exciting, informative, snarky, and very likely fabricated tales of life as an american expat in london

no voice of mine

by Jen at 4:50 pm on 27.06.2007Comments Off
filed under: londonlife, mutterings and musings

and with very little fanfare, the UK has a new prime minister from today. under the parliamentary system, gordon brown takes over from tony blair as the leader of the majority labour party, and therefore de facto becomes the head of the national government.

i’m still getting used to all this parliamentary stuff. there are certain aspects of it i really like. this isn’t one of them. i still have that deep-seated need to elect a person as opposed to a party. i need to know that i get what i signed on for – not that halfway through i’ll be provided a relief pticher in lieu of the person i actually wanted to lead the country. it feels like bait-and-switch. and while i vehemently disagreed with blair’s stance on many things, overall i was still a member of the fan base. this gordon brown character leaves me cold, and i haven’t been around long enough to know much about his views and priorities. so basically, we’re all supposed to take it on faith that he’ll stay true to the party line everyone bought at the polls just two years ago.

still, the lack of pomp and circumstance around the whole thing is rather refreshing. when my dad was here visiting this spring, he was surprised to learn that a former prime minister is not accorded the same exalted status as a former president. while they’re certainly granted privileges and honours, they’re seen much more as former-public-servants-turned-private-citizens. many even continue on in politics as members of parliament – something which would be unthinkable for a former president to do. having reached the pinnacle of political achievement, presidents don’t then go back to being a congressional representative – instead they build their libraries and visit their ranches, and continue to be surrounded by the secret service, and write their biographies, and take on the occasional public speaking event. they don’t go back to worrying about showing up for votes or stumping the campaign trail.

so it’ll be interesting to see what we get under gordon brown, but thus far he’s not been heaped with praise. to me he remains a largely unknown quanitity and his promise of “new priorities” has me a little unnerved. come next general election, will he get my vote?

the apples in stereo – same old drag

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comfort on my mind, with me all the time

by Jen at 7:07 pm on 20.06.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

jonno leaves for south africa for three weeks tomorrow. he booked the tickets about a month ago, and since then, i’ve had a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach every time i think about the approaching departure date.

part of it is plain ol’ jealousy – i’d love to go with him, but with my own trip to the states booked in august, it just doesn’t make any financial sense. instead, i have to go to loathesome, dragsome, detestable *work* every day, while he gets to hang out with his family and friends drinking beer in the sun.

but also: i will miss him. it’s hard to fathom, but we’ve not spent more than a few days apart since we first got together. right after we first met, i went on holiday to rome, and we spent the entire week sending pathetic text messages across the continent, messages full of desperate longing, messages i still have in safekeeping to this day. and even on our travels, when we were attached at the hip 24/7 for 6 straight months, we never got sick of each other. we shared closet-sized hostel rooms and even smaller campervans. our current apartment is so small we’re almost constantly within arm’s reach of each other. it feels unnatural to breathe un-jonno-breathed air.

when you’re used to being continuously in each other’s space, three weeks with no one on the other side of the bed is a long time. the phantom limb of an empty pillow.

don’t get me wrong – i’m fine with being alone. i’m not one of those girls that keeps mace under her mattress and barricades the door when there’s no man around. i can go to movies, museums, restaurants by myself and be perfectly happy. i can find the fusebox and the water mains, even if i can’t reach stuff on the high shelves.

and i’m trying to remind myself of all the positives of an uncompromising lifestyle. eating poptarts and salad for dinner, watching whatever i want on telly. no one complaining about my penchant for reading in bed, no tea cups left on the floor. and i’ve got several diversions lined up to keep me from turning into a hermit with unshaven legs and dirty pyjama pants.

i’m not convinced that absence necessarily increases fondness. instead i think it simply emphasises the space left behind by the missing, like a puzzle piece described by its empty relief.

i suppose that’s what i’m dreading so much. the emptiness of the jonno-less space, missing its matching piece, yearning for the part of me that’s not there.

thank god for skype.

amy winehouse – wake up alone

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compliments and cutting remarks, captured in quotation marks

by Jen at 9:15 pm on 12.06.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

i was listening to a podcast the other day talking about declaring “email bankruptcy” – the notion of wiping the email slate clean and starting fresh, with no unanswered messages, no archived folders.

i’ve had my longest email account for about 6 years now, and while most of my stuff is organised by folder, i rarely delete these days. given almost limitless storage space, there’s really no need. out of curiousity, i had a look to see how many emails i have currently saved…

… and it turns out, nearly 10,000. that’s even *after* the cathartic purge of 2003, when, after an emotionally disastrous summer, a failed relationship came to an abrupt and bizarre end (he accused me of being manipulative, selfish and deceitful in one email, then told me he loved me 24 hours later in the next) and i just slashed-and-burned everything in my inbox.

i’d find that nearly impossible to do today. in a time where the handwritten word is nearly extinct, emails are the emotional equivalent of the pen pal/loveletter/diary. as imperfect as the medium may be, the thoughtful, well-composed email is no less imbued with depth of feeling. some of the most romantic things i’ve ever written or received have been on email. i’ve carried on passionate political debate, received birth announcements, and developed friendships via email.

and i do re-read them, some more than others. like a keepsake box, my emails form part of my memories, my history. not just the ones received, but the ones i’ve sent as well.

intellectually, i know they’re nothing more than series of binary strings saved somewhere in the ether on an anonymous server – expressions of love and heartache reduced to cold mathmatics. but they’re *my* strings, and they’re the only proof i have these days of what once was, previous lives lived and otherwise lost to memory. i’m not ready to delete.

elvis costello – every day i write the book

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the strangers whose faces I know

by Jen at 9:36 pm on 11.06.2007 | 1 Comment
filed under: classic, mutterings and musings

i came home this afternoon to find a card from my friend jo lying with the post on the floor. inside she wrote that she’s having another baby in november. which means she’s 4 months pregnant already.

i tried grasping at happiness, tried to react the way a good friend should when someone shares joyous news… but my heart just sank. the gulf that is not the atlantic between us has widened just a little further – a distance measured not in miles or years, but trajectory. as in einstein’s theory of relativity, it’s hard to know who is moving away, and who is standing still, and if it even matters when the person you love gets smaller every time you look over your shoulder.

i have spent some time mourning the friendships i left behind in the u.s., but it took me a long while to realise they were dying. i didn’t know then that by leaving them, i was letting go of them. forfeiting by default. i didn’t know. nobody told me that would happen, or nobody made me believe it anyway, and i’m not sure that if i knew, i would have gone.

i’m also not sure i wouldn’t have. i’ve often traded the known for the unknown, without knowing why. a deep-seated impulse defying examination or explanation. maybe the defiance *is* the impulse. or the explanation.

and i know, too, holding fast with both fists is not an act of preservation. the world spins on in spite of me, and perhaps i was always on a different course anyway – like a boat tacking through the eye of a wind, a pivotal turn or decision setting me in an unforseen direction, the only real question: will i be forcibly pushed or allow myself to be carried? there is a difference. even staying put, nothing stays still.

the shift has been infinitesimally incremental, and the same time seismic. tectonic plates drifting past each other towards opposite sides of the world. me in my boat of defiance, helpless to get back to where we were, when things were aligned and we were both looking in the same direction. we’re victims of the little earthquakes that change our internal landscape, and in doing so, change everything.

or maybe it’s just me.

and so i try to recalibrate, adjust. point the compass north again towards the only thing i know to be true: i could not be anyone else, anywhere else. still – i feel so lost when i see my familiars receding into pinpricks on a horizon an ocean away. i’m lost and losing and tearful of salty sadness.

awash and at sea and alone.


the weakerthans – left and leaving

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by any other name

by Jen at 6:20 pm on 28.05.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: londonlife, mutterings and musings

my name often feels like the bane of my existence.

as you may have surmised, jen is of course, short for jennifer. it’s a name i’ve never felt suits me particularly well. it’s overly formal, stuffy, uptight. there’s just something about it which has always chafed, to the point where i’ve given serious consideration to actually changing it. it’s just not “me”, and as such has always felt like something of a burden to endure. there is also the additional annoyance of having a name as common as dirt. as an american girl child born in ‘72, i grew up with a whole phalanx of jennifers around me – jennifer was the single most popular girls name from 1970 – 1984, finally falling out of the top five only in 1989. that’s nearly 20 years, with 3-4 million births per year – it’s jennifer madness.

my family have never even called me jennifer – as a little kid i was jenny, and from about 11 years old onward, i’ve always been adamantly jen. i don’t call myself jennifer, i don’t introduce myself as jennifer, and i don’t answer to jennifer.

here in the uk though, there is a refreshing dearth of jennifers. i personally, in my four years here, have only met one or two others. and i’ve never met anyone who goes by jen – i’ve heard of mythical jennies, but not yet spotted one of these elusive creatures. and whilst i’m thrilled to not be constantly surrounded by a swarm of people with the same indistinguishable name, it still manages to cause me consternation, even here.

a typically british trait is that almost all names are shortened to some sort of nickname, but yet almost no one seems to intuit that jen is a diminution of jennifer. and consequently, they almost never get it right. i don’t introduce myself as jennifer because i don’t want people calling me that, but “jen” without the context of my longer name seems to cause inordinate amounts of confusion. i am continually called jan/jane/jean by work colleagues i’ve known now for several years. over the phone, i have to spell out j-e-n innumerable times. i get post addressed to “jan” even when they’re replying to a letter sent by me with my name right on it. i sign all my emails jen, but still some people insist on replying to “jennifer” (from my assigned work email address), or even jenny (infuriatingly childish) because jen just befuddles them. it’s as if three simple letters were the equivalent of that indecipherable symbol that prince used.

so whilst i’m no longer trying to individuate myself from a sea of jennifers, i’ve now got the opposite problem. whereas before there were far too many jennifers/gennifers/jenns/jennies/jennys, now there are too few. i might as well have a name like condoleeza, for all the grief it causes me, or the number of times i find myself repeating it over and over.

what name would i want? well i’ve always loved my middle name – noël (the traditional french spelling) – but honestly, you try getting identification, filling out forms, etc. with a name that has an umlaut in it.

and over here, where noel is a common boys name, that’d just be opening a whole different can of worms. roll

so i’ll stick with jen for the time being, but it certainly lends creedence to the old chestnut: be careful what you wish for, because you just might get it.

i’m from barcelona – jenny

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no good war, no bad peace

by Jen at 9:53 pm on 26.05.2007 | 5 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

Peace is the only battle worth waging – Albert Camus (1913-1960)

this weekend is memorial day weekend in the states. and that means a lot of “support our troops” emails are making the rounds. several of them have made it into my inbox, and i find myself grappling with how to respond.

it’s a bit of a touchy subject for me – one i find hard to explain without coming across as coldhearted. i don’t usually do it very well, so i’ll attempt to make a better job of it here.

when i read about people lost to the war, of course i find it sad. it’s incredibly sad. it’s even more tragic because i think it’s wholly unnecessary. but even though i don’t want anyone else to die (please, don’t let anyone else die), as a pacifist i can’t bring myself to say i “support the troops”. to my mind, to condone the existence of the military is to condone the machinery of war and death. as a pacifist, i don’t believe in the military, i don’t believe in guns. i don’t believe anyone should have to “fight for me”, much less die for me. i can’t say i’m “proud of them” because i don’t believe anyone should ever kill, even in self defense. i don’t believe the government has the right to take a life, under any circumstances. i don’t think death should ever be a source of pride. i can’t say i “appreciate what they do for us”, because they don’t do it for me – i’ve not asked them to, and i don’t want them to.

i therefore also refuse to believe that i should show gratitude towards those who support an institution i don’t agree with. lots of people find that offensive, but there you have it. i don’t believe in a military and i don’t feel indebted to those who’re part of it.

that doesn’t mean i don’t want them to come home safe and alive. i hate this war and i hate the wasted lives it has spilled. not just american lives, but all lives. memorial day (and remembrance day) for me means reflecting upon what a colossal tragedy it is that we’re still running around killing each other over politics, religion, land. that anyone should die for such

most people (even most of those who’re anti-war) still feel there’s a need for the military, that they serve a valuable function – and that’s something i can’t reconcile with my beliefs. i disagree with the fundamental premise that the military is a necessary institution. most people find that position naive and hopelessly idealistic. it probably is.

