Thursday, December 20, 2007

I['m making it through...so can you]

from an email I received earlier today--enjoy, or just be conscious that you (twenty-somethings, thirty-somethings, forty-somethings, fifty-somethings--everybody alike) are NOT alone!

They call it the "Quarter-life Crisis." It is when you stop going along with the crowd and start realizing that there are many things about yourself that you didn't know and may not like. You start feeling insecure and wonder where you will be in a year or two, but then get scared because you barely know where you are now.

You start realizing that people are selfish and that,
maybe, those friends that you thought you were so close to aren't exactly the greatest people you have ever met, and the people you have lost touch with are some of the most important ones. What you don't recognize is that they are realizing that too, and aren't really cold, catty, mean or insincere, but that they are as confused as you.

You look at your job... and it is not even close to
what you thought you would be doing, or maybe you are looking for a job and realizing that you are going to
have to start at the bottom and that scares you.

Your opinions have gotten stronger. You see what others are doing and find yourself judging more than usual because suddenly you realize that you have certain boundaries in your life and are constantly adding things to your list of what is acceptable and what isn't. One minute, you are insecure and then the next, secure. You laugh and cry with the greatest force of your life. You feel alone and scared and confused. Suddenly, change is the enemy and you try and cling on to the past with dear life, but soon realize that the past is drifting further and further away, and there is nothing to do but stay where you are or move forward.

You get your heart broken and wonder how someone you
loved could do such damage to you. Or you lie in bed and wonder why you can't meet anyone decent enough that you want to get to know better. Or maybe you love someone but love someone else too and cannot figure out why you are doing this because you know that you aren't a bad person. One night stands and random hook ups start to look cheap. Getting wasted and acting like an idiot starts to look pathetic.

You go through the same emotions and questions over
and over, and talk with your friends about the same topics because you cannot seem to make a decision. You worry about loans, money, the future and making a life for yourself... and while winning the race would be great, right now you'd just like to be a contender!

What you may not realize is that everyone reading this
relates to it. We are in our best of times and our worst of times, trying as hard as we can to figure this whole thing out.

Keep breathing, keep praying, keep surviving
with love & encouragement--arinmaya

Walking Shoes

So last night I got home at a reasonable time--around 10pm, I think.
My mother would worry that at that time, coming home alone wouldn't be the safest option.
I fear little other than God.
It was dark, as the sky is prone to sleep oftentimes before we even come close to the places we call "bed," but many street lights were on and I had several other New Yorkers all around, whose sleep/living patterns closely match mine.

"Sporadic" hardly comes close to describing what we do every day.

So I'm coming home and I get off the 6 train to walk the happy, familiar block from Lexington to Park. It's cold outside, as can be expected for the wintertime--at least in New York, anyway.

{Sidenote: i was talking to a close friend last night who mentioned one of the reasons he's usually so quiet or seemingly withdrawn: he simply doesn't prefer to waste words. Conversations in the dead of summer that say, "man, is it hot out there!" just don't do it for him. That our (and by "our" I mean people in general/adults in general) conversations tend towards the obvious or mundane topics like weather once we finally approach the age where we can fully engage in and benefit from meaningful conversation is, I think and I'm sure he would agree, sad...but a topic for yet another posting. [end sidenote]}
...by the way, don't you just LOVE the variety we have in brackets!?

Anyway, I'm heading home. It's nighttime, and it's cold.
And there's a girl who gets off the train on a different car than me.
She exits and walks outside.
She's young, and she's cute.
A bit taller than me, and I think Puerto Rican.
She captured my eye for all these reasons but more because she had on a white shirt.
Why is her white shirt important?
Because she didn't know what color my shirt was because it's COLD outside.
I had on a coat and a scarf...and maybe even my hat.
She had on a white shirt and one of those sleeveless--we'll say "down" vests.
I can't really say whether they're warm or not. My daddy used to wear one all the time, but in his defense he's a grown grown man (this girl was maybe 18, maybe 20) and he always wore sweaters. I remember that.
I just don't think her outfit was warm enough, not to mention, her white shirt wasn't even rolled down to cover her whole arm. Her wrists were exposed!

The rest of her outfit consisted of blue jeans (standard) and gym shoes. (And don't anybody try to tell me they're sneakers or anything else--I know what I'm talking about...Chi-town stand up!)

She jogged up the stairs, out of the station, crossed the street in the same direction I was headed, and then away from where I was walking. And she didn't look cold.
She actually looked particularly comfortable and carefree.

Which is what made me think: I bet her gym shoes are making her happy right now.
Of course, this thought came as I made my way home on tender feet from having worn heels (low, but still inclined) all day long.

I thought about her shoes (by then I guess I'd gotten over her being misdressed for the weather) all the way home, and into my apartment where I gave a sidelong glance to my own boot/shoe collection, complete with several wonderful pieces, but so uncomfortable looking (and often, not so great feeling either.)
Before I even walked into my room I had decided, inspired by the young girl/woman, to get rid of the shoes that didn't make my feet happy. Life is too short to walk through it with feet that don't smile.
But really, who was I fooling?
I've spent time, excitement, MONEY, joy, MORE money, and energy, on picking out my wonderful collection of shoes and boots.
I like what I have...for the most part.

And I'll say I think any kind of choice to better one's life comes with a small pain--kind of like post-partum syndrome...kind of, though I realize it's not really like that at all.
But you get my point.

Anyway, I did decide (by this morning) that I would try my darndest to sell a few pairs of shoes/boots that are still in great working order but that just don't make my feet happy.
Because walking should be a happy endeavor, no matter the shoe, no matter the distance.

I'm out to live life happy...and even though it took me at least two pages to get to my point, I'm starting with my walking shoes.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

The Reasons, The Reasons That We're Here. . .

I don't think I'd be alone in saying I sometimes wonder what my reason is for being. . .here
"here" meaning on earth or at this job or in this emotional place or on that street corner at 2am when the wind is blowing and the only cars passing by are offering nothing more than Andrew Jackson on a flimsy piece of green paper

These are the days of our lives and we go through them for a reason. I recently made the conscious decision (after spending several years unconsciously acting in an imprisoned stance) that I TRUST myself and I trust my emotions. And that when I feel good about someone, it's ok to experience that feeling. And when I feel bad about a situation, that's ok too.

I'm a very smart person. Or at least I like to think I am.
So here's my testimony:
I think too much. I know this. If you know me, you know this, and it's very likely that if you know me and we're friends, you think a lot too.
But there's a big difference in thinking a lot and thinking too much.
I was talking to a friend the other day, telling her I think too much and it's gotten me out of a lot of situations, but it's also left me OUT of many more.
She said, well I think all women analyze.
I agree. We do. It's what often separates us from our men.
We think, and think, and rethink, and overanalyze, just to make sure we're not crazy.
I guess the thing is, who cares?
Let's be crazy. Let's be our emotional selves.
Let's get loud (every now and then), but when we're loud, let's try to stay as right as possible.
My daddy told me a long time ago, "Don't be loud AND wrong"

I believe in that.
I know I'm talking in circles but the point is that overthinking (for me) trapped me out of feeling or feeling like it was okay to feel and express myself emotionally. . .as in off of paper.

