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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Let Us Eat Cake!

This summer I've thinking about running a lot, and actually doing it occasionally. A few weeks ago I was contemplating whether or not to head out for a jog and decided against it because it was a little too hot outside. Instead, I promptly drove straight to the grocery store and bought a bottle of wine and a cheesecake to bring home to my roommates. For no reason. It just sounded good. We ate it and had a good time, so there are no regrets, I just wonder if I couldn't have found some middle ground between, you know, intense exercise and consumption of the highest-calorie dessert I could think of.



As a follow up, last week Taylor and Janna spearheaded a roommate hangout time - actually it was the one and only time all 5 of us have ever intentionally gotten to hang out together the whole time we've lived here. Janna made a great little cake and we watched Taylor's favorite childhood movie, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Yay for fun girl time and total denial of wedding-planning stress!





Monday, July 28, 2008

I *Heart* Wendell Berry

The always-witty, often-informative Zoomtard recently clued me in to a new short story by Wendell Berry - one of my all-time favorite authors in the universe, ever.

The first book of his that I read was Jayber Crow, and it changed my life. Since then I've read two more novels and a collection of essays by Berry, and my admiration has only grown.

So, yeah, check him out.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Those Crazy Artsy Types

My friend Kesa and I go way back. We've both experienced homeschooling and the crazy ballet world, and we even lived in the Deep-ish South in adjoining states at one point. Now she lives in NYC, dancing and working for a non-profit and being hip and cultured, while I work for corporate (faux-Chinese-) America. Common denominator: we both sweat a lot and are poor.

Anyway, the New York Times recently did a little video segment about the place where she works. It's fun to watch, and makes me proud of her and also makes me miss dancing.

Monday, July 21, 2008

At the End of the Day

Have three weeks passed already since the last post? I very much feel like I am in a time warp.

On Friday night we went to see a production of Les Miserables. One of Jesse's old high school friends was in it, and I was glad to go, but not expecting anything spectacular. I was wrong. It was stunning - a very high quality performance of an already wonderful story and collection of songs. I want to go again, and want all of you to, too. But the run is over. Sorry. If you ever have a chance to see it somewhere else, do.

On Saturday evening Jesse was playing in a re-enactment/1860's-style baseball game at Fort Vancouver. Dressed up in that crazy costume he looked like a total nerd - a very cute nerd, though.

Also on Saturday we finally got our new apartment!! We've been in the process of going through paperwork and procedures for well over a month and it is quite a relief to know we won't be homeless. Now we just have to start moving stuff over there.

Clearly, there are many good and fun things making the time go quickly. There is also work for me, and school for Jesse, and, of course, wedding planning is completely devouring my life. Some of it takes time, yes, but it's really more the mindset that is getting to me. The fact that there are so many little details and questions and logistics that come to mind at inopportune times (often while I'm working or on the bus or in bed) and hang there, threatening to tear my sanity apart. Lots of people have graciously offered to help, which I very much appreciate. I just feel ill-equipped to run the whole thing.

Some sample questions:

-Should I do my hair myself for the wedding, or make an appointment?
-Why are hair appointments so expensive, is there anywhere cheaper?
-Why doesn't my dress fit anymore? What should I do about it?
-Do I have cancer?
-When will I have time to pick up my apartment keys?
-Should the groomsmen wear shoes or flip-flops?
-Will the sound system work?
-What songs should be in the ceremony?
-Paper plates or china?
-How many of what kind of flowers are we getting, and from where?
-Did I remember to put deodorant on this morning?
-Are we leaving the ceremony via car or boat?
-Will the cupcake/sound system/music guy really be able to do all that? Does he know what day to be in what city, and does that still work for him?
-What if people get food poisoning?
-Is attendance really going to be 85-90% of those invited?
-How long will it be before my diet of toast, fried rice, and cookies begins to permanently affect my health?
-Why does my roommate have MS?
-Why am I so lucky?
-How am I supposed to respond to so many people doing so much for me and making me feel so loved all at once?

When taken separately, most of these aren't particularly difficult. It's just the swarming tornado of them that hovers over me as I try to fall asleep that becomes a problem. But certain things and certain people have repeatedly helped me to regain my perspective, and get at least brief glimpses of some form of the 'big picture'.

Maybe that's part of the problem, though: all the little inane details really are connected to something bigger - something significant, momentous, worth being troubled over. The questions about flowers and ties and programs and rented folding chairs only partially camouflage the underlying questions. The ones about making promises to last forever when you don't know what forever might look like. The ones about home and identity and name changes and new families. The ones about purpose and direction and duty and fate. The ones that admit, "I am receiving the thing and entering into the place that I have wanted perhaps more than anything else in this life, but I don't know the first thing about what that means."

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

46 Days

Well, the month of June came and went. It was mostly lovely, as I recall. Life has kept me extra busy lately between wedding planning (a month and a half to go!) and working a lot. It's so easy to type out words and phrases, to inform people: "we're getting married" "I work at a Chinese restaurant downtown" "it was over 100 degrees outside on Saturday" "I donated blood and didn't pass out". Simple things and momentous changes alike can be communicated in just a few seconds.

What's more difficult to share, though, is reality. The depth and subtler characteristics of different experiences. I miss writing - publicly, like on this blog, and more privately, to friends or just myself. Life has been so full and so rich recently, and writing tends to help the important things sink in a little more.

There has been so much to adjust to, so much to learn, so much to enjoy:
  • Preparing for marriage is challenging, fun, ludicrous, mysterious, commonplace, and impossible.
  • Work is both exactly what I need and the bane of my existence, by turns.
  • The church I've been going to down here is wonderful -I really love it- but I also feel like I've been in a spiritual coma for a long long time and am just starting to come out of it.

I could take any one of those topics and write or talk or sit and meditate for days, but instead the hours and minutes keep skipping by and I am left to wake up in the morning wondering how it got to be July already.

Here is one of literally about 3 existing pictures of Jesse and I together, taken at our friends' wedding a few weeks ago: