The personal is political, a name dissected

for something like years now, i have been meaning to make a mixed cd
in fact, i believe so many years have passed that originally it was meant to be a mixed tape
recorded track by track with gaps in the playback that could only be appreciated
played overlay with the whirring of the engine of my 1986 chrysler new yorker
and this mixed tape was designed for sleeping which is probably why it never got mixed
(who needs tapes for sleeping when you fully know you will only listen to it when driving?)

even at sixteen i understood the dangers of flirting with disaster,
flirting with the calm, peaceful disaster of driving with music that makes you excited to sleep,
but then, i’ve always been ready to sleep, waiting to dive into my subconscious
learning more about the twirling sentiments of my mixed-up brain by experience reality
a reality tinged by a deluge of surreality, a surreality deluged by a tinge of reality

and besides all of that, i was stuck. on a transition.
so for years, through days and days of classes i sat rushing through songs in my head
trying to solve the age-old question of does ben folds’ narcolepsy come before
or after i’m only sleeping by the beatles. and as many times as i hummed through quiet beats
finding it impossible decide if this was meant to start at night and end at morning
or start at morning and end at night, and maybe that was my problem:
maybe everything is so simple that it always has a definite beginning and an end,
and didn’t i leave her because i was afraid of the gray area between us?
was that what she always told me, or was it just what i told myself to calm the aching in my throat?

and i have grown so old that the mixed tape turned mixed cd in question would now be outdated,
but not outdated in the sense that so many artists have written so many songs about sleeping
that paul, john, ringo and george would need to take a backseat to the likes of mae
again, my unmade mix would find itself outdated in form. and so maybe it is that when i met you,
i was considering track orders for something i would call a playlist, but i don’t recall that detail now.

just like i don’t remember what you were wearing, only how you looked, and just like i don’t remember
what we discussed, but i recall feeling underprepared, flustered, and tired, and i remember
that your name was Ben. so maybe it was your introduction that sent me, topsy-turv
returning to my great philosophical preponderance of high school, thinking
well, he does not seem like the type whose melodies precede his lyrics
nor does he seem to be a meaningless pusher of words??you were more thought out,
less five, meaning three, and more solo, if you catch what i’m trying to say there
but there is no sense on getting caught up on whether you’re more annie waits than you are army,
because this is not a poem about that,

this is about an idea i had two weeks ago watching you recite poetry to a standing-room only bar,
or more, an idea i had as the em cee announced you as Benjamin and i found it odd
to hear you called by your full name as I was in an island of those who knew you as Ben
surrounded by a sea of those who know you as Benjamin and it had not occurred to me??
like the shaded area indicating overlap in the vinn diagram of this situation, to me you are both.
so maybe it was the five extra letters of your name that flash like neon lights depending on your context
which got me thinking about the plaguing philosophical question of twenty-two, that is
i started thinking about the five letters of my name which social custom tells me to disregard

like who i’ve been all of these years is meant to be tucked away into the nostalgic folds of my mind,
so someday i can tell my children, “when i was your age… i was someone else.”
and sipping diet coke at age twenty-two trying to decide who i am going to be in four months,
i thought maybe as someone who oscillates between a nickname and a full name,
you could grasp the difficulty of developing a new title for yourself, or maybe
just as a poet, you could relate to my sentiment that it is strange to punctuate my name
when i don’t really like to punctuate much of anything, and most certainly, not with hyphens
but the government does not understand my love of the long dash, so maybe
as a feminist you could understand my struggle to make feminist choices
which abandon the idea that my surname is indicative of my owner before my family
and as a person who has a name, or two, perhaps you would grasp my desire
to refrain from becoming a munition in this fight, my hope to keep
something as basic as what I call myself from being a statement about my politics

again, i’m caught up in my tendency to polarize a situation,
creating a side that is black and a side that is white with no room for gray
and i’m thinking i’m starting to understand that in the end, it’s just what i write down
not who i am, that i’m deciding, and as you were retelling your story for a thirteen-year-old girl
i thought of myself at that age, thinking of how quickly i tossed my name to the wind
to try hybrids of my first name in the margins of every sheet of notes i took,
and not until i turned fifteen and met my first Jessica Smith did i realize that i did not wish to become one,
only understanding the power of what i call myself when i felt
like i laid greater claim to my words when i signed jess after them

and then i thought about so many unimportant lovers whose tongues i autographed with my own,
swirling each letter of my name with theirs, searching again for some ridiculous symbol of self,
until finally i realized the meaning of the metaphor of all of those makeshift tattoos we wore,
and i understood the depth of my latest playlist which would be the same as a mixed cd or a mixed tape,
because the melody for a first dance as husband and wife can not be boiled down to a hyphen,
instead, it is just the little blue heart in the margins of my ninth grade math notes
and a recognition of the wishes, unchanging, that have finally been realized.