i am very much aware that my opinion is in the minority – i have no desire to try to convert people or defend my beliefs. most everyone i know disagrees with me, and that’s fine. personally, i think i’m in pretty good company.

but even if I am wrong, i’m not going to change my core values, simply to match “reality”. call me naive, call me unrealistic, call me what you will. but they said the same thing about Gandhi’s, Martin Luther King’s, the Quakers’s (dare i say, even Jesus’s) belief in the power of non-violent protest. so i’ll continue to side with peace, no matter how foolish such a simple option may seem, no matter how difficult to understand.

fellow pacifist Albert Einstein famously said: “You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war. The very prevention of war requires more faith, courage and resolution than are needed to prepare for war. We must all do our share, that we may be equal to the task of peace.” that comes closest to saying in a nutshell what i feel at the centre of my soul, what i will never waver from.

and what i will be thinking about this memorial day.

the submarines – peace and hate

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redemption songs

by Jen at 8:51 pm on 3.05.2007Comments Off
filed under: mutterings and musings, tunage

music is such an intensely sensory experience – there are few other things i can think of with the power to reach in under my solar plexus, clutch at my heart, and either lift it skyward or send it plummeting through the pit of my stomach. that can transport me back to a time and place with such immediacy it’s like reliving the experience all over again.

i’ve ruined a lot of perfectly good songs for myself – songs i insisted on playing in endless loop during particularly painful breakups, or the depths of a dark pool of depression. there are songs that have all the force of a suckerpunch to the gut when i hear them unexpectedly, knocking the wind out of me while blowing me sideways. i often wish i could go back in time to that girl and tell her to turn it off, because someday she’ll regret tainting such a great song with permanent greys of sadness. and still, once they become tangled up in memory, it’s hard to let them go, no matter how painful they are.

but there are also songs of such immense, irrepressible joy that i can hardly contain myself. songs that make it impossible to sit still – there is no other remedy for it but to sing at the top of my lungs. music that makes me want to light the world on fire and dance as it burns. music that makes me physically high, like being full of sweet, pure oxygen and light. deliciousness.

so i find myself hoarding music these days. greedily inhaling the temperament of certain rhythms and lyrics. collecting emotions in a jar. searching for sparkling new highs like diamonds in the weeds. piling them up in heaps. drowning out the drab, careworn songs of another time, another girl, with a flood of brilliant sound and light.

the ragged:

fleetwood mac (stevie nicks) – landslide

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and the glorious:

the hold steady – stuck between stations

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a sigh for every other breath

by Jen at 9:26 pm on 1.05.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

for the benefit of those of you who don’t know me in real life: i’m a procrastinator. i procrastinate – a lot. (aside: say “procrastinate” more than a few times in a row and it starts to sound really funny.) i’m the kind of person who has a parcel ready to mail, sitting in her lounge for three weeks at a time. or who waits months to change her mailing address on her credit card. most of it is due to a mild phobia, something i’ve struggled with most of my life. i’m not phobic about meeting new people, or going to parties, or eating alone in restaurants. no, i’m afraid of completely innocuous strangers like the shopkeeper, or the customer service rep. afraid is probably the wrong word to use – it’s more an uncomfortably irrational anxiety. fear of being judged or looking doltish. i *know*, intellectually that it makes no sense. that i will never see these people again, that asking for help locating the spinach in the grocery store is hardly a source of embarrassment, and that my brief, completely unremarkable interaction with them doesn’t even register as more than a blip on the consciousness of their daily life. and yes, i am able to function in my daily life – it hardly stops me from finding and buying the bloody spinach (under 3 crates of oranges, *obviously* roll ). but i still have to mentally psych myself up for even these insignificant interactions. i run a little practice dialogue in my head beforehand, steel myself (against what, exactly? who knows?), walk up, open my mouth, and ask. it’s the same thing for speaking up in meetings, using the phone (an anxiety that only got worse when i first moved here and couldn’t understand the person on the other end of the line), and dealing with everyday errands and annoyances. i don’t know why i have this particular mental block, but it seems it’s always been with me; i remember all the way back to being a little kid and being too nervous to even order at a takeout counter in mcdonald’s.

and so the little things that most people don’t event think twice about (ringing about the utility bill, going to the post office, returning a pair of jeans) become miniature hurdles for me. and if it’s a more daunting task (like sorting out my student loan, paying parking tickets from years ago in vermont, ringing the home office)…well, now you understand where the procrastination comes in. i get all these things done eventually, but it takes lots of time and large amounts of self-discipline

it’s stupid, i know. where in the rest of my life i feel smart and capable, this ridiculous anxiety makes me feel small and pathetic by comparison. every time i get past a mini-hurdle, i feel incredible relief – and embarrassment that something so silly can affect me so much. over the years, i’ve gotten much better. i make lists, reward myself for accomplishments, and remind myself how much better i’ll feel once it’s done. i force myself to pick up the phone, deal with the teenage salesclerk, tick the things off my list. it’s just getting past that small initial stumbing block, each and every time. some days it’s a molehill, and some days it’s a mountain.

still, i can’t help it. i try my best – i really do. but now, stacey, you know when i don’t get your parcel in the mail for weeks at a time, that’s the reason why. in spite of all my best intentions and in spite of all my other strengths, i am a procrastinator, just trying to face my stupid little hurdles. one at a time.

the arcade fire – you tried to turn away my fears

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you can fool yourself, and maybe someone else like me

by Jen at 7:12 pm on 27.04.2007 | 3 Comments
filed under: classic, mutterings and musings

tomorrow is my friend beth’s birthday. i always remember her birthday because it comes right after my sister’s birthday, and at one point she and my sister were probably the people i was closest to in the world.

beth and i met shortly after i first moved to new york. i was working in a residence for people with learning disabilities, and she was the newly appointed assistant manager. it was a shitty job – the kind of shitty job you have to do in certain fields before you get to move up to non-shitty jobs. the kind of job where most of the staff don’t care, and the managers even less so. except for her. working with people with learning disabilities just made her eyes light up. she happily gave up her evenings and weekends without pay, because to her it wasn’t a sacrifice to do something she loved. it set her apart.

