Showing posts with label Thoughts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thoughts. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

On Greatest Fears and Knowing Where You Are

When I was younger, perhaps eleven or twelve years old, I was very lonely.

I remember one night I was over at someone's house after the sun had gone down. There was a lingering pinkness showing through the trees in the west, but the stars were already coming out above me. I was lying on my back on their trampoline, at a weird angle to avoid the hole in it. I could hear the other kids screeching off somewhere in the woods, yelling directions as they tried to catch an armadillo.

The stars were so clear that night. I remember seeing Cygnus the Swan almost directly overhead. My heart was aching like it was being squeezed by a great, iron-clad fist, and more than anything I wanted someone, anyone, even an adult, to come out and just lie there next to me on that trampoline. I had been alone all afternoon. I had watched the sun go down from someone else's kitchen window while their parents weren't home and they themselves ran wild at a faster pace than I could manage.

I was whispering to the sky, because I was a weird kid who believed it would hear me. I don't even remember what I said, but it was pathetic and probably really sappy and embarrassing. But I was talking to a bunch of gas-balls millions of miles away and finding a very small and uncomforting comfort in the romanticism of it.

I never really got over my loneliness.

It's my greatest fear, you know. Like Fezzik, my idea of hell is being alone for ever. I don't need to speak, I don't need to move. I can live in a box the size of a coffin for all eternity, as long as I have someone crammed into that box with me. I used to wonder why Satan never attacked me with demons like he did my friends. I know now that it was because he knew it was worse for me without them.

It's gotten better. I have friends now, close friends that are brave and true and better to me than I could ever be to them. One friend in particular; small and sweet and with a mouth that speaks of love and hope and courage. If the coffin gets too small all I have to do is cry out and someone will crawl in to spend the night with me.

But sometimes the coffin's too small for them to fit, and then the dark reaches out with cold fingers and my lungs no longer breathe; then my brain short circuits and all of a sudden I'm in a white room at midnight, and no one sees me and no one knows me and I'm not sure I even know myself anymore.

And sometimes that white room turns into a hallway, twisting and branching and dipping deeper and deeper underground with each step I take. And the further I go the more I forget about how I got here in the first place; the more I forget about who I am.

I wonder how often that happens in real life. How many times does your average person stop in the middle of their work because suddenly they don't know where they are? How often do they see white and have to shake their head and reach for the nearest bit of color?

* * * * *

I wrote this post well over a year and a half ago, but for reasons that are probably obvious, I never published it. How badly I wanted to be heard and pitied for problems I could have just taken to the Lord! My heart was aching for so much more than I had, despite my having everything I needed within my grasp. 

What I said in the 7th paragraph is true - it's gotten better.  

God has worked in my life in amazing ways. I still get lonely sometimes. But no coffin is too small for my Lord, and with a breath He can fill my white rooms with sound and color and a Lifeblood. I don't have to wonder where I am when I'm in His arms. 

Being lonely is no longer my greatest fear. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Pieces of Today, Aug. 31st 2016

#1. Grandma's house! Food! Movies! Conspiracy shows on the History Channel!

#2. Provolone cheese.

#3. Chipped toenail polish.

#4. Phineas and Ferb.

#5. Reese's-flavored cereal.

#6. Grass-pulling.

#7. A bright blue chair.

#8. Sunlight through the window blinds.

#9. (Your hands can heal, your hands can bruise.) 

#10. An adult coloring book and it's surprising effectiveness.


Friday, July 29, 2016

Pieces of Today, Jul. 29, 2016

(Or more accurately, Pieces of the Last Month or So)

#1. I found a ton of thread and stuff under my bed and now I'm braiding bracelets when I get bored.

#2. I've been downloading as much music as possible onto my iPod, and it's glorious. (My iPod's name is James, by the way. Yes, I name my belongings.)

#3. A LOT of Downton Abbey. I ought to know the whole series by heart by now. It's ridiculous and I love it.

#4. Been working on my art journal/quote book.


{They beat me with clubs to see if I was strong enough and when the 
clubs broke they decided I was. -Fezzik, The Princess Bride}

#5. Went to a family reunion and did the usual awkward re-meeting-of-cousins and binge eating and playing of cards.

