readingredhead: (Stars)
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The earliest recurring dream I remember is from when I was pretty young -- maybe starting as early as first grade. In it, I followed a cat through a city that looked like it belonged in Spain or on the Mediterranean somewhere, all whitewashed stonework and mosaics and warm red tiles. Anyway, I followed the cat into a house, because the door was left open, and up some flights of stairs onto a balcony, where I arrived just in time to see the cat jump off the edge. Turning around, I was faced by an angry old lady, who yelled, "What did you do to my cat?!" before shoving me off the balcony. I fell until I woke up.

I also had another recurring dream in which my elementary school had been turned into a military base for some kind of illegal operation, and it was up to me and some of my childhood friends to infiltrate the base and take it out.

Rebecca knows that I have far too many interesting and generally vivid dreams...although hers are pretty good too (and may be resonsible for infecting mine with great quantities of Buffy).

In other news, I have been doing nothing. Almost literally. I've been reading a lot, but I'm realizing that what I'm reading is either a) intended for people much younger than I am (actually or just maturity-wise), b) some form of trashy romance, c) fanfiction, or d) a combination of all of the above. There's a list of books on my door that I should really be reading -- books by authors like Dostoevsky and Bronte (all three of them) and Austen and Chabon and LeGuin and Shelley -- and instead I'm reading paperback romances.

Oh well. It could be worse -- I could be reading literary fiction. *shudders*

:)
readingredhead: (Rain)
I've decided I'm going to keep writing the NaNoWriMo novel. Not edit or revise--just keep writing, with another word count goal and another deadline. 150,000 words by the end of January. It's my new year's resolution. I'm starting now and taking it as well as I can. But since there's not the weight of 100,000 other people doing this at the same time I am, I'm gonna need some help. So here it is: pester me, poke me, ask me how it's going, remind me I need to be doing it. This is the first time I'm going to try something like this and I'm a little worried but also a little excited. It's something I need to do, and so I'll do it.

Hopefully, it all turns out well. Hopefully, I can make it to the end of the story. And then, hopefully, after it's over, there will be enough of it for me to be forced to make it better, make it actually good.

And maybe this won't work out at all like I expect it to, but even then...at least I made the attempt.

Please, don't let me break this promise to myself. Don't let me make excuses. I know I need to do this if I ever want to see this story in print, and right now I want that more than I want a whole lot of things that I should want a whole lot.

43 days from now I might actually have a finished novel in my hands.
readingredhead: (Stars)

I’m rather annoyingly bored.

 

One would think that something like this would be nigh on impossible, considering that I’m currently sitting in London, listening to cars going by and what I think is thunder out of the open window.  Maybe bored isn’t quite the right word.  But I feel like this time around, I haven’t been nearly as productive as before.  The last time I spent a week in London, I used it to produce a short story, one of my favorite ones I’ve written.  I wanted to use this time on vacation in order to start writing again, but I just haven’t been able to stick to a single idea that I want to develop.  Because there really isn’t a single idea that I want to write on right now.  I keep jumping from plot to plot with little motivation to make any headway with any of them.

 

And for some of the time here I’ve been reading good books and doing good things (like seeing a Shakespeare play in front row seats for under $10), and when I’m doing those things I’m not that bored.  But come on—it’s Friday the 13th and nothing interesting has happened yet.

 

And I’m going to be awake all hours of the night because I took a nap earlier today because I had nothing better to do than sleep!

 

(And I realize I’m ridiculous because I’m complaining while I’m in London.  I hate myself even more for that.)

 

I think the problem is that I need deadlines, and real incentive to meet them, in order to really go places with my writing.  I also occasionally need prompts, though in some cases deadlines spur me to continue or finish things that I’ve already thought up for other purposes.  That’s why I like NaNoWriMo, and writing for Julie.  I’m given a specific amount of time in which to do things, and a schedule to keep to (in the case of NaNo), and that’s comforting for me.  Which is interesting, because I originally started doing NaNo to move outside of my comfort zone (because my other discomfort comes from writing anything that’s not polished the first time around).

 

Another problem is that I see editing as work.  I don’t see it as nearly as joyful as the writing process.  What I think I need to realize is that rewriting is just as important as writing.  I think I need to remove the word “editing” from my vocabulary and replace it with “rewriting”—because it emphasizes the fact that it’s the writing that’s important.

 

For instance, I’ve been trying to edit—ahem, I mean, rewriteKes Running, the most recent November Novel, for some time.  I keep getting bored, or skipping ahead to the good parts.  I really need to take the time to notice which parts I’m skipping—because those are the ones that ought to be deleted from the final draft!  More than that...I feel that Kes’s story really needs to be finalized before I go to college.  It’s really a product of my pre-college anxieties, and I think it would sound false if I finished it at a much later date.  Hell, it’s about a girl who runs away because she doesn’t get into the college she wants to go to!  I don’t think I can honestly write that as a college student and make it sincere.  I don’t know for how long I’ll be able to draw upon those reserves of dejection that the initial rejections made me feel.  I should tap them while I still can.

 

(And yes, I realize I’m manipulating my own emotions in order to write.  It’s really the way to make it sound the most real.  And it doesn’t hurt all that much any more...)

 

Another issue I have with writing that I really need to fix is my problem with plotting.  Simply said, I cannot plot out an entire story before I start writing it.  Once I start writing it, I get bored with it because I haven’t plotted it.  See the dilemma?  Really, I ought to just be harsher with myself about plotting things out, but it seems like every time I try that, something comes up that I just have to write, and the voice in the back of my head assures me that I’ll be able to fit it into my plot outline at a later date...  I honestly think I have about six unfinished plot outlines for Azuria (because before I ever had time to finish one outline, I re-thought the story and so that plot actually changed).

 

Then there’s the problem that, while I do write for fun (or, more accurately, while I do enjoy writing), I also want to be published, and it’s really hard to stop thinking about that when I’m writing.  So I get into arguments with myself about whether or not something is “publishable.”  Kes Running would certainly be publishable by DAW (my publisher of choice) by the time I finish with it.  But Azuria, which has been my pet project before I even knew the girl who named Kes, was started when I was much younger and therefore the characters are much younger.  In fact, it was intended as young adult fiction.  DAW doesn’t publish young adult fiction.  Now, it wouldn’t be hard for me to remake Azuria so that the characters were a bit older and things were a bit more, well, adult.  But part of me wonders if I should have to do this.  Part of me wonders how true I ought to stay to my initial vision of the story.

 

And then there are the random short stories I write that don’t seem to fit anywhere.  They’re not easy to classify.  The ones that I’ve written for Julie have managed to fit into their required categories, but the stuff I write for fun frequently defies categorization.  The closest term I’ve coined is speculative fiction, but even that doesn’t cover everything—one of my favorite stories is about a Parisian college student who pays tuition by working late nights in a bar!  And the political romance I want to write certainly doesn’t fit the mold most people place me in. 

 

(I hate that, by the way.  I hate how, when my dad first read the aforementioned story involving the Parisian college student, he was so surprised that I had written it and obviously enjoyed it much more than anything I’ve written since.  I hate how mom assumes that I only write and read sci-fi.  I hate how Corinne snubs me for not reading “literature.”  I think the load of it is bullshit.)

 

And (I notice I start a lot of my sentences with “and”) the one story I might possibly want to plot out thoroughly before I write is starting to seem not so publishable.  Really, on the surface it seems very stereotypical, in the way a bad romance novel is stereotypical.  It’s really easy for me to describe it, but the description I most frequently give makes me realize just how shitty it sounds.  And I know that when I write it, it’ll be ten times better, but I can’t help but thinking that somewhere along the line, an editor will read it and say, “What the crap?  It’s just Jane Eyre with werewolves!”

 

At which point the only thing I’d be able to do to correct the editor would be to mention that there’s only one werewolf, and there’s a bit of Pride and Prejudice, too, if you look for it.

 

See what I mean about it sounding shitty?

 

The story behind this story actually starts around sophomore year, wherein a few great things happened in quick succession: I read Cyrano de Bergerac, Austin got me into musical theater, and the movie of “The Phantom of the Opera” came out.  The result of this was an epiphany of sorts that Cyrano, Phantom, and the other stories like them were all just twisted versions of the old tale of Beauty and the Beast (there was also an epiphany relating to the fact that all of these stories were of French origin, but we’ll get back to that later).  Project Gutenberg being the godsend that it is, it was only a short while before I had the e-text of the original Beauty and the Beast in front of me and had read that, too.  I began to rather idolize that particular plot—the idea that a person could see past the surface and grow to love another for something beyond appearances, the idea that a relationship of sorts between two people could develop the better qualities in both parties.  Add to this that Belle was always my favorite Disney Princess (because she was the only brunette and because she liked books almost as much as me) and it’s understandable that I became rather obsessed.  What was my response to such an obsession?  A rather logical one, actually.  I decided I would attempt my own rewriting of the classic tale.  But how, I wondered, would I keep it interesting?

 

The answer came to me in a single word while sitting in MUN during junior year.  And the word was werewolves.

 

Now, I’m not the type who’s particularly fond of this specific portion of supernatural lore.  Not that I have anything against werewolves—in fact, one of my favorite fictional characters happens to be one—but I don’t really have anything for them, either.  Which was why, initially, the idea was an odd one.  Surely, werewolves were something that other people wrote about.  But the idea was just such a good one.  It allowed my “beast” character to actually be a beast, but only for a small portion of each month, so that his human side could also be explored.  Hell, he could even hide his lycanthropy from my “beauty” for a while, if he wanted.  Let people think he just had attitude problems.  And the fact that he could hide his condition meant that I could make the story seem rather realistic from the start.  When I first thought up this idea, I cackled to myself at the look on my readers’ faces when they realized what I’d done.

 

Now, I’m starting to wonder if this is the best of ideas, and I’m wondering this for the stupidest of reasons, and that stupidest of reasons is: how do you write a back cover synopsis for a story that essentially hinges upon something that doesn’t get revealed until halfway through?  It’s no fun if the readers know that he’s a werewolf from the start, but if there’s nothing special about him, who’s going to read it to begin with?

 

Stupid reason, I know.  But nonetheless, I continue to stumble over it.  (You know what I want for Christmas?  A way to talk myself out of stupid reasons for not writing.  Also, the X-Files movie on DVD, but that’s for another day.)

 

And it bugs me, because I actually like the idea for the story.  I actually have a plot for it (almost) because I’m tentatively stitching together one that follows the typical hero’s journey.  Once I’ve laid that down as a skeleton, I plan on fleshing it out with more of the details that can add pacing to things...and the strangest part is, for possibly the first time, I’m actually looking forward to this part.  I usually hate planning.  But part of me thinks that, this time around, the planning could be fun.  At the very least, it could be interesting.  One of the things I like about this story is that it’s giving me a chance to pay homage to some of my favorite stories.  Beauty and the Beast, obviously, but also Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice, from which I’ll be pulling ideas about the interactions between my two principal characters.  Stop for a second and picture someone who combines the moodiness and quick temper of Mr. Rochester with the pride and arrogance of Mr. Darcy.  Then, imagine him hiring as a servant someone with Jane’s quiet determination and Elizabeth’s curiosity.  Throw in the fact that everyone in the village is sure the man is cursed, so he’s had barely any human contact...and I think things start to get rather interesting.

 

Really, I just ought to write this.  I ought to stop worrying and write this.  Or at least, I ought to stop worrying and plan this.

 

But at least writing about it incessantly has helped me to think it out a bit more.  Usually when I complain about myself, I’m not smart enough to get it in writing.  Lucky for me, this time I managed to.  Hopefully it helps me out in the future.

 

Until then, I think I’m going to read, because although my fingers are warmed up by the typing, my lap is overheated by the laptop’s fan and I’m in a good book anyway, so there.

readingredhead: (Default)

In a few minutes, I leave to go to school and take the IB English test.

I didn't get as much sleep as I should have.  I went to bed a little late thanks to the X-Files and (Shannen, you could probably guess this) fanfiction.  Then I woke up from a dream about North Koreans taking over MVHS with the support of NHS about half an hour before my alarm was supposed to go off.  Yet for some reason, I feel quite awake and alive today.  I feel like I can face this test head-on and come out the winner.

But really, I don't want to beat the writing -- I want to work with it and produce something beautiful.  Right now, swelling with overconfidence, I believe I can.

readingredhead: (Stranger)
So I got into Berkeley.  I went up to LA today for the interview for the Regent's/Chancellor's Scholarship and the lady who signed me in shook my hand and said, "I want to be the first person to congratulate you on your acceptance to this school."  Dad was there with me and he was freaking out, because Berkeley's his Alma Mater and I'm sure he'd like to see me go there. 

But (and I feel like an unappreciative freak for saying this) I wasn't freaking out.  In a way, I'd been expecting it.  "So I'm into Berkeley," I've been thinking.  "So what?"  True, I'd like to go there; true, out of the colleges that have accepted me at the moment, it's undoubtedly the one I'm going to (did I mention I also got into Santa Barbara?).  But I'm not excited.  I don't feel happy for myself.  I don't feel any different than I did before I knew for sure that I'd been accepted.  It's not a big deal.

And I think it's because of my expectations.  I've set them so high...when I set them I didn't think they were impossible.  When I fell in love with Stanford, I didn't realize it was the one thing I wanted that I wouldn't get.  But regardless of how well I set my expectations, they're set, and I'm realizing that nothing short of being accepted to Stanford will make me happy.  I know universities other than Stanford will make me happy -- Berkeley's a good example of that -- but the finding out, the "oh my god I got in" moment, will only happen if I get into Stanford.  

If
.  I hate that word.  It means there's something I don't know.  In a way it's possibilities -- but not just for good.  Bad stuff can happen to an "if," not just good stuff.  "If" might mean anything.  And a lot of "anything" sucks.  

I hate it that I can't feel proud of my own accomplishments.  In a way, though, it's why I'm here.  I'm always trying to do something better, no matter what it is.  When I accomplish one thing, I'm already looking ahead to the next.  That's how I am in writing, certainly -- I have moments where I allow myself to feel excited, but also sometimes I just get right on working with the next project, the next set of characters and turns of phrase.  It's what's gotten me this far: my ability to keep reaching outward and outward, to set my standards higher and higher.  Which is why it feels so shitty when I can't reach them, or I'm not sure if I've reached them, or I should have reached them but someone on the outside says I haven't, except for some stupid reason or another, what they have to say matters more than what I know.  I hate that.

I think, though, once again, that it's too much a part of me to get rid of.  I've always been about impossible dreams.  I see myself most clearly in the third-grader who came home from school one day to tell mommy and daddy that she'd be a published writer when she grew up; in the fifth-grader who began the creation of an entire fantasy world from scratch; in the seventh-grader who picked up those fifth-grade characters and worlds and thought she could resurrect them and turn them into something worthwhile; in the ninth-grader who re-resurrected the same story and decided she would have it written and published before she graduated high school.  I see myself most clearly in these shadow dreams, goals I once had.  In writing, I've been able to compromise with myself -- I've been able to talk myself out of some of my more ridiculous goals, which has made the intermediary milestones seem more important.  But I don't think I've been able to do that with college, because I'm not excited about Berkeley, and I don't think I will be unless (until?) it's the last choice I have left.
readingredhead: (Mother)
I should be doing my math homework, or my chemistry homework. I should be making headway on one of the long-term assignments littering my calendar. I should be reviewing what I read last week in Road to War so that I don't completely fail the quiz we'll have tomorrow. I should, I should, I should.

