I've come to the conclusion that I like my movies humorous and my books tragic. If I'm in a mood to watch a movie its probably because all I want to do is relax and not think or ponder great ideas and concepts. When I read, though, I expect to be challenged. I want to come across something that makes me question things or see life in a different light. I find laughter in movies and myself in books.
That's how it seems to go. How it's always seemed to go.
I've been pondering my reading habits lately. Thinking over the things I like to read and why I read them. Wondering why I've become obsessed with John Green's books and why young adult lit seems to be my favorite lit.
After much thought I've come back to the answer I gave my World Literature professor at the beginning of the semester, when he asked the class what kind of readers we were. I had told him that I was a contemplative reader. That I liked reading things that dealt with the big questions in life. I don't necessarily like books that answer the big questions -those tend to be theology or philosophy books -but books that toy with them. After all, the big questions in life, the stuff that really matters, aren't easily answered. They're things we have to wrestle with. Things we have to reach our own conclusions on. We can do research and ask people, we can even be taught what to believe, but really it comes down to us finding those answers for ourselves.
What happens after death? Does God exist? Why is there so much suffering in the world? How do we overcome the suffering? What do we do when all hope is lost? How do we change our destiny? Does destiny exist? Is there a group of old lades planning out our every move? Our every kiss, tear, and laugh? What's the meaning of all this? What's the meaning of life? Why are we here?
There are so many big questions. So many thoughts and ideas we have to wrestle with and literature can be the ring we wrestle them in.
My newest obsession -my newest Big Question that I've been wrestling with -is the idea of the last moment. It's not really a question; more of a concept. Every single person on earth experiences the last moment. That is to say that before a person dies they must first go through their last moment of living.
It takes only a split second for a life to end. The human life is as fragile and fleeting as the flame of a candle. A simple burst of air and it's gone; poofed out. The Greek story teller, Home, once stated that, "Everything is more beautiful because we are doomed." It is mortality that makes the light that is our lives burn brightly. If we lived forever, if there was no death, where would the meaning be? What would be the point of existing?
We all expect to die, but some of us don't get the chance to die of natural causes. Whether you're murdered, killed in an accident, or suffering of an illness, whether you die of old age or because you've decided you no longer wish to live, there is still one last experience you have to go through. It is the last event every living person must experience. There is no getting out of it. And it is living the last moment you are alive.
I'm not obsessed with death. I'm obsessed with life before and after death. I'm obsessed with how death can take the burning light of a human life and smother it. I'm obsessed with the moments that death cuts short. I'm obsessed with mortality.
This last January, a girl at my university died. They say she was driving in a car with her brother when a truck hit them. This tragedy hit the heart of our campus heart. I never knew the girl, nto personally, but I had known of her and just that fact that a member of our beloved community was gone hurt. To think, to know, that a life so young was ended just like that...it was..I couldn't help but wonder where she and her brother were going. What they were doing.
I wondered if they were listening to music. Singing along to the radio. Maybe he was texting someone. Maybe she was talking about Christmas. Maybe they were discussing school or having one of those all so important sibling bonding moments.
Only a few months later, in March, I got a call from my dad saying that an elderly lady of our church had passed away. He told me that they (who I assume were the doctors or the people that found her) thought she died looking for something. That she appeared to be looking for something and that her heart just failed. That she died instantly. One second she was there and the next gone.
It makes one wonder, what will we be doing when we die? What moment of ours will be cut short? What moment will be our last?
We don't always know when we are experiencing our last moments. Sometimes we do. Some people stare death in the face knowing that in a few seconds he'll take them to eternity. Most don't though. The average person does not know when they are going to die.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Friday, March 27, 2015
The Sad Reality Of A Time Deprived Writer
I've opened Refracted's document on my computer and stared at it blankly more times in the last week than I can possibly count. I have no excuse, really, for not working on it. I have the plot, I know where it's going, the characters are talking to me, I love the story itself...what I lack though is motivation. Or, maybe, motivation is the wrong word. What I lack is passion.
More and more often nowadays I find myself not wanting to write.
I don't want to write.
There. I said it...and I'm pretty sure a part of my soul just died doing so.
That's the sad reality of it though. I want to write. I really, truly do. It's not like I've completely lost my passion for it. I mean, I've been writing since my mom taught me how to form the letter 'A'. By now, I can't not write. My brain gets so cluttered when I don't. My fingers itch for the familiar feeling of an ink pen and the beauty of words on paper. Yet, when I sit down to write I want to cry.
Why?
Because I can't bring myself to write with an impending feeling of doom hanging over my head. An impending feeling that I should be doing something else. That's what makes me want to bawl my eyes out in frustration.
Writing is my coping mechanism. For the longest time, writing was the only thing I thought I was good at. It's what made me me; what allowed me to be me. It's completely me. It's everything I've gone through, am going through, and may go through, It's my life.
Writing is as necessary to me as breathing and, darlings, right now I'm suffocating.
It hurts so bad not being able to sit down and write without feeling like I'm being a bad student because there are a dozen projects I could be working on in that moment. But then it hurts even more when I think about where my life is going and I wonder if I'll ever have time to write after graduation at all.
Have time to write...scoff...did you hear what I just said? I just broke one of the commandments of writing. "Thou shalt make time to write even when thou hast none to give."
My roomate asked me the other night how I could stare at a computer for so long. I didn't say anything, primarily because I was in a grumpy mood, but I thought, "Lots of practice." I used to be happy to get to the computer and write. I used to rush to it. I'd try to beat my siblings to it. Now I'm on it all the time checking emails, moodle pages, writing papers, doing interviews and research, working on journalistic stories for the school newspaper/my reporting class which no where satisfies my craving for creative writing.
I'm never on my computer working on my novel or that selection of short stories (which I'm actully in the process of turning into a blog series) I've been meaning to put together, or that children's book series based on my childhood teddy bear that I think would be a great idea, or any of the stories I've started strictly for DeviantArt purposes...and I HATE it. I LOATH it with a fiery passion.
I just want my characters back. I want to be able to sit down and write without feeling guilty. Even now, as I am writing this, I can name five different assignments I could be working on. The thought of them makes my gut twist in such a way that I'm tempted to stop writing right here and now, but if I did there would be no way I'd be able to sleep tonight.
My mind is heavy with thoughts and facts that I'm supposed to memorize, and a list of tasks I have to get done, and I fear that if I stop writing I may be reduced to a puddle of anxiety induced tears.
I've spent the last couple of weeks praying myself to sleep or listening to my detox playlist until I succumb to slumber. And every dream I've had has been nothing near restful. I've had work dreams, school dreams, dreams of horrible scenarios involving my family and friends that literally have me waking up wanting to puke...I'd like a dreamless night. Sadly, stress doesn't grant such requests and instead I just keep putting on a brave face and going about my day trying to keep my complaining to a minimum.
I mean, I'm dealing. I haven't had an anxiety attack or anything yet, thankfully, but I am more than a little peeved at life right now. I'm especially peeved at certain people who seem to think that I should be doing more or putting more effort in. Yeah, sure, cause you know I came to this school with the ultimate goal to burn myself out before I hit middle age.
Life demands more time than I have, but I'm trying really hard to make my own sunshine here.
A week ago, nearly two, I was back in Nebraska for spring break and one afternoon I was on my way home from Walmart with my mom and a van full of my siblings. One of my foster brothers said something about life not being fair and I responded to him by saying, "Life isn't fair. Life will give you lemons, but it's up to you to find the sugar to make the lemonade."
Finding the sugar is sort of my goal right now. Staying positive in a stressful time. Because a pitcher of bitter lemonade may still quench thirst but it doesn't completely satisfy and I want a life that I'm satisfied with. I want a life that when I'm old and grey I can look back on and say, "Yeah, not that was some good lemonade."
I don't even want just the lemonade. I want the whole freaking garden party.
I'm human and a human's life is as fragile as a candle's flame. It can go out at a moment's notice. It's short lived. Fleeting. It's mortal and I don't want the stress of my life to ruin it for me; to dictate whether or not I enjoy myself writing.
I've made some pretty big decisions lately. Some decisions that are kind of expected for someone my age but were pretty big deals to me because -would you know -I'm not a huge fan of change. In fact, i despise change and love organization. Lists, cell alerts, calendars, and planners are the only way I can get stuff done. I love time management. Probably a little too much.
I'll admit that I'm a bit of a control freak when it comes to my time. Which is probably one of the main reasons I'm so stressed lately. Kinks keep getting thrown into my schedules and I don't like it. It makes me irritated.
Just a couple days ago, I was complaining to my roommate (Yeah, I mention her a lot. We live together and we're friends. Deal. With. It) because I got on Facebook to send a message to someone about an assignment (yes, I was actually doing homework while on Facebook. It can be done) when I received four different requests from people wanting to hang out.
I groaned and said something like, "As much as I love so-and-so I just don't have time for this."
My roommate responded, and I applaud her for this because I really did need to hear it that day, by saying, "Yeah, it's sooooooooo horrible that you have friends who care about you and want to go out and do things with you. Friends are such a burden."
I was a bit taken aback at first but she forced me to stop for a minute and think about just how lucky I am. I mean, I do have some pretty awesome friends. The best, actually. And I'd rather hangout with them than stress about that one person that just won't respond to any of my messages but is essential to the assignment I'm working on.
You know what's funny? As soon as I acknowledged that my roommate was right and that I was overreacting, everything worked itself out.
It worked itself out so well that I actually got a couple hours of free time that day, which I used to play the Lego Batman 2 game I just bought for myself. I wanted to write, but I couldn't, due to previously mentioned reasons. So I opted to spend those two house vegging in front of the TV and guess what else. I even got to see one of my best friends and former roommates who was in town.
Okay. So, yeah. I'm stressed. Yeah, I'm a bit more than peeved at life right now. Yeah, I'm wishing I was doing more creative writing. But you know, life's not all that bad. There still is some sugar left in this life.
I've made it my goal tonight to not go to bed until I've completely exhausted myself from writing. I've written the whole next part of Refracted and am planning on editing and posting it before I hit the hay. I don't care how early I have to get up in the morning. I'm going to write to my heart's content tonight.
And that, darlings, is all I have to say for now.
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Every Triangle has a Point...So I Guess this Post is a Circle.
It's 10:40 at night when I'm writing this, though it'll probably be a much different time when it's published, and I don't really know how I feel tonight. So, more than likely you're just going to get some of my rambling. Okay, yeah, you are. There's no real point behind this post. I just really felt like writing.
There's a group of people playing sand vollyball right outside my dorm window and I've spent the better part of this night watching them, because, you know, I have almost zero athletic capabilities. Plus, I learned back in high school that vollyball wasn't my sport. I'm more of a yoga doing runner, who's being forced to learn karate to meet her PE requirement for graduation. I'd sooner learn to swim then play vollyball...and I have a rational fear of water. Retract that. I have a rational fear of drowning. I have nothing against water itself. In fact, water and I are best buds. I quite enjoy showers, a cool glass of water on a hot day, and a hot glass of water to make hot chocolate or coffee out of on a cold day. However, I've never quite gotten over almost drowning as a child. So there's that. Yet, even though I don't play vollyball I still enjoy watching. The same goes for basketball. Not so much football, unless I'm actually at the field. Football on TV is boring...any sport on TV is boring. I like the excitement of actually being there when it's being played.
Watching those people play vollyball, though, makes me long for summer. I could really go for a bonfire or fish fry right now. It's been so gorgeous here lately that all I've wanted to do is find a lake with a rickety dock to sit on while I write and sip at a tall glass of supper sweetened ice tea.
Can you tell that I'm really ready for break? I seriously need one. Thank heaven spring break starts tomorrow. Though, I don't actually get to go home until Sunday because my car decided to give up on life again in the Walmart parking lot. That seems to be it's go to place to die. It really does handle stress a lot worse than I do (Which is saying something because I'm not exactly the best person when it comes to dealing with stress. There's a reason I journal so much.). I wish it'd put on it's big girl panties and just suck it up. I can't slow down to take even a day off. Why should it be able to throw a temper tantrum like a two-year-old? Lame. It's just lame.
On a side note, going back to our previous topic of sports, I had a karate midterm today. I didn't exactly do terrible. In fact, I found the written part to be extremely easy and the blocks, kicks, punches, stances, and self defense sets were fine...my kata though....yeah...
You see, I've spent the last week working my butt off to get that kata down. I looked it up online, found a diagram of the steps taken in it, made sure my stances were correct, that I was punching correctly, that my turns were correct, and that I was turning in the right direction. I was doing so well, too, on the midterm today...until I looked away from my fist and caught sight of the teacher. I may have also saw a certain guy -who shall remain nameless but has made his way onto my 'threat' list...that is a list of people I find to be threats. Not a list of people I intend on threatening -and I choked. I don't really know how it happened but my mind went blank. Half way through the kata and I forgot everything.
I was so lost that I ended up literally throwing my hands in the air and saying to the professor, "I give up. I'm lost." And he just nodded at me like he had expected it. Anyway, I'm really hoping that didn't effect my score too badly. I had everything else down. I had that down too, until I actually had to do it in front of him and the class.
Well, I don't really know what else to tell you, and I kind of want to read some more of Will Grayson, Will Grayson before I hit the hay. So I guess I'll let you go for the night, so I can go read instead of sleeping, which is what I should be doing because I have a 9 o'clock sociology class that I have to go to. I'll go to it no matter how tired I am. Because A) I need to go. Notes are important in that class. And B) I actually like the class.
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Chaos Precedes Change
“All great changes
are preceded by chaos.”
~Deepak Chopra
Friday
night, March 6, 2015 started out like most weekends for my roommate and I. Our
minds and bodies were utterly exhausted from the week we had just finished and,
though we still had a weekend of work and papers that needed to be done ahead
of us, we found ourselves sitting down in front of the television. She on her
black bean bag chair, me on my lime green yoga ball, both of us with our phones
in our hands and only half paying attention to the comedy we had playing on one
of the two TVs that sit on our make-shift entertainment center.
Being
both mentally and physically exhausted, we talked about nothing while
absentmindedly playing games on our phones. Everything from our current relationships
to the exams we were currently studying for came up, and eventually the movie
we were watching invoked a new topic of conversation.
I,
being bored, had popped my copy of Son-In-Law in the DVD player. My roommate,
who had never seen it before, made a comment about co-ed housing. We chatted about
our opinions on the idea of it for a few minutes before one of the main
characters in the movie, Becky, made a remark about how even though she was at
college she wasn’t going to change. Off handedly, I stated, “Something always
changes when you go to college. If it doesn’t, then you’re doing it wrong.”
“Yeah,
seriously,” replied my roommate, who was now grinning while she made virtual
salads on her phone.
Being
high level college students, we’re able to look back on our last few years here
at the university we attend and see just how much we’ve changed. She, in her
junior year, and I, in my senior, have experienced much over our college
career. We started talking about it. About how we went from those shy, awkward
freshmen pictured on our student IDs to the women we are today. How we went
from thinking we knew everything and really knowing nothing to thinking we know
nothing but constantly amaze ourselves with just how much stuff we really do
know from our classes.
They
say middle school and high school are the most difficult times of your life and
that college is the best time of your life. Well, let me tell you something,
even those best times come with a few rain showers. Not everything is all
peachy keen when you get to college.
When
you’re in high school you think, “Oh, college is going to be great! It’s going
to be like having an apartment and I’ll be able to do whatever the heck I
want.”
The
reality of it is that you realize just how much you really kind of liked living
with your parents…then you develop a sense of independence. You get used to
living away from them and then, when you return home for break –for the first
time, and every other time after that –you are conflicted. Conflicted because
you feel like you need to check-in with your parents while you’re home but know
that you are more than capable of doing what you want, when you please. Knowing
that you don’t need curfews or check-in calls…yet, secretly you do actually
kind of like when mom or dad calls to ask, “Where are you?” Even though you may
be living over six hours away and your answer to that question doesn’t really
matter because they can’t really do anything about where you’re at in that
moment any way.
College
is a journey. There’s no doubt about it. Sometimes you even feel like you’re
Gilgamesh slaying Humbaba, or Odysseus escaping Polyphemus. Other times you
feel like superman with a bunch of kryptonite stuffed down your pants.
When
you first enter college you’re like Mike, from Monster’s University, on his
first day at campus. You’re in awe. You’re amazed at everything around you. You
feel like you just stepped into an entirely new world and, in some cases, you
have. The main thing on your mind is that you finally made it out of high
school and that you’re now officially a college student.
Going
in you have such high expectations. You think everything’s going to be perfect.
I mean, you’re away from home. Away from mom and dad. Away from whatever place
you’ve been saying for the past four or so years that you couldn’t wait to get
out of. How could it not be perfect?
In your
dreams, you see college like it’s your kingdom. You think that your dorm room
will be your palace. Like you’ll finally have all this space to spread your
wings.
But
then you unlock that dorm door and you quickly realize that it’s more like
this:
So you
start your job search so you can create that luxury life you want. Yet, between
tuition payments, the upkeep of your car, and social events, you’re
consistently broke. So you resign to surviving off cafeteria food for as long
as possible.
However,
you soon realize that eating a sandwich every day for lunch gets old. So you go
on an ultimate hide-and-seek game with the spare change you know is lying
somewhere in your room and you end up taking everything you find to Burger
King/McDonalds.
And
slowly, over the course of your first semester, you start to change and people
back home start asking what happened to you. Some people even seem confused as
to who you are at first.
And you
don’t know if you should care or not, because you are finally starting to feel
comfortable in your own skin.
You
start developing this confidence that you didn’t even know you had before.
Suddenly you feel like you could take on the world and become some sort of
superstar activist. Felling like you could start some kind of ultimate awesome
revolution against ‘the man’.
But then you realize the people you
really want to start a revolution against are the ones questioning your major.
So what if you chose one of the ‘worthless’ majors? Those people telling you
how hard it’s going to be for you to get a job after graduation, how little the
content of your classes matter, and keep asking, “So what exactly are you
planning on doing with that degree?” are nothing but peasants anyway. They
don’t know what they’re talking about and you feel the need to inform them of
just how valuable your area of study is. So you shoot off random facts about
how it ties into humanity and everyday life and they just stand there like, “Is
she crazy?” or “Did I break her?”
So you
buckle down to show people just what you can do and how you’re not wasting your
time...
…but
then you overwork yourself and get so stressed out that you realize your best
friend isn’t your roommate, or that guy you think you might like, but is really
the precious cup of coffee that keeps you awake through all those hours of
studying.
And
eventually you reach a point where you’re just like: (Pardon the cursing in
this)
So you
reason with yourself that you’ll be fine if you skip that one class or don’t
take that one exam. And you end up getting into a funk where you give up and
have reached the conclusion that you’re not going to make anything of
yourself…and you’re okay with that…but then a friend intervenes and forces you
to get your act together.
You
create a study group because if you’re going to do this then you aren’t going
to do it alone. Besides, you know you’re better at English than that one
person, but that one person happens to be better at history, and then there’s
that kid that never misses a math problem…and boom, the A-Team of study groups
is created.
Then
you push through, take your tests, and make it through all those courses
required for your major. So you come out like:
And
then you blink and you realize time’s gone by faster than you could have ever
anticipated and you’ve reached the end of your college career.
Somewhere
between all the pain, tears, late nights, bad quiz grades because you chose to
socialize instead of study, and the lost friendships because you chose to study
instead of socialize, and the deterioration of your mental state, and all the
money you gave to the school in order to go through all your courses, you
created a bunch of good memories and came out a changed person with friendships
that will last a life time.
You
look in the mirror and you’re like, “Woah, look what I’ve become.” Because
you’re no longer that awkward little freshman. You’re not even the same person
you were four years prior. You’re not the same person you ever were. You’ve
developed into something better; something brighter.
College is a rollercoaster of a
ride, but it’s worth it in the end. When it all comes down to it, and you’re
getting ready to graduate, you realize that even though you still don’t have
your life completely together you have the means to make it where ever you want
to go. Because you’re a confident new creature who knows she doesn’t know as
much as she originally thought and is okay with that.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
25 Important things My Mother Taught Me
Mother's are important, there is no doubt about it. They're there for our first cries, our first laughs, our first words, and our first heartbreaks. They are the ones to wipe away our tear streaked mascara and they always support us. A mother's love is unconditional and her words are wisdom.
My mother has taught me so many things over the years. She is someone I will always respect and look up to. I feel guilty when I hold something back from her. I have to tell her everything. I'm not capable of not telling her everything. Especially when she has this sixth sense of knowing when something's wrong. I love her for that. And for many more reasons.
Over the years, though, I've learned much from my mother. She's taught me everything from the basics to the complex. She's taught me how to talk and walk, and how to pray. She's a warrior.
There's a little trend in my family -well, among my siblings -where we like to give people we're close to superhero and Greek god names. We try to match people up to who they're most like. My brother's Green Arrow/Apollo and my youngest sister is Flash/Hermes. We each have a superhero and Greek god name, but giving our parents names have always been the hardest. It seems like there is no super hero or Greek god out there good enough for them to have the names of. However, we did eventually settle on a superhero name for our mother.
Our mother is...Wonder Woman. Why? Because she's a strong, confident woman who stands up for what she believes in and protects those around her. She's our hero.
This past weekend I had the opportunity to go to a retreat with my Mother, sister, and a good friend. While there we learned a lot and had a blast. And I got to see my mother at her peak. She out partied my sister and I. She out partied a 23 and 19 year old. Now, when I say party I don't mean drinking party. This was a Christian retreat with no alcohol. But, dang, my mother stayed up so late that my sister and I feel asleep waiting for her. She was a hyperactive social butterfly this weekend. The embodiment of everything she's ever taught my siblings and I...with the exception of when she went to find my hair tie and only 'Kind of looked for it,' When I was a kid, if we 'kind of looked' for anything we would get a lecture on how you actually move things when you're looking for something, not just glance at places. We gave her a bit of a hard time about this, but she took it well and joked along with us.
Like I said, she was the embodiment of everything she ever taught us this weekend and that got me to thinking. I laid awake last night thinking about all the things she had taught my siblings and I and I made a list of 25 of them. There soooooo many more things she's taught us, but these are among the most important.
1. Never lend someone something you expect to get back. If you give someone money to help out, it's a gift, not a loan.
2. Always take time to stop and pray with a person instead of just saying that you'll pray for them.
3. A lady always has tea in the house (whether she likes it or not).
4. It doesn't matter how busy you are, if someone calls or drops by to chat you make sure to talk to them.
5. A woman always supports her man.
6. When visiting someone you always offer to help clean up after the meal.
7. Cookies. If you don't have time for a complex dessert, cake mix cookies are always a favorite go to. It takes 15 minutes and guests will love them.
8. If you do something, no mater what it is, alwasy give it your all.
9. The french Braid. It's like a rite of passage.
10. A lady should know how to properly set a table.
11. If your gut tells you something is wrong, then more than likely it is.
12. There's no need to pay someone to clean your carpets. A capable woman will roll up her sleeves and do it herself to save a few bucks.
13. It's okay to treat yourself every once in a while...
14...but family ALWAYS comes first.
15. If a sister has fallen you don't kick her and run. You kneel and help her up, no matter how much you may dislike her.
16. Please and thank you are critical words.
17. Make up is not important. Inner beauty matters more...
18...but a lady should know how to properly apply makeup. You're not a clown, dear.
19. Be kind, but sassy. Don't let people walk over you.
20. Be well read.
21. Traditions are important.
22. Be a pioneer woman. Know how to sew, cook, garden, host, and pray.
23. Love everyone. Even your enemies.
24.The best accessory is a smile.
25. Always be yourself. You're not a reflection, you're the original.
Sunday, February 15, 2015
A Moment of Mortality
I'm not going to sugar coat this. Life has been crappy lately. One good thing happens and then something equally bad occurs. It's been getting really tiring and it's caused my friends and I to partake in the age old habit of talking about it. We've discussed a lot lately. We've talked about mortality, life, growing up...about how all our teachers seem to keep saying, "It doesn't get any better," and how we just wish one person would tell us not that it would get better but that we're going to be alright.
Anyway, I've taken these conversations we've had and used them to write up a little piece of creative nonfiction, which I've titled A Moment of Mortality. I was particularly alive today and decided I'd use my good mood to create this. Read and enjoy...or don't...I mean, whatever floats your boat.
A Moment of Mortality
“We should crossover.”
“But I’m not ready to yet.”
“There’s a car behind us! If we don’t cross now then we really will be crossing over.”
“Aw, but I want to die.”
“I want to die too, but that doesn’t mean I want to die now. I still have a lot I want to do first. A lot of places to see...”
“A lot of things I want to draw…”
“To write…”
“To do…”
“To try…”
“But death would be easy.”
“It really would be. Think about it. If we died now all our problems would be solved. No more Walmart trips, no more scrounging for loose change to buy a pop, no more pain, no more trying to find the right guy, no more heartache, no more tears, no more stress…no more student loans or trying to fight the unknown.”
“We’d be embracing the unknown.”
“It’s not unknown. I know where I’ll end up…I’ve heard Heaven’s lovely this time of the year…but it’s not time. I’ve got my ticket, I’m just not ready to board the plane. You know?”
“Yeah. I know what you mean. Can I tell you a secret though? Sometimes I play with my knife and think about how easy it’d be to slide it across my wrist. I bet the blood would look pretty. It’d make things easier….”
“Easier isn’t always better. You really ready to go now?”
“Hmmm, no…not unless I could haunt a few people. That might be worth cutting my time short. You think when we die we’ll get a chance to haunt someone?”
“I don’t know. Don’t think I’d take it if we do.”
“There’s a few people I’d like to haunt. A few that deserve it.”
“If I haunted someone it’d be someone I know really well. Someone I like to mess with.”
“You’d pull pranks on them.”
“Yep. It’d be the only reason to stay.”
“What about unfinished business?”
“What about it?”
“Wouldn’t you want to finish it?”
“Would you want to finish a term paper over summer vacation?”
“I guess you’re right…I bet Heaven’s lovely.”
“Mmmmhmmm.”
“A lot better than school. I’m getting really tiered of staring at brick walls.”
“Enjoy it. In a few years people are going to be asking you, ‘What’s next?’ and you won’t have an answer.”
“You really don’t know?”
“I didn’t become a Lit. Major for an easy life. I never really knew what I’d do with the degree but I always knew that writers never have it easy. The history of our career is full of violence, and blood, and alcohol. But we’re needed. We have a job to do, you know? The world needs us.”
“Yeah, I know. You haven’t resorted to alcohol yet, though.”
“I think about it every once in a while. I’ve had wine before, you know. It was actually pretty good.”
“Then why don’t you drink it regularly? Alcohol numbs. It’d make life easier.”
“I doubt that. Besides, there’s history between my family and wine. I’ve heard some horror stories.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“We can’t die…we can’t drink…we can’t sleep around…there’s really nothing we can do to escape, is there?”
“…that’s why I write…”
“To escape?”
“No, because it’s a better alternative. It’s a healthy coping mechanism…some writer once said that you have to stay drunk on writing so reality won’t destroy you. He really hit the nail on the head. There’s just so much bad in the world. So much stress. Someone has to write about it. To let future generations know that there’s still hope. You want to know what’s worse, though?”
“What?”
“We’ll never really know just how bad it can get. I can write about all the crap the world throws at me and I can hope that it’ll help give someone else hope, but while we’re sitting here in a Walmart parking lot, drinking cheap bottles of pop, complaining about how tough our lives are and how easy it’d be to die, there are millions of other people out there that have it so much worse than us. Our problems are kind of petty, in retrospect.”
“Maybe we just like the idea of flirting with death.”
“Maybe we’re just highly aware of our mortality. I mean, yeah, death would be easy, but seriously…I’m fine with my life right now.”
“Really? Even after all the crap that’s happened this week? This month?”
“Yeah. Even after all that. You know why?”
“Why?”
“Because I may not know where I’m going in life but I know I have the means to make it. I’ve got a full tank of gas, enough money to make a trip home this next weekend, and I know who I am.”
“I wish I could say that. I don’t know who I am anymore.”
“Girl, take it from me. I know I don’t have too many years on you, but in my experience one has to lose themselves before they can find them.”
“Endure the rain to get the sun.”
“Exactly.”
“Speaking of rain. Those clouds look pretty bad.”
“Yeah, we should get back before the storm rolls in.”
“Procrastination party?”
“Can’t afford one. The time’s come to stop loitering in parking lots and to start writing about the impact the Fine Arts has on campus.”
“I hate having responsibilities.”
“It’s part of growing up.”
“Growing up sucks.”
“Ha! Yes, it does. As much as I’m okay with my life, if I had known it’d be like this, I would have taken sometime to slow down and enjoy all those stupid sleepovers more…all those bike accidents…nights babysitting to buy that new Star Wars book…hey, listen to me, alright? This time, next year, you’re going to be here studying away and I’m going to be back in Nebraska doing God knows what –And that’s not cursing. He’s really the only one who knows what I’ll be doing right now –so listen up. I know you’re not that big of a people person, but take some time to pretend you’re a socialite. Take some time to slow down by hoping into the fast lane. Some of the greatest nights I’ve had here I didn’t say a word during, but sometimes words aren’t needed.”
“That’s real rich coming from a writer. Do you even hear what you’re saying?”
“Do you even hear what I’m saying? The moments I’ve felt the most alive have been the ones where I took time to go out for a good time with a group of people. I may not have said much, but when you’re driving through Kansas City at night and the lights of the Plaza light up the street like a runway, and there’s good music blaring from the stereo, and you’re surrounded by good people, it’s not the words that mater. It’s the almost overwhelming feeling of living. Death might be easy, but I’m pretty damn sure that life’s worth it.”
Anyway, I've taken these conversations we've had and used them to write up a little piece of creative nonfiction, which I've titled A Moment of Mortality. I was particularly alive today and decided I'd use my good mood to create this. Read and enjoy...or don't...I mean, whatever floats your boat.
A Moment of Mortality
“We should crossover.”
“But I’m not ready to yet.”
“There’s a car behind us! If we don’t cross now then we really will be crossing over.”
“Aw, but I want to die.”
“I want to die too, but that doesn’t mean I want to die now. I still have a lot I want to do first. A lot of places to see...”
“A lot of things I want to draw…”
“To write…”
“To do…”
“To try…”
“But death would be easy.”
“It really would be. Think about it. If we died now all our problems would be solved. No more Walmart trips, no more scrounging for loose change to buy a pop, no more pain, no more trying to find the right guy, no more heartache, no more tears, no more stress…no more student loans or trying to fight the unknown.”
“We’d be embracing the unknown.”
“It’s not unknown. I know where I’ll end up…I’ve heard Heaven’s lovely this time of the year…but it’s not time. I’ve got my ticket, I’m just not ready to board the plane. You know?”
“Yeah. I know what you mean. Can I tell you a secret though? Sometimes I play with my knife and think about how easy it’d be to slide it across my wrist. I bet the blood would look pretty. It’d make things easier….”
“Easier isn’t always better. You really ready to go now?”
“Hmmm, no…not unless I could haunt a few people. That might be worth cutting my time short. You think when we die we’ll get a chance to haunt someone?”
“I don’t know. Don’t think I’d take it if we do.”
“There’s a few people I’d like to haunt. A few that deserve it.”
“If I haunted someone it’d be someone I know really well. Someone I like to mess with.”
“You’d pull pranks on them.”
“Yep. It’d be the only reason to stay.”
“What about unfinished business?”
“What about it?”
“Wouldn’t you want to finish it?”
“Would you want to finish a term paper over summer vacation?”
“I guess you’re right…I bet Heaven’s lovely.”
“Mmmmhmmm.”
“A lot better than school. I’m getting really tiered of staring at brick walls.”
“Enjoy it. In a few years people are going to be asking you, ‘What’s next?’ and you won’t have an answer.”
“You really don’t know?”
“I didn’t become a Lit. Major for an easy life. I never really knew what I’d do with the degree but I always knew that writers never have it easy. The history of our career is full of violence, and blood, and alcohol. But we’re needed. We have a job to do, you know? The world needs us.”
“Yeah, I know. You haven’t resorted to alcohol yet, though.”
“I think about it every once in a while. I’ve had wine before, you know. It was actually pretty good.”
“Then why don’t you drink it regularly? Alcohol numbs. It’d make life easier.”
“I doubt that. Besides, there’s history between my family and wine. I’ve heard some horror stories.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“We can’t die…we can’t drink…we can’t sleep around…there’s really nothing we can do to escape, is there?”
“…that’s why I write…”
“To escape?”
“No, because it’s a better alternative. It’s a healthy coping mechanism…some writer once said that you have to stay drunk on writing so reality won’t destroy you. He really hit the nail on the head. There’s just so much bad in the world. So much stress. Someone has to write about it. To let future generations know that there’s still hope. You want to know what’s worse, though?”
“What?”
“We’ll never really know just how bad it can get. I can write about all the crap the world throws at me and I can hope that it’ll help give someone else hope, but while we’re sitting here in a Walmart parking lot, drinking cheap bottles of pop, complaining about how tough our lives are and how easy it’d be to die, there are millions of other people out there that have it so much worse than us. Our problems are kind of petty, in retrospect.”
“Maybe we just like the idea of flirting with death.”
“Maybe we’re just highly aware of our mortality. I mean, yeah, death would be easy, but seriously…I’m fine with my life right now.”
“Really? Even after all the crap that’s happened this week? This month?”
“Yeah. Even after all that. You know why?”
“Why?”
“Because I may not know where I’m going in life but I know I have the means to make it. I’ve got a full tank of gas, enough money to make a trip home this next weekend, and I know who I am.”
“I wish I could say that. I don’t know who I am anymore.”
“Girl, take it from me. I know I don’t have too many years on you, but in my experience one has to lose themselves before they can find them.”
“Endure the rain to get the sun.”
“Exactly.”
“Speaking of rain. Those clouds look pretty bad.”
“Yeah, we should get back before the storm rolls in.”
“Procrastination party?”
“Can’t afford one. The time’s come to stop loitering in parking lots and to start writing about the impact the Fine Arts has on campus.”
“I hate having responsibilities.”
“It’s part of growing up.”
“Growing up sucks.”
“Ha! Yes, it does. As much as I’m okay with my life, if I had known it’d be like this, I would have taken sometime to slow down and enjoy all those stupid sleepovers more…all those bike accidents…nights babysitting to buy that new Star Wars book…hey, listen to me, alright? This time, next year, you’re going to be here studying away and I’m going to be back in Nebraska doing God knows what –And that’s not cursing. He’s really the only one who knows what I’ll be doing right now –so listen up. I know you’re not that big of a people person, but take some time to pretend you’re a socialite. Take some time to slow down by hoping into the fast lane. Some of the greatest nights I’ve had here I didn’t say a word during, but sometimes words aren’t needed.”
“That’s real rich coming from a writer. Do you even hear what you’re saying?”
“Do you even hear what I’m saying? The moments I’ve felt the most alive have been the ones where I took time to go out for a good time with a group of people. I may not have said much, but when you’re driving through Kansas City at night and the lights of the Plaza light up the street like a runway, and there’s good music blaring from the stereo, and you’re surrounded by good people, it’s not the words that mater. It’s the almost overwhelming feeling of living. Death might be easy, but I’m pretty damn sure that life’s worth it.”
Sunday, February 1, 2015
Sexuality in Literature: Why I've Decided to Write a Bisexual Character
Diversity
is something I have always been mindful of in my writings. I’ve taken time to
layout lists of characters and their aspects for many of my stories. I’ve made
sure to have racial diversity, religious diversity, language diversity, skill
diversity, personality diversity, as well as moral diversity. I try not to
write too many stories where all of the characters in them are from the
majority or are Caucasian.
I’ve
had people ask me about diversity in my writing’s before. One of my primary
readers once approached me about a book I was working on and asked, “Are all of
the character’s white?” I politely reminded her of a few characters who, at the
point in the story she was currently at, had only been mentioned a couple
times. As that story progressed, my African American, Hispanic, and Korean
characters became more prominent figures. Seeing as this particular story is
meant for publication one day I will not be posting it on any of my social
media sites so I therefore cannot provide you a link to it. To be honest, I
spent a lot of time on diversity with that story. Racial and class diversity
were a couple of the story’s elements that I paid the most attention to.
In
another one of my writings I wanted to make a point of having religious
diversity, especially since the subject matter at hand was one that would cross
into religion and theology. In this fantastical tale of myth, I have creatures
from all sorts of mythology and those creatures each have their own belief
systems. My main vampire character is Catholic, the main Siren character is Greek,
and another vampire is Atheist (http://writingangel2010.deviantart.com/gallery/50286567/Everlasting-Lie-Trilogy).
I also have stories that include Egyptian mythology and the difference between
cultures (http://writingangel2010.deviantart.com/art/The-Pharaoh-s-Guard-Introduction-453055286).
I like to keep my characters as diverse as possible.
Lately
though, I’ve crossed a new line. I posted on my Instagram a couple months ago
about starting work on a story that would contain my first ever non-straight character.
The response I got was predictable. Very few people liked the photo and
comment. Most didn’t respond to it at all. This isn’t surprising to me. One
person, one friend, did comment though and she was someone of the LGBT group.
She liked the idea of me writing a character that she could possibly relate to
on the level of sexuality.
To be
honest, I had wrestled with the idea of having a character that wasn’t
heterosexual before, but I had chickened out and decided to make him
metrosexual. In all honesty, I think that was a good move at the time. My
writing skill has progressed from that point and there was no way I would have
been able to portray that character as being homosexual without feeling guilty.
Why? Because at the time I was but a child. I had no idea of how I felt about
the LGBT group let alone how people would react to it. I feared that portraying
such a character would lead to fractures in some of my friendships. Now though,
I can honestly say that I feel no guilt or sense of ‘wrongness’ for writing
such a character.
Scythe,
son of Mortem and Vita, is a new character for me and stands out amongst the other
characters I’ve created. He’s free spirited, lost, and struggling with the idea
of destiny. And, as I mentioned, he’s bisexual.
I have no regret in his creation. I actually spent a lot of time in
prayer and meditation about the impact he could have on my writing.
I am a
Christian. This is something I would proudly proclaim to the masses. I’ve been
taught that homosexuality and bisexuality is a sin. I’ve been taught that it’s
a choice. These are not matters that I wish to argue over and I respect
everyone’s opinion on them. When it comes to this mater I am normally quite. I
tend to keep my opinions that I think people will blow out of proportion to
myself, but there is one thing I want to say about this mater. No mater your
religion and no mater your beliefs on whether it’s a choice or not, it still
exists. It’s existed for a long time. And what is literature, my friends, if
not a mirror?
Many
symbols have been given to literature, but my favorite is the mirror. Think
about it for a moment. Literature, in any form, shows society. It shows
humanity. It shows the struggle of the Human Condition and the Human
Experience. It shows us who we are.
The
purpose of literature is to teach, to inform, to document, and to let people
know that they aren’t alone. If you think about it, every story ever written
–every news article, every pamphlet, every book, and every poem –is about
humanity. Yes, there are specific kinds of literature that target specific
subjects, such as a pamphlet promoting an event or a new business, but
literature in every form seeks to unite. It seeks to show humanity as a whole
and to teach us that there is help out there, that we’re not alone, that the
problems we face every day have been faced and beaten before by others who have
gone before us.
Since
humanity is the subject of all literature, and humanity is diverse, why then
should literature not be diverse? This, my fellow humans, is why I’ve decided
to write a bisexual character. I wish to portray humanity as it is. And to do
that I must be diverse in all things.
However, there are two last things I would
like to point out. The first being that I know that some of you who read this
will not like my ideas and will be completely against me writing this
character, but neither Scythe nor I care. What you must understand is that the
characters of a story are the not author. Yes, the story is part of us. Yes,
when you buy a book you are purchasing a piece of the author’s soul. But no,
the Characters –the shadows on its pages –are not mirrors of the author’s
personal life. I am not my characters, and they are not me. To use an analogy I
do try to stay away from just as God created man in His own image and man does
not always resemble their creator –does not always show or proclaim who their
creator is –so characters do not always resemble their authors. In fact, the
great play write, William Shakespeare, is a perfect example of this. Nowhere in
his works is it possible to point at a character and say, “That’s Shakespeare.
Right there. That’s him.”
The last thing I want to point out
before I conclude this little article –I guess that’s what it could be called
–is that I am a firm believer that every great library has a book in it to
offend everyone. Like I said before, one of the main purposes of literature is
to teach, and to do so some times is has to offend.
So am I sorry that I no longer have
all straight characters? No. Do I feel guilt at having a bisexual character? Do
I feel like I am sinning by writing him into existence? No, on both points. I
write what I feel I must. I write the stories I feel that should be told. If I
start to write something and get a sense of wrongness, I throw it out because
A) it either is really wrong to write about it or B) I need to solidify what I
personally feel about the subject matter before I embark on the journey of
writing it.
Now, I am not going to tell you my
personal feelings on this particular subject matter, for the only personal
feelings that mater here is the feeling that Scythe belongs in his story. That
his story is one that I feel compelled to write. It may not be my best story
and it may never be seen on the shelves of a Barnes and Nobel, but it is one I
will write. One that I will continue to post chapters of up on my DeviantART
site. Because I believe in diversity and believe that as a mirror literature
should be diverse. Just like there isn’t just one type of chocolate or one type
of coffee there isn’t just one type of person, and literature should reflect
that.
(Scythe's story can be found at: http://writingangel2010.deviantart.com/ Under the titles of: A Weight of a Prophecy and The Callidus Chronicles)
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