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Friday, April 27, 2012

Family Reunion Dream

I'm the passenger in a car headed to a family reunion. We drive to my neighborhood, but the streets look unfamiliar even though I know I'm in the right place. We parallel park the car (not very well) in a hurry and walk to the house where the reunion is being held.There are dead leaves all over the ground and it feels like Fall. From the outside, the big old house isn't one I recognize at all, but once I'm inside I know it is the house of a childhood friend. Though I am entirely positive this is my family reunion,no one from my family is actually there, and the people I came with aren't my family members either.

The next thing I know I am sitting alone in the dining room playing with Legos. After some time, three of my friends arrive and join me. I have the feeling I'd rather not share my Legos with them, so I melt some of the pieces with a candle. My friend whose house it is has two twin baby sisters and everyone is talking about how they're going to get married soon (to each other). I feel uncomfortable about this since they are much too young to be getting married, and so I leave the dining room and go into the living room where there are a lot of people socializing.

I awkwardly interject myself into a conversation that somehow turns into a discussion of Halloween costumes. Everyone is posing ideas for a friend of mine and her mother about what they should dress up as next year. My friend whose house it is suggests the idea of "Queen" and someone else says one of them might consider being a mouse. I tell my friend's mother I think she should dress up as a Desktop Background. Then I wake up.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

o c t o p u s

Octopuses have 4 pairs of legs 

I'm working really hard this week on a new submission for my English class, but it's been frustrating and all my hours before the computer have proven rather unfruitful. Last year I was trying to write about something similar, and got a big block in the same way...both pieces feel like great ideas until I try and get them out into words. It's just so frustrating, but I can't seem to form my feelings into any kind of picture. Hopefully I'll have something good to post within the next couple of days.  

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Thank Goodness!

Brian got a little bit hungry waiting for his dinner.
There are a lot of things to be excited about lately:


1. I played frisbee in the park on Monday. In the sun. And drank mexican beer on a patio and ate my dinner with friends. And as I sat there watching the sun set over the bay (I know, it was a pretty remarkable day), I was so incredibly thankful for each and every person who has impacted my life here in Bellingham. Particularly the two boys with whom I share the majority of my time, my issues, my successes and especially my meals. The three of us are close in a way I haven't ever been close with any other group of friends, and we've shared a lot over the last two years. I don't know what I'll do without them when I move away, they are truly my family here.


2. I received some very positive feedback on my first writing submission for my dream-writing class. Considering that the last time I took a class with this professor, I cried during his office hours...I'd say that's pretty remarkable. I feel proud of myself. Read the first draft here: Chartreuse Couch


3. I planted seeds with kids for six hours today. All of them were genuinely excited at the prospect of witnessing a plant grow. Every. Single. One. That's just awesome.


4. In less than two months, and permanently for the first time in four years, RELM will all be living within 25 minutes of each other. This makes me happy beyond belief, and eases my mind a bit when I think of leaving the good people I love here. There is something indescribably wonderful about the friendship I share with these girls, and the relationship that stands between the four of us, and I can't wait to be with all of them more frequently. Our paths have already forked and twisted far from each others', but it's nice to know that before we journey off into whatever is to come, there will be at least a few months to pause and be together. That's mushy, but who cares.


5. Finally, or at least lastly on this list, I splurged and bought eight wonderfully colored Super Furby colored pencils from work on Sunday. They are the apples of my eye and so lovely that they absolutely deserve their own pencil case, or cup, or whatever.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Welcome Home

I'm in love with this song right now, and so happy the sun has come out today.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Q & A with the Baltimore Catechism

Q: Who were the first man and woman?
A: The petunia, its magenta, skin-like petals spread; and the bee, his hairy body buzzing.

Q: What is man?
A: Oil stains.

Q: From who do we learn to know, love and serve God?
A: Guilt, fear and hope.

Q: If God is everywhere, why do we not see him?
A: Because he has an invisibility cloak just like Harry Potter.

Q: What is a spirit?
A: The deepest orange in any sunset.

Q: Can we always resist temptation?
A: It is a fact that I've had ice cream for dinner.

Q: What is an actual sin?
A: Hitting a dog with your car and not going back.

Q: Is this likeness to God in the body or in the soul?
A: You can see your flaws in the mirror, but God cannot.

We did this as a writing prompt in class the other day and I thought it was kind of cool. We're supposed to do this same kind of metaphorical Q & A with our dreams every day, to understand the motives of our dream better. Obviously these are not the real answers to the Baltimore Catechisms.

On a side note, doing this reminded me a lot of the game we play at family holidays (the "Question Game") where everyone writes three open-ended questions, then the questions are mixed up, and everyone writes three random answers. In the end you read the questions together with the answers and find out the "psychic" answers to your deepest and most pressing questions. Sometimes they turn out really well, and other times they're total flops. Either way, that would be a cool writing prompt as well.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Testimony of a Non-believer

For my dream writing class, I've been having to pay close attention to my dreams and record them when I wake up. This proves to be more of a challenge than I thought it would be, and I often wake in the middle of the night, knowing that I've been dreaming hard about something but with the conscious awareness that the images of the dream are slipping through my fingers like wisps of cottony cloud. It's made me realize how much I dream...how many dreams I have every single night, and how hard it is to make myself wake up and record them at 3 a.m. when I just want to roll over and go back to sleep.

We've been encouraged to take 'elaborate naps' which I am quite delighted by, and so I came straight home from work today and took a nice long one. I dreamed that I was at Tom's family reunion this coming summer, at his aunt and uncle's house just north of Bellingham (where the reunions are usually held). Except this house was not actually their house. It was more of just a big wooden deck, one that reminded me of the deck at Libby's boyfriend Mike's family cabin on Hood Canal. The deck was in the middle of a big green lawn, and faced out toward the ocean. I had an acute feeling that I was in South Carolina, where Tom's dad lives now, and I was standing on the deck looking out at the ocean (that looked more like Hood Canal than the ocean). I was talking with some relatives that I don't actually know, but who seemed to make sense and look familiar in the dream. I was telling them how I had been to lots of family events before, and that in fact I'd been at the last family reunion just two years ago that had happened in the same place. The sun was starting to fall lower in the sky, and I was having a progressively harder time turning my head to actually see all of the relatives around me.

Then, Tom's uncle Guy, who passed away shortly after the reunion two years ago, showed up wearing a dusty-rose colored pair of bermuda shorts. He was younger than he'd ever been when I actually knew him, and his outfit was kind of reminiscent of a picture that I've seen of Tom's mom Gay in the 80s. At the last family reunion, Guy had been really sick, suffering from diabetes that he didn't like to take care of. He was weeks away from having a surgery that was hopefully going to reverse his condition, and on the last day of the reunion the family had a testimony meeting where they blessed Guy and prayed for a successful surgery. A testimony meeting, if you don't know, is where everyone in the family sits down and hears each other's testimony that God is real. Tom's family is Mormon, and these kind of things are pretty alien to me, but it was intense and I found it moving all the same. Guy and Gay are two of a large group of siblings (eight? eleven? ...I can't remember, but it's always a big crowd at family events) who had lost their dad when they were very young, and had been raised by a single mom. A lot of their testimonials centered around this fact of death; that their loved ones had somehow communicated to them from the other side, and through this they knew that God was real. Aunt Marsha told everyone how once, shortly after their dad had passed away, she had been riding her bike when a driver swerved up onto the sidewalk and should have hit her. Miraculously she found herself five feet away from where she had been on the bike, shocked, but sure that her father had protected her. She said that in that moment, the air felt a certain way, and that the leaves moved against each other to make a sound that she knew was him, unmistakably. Everyone in the room was very emotional, even me, and when it was all over, and Guy had been blessed by all the priesthood holders of the family, he took me aside and thanked me for sitting through it. He said he knew it was probably really weird to listen to all that, which it was (and wasn't, at the same time), and then he hugged me, and told me he was glad I was part of the family.

Guy was Tom's favorite Uncle ( actually, I think he was everyone's favorite uncle). He loved cars and building things and bad jokes and junk food. He let us drive his $100,000 Jaguar even though we'd had our licenses less than a year, and liked to break rules in the best kind of way. He was one of those people who makes fun of you until there isn't room to be uncomfortable with yourself anymore, and then makes fun of himself just to make you feel better. At his funeral and in the weeks after, I thought again and again of his blessing at the family reunion and his kind words to me. I'm not sure that I felt it was "divine" or anything, but I surely found it poignant that I got to have such a sweet last conversation with him.

Now years have passed, and unfortunately I probably spend more time thinking about organic knitted baby rattles and facebook statuses that the tiny, most important moments in my life. And maybe that's why today, when Guy showed up in my head, healthy and wearing pink bermuda shorts, my dream focused on him. As I watched him pass out deep-fried corn dogs from a Costco sized cardboard box (calling them "appetizers"), I wondered if what I was seeing was more than just a dream. If heaven is real, as most of us hope it is, then surely this would be Guy's version, as I can't imagine anything that would make him more delighted than sharing a box of deep-fried corn dogs with his giant, loving family. And I guess if God is willing to grant us lush green lawns and our favorite, greasy indulgences in the after-life, then perhaps we shouldn't fear death so much, or grieve so terribly when people go.

I guess a big wooden deck somewhere in the sky is something I can believe in.