But I'm not. This seems to happen to me a lot. I sit around thinking about what I should be doing, even when doing those things won't happen (and wouldn't necessarily be helpful if it did). I know my own limits and abilities; I know how much I can get away with. Maybe I should start trusting my own self-knowledge?

I'd really like to sit back with some knitting and watch more West Wing. And I think that might actually be what I do. It's amazing how sometimes you do what you want without thinking about what you should do. That's the feeling you should have for your entire life.

Random Recollection #1: My dreams last night

I had one really consistent dream that went a lot of places. I saved Sadie from a car accident, out-ran Rob for something-or-other, and came face to face with Julie Czerneda. (I think Diane Duane might've been there too, and she and Julie might've been arguing over something?) Anyway, I was talking to my dad about why I didn't want to be published by Random House, because they would market a story of mine as a kid's book when it's obviously not. Dad mentioned something about Random House publishing Eragon (which I don't know if they did, but I wouldn't be surprised, I have an odd memory for these things).  Anyway, Julie walked in on me and Dad when I was explaining this to him, and saying that I'd rather be published by DAW.  For some reason when Julie heard me talking about this she felt like I was being really arrogant (which maybe I was, but only because I only thought Dad could hear me).  And then I don't know what happened.  Take that, Freud.

Random Recollection #2: My phone

I have a new phone as of today.  He's sleek and black and in need of a good name.  Corinne says he's emo and needs an emo name.  For some reason I'm thinking of Tom or Carl (yes, there is a Young Wizards theme to my thoughts).  I'm thinking he needs a literary name, because all of my tech toys end up with them sooner or later.  But he strikes me as belonging to popular literature, not anything classical.  He's pretty nifty, though.  (And I've still got the same number, though nowadays no one loses their numbers when they change phones.)

Random Recollection #3: Berkeley interview?

I showed up a week early.  That's a nice way of putting it.  I think that's the phrase I'll use from now on.

Random Recollection #4: I'd like some politics

They should make more good political dramas -- books, movies, television, real life, I don't care.  I swear it's Rick's fault, but the political scene seems so dramatic to begin with, and in a way it's enticing.  I used to be afraid of the fact that I felt like I could be a politician.  Slowly but surely this fear's going away.

Random Recollection #5: Global warming

Melissa Etheridge's song from An Inconvenient Truth is really cool, and you should all listen to it.  When she performed it at the Oscars it was really neat because they had a screen in the background with all these facts on global warming, how to reduce your carbon emissions, etc.  The last phrase on the screen was "When you pray, move your feet."  I like the call to action -- don't just wish for things, make them happen.  It's always been a motto of mine, and I'm glad to see it reflected.

Random Recollection #6: And the Oscar goes to...

I'd like to win an Oscar, I think.  How this shall be accomplished remains to be seen, but I think it would be great fun. 

...and that's kinda what my life's been like lately.  Yeah.  Well, I have to wake up again tomorrow.  That's kind of annoying, but I know I'll handle it; I always do.
readingredhead: (Default)
I had a restless night full of half-dreams and anticipations. I kept waking up with the feeling that there was something I desperately needed to do but that I had no clue how to approach. The dream arc followed a story wherein I was on vacation but we got flooded in wherever we were and I couldn't make it back home in time for an important MUN conference. I stressed out so much trying to make it in time for that conference, counting the passing minutes and calculating how late I was. At one point Mr. Krucli was there and he was really nice -- he offered to print something for me that I needed printed, I think -- but then he disappeared before I could get the paper he'd printed from him. Then I finally showed up at the conference and found out that my codelegate had decided not to go. But with all of this, I wouldn't allow myself to just give up.

The odd thing was that this dream seemed to continue even when I woke up and fell back to sleep (which I did a lot of times). And when I was lingering on the edge of sleep, just about to wake up, I had this strong fear of statistics class, which I don't even take.