#6. WE HAVE A SCHLOTZKY'S IN OUR TOWN NOW. THIS IS MONUMENTAL.

#7. Visited my Grandma, introduced her to Panda Express. Lots of orange chicken involved. We also went to Barnes and Noble, where I spent a hundred dollars on books that I definitely, absolutely, no-doubt-about-it needed. Stop looking at me like I have a problem.

#8. ('Cuz he knows that it's me they've been comin' to see, to forget about life for a while.) 

#9. (And you said you'd always have my back/ oh, but how were we to know?)

#10. And lastly, but definitely not leastly:


Our youth pastor's wife posted this on Facebook a while back and I can't tell if she knows or not. 

This is the sort of thing that keeps me up at night. 

Monday, June 13, 2016

Pieces of Today, June 13th 2016

1. PEANUTS.

2. The smell of sharpie.

3. My best friend's BIRTHDAY (which was yesterday).

4. Panda Express.

5. Humidity.

6. A rather drastic haircut.

7. No, seriously, guys - I cut my hair.

8. It's short.

9. Really, really short.

10.  I've frightened myself.

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Pieces of Today, June 4th 2016

1. Caesar salad.

2. Civil War. (Gaaaaahhhh, don't fight, guys!) 

3. (Are you going to age with grace? Are you going to leave a path to trace?)

4. Cherry Tea and watercolor painting.


5. An oversized nightshirt.

6. (Hollow heroes separate/ as they run.) 

7. Book-boxes.

8. (You're the Northern Wind/sendin' shivers down my spine,) 

9. (I read them all one day/when loneliness came and you were away/oh, they told me nothing new/but I love to read the words you used.) 

10. A thought: Why is it that sometimes you see what isn't there, and sometimes you can't see the obvious?

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Pieces of Today, May 29th 2016

1. The scent of my bible.

2. Mom's amazing salad dressing.

3. (Sing me a song, sing me a melody.) 

4. Z-E-P-H-A-N-I-A-H

5. (We might fall.) 

6. (Come with me / not above me or below me.) 

7.  Spilled coffee and donut holes.

8. (You're so cold - keep your hand in mine.) 

9. A conversation with my cousin yesterday:

Me: You have your shoes on the wrong feet, sweetie.
Nichole: But they're still awesome. They're VANS! You have Vans too! I like your Vans.
Me: *silent stare*
Nichole: *cute grin* 
Me: *silent stare*
Nichole: What?
Me: Somehow I knew this would happen.

10. Sore ankles from playing tag with the younger kids. 

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Pieces of Today, May 26th 2016

1) Ethnicity studies (my fancy name for looking up different cultures on Pinterest).

2) The odd variations in my handwriting.

3) Books on the floor and on the bureau and on the table and...I need a bookshelf.

4) Dried roses.

5) A funny, sad, and brilliant movie.

6) Chocolate chips.

7) A tiny notebook full of names.

8) Two letters stamped and addressed and ready to be sent in the morning.

9) The kitten's plaintive meaows and sharp claws as she perches precariously on my shoulder.

10) The relief of actually writing a blog post again after - how long has it been? A month? Anyway, I'm glad to be back. :D 

Monday, April 18, 2016

Pieces of Today, Apr. 18th 2016

1. Green-apple taste and couch cushions.

2. "It seems my hypocrisy knows no bounds."

3. An old porcelain doll in a lacy pink dress.

4. (I'll be your sword, I'll be your shield.) 

5. A puppy dog chewing on my defenseless ankle.

6. (And she smiles...oh, the way she smiles.) 

7. Delft blue.

8. (And if I seemed dangerous, would you be scared?) 

9. Water-spots on my glasses.

10. The glories of trying to figure out what exactly I messed up when trying to type our Wi-Fi password. Who even comes up with these things? 

Monday, April 4, 2016

Like An Adolescent Unyielding


I have talked before about being both a child and an adultabout how I want my life to be tender with wonder and strong with experience. But there is, as always, even more to what I want to be.

