31 July 2005

can you tell that I am avoiding having to actually do something....

randomly found online quiz...

What tatoo fits you best? (or something like that...)

Your peronality says you would most likly pick some
kind of flower. Something beautiful and
something that displays your grace. You are
quite origanal.



I took this perhaps a week or two a go... I think there is a bit of resemblence between the present me and my ghost off to the right...
travel log...

30 July
heading up north, not very far, but away from here. clouds are massing behind the mountains and I think we are headed strait for them. the heat is dry and unmoved by the wind pouring in from my open window. I fear I am equally unmoved by my driver's now occational emotional outbursts. perhaps I'm a bitch for being unfeeling, but that's how things are at the moment, and I am not going to do anything about it right now. i'll have to be nice and good when we get there.


the hills are having their usual calming effect on me. the mulitude of greens, subtle and drastic at the same time are soothing my distressed heart, playing the part of a cool balm on the rawness i feel. there are moments I feel like some sort of vampire, preying on the emotions and affections of the unsuspecting, and at the same time, willing sweet fools who take what I offer...

am i imagining or can i really feel the residue of the cigarette smoke at the back of my throat... the feel of the dry paper on my lips and the warm greyness in my mouth are vividly impressed upon my senses. i want...

31 July
so apparently, given the right conditions, it is possible for gasoline to vaporize in the fuel lines before it reaches the engine. this is damaging to the performance of the vehicle and general mental health of its occupance. Fortunatly, it does not take long for a small car to cool down on the side of the freeway, even in 100* weather...

27 July 2005

I am sitting in a local cafe. On the wall behind me a government conspirocy theory movie on 9/11 is playing. I'm sorry that I missed the beginning, I would like to have their whole story. The evidence they are presenting in interesting, including interviews with eyewitnesses, newspaper articles, government reports - all with an anti-government hint. The narrator's voice is calm, but every now and then he throws in a bit of sarcasm. I would wager that the purpose is to undermine public support for the government's war against terrorism and all that goes with it (increased security at airports, government buildings, etc.; the Patriot Act, the war in Afganistan, the war in Iraq)
"America has been hijacked...by a group of tyrants..."

The woman whom I think is in charge of the showing is giving a speach.
"Keep your minds open...it's important to think critically..."
Machiavelli just came up... I am now regretting my lack of attention to the news in the last few years.
It is only too easy to loose trust in everyone and everything...but things like this make one wonder. The wondering is good, but how far should it go?

24 July 2005

I stand waiting and watching beyond the open door. The wind brushes past me, catching at my hair, my clothes.

"Why do you stand here? What are you looking for?"

"I am looking for a way to find what I once had. Tell me, wind, how to find it..."

"You cannot go back," replied the wind's ever-changing voice. "Time does not work in such a way with men."

"No, do not tell me such things," the tears and searing pain betraying themselves in my voice, yet knowing the wind spoke truly. I cannot go back. The passage of Time necessarily brings change, but through the will somethings are able to remain. Turning, I gaze once more through the doorway, remembering wondering if my will is strong enough.

23 July 2005

Eli, the barrowboy, you're the old town
Sells coal and marigolds and he cries out all down the day
Below the tamarac she is crying
Corn cobs and candlewax for the buying, all down the day

Would I could afford to buy my love a fine robe
Made of gold and silk arabian thread
She is dead and gone and lying in a pine grove
And I must push my barrow all the day
And I must push my barrow all the day

Eli, the barrowboy, when they found him
Dressed all in corduroy, he had drowned in the river down the way
They laid his body down in a churchyard
But still when the moon is out, with his pushcart, he calls down the day

Would I could afford to buy my love a fine gown
Made of gold and silk arabian thread
But I am dead and gone and lying in a church ground
But still I push my barrow all the day
Still I push my barrow all the day

Eli, The Barrowboy -The Decemberists

20 July 2005

who's seen jezebel?
she was born to be the woman i would know
and hold like the breeze
half as tight as both eyes closed

and who's seen jezebel?
she went walking where the cedars line the road
her blouse on the ground
where the dogs were hungry, roaming

saying, "wait, we swear we'll love you more and wholly
jezebel, it's we that you are for only"

who's seen jezebel?
she was born to be the woman we could blame
make me a beast half as brave
i'd be the same

who's seen jezebel?
she was gone before i ever got to say
"lay here my love
you're the only shape i'll pray to, jezebel"

who's seen jezebel?
will the mountain last as long as i can wait
wait for the dawn
how it aches to meet the day

who's seen jezebel?
she was certainly the spark for all i've done
the window was wide
she could see the dogs come running

saying, "wait, we swear
we'll love you more and wholly
jezebel, it's we that you are for
only"

Jezebel by Iron & Wine

18 July 2005

I came to Life with my hands open, awaiting the good things I knew would be poured into them. I was not mistaken. As long as my hands remained open they were filled. I saw loves and joys, hopes and dreams placed in their once empty palms. At times the desire to assure myself that these were actually mine to hold and keep was too great and I found my fingers trembling. What would happen if I closed my hands on these gifts? How long would they remain with me if I did not? I did not know, and Life provided me no clear answers. Something within urged me not to cling to such apparently fragile things, and so I resisted the desire to close my hands upon what I had been given. I would wait and try to trust.
Months have passed and some of these treasures have been carried away with Time's winds. They were not meant to be mine any longer and perhaps will not be ever again. With sleepless nights and tears I mourned their passing. Others have remained, though seemingly changed to ash even as I watched and waited. These too I mourn. I am asked how could I not fight for these my treasures? Because in a very real way they were not truly mine. They were given to me, yet in a most transitory fashion, placed in my open hands. And so now I stand waiting, tears occationally disturbing the layers of ash, perhaps waiting for a phoenix to rise. For these treasures are still in my care, though not in the form they once had, and I will not reject them in order to reach after something else.

