Thursday, May 22, 2008

trafalgar square to anywhere


after a long hiatus ((emphasis on the long)), i find myself inevitably, invasively back to blogging, transcribing the earth-shattering thoughts, witticisms, and general useless and often disposable points of knowledge.  

it's been a long couple of months.

since i now blog for a grade, it might be useful to recapitulate the actual purpose(s) of my blog.  at the moment, i can think of three things that would be of the most use to the casual reader:

-travel.  that thing which i love to do, dearly, more than anything else, though funding is sometimes an issue.  scratch that.  always an issue.

-writing.  it was my major.  i've held a pen since i was crawling around in nappy's, drooling my ABC's to sesame street.  i've written since i've known how.  so i will bore the general public with talk of craft, of narrative structure, and of character development until they can't tell post-laupsarian from pre-laupsarian.  to make matters more interesting, i might just talk about the books i'm currently reading.  as a hefty graduation present to myself, i purchased several books from barnes and noble - all of the ones that miami hasn't made me read that i felt like i should (i.e. jude the obscure, catcher in the rye, any book with a russian surname) and books that i have wanted to read but have simply lacked the time (ian mcewan's atonement, david sedaris, and - the ever endearing cormac mccarthy).  

-film.  it's my third passion.  it's what i want to pursue in graduate school.  that is, be a screenwriter.  gee!  handy how #2 and #3 tie in so neatly.  i indulged in some oscar winners of 2007 - no country for old men, there will be blood, juno, atonement, once, enchanted.  (hey, it was nominated for best original song.  do not be so quick to judge.)

so, where to begin.  well, i just returned from a hiatus to the ancient city of londinium - that is, the bastion of civilization, london towne, merrie olde england, if you will - for a choir tour.  avid followers of this blog will note my seven week stay there last summer, and i will reinstate that london is by far the best place in the world.  some people have their new york's, their chicago's and barcelona's and vienna and morocco, others have their oxford, ohio . . .  but for me (and samuel johnson) there's no place like london.

"when a man is tired of london, he is tired of life; for there is in london all that life can afford."

though i can hardly recount every event on tour, there were definite highlights.  last thursday at this time, i was singing in salisbury cathedral with sixty other peers.  chords and notes danced off of the ceilings, flying through the cloisters and into the heavens.  emotions swelled, ebbed, and spirits were raised.  there was one song, in particular, that was written in the 20th century, a sort of post-modern remix to a medieval requiem mass, entitled, "in paradisum"

in paradisum deducant te angeli:
 in tuo adventu suscipiant te martyres, 
et perducant te in civitatem sanctam jerusalem.  
chorus angelorum te suscipiat, 
et cum lazaro quondam 
paupere aeternam habeas requiem.

translation:  may angels lead you into paradise: may the martyrs receive you at your coming and lead you to the holy city of jerusalem.  may a choir of angels receive you, and with lazarus, who once was poor, may you have eternal rest.

it was a surreal moment, to sing for travelers and the devout alike, this strange, alieotoric mass.  okay.  done now, i promise.

more stories of london, life, and literature to follow.  but the woods are lovely, dark, and deep, and i have promises to keep, and miles to go before i sleep, and miles to go before i sleep.

quote of the day:  "america has a constitution, and i have a nine inch penis." 
- a man at speaker's corner in hyde park, sunday morning.




Saturday, March 15, 2008

the land of tropicana and tan lines


there are only two emotions in a plane: boredom and terror.

-orson welles


perhaps one of the truest statements of all time, aside from the axiom that everyone loves parfaits. parfaits are delicious. i write this entry somewhat sadder, wiser, and more sleep-deprived, with the cynicism of orson welles to guide me. it also guided me to clearwater, florida, after many bruises, bumps, some turbulence, and a few stale pretzels. here's how it went down:

3:20 a.m. my alarm goes off. i decide (unwisely) to ignore it. we are staying at brittany's brother's house in columbus and the guest bed is like a deliciously feathery dream. i do not wish to wake from that dream.

3:40 a.m. erika prods me awake and says, "you know we're leaving for the airport in 20 minutes, right?" i groan and curse humanity for inventing mornings and reluctantly get up.

4:03 a.m. the three of us have made it, (thusfar) unscathed from newark and onto the road that will take us to the columbus international airport. there's more fog than in foggy london towne, and we have the visibility of an 80 year old woman with cataracts. so, we listen to fionna apple to calm our nerves.

5:06 a.m. it's columbus airport. it will not be light for another 2.5 hours yet. we check in, watch our belongings get violated by security, and head to the respective terminal for the departure to tampa. need. coffee. feel like death.

5:18 a.m. i locate a starbucks, and promptly order the biggest coffee known to man, downing it in mere minutes. situated across from our table are several other miami students. they first debate who is skinnier, then their friend who tried out for top model (who was, like, SUPERSKINNY!!!!!!!) and then how full they were from their venti, non-fat, no-whip, soy, sugar free lattes. and these girls are the future. get me out of the country now, please.