I want to be bold. I want to be brave. I want to march to victory without thinking of what would happen should my cause be lost. I want to know what I want and I want to shout it aloud.

I want to be like Frodo, taking the Ring to Mordor, though I do not know the way.

I want to be like Buttercup, working towards improvement against the return of my Beloved.

I want to be like the countless young men and women throughout the centuries, loving my God and my family and living and dying that they might live and die.

I want determination, and emotion, and fervent fire building and burning in my veins. I want to walk through the angry mob unharmed, solid and covered with a certain admirable Grace, and standing on a Rock that no earthquake can move.

And this is yet another of my Odd Resolutionsto be an adolescent unyielding, holding firm in my faith and refusing to belong to another. 

Saturday, March 19, 2016

On Writing Epics and Dropping Stones

The skipping stone leaves ripples, but ripples fade. The stone sinks, but it continues to shift and sink into the earth.

Well, it's time to write.

I am conspicuously armed with my essentials: My favorite mug full of some cheap berry tea and my writing hoodie (acquired at an Army-Navy store in Tennessee) engulfing my mussed form. My favorite playlist is playing on Spotify, and Pinterest is up in another tab just in case I need some quick inspiration. I'm ready for this.

The problem is, I have no idea what I'm doing.

I've been writing for five or six years. In that time I have produced the beginnings of four novels, one completed short story and fourteen unfinished ones, twenty-odd poems that I would shudder to show anyone, and a lot of bad fanfiction. Like an artist trying to paint a masterpiece, I've been trying to write my epics and pretty much failing.

So I took a break for a while.

I didn't write for five months, except for blogging. I focused more on things like school and free reading and wandering around outside. I actually didn't miss it as much as I thought I would.

The truth is, I love writing. I'm working on a book that, with the grace of God, might actually work out. I love the romance of words and the ache my heart feels when I read a fairytale. But I'm not meant for an epic. I'm not meant to be a classic author, a second Tolkien or Chesterton or Kafka.

I used to think that meant I wouldn't make it as a writer at all. I mean, what was the point if I didn't touch someone's life or failed to create a character someone could relate with?

But the real point is this: The masters weren't the only ones who found joy in putting pen to paper. Writing is not about the people reading. It effects them, but it is a secondhand effect. The person who is different because of writing is the writer.

So this is my odd resolution for now: To no longer want to be a master, a writer of epics. I want to be a simple teller of fairy-stories. I want to paint watercolors on notebook paper, and leave the ceiling frescoes to some modern Michelangelo. 

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Pieces of Today, Mar. 16th 2016

1. Jed's Hobbit Rock: A reminder from my brother that I have promised to be a hobbit for my birthday, and give gifts to others instead of receiving them.


2. (Pack your things; leave somehow. Blackbird's song is over now.) 

3. Sunlight on irises and green-carpeted ground. 

4. The very first few Indian Paintbrush. 

5. (So if you see me smilin' it's because I got you to love.) 

6. (Tell everyone I'm coming home soon.) 

7. Lamplight on copper-beige fabric. 

8. Raskolniki. 

9. (Can we sail to Spain, just me and you?) 

10. Preparations for my upcoming BAPTISM, a very exciting epoch in my life this far. Praise God for the great mercy, grace, and love He has showered on me in order to get me this far! 

Monday, March 14, 2016

Pieces of Today, Mar. 14th 2016

1. A taste of my art journaling:


2. Cleaning. More cleaning. And sweeping. Sweeping is not cleaning.

3. (Everybody in the ol' cell block, dancin' to the jailhouse rock.) 

4. A new computer and a very confusing keyboard. (Seriously, this thing is so spread-out and hard to type on.)

5. Paperwork.

6. MASHED POTATOES.

7. (And I don't need this life, I just need somebody to die for.) 

8. Still mulling over Harvest America.

9. (Well, I've heard there was a secret chord, that David played, and it pleased the Lord...) 

10. And such an overwhelming sense of grace; grace that saved a wretch like me.

Friday, February 19, 2016

Pieces of Today, Feb. 19th 2016

1. Happy dogs and a grumpy cat.

2. Drowsiness and sleepiness (which are not at all the same thing).

3. New movies and old TV shows and dorky outfits in both.

4.
    "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?    Far from my deliverance are the words of my groaning.    O my God, I cry by day, but You do not answer;   And by night, but I have no rest." -(Psalm 22:1-2)

5. (Well the good ol' days may not return...the rocks might melt, and the sea may burn.)

6. Staticky radio hosts and tangled cords on the floor.

7. Rock n' Roll and blatant carefree-ness.

8. The lingering affects of a headache mixed with the dizzyness of moving too quickly.

9. Different anthems ringing and ranging and leaping around my head like a ping-pong ball.

And most important:

10. "The thing I'm gonna love about Heaven is there'll be no fences." 

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Literature of Late

I love to read.

Well, perhaps I should say that I loved--past tense--to read. I recently went through a period where reading rather bored me. I assure you, it was not a productive time.

However, with a few of the right books put blithely in my path, I have found again that joy which follows one who has been buried a few hours in the printed word.

I now, once more, love to read.

The books I've been reading have, as books always do, transported me to the worlds, the fashions, and the personalities of the people within them. My emotions were fiercely caught up in the merciless things. They raised hopes and dashed them, founded loves and hatreds and promptly turned them around again. They were, all in all, Good Books.

(Another note on which I feel compelled to state my opinion: paperbacks are wonderful. I cannot explain it, but I have an immense love for paperbacks.) 


My brother was the one who gave me The Princess Bride. I had, of course, previously seen the movie, and had absolutely no idea there was a book until I stumbled across some quotes that had never made it to the screen. I was entranced, and instantly knew what my Christmas present should be. Brother indulged me, and soon I had a book in my greedy hands.

He had gotten me the "good parts" edition, adapted by William Goldman. At first I was disappointed, but I practically ate the thing anyway.

I must say, I unexpectedly loved this edition. S. Morgenstern, the original author, was a satirist. Thus, he goes to great and ridiculous lengths to make a point. I was glad that I didn't read the original, because Goldman's explanations on why he removed certain passages is headache-inducing enough:

 "what happens is just this: Queen Bella packs most of her wardrobe (11 pages) and travels to Guilder (2 pages). In Guilder she unpacks (5 pages), then tenders the invitation to Princess Noreena (1 page). Princess Noreena accepts (1 page). Then Noreena packs all of her clothes and hats (23 pages) and, together, the Princess and the Queen travel back to Florin for the annual celebration of the founding of Florin City (1 page). They reach King Lotharon's castle, where Noreena is shown her quarters (1/2 a page) and unpacks all the same clothes etc. that we just saw her pack one and a half pages before (12 pages)." 

I'm very glad I missed that. Anyway, the book was great, and other than the stuff taken out, it was original Morgenstern. I loved especially getting to know the characters more deeply. It was so satisfying to know the ins and outs of where Fezzik had come from and how Inigo trained and why Count Rugen was so fascinated by pain. I highly recommend reading it.



Till We Have Faces is another book that gave me great joy while I read it. That's actually sort of odd, because it is a very dark, devastating work. It is definitely Lewis' best book, in my opinion--even succeeding The Chronicles of Narnia. 

I always had a bit of a fascination with the myth of Cupid and Psyche, so when I first started the book I was eager to see another vantage point. I got a bit more than I wanted--hardly any of the novel is dedicated to Cupid or Psyche at all. Instead, it focuses on Psyche's sister, who is ugly and hated and loved her beautiful sister to the point of despair.

I think the reason I loved it is because it was honest. Orual was not beautiful, was never happy, was selfish and bitter. She was smart, but she refused to think. She was insane with hatred and jealousy and longing. She was loved undeservedly by many people and completely missed it.

"And I thought how the seed of men that might have gone to make hardy boys and fruitful girls was drained into that house, and nothing given back; and how the silver that men had earned hard and needed was also drained there, and nothing given back; and how the girls themselves were devoured and nothing given back." 

Anyway, I loved it, and recommend it highly.




I am ashamed to say, that though I've seen all of the movies (multiple times), I'd never read Pride and Prejudice until a few days ago.

Oh my goodness.

I will never ever marry a man who has not read this book. This book made me want to get married again. This book is brilliant, hilarious, joyful. Mr Collins is the creepiest guy ever. And Darcy. 

Lizzy Bennet, you are the luckiest fictional character to ever walk this earth and you better know it.

In case you couldn't tell, I loved this book. Loved it. It is recommended to you. So go read it. Now.

(On a side note, if I did the whole so-and-so is my spirit animal thing, which I consider very stupid {what is a freaking spirit animal? that doesn't make sense. But I digress.}, Mr Bennet would be my spirit animal. As Lizzy said, "We are so very similar.") 



The Book Thief is a reread, and my favorite book of all time. The writing in this book is just...wow. I can honestly say that this is the first book I ever cried for.


Death broke me. Liesel broke me. Papa broke me most of all. There is almost nothing I can say for this book, except that every time you read it you see more. Read it, guys. Read it.

***AND ON THAT LAST NOTE***
I will bid you all a very fond farewell. 
It is not often, after all, that one such as me
writes a rambling post about books.





Thursday, January 7, 2016

Pieces of Today, Jan. 7th 2016

1. A WIP that I don't think I'll ever get done:
 

2. A dead computer and the potential loss of five-years worth of work. (I'm praying that'll turn out not to be the case, but it's looking pretty grim right now. Pray for my sanity.)

3. Cinnamon toast and resulting pounds. (I tried to be stoic. It didn't work.)

4. (I came here for sanctuary, away from the winds and the sounds of the city.)

5. Dating-site ads. (Where did they get the idea that I want to find my "sensual Russian soulmate"? Sorry, but no. Just...no.)

6. A new Bible study and an old Bible.

7. (Sing a song for the bad man...)

8. (World-losers and world-forsakers,/on whom the pale moon gleams./Yet, we are the movers and shakers/of the world, forever, it seems.)

9. Spicy oyster crackers.

10. Annnd running out of the Christmas chocolate already. Whoops. *wink*

Monday, January 4, 2016

Pieces of Today, Jan. 4th 2016

1. A Bourne marathon and a lukewarm meal.

2. Long debates on (and I quote) "the philosophical/theoretical rightness of Star Wars!"

3. Russian mumbling and wide eyes.

4. Really, really stupid decisions.

5. Responsibility and chores and school and room-cleaning.

6. Ladybug-vacuuming and a whole lot of disgust on my part. (For future reference, I hate ladybugs with all my heart, soul, and gut. There was a lot of shouts coming from the vacuumed area, some of which sounded suspiciously like 'Die! Die, you infidel creatures!')

7. (Tell your father and your mother, we are going home.)

8. Old nail polish chipping and cold feet under a woolen blanket.

9. {gasping}

10. A headache, a backache, and bitter smile that's trying hard to be sweet. (How often do you snap at someone without reason when everything is fine, but strive to please them when you have a legitimate excuse for your pain?)
 

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Like an Adult in Pain

"I do not remember where I went, or who I saw there, or what I did on the visits. I only remember the way the mist curled around the buildings while I watched twilight colors get drunk on guitars and concrete and neoned reflections. I do not remember the trip, but the destination is too great to re-imagine into words for you. 
For city lights and hurting people are a grander picture than any artist can capture with camera or pen or paint. A street musician's wild and animalistic smile is more joyful than a Christmas gift-opener's; and life is not confined to those living it well."
A couple of weeks ago, I posted a resolution to live my life like a child, to gape and be amazed by all the things I see, to ask never-ending questions about the things that fascinate me.

Now I feel I must comment on the other side of the way I want to live.

Have you ever seen a movie (or read a book) that was so vivid, so truthful about pain and sin that you suddenly felt inundated with it? As if you were the refugee, the tortured soul, the betrayed victim of war? I've seen (and read) many. Braveheart, Forrest Gump, The Screwtape Letters.

Even some more innocent stories have given me tears over the depth and subtlety of the agony lying beneath the surface. The Princess Bride, The Chronicles of Narnia, and even The Blues Brothers (a comedy) have all shown me something that sobers and hurts me. They've shown me things that have grown me up.