beth’s work was also an escape from her homelife – a life full of drama and abuse that she never seemed to be able to free herself from. there was a long-term wifebeater named tommy – the stereotypical hard-drinking irish guy who’d slap her around and stomp on her soul. there was a cold, distant mother that never really cared to begin with, and only used her improbably successful daughter to boost her own ego. there were the stray animals she was forever taking in and nurturing through long nights of sickness, nursing them to health. there were fights and abortions and depression and more fights.

i’m not quite sure how or why she and i became such close friends through all of this. i suppose because we were both had a similar innate, shoot-from-the-hip sensibility. maybe because we both had a crude sense of humour and a tough-girl facade. most likely, above all else, because i was a sympathetic ear for the never-ending soap opera that was her life. in retrospect, she needed me to be a rock, and i needed to be needed. she was, by turns, kind and caring and effusive and a incorrigible liar. the kind of liar who confides in you about the lies they’ve told others, yet still expects you to believe in truth. it was never malicious, or even intentional – she lied to get help from the people she didn’t think would help her, because she didn’t think she deserved to be helped. she intuitively used people – but she did it with such fragility and open need that you had to forgive her for breaking your heart, even as you picked her up off the floor.

after several long years, she finally left tommy. i helped her move out. and then she decided to make a clean break of it altogether and move to louisiana. something about the heat and the languid pace drew her there. there were tears and exchanges of rings and hours of long-distance phone calls. in the end, she spent two years waitressing nights at a bar and grill chain in lafayette, declared bankruptcy, wore herself into the ground like a used cigarette butt, and finally decided to move back. when she was getting ready to move back to brooklyn, i flew down to help her drive the van back. we spent a weekend in new orleans drinking, dancing, getting tattoed and watching sunrises over the mississippi.

after moving back to new york, i helped her get a job working in my department as a care manager for people with learning disabilities. it was a job she was ill-suited for, and she hated it – i always felt guilty about that, and covered for her lapses more than i should have. in the meantime, tommy had been replaced by rob – different name, same manipulative, controlling personality. she drew them to her like flies, men who saw a vulnerability to exploit – like a warm open mouth waiting for a kiss and getting a left hook instead. there were more arguments and abortions and depression. she eventually took a job as a veterinary assistant, and wept every time she had to euthanise an animal. she was in a bad way.

eventually, finally, she began seeing a therapist. she started her own pet-taxi service. she broke up with rob. and for a while, she balanced without training wheels, riding wobbily along, but riding nonetheless.

the problem was when she looked down and realised there was nothing holding her up but herself. that, of course, was when she crashed. it’s easier to believe in gravity than your own strength.

i was living in boston then. it was the day that i’d finalised my divorce, and i came home, put on pyjamas and crawled into bed at seven o’clock, hoping for sweet, oblivious sleep. so when the phone rang at nine, i almost didn’t answer it. and of course, it was beth – in the throes of suicidal despair. telling me all about the note she’d written, the pills in her hand. the connection kept dropping as my cordless phone battery died, and then hers. she told me she was taking the pills. i told her i was calling the police. i called the police. i sat on the phone with her waiting for them to arrive. she pretended to be mad, but never hung up. i hung on.

one of the many ways beth bent her life, twisted the people in her life, was to never have any of her friends meet. so i never met her friend marnie, who called me a few days later and told me beth was okay, was getting out of the hospital, was on anti-depressants, was staying with her for a few weeks. i had no way to contact her

she called me a few months later. she sounded good. we talked only a few times after that, and i knew she was getting back together with rob. whenever she did something she thought i wouldn’t approve of, she laid low and avoided talking to me. i don’t know why she needed my approval. i don’t know why i needed to approve.

and then, suddenly, i was moving to london. i rang her up, made a special trip to new york to see her before i left. i was staying with my friend jo, and when i arrived and called her to meet up, she told me she was moving apartments that weekend, but she’d call me back later that night after she was settled. she never called back, never answered my calls.

and i haven’t seen or spoken to her since. i often wonder if she’s still alive. when i google there’s not a trace of her, except as the name of a character from the old t.v. show “dallas”. and some part of me has to wonder if she lied about that too.

but for all her faults, beth was my dear friend. and i miss her.

happy birthday beth, wherever you are.

the jealous sound – naive

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night fights

by Jen at 7:22 pm on 20.04.2007Comments Off
filed under: mutterings and musings

Woke up this morning at 4:30 to the sound of crashing and shouting. My heart immediately began racing, my adrenline waking me instantly. The couple next door was fighting. Fighting hard. The kind of fighting that sometimes spills over into hurting. There was screaming and crying, shrill voices piercing the walls, doors shuddering with the shake of slam. I lay there, trying to calm myself, slow my pulse. There were lulls of quiet, serious talking, and I’d hold my breath hoping it was over. Covers pulled up to my chin, tucked into the curve of j’s steady sleep, thinking “everything is okay, just relax and close your eyes”. Only to hear it build to another crashing crescendo. Sleep was a distant dream, and I lay there in still, taut anxiety until morning came – waiting to hear the sounds of silence.

It’s a visceral, gut-knotting reaction. When I was 18, my parents split up, and I was home for that whole terrifying summer – a summer full of nights of crashing and shouting. Nights of being awakened in the early hours, heart in my throat, thudding in my ears. Fighting that spilled into shattering, splinters of black fear flying. a summer of sleeplessness and sirens.

