Sunday, November 27, 2011

travel-related haiku

on Turbulence:

Turbulence is like
a roller coaster, except
higher and no brakes

Jiggling around
Ears popping and a headache
Plane rides are no fun

The pilot now speaks
Choppy wind is upon us
Rain clouds down below

on The final step toward home:

Charlotte is a place
within North Carolina
that I've never been

I will go there now
but only see the airport
a brief vacation

Boarding a plane home
I am Tallahassee bound
Ugh! Work tomorrow

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

mucinexDM

Last night, I was coughing a lot, as I am getting over a cold. I took some MucinexDM in the hopes that it would tackle both the mucus problem and the coughing problem.

The first thing I noticed was that I couldn't sleep at all. My body was tired, but I couldn't settle down. I fell asleep for a few minutes or hours at a time, then awoke again to restlessness. At around 5 in the morning, I awoke to my quickening heart beat. I lept out of bed and ran to get some Gatorade, but then felt nauseous and collapsed on the floor. My limbs were numb and my heart wouldn't stop accelerating. I told Daniel I needed to go to the hospital, but he recognized the beginning of a panic attack and told me to breathe in and out deeply.

Once my heart rate got under control, the nausea returned. I vomited several times over the next few hours and ended up sleeping on the carpeted floor right next to the bathroom. If I began to think about making calls to get off work, my heart rate would go up and I'd have to make myself breathe in and out.

The nausea and irregular heart rate continued in waves until the medicine wore off at 1:00 this afternoon. I slept for another three hours and was finally able to eat some food.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

self portrait

Picnik collage

tools: vintage jumper, tea, tripod, and photo editing software.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

confrontations (and a guardian angel?)

Today was CRAZY (so crazy that crazy really does need to be capitalized).

It all started when I got to work. My coworker forewarned me that the manager for our department was angry with me and had compiled a long list of my failings and oversights. Before I continue, let me remind you of this post where I explained how hard I am on myself and how much effort it takes for me to even feel content with myself at the end of the day.

So, perfectionist and people pleaser that I am, I could barely stand to hear that someone was talking about me behind my back or operating on the impression that I intentionally cut corners or failed in my position. I was really nervous up until the manager arrived. I hoped the whole thing would just blow over.

Ten minutes into his shift, the altercation began. I admit that the details here are already hazy, as I became quite emotional shortly after the "conversation" began. It started with him thumping his fist two times on the table, then beginning his speech about my wrongdoings. Without thinking, I mimicked his behavior, thumping my fists on the table and telling him that he had just made the same mistake. At that point, things got really, really ugly.

He immediately silenced me with a glare and a shout. This is the point where I started weeping. I told him I had already seen his list and that most of the errors were minor, understandable, or resolved and all were unintentional. I acknowledged that my standards could have been higher, but I couldn't completely back down, as many of the problems could have been resolved without a confrontation had he communicated errors to me as they occurred. Did I overreact? It's almost certain; the forewarning I received over-prepared me for the lecture. But the reason I felt so defeated, so desperately sad, was not because I was "in trouble," but because I was at no point given the benefit of the doubt. It was as if the relationship I built with him over months of working together was thrown out the window, as if I had shown myself to be a lazy, selfish, hypocrite rather than a serious, hardworking, caring individual.

I cried and cried, then cried some more. Then I almost had a weeping-induced panic attack. Then I told myself to get over it; after all, I was still on the clock.

I went to a different department to work, as it was clear that we both needed time away from each other to cool off. Two hours later, the former-hippie-Vietnam-vet-artist I met about a month ago in the art section of the store approached me. He said he had come to visit for some supplies, but also to see how I was doing. We had a wonderful conversation in which he told me that: I have a long time to figure out life and I don't need to worry; I am a wonderful person and I should tell my husband he's lucky; I should let myself stop living with one foot in the past and one in the future and start to be really grateful for each moment; the only thing I can do sometimes is forgive and let go; and he understands that a plight of womanhood is not being taken seriously or being bullied in certain situations because men feel like they have power over me.

Bullwinkle (his name is Steven, but his dad always called him that) saved the day again. The only other day he came to the store was a similarly emotional day for me. He cheered me up then and today by expanding my view to something bigger and greater than my current situation. When I responded positively to his final statement, he suggested I read a book on women archetypes, which he had, conveniently, in his motor home (he had driven it to the store parking lot). When we said goodbye, he promised to come right in with the book.

Then he gave me the book, Women who run with wolves and one of his original pieces!

After I clocked out, I apologized to the manager for my part in the conflict. Bullwinkle had talked me through the raw emotion I felt and helped me realize that I needed to move on, to stop dwelling on the past and take account of the present which was incomparably better than that former event I had been worked up about all afternoon.

I left work with a new hope that things will work themselves out, not just at work but in life.

And that's why I'm (almost) convinced that Bullwinkle is my guardian angel.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

feminist anthropology

Beginning to read a year's worth of Godey's Magazine for women from 1896 has set me on a little research tangent. It is at first remarkable simply to read about conceptions of the "new woman," or independently thinking, outward peering woman of the late nineteenth century:
"The new woman of today represents the first great intellectual harvest which has ripened since that seed-sewing long ago. Old prejudices, one after another, have been overgrown, smothered with the ever-strengthening force of woman's intellectual power, until there hardly remains to-day an old original obstacle which has not been overcome; and the development, gathering force as it grows, is destined to uplift the race to heights undreamed of." (p. 23, Godey's Magazine, January, 1896)
But, after looking at the various articles on the modern woman for several minutes, I began to sense a unique authorial voice. I looked at the names of the writers. They were largely men. The articles I've skimmed so far are "The New Woman, Athletically Considered," "The New Woman in Office" (meaning merely to have a job outside the home), and "Music in America: The Women Composers." The first may have been written by a woman, as the author's first name is listed only as "W.," but the others have decidedly male voices - male voices that wonder at the strange and newly discovered talents and strengths of women, so long held captive by their households. It is clear that I have access to a document that presents a very interesting crossroads in women's rights and feminist theory. Women have jobs, but only men record it. Women compose successful pieces, but only men critique them.

The document I have represents the first wave of feminism in the U.S. I find it baffling that women can hold high positions in their communities at this time, but still don't have the right to vote.

I was talking to Daniel this morning about how disappointed I am in myself from day to day. He suggested I pursue independent research of some kind (of course it's a man telling me what to do). He asked me why I think women have historically submitted to patriarchy. My hypothesis from a biological or anthropological standpoint, I suppose, is that all humans have a desire for power and that men are more physically capable of demanding it in the sense that they tend to be stronger, larger, and more physically aggressive than women. I've going to start with a collection of anthropological studies, not all of them specific to gender.

So far on my list are:
The Second Sex, Simone de Beauvoir
Writing Women's Worlds, Lila Abu-Lughod
The Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedan
The Western Illusion of Human Nature, Marshall Sahlins

I'm sure there are tons of others that may be more useful than these, but I want to read a few of the books and writings that were most transformative for the field before I delve into more specific readings.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

meaning


I want to live a full and meaningful life. I want it so badly that every moment I'm not doing something meaningful, I'm waging a silent verbal battle against myself for being lazy, incompetent, and unmotivated. Each morning, I wake up and lay in bed thinking about what the day holds. I dread getting up because I know that, as soon as I do, I am fully responsible for how my day turns out. When I finally do get up, I am angry with myself for sleeping in too long. I worry that I won't get the things done I obligated myself to complete. Whether I get everything done or not, I feel like I should have done more.

A girl in my small group told me my problem sounds like the plight of the intellectual, meaning that I'm so driven to pursue intellectually stimulating activities that I can't allow myself to sit still. It's a hidden compliment, but it doesn't really resolve the problem. The fact is that I have always been disappointed in myself; being in school doesn't change that; being out of it certainly hasn't. To live a full and meaningful life I need to start seeing the beauty of spare time, moments of inactivity, and thinking in bed. Don't they contribute to a well-lived life?

I am often rather nostalgic about my freshman and sophomore years of college. I've let go of the romance for the most part because it is not useful to dwell on a hazy and exaggerated narrative of the past. But I do think I was in a stage in my life where I naturally accepted the beauty of just sitting on grass or talking to a friend or writing a poem about what I had for lunch. As I've grown more self-aware, I've turned inward to the point that seeing sun-dappled leaves out of my window can't overshadow the nagging feeling that I'm not good enough.

It does make my heart a little warmer to be able to contribute something higher than fashion to the blogging world as of late. This blog will always be more meaningful to me than someone's water lily. To be honest, I'm about to give up on making the other blog popular or monetarily successful.