So I'm much more vocal now. I'm a bit more open. I'm learning myself.
I'm happy. I'm telling people I love that I love them.
The other day I asked a great friend why he thought we hadn't become closer than we had, since we get along so well as friends and are so close.
I was curious. He wasn't afraid of the conversation and we had it.
Before, I never would have even asked. The question would have either sat still in my head, or manifested in a poem I wrote three months from now that would then disappear into a notebook I wouldn't refer back to for six more months to a year.

I'm feeling like this life I'm in right now is worth living RIGHT NOW.

My co-worker and I were just talking earlier this morning.
She said her boyfriend knows that if he asked her to marry him, she would say yes.
She's been with him for less than 3 months, people.
I don't think that's crazy necessarily. I am at a point where I believe after a certain age, we just KNOW. We love and we know we love and it's a simple as the falling rain (or hail if you're in New York City today).
I told her there's only one man I know for sure I love enough to marry, and that's my ex-
I'm not shamed to say I have all of ONE ex-boyfriend...or at least one official one.
No one else committed. And that's fine. It means I didn't either.
But he was my ex- and even with his complete lack of consistency and the fact that he disappears for seasons at a time, I love him and always have loved him unconditionally.
He has a baby AND a baby's mama (is it possible to have one without the other?) and a lot more than just that
But I said this to her and I wrote it down, so now I'm sharing it with you:
i would ruin my life to love him forever

Not that he would ever intentionally hurt me or ruin my life. Some things just are.
And it is very possible that me being with him is just not what my life is supposed to be. I might be going against my angels to commit my life to him. Who knows?
The point is, I know I would and I know I could--love him forever.
And quite honestly, marriage or not, I always will.

But this is what I'm talking about.
I'm ok with this love I have for him. I'm no longer afraid of it. No longer feeling like I need to shut my mouth or choke my emotions for the sake of pride (the ultimate killer).

I'm just being...and being me.

Love, love, love

Monday, December 10, 2007

Free Food

Today, I asked (in my office), "what day is the holiday party thingy?"
Someone responded, "Thursday"
I said, "Today should be Wednesday."
Someone else replied, "Wednesday is the pizza lunch." (Every month in my office we have a pizza lunch to celebrate birthdays and eat together--it's a non-profit, we do these things.)

My heart was lifted, especially since I (a) love, love, LOVE free food, and (b) because I'm trying to my darndest to save money these days, so any chance at having some (free food) is music to my ears, literally. I thought to myself, and said out loud, "Are you sure? They usually don't like to feed us twice in one week." And yes, I am aware of the fact that in that moment, I made us sound like zoo animals looking forward to feeding time. I have no shame.

Somebody agreed to check.

1.5 hours later--
The email comes through: No Pizza Lunch This Week
Oh, LAWD!
"You bring me up just to break me DOWN!"
Yes, I said that out loud and loud enough for us all to laugh at the sad humor we were all experiencing at that moment.

Yet another missed opportunity at free food, and another day to construct a meal of sorts. . . Maybe Wednesday will be brown rice with barbecue sauce day :(

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

My hands

So for those of you who know me, you know I'm an avid DO-er
meaning I have trouble sitting still and doing nothing
I don't watch much television (though what I do watch has been critiqued as being less that worthy--p-shaw Mike Webb!...i will have you know that many an educated woman (and man) gets a dose of GOOD TIMES from America's Next Top Model. And a whole host of designer-wannabes has been born from indulging in Project Runway.
Don't knock it til you know it!

I digress.

My hands are tools I like to keep busy under God's watch, and not satan's.
I knit, i crochet, i dance (sometimes), i cook (less sometimes than i dance), and i meet people and shake hands...i also hold onto the nasty poles on new york city subways--ew. And I guess it's pretty obvious that I write too.
But more than JUST write random thoughts (like I do here) I write poetry. If you knew me as a blogger before noseandeyelashes, you knew me for my soulbaring words written at arinmaya.blogspot.com

I'd been planning on putting together a book of poetry, and even had a good friend helping me with editing, but upon undertaking the editing of the book/manuscript found myself frozen and dumbfounded with (1) the amount of work that it needed, and (2) all the heart I'd put into it that was going to require me to really relive so many memories of some very interesting/dramatic/wonderful/not so great relationships (argh!)...
i decided to leave it alone

but just a couple days ago, a good friend who'd drifted away like sunshine behind a cloud (you'll catch on), came back to light and asked me about my book. i said "i had to let it go for a little while," only to pick it up the very next day.

I'm telling you all this so you can be in prayer with me about yet another of my God sent endeavors: getting this book done (on my end) and one day (no big rush) published. I think it's timely enough to come out now or in a year. I'm patient and I know my [stuff] is hot.

It's just a matter of God's time and my hand obeying what He says.
(By the way, this whole entry was just an excuse to share with you this short piece:

i don't know why you didn't save me when i knew and you knew you could
it hurt me to see your back when i thought we could see each other eye to eye
i decided i didn't know you at all
and instead of coming back to the potential of you turning your back on me twice in one year
i have stayed away
keeping myself busy with life
and dreams not you


--re-typing it now, it's definitely more a reflection, but i still like my words. it may not make the cut for the book, but it's how i felt. hopefully you can feel it to--or your version of it.)

Friends are like. . .

sunshine
sometimes they make us warm
sometimes they climb behind clouds and leave us feeling cold and alone
sometimes we forget to give them the due thanks, but they keep shining over us and bringing us all of what we need
sometimes they burn us, but from love (or need) we always go back for more--i guess we know it wasn't their purpose to burn

sometimes, suntimes, sometimes...
friends are there like the sunshine is always there, even when we can't see or feel it
sometimes bright, sometimes dim, but always always there

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

I wonder what it would be like

I wonder what it'd be like to never have someone tell you to shutup
Further what it'd be like to slap the people try to stifle our innermost selves

I wonder what it'd be like to never have to be quiet, but to sing at the top of my lungs whenever, wherever, whatever

Just wondering to pass my day by without violence or harsh words :)
Thanks for listening

Singing other people's stuff...

This is the dilemma I have when I go to open mics, not that I've been to one in a while
I was going to an open mic last night with my new friend Alexis (upcoming actress--catch her on stage in less than a year--I promise)
Cafe Wha was the chosen location, but it turns out that their open mic doesn't start until 12 MIDNIGHT!
What is that?
I don't get why open mics start so late!
It kind of makes me sad since I do still have a day job that requires me to get in before 2pm :)

I was going to sing Maxwell's "Whenever, Wherever, Whatever"
It's one of my favorite songs by him, though really, anything he puts out is potentially my favorite
He's just so sweet
I saw him live once...?
WHOA
Oh, and (yes this a shameless plug for ME) I saw, spoke to, and hugged him once a couple years ago.
I'm still (along with several other hundred people worldwide) waiting for his new album to drop. It appears that he's got something coming (for real this time) from Columbia records.
Check his myspace page, there's a snippet

Anyway, just wanted to share this update, as well as a pretty decent version of what I would have sounded like if I'd sung this last night. Enjoy!

Also, if anyone has any suggestions of songs I should consider singing at open mics, or even just having in my repertoire, please let me know. I'm open to ideas and welcome all forms of support.

Love, love, love

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Isn't it Funny

Isn't it funny how we can go from not seeing someone for years and years to feeling like we've missed them the whole time, without ever having reached out?
Isn't it funny how a kind word can make you feel like crying, just for the simple goodness of knowing someone actually cares?
Even funnier to know they can lose that ability in a mere split second...

Isn't it funny how we can KNOW what we're put here on earth to do, but doubt it every day of our lives, never listening to the voice inside our heads and hearts, but paying total attention the naysayers who say "it can't be done"?

I think it's rather funny myself
and I laugh out loud
scoff at those who would otherwise scoff at me
i know what i'm meant to do
and i know who I'm answering to
and i know He wouldn't have it any other way

yet and still, I know there are people who feel I have to answer to them
and I know there are times I feel I have to entertain them
but in the end. . .i know, i know, i know
who holds tomorrow, and i know
who holds. . . who holds. . .my hand

live your lives
live your dreams
and don't EVER let ANYONE try to steal them away!

Monday, November 26, 2007

This whole love thing is overrated.

I thought or maybe I just guessed incorrectly that love was some beautiful untainted thing that you could hang on somebody's wall and show it off like fine art.
I am slowly but surely finding it's more abstract than that. Not an Alfred Stieglitz at all but more like any given amateur, prancing around with a polaroid camera and calling posed phrases that resemble his dreams "art"

I would go as far as to say love is bullshit but I still believe in it too deeply to say that.

A while ago, I met a man. Older. Attractive. Similar interests. Smart. Articulate. Artistic. Culturally conscious. Almost absolutely wonderful outside of that deep gut feeling that kept saying something just ain’t right.

Problem: he had a girlfriend the whole 5 months it took me to accidentally fall into the ditch of love, so artfully placed at his f-ing feet. Go fig.

Sometimes it feels like someone's playing a trick on me. Is it you God?
No...couldn't be. You love me too much. I'd believe 200% times more that it's me. I'm the trickster and the fool. How pitifully romantic is that?

Here’s the story: After five months of getting to know the guy I fall in love only to find out intuitively (three days later) about the girlfriend; sever all [too] close ties; eventually drag myself, slimy and muddied, from the completely unglamorousness of being in love (and yes, ugly crying—even if spurred on by the all too familiar PMS monster), and walk away. Now here he comes 5 months later to do it all over again, screwing my psyche up and making me feel this awesome fullness even though I still can't do anything with it because morally "we're almost over" still sounds a lot like "I have a girlfriend" to me.
Correct me if I'm wrong. Maybe slavery wasn't the only peculiar institution . . .

Either way it goes, my heart doesn't stop beating when he's in mind or eye and I know it's love, and God I wish I could do something about it—but what?
Hug him?
Hold him?
Leave him?
Listen to him?
Just be there?

I guess the answer is yes—all of that

You may know the song: “hopelessly devoted (or is it commited?) to you . . .” Guess I DON’T know the song, huh? Well I guess that's me.

I'd rather be at Jamba Juice in Times Square getting 2-for-1 smoothies.
Hey, that actually sounds like a plan :-)
At least I have something to look forward to. . .


“I will have poetry in my life. And adventure. And love. Love above all.”—Shakespeare in Love (only one of my FAVORITE movies of all time!)

Men who race to sit down on the train (written 11/18/07)

More than a writer I’m coming to believe I’m more a thinker

...This Sunday afternoon as I was heading down to BK to meet a friend at http://www.mocada.org">Mocada I got on the 4 train.
There were a few seats to which several people rushed

Asses are indeed made to be seated

I got on and came face to face with a rather largely built man who wanted to sit down.
His ass was definitely bigger than mine.
I made my well what r u gonna do now? face (kinda like this, but without the sunlight and sunglasses) and was glad when he moved away from my (rightful, or so I felt) seat to another free seat.
I think I may have even sensed a little shame just before he moved away…or was that defeat?
I'm actually not sure but I honestly didn't care until this cute smallish girl got on at the next stop (she reminded me of my sister) and missed a few seat opps to eager unthinking men. Her face of defeat actually hurt.

I was offended for her and saddened at what really bothers me often--men carelessly taking seats that could more politely be used by women.
By no means would I ever suggest that men don't deserve a seat. Sometimes even more than women what with the potentially strenuous and dangerous work they do for cities and offices. But at LEAST extend the courtesy!
It makes me shiver to wonder what their mothers were teaching. . .

I know this could stretch into a three (or more) hour conversation about men and women and how we relate and what expectations we have of each other. And by all means, converse away (via comments.) To me it's as simple as being courteous.

I went as far (after watching the girl flounder and fail for at least 3 seats) to get her attention and offer her my seat. She smiled and declined. Previous to this offer she actually looked sad. Like she’d had one of those days and this seat thing was on the brink of taking her to tears. And I didn't want that for her because I understand “those days” and they are not easy. I worried about her like I do my own sister when she has a bad day.

A bad day coupled with too many unthoughtful men can really be depressing.

So this is a simple plea, not only to men but to everyone. Let's try to look into each others' eyes and see what we can see. Then move to your seat. If your “seat” ends up being a pole to lean on, don't take the seat that's waiting for mr. or mrs. tired ass and feet. Look around, spread love, and give up your seat.

Monday, November 19, 2007

i couldn't go to sleep yet-it wasn't time

tonight i had my first voice lesson in a while--a few months
it cost me about what i'd value my vhs collection at
$65
not too much but it makes a dent when trying to decide whether to eat breakfast or not
whether to buy that evian water bottle or not
whether to stay in or go out and buy that drink you could have substituted with water...from the tap

i've heard so many times that life is about our decisions
that what we choose will guide us to where we're going

as i do my best to (sometimes) stay quiet and listen to the voice of God in my head during this 25th year of life, i'm led both by spirit and faithful friends to believe in me

[faithful] leaps abound in glory
i can't believe anything less than this right now
i'm heading towards my glory
it sounds like the sun is coming too

This is the day of Thanksgiving...

...blessed be the name of the righteous one
This is the day of rejoicing, for all the things that He has done
He reigns supreme . . . over everything,
But yet He listens . . . to the birds that sing
Celebrate
Celebrate
Celebrate Jesus Chriiiiist!

(and this posting has nothing to do with that this Thursday is Thanksgiving--though I do wish a happy one to each and everyone who does and doesn't read my blog)

Indeed, sometimes I need to encourage myself to be thankful instead of pissed at what drama or ridiculousness my days bring me.
I was chatting with a friend and listing the reasons why a recent day of mine stayed afloat, and thought maybe you wouldn't mind me listing a few of my blessings, about which I should be and am in the process of rejoicing.

Here goes:
God woke me up this morning
I actually got work done today
I wore my new red earrings today (by Sophia Loren Coffee)
I have enough money to pay for my voice lesson tonight and I'm excited
I have a house to go home to, and a key to open the door
I have food at home (waiting to be cooked)
Somebody left me a voicemail, which to me means they (whoever they are) were thinking 'bout me
My sister said I can have Thanksgiving with her and her bf's family
Even though I didn't sell ANY scarves this weekend at the trunk show, I accomplished much--finished product with labels (hand-designed by Jaeah Lee, upcoming visual artist/architect)

. . . the list really doesn't have an ending place, but I'll try this:
i read this morning in Isaiah--that's the Bible :)--that God selects all the stars and puts them in their place and calls them by name to shine the way they do

I figure, if he can make a star to shine so bright, I'll be alright

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

About the...

Rage in Brooklyn that I unfortunately didn't know about until the paper this morning--how uninformed of me!--can i just throw the question out:
What do we think of this?

I feel that given the already tense atmosphere of this America we live in, where police brutality is not railed against with any force by the just-us system, the recent murder of the unarmed Khiel Coppin was quite obviously as ridiculous as all the rest.

From what I read, it does appear that like his mother said, Coppin was suffering from mental issues. But 20 shots?
I am not, nor do I pretend to be anything close to a police, or even in support of that body of citizens. However, I feel my gut telling me that their job is not to shoot with the intent to kill, even if the person is suspected of having a weapon, but to disable the person from being able to kill or harm them. I understand self defense, but DAMN!
Is the shot to the knee no longer an acceptable method?

I'm at a bit of a loss and figured maybe somebody has something to say. . .

Night on the town (with the Rockettes)

And I wish I'd have had my camera, but alas!
Here are my notes from opening night at Radio City Music Hall:

Okay, so right this moment I am radio city, for the 1st time since I've lived in
New York.

Why?

Because the wife of one of my best friends since kindergarten (Cousin Christy, I'm thinking of u and your cute accented "kindergarten") is a dancer in this year's Christmas Spectacular with the Rockettes. . . right.

She's wonderful and I love her (yaaay Alia!) and she chose me to get the other comp ticket. Because, she says, I always make her feel good about her performances, post show.
But what's throwing Andre (Alia’s husband, my friend) and I right now is the "glamour and grandeur" of it all.

The line outside?
Ridiculous.

This theater?
Ri-damn-diculous.

I just saw Miranda from Sex and the City in the lobby as we were walking to our seats in the orchestra. Well alright!

This scene (rendered complete by the bar of chocolate and the peppermint candy cane given us at the door) leads us to a conversation:

What is "art"? And further, what is art for Americans?

I think it’s the level of décor and celebration that makes it all too much for us, especially knowing the hard work that’s put in by struggling artists to make their mark through statements that could mean formidable change for the world. Or maybe that’s too deep for this crowd.

From Ailey to Radio City, it appears (preshow by the way) that it's full with glitz, glamour and beauty. But what is beauty?

And says who?

Back to the scene. . .

I forgot to mention the star light they gave us at the door, along with instructions and 3-D glasses. Do I really need this?
Only if it's free. (And a post-show recap makes it all very clear: this show is made for children. It’s a tradition. Breathe and let it be—or else we’ll incite a mass conniption.)

Oh, and apologies to my coworkers to whom I tried to sell an early love for Christmas music last week. With “frosty the snowman” in my ear, I completely understand and revoke my previous inquiries.

(Oh wait, a conversation about the union strike on broadway, which obviously didn't affect Radio City...What about the tours? It turns out that tech crews travel. Wow.)

Final notes (pre-show). . .

The show was supposed to start at 7:30…it’s four til 8, and nobody’s said a word. Andre says: I don’t ever want to hear another word about black people’s shows being late.

‘Nuf said.

Post show reflections:

Similar to the aforementioned sentiment of “breathe and let it be,” not to be confused with laissez-faire :), the Christmas Spectacular with the Rockettes is exactly that. A spectacle of sorts. It’s not offensive. It’s a good show. I think it’s necessary to place things in different parts of our understandings. I don’t know if anyone calls this show high art. I think I can go as far as to say, such a statement would be obviously incorrect.

What it is, is entertainment. A night on the town. And a creative (and traditional) way to usher in the holiday season (and the cheer that comes with it, if you will). . .even if it is November 14th

Merry Christmas!!!


Shooting off at the heart/brain

So I get to work early-ish (yay!) and after admiring my coworker’s dress, see that she’s brought something new into the office: a hot water heater. It resembles a humidifier.

She’s brought it in because the one we have in our kitchen (“our” being the nonprofit where I work) is slow and isn’t quite effective. (Sidenote: though I don’t do any programmatic work here, I think it can be said in a general sense—and not only in reference to non-profits—that organizations tend to go the length to figure out the problems, and to research them extensively, only to leave the solution incomplete or only partially done. I promise this is relevant to the story I’m about to tell.)

The water heater. . .
So she’s brought it in, and it appears to be slightly sizeable, but isn’t ginormous (shoutout to the Tuskeegee crew). I hear her say once: can you find mean extension cord? I ask, for what? It doesn’t fit in the kitchen without one? She tells me our Operations Manager has voiced a concern regarding the water heater taking up too much counter space…blah blah.

Did I mention I don’t like being told "no"?

I hear again: can you find me an extension cord?

Oh, and another thing I don’t like is repeating myself or hearing the same thing over and over and OVER. It begins to feel like someone tapping my shoulder—which I don’t like.

I respond: I’ll TRY!

And yes, it’s okay to express emotion in this office space. So I raised my voice.
My mother might be shamed. My sister would be appalled.
I say we are not all the same.


Back to storytime. . .
When things get annoying, I make a decision to either ignore them or to fix them/change them from being annoying to being not. So when I heard: can you find me an extension cord? again I may have snapped a little bit. I uprooted myself from my desk, grabbed the hot water heater, and made my way to the kitchen to do a little experiment. This seemed an easier option than finding an extension cord that has nothing to do with me or my job.

I rearranged some things: coffee maker #1, to the left; coffee maker #2, to the left; current hot water heater, offline; new hot water heater, to the right. Everything fit perfectly, thus proving the previous statement or concern incorrect and invalid, and hence irrelevant. Solution? Replace old hot water heater with new hot water heater. Water flows freely at a reasonable pace, everybody is happy. No excess or lost counter space. Tah-dah!

I walk back to my desk, victorious, to get my coworker (to whom the device belongs) and her approval. I am indeed quite proud of myself.

A note on my not taking “no” for an answer:

I believe strongly that when there’s a will there’s a way. If you want something badly enough, you’ll figure out how to do get it done, how to reach the next level, how to win the prize. “No” will always lose to a winner. I’m a winner.

Previous to her getting up off her ass to follow me to the kitchen she says: uh-oh, arin’s gonna get me in trouble. Do I appreciate this assumption? No. Do I care to respond to stupidity? No. I don’t generally choose to give life to something that never should have been born. The proof is in the doing.

So I take her to the kitchen. But as you might be able to guess, any forward movement is hindered by the presumption that “Arin’s gonna get me in trouble.” All reason is tossed to the wind and the fact that this hot water heater fits perfectly without any unfavorable change becomes irrelevant.

All that’s relevant is:

But then she’d have to get rid of the old hot water heater.

Right, but it wouldn’t make sense to have two anyway.

But we already kind of have two.

Right, well the point is, her point of there not being space is irrelevant.

(is this [chick] panicking?—this type of communication and hesitation and dumb [mess] is what starts riots, or at least what gets [ofays] screaming “rape!”. . .I’m just saying)

Well I’m just gonna take it home.

Fine—I was just presenting it as an option.

(She unplugs it and takes it back to her desk.)

End scene.

My issue with the whole playout is this:

That I had to hear: can you find me an extension cord? one too many times, urged me to find a solution to the apparent problem. I know she didn’t ask me to put it in the kitchen. I also acknowledge that it’s not my hot water heater and so is not mine to do anything with. However, when something is brought into my knowing, I have the tendency to try to make them as best as is possible. That’s not anyone’s fault, it’s just who I am. Love me or hate me…

Maybe I jumped the gun. Maybe I care too much. Maybe I should find some work to do. But my thing is this: so you lugged this thing all the way from home, only to have to take it back home without having presented a valid and solid (and sound) argument in favor of your desired goal? How weak and useless of you. (This may sound a bit harsh, but some people are conservation and others are a bit more radical. I'll let you choose where I fall on the spectrum. I don't judge--I just have my opinions.)

My ability to stay true to myself and to maintain my strength of mind through voicing my opinions when I choose to or when it's necessary or even asked for, is one of my favorite things about me.

This is just who I am—some kind of passionate, involved, dedicated to trying to actually FIX problems instead of think about potential solutions and why they do or don’t work—I've always had a special place in my heart for geometry. Why? The proofs . . .some kind of wonderful (if I do say so myself)

Good morning! And please (if anybody’s out there) I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

I recently realized...

...that I haven't been as true to myself as was originally intended with this blog-o-mine.
The whole point is for me to get to mention things I love.
And yes, I would LOVE to highlight things and people that strike my attention, but seriously...toothpaste?

I hate to go against anyone's impressions of me whether they be from initial meeting to years of knowing me. But going against the grain is the point of living, I think.
So there will be a shift in my musings from now on.

I'll mention things like the place I went to get my pedicure last week in BK (shout to all you wonderful Brooklynites (i don't know if that's a real word, but deal with it)) called Purple Nails, where Christy (I think that's her name) stayed until the place closed down, PAST the bad episode of Everybody Loves Raymond--p.s. I do NOT love Raymond, and the trash was ready to go out with her, JUST to make sure my pretty little toenails dried.
It was too cold for flip flops!

Big ups to the prices, which have remained the same since I first came to know them (only $10 for a pedicure; $14 for mani and pedi) when I lived at 83 Hall Street in the wonderful summer of 2003, and the people. (The guy at the front will harrass you, but only in love.)

Not to mention the Chinese food place next door, whose prices have unfortunately gone up, but only a quarter so far as I can tell, whose french fries (with ketchup AND hot sauce) are to die for! And don't forget to grab the tupperware full of fresh pineapple (in juice...and quite possibly straight from the can) for $1...or is it $1.25 now?

This is who I am. I love a bargain. I love to shop. I love to treat myself. I love art. I love people. I love naming the stupidity that surrounds me on a daily basis. Because it puts life in perspective.

So join me if you will, and if you won't, my love will still find and follow you everywhere you go.

I hope to see you all again, and again, and again.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

"I miss you"

Not be like Usher or anything, but I do every now and then (more often than not if i'm being completely honest) have confessions that bring me closer to myself--to my true self.

This confession is that even though I have emotional hangups and don't always like to be as open as God's arms...and even though I seriously don't say it a lot (quite purposefully, because of what i feel and know these words to mean--i know their gravity) i really do miss a lot of people a lot. It's because I love a lot. And I like to love. Even when I'm upset with someone and don't really understand why things may not have worked out the way I wanted them to... And it's not even always a dramatic feeling. It just is what it is.

Life is so fleeting, and we're all so busy and moving here and there--I just recently realized, or determined, that I don't have the time to waste on not telling the people I love that I love them, in this way. It's a bit more subtle, but to me no less meaningful.

My "I miss you"s used to come in the "I think I might miss you" form. A huge defense in case the other person didn't share my sentiment, or even had nothing to offer on the other side of my statement. Silence is not always golden.

So if I see some value in you as a person, as a friend, or in the opportunity to hear your voice at any point, I really do miss you

Mommy (cause you're always going to be crazy and I've finally accepted that--just KIDDING--really just for putting up with me and understanding how your craziness has made me who i am :))
Daddy (for keeping the best parts of you in your life's transition and even at a distance still loving me)
Nia (even though we live in the same city)
Caira (cause you'll always be my play lil sis)
CAMILLE (I'm listening to Anthony Hamilton right now!)
Radiance (when will i see you again!?)
DeJaundre (though logic tells me not to, you caught my heart at an early age)
Earle (for your sometimes and often brutal honesty--I appreciate that in you)
REV!(for being your loving, sometimes grumpy old man self--thank you for being you)
Jon (for always listening)
Melody (for being the best not-quite-auntie ever!)
Jamar (you were something like amazing, and I'll never forget you)
Eric (for being loveable even though you weren't available--i hope one day I can accept your friendship in whatever form it comes)
Kamaria/Tiffany/Florence (I sometimes wonder if we could go back to the old days...)--the list extends and extends
Rasaan (for sticking it out)
Dave (i hope your girl doesn't mind my always and forever stance on us as friends--i only wish you happiness)
Steph Young (there's always been something real and genuine and beautiful about you that I really appreciate--thanks for keeping you in tact)

this is my confession: i miss and love you all

It's Been A Long Time--I Shouldn't've Left You...

By the way, the word "shouldn't've" has a LOT of syllables.
A big round of applause to all who are able to pull it off with ease.

I can't quite explain why I haven't had much to say lately. Work has been a *****, personal life a slight reflection of such, and you know, one thing leads to another.

I can say, I'm glad that I have God, friends, knitting, singing, and happiness (and the potential for more in the near future) on my side.

I've been preparing for a trunk sale on November 17th here in Manhattan, by making many scarves, which will hopefully translate into much money. Because I am choosing broke right now. If I can keep up with this savings schedule (of not really shopping at all) I can save enough money by the end of the year when I may need it.

I would like a new laptop. I think I'm gonna go with a Mac this time. The ads have sunk into my psyche and Mr. PC isn't looking so hot anymore.

Fall has finally fallen. This fact has a large potential to make me happy, except that I can't seem to figure out what has happened to my wardrobe.

I haven't read much in a while.

There's so much to do with so little time.
Right now I'm listening to Richard Smallwood's Persuaded Live in D.C. If you've heard it, you know God's power through it.

I'd like to go to Central Park and walk with someone who I know well enough to know I don't know all there is to know of them. And to talk and learn more.

I hope to be patient and to not make the rash decisions that I've made in the past, and that have led me nowhere closer to my real destiny.
At the same time, I wish to not waste my time listening to sounds unpleasant and seemingly necessary for growth--I want to listen and allow goodness to come into me. If I must listen through filters, so be it. Let God be that filter. Or let me use my brain and wits to sort through all the stuff out there.

I'm in the place where it's necessary to be conscious of my temple, while trusting that God will do the guarding while I do the living.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Three Letters...S...W...V

Yes ladies and gents--I'm talking about the (or my) favorite girl group from the early 90s and into some years after that.
Sisters With Voices (maybe not the catchiest name these days) could SANG!
They make me happy. . .and a little bit weak in the knees

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Maybe we should start using nooses like we use nigger...

Columbia Univeristy hangs nooses too

A few friends (okay, just a couple...read: two) have suggested that this posting needs a little more than just a title and a link.
One friend's response was simply, "What does 'Maybe we should start using nooses like we use nigger' mean?"

I get it--I can't just live in my head, assuming you all know how to read what's inside with no direction. Well here goes a brief, tired at the end of the day, attempt for the masses:

Right now there's a huge backlash/uproar surrounding the Jena 6 case and many angry and disgruntled racists in this here country we call America are choosing this moment to "copycat" the use of nooses to drive attention to the fact (that several Americans like to disregard) that racism is as alive today as it was 300 years ago. . .

Jena Six case spurs copycats nationwide

By Marisol Bello
USA Today

On the campus of the University of Maryland, where a third of the students are minorities, a noose is found hanging from a tree in front of a building that houses black organizations.

At the Model Secondary School for the Deaf on the campus of Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., seven students, six white and one black, assault a black student and scrawl KKK and swastikas all over him.

The incidents are among at least a dozen racial incidents across the country found in news reports since the case of the "Jena Six." The six black teens were charged with beating a white student after a series of racial incidents that included white students hanging nooses from a schoolyard tree.

Most of the dozen occurrences in the past two months involved a noose left anonymously at a school or workplace, including nooses found in a Long Island, N.Y., police locker room, at a Pittsburgh bus maintenance garage and at several high schools.

"For a dozen incidents to come to the public's attention is a lot," says Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups. "I don't generally see noose incidents in a typical month. We might hear about a handful in a year."

Several of the recent events are being investigated by police as hate crimes - crimes motivated by prejudice based on race, religion, sexual orientation or ethnicity.

Criminologists and civil rights advocates say there is usually a spike in hate crimes after events such as the Jena case, although recent data are unavailable. The most recent statistics are for 2005.

"Any time you have a case that receives national notoriety, you see an uptick in copycat offenses," says Brian Levin, executive director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

After 9/11, FBI reports showed the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes shot up from 28 in 2000 to 481 in 2001.

Copycat offenses are most often committed by men under 22 who are bored or drunk and looking for attention, Levin says. They generally are not members of hate groups, he says, but they harbor racial animosity or feel threatened by racial groups they think have unfair advantages, such as affirmative action.

"Those prejudices are already there for the most part, and what the Jena incident did was give them a green light on repeating this novelty," Levin says. "It's a way of reasserting their importance."

Scholars and civil rights advocates say the rash of episodes reflects the country's continued tensions over race.

"It's something in our culture that never goes away even though all this progress has been made," says Philip Dray, a New York writer on black history who authored "At the Hands of Persons Unknown: The Lynching of Black America." "Below the surface remains a hostility and distrust that can be easily awakened. ... You can have a situation where people go along for years, and then an incident triggers it and you have this kind of eruption."

He says nooses are an unmistakable act of hostility toward blacks, given the country's history of 4,000 lynchings of black men in the 19th and 20th centuries.

The Model Secondary School, where half of the 175 students are minorities, hired a consultant after the Sept. 29 attack to train the faculty and staff to deal with racism, says Dean Kathy Jankowski.

She says the school already sponsored diversity assemblies and cultural festivals and assigns students to sit at different tables during lunch so they can learn about other groups.

That's why the attack was so surprising, she says.

"It's very disappointing," Jankowski says. "We have done so much to promote diversity, and it still happens. ... It tells me we need to do more."

On Sept. 20, the day more than 20,000 people from across the country rallied in Jena, La., to support the Jena Six, Rosalyn Carpenter of Nashville couldn't believe it when she saw a red pickup truck drive by with a noose hanging from the back.

She and other demonstrators were in Alexandria, near Jena, waiting for their tour bus home.

"It was so bizarre," says Carpenter, president and CEO of the Urban League of Middle Tennessee. "To me it spoke to where we were, in the Deep South, and what is acceptable and what is allowed. ... We need to get it together when it comes to issues of race."

Two males, 18 and 16, were arrested. The older teen was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, driving while intoxicated and inciting to riot.

In Winchester, Ky., four teens were charged in August with terroristic threats for taunting a black classmate with drawings of a noose, a Confederate flag and someone being whipped and lynched. The mother of one says her 17-year-old son wasn't doing it because of Jena.

"I know he meant nothing by it," says Lois Cotton. "I know he's not racist. He said he was just joking around. They were passing time in class."

She says her son didn't understand the impact of the drawings and has apologized. "I think he understands how serious this thing is," Cotton says.


My sarcastic and (wanting to be slightly humorous, but quite serious) response to the random noose hangings is, why not treat nooses like so many African-Americans use the word "nigger"--or, should I say "nigga"?

Somehow, we've ascribed the term that degraded us for so long (and still does) with some kind of inherent power. Of course, we're only okay with its use when we are the ones who use it. My nigga!!! or Nigga, please!, which to me mirrors the beloved Bitch, please!

None of it is acceptable. Self-hatred, or as my girl Karyn would say, "self-loathing" really is quite unbecoming, and it speaks volumes to our capabilities and future trajectories.

My "maybe" statement was only meant to raise eyebrows at what could so easily (thanks to our collective creative energies--though not always synergized) become a laughable moment in time. To remind us to be conscious and to not take things lightly. Not that anyone is taking the Jena 6 lightly. . .I hope.

Sign it, seal it, deliver it.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

'Nuf Said

Luther, at his best

I love you Luther!
God, if I'd have had the chance to meet him before he went home...
This is what's keeping me alive at the end of my work day, and it's SO worth it.

Last Standing Poet

Name: Samantha Thornhill
Age: 26
Status: Effing Amazing
The Deal: She's got CDs, poems to read, and a book upcoming
Website: www.samathaspeaks.com (click the "Journal" link for her blog)
(read: CHECK HER OUT!!!)

I had the initial (and clueless) pleasure of meeting miss Samantha a few years ago through Quraysh Ali Lansana, a longtime friend from Chicago whose poetry show I had just missed seeing (because I am eternally late) at the Bowery Poetry Club. I was new to New York and it was my first time there...I still haven't really learned my lesson about being late, but I haven't completely missed anything since then--I promise!
After trying to apologize to Quraysh profusely on a Sunday afternoon, I accepted defeat and leaned into the introduction phase. Samantha was there and she hadn't missed the show. To make up for my absence, I followed the group of family and friends out to a Chinese restaurant. We ate, exchanged information--I left.

