Thursday, October 31, 2013

Bravery and Breaking Silence

I haven't been that great with updating because I'm caught up in the precarious balancing act of school work, organization commitments, feeding myself, and socializing, but I wanted to share a few things as October comes to a close.

It's Purple Week here at school, sponsored by the Women's Resource Center and the Advocates club.  Although it was initially for women against domestic, relationship, and sexual violence, it really encompasses awareness against all forms of violence.  On Tuesday, they had their annual event of Take Back the Night, which was established in 1999 as a vigil and protest against sexual violence.  It's for people to reclaim the space they may have lost-- both physical and metaphorical-- and be unafraid in the world.  I deeply regretted not making time to attend last year's TBN, so as soon as my good friend Kat asked me if I was interested in speaking, I committed.  I didn't quite know what I was going to be reading until the end of Tuesday morning, but I resurrected many thoughts that have stirred through my heart, mind, and being.  It's not necessarily a story, but an open letter; to myself, to you, to them, and to everyone.  And please bear in mind that it draws from twenty (nearly twenty-one!) years of observation, but is not entirely applicable to my life as I have known it (i.e., I've incorporated the experiences of others).

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For Take Back the Night, 2013

            You are beautiful. 
You are strong. 
You are intelligent. 
And the things that you do matter.

This is what I tell myself when I feel like the world doesn’t want me.  The first time I said this phrase aloud, facing a mirror, I nearly choked.  I couldn’t admit to myself that I was worth appreciation.  That I was worth loving.

I’ve never had a significant other.  My psychological and emotional and physical closeness has never been shared at once with another.  So for many years, and sometimes even now, I hate myself for not understanding love.

And yet, it goes beyond my lack of personal experience, the seemingly pointless wallowing.  Because desire, lust, passion, greed, obsession, possession—these are realities I have witnessed, at times, under the guise of love.  Of acceptability.

It’s not only about when the sun goes down.  The violence is subtle, and it’s insistent; language, media, behavior, songs, expectations, and movement.  If we recognize it, we should do what we can to end it.
But the violence can also be in your memoires, and it’s not always easy to interpret.  When you witness someone hurting another, as a child, what do you do with that pain? 

I saw her hit her.  She hit him.          He consumed him, he didn’t understand, he touched me, she touched her, he hurt her, he asked and she still hurt, they hurt her, they didn’t listen, and still, and still—
she internalized all of it.

[There are days that I feel like I’m carrying the weight of one thousand and one women.  We are each threads in Shehrezad’s story, woven delicately and intersecting, fragile but surviving through this connection.  It is a narrative of illusion, whether the assurance that we’re safe, or the relief of finality.  It’s never truly over.] 

But I don’t think it’s about being against one another, pitting men against women; but for a common space, together.  Without fear.

I stand here, on my stage.  My literal stage, my metaphorical stage.  I watch, but I don’t always know how to act, how to respond.  I’m doing this for me; for them; for all of you.  I am a watcher, a listener, and now—I am a speaker.

We all carry our pain differently.  I carry my pain, and I will carry yours too, if you want me to.  Maybe I won’t absolutely understand, but I will do this for you.  You are not defined by your pain.

You are beautiful, you are strong, you are intelligent, YOU ARE WORTH SOMETHING,
And the things that you do, matter.

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So that was emancipating, in every sense.  Mind you, I was the third of four speakers, and although I wasn't directly sharing a story of assault, I was shaking.  My head was buzzing with the words of those before me and the eyes of everyone in the room.  It was the largest attendance of TBN, perhaps at least fifty people, with many faces I wasn't expecting and the familiar ones that would have been comforted if I wasn't already blinded by my own nervous.  The passage in the brackets?  Yeah, that was my favorite section that I wrote, but I accidentally skipped over it--that's what I get for not rehearsing..

At any rate, I read these scribbles off a red sheet of construction paper, wearing red lipstick.  I think I had the support of everyone and there were people that approached me afterwards in thanks.  I meant every word, I told them.

On another note, one of my classmates, intelligent, and deeply compassionate friends, Tommy, was published on salon.com a few weeks ago for a piece that he wrote on sexuality and trans-gender attraction.  He first wrote it for The Weave, the brainchild of my brilliant professor Dr. John Collins, where students blog on under reported news issues, but then salon.com picked it up and it's circulated to thousands ever since! Take a look at it here: http://weavenews.org/blogs/thomas-matt/10476/defeating-shame-my-story-trans-attraction  // And here: http://www.salon.com/2013/10/22/im_attracted_to_trans_women/

Here's to bravery, breaking the silence, and looking like an outrageous fool for Halloween (the final year it will be excusable to conceptualize three outfits).

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Autumnal Musings

School life keeps me busy, and academics aside, it's been a fantastic time!  Two weekends ago we had our Fall Fest concert, this year featuring The Rubens from Wales and Grouplove from L.A.!  My housemates and I rocked out in the front row, pinned against barriers and moshing freshmen.  I was enamored by their lead singer Hannah who bounced and belted around stage in a skeleton morph suit!



Autumn in the Northeast is such a relief.  This past week was crisp and sunny, unusually warm but ablaze with the changing trees.  I started volunteering as an after school mentor with middle school students in a program called Club SLU, and their campus has a nice set of trails to run around.  I enjoy sitting outside the student center in the sun whenever there's a break between classes, and I squeezed in an hour of canoeing yesterday with Jenny on the Grasse River!






The CSA is treating us with the last of the basil, peppers, and tomatoes, and now we're receiving squash, bok choy, and beautiful green and purple tomatillos.  Those promptly turned into fiery salsa and frittatas.  And now it's apple season, which means pie!  I made two this past week, with a flaky, homemade crust.  I tend to prefer baking over my readings...

 

Family weekend at school just concluded.  It made to me happy to watching the amusing interactions between students and their parents, showing them around campus, eating at the dining halls, attending football games and concerts.. even the sole bar.  My parents are in sunny Florida, but Lia's and Elizabeth's joined us for the weekend, along Ally's sister who's visiting from North Carolina.  We had a big family dinner at the townhouse with chicken wing dip, bean dip, chips, vegetable lasagna, salad, garlic bread, Riesling, wine slushies and the like.  






And I'm off to volunteer and cook with Campus Kitchens, lead a copy-editing session for The Laurentian Magazine, then more homework.  Just another weekend until mid-semester break, but I would say that I'm in a good place right now.

Listening: the Patriots-Cincinnati football game that my housemates are watching in the living room.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

La pureté de l’instant est faite de l’absence du temps.

Instant purity is made in the absence of time.  (from the novel l'Aventure ambigue by Senegalese author Cheikh Hamidou Kane) // Time is always something I'm complaining about, and seeming to lack, but I make the most of it.  After a week of unbearably capricious weather (I don't take to humidity well), the front has blown by and autumn is settling in the North Country.  I love being wrapped up in frumpy, thrifted sweaters and nursing mugs of spiced cider.  Having a half-meal plan and a CSA has been a dream because we have a rotation of fresh vegetables twice a week and I have eaten dinner at a campus dining facility less than I can count on my hands.  Between class work, my honors research and organizations, eating actually needs a scheduled block of time.  Nonetheless, cooking is high on my priority list because it's a chance to unwind, meditate, and savor the process.  The Kitchn just published a great article echoing these sentiments here.  


 My parents came up last weekend for the day!  We ran errands together, went out to lunch, did some shopping, and my dad fixed a broken tube on my bike.  Heh, I'll figure that out someday but in the meantime, thanks, Pops!

  
CSA pick-up week one on the left, week two on the right!  Edamame (still on the stalk), beets, purple and yellow and red peppers, cabbage, cauliflower, tatsoi, garlic, green and purple and yellow beans, basil, tomatoes, apples, carrots, cayenne peppers, celery, swiss chard.. and sunflowers!
Tuesday and Friday generally have vegetables to ensure that all shareholders receive the same variety.

 The inaugural CSA meal.

 Dinner crepes and roasted beets.
 

 Apples sauteed in honey whiskey with brown sugar and pecans for dessert crepes.
 
Dinner partying at friends' houses, and our own!

 This dinner was particularly classy in honor of Pico Iyer, who visited this past week for a Writer's Series event (more on that the next post).
 A frittata cooked for our CSA potluck this past weekend, using eggs from their farm! 
Not pictured:  many other delicious, satisfying meals.

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 The Ruckus Bus also had our first tournament the weekend of the 7th.  It's been a joy playing with my people again, so unstructured and rowdy.  Playing in China served me well though, because I gained a lot more experience and understanding on the field.  Now I'm able to help other players who are newer to the game, and I'm heading up the revival of our women's team, The Ruckus Bust!
 Reppin' the Ruckus with the Shanghai Huwa shorts with Courtney and Holly!  Courtney and I are roommates and we scored an awesome point together on her hammer and my bid during a torrential, sideways rainstorm-- it was a beautiful moment.
 So we didn't win the tournament because an alumni team with semi-professional players outplayed us by a few points Sunday morning in the championship bracket, but we still won the party.  Equally important.
They're my favorite shitheads.

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 We went to Little Grasse Farm first thing Saturday morning to farm with other CSA shareholders as part of the labor we've exchanged.  Here's my house mate Elizabeth after we harvested some tomatoes!
 Shucking dry beans with freshly-pressed cider.
 Chickens roaming their coop.
Harvesting squash into piles so their skins dry out a bit and toughen. 

 There was a potluck after 

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My housemates are so busy and good at what they do, that the six of us haven't been consciously present together since the first few days of school!  This was prior to our first Ruckus Bus party of the year with the theme 'fancy homeless.'  Sam didn't end up wearing her hat for fear of looking "more like a hipster douchebag than a homeless person."  Haha!!  A family photo will hopefully come soon.

Listening: "Fox Say" by Ylvis  (SORRY: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jofNR_WkoCE)