15 July 2005

(catching up on my postings...I'd forgotten about this stuff in the ebb and flow of the past week)

8 July
Listening to the safety instructions as I sit in my exit row seat, I wonder idly if I really know them as well as my years of flying should warrant. I remember as a child being fascinated by the flight attendant running so smoothly through the routine...

The crowded trees and hidden roofs of Keaukaha slide by as we taxi down the runway. I'm on the wrong side of the plane for watching my home sink below me. It is raining again up the hill and I cannot keep the drops from being mirrored on my face. As the plane rises into the low clouds I catch a last glimpse of rugged curving coastline, white surf breaking on black rocks, forest of dark greens sweeping away from the dark blues of the sea. And then all was white and greys. Now the clouds lie below me, and below them is the ocean.
Its raining of Maui too. Watching the downpour from above the clouds gives the impression of a...
Lani, Moloka'i...perhaps I'm not on the wrong side of the plane. Ribbons of white sand beach lie along the edge of the islands, sometimes faced by off shore reefs, other times only kissed by the waves of the open ocean.
It looks like another world up here, with plains and hills, canyons and mountains - all of cloud. It is very beautiful - but I have seen few places that are as stark and empty.
How can there be so many shades of blue? The sky goes on forever, pale ice at the horizon to rich azure at zenith, and the sea holds a myriad more...

watching the news on the TV's near my gate...
I am struck again by another national leader urging a "return to normalcy", this time made by Prime Minister Tony Blair of the U.K. Assuming that the purpose of terrorist attacks is to disrupt the normal flow of life and business, this injunction makes sense. It is a show of personal and community strength, almost a passive defiance of those who made the attacks. In another way though, the "return to normalcy and business as usual" is disconcerting. It seems to be an ignoring and dismissal of the attacks altogether. Those killed are left to be mourned by their families and friends as the rest of the world goes on shopping...
This is my 151st post...
Conclusion: It is hard to stop thinking in the dark. I am beginning to fear the setting of the sun and the arrival of the night. I want to work all day and keep the sun up... Fortunately, I can do just that all week-end (without keeping the sun up). Oh, joy...

08 July 2005

Happy 1st Blog-day to me...

So, I've been writting for a year now. Somehow it seems fitting that this is the day I leave home once again. It was because I came home last year that the writting kept up; I wonder if it will be that way this year...
I've been reminicing about this past year while I packed. Much has happened, loves were lost - and found, friendships shaken and rebuilt, strengths and weaknesses tested. I questioned the all reasons for being at school, while never doubting that it was where I was meant to be. And this blog, my burrying ground and junk-drawer for thoughts, has witnessed and recorded it all...

Well...
(the relative lateness of the hour must be affecting my brain, so I'm not going to say anything more)

03 July 2005

It is Sunday afternoon and the house is nearly empty, well as close to being empty as it has been since I got home. The family has scattered to the proverbial four winds (for the afternoon) and I have time to fill by myself. The desire to read has somewhat abated since yesterday's reading of Steinbeck Of Mice and Men. I am looking forward to returning to school and discussing it with someone (the one-sided discussions I've been having with myself can only take me so far). I've been nibbling at an Harry Potter book (I will confess unabashedly that I have read all five of the books and am looking forward to the next) while waiting for the very slow dial-up connection to the outside world (also known as the internet) catches up with what I want it to do. All in all I am happy to be five days away from leaving. I think that I need to go while there are still things here I want to do and people I want to see, or I will start chaffing under the ever present knowledge that there is a 2000 mile barrier between myself and where I want to be... On the other hand, it will be hard to leave my younger siblings, not knowing when I will see them again, that they will continue to grow up and I won't really know them and they won't really know me... life is strange.

02 July 2005

Random observation: blogging was meant to happen late at night when the house is asleep...morning blogging is not very practical when you have little people coming up to you every few minutes asking if you are still on the computer. ("Gabe, I can sit at the computer all day." "Wow...") I think I will surrender of the obvious and get dressed for the day... hopefully I will come back with beautiful thoughts about the beach...
Here Comes

Here comes summer,
Here comes summer,
Chirping robin, budding rose.
Here comes summer,
Here comes summer,
Gentle showers, summer clothes.
Here comes summer,
Here comes summer,
Whoosh - shiver - there it goes.

I've introduced my younger siblings to the wonders of Shel Silverstein. I remember picking up A Light in the Atic somewhere, library book sale or church grab box or whathaveyou, and thinking that I had found a treasure. Now I will freely confess that I had not read very much Silverstein myself, flipped through some of his collections of poems and The Giving Tree. Reading to my little sis, I was struck by the depth of some of these "children's" poems, "The little boy and the old man," "Nobody," "This bridge," for example. I need to wonder about these a bit more...
Random thought spawned by being home that I lack the time to turn into proper blogs...

...streets familiar in a parallel way hints and shadow of past life and what once was possible...

The warm humidity inclines me toward the water, strange for one who care not for swimming.

The land spreads itself out for my viewing, hues and shades of green down to the water. The sea is less than ten miles away... The deep blue turns grey under the reflection of the clouds.