Pop culture has been happening

So I’m saying that I have a couple goals this summer and one is to read. A lot. I want to read more than I drive, basically, more than I watch tv that I don’t even like. I want to spend just one summer with no concern for what came before or what comes after it tearing through novels like I did when I was fifteen. So, keeping with the traditions of my fifteen-year-old self, it is time to craft a summer reading list. More will be added at will.

Xenocide by Orson Scott Card
Barbie’s Queer Accessories by Erica Rand
Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work by John Gottman
Why Marriages Succeed or Fail: And How You Can Make Yours Last by John Gottman
… the other book about marriage that Jenny sent me
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran
Million Little Pieces by James Frey
Never Again by Flora Nwapa
Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy
Lullaby by Chuck Palahniuk
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Marquez
Love in the Time of Cholera by Marquez
, et cetera

We are made to bleed, and scab and heal and bleed again

i don’t know who you were expecting/probably some bitch who does not budge/with eyes the size of snow/i may get pissed off sometimes/but you seem like the type to hold a grudge/and in the end, i just let go.

Last night, my name was mentioned in an ad-hom attack against Kyle by someone who I’ve always given the benefit-of-the-doubt in situations despite the theories i hear to the contrary about what is said about me when i’m not around. Specifically, it was alluded to that I cannot even carry Kyle through the rest of our lives because I failed to get into grad school. Pretty much this started the melancholy, woe-is-me I’m not in grad school funk that I think everyone was expecting. But really, it’s not that bad. There are just some things I don’t really talk about because I don’t like to bring my personal world into the blogosphere quite the same as I used to. But the fact is, i don’t write things down except on the internet. And the fact is that now that my so-called failure has been broadcast to a community where I still like most of the people I’ve met through it, I feel like I should maybe go into a bit more detail about how I actually feel about it.

Not getting into grad school is sort of a sticky subject. Stickier because I really do have mixed feelings on the deal. For one, I don’t like it when I decide someone should let me do something and they disagree. For another, I think the absolute best thing for me next year is to take a year off, spend some time adjusting to the real world and considering what it is that I have a life-long passion for. I don’t think I’ve day-dreamed about what I want to do with my life since I was a very littler girl. “Well, I could do this, or this, or this” is so liberating to think about. Now that I’m doing it I feel a great sense of relief that I have the ability to do it because I never really have before. After spending a summer thinking about what I wanted to do I decided on African History so I could further pursue the apes thing and then Joe told me I was “too fickle to follow” to grad school and so that flipped my stubborn switch and even after i wasn’t dating him and didn’t have to prove anything to him, I felt like I needed to prove to myself that I could stick to something. So that’s what I stuck to.

And maybe I was right. I think my statement of purpose was purposeful. I think i have a vision and an idea of what I want to do…. but sometimes I don’t know quite where I fit in the realm of African History. Sometimes I feel like just another white girl trying to appropriate agency on Africans. It’s harder because I really like Pan-African movements. So in my utopia, I’d be out of a field of study. But then, history isn’t about studying what you are, necessarily. Bearman always says that History is a dialogue among historians which is true, it’s all a debate and a discussion about what’s been done and how we interpret those events… but I think historians are just really curious about their own identity and what it means to be human. Or at least, I think that’s one of the reasons I’m interested in it. I’m interested in African history specifically because I think Western feminism has a lot to learn from gender roles in Africa. It’s interesting to me both how societies have divided themselves and how Western women have sought out to wreck those existing systems and how now women’s standing is seen as so important to economic development in Africa. I also want to be an activist and I think the Great Apes Project lacks an historian in their approach to African history. So there is that. I have a passion for history and I have a passion for African history because I think more than any other field it allows me to voice my opinions. There are so many reasons why I want to be an Africanist historian that really it doesn’t bother me too much that sometimes I feel a little like I don’t know where I fit in. I also think I would feel the same way if I was an historian of Ancient Rome or something except the really passionately interested in it part. Cos I’m most certainly not passionately interested in Ancient Roman history.