Pain involves a great deal of clarity. Pain is always intent, always exact. Pain does not allow compromise or unpunctuality. Part of being an adult is knowing pain beyond scraped knees and disappointment. It is honesty, perception, and undulled feeling. It is great and wild and chaotic.

For some reason I find myself wanting it. Not the pain itself, necessarily, but the growth, the experience. I want the knowledge, the power, the memory of triumph and failure standing side by side.

I want to be like an adult in pain, knowing that I have seen much and can see more, and unafraid of the crescendo creeping nearer and nearer. I want to gasp at the asphalt and smoggy skies and hold in my arms a hopeless medical case and sing loud into a lonely, lonely canyon. I want to walk straight into a world and not sidestep the beggars lining the streets or step over the litter blocking the pathways.

I want to be a woman unafraid of the pain she's in, holding instead to the suddenly clearer image of her Reason To Live.

(And this is another odd resolution, to be an adult, with more strength and gentle forbearance than I currently have.)

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Pieces of Today, Dec. 23 2015

1. Burned skin and a nutmeg-scented kitchen.

2. Pie crusts and The Girl is Mine and guitar-picked tunes.

3. The Nativity Story. (The prophecy shall end tonight, father.) 

4. Candles and Christmas lights.

5. (How often is it that you have a Christmas at home? With no travels or relatives or friend-centered parties, just you and your family singing round the tree?)

6. The Force Awakens and the thrills it has given me. (Han! Chewie! Rey and Finn! POE!) 

7. Baseball caps and notebooks and paper towels(?) scattered across my floor.

8. Happy tears and song-filled days of preparation.

9. (Joyful, joyful, we adore thee.) 

10. Sunset-colored roses and purple grass and fireant beds and field-scented air. Because these days are filled with flora and fauna of infinite proportions and the feeling of sunshine on skin and grass underneath you is one of the best that can be felt. Oh joy for sunnied Decembers!

(Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout alond, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king is coming to you; righteous and having salvation is he, humble and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey.)  -(Zechariah 9:9)
Merry Christmas, and a happy and blessed New Year to all of you.

Galu,

Erin

Monday, December 21, 2015

Like a Child in Love

Remember the wide-eyed wonder and simple exclamations? The wows and the pleeeeeaaases and the mouth opened wide and round? Remember when you--a teenager or college student or single mother or creaky grandfather--were a child shopping with your mother, begging her to buy a soda or look at the train a little bit longer?

How long has it been since you gaped in awe at a butterfly fluttering near you or laughed like the bubbly schoolkid you were at some extremely dumb and cliche joke? It's been a long time for me. 

It's strange, really. I see these things, and I love them. I think butterflies are beautiful, and I love puns, even when they get cheesy. But I don't feel them the same way I used to. I want to be struck dumb when I see the wonders instead of taking a picture and exclaiming over the perfection. 

I want to watch, and remember, and tell about it in a hushed, reverent voice that still can't believe the beauty. I want to live this world like a child in love, a child that holds in cupped hands something it is afraid of shattering. I want to be awkwardly awe-ful, and blessedly full of cheeky smiles at such simple, common pleasures as ice cream and leaves blowing down in a shower. 

I want to be like a child wandering through her life, finding beauty in earthworms and the great expanse of sky and city and empty space that surrounds us.

(And this is my odd resolution for now. To be a child, more of a child than I already am.) 

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Pieces of Today, Dec 19th 2015

1. To have and to hold....a lover of the light. 

2. Six-year-olds and tickles and Christmasing around the lighted tree.

3. Watercolor paints and HB pencils and the smell of fresh wood under my fingertips.

4. This song:


5. Motivation and subsequent stress.

6. Old friends and unintentional insults and unstoppable smiles. 

7. All is a riddle in the world, she said, all is a riddle inside my head. 

8. The beginning of an art journal and uncooperative colors. 

9. What is it about moleskin notebooks that everyone likes? They're okay, but I like leather. Just a thought. 

10. And this plot point that I should've seen sooner: