Sunday, July 18, 2010

The Stories of Eva Luna

I have recently begun reading "The Stories of Eva Luna" by Isabel Allende, and found in the preface one of the most beautiful passages I've ever read:

"You untied your sash, kicked off your sandals, tossed your full skirt into the corner - it was cotton, if I remember - and loosened the clasp that held your hair in a ponytail. You were shivering, and laughing. We were too close to see one another, each absorbed in our urgent rite, enveloped in our shared warmth and scent. You opened to me, my hands on your twisting waist, your hands impatient. You pressed against me, you explored me, you scaled me, you fastened me with your invincible legs, you said a thousand times, come, your lips on mine. In the final instant we glimpsed absolute solitude, each lost in a blazing chasm, but soon we returned from the far side of that fire to find ourselves embraced amid a riot of pillows beneath white mosquito netting. I brushed your hair back to look into your eyes. Sometimes you sat beside me, your legs pulled up to your chin and your silk shawl over one shoulder in the silence of the night that had barely begun. That is how I remember you, in stillness.
You think in words; for you, language is an inexhaustible thread you weave as if life were created as you tell it. I think in the frozen images of a photograph. Not an image on a plate, but one traced by a fine pen, a small and perfect memory with the soft volumes and warm colors of a Renaissance painting, like an intention captured on grainy paper or cloth. It is a prophetic moment; it is our entire existence, all we have lived and have yet to live, all times in one time, without beginning or end. From an indefinite distance I am looking at that picture, which includes me. I am spectator and protagonist. I am in shadow, veiled by the fog of a translucent curtain. I know I am myself, but I am also this person observing from the outside. I know what the man on the rumpled bed is feeling, in a room with dark beams arching toward a cathedral ceiling, a scene that resembles a fragment from some ancient ceremony. I am there with you but also here, alone, in a different frame of consciousness. In the painting, the couple is resting after making love; their skin gleams moistly. The man's eyes are closed; one hand is on his chest and the other on her thigh, in intimate complicity. That vision is recurrent and immutable; nothing changes: always the same peaceful smile on the man's face, always the woman's languor, the same folds in the sheets, the same dark corners of the room, always the lamplight strikes her breasts and cheekbones at the same angle, and always the silk shawl and dark hair fall with the same delicacy.
Every time I think of you, that is how I see you, how I see us, frozen for all time on that canvas, immune to the fading of memory. I spend immeasurable moments imaging myself in that scene until I feel I am entering the space of the photograph and am no longer the man who observes but the man lying beside the woman. Then the quiet symmetry of the picture is broken and I hear voices very close to my ear.
'Tell me a story,' I say to you.
'What about?'
'Tell me a story you have never told anyone before. Make it up for me.' "

--Rolf Carlé

This passage represents absolute love in a memory that is preserved for all time as perfect… I thought it was beautiful and wanted to share it :)

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Just Kidding... and My Imagination

Okay so maybe the quote thing isn't going to be consistent. Whatever. This blog is henceforth about whatever the hell I want it to be about.

A really weird thing I've realised recently is that my imagination has a setting. Certain things trigger its setting, and it's bizarre. For example, my imagination has a weird connection with fairy stories, (or faerie, depending)... I've never paid much attention to those stories, not the prissy ones for five-year-olds anyway, but the stories with some creativity and originality spark my imagination. Hm. Very strange. Especially since I don't believe in faeries. Or do I? No, not particularly.

Another thing that fits perfectly in my imagination is the band "Death Cab for Cutie". I have absolutely no idea why, but something about the music gets inside my head. It reminds me of the witching hour at two in the morning when you're the only soul awake and your imagination runs wild.
The band "Iron & Wine" also intertwines with my imagination, which is odd because it's not the kind of music I'd have thought I would like.
And finally, the last thing I have discovered to date that matches my imagination is the "The Girl with Glass Feet" that I talked about in the last post. St. Hauda's Land (the setting of the book) makes me think of Death Cab for Cutie, Iron&Wine, and faerie stories, which means it also is a huge part of my imagination.
Do any of your imaginations have settings or triggers? I'd be interested to know...

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Happy Fourth! And the best book I've read in a long while...

I just finished the book, "The Girl With the Glass Feet," by Ali Shaw (a guy). It's weird how the book captured the setting of my imagination - just odd enough to be out of this world, while still technically a part of it. It's about a young woman named Ida whose feet are turning to glass, and the glass is taking over her body. She encounters a man named Midas by coincidence in the forest, and their friendship grows immediately, as they are drawn to each other. Midas is a young photographer whose family history is less than desirable, and he and Ida are connected by a weird set of circumstances (not related, just connected by family friends).
As Ida realises that her time is running out, she tries to kiss Midas, who wants to kiss her back but is too scared. He runs away and leaves her, and she is devastated. In the woods, he encounters a man, and they have this conversation:

"Do you know what it's like to lose someone, Midas?"
"Yes."
"Someone you were in love with?"
"No."
"Have you ever been in love?"
"Erm…"
Hector's eyes narrowed. He grinned wolfishly. "You are at this precise moment! It's written all over you."
Midas looked down at himself, as if expecting this to literally be the case.
"I think…," said Midas slowly, "I might be."
"Might be what?"
Midas cleared his throat. "In love."
Hector threw his arms wide open. "Then always make sure you act like it."

Ida needs to know where they stand, because she doesn't have that much time left.
Midas, after running away back home, is sitting in the kitchen with his friend's littler girl, Denver.

"You haven't shown me new pictures in ages. Show me some now."
He shook his head. She started to play with the digital's buttons. The two of them sat in silence as she flicked through its image bank.
"Not even one of Ida," she said.
Midas rubbed his forehead. "They were all too awful. I couldn't get them right."
"And you got rid of them because they didn't look nice enough?"
"Precisely."
"I think you were in love with her."
"Love… is not something you understand when you're a grown-up, Den. It's just as if it's… a memory of something that should have been. From stories… and… I don't know whether you really can be in love."
"You could be," she said. "You and a few other people. You're like me. You've got it."
"Got what?"
She shrugged. "A grip. On the bits in the back of your head. And here…" She touched her tummy. "Somewhere in here."

Midas goes to rescue Ida from the house she's stuck in looking for a cure that won't work, and he finds her.

"Sh-shit it's cold," she said.
"I know. I'm sorry."
She nodded drowsily. "Your coat. Thanks."
"It'll warm up in the car."
"Hug me."
"I… I'm sorry?"
She opened her eyes a crack. They couldn't focus. Her irises were ash between red eyelids. "Put your arms around me."
Carefully, he reached around her with both arms so his fingers locked across her back.
"You have to squeeze," she whispered, "or it's not a hug."
"You have to be bolder," she whispered. "Please." Then she pushed her face into his.

She begins living with him, and here's the third and final passage that I love:

She had felt a collision with him and known that she had wanted this her whole life: to crash for just one moment into another person at such a velocity as to fuse with him.
That moment had come not at the height of a night's passion, as she'd expected, but in the morning when their eyes opened at the same time and felt for focus in each other's. They were newborns, wide-eyed, sharing their first breath of the world. Then it was over as quickly as it had come. Midas had blushed and looked away from her. She had reached out to hold his face.

This book was magical to me, and I highly recommend it to you.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

The change

So I've decided to change this blog a bit, and instead of writing things myself, I'd like to share things that other people have written that affect me. I keep a book of these - quotes, poems, lyrics, anything that speaks to me.
The first is a poem by a thirteen year old boy named Rene Ruiz, called
"He Shaved His Head"

He shaved his head to release his imagination
He did it to get a tattoo on his shining head.
He did it to lose his normality.
He did it to become a freak.
He did it because he was angry.
He did it to make people angry.
He did it for himself.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Okay so I get a little loopy after rehearsal...

Hello!
I just got back from rehearsal for Oliver (wahoo!) and decided that in honor of the coolest word of all time, I would make a list of really, really awesome words.
Okay, here we go.

10. antidisestablishmentarianism
I must admit I still am a bit vague on the meaning of this word. I learned to spell it when I was in second grade and I thought I was all cool and whatnot, but all I know is it has something to do with being against the disestablishment of churches. Or something.
9. whippersnapper
I WILL call some poor little kid this when I'm old.
8. rivulet
Just trips off the tongue :)
7. serendipity
Not just because there's a store named after this word. It is genuinely a great word.
6. flummox
5. spelunking
Caves are AWESOME!
4. zephyr
3. jargoon
It means a pale shade of yellow (Yeah Mr. Holcomb's really productive English class!)
2. requiem
1. fisticuffs
WHAT FISTICUFFS? (OLIVER!)