But I don’t want to struggle with the difficulty of a modern, academic job search while not knowing if I really fit in. I don’t want to uproot Kyle and I and get somewhere and decide it’s not for me. And so I think a year off is in order. And further, I think that even if I just feel that way about maybe burning out on history or African history is a ridiculous assertion that comes out of my defensiveness and need to justify to myself, or more my feeling that i should justify to others that it’s okay that i didn’t get in. But I’ll figure that out in a year off as well.

I would also like to experience making money, just once. I want to spend time with Kyle without thinking about what homework I have due the next day. I am going to read. I am developing a book list of things that I want to read and I am going to read them because that is what I enjoy doing. And I haven’t had a booklist since I graduated high school… but I used to have a long one. Take the length of your netflix que and multiply or divide depending on the season and you have my booklist. I read so many wonderful and interesting things! I discovered so many worlds I didn’t know and how cool was that? I miss it desperately. And I’m going to do it again. And maybe next time when I get into higher education I won’t stop doing it.

To be honest, I’m excited for my gap year. It’s just hard to talk about. I get a little embarassed and feel like I did something wrong or let someone (myself) down by not applying to more schools… by not applying to what would have been a surefire safety school. By not running just one more edit on my rough draft or not losing my jump drive with my better hook on it or whatever. Writing a longer statement of purpose for Iowa or Boston who didn’t specify how long it should be. Talking to professors in the department and catering my applications more. There are so many things I could have done differently but sometimes it doesn’t matter. And I’m just fine. And more than that I know I’m going to be just fine.

I don’t have to fit into a little box where I can say “i am an historian” and have that mean something. I wrote such a long entry last December about how I just wanted to be a debater, a historian, a Catholic and a poet. But I’ve found that when I lose those things, I don’t lose who I am. I’m not less of a person because I no-longer debate or am not going to grad school in history in 2008-2009. I’m still me. And I adapt and I evolve and I change. And I choose more worthwhile friendships.

squalor victoria

Rarely do I tell stories of semi-personal embarassment over the internet, I delight in them because they make me happy but I don’t often share them because I only blog in these weird moments of “oh i should update the world” that tend to overlook the little miniscule things. But it’s spring and miniscule is hip so here’s a fun story from my life of late. For those of you keeping track of my psychological development, this one tells you two things. 1) I’m still pretty bad at telling stories. 2) I’m a lot more relaxed than I was when you started paying attention.

The story begins with a clean closet and ends with a post on Bethany’s facebook wall that goes like this:

Jess wrote
at 6:12pm
Inventory of things in my closet:
1. Blue bookbag containing graduation garb and notebook with invitation list to wedding.

Should I call WUPO and let them know the case is closed?

Approximately two weeks ago on a Monday (so one and a half weeks, whatever) I went to school on a Monday to turn some things in for Prasch, ie my thesis, and do some printing in the library. I showed up early because it was a Monday which means Mondays at Mabee and I wanted some of the good discussion and free pizza. So I had a chat and then I went over to the computer and printed my things and then I went to class and I handed it in and discussed how far along we all were on our thesises and then I headed home for the day or maybe to work or somewhere else. The next Wednesday I was getting ready to go to class and went to put my laptop in my bookbag to find my backpack missing. I figured I’d probably just left it in the car because I know I didn’t take my laptop to class on Monday so there was no real reason to warrant bringing it in the house. I look around my room for it in it’s usual haunts (my chair, my couch, wherever) So I take my tote bag to campus with my laptop in tow and call it a good day.

For the next week I think about things that could be in that bag to decide if it’s worth finding. The worst thing that I’m losing is a list of invitees to the wedding. And about 40 sheets of paper that say some combination of Jessica Lynn MyLast and HisLast all mashed together like I’m somehow going to figure out which name combo fits best if I write it over and over. So I decided it’s replacable and not that big of a deal and I mention off hand that I should probably look for it but I never really do. Meanwhile I contemplate cutting the wedding guest list down to about 50 anyway so it wouldn’t really matter if we had the old list.