During the intro phase and through supper (dinner pre-6pm), I did mention my then strong and living desire to get my MFA in Creative Writing, similar to many at the table that afternoon turned evening. And while no one was unfriendly in the least, no one seemed as happy or excited as the counselors whom I'd just left behind at Howard just a few months before. It was then I started to understand that whatever I wanted in life would have to be mine, and I would have to own it. No one was necessarily going to push me or cheer me on. I'd had to establish a self-endorsing team of my own and in myself.

Back to Samantha and her amazingness. She reached out. Albeit, her reach out (otherwise known as adding me to her email list) had nothing to do with my desire to "do" poetry. At the time, I was also completely clueless with regard to this theory of recklessness. It's growing on me. [The idea of throwing one's self into a task or into a passion directly seems slightly difficult, especially with my varied and extensive list of interests (singing, knitting, writing, dancing (sometimes)), as well as painful--the actual throwing, that is.]

... SAMANTHA (i digress easily, as you can see) added me to her list and I started learning about her slamming and poetry. I never went to her shows. I hardly ever really read her emails. I was too busy working at Random House! The one email that did finally catch my eye had to do with her needing mentors for a program she was heading up at the Children's Aid Society that fall. I needed to do community service for my soul. I responded. We reunited. (A story about a girl named Doriza who stole my heart away to the Philippines shall one day follow.)

One of the interesting things about Sam is (at least from my perspective) her sincere and true dedication to everything she engages in. She's a poet, an artist, and an amazing one at that. But she's also a teacher, mentor, organizer, lover, human.
This kind of messed me up in the head. How come SHE can be all focused and I'm all over the place? I still wonder this. I think they call it focus.

Only just now, about three years later, am I finally finding myself really able to read and devote some real time to "hearing" Sam's ridiculous talent. Why? Because I'm kind of following her example. Doing something with this devoted focus thing.

I just read her poem (A Memory) about Amina Baraka, wife of Amiri Baraka, who I heard recently read a poem at the Bowery about a red dress and a purple hat. (I've got to find the footage of that poem.)

If you're seriously not made to smile by "A Memory" like I was, go away.
Or, you can just go to Sam's page and find something you do like. She will become yours, and hopefully, you'll jump to task quicker than I did.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Knowing the News

“A little butterfly in Panama beat her wings and created a storm in China.”

Not at all could I ever say that I love what was turned up (as noted in the story, linked above) but I do love ordinary people, of which I am certainly one. Eduardo Arias in Panama seems to have just saved many lives, where several thousand had already been lost--to a poisonous ingredient in toothpaste being manufactured in China.

One of my favorite church songs is "Ordinary People," (not the John Legend version) where the lyrics read:

Just ordinary people
God uses ordinary people
He chooses people just like me and you
Who are willing to do as He commands
God uses people that will give Him all
No matter how small your all may seem to you
Because little becomes much as you place it in the Master's hand
(the rest of the lyrics can be found here)

So, I'm just thankful for the ordinary people who are willing to step outside of themselves every now and then to do something that may seem little, but that truly becomes much more than that.

Also, a shout out to Coalton Bennett, a friend of mine, who in true form, incited a brief but meaningful conversation with me regarding the news. I was saying I just don't pay that much attention to the news because it's so biased and, in general more disturbing than I feel is necessary for my life. I admitted to living in a comfortable, though potentially ignorant and dangerous bubble, most of the time. I went on to admit that my laziness and opposition to knowing all of what was in the news was leveraged by my constant exposure to like-minded people who do my leg-work for me. He suggested that even they have biases when they give me my daily dose of what's important in the world--and that I should be informed; that my brain was the filter I should rely on, and not the people or random media sources that come into my psyche.

At the end of the conversation, there was no right or wrong--there was just a truth that I couldn't deny. Bubbles are for kids. And it's time for me to up my news game, so I don't end up, like my friend suggested, finding out about something three years late that really mattered.

...and so here I am, adding a news component to my favorite things. Because being informed (and always smart) really is one of them.


Monday, September 24, 2007

Going Home

I went home this past weekend, to Chicago, home of Buckingham Fountain, the Water Tower (one of the only remaining buildings following the Great Fire of 1871), and Da' Bulls--I don't follow sports so feel free to let me know if I should have left off that last (former) claim to fame for the Chi . . . I guess I could also have said home of Obama, my beloved Trinity United Church of Christ, Kanye, Common, and all things formerly southern but replaced during that Great Ole' Migration in the 1920s and 30s...you get the point

My trip home was, I'm sure, just like anyone's who love where they came from as much as I do. It didn't hurt that the weather was a whopping 88 degrees on Friday. . .and it maintained all weekend.

I pay tribute to Mayor Richard Daley and his constant (and likely everlasting) bullheaded ways, to Natalie Y. Moore (recently featured here) whose voice I heard on Chicago Public Radio (WBEZ 91.5) in reference to gang violence and efforts being made by Chicago teenagers to amend what (I believe) police only aggravate . . . to artist-diva and psalmist, Candace Hunter and to the father-daughter artist duo, Aiesha & Arthur Wright, whose work was featured at Nicole Gallery, next door to. . . Blu 47 at 47th and King Drive--you make my mouth and my tummy very VERY happy. . . to my daddy who knows the chef (at Blu 47) and for sitting and listening to me as we sat by the dock of the bay (better known as Lake Michigan) . . .
I pay tribute to friends old and new--your faces and your love light my way. . . I give love to my mommy, whose happiness (i am confident) will triumph at the end of her tunnel, and who put a virtual knife to my throat to FINALLY make me go through old chemistry, physics, english, english, english, and "other" notebooks and files, all to clean, but really to remind me how thankful I should be every day of my God-given, and quite glorious, life. . .
To music, to spirit, to sincerity, to the written word, to friendship, to water, to vision, dreaming, and destiny. . .

This poem is something a bit aged but that, I hope, still captures some of what I just blurted out above--a bit more tamed this time
Chicago-lovers (and everyone else too!) feel free to add your own note of love for Chicago, or just for home

ode to Home
i wanna go to hyde park
dance in the new light of the moon tonight

twirling out of control with my eyes shut closed i wanna
feel the wind on my neck
breathing heavy and thick
rippin’ my hair with its lips and teeth

want it to wrap me up in its arms real tight
dizzy me around
slap a smile on my face
and call me in a voice that shakes me up inside

i wanna dance alone and feel rich
and generous

i want light
to drip from my eyelashes
to grace the grass beneath and between my toes

i wanna look up and have the stars envy my glow

Let them shrink back into the depth of the sky
so that she bursts with joy sending rays of lust down
to earth
creating new life all green, all alive

i can see it all inside the thick part of my brain
or when i cross my eyes


and i can feel life moving through me
wheezing steady through my lungs

and all of this: the wind, the earth, the stars. . . light
all these things drag me to a peaceful place
where i can lay down onto my pillowed hands
rest my eyes to watch the sun dance in my eyelids
stretch and know no boundaries
say 'no' and summon freedom
be sexy without being defined by sex
open my eyes and see myself twirling in a huge green field with vast waters reflecting faraway rivers

and know that home is never far away

© 2005 Arin M. Lawrence

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Writers on the Come Up

...as in writers to watch out for in our blooming generation
The other day I was forwarded the following article written by a friend's sister. The topic is so on point and the writing is so flawless and honest, I know everyone will have something to say. Chime in as is relevant! And keep your eye on Natalie Y. Moore. I aspire to be her in some brightly lilt corner of my heart.

Rule of Thumbs: Love in the Age of Texting

By Natalie Y. Moore
Sunday, September 16, 2007; B01

I once had a boyfriend who was Mr. Text-o-Rama.
He never wanted to talk, but he always wanted to text. To him, the only way to communicate was via thumb.
I remember a Saturday afternoon I spent with a female friend when I didn't have my cellphone handy. By the evening, I had a logjam of text messages from him. The final mess of a message inquired whether our relationship was over because of my "lack of communication."
I called him. He didn't answer.
And so it went. During our relationship, he sent me curt texts reeking of attitude. He sent texts that had the elocution of an August Wilson soliloquy. If I tried to actually call him to work something out, he'd fire off a snippy "You're busy. I'll talk to you later." It got so I wished I could string him up by his thumbs.
Looking back, I see that relationship as the embodiment of how technology is slowly killing romance. It's draining the courting out of courtship. And frankly, I'm ready to hit "delete" on the whole thing.
A flirtatious text here and there is fine, but a text of more than 100 characters? That's overkill (not to mention hard to read). When the time comes, I don't want to see the words "will u marry me" in one-point font. Call me old-fashioned, but I wonder what's so "advanced" about these so-called advancements in communication. When they're abused, they can make a caveman's grunt seem refined. The same gadgets that allow you to be in touch all the time sometimes mask the fact that you never really touched at all.
"Texting is a way of life," says etiquette expert Joy Weaver, "but it cannot replace the human voice or touch." Tell me about it.
The relationship began sweetly enough. We met through mutual friends and quickly took a liking to each other. We visited museums and bookstores and camped out at dive bars. I liked that he was so expressive and open. And I had never dated a guy who liked to communicate quite so much in so many ways.
"I love you."
I looked down at my cellphone and read the text message. It was the first time he'd expressed those dreamy words. My heart fluttered. I immediately speed-dialed him back to hear him say it out loud. He didn't answer. "Call you later," he texted me back.
At the time, I was too giddy to notice -- or care -- how weird that was, or how even weirder the many scenarios that followed were: being forced to boost the allotment on my mobile text-messaging plan. So much passive aggression delivered via tiny rectangular pieces of plastic.
My thumbs becoming so tired.
Initially, texting with him was thrilling. Wherever I was -- on assignment, at the airport, out with friends -- his sweet messages triggered butterflies. It was like talking, or flirting, but better. We were always only a few keystrokes away from communicating at any time, night or day.
But soon that became the problem.
On the day of my birthday bash, he texted me that he was "uncomfortable" with our relationship and that we needed to talk before the party.
Say what? We hadn't had a fight. I called him. No answer. I called again and again and again. Finally, he answered with some lame excuse. I'm still not sure exactly what the problem was.
Repeat scenario. Add water and stir. He often seemed unable to articulate what made him mad or uneasy. But that didn't stop him from firing off messages accusing me of not communicating. Me. The girl who likes to hear or see the person she's talking to.
The final few weeks before we broke things off were a blur, one long string of digitally delivered angst. Once upon a time, drunken dialing could ruin a relationship. Ha. Try getting drunken, misspelled texts at 3 a.m .
What was I to make of this? According to Barb Iverson, a professor of new media at Columbia College Chicago, the latest technology revolution means that there are now two kinds of people in the world: "digital immigrants" and "digital natives." The digital immigrants came of age before the technology revolution and they struggle to adapt to the new language, rituals and protocol. The digital natives instinctively emote through their thumbs and don't consider a relationship "official" until their Facebook or MySpace profile says it is.
Then there are the Gen-Xers like me who are somewhere in between.
In the United States, we have come fairly late to the texting game. The Chinese, who embraced this technology years before it arrived here, send 300 billion text messages a year, and the number is rising. Half the 13- to 15-year-olds in Australia own cellphones. In Japan, some experts have noted that thumbs are growing physically bigger and people are now using that digit -- and not the index finger -- to point and ring doorbells. Texting is so prevalent that Japanese teenagers are called the "tribe of the thumb."
Anthropologist Bella Ellwood-Clayton studied texting and dating in the Philippines, which she calls the texting capital of the world. In a 2005 study, she detailed how it works: A man might send an innocuous text message to a woman. If she replies quickly and with warmth, the texts back and forth increase in familiarity -- and innuendo. "It is also a fairly nonthreatening way to initiate communication with someone versus a phone call or face-to-face methods, which demand greater bravery and often directness of intention," Ellwood-Clayton noted.
As we catch up here in the United States, we are grappling with the social implications that come along with texting.
As I learned, if emotions become involved, texting can quickly devolve into a power play. Because people usually keep their cellphones within reach, angry text forces the hand of the recipient: If you love me, you'll respond right now! It's not the same interruption as a phone call. You can work, watch television, sit in class or talk to a friend while texting.
My single friend Thomas says that "good morning" texts or short messages in the middle of the workday from a girlfriend are fine to let him know she's thinking of him. But receiving a text at 7 p.m. asking "How are you?" is a chicken way of saying "I want to talk to you without actually calling." He says the woman is probably at home willing the phone to ring. Her recourse? A text.
This deranged texting dance doesn't stop with singles. A married friend rolled her eyes as she recounted how her husband, sitting in another room in their house, sent her a sour text after an argument to cancel their night out on the town. It was widely reported that Britney Spears ended her marriage to Kevin Federline via text.
But in text, nuances in tone, mood and intent go by the wayside. Just like the pseudolives of millions of addicted MySpacers, too much texting can create what media theorists call "parasocial" behavior. This term is applied to people who believe that constant virtual contact is more than just pretend intimacy.
In an online and magazine ad campaign, mobile phone company Helio put out guidelines on social etiquette and technology, filled with pop quizzes and diagrams. It includes a primer on emoticons and abbreviations (e.g. YMMFS -- you make my fingers sweat).
The company suggests several texting rules for dating: Don't flirt too long virtually; if someone doesn't text you back in 24 hours, it's not happening; only cowards settle arguments via text, and text breakups don't count.
And the No. 1 text message rule: Keep it short.
The campaign is all tongue-in-cheek, but if you ask me, some people need to pay attention.
I now believe that texting should be reserved for the following notifications: "I'm running late." "I'm outside." "Meet me at [insert location.]" "It's noisy; I'll call you later." "What time are the reservations?"
And yes, "I love you" is fine -- but only if you've already said those words in person.

natalie.moore@myoasis.colum.edu
Natalie Y. Moore is a public affairs reporter
for Chicago Public Radio.