6:49 a.m. the steward announces that due to fog, the flight will be delayed. i break out my 610 page issue of vogue and proceed to read it cover to cover before they board us.

8:01 a.m. board plane. bored.

10:54 a.m. arrive in sunny florida. we take a cab from the airport and enjoy all sights that are not southwestern ohio/miami university. it is glorious.

2:12 p.m. it's food time. erika, brittany, and i scavenge for something - anything - that was edible. we stumble in on a small sandwich shop. the clientèle needs to learn the significance of pilates - that or the significance of how to rid oneself of adipose.

2:59 p.m. stomachs satiated, it was time for purchasing beach towels. we go in the nearest surf shop and creepy mexican men (drunk) proceed to hit on us. "can you help me buy a pair of flip flops for my lady friend?" one asks erika. another smiles knowingly and winks when i ask him where the shot glasses were. dios mio.

3:13 p.m. - 6:02 p.m. we walk the beach and enjoy the conspicuous lack of snow.

6:24 p.m. exhausted from sitting out in the sun and doing nothing. i tried to read fictions of an empire but it's to windy. i come back to the hotel room to DiscoTech Party 2008. nonstop pulsating bass and indistinguishable lyrics. my idea of heaven.

this, dear readers, is florida. and i believe an incredibly long nap is in order.

quote of the day: "and then they could point to you and say, 'there! that's the fruit of my loins!"
-erika hadley.


Friday, February 22, 2008

wow! there's a brain behind that face of yours!

stereotypes. they help us discern the world around around us, and make connections that can be beneficial. for instance, when to say, that man in the mask looks strangely like a ninja. maybe he can kick my ass. but when does a stereotype slip out of the category of generalizations to just plain bigotry? for example, if someone saw me, they might notice:

-tall
-blonde (well, -ish...)
-thin
-in a sorority
-goes to university
-correction. goes to MIAMI university
-spends summers in europe
-enjoys mocha's, like any american should


from that, what conclusions would you draw?



my point, exactly.



but that is only the superficial. there's so much more to me, my interests, my passions. beneath the exterior, i am a tv and film and book nerd. i think a cool night is spent on the sofa reading voltaire. i sing. i ride 2,000 pound animals. and if one only judges on stereotypes, then what chance is there that they can look past what society dictates for them to see?

it can be a dangerous self-prophesy too.

case in point: a few weekends ago, i was at a bar, and - wisely or unwisely - set my coat, along with cell phone, camera, and credit cards, under some other coats. i was moderately pleased at the effect - my coat was like the milford school and was neither seen nor heard. i thought it would be safe for the hour or so i would be there. how very wrong i was. i came back to check my phone, and there was a man rummaging through my credit cards. i inwardly groaned, because it wasn't a "typical" miami student: he was about 6'2", 300 pounds, and black. i snatched my cards from his hands and demanded that he empty his pockets, and my driver's license popped out.

now, i know. i didn't do things properly, either. i should have carried my effects with me rather than blindly trust that oxford is a small town; i had never had a problem prior to this. but talk about perpetuating a stereotype. there are any number of them out there: if a korean woman rear-ends you, or a jewish man is wealthy. you can never say one part represents the whole, but what of those who say stereotypes exist for a reason?

watch crash and you'll know what i mean.

you can't not not stereotype. the question is, is that good or bad?

quote of the day: (i must first set the scene for this.)
jenn just ordered papa john's breadsticks. there was marinara in which to dip them. i was famished. and this came out of my mouth.

me: i just love dipping my sticks in your red sauce, jen.
brittany runs in from the other room and screams: "that's what she said!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

on a slightly solomn note...

i figure the best form of catharsis is simply to get all of the toxic things out of your mind where it can't do any good, and can only pollute. that's why, when you have issue with someone, they say don't let the sun go down on your anger - it's just not good to have something pent up for long amounts of time, accumulating and congealing.

so, with that in mind, i'm going to write about that which i haven't much talked about since it happened. i'm not writing this so that someone may feel sorry for me, or to an empathetic shoulder to cry on. to quote a good friend of mine, "it is what it is." this is my story, and i need to tell it.

it's may 2004. i'm finishing the last few blissful days of high school, spending good time with friends and family, and performing in hello, dolly! the last curtain call has happened, i have taken my final bow, and the cast, crew, and i are heading to a friend's house for the cast party. the rain is coming down heavily, and there is an inky black glow to the night. i offer my friend bridget a ride to the party, but she declines. "i'm exhausted," she says, "and besides, the number of drunk drivers on the road increase exponentially after midnight."

i shrug it off and get in my neon with my friend nicole sitting shotgun, christine in back. it is a caravan of cast members as we drive to ashley's house. there are fierce puddles on the side of the road, and ashley's vw beetle swerves every now and again to avoid them. suddenly - without warning - the beetle beelines into the left lane, across the double yellow lines - nicole and i look up, and there is a red jeep without its headlights on, pummeling towards us in my lane. i try and swerve out of the way, but it all happened within a few seconds; there was no time to react.

this was my car afterwards:



and this was hers:


nicole and christine were more or less fine:
i suffered a severe concussion and a broken right femur.
the woman who hit me, jessie redding, was 20 at the time, and suffered no injury whatsoever. she had a BAC of 0.2

i was rushed to the ER with 2 IV's sticking out of my arms, where they performed any number of painful tests, MRI's, and CAT scans to see if i was injured internally. thankfully, there wasn't internal bleeding, but that didn't mean i was in the clear. i spent the night (still in complete stage makeup, with ash and mud and glass in my hair) in a neck brace on a splint, to await surgery the next morning.

the surgery is this: an incision was made on my right hip, and a doctor hollowed out the inside of my femur with a drill. a titanium rod is inserted the length of the femur, and a pin inserted laterally through my knee to stabilize the rod. there's no cast, there's no waiting time. mechanically, i would be able to walk on my leg right after surgery, but for the pain.

the next few days are a blur of memories, as i slipped in and out of consciousness, succumbing to my many medications. post-op, my leg was about the size of a watermelon, and i could barely stand to be awake because of the constant pain. friends trickled in and out of the hospital, made their well wishes, brought flowers, said prayers. and a week later, i was discharged and sent home.

the accident happened may 1. my prom was may 7. i knew i had to go, but i also knew it would be a night filled with uncertainty, discomfort, and a more tulle than i knew what to do with. i spent the vast majority of the night in my wheelchair in a percoset-induced haze.
.

a week later, i graduated high school, not sitting with my fellow classmates on stage, but in a pew in front of them. at that point, i had gotten enough strength to navigate short distances with my crutches. when i received my diploma, i looked back at my parents, who were pointing at my fellow classmates. they were all standing, applauding.

i will skim over the next few months, as it was the same daily ritualistic routine of waking up, going to physical therapy, showering, sleeping, over and over and over again. my medicine made me nauseous and anxious, and i lost about 15 pounds. i was in the aquatic rehabilitation center every day - learning how to use my leg again, learning to walk. it is the sort of thing you only expect to have to learn once in your life - and certainly not at the age of 17. i was the only person at allied rehab under the age of 99.

that fall, i had gotten to the point where i could almost walk without my crutches, though i had a nasty limp that would make any war veteran proud. and so, nervous and unsteady, i went to OU not knowing what to expect.

it was not good. OU is the san francisco of the midwest, and i have the limp to prove it.


i was exhausted after a morning of classes, and barely had the energy for anything else. thus, making friends was a more difficult endeavor that first warranted, and i longed for a campus that rivaled kansas in its geography. which is why, after only one quarter, i transferred to grove city. a small campus, challenging academics, not terribly far from home. it had the ingredients of a school that i could actually enjoy.


but things didn't pan out the way i had originally planned. my interests changed, i experienced a paradigm shift, and i knew i wasn't happy. and so, it was transfer numero dos.

coming to miami was a decision i am glad i made. but sometimes it points out (and sometimes points out very blatantly) of what i still cannot do. i used to run long distance in track and field, and now can't even run 800 meters without my leg hurting, my knee giving out, constant, throbbing pain where my leg broke in two. i can't participate in intermurals. greek week is a definite no. and even my passion of horseback riding - i had to quit the equestrian team because i didn't have enough strength to do what was necessary. even now, day to day activities prove to strain my endurance. i'm not saying i'm not thankful for only having this extent of injury - i've read the police reports, and i know what the paramedics thought. i know i am lucky to be alive, and to be where i am, knowing my original place. but i also know that this has been exponentially unfair.

to say that i don't speak of this is probably true. i've only divulged this secret to my closest friends, those that i trust and who know i'm not doing this for pity or attention. i don't talking about it, and frankly, i hate anyone thinking i'm disabled or handicapped. i just want to be normal, though some part of me knows that will never be the case again.

this weekend, i'm heading back to akron for the trial that has taken nearly four years to complete. my health insurance has refused to compensate for pain and suffering, and so, my parents and i are suing. i'll be there until at least wednesday, maybe longer, until this thing - this thorn in my side - is finally finished.

i will always have my story. i will always have my scars - a small knick on my knee, and a six inch behemoth down my right hip, scars up and down my left hand and arm from shattered glass, a scar on my forehead (not lightning shaped, though - alas), and the scars in my mind. i will always be wary of my injuries and of people like jessie who decide that under any circumstance, it is acceptable to drink and drive. i am living proof that one idiotic decision can cause a lifetime of repercussions. i do not say this to preach. i say this because it happened to me, and it is something life-altering and personal.

and i needed to say it.

quote of the day: "you gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. you are able to say to yourself, 'i have lived through this horror. i can take the next thing that comes along.' you must do the thing you think you cannot do."
-eleanor roosevelt