This is the second dream in recent memory that's involved a flood, though the first flood dream was more Biblical in nature and also potentially involved Mount Sinai.

When I woke up finally to my alarm ringing (or rather, when my alarm told me it was all right to get out of bed and just stop trying -- I wasn't actually asleep for most of the night), I felt hollow. Like my gut was profoundly empty. Not the empty feeling of hunger, but of emptiness -- I can't really explain it better than that. It went away -- most of the hard parts of last night went away eventually -- but I know I'll be falling asleep in school today.

As usual, my life is juxtaposed oddities: I'm really happy because I did some more research and discovered that I can viably write my Spanish internal assessment on Cuban science fiction. That makes me feel better about myself. And I'm going out tonight with friends -- that certainly makes me feel better about myself. So I guess I'm not too bad -- I guess, as usual, I'll be okay.
readingredhead: (Different)
Ever typed "the meaning of life" into an internet browser in the middle of your second year calculus class because you were too damn fidgety to do anything else productive with your life?

<http://users.aristotle.net/~diogenes/meaning1.htm>

Right now the thing I want most in the world is a large room with white walls, and a whole pack of multicolored Sharpies so I could write on them. As it is, the walls of my room are too bare, and I want to cover them with my words and thoughts and not have to worry about repainting. If I lived on my own, I would go crazy and write all over the walls, and then just repaint them later.
readingredhead: (Default)
I want to do something amazing.

EDIT: I want to be inspired.
readingredhead: (Earth)
I was searching through my word documents for something else entirely when I came across a list that had been typed up for my Success Book in eighth grade health (please tell me some of you remember those?). This was a list of thirty dreams I had for the future. Comparing the ones from then (around the end of eighth grade) and now, some things have changed...but others haven't.

THEN:
1. Publish a science fiction or fantasy novel
2. Learn to speak Latin
3. Meet J.K. Rowling
4. Play on my high school varsity soccer team
5. Have my writing complimented by Anne McCaffrey
6. Be high school valedictorian
7. Invent water-repellant paper
8. Invent electromagnetic hover cars
9. Visit the moon
10. Become a middle school teacher
11. Learn how to skateboard
12. Improve my surfing skills
13. Go snowboarding
14. Go scuba diving with my best friend in Hawaii
15. Attend UC Berkley
16. Win a Nobel Prize in poetry
17. Live in a house near the beach
18. See the pyramids of Giza in Egypt
19. Float in the Dead Sea
20. Understand hyperbolic geometry
21. Never break a bone
22. Co-author a book with my best friend
23. Visit Greece
24. Create a theorem in Euclidean geometry stating that in a proof, whatever comes after “Prove” is true
25. Have my own neighborhood library
26. See the Olympic Games
27. Start a book club with my friend
28. Invent a molecular acceleration transport device (teleporter)
29. Own a jet ski
30. Be positively remembered after I die for making a significant change in the world

NOW:
1. Publish a novel
2. Publish my short story "The Free Way"
3. Publish my short story "Fire and Ice" in some form
4. Publish a novel of Azuria
5. Win a Nobel Prize
6. Meet Julie E. Czerneda
7. Attend Stanford University
8. Work for NASA
9. Be involved with the creation and production of a musical
10. Go to Russia
11. Go to Venice for Carnival
12. Go to the moon
13. Study astronomy & astrophysics
14. Study string theory
15. Study abroad in London
16. Speak at my high school graduation
17. Have at least 13 gavels by the time I graduate
18. Go backpacking somewhere I've never been before
19. Be approached by J. K. Rowling asking me to sign a book for her daughter
20. Win NaNoWriMo a record number of times in a row
21. Work with the United Nations to campaign for peace
22. Never lose touch with all of my good friends
23. Never forget how to smile
24. Become a household name
25. Save the rainforests
26. Save the oceans
27. Save the atmosphere
28. Save our souls
29. Save the world
30. Be positively remembered after I die for changing the world

I pose a question to all of you out there in cyberspace: what does your list look like?
readingredhead: (Milo)
So I've done this before--the update in a minute thing--and I actually sort of like it becaue it forces me to get stuff out quickly.

I went to Disneyland yesterday and my sister's friend had Aladdin sign her pants, which was pretty cool. I had a good time.

MUN is not FUN at the moment, but it's getting to be resolved and I had a nice long talk with Tony that made me feel really good.

School starts in less than a week and I'm having nightmares about it but they're not too bad.

A Dream

Jul. 7th, 2006 12:27 pm
readingredhead: (Stranger)
I'm back at home, and it's the fifteenth of July. I look at my watch, just to check and make sure -- yes, I'm right, it's the fifteenth. But maybe that doesn't count as the "middle" of July, exactly -- July has thirty-one days, so maybe at the middle of the night tonight the call will come. But that would even be later for her, since she's in Ontario and a few time zones ahead...

My mind wanders, waiting, wondering, wanting nothing more than the interruption of the telephone to confirm -- what is is? A dream? A miracle?

Or maybe a nightmare. Maybe it won't be what I've always wanted. A call, a voice on the other end. Sorry, it was a really good first try, but we had to be picky, we could only accept so much. You're really talented, though, try again next time! And then the call's over and my dreams are over with it, no, not the way I wanted it to go at all. Maybe I really shouldn't be waiting for the phone to ring.

Maybe it would be better if I held this vigil in front of the computer, with my inbox open, waiting for the letter, because do I really expect a call? I mean, they asked for the phone number...but am I that important?

Yes, I am, to me, but to others it remains a mystery.

So I get up from the couch, sigh, turn on the computer at my desk, sit down in the chair that I have missed all these weeks away, and wait for the opening sequence, hear the hard drive begin to whir --

-- only to be interrupted by the dulcet tone of the telephone beside me, ringing.
readingredhead: (Stranger)
Sometimes I wish that my life was more interesting.

Then, I get a glimpse of what "interesting" looks like and I realize that maybe I like being a little more ordinary.

Not that there's anything too normal about me; I just have high expectations when it comes to "interesting."

(The problem, really, is that I tend to forget that "interesting" to someone on the outside can mean "painful" to someone on the inside.)

This is just a thought.
readingredhead: (Different)
Minute One:

Last night all of my dreams were about amazing adventures and quests and saving the world. I can't remeber exactly what they were about but I remmber that sense of importance and that I was able to do something, make things better than they were, fix the world that so often seems to be a little broken. That was a dream. I wish that it was real life too, sometimes.

Minute Two:

Why can't dreams be real? Then again some things we dream are not so great so I guess I don't want all my dreams to be real, but there are a few that I like -- the ones where I'm successful and happy and I have time to be myself and not worry about being anythnig else, like a historian or a good daughter or a friend to those in need. It's not that I don't want to be all of those things, it's just that those things take time and there's still that I have to be a student and all of that.

Minute Three:

And it annoys me that I have so little time to just sit down at my computer and type and see how much I can celar out of my head in short amounts of time because that's the only way for me to regain a little bit of what others like to call sanity but is really more a sense of self. I like to know who I am and have time to just be that but sometimes it doesn't work, the keys aren't right, my fingers type the wrong way and I just can't because I have no other choice.
readingredhead: (Stranger)
Scream


Shadows walk the roads today, the shadows where people were, but are no longer the world is filled with such empty places,

But better shadow than hole, holes aren't there, the blinding blank nothing of their presence stuns shocks awakens makes nothing out of nothing for sake of no one forsaking everyone,

In this dance of not-ness, the shadows wander combine attach form groups so the shadow grows, widens, connects to all other shadows through a moment-life of silence

Which echoes through the streets, pounds past the lynchings and the beatings and through the mad dark streets of backcity sound and laughter somewhere,