That was 15 years ago – and it lays buried, but not dead, in the back of my drowsy subconscious. Waiting to be stirred to wakefulness with the right kind of scream. watching for the safety of the light of day.

ben folds – still fighting it

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searching

by Jen at 7:14 pm on 17.04.2007Comments Off
filed under: mutterings and musings

and so, when i went to work today, i was asked the question. the one i knew was inevitably coming. the one for which there is no answer, really.

why?

and there is subtext within the question. they know before they even ask, that I have no special insight. but they want me to tell them it couldn’t happen here. they want me to tell them that this country, these people are different. they want me to tell them it’s american, rather than human. that there’s some unique confluence of characteristics and circumstance which only happens in places like american schools.

they want me to tell them they’re safe. even when they know it’s not true.

and lord knows, i wish i could. because then i’d be safe too.

elliot smith – needle in the hay

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as i plant tomatoes on easter sunday

by Jen at 2:25 pm on 8.04.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: classic, mutterings and musings

kalanchoe, variegated coleus, rhododendron, geranium, alyssum, verbena, bromeliad, succulent… the latinate language of music to a frustrated gardener.

since sprouting marigolds in paper cups as a little girl, i’ve loved growing things. my mother’s own enthusiasm for amateur botany was woven through the tapestry of my childhood memories – forest walks spent exploring the hidden life of the undergrowth, the overexuberant vegetable garden in the backyard, the patiently rooted cuttings with their delicate tendrils perpetually on the windowsills, waiting to be gently transplanted into pots. and she loved teaching me the names – identifying well known species aloud, looking the unfamiliar up in reference guides, fostering curiousity, honoring nature.

yet it’s only recently that i’ve begun to recognise the roots of that same affection within myself. moving back to boston in my late twenties was the first time i began to cultivate it – i had just moved into the first floor of a two family house, and was still idly looking for a job, when i began to try to tame the vast overgrowth of my new backyard. pretty soon, i found myself esconced in an old neglected corner plot of the yard, just aching to be renewed and replanted. i spent hours in the springtime muck, excavating thick weeds and wild grasses, hacking away dead vines and old stumps, combing through stones and preparing the beds. after investing so much energy in the preparation, i set out a diagram of vegetables and flowers – that first spring i installed tomatoes, beans, sunflowers, daylilies, basil, snapdragons and daisies. every afternoon that summer, i would come home from work, carefully search out any weeds, attach the hose to the sprinkler, and sit in the sun with a beer and the paper while the plants drank deeply from the soil.

still, it took me by surprise when it happened. under my watchful, industrious care, things actually began to grow. tiny bipalmate shoots emerging from a single seed. fragile roots multiplying and strengthening. stretching upward, gaining height every day. flowering, pollenating, fruiting. it fascinated me as nothing short of miraculous, like one of those time-lapse nature specials unfurling in real time right before my eyes. from nothing to something to abundance. the worms as allies, the bees as guardians.

i became a gardner in earnest. i pruned and mowed and tended that yard with such devotion. i carefully sculpted the old rhododendron back into shape, untangled the surprising grape vines covering the fence, sewed up the gaps of lawn with green, and ruthlessly executed any interloper weeds with the vengeance of a woman possesed. i created a small herb plot full of fresh thyme and rosemary. i cordoned off a large wildflower patch, strewn with poppies, columbine and nasturtium. i barbequed at weekends, gathered fresh bouquets of blooms, and watched the dog roll around in the grass with abandon. i pinched back even when i hated to, fertilised prudently, set out booby-traps for slugs. i dragged out the mower every summer, and stored the hose away every winter. i filled the birdfeeders religiously. i sat on my porch and watched the grass grow with a patience i didn’t know i had.

and even after i left that apartment behind, the garden still grew in my thoughts. i wondered if the bulbs had come up that spring. if the new occupants were tending the perennials, if they’d turned over the topsoil and planted new sprouts early enough in the season. if they’d protected the hydrangeas from frost.

since leaving that apartment, my nurturing instinct has been restricted, restrained. curtailed within the square confines of balconies and windowboxes. pot-bound, coiled in on itself, like the roots of a plant with noplace left to grow. i try still, seeding my energy in small containers of green longing, straining through glass-filtered sun. and there are some small successes – some hardy souls which flourish in spite of the crowding and smog.

and there’s me – still trying like hell to bloom where i’m planted. and if you look closely, some small encouraging shoots of growth, pushing up through thin soil towards the sky.

the youngbloods – sunlight

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happiness is all the rage

by Jen at 3:56 pm on 4.04.2007 | 5 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

It’s a big birthday year for a lot of my friends and family – the momentous 3-0. Kerryn’s already over that hill, Diana follows tomorrow, my sisters and J are right behind.

I remember approaching my thirtieth birthday with such intense, overwhelming anxiety. For the two years leading up to it, it felt like my life was spinning out of control – one long, protracted panic attack of stomach-churning and crushing weight. I was adrift – all the things that I had built my identity around were falling away, and suddenly I was *running*out*of*time*. It was one thing to fuck around in my twenties – ditching jobs, juggling debt, uprooting, making excuses, changing elements of my life as often as i changed my haircolour – because that’s what the twenties are for. But it was quite another to suddenly run up against the end of a decade and have little more to show for it than when I started. When you fuck up in your 20s, you can chalk it up to a learning experience. yet being a fuck up in your thirties… well, people are much more judgemental when you’re beginning the long approach to middle age.

And so I did what any sane person would do: I freaked.

It was like watching a car wreck in slow motion. Suddenly single after a decade long relationship, I threw myself wildly into dating. Sadly, I really sucked at that. Relationships I’m great at – dating, not so much. I tried exploring grad school – only to bomb at that as well. I took the gre and went down in flames of confusion and shattered self-esteem. In desperation, I decided to move to London – only to then have to purge everthing I owned and move back in with my mother. I threw out cappucino makers, juicers, sofas and treadmills, and went to living in a bedroom with two suitcases of clothes and my neice’s hamster. Hardly the life of a responsible adult.

In the weeks before I turned thirty, I was alone, emptyhanded, broke, working at a mindless job, and living with my mother. I was wallowing (drowning?) in self-pity.

And then I actually turned thirty. And suddenly, miraculously, i just stopped caring about what anyone else thought. This giant, bleak cloud of dread and self-loathing that i’d been towing around with me for so goddamned long – it completely disappeared, as if by magic. I spent my thirtieth birthday (christmas day) in new orleans with a friend, getting completely wasted for a week. and even for all the hangovers, it felt like being born again. i was happy and lighthearted and full of excitement and possibility – i couldn’t remember the last time i’d felt so alive. i had a *personality* again. i may have been the world’s most pathetic thirty year old ever, but i really couldn’t give a damn. in a moment of clarity, i realised the the only thing that mattered to me, was that i was *living* my life, on my own terms. seeking out new challenges, trying new things, never growing stagnant. i was doing exactly what i wanted to do, and if i couldn’t be happy about that, then i would never be happy about anything.

and i remember wondering why no one *told me* that that’s what happens. that you come into your own sense of self-assurance. that everything you’ve been through to that point, every miserable experience you survived, was for this – this understanding of what lies at the core of your innermost heart, the things that mattered to your soul, and how they shape your life. how *you* shape your life, because of them. and to their credit, they probably did try to tell me that – but it’s hard to be open to optimism when you’re paralysed by fear. it’s a scary thing, taking charge of your own destiny, deciding to be responsible for your own happiness. because when you take responsibility for your happiness and success, the corollary is that you also have to take responsibility for fear and failure. no more excuses, welcome to adulthood.

but the possibilities for happiness are limitless.

this turning-30 revelation didn’t fix my life (i was still broke, single, etc.) – but it absolutely did change it.

and i know that turning thirty probably doesn’t have that same effect on everyone – i certainly hope not everyone was plagued with existential doubt the way i was. but i do hope that everyone gets a chance to come to that same realisation sooner, rather than later. that they don’t waste years of their life waiting for happiness to land in their lap, but seize it, make it their own, take charge of joy.

that’s my birthday wish for them this year.

res – they say vision

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and me with my umbrella

by Jen at 3:22 pm on 30.03.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: classic, londonlife, mutterings and musings

as a kid, my favourite books were the mary poppins series, because they told stories of a world where *anything* could happen, a world where children’s fantasies and reality were inseperable and unpredictable. and somewhere in my travels through the realms of that literary fantasy, the idea of living in london became planted in my head.

more than 20 years later, i determined that i would turn my childhood dreams into a real-life reality. so i got rid of all my belongings, moved in with my mother to save money, took on extra jobs, sold my car, enrolled in night classes, and applied for a student visa. making my decision, to actually getting on a plane took 6 months of hard work and sacrifice. and there were innumerable times when i wondered just what the hell i was getting myself into. i worked 50 hours a week, took beginner college classes 4 nights a week, fought with my mother non-stop, had no social life, no belongings, no transportation – all to move to a city i hadn’t spent more than 48 hours in. to head off blindly into the unknown with no job, no friends, no security. it felt like madness a lot of the time. and it probably was. (i needn’t point out that most thought i had lost my marbles.) i wrote in my journal on the day that i landed, “i made this happen because i fixed my mind on it, and would not let go.” probably the most important lesson in self-determination i’ve ever experienced.

last year, as i was getting ready to leave, i reflected upon the 3 year anniversary of my arrival in london. the initial romance, the inevitable fade. the hard-fought truce i managed to broker between a city trying to best me, and the person i was determined to become. the tension between the fantasy life i thought i would lead, and the reconciliation with a new reality.

and today makes four years. leaving and returning has made me feel even closer to this city in many ways. i came because i felt i needed to. i stayed because i felt i had to. but i returned because i wanted to. i no longer believe in the fantasy – this isn’t mary poppins’ london. but i also no longer need it. the reality of living here, both good and bad, is something i choose every day. every day i don’t get on a plane to be somewhere else, is another vote of commitment to the weight of my life in london. that’s probably not a forever thing, but it’s been enough for four years worth. four years of deciding that even though the fantasy never lived up to the hype, the reality ain’t half bad.

but what i’ve learned about myself between getting off the plane and today… that’s the real dream come true.

i’m not a big dave matthews fan, but through all the hardest times of doubt – every time i thought i’d never get here, or wondered what the hell i was turning my life upside-down for, or felt like kicking out all the windows, or wondered why i had run across an ocean only to end up depressed, lonely, broke and scared – this song carried me through.

dave matthews band – grey street

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There’s a stranger speaks outside her door
Says take what you can from your dreams
Make them as real as anything
It’ll take the work out of the courage

There’s an emptiness inside her
And she’d do anything to fill it in
And though it’s red blood bleeding from her now
It’s more like cold blue ice in her heart
She feels like kicking out all the windows
And setting fire to this life
She could change everything about her
Using colors bold and bright
But all the colors mix together – to grey
And it breaks her heart

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there is beauty in this tension

by Jen at 7:25 pm on 21.03.2007 | 2 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

equinox: when the Sun is at one of two opposite points on the celestial sphere where the celestial equator and ecliptic intersect. In a wider sense, the equinoxes are the two days each year when the center of the Sun spends an equal amount of time above and below the horizon at every location on Earth. The word equinox derives from the Latin words aequus (equal) and nox (night).

the equinox heralds the official beginning of spring. i’ve written before about how important, both physically and metaphysically, spring is to my being and well-being. it’s closure, reprieve, renewal, all rolled up into one.

but there’s another element to this day. they say that during the equinox, if you time it exactly right, you can get an egg to stand on its end* – demonstrating a moment of perfect balance in the cosmos. i’ve never tried – my life just doesn’t work that precisely. but the concept of balance is important. the need to pay equal attention to body, mind, spirit. to evaluate and adjust that which has gone off-kilter. (and it’s so easy to get out of kilter when you’re not looking.) to examine how the parts work together, and treat each with care. tuning strings back into harmony, attending to areas of neglect.

and so even in celebrating the return of sun, i am reminded to take stock and balance the scales. run, meditate, read, play, sleep, eat, relax, walk, listen, work, talk, stretch, drink – in equal measure. pay attention to balancing the egg – for more than just a moment in a day in a year.

*yes, I know this is a myth, but it makes for a good blog post metaphor. thanks for the inspiration, v.

knapsack – balancing act

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the revolution will not be televised

by Jen at 5:26 pm on 9.03.2007Comments Off
filed under: mutterings and musings

it’s a friday afternoon and bernie and i are once again walking along the windy river, the sun peeking out between the spitting clouds. and after getting our friday work moan out of the way, we embark upon the topic of socialism, as we are wont to – me arguing that human nature is inherently greedy, and that this is antithetical to the notion of collective resources and collective power, making pure socialsm impossible. she arguing that darwinism may be a biological imperative for animals without social responsibility, but that nurture can override nature, if enough people are indoctrinated with the belief in self-sacrifice for the greater good. me: now that i’ve had some first hand experience of “socialist” countries, i’m even more convinced that communism as a theorised transitional model is far too easily manipulated to the will of dictators and oppressors – thus the lack of truly communal societies. she: marxism as the ideal remains a viable alternative which can not be disproven because it’s never been implemented – therefore we must continue to fight the good fight.

it’s a conversation we’ve had millions of times, on walks, over pints – both of us knowing that neither of us will be swayed. but that doesn’t stop us from trying, albeit with a healthy dose of respect and recognition that we’re both women who know our own minds. and though i never tell her so, i like that she continually tries to draft me for her team. i’m secretly pleased she thinks i’m worth the effort, in spite of my dour outlook. i find her faith in the ideal inspiring – as a middle aged mother, she’s still politically active, ideologically ambitious, committed to her version of a just world. and her arguments challenge me to support my own – examine what i believe to be true and evidence it. the way good debate always should.

in the end, i admire her optimism in the face of cruel, crass reality – the kind that’s long since turned me into a hardened cynic. i love the fact that she thinks we’re capable of more change than i give us credit for. i love that in bernie’s world, people are generous of spirit, each buoying each other so that everyone stays afloat.

it’s a nice world, and i’m glad someone lives in it – even if i can’t. and if bernie has her way, someday we all will.

song of the day:the beatles – revolution #1

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shatterproof

by Jen at 8:49 pm on 25.02.2007 | 1 Comment
filed under: mutterings and musings

i’m going to break one of my cardinal blogging rules today: nothing about anyone else without their consent. and i’m doing so only because i’m pretty sure she won’t mind. besides, this is more about me than her.

j and i went to k & a’s house for dinner last night. and k & a are the kind of friends that are kind enough to never mention all the embarrassing things you say and do when you’re drunk – a state we often seem to find ourselves in when hanging out with them (and you can either read that as an endorsement of their hosting skills, or a commentary on my lack of willpower – most likely a deadly combination of both.) and they’re the kind of people who can always be counted on for plenty of honest, intelligent, opinionated conversation, which is something i value in my friends.

but last night, at around 3am, after far too much wine and in-depth discussion about religion and traditional marriage (warning! danger will robinson! danger!) k and i found ourselves suddenly, unexpectedly and explosively at loggerheads. which took both of us by surprise, i think. one minute we were talking, the next minute we were arguing angrily, full-on. which caused my eyes to start leaking (coming from the emotional equivalent of a sicilian family makes it hiding my feelings pretty damn impossible.) as i went to the bathroom to dry my eyes, i found myself feeling as if i’d just walked away from a car wreck. what the fuck just happened here? how did we manage to go from having fun to fighting in under 60 seconds? my head was spinning from the combination of alcohol and whiplash. anger and confusion were whirling around, but mostly, i was hurt. i felt like just getting my things and going home. in my tipsy state i just wanted to escape and lick my wounds and wait for an apology to surface in calmer waters.

i collected myself, and went back to the now-silent group. i wasn’t sure what to do. i wanted to leave – but i also didn’t want to leave it like that. tension and hurt hanging in the air. a good amount of stubbornness rising to meet them. fear that leaving things unsaid now would leave them unsaid for a long time.

and so i plucked up my courage, swallowed my pride, and asked her to go for a walk. and somewhere in between the sobering chill and the early hours and the listening and the talking and the walking, we worked it out. y’know – like you’re supposed to do with people you care about.

and we hugged and smoothed things out, and both felt, i think immeasurably better than we had 15 minutes before. like something had gone almost to the edge, only to be caught and pulled back at the last second. perhaps that sounds overly dramatic – but it felt dramatic at the time. i don’t have the same depth and breadth of friends over here as i’m used to back in the states – i can’t treat them as casually as i am used to, with the cavalier knowledge that they will always be there to fall back on. those few friendships that i have here are a bit more precious, held close to the chest. and that made the argument feel far more dangerous than just a frivolous spat.

and so in a way, i think we’re both shyly proud of coming through the other side of it with the thread intact. it’s so easy to let hurt feelings and embarrassment keep you from taking a step towards reconciliation, no matter how badly you want it. it would’ve been easier for us to try to pretend it didn’t happen, chalk it up and just take a half step back from the relationship. mentally rescind that offer of trust, rather than allow the vulnerability of apologies. save face at the expense of a friend. we could have done, might have otherwise done, all those things. we’re similar that way – a bit too hard-headed for our own good. and instead, we decided to extend ourselves in the face of the instinct to retreat. be a little braver, more open than we felt. we haven’t acknowledged it out loud – but i sense a new layer of understanding running between us that adds a certain solidity and weight to the idea of “friend”. it’s encouraging.

the moral of the story here is twofold: 1) never discuss religion when drunk (duh!) and 2) sometimes the test of a relationship reveals a strength you didn’t know it had. a shatterproof quality you weren’t aware of until you dropped it. and maybe that makes it more valuable than the relationship you handle with kid gloves.

you don’t want to go throwing it around carelessly – but it’s not as fragile as you feared. because *you* are not as fragile as you feared.

it’s nice to know.

and i’m sorry.

song of the day (with tongue planted firmly in cheek): OK GO – get over it

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undaunted

by Jen at 11:01 pm on 22.02.2007 | 3 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

since the beginning of the year, i’ve been walking during my lunch hour. usually i go along with a colleague friend of mine, and we talk about socialism and work and life. some days we can’t co-ordinate our schedules, so i walk alone.

i walk across vauxhall bridge, past millbank, along the waters edge following the thames, up to the houses of parliament, westminster abbey, big ben. i skirt all the tourists stopped in the middle of the pavement pointing their cameras upward, around the metal barriers and cops. then i walk across westminster bridge, past the london eye and the aquarium, i walk around all the pedestrian traffic heading for big ben, walk past the souvenir stands, down the other side of the thames, past albert embankment and the imperial war museum, past the big imposing mi5 building, and back to my office.

there’s a guy directly across from the houses of parliament. his name is brian haw, and i see him every day because he’s camped there. for almost 6 years now, he’s been in front of the government, staring them down, watching the mps that arrive and leave throughout the week. he’s there trying to stop the war in iraq. he has a tent, a small cohort of supporters that come along in shifts, and his handmade placards. he has a bullhorn, and every once in a while, he uses it to let people know. day after day, he’s there with his conscience and his pride and little else. they’ve passed laws to try to remove him, stolen his property, harrassed him and ignored him. every day they ignore him, and every day he stays in spite of it. holding out hope that they can’t ignore him forever.

and every time i see him, i wonder if there’s anything i would give up years of my life for. if, in spite of all my noise, i’m no different than the people who pass him every day. who see him without seeing. who never walk the walk. i’m both inspired and ashamed by his simple act of commitment to something he believes is worth sacrificing everything for. unwavering dedication in the face of overwhelming defeat. brian haw will never save anyone’s life, in spite of all his passion. yet he shows up with the same amount of it, day after day. goes to bed with it. eats it, breathes it, lives it.

he puts me to shame – and some days, i find myself averting my eyes when i get to parliament square.

it’s easier to look away than look inside.

