Saturday, October 1, 2011

Just A Regular Riverside Saturday


This morning I decided to walk to the farmers' market and buy some nectarines. I mostly wanted a reason to listen to the new Rihanna song on repeat, but this worked for that. Anyway, I got the nectarines and also these nice flowers for myself (I'm still dating myself, btw). But the best part was that I was pleasantly surprised to run into a taiko performance in the middle of the street, paired with some kind of street fair with booths featuring craft projects attached to different countries, and then the topper: as I walked through the pedestrian fountain walk area, there was a middle school aged kid set up on the side with a boombox and a sax, playing the James Bond theme song. Not well. But proudly.

Prof Magma No More

I am not Professor Magma anymore. I teach intro to fiction for undergrads: real things to real people. It has been 1 week. So far so good, but it's probably because my students are very agreeable. It also consumes me so that I'm fairly anxious most of the time, usually feel behind on things and am trying to think of improvements and activities when I should perhaps be sleeping.

On the other hand, there are some undeniable positives. It does mean that I have a cubicle for the first time since I was an intern at YBCA in 2004, which is probably a good development for my life. It also means I get to decorate it! I'll have to put up a photo soon. I was gifted a very lovely Katy Perry poster that is even faux-signed, super exciting, that I'm debating whether or not will totally obliterate whatever sense of seriousness I have fooled my students into thinking I have. And the other night, when I stepped out of said office to teach, I encountered a beautiful smoggy sunset:

Friday, September 23, 2011

my new (first) tattoo



Many say it looks like a woodblock print and that is not untrue. I drew the waves and originally filled them with lots of lines, but decided that even ones gave it a clean, orderly look. The man who tattooed it on me said it was "geometric, but whimsical" which I think sounds great. I found myself writing about water this summer all the time, I think it's a very apt metaphor for life. Now it's on my arm.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Stuck in My Head

Body Parts

I've been going to writing workshops at VONA for the past week and we've done some cool exercises in class. The other day we were asked to write stories that were, in essence, a tour of our body. I started with my eyes and came up with this story to share:

I have worn glasses since the age of four. It all started in preschool one afternoon when I reached across the table to steal a piece of melon off of my neighbor’s plate. I ended up knocking over my cup of milk. As it lay prostrate on the table and I scrambled to pick it up, Anita, my preschool teacher, caught my hand. She turned me towards her and stared into my face.

“You didn’t even see it, did you?”

“I did! I did!” I cried. I liked milk probably as much as melon. To watch it pool in a thick, opaque puddle was breaking my heart.

“And you color with your face so close to the paper,” she mused, releasing my hand.

“I like those markers’ smells,” I said. I snatched up the cup, letting the last drops of milk fall into my open mouth.

“I think you need glasses,” she concluded.

“There is nothing wrong with me,” I huffed and stuffed the contraband melon into my mouth.

As it turned out, I was near-sided with astigmatisms in both of my eyes. My parents nodded nonchalantly when Dr. Arao shared this information; my eyes were just like theirs. I picked out one pair of pink metal frames and one in blue, figuring they would match anything I would ever own. From then on, glasses became a permanent part of my face. It wasn’t such a terrible change, there were plenty of people who didn’t have perfect eyesight. However, the idea that my body had somehow failed me at such a young age, even in this minor way, was not lost on me.

It wasn’t until high school that my imperfect vision became a good time. One night I found myself stoned and sitting on top of the whale at the Lawrence Hall of Science. When I took off my glasses and looked out across the bay, it became a sea of multi-colored, bobbing orbs that pulsed and glided, their starry halos orbiting and overlapping.

“You see that?” I asked my best friend.

“Don’t you just love the view?” she asked.

I didn’t tell her that’s not what I meant. That this was my own private light show, one she could never see. It seemed rude to point out her visual shortcomings at this time.

A few months ago I met the girl of my most recent dreams. We had made a habit of sitting in my backyard drinking beer and listening to music late into the night. Once it was dark out, I liked to plug in the colored Christmas lights.

“You ever do this?” she asked me one time, taking off her glasses and nodding towards the string of lights. “It’s like a magic show.”

“I do.” I nearly gasped. “Doesn’t it make you feel like you have a special power?”

“Yeah. Because it is,” she said. “We can see things other people can’t.”

I took off my glasses and together we watched the celestial, blinking dance of the rainbow orbs. Electro glo-fi beats pulsed through the air and I felt like I had somehow come home.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

My Current Jam

Sophie told me to listen to Painted Palms and I fell in love.

Friday Silliness

I think Maneka once mentioned to me about the girl who paid lots of cashmoney to make a hot pop hit for her birthday. Then at the Oberlin reunion, this Oberlin Friday parody version was playing all over the place and I got the annoying song stuck in my head! However, it wasn't until this very morning that I watched the real video and realized how ridiculously, hilariously close Dan Schloss' Oberlin version is to the real thing. And that is beautiful.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Crate Magazine

I spent a really long time over spring break editing and laying out this little magazine. Sophie can vouch for me sitting at her really awesome drafting table, trying to figure out all the tedious, annoying details of page layout. Anyway, it turned out really well and I'm quite proud of its beauty. The magazine features 4 pieces of fiction that I liked enough to edit myself and you should probably own one: Crate site.

School's OUT

Hence, Sam(antha Lamph) and I felt the need to produce some videos inspired by the beauty, freedom and wonkiness of summer.





Saturday, February 19, 2011

Water Inspired

My dear friend Heather gave me an alligator who grew from very tiny to impressively large while submersed in a bowl of water for a few days. During this time, I noticed that the bowl of water, in which the toy was placed, sometimes caught the sunlight and made a cool pattern on the wall. Then, when Robyn and I were recording our podcast, I realized that the sound effects in Garageband would be very cool to use to alter my vocals and make some water-related music. On this rainy afternoon, I put the two together and made a little video ditty:

Monday, February 14, 2011

My Valentine, Tina Fey

In celebration of Valentine's Day, I treated myself to a lovely article in the New Yorker, by my greatest love, Tina Fey. I saved it to read over breakfast this morning. It made my day super. Thank you, Tina Fey. I think you can get sort of an idea of it here.

A Video for Poetry Class

I also made this for poetry class. It may have a good idea in it somewhere. I once, long ago, gave Amy an assignment to walk around in Chicago doing her normal routine and take video footage of her feet walking, so that's where the audio is from. It also stars my sister, Maneka, who, after showing this video in my poetry class, was deemed a budding star by a woman in my class.

Soup With Robyn

I keep forgetting about this blog and leave it dormant for months on end. There are probably other things I should put on here that I care about and that I have been doing, but I just made this video of Robyn and myself making chicken soup. Which reminds me very much of when Sophie and I made chicken soup. And it was the most amazing soup I've ever had. This new soup was good, but not as good as the Sophie chicken soup because in that case, I also made the chicken and made stock. But this was super quick and easy and delicious and accompanied by a wonderful movie, The Prince of Persia, that you can even read about on Sophie's blog.

Watch: