Showing posts with label the artist. Show all posts

The miss list

It seems I've had so many previous lives since college.  I have no regrets (I don't believe in them) and I wouldn't change a thing (to drop two cliches), but when I am feeling particularly nostalgic for a home that has nothing to do with a physical space, I start to hone in on that which I really loved about those previous lives.  It is my dream to say "I have truly lived" on my deathbed.

Today I miss
syliva loves the seaside
Sylvia

light
The spring evenings spent with my sister in San Diego last year

Poetry

sensory breathing
Hanging out with my books

elle écrit
Journaling

right where she was all along
Waiting to go to brunch when they all still lived here

Cafe Septieme
Writing Letters

 Clara
Looking over Clara's crib and seeing her smile at me

home is where the muffins are
Baking

like him with friends possessed
A dream


A comfortable chair

Joel working from home

A purpose
(a few of my former students, way back in the day)

Despite the angst, I admit that somewhere deep inside, it does feel good to miss.  If we didn't fully realize what we don't have, or didn't miss that which we once had, or didn't want something back that was snatched from our grasp, what would compel us to reach out and gobble up the love offered to us?  Without need, how can we know completion?  Without feeling empty, how could we know fulfillment?  Without desire, how can we know ecstasy?  

My soul has been on edge of late, and after taking several days to put it through the standard rigmarole of why this could be, I've decided that I have gone much too long without writing, reading, photographing, or really any other creative endeavorer (hell, even cooking).  My soul cannot survive a creatively stale life, and so I must tisk-tisk my finger at lazy practicality and determine to make my life once again about something more substantial than a plan to start making something.  It's time to do it.


on disappointment and self-definition

This year didn't go quite how I expected it to.  Of course one can never fully prepare for:
  • Death
  • Divorce
  • Friends moving 
  • Cancer
  • Rejection
  • Transition
  • Disappointment
  • Failed dreams
but even with that understanding, I can't help but leave this year feeling disappointed somehow.  In her wisdom, my sister says that's the way things go...everyone has their onslaught of bad thing after bad thing and then things begin to turn around and life becomes easy and the good sticks around for a while.  I feel that things are starting to settle, but I am straining my neck to see the part where the good sticks.  It still seems unattainable, precarious despite there having been so much good recently.

For the last few months, I've given myself a lot of leeway regarding maintaining my artist lifestyle amidst full-time work.  But this last week, I've been increasingly disappointed in myself for ____.  I don't know what.  Maybe not having enough energy, not taking care of myself enough, not calling my friends enough, not giving enough...but mainly, for not writing enough, for not shooting photographs enough.  Today, I am sick of this disappointment.  I want to dig deep and remember my wise, capable self.  Today's mantra is this..."Self, I trust you with myself."  

I took myself to coffee yesterday morning and while I thought I was going to read some of my favorite poets (recently Hughes and Arnold), I actually found myself reading my own journal.  I forgot that one of the most beneficial things about journaling in the first place is re-reading your own thoughts...remembering as only you can where you have been and what have you processed.  Remembering that you have been amazing and will be again.  

Just as I was bemoaning the loss of my art, I stumbled upon something I had written a few weeks ago.  It soothed my soul.  Imagine, myself taking care of myself...this may sound basic to you, but I firmly believe that the ability to comfort oneself is not easy to come by. 

2 November 2010
11:01 p.m.

"Thinking about art/self-perception.  This summer, I felt as though I came into something as a writer - in that, I WROTE.  I saw that to BE a writer, one must ACTUALLY do it.  It was good, so satisfying and good.  Thinking about now.  I've not written in days/months/years it seems.  Does this negate all I came to this last summer?  I mean to ponder the notion of self-titles, of the DOING to being an artist.  Is it as important or more/less so than simply the BEING an artist?  Can it be so tied to producing?  My gut says an emphatic "no."  The doing NEVER matters as much as the being, but how to wrap my soul around the principle?  Or is it a matter of timing?  Can I have been because I DID and now am a writer even if I am not currently doing it?  Is Dillard only a writer when she is working on something?  No.  She has done it in the past...there are tangible evidences of her having written.  Does this undo her self-definition going forward?  Does it matter then if I do it often? How often...every day? Every second?  No, of course, no.  So what matter is time, then?  Is it even important to still title myself as an artist?  And if so, to whom?  I KNOW no one else cares how I title myself (and if they do, it doesn't matter, MY self-definition is not their business). I feel my soul here jerk, because I did fight so hard to find that definition.  That I am now willing to let it be whatever it becomes, does that negate the past work?  Is writing so true to my essence that it doesn't matter HOW I label it? 

The DOING.  I think it must not matter as it used to.
It's just...only ever...
                                   THE BEING.

for me.
for now."


And so the truth is that I am done being disappointed in myself.  I cannot do what I used to do when I was home all day.  Who even says I am supposed to?

where she may have sat


"There is only the fight to recover what has been lost
And found and lost again and again"
T.S. Eliot

And. So. It. Goes.