(photo via parliament-square.org.uk)

 

song of the day: nikka costa – push and pull 

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advice to another expat, on the missing

by Jen at 10:23 pm on 18.02.2007Comments Off
filed under: mutterings and musings

“It’s a hard thing, the expat life – because you never lose who you are, no matter who you eventually become. You never stop missing home, even when it’s no longer home.

An expat is a square peg, always trying to fit into a round hole. And even if you no longer fit your country of origin (as I don’t) it’s hard to know you might never fit anywhere else either.

And sometimes, in the daily exhilaration and exhaustion of always having to learn to navigate new places, you just want the comfort of the familiar. The ease of knowing how to operate, speak the lingo, blend in, be the insider. Someplace you don’t have to think about or adjust to. Someplace that has memories and family and pull on the heart.

I’m sure some of this has to do with your experience of the other day. But it happens to all of us from time to time.

I miss it too.

Just know you’re not alone.

Jen”

song of the day: bernard fanning -songbird

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brooklyn love story, circa 1992

by Jen at 7:59 pm on 12.02.2007 | 4 Comments
filed under: classic, mutterings and musings

So in spite of the bird flu, I had to drag myself out to the shop. on the way back, i’m trudging along, laden with groceries. it’s just stopped raining and there’s a fresh breeze blowing across my face, lifting my spirits as dusk descends and the city lights emerge. ipod snugly in my ears, suddenly an old skool “de la soul” track comes on…

and i’m transported to a brooklyn rooftop in 1992, and it’s a thick summer evening with a film of smog hanging over manhattan in the background. the bulwark of the brooklyn-queens expressway overpass separates us from the glow of downtown manhattan, where *everything* happens, all we can hear and see are the cars and horns and rumble of trucks, but it’s magic just knowing it’s there on the other side. it’s me and garnett, shelly and dre – friends who chose each other to stick together and became family. and we’ve got a dime bag of weed, a cheap cigar, and a 40 oz. bottle of malt liquor (which we probably bought with subway tokens at the corner bodega, because we bought a lot of things with subway tokens in those days). that and a portable radio is our only entertainment, but it suits us just fine. we’re broke and tired from working long hours for no pay, but there’s something exhilarating about it all anyway, so we don’t mind so much. and we spend our summer evenings hearing police sirens mingled with the music and getting drunk and high and running our mouths and thinking about what we can’t see on the other side of that overpass. we spend those summer evenings being family in the way only friends who’ve fallen in love can be, and sitting on the dark rooftop in a haze, bone weary and busted, but it’s all good. because we’re high on a rooftop in new york with friends who are family.

and we’re on top of the world.

song of the day (with apologies for the quality) De La Soul – Eye Know

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(and yet more technical difficulties plague us – my internetz at home is broken, and won’t be fixed til the end of the week. grrrrr.)

(oh wait! it’s fixed! hooray!)

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in praise of pop candy

by Jen at 3:57 pm on 9.02.2007 | 3 Comments
filed under: mutterings and musings

in talking about books recently, a friend said to me, “it feels like oatbran, when i could be eating nachos”. i love that line, particularly because it so aptly describes the guilty pleasures that everyone indulges in from time to time, all the while chastising ourselves for not devoting our brain to more highbrow pursuits.

we all know someone who claims to never watch television, or who only reads the most convoluted and obtuse novels. someone who consciously cultivates an air of pretension because it makes them feel superior. hell, in england, people even judge your social class by the newpaper you read on the tube – that copy of “the sun” says more about your economic status and educational background than anything you could convey in words.

and i know there are people who would judge me because i read and enjoy the “harry potter” series. i know there are people who would think less of me for admitting that i actually like to watch “america’s next top model”. and i have acquaintances who would look down their noses at some of the fluffier selections on my ipod. never mind that i can debate the latest foreign policy matters, love thought-provoking modern art, and regularly play chess – i’d still be considered an intellectual lightweight for reading anything that happened to be on the “oprah’s book club” list.

now sure, you can just chalk some of this up to bad taste if you like (and some of it definitely is!) but i have to admit that i don’t fully trust people who say they can find no redeeming features in the well-crafted candy hook of a catchy pop tune. i don’t trust people who feel that things like entertainment news are somehow beneath them. i don’t trust people who won’t admit taking special pleasure in some engaging lite literary escapism.

i don’t trust them, because i don’t believe them. we all have our guilty pleasures – the cultural equivalent to tasty, indulgent fast food. some people just won’t own up to them. i once had a neighbour who was a poet by profession. he didn’t own a television or a computer – but whose door do you think he came knocking on to watch the football game, or play the latest release of “doom”?

i am, of course, not advocating a steady diet of mainstream pablum. as in everything in nutrition, a balanced approach is best. but life is not all self-abnegation either – there is pleasure to be had, and it’s an important facet of being a well-rounded individual. after all, if we’re not here on earth as sensory beings to experience pleasure, then what the hell is the point, really? and if you can’t delight in the pure joy of a few of life’s more basic indulgences, if you’re so elitist that you can’t relate to the commonality of participating in a pop culture climate – well then, i’m not sure that i want to know you.

you can have your “james joyce’s complete works” and bowl of gruel. me? i’ll be over here with my “harry potter” and nachos.

song of the day (speaking of pop candy – this song is so inane, but it always makes me want to dance my ass off, and i listened to it on endless repeat all the way through china. and yes this is my one nod of deference to brit pop.) Orson – No Tomorrow

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