Monday, July 30, 2012

Dogs, Tweets, and Satos

Hi.

August is on its way and as the weather keeps holding everything in place and fighting against gates of rust, I’ve been lazing around, listening to the dot dots of key-pushing, completing a few assignments, babying somebody, and reading, writing, examining words, and watching photosets/gifs of characters I adore.

Last Saturday I woke up to my mother looking at the TV as The Olympic Games ran live. John Green has been tweeting eagerly about the competitors/teams, and I am absolutely enjoying seeing his tweets pour down my timeline.



So far he hasn’t sworn. Yet.

And I got this book 

Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know 

and the reviews are enticing – it does look promising, especially with that dog staring into your soul on the cover (and the title even uses the oxford comma, although I try to establish not to judge any work of literature that lacks it) – so I hope I garner more and more knowledge about dogs, considering the aforementioned reasons and the fact that the author is – surprise surprise! – a dog lover herself. 

There are two girls I love so much  one the namesake of the other.

My Asami Baby

(and all the other dogs
try to chase me
but here's my number
so call me maybe)
(I'm embarrassing myself online.)




and my Queen, who appears on Legend of Korra


I'll be back this August! Hopefully, yes!

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Two Hips and a Hooray

Some days when the world is pretty much the same in the peculiar sense that it is not, I like to think that I do think of the worlds I’ve rumbled and jumbled under my eyelids. There’s a Captain America shield to my right – a story, among other stories. Books – at least the books you know – stand out to you because they’re known and they are loved. I’ve loved worlds and I can’t tell if it’s healthy or not – the longing and the desire – but it dresses me with joy. Unquantifiable joy I grasp till I can’t – euphoria I can hold before the truth and the days of this world blind me back to disparate (and sometimes unwanted) knowledge.

Yesterday I wrote one drabble and hiP HIP HOORAY to that! But now I can feel how competitive and so damn little I am as I have skimmed past a page of laudable writing by a dear blogger. There is pride, now that I think about it, when the screen had flashed through my eyes and thoughts. I identify as writer (and I just had to italicize that word so much because I marvel in it) and I live in a world where there are many others of that too. But then I speed through blog to blog and I know – I’ve always known – that there are lovelier, simpler bridges of words that have been constructed SO WELL that they are so gorgeously complicated in a way it makes me dizzy to comprehend. I envy so much.

One thing: I am a cruel vine sprawled out over lives of my loves, and I am a witch hissing for languages and the breath of vacation. Another thing: A twisted world doesn’t need a Cinderella, but she stays because she’s Cinderella.

If it hasn’t dawned on you yet, I want to speak out that my words do not make sense unless you understand – from beginning to end. I try not to make reading hard for you. But the world doesn’t make writing easy for me. I’m struggling, and I love you. Perhaps you could allot time for reading? :)

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Life Number One

For July and for Owl City. 

Let’s say that humans have nine lives and this is my second life. My first was a life of discovery and amazement funneling down into a cryptic close, and I wasn’t worrying because I still had eight more lives to spend. And hopefully I do spend wisely as not to waste.

My first life was a book of fresh faces – the pillars and waves of teeming journal entries and biographies. This life had begun in between wet eyelashes and flipping notebook pages. A collection of fiction and not, I originated and lived without panic.


My Mondays were sewn with the tapping of feet and the blowing of wind, my place of relaxation and study as a twenty year old was a house near the beach where I could breathe way easier. I created dance steps and procrastinated. I was crammed with word document appointments. I was too engulfed in the work of fixing my TV set and staring at dresses and bowties on the Internet. I was a silly lady made out of sharp pencil markings and long hair. I was a borrowed ballerina shoes; I was a freckled face – too sunshine; I was a ponytail snaking down to my tailbone – the colors of black and red were prominent.

Nine years old of first life was when I would always jump out and shout in the rain. My name was Z – like, maybe, zealous! – and when my first life’s fourteenth year came I sat among a couple of friends and their stuffed toys to hit our faces with cake of strawberry icing. I bounced from cloud to cloud when it was a Christmas blue, and I can only recall the jukebox pumping out notes by Momma’s Diner as my good friend Rende (like the rende of rendezvous) leaped from dead rock to sleeping frog with my collection of films. That thief.


My twenty-first came one day and I made the bell ring once again in the nearby library of Mrs. Monica. I showed her my doodles of Rende and that diner one time it snowed abundantly, making sure my toothy smile was safely inches away from her frowning one. But I can tell you that she smiled at the end of our almost one-sided conversation; Mrs. Monica may have already been eighty-seven and a widow, but she breathed in stories the way I breathed in paint. She loved, loved, loved it.

So I told her another story and whispered it, saying, “You know, ma’am, I used to bounce from cloud to cloud.” She pushed her pair of glasses back and inquired, “You stopped?” And I laughed. I don’t know why I laughed, but I did. It was more like a small snicker to myself – a sarcastic and bitter one. Oh, I did stop.

“Mrs. M, of course I did!” I smiled. She grew a smile. And she told me to continue hopping until something stopped me.

That was when my pencils unraveled themselves from my fingers and drew that Christmas blue back. “How can I, Mrs. M?” I always called her Mrs. M. I already had called her that half a dozen of times that day. But I was afraid. I had not cloud-hopped in a long time. My jukebox wasn’t there; my diner wasn’t there; and my good friend Rende Zvous wasn’t there.

She told me, so softly, “Believe.” That word took me aback, but I stood in place; I feared my pencils and I feared myself. “You’ll die and you’ll live. Be yourself, miss Z. You have won the Christmas blue before, and you will again. Behold, the sun is shining! You are sunny, too. But you know you belong in the world of the moon and the stars, child. I will miss you. Your books will miss you. But Christmas blue misses you much, much more.”

Mrs. Monica blew my jukebox at me, and it landed on four stars next to Momma’s Diner. She hauled – and I almost shrieked for she mustn’t carry such a massive thing! – the world at me and before I could catch it with my hands, my heart did. I breathed out a few wishes, a few hopes, and a few miseries. I kept more to myself. But still–

I hopped.