Past the righteous world passing judgment like the Son of God itself, but out of form, in the wrong costume the heavenly power rots and decays, there is nothing left for the televangelists to kill,

So dead is a world where only shadows speak, and only speak through the sound of empty, echoing beating loudly through the white noise importance with lucid form, form of light, star against the night,

Coming out at the end of the railroad tunnel overpass where the weeds grew and the light dimmed and the people were lost to the overgrowth of a history inaccepting of their very existence, then what can be done, what will be attempted,

What are you doing here, trying to make a difference, they want to know, what can you do, you're only one and one and only, but they don't see the shadows that follow me, I say, and help me in my cause, and whisper silently into the night,

Telling how they must not be lost lonely gone away forgotten...

......................................................


I wrote that in third period today, reminiscing about our Day of Silence. I think that today was a very powerful experience for a lot of people, myself included. It is so heartening to see that there are people who support tolerance and are willing to fight for it. The number against us does not matter nearly as much as the number for us.

This poem is slightly patterned after Allen Ginsberg's "Howl," which I read for the first time last night. Something about the raw emotion of it got to me, and this is my response, in poetic form.

Later, I'll be typing up what was said by other participants on this day -- important conversations, things that mattered, things they learned and why they even participated in the first place. Tony and I might end up creating a book of the things that happened today, and trying to get it noticed. Mr. Vargish always quotes from Hamlet, saying "The play's the thing to prick the conscience of the king." Well, maybe the play for this cause still needs to be written, and maybe it can be written by us.

If any of you who are reading this participated and want to write up a narrative about your day -- even just a part of it -- let me know, and by all means, write it. At the very least, we can put together some sort of book for ourselves to remember this day by. Beyond that, who knows, but I'll admit that I think there would me nothing more brilliant than creating a formidable manuscript out of first-hand accounts from participants and getting it published. Call me optimistic, but I think it can be done. No matter how we put it together, I'm thinking we should call it "A Diary of Silence: One Day, Many Stories." I just really like the way that sounds. Anyone interested in preserving the events of this day, or with any ideas on the matter -- I want to know what you think! This is a pet project that just appeared into my head, I don't know if it's even going to happen, it all depends on the sort of response I get. But I think it would work, marvelously so, with the right sort of backing...

One Minute

Mar. 16th, 2006 07:57 pm
readingredhead: (Different)
I think that at some point in my life I'd like to be a CIA agent, or maybe work with the FBI, just so that I can get some adventure in, do something interesting, be a spy or an undercover agent. Then my life would be really interesting. Not that it's not interesting now, but it would be more importantly interesting if I was doing one of the aforementioned things, and above all I want for my life to have importance. If I can accomplish such importance without being a spy I guess I'm fine.
readingredhead: (Default)
Hm. I had a dream last night. I had a lot of dreams last night, actually, but I just remembered this particular one because in it, I had abs. (This is how I know it was a dream.)

Also I'm pretty sure that at least one of my dreams last night involved Mr. Vargish.

In one of my dreams, I was stranded on an island for some odd reason with a bunch of people I knew. We had to go from island to island to try and make our way back to where we'd started from. (I think we'd gotten lost or something, or maybe shipwrecked.) The only image I have left from that dream is one of me and my sister hauling ourselves up onto a dock at the place where we'd originally been before getting lost, and proclaiming to everyone that we'd made it home. There were lots of sailboats in the water near the dock, and the dock was raised up out of the water a bit, so that it was hard for me to get the leverage with just my upper body to pull myself out. It was made of wood and it scraped at my stomach (I was wearing a bathing suit). When we got back safe, I don't think anyone had known we were gone.

Then there was another one that had Rick in it, but that's all that I remember about it.

I don't know why I'm writing this in here, I just feel like it's a good idea somehow.

I don't know why I had so many dreams last night. I remember at least three distinct series of dreams, but I can't remember more about them than that.

(Then again, I guess it makes sense that I dreamed so much, since I was asleep for about eleven hours.)

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