sunday 23 October 2011

Said What I Said and You Know What I Mean

There are so many things I want to hear and everytime I don't hear them I feel my insides well up, collect, and pool.  In my stomach, my chest, my head.  I'm heavy and the weight drags me down.  I can't keep focused on anything.  Rationality and logic -- I wish I understood.  I'm emotional. Passionate.  Changeable.  Water and air.

I want to hear that it was worth it. That every ridiculous and crazy thing done had a drop of sanity and reason.  That there was meaning in it all, and in that meaning there was feeling, not just lust.  I want to hear that I didn't just ruin everything.

Tell me that behind everything, every look and touch and word, there was something.





I also really like this song for some reason I can't quite explain.

Everytime I think of winter and snow and trying to get warm, literally and metaphorically, I want Fever Ray as my soundtrack.

No Need to Worry

Last night I told her about the dream I've been having.  A fence, built out of thick white elastics, intertwined like a cat's cradle, surrounding a tiny red wood house.   I told her how I tried to gnaw my way out and spat out a tooth.  I didn't want to tell her about the night I dreamt I pulled out my tongue.  Or when there was something, all presence and shadowy feeling, climbing over the wall.  Panic rose in my chest, stalled in my throat, and I couldn't move.


Friday 21 October 2011

Vice Rag


I want my name to breathe beauty and a wealth of knowledge.  For him to think of soft angles and sharp opinions, shiny hair and soft shoulders. Talent, ideas, strength, hope, and promise. 

Instead, clutching thighs and the intake of breath.  Exposed limbs, tight and supple and available.  How my lips look, my eyes smouldered, my chest heaving.  The way my body curves in and out.  How it tenses and relaxes.  The rise and fall of my voice, all valleys and peaks, low murmers and deep sighs.

Elan Vital



Three years ago today I was in London, England, savouring the rich mix of history, fashion, stones and sky and grey.  A whirlwind trip around Western Europe, I was in love with the world and everything and everyone around me.  We were taken in, like old friends, given food and warmth and comfort, and I felt like I found my home.

Each time I've left Ontario, I think I've changed.  From Florence to Amsterdam, Edinburgh to Guysborough, Nova Scotia, to Montreal, these trips, whether weeks or days rejuvenate and make me think of all the things I want to alter. My bedroom, my hair.  I'll start wearing heels, buy more fresh vegetables, walk, walk more, drink red wine, black coffee, wrap myself in wool and leather and lace, find an old stone walk-up, a high-rise, speak up, yell louder and sing, sing, sing.

Wednesday 12 October 2011

Summer comes and gravity undoes you


When I think about my life, what do I think about?  Lush ferns, peony petals on burnished wood, and open windows.  Cool basements made sweltering by burning wood stoves. There's vanilla extract, dark, paper-lined cupboards, and twinkling nights, all stars and clean air, shadows and long driveways.  A childhood fear of the dark, of witches, of being called on in class but not having the answer.  A beliefs in my beginnings and roots.  An uncertainty, but assurance in the value of my future and that strange and naive sense that everything will be okay.  The past flashes like pictures on a screen, while my mind tries to focus, grab an image, hold on, dissect it.  I try to remember what I wore, how the weather was, if the grass was covered in dew or frost or snow.

The day I left was hot. June 3rd.  My outfit -- a vague recollection of bare legs, tanned arms, and a flouncy skirt.  Not sombre.  Light.  The wind rippled the fabric around my thighs as I walked to the subway and my mind reeled with the past, the even further past, and the future.  The present, what was happening, at that exact moment, did not register with me.  I headed west, where everyone seems to go when the air around them whispers change.  In my case, west of High Park, Runnymede, Jane.  

The next month was a haze of melancholic lows and euphoric highs.   In an effort to steady myself, reinvent what it meant to be me, I shopped.   Free of another person for the first time in four years I spent money compulsively; clothes, coffee, magazines, books, anything.  I went out early and came back late.  I listened to the same albums on repeat:  Chad Vangaalen, Bjork, Bon Iver, Yeasayer.  Soul, conviction, honesty.  Things I was scared I had lost.  I was overwhelmed by the prospect of single hood but it was the dawn of summer, and sunlight was keeping me afloat.

I moved three times in June before settling into an old home in the Annex, all exposed brick and overhanging trees.  I knew none of my room mates and subsequently felt relief.  Anonymity.  Summer and all its heat and brightness and lack of restraint had an effect on me.  I grew my hair and let it reach down my back in bronze strands, and when the warm wind blew hard, it whipped around my head, getting stuck in my lips. 

In those hot months I walked long and far.  Down Markham to Queen, west to Parkdale, Roncesvalles.  Sometimes across to Kensington, through the university campus.  Sunny days saw me crave chaos, noise, while cloud cover led me down deserted student avenues.  Often I had no real sense of direction.  The city opened itself up to me and I inched towards renewal.

When people ask me how my summer was, I pause and reach back.  It was good, I say.  Different.  To those I know a bit better, an explanation:  a serious breakup, a nomadic season.  I stretched my legs, only to tuck them back in.

Today, it's early Autumn, and the heat of summer is already buried under wool, damp leaves, and a heavy dose of reality.  The summer months had me untethered, wavering in a limbo between past and present.  October is steadying.  It casts a golden amber glow on the world that's not concealing or smoldering like the haze of a humid Toronto summer, but rather exposing.  The crisp mornings wake me up, shake me out of the stupor of July and August, and bring with it the alarming realization that I have no idea where life will take me.  

So I close my eyes.  Think about peonies and morning glories.  Wide open windows.  Quilts upon rainbow-coloured quilts, cut from the cloth of my childhood.  Of expectations and possibilities.  Brick and wood, gravity, water, and soil.  What's solid and what's ever-changing.  What keeps me sane, grounded, and what will set me free.