Flash to today. I wake up and in a montage that took place before I opened my eyes realized that all my graduation regalia is in that bookbag. so i sort of need it or else I’m going to have to pay 24 dollars again, and I don’t want to pay 24 dollars again. Thus, Bethany and I go on a mission (she was going to Morgan and I tagged along) to find it. We went by the police department, after watching some ducks on campus for probably an eery amount of time, and filed a report. The funny part was that they asked when I lost the bookbag. Answer: “I don’t know, about two weeks ago?”

I came home after no luck on campus and took a nap and then I looked for the bookbag in my room again, and there it was, hanging out in my closet. Which I cleaned a few days before it got lost. Apparently the little guy just found a niche and didn’t leave.

Saving graces.

and you should know, she uttered with that look in her eye.  the look you always thought adorable, where the only thing between you and your latest earful is the echo of her last cigarette rustling around in its softpack, how many paused conversations had you spent wondering how she heard an echo against a softpack burried in the satchel at her waist? and as she paused midsentence to suddenly inhale twice, quickly and walk briskly toward the chilling evening outside.

a lot of people smoke cigarettes to calm themselves in tense situations.  like a mandatory 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 to return their blood flow to a normal rate.  she was not one of them.

her cigarette seemed to walk itself amongst her fingers as she fidgetted with it, her corduroy jacket wrinkling against the window while you waited anxiously for her return.  you waited with your foot tapping under the table imaging your whole body cramped such a small space, imagining all of that smoke mashing up against the words as she turned them over again in her mouth, coming up with the right organization to convey her message to you.

today was different, somehow.  and you noticed a brush of urgency as she flicked away her cigarette and pivotted back into the room.  you watched as the last spark of tobacco burnt itself at the filter so intently that you missed in her eyes what you heard in her voice.

and you should know, she said, you should know the only reason i’ve never left is because you’ve never suggested that i’m going.

Losing my chomps

I had a pretty nice weekend in Independence, Kansas and then getting caught up on things before I got my wisdom teeth taken out yesterday.  I’m pretty well on track with everything, or at least caught up with a usual tuesday.  I just need to spend a chunk of time working on f&f stuff on thursday and the apeiron is friday.  when i got home from surgery yesterday i found out that Kyle’s grandmother passed away which makes me sad.  I never knew her but it’s just hard and I hate that I can’t be there for him.  I think distance at times like these is really when distance is the hardest because we could both really use each others physical presence, what with my recovering from surgery where one of the instructions is not to talk much and with him not really liking to talk about what’s going on.  I just really wish that we were closer, I guess.  And I can’t wait until that happens.  I applied for three museum internships today so hopefully one of those comes through.  And I’m applying for an actual job with the pitch but i haven’t been able to do that yet even though I now have a professional resume ready to go.  I should probably show around for more places to start putting in an application.  I’m very excited about kind of knowing what we’re doing and having some time before the move to put in applications and look for jobs.

Sleeping in for the wrong team

For some reason, I’m sort of exhausted.  Maybe because I played Smash Brothers most of yesterday and maybe because I spent like 9 hours this weekend finishing up my thesis, not bad for the last push on my thesis but still sort of exhausting.  And right now I’m at that place with a paper where I can’t look at what I did.  I just know I feel sorta like I wrecked my car.  I’m sure I’ll re-read it and it won’t be as bad as I think… and I’m sure I’ll get it mostly cleared up in the parts where it is bad, but still.  I’ve vowed not to think about it for the next day or so.

WordPress changed the layout of the internal part of the site.  Here is a message to the people responsible for this change: I don’t like it.  It is silly.  And the first thing I am going to do is change it back if that’s possible and it probably is.

Kyle and I did our engagement photos. Pictures are up in an album on Cari’s account and I’m probabaly gonna snipe them for flickr in a bit too.   i’m trying to hold off until they’ve been editted but at this point, meh, whatever, i’m just taking them.  i’ll edit them on photoshop express or something.  speaking of, i’ve been experimenting with seashore which is the gimp build for mac because it’s free and i like free things.  so far, i’m only fussy about how it does brushes (this is a big deal if you know anything about my design habits) but otherwise it’s good little software.  i also assume this is just part of the learning curve.  I also have been using Scribus which is an opensource desktop publisher.  it has a huge learning curve but now that i’m figuring out I probably like it about as much as InDesign.  Certainly when you consider the difference in price tag its way better… also because I don’t typeset.  I could see it maybe being a pain in the ass if you were working with lots and lots of content, but then, I think InDesign is that way on my laptop as it is…

It’s so like me to try to update the world on wedding prep and instead get distracted with a conversation about opensource design software.  ack.  I mean, I guess it all relates cos we’re doing our own programs, invites, blah blah blah all of that.  so i sort of need the software for something semi-practical for once in my life.

I also bought us a copy of “The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work” by John M. Gottman, Ph. D.  I’m only a chapter+ in right now so I don’t feel like I can make a royally long critique of the book but so far I like it.  I like it cos I don’t like Active Listening even though I’ve been trained in it (I call it passive aggressive listening… ahem).  So Gottman criticizes it because he says that it’s really meant to be an individual therapist-to-patient method of listening and not really that applicable when all the “I statements” are criticizing the listener.  A good point.  And he mostly talks about how good he is at his job which is sorta sweet.  And he comes really highly recommended.

Sorry I don’t have long treacherous reports about the ins and outs of my life these days.  I guess things are really good, or just kind of unknown.  I’m hoping to have some blanks filled in by the end of the month but there is no sense rushing a lack of information. On the right side, I have been updating you with far more poetry which is good for us both.  Another one is hopefully on the way soon.

moment mistaken for memory

you curl your toes into the dirt,
somewhere else,
i see you barefoot
and i imagine you
turning words around
inside of your mouth
feeling out the proper metaphor
with your tongue,
and thinking,
thinking, thinking,
thinking you would not
recognize these shoes as mine
if they were falling over themselves
to wait for my return
in your entryway,
and i would only know
by the soft memory
imbedded in this humid breeze
if that were you there,
a cleverly placed stranger
and not the strangely placed memory
who i half expect
as your pen pauses
and you turn the page.

with clarity comes a new purpose

I officially got my final letter of rejection from graduate schools for the 2009-2010 school year.  while i haven’t been blogging excitedly about this crusade against jess in the academic community, i am surprisingly at peace with their decisions.  Minnesota admitted 20 of 225+, Boston admitted probably around 15 of 215-or-so and as far as I can tell most of their admitteds in my position were deferred to Master’s only programs which they don’t get any money for, Iowa admitted less than 10 out of 100+.  So out of 500+ applicants applying for less-than-45 positions, I managed not to make the cut.  That kind of sucks.  I think a jess of years past would greet this kind of failure with some sort of sorrow or sadness.  So far, I’ve cried twice.  Only once if drunken crying doesn’t count and for me these days, I’m not positive that it should.  My first tears were shed upon finding out that I wasn’t in at Minnesota.  My second tears were shed over spring break when I was reminded by that cruel voice in the back of my head about the time that Joe said I was too fickle to follow.  I guess Joe was right, in his own way.  I think I said something like “I’m not too fickle to follow, I’m just a failure.”  That’s melodramatic and not even true.  The truth is, that universities are too fickle to pin your hopes on.  And here’s the thing, I expressed to Dudley that I wished I would have applied to less-good programs so that I could get an acceptance letter like my friends are, but the deal is… the graduate market is indicative of the job market and I’d much rather go through this now when it’s going to turn into a probably good story for my children in the future about the time i applied to three  schools and didn’t get into any so I changed my career path.  The moral of the story will be one of humility, resilience and why it’s okay to fail.  And it is.

A little-known story from the night that Kyle proposed is that sometime after we got to the concert I was standing there with arms around me feeling heavy-hearted.  I said a quiet, tiny prayer that God show me what His will it was not for me to go to grad school.  Soon after, Kyle was on one knee asking me to be his wife.  Since that moment, so many things have been just falling into place that it’s hard to look at this new year off that I’ll be taking as anything but a good chance to take a step back and look at how I want to spend the rest of my life.  Maybe this is a sign that I should be going down a different path.  And so far, this new fork in my road looks pretty good.  For example, I have been offered and accepted a site administer position for a new website we’re doing at work.  It’s pretty baller.  I get to be the site administrator which is an awesome resume line, but further I get to sort of just add things to the site that I think fit.  Which is pretty neat responsibility.  Better? I’m getting a raise now.  The really awesome thing?  This job will translate into a freelance position that will pay some spending money and a good portion of the rent each month whenever Kyle and I move where we do.  More wonderful things are happening in my life, I’m just so excited to have a year to spend with my new husband, getting used to what it means to be married, before we dive into law and graduate school.