Tuesday, December 25, 2007

obsessive cycles

The mechanics of my living cycles through obsessions, which are people and items that I react to with intense interest. They are usually immediate, thus initially irrational. I try to get to know them better, and through the process I get to understand how I think and who I am. As Anais Nin said, "We don't see things as they are, we see things as we are."

I rarely abandon an attraction once acquired -- the nature of my passion stays the same -- though my level of engagement may change, depending on my day-to-day life and/ or intellectual afterthoughts. The obsessions do not necessarily return in chronological order either; the order is affected by my weathered perception of current circumstances.


The idea of poetry grasped me more about four years ago, when I picked up stream-of-consciousness from Virginia Woolf's
Mrs. Dalloway. I wrote a piece about "life, a delusion, whimsical -- an enigma," which I was so proud of that I sent it to Exeter's admissions office.

"Growing is a sense of the presence of life. The mountain, no, it never grows but life hides in it ... I am not life and I am not my own life's overseer ... My subconscious overtakes my conscious and runs wild like a gypsy child -- and life is allowing it! ... My being is polluted by life, its greediness, its evilness. But on the other hand, I can't live without life and its every essence. The essence, the essence of life, flashing now and then, like a brand of shampoo on the TV screen ..."
And just now, I found an email that I wrote to someone I cared deeply about of the same time period; it was also structured in subtly connected paragraphs, but with first-hand short descriptive and narrative phrases, pieces of conversation, and bursts of emotion.

About two years ago, after reading Mary Oliver's In Blackwater Woods in Mr. Weber's English 210, I wrote a reaction to this excerpt from a poem with the same title as the book.
To live in this world

you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it

against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go
.
The reaction was a collection of ten poems, called A Process of Realizations. It was based on a relationship I had, which soon evolved into one with myself. (There's a distinction between being alone and having a relationship with oneself; the former is innate, while the latter is an obsessive phase.) Relationships could be pretty obsessive.

After the collection, I again substituted prose for verse as my roots paper on family history in English 230, and I continued sprinkling my own lines between prose in following English papers.
I did it because I could not express those bangBangBANGS, gel-like heaviness and buzzing white lights in prose. I'm grateful that my teachers were appreciative, because it was a need that molded me. A need that is acutely aware and keeps me hyper-conscious.

When I started off, I was an introverted detective. I meticulously recorded how I felt after moments that affected me, in relation to what/who I interacted with and snapshots of where it happened -- also, in context, because at the time I was transitioning from tradition-valuing Chinese culture to American individualism.

While poetry and the free verse form I use have been personal to me from the beginning, I explored the individualist aspect in great poets. I remembered that Mr. Weber mentioned Walt Whitman was the pioneer of free verse, so I bought Leaves of Grass and read pages of it on the plane. The below excerpt is clipped as a Post-it on my desktop.

"Speech is the twin of my vision, it is unequal to measure itself,
It provokes me forever, it says sarcastically,
Walt you contain enough, why don't you let it out then?
Come now I will not be tantalized, you conceive too much of articulation,
Do you not know O speech how the buds beneath you are folded?
Waiting in gloom, protected by frost,
The dirt receding before my prophetical screams,
I underlying causes to balance them
at last,
My knowledge my live parts, it keeping tally with the meaning of all things,
Happiness, (which whoever hears me let him or her set out in search of this day.)

My final merit I refuse you, I refuse putting from me what I really am,
Encompass worlds, but never try to encompass me."

-- Walt Whitman's
Song of Myself
Poems I wrote were private, but I was also eager to share my crafted confessions. I wrote because I reacted, consciously so, and I hoped that the reader would react, too, even if differently. Like Elizabeth Bishop, I loved painstaking accuracy, spontaneity and mystery, though I doubt my mastery of those qualities. I continued to practice.

Summer 2006, I wrote more than thirty poems in eight weeks, and I feared that I was becoming too self-absorbed. Distracting myself, I experimented with out-of-the-ordinary images, combined icky-sounding words and toyed with the gross and magnificent imagination.

This past term, the writing class that I took forced me to write in form -- blank verse, sonnet, traditional stanzas, etc.. It was a rigorous creative challenge that I have never before experienced. I wasn't sure how that made me grew, until I attempted to understand how my self-focused tendencies match up with my eagerness to meet people and my life's goal to devote myself to development. My conclusion, as of a couple of hours ago, was that my life of cycling obsessions -- made conscious -- allows for risk-taking, and my awareness, sharpened by poetry, yields compassion. And, undeniably, I'm a born reactant, infinitely curious...

Sunday, December 23, 2007

i think of vladimir

The glittering city of Hong Kong stands against a purple screen, seemingly lighted from behind. The patches of white-, yellow- purple look alluring and diseased at the same time. (Air pollution, light pollution.)

By the window, I sit at my desk, mulling over applications for colleges in the United States. In an essay, I mentioned this photo, taken in St. Petersburg.

... a polished black stone horse – its forelegs in mid-air, its muscles bulging, veins taut, pulled by wires against an opaque blue ...
The horse's strength and the wires' counterforce have served as an inspiration, and I have had the photograph as my desktop background. This reminds me of a coincidental anecdote.

A muggy summer's day in 2006, my friend JY and I were sitting on the ledge of Au bon Pain cafe at Harvard Square, and I heard intermittent clicks around me. Amateur photographer Vladimir Gitin was angling his camera and snapping portraits of people in the square, as Petya, his Russian street musician friend, strummed the guitar that was connected to loud speakers.

Above is his favorite shot of me, which he posted on his flickr website. A flickr member commented, "На лице написана грусть :)," which translates to "on the person the grief is written." I think, then, I was deep in conversation with JY about whether "God," or a higher power, of different religions was the same One.

He also took some portraits of my dearest friend Victoria and me at his Barker Center office when we visited him over Winter Thaw last year. Hopefully, we'll make it down this year again.

Visit Vlad's flickr, where he uploads his rich collection of portraits and sceneries from St. Petersburg, Jerusalem, Italy, Amsterdam and East Coast United States, among other places. He has an eye for stunning perspective and composition, light playing with colors and emotion. His photographs ask for an immediate reaction and a precise appreciation.

When separated from his camera, Vlad teaches in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literature at Harvard University.

Afghanistan Wedding

This sobering image, showing a 40-year-old groom sitting beside his 11-year-old future bride in Afghanistan, brought Stephanie Sinclair top honors in the annual Photo of the Year contest sponsored by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
-- Spiegel Online
What a lovely wedding picture! If you don’t like it, that means, as Leon De Winter explains, you are just a product of your cultural values...
-- Arts and Letters Daily

Saturday, December 22, 2007

"technical" updates

[Technorati Profile]

Today I connected the blog with Technorati, syndicated its feed with Feed Burner, and opened a del.icio.us account, which all feels somewhat self-validating. See "Subscribe now." :)

Thursday, December 20, 2007

beliefs

"One's life has value so long as one attributes value to the life of others, by means of love, friendship, indignation and compassion."

"I tore myself away from the safe comfort of certainties through my love for truth - and truth rewarded me."
I've been having a fetish for Simone de Beauvoir and her "life long partner" Jean Paul Sartre.

...

I am brought up in Anglican kindergarten and primary school in Hong Kong, while I have taken up weekly Buddhist meditation practice in the U.S.. Recently a friend asked me how I reconcile my Christian religious faith and Buddhist philosophy. The incongruence he saw are Christianity's focus on eternity/ afterlife versus Buddhism's "nothing is permanent," and Christianity's "everything has meaning" versus Buddhism's "nothing has inherent value." This is along the lines of what I wrote him:
I'm not doctrinal. I feel the power of God's presence -- I feel grasped by faith, if I can borrow Paul Tillich's words in "Dynamics of Faith." At the same time, I also feel present at dharma practice. I like the "feel" for the Christian religion and Buddhist philosophy; they both represent a way of life for me. Perhaps, all encompassingly, I'm more of a Unitarian. Hmm, I also dislike categories, because they don't seem to allow grey areas.
However, that doesn't tell the whole story of how I have come to accept that "feel." I have agonized over not attending Sunday services my first year at Exeter, and this year I have taken on the responsibility as proctor to make my meditation practice regular. Through a religion course, "Personhood and Belief," I have come to think more objectively about psychology and philosophy. Having read a bit on Existentialism on my own, I try to make sure that I do not blindly following my instincts and am conscious of my thoughts and decisions.

Monday, December 10, 2007

thanks

nice top & jeans
shirt & tie, slacks

an athlete, a musician, a go-to dorm mate
a chill demeanor in Grill, a brightening smile
we look similar, we do similar things

two parents, single parent, a step family
loving, controlling, aggressive, anxious
middle school teachers, cooks, i-bankers

we could've left home, we could've been kicked out
some of us have
boyfriends we live with, juggling jobs
i've at least heard of four cases

red-bricked buildings, overnight papers
dorm-wrestling, a movie on Saturday
a bite of pizza

we go on, make money on wall street,
embody non-sibi, pursue the life of the mind --
hard and good

"Lose something every day"


At one in the morning, a friend ended a phone call with, "I will see you tomorrow."

I didn't get back to preparing for my presentation on Elizabeth Bishop, and, instead, lay down in bed, too tired to feel connected.

A couple of hours later, another friend texted me, "sorry i went quiet yesterday." Packing absorbed him -- we'll probably never be in the same place again, as the aforementioned friend, he'll be going off campus -- or did he say cleaning?

The overhead light hummed at five in the morning, consistently. It unsettled me, still in bed but wanting to get up. I wanted a friend, someone I know but not so well, to be by my side. I felt weakened by daylight.

What was it that I left behind that I lost? Renewals -- like checking in with a dear friend daily -- affirm me. New things/people/occurrences inspire, keep me wanting. Potential connections keep me wanting to live.

possibilities excite me
they make me love
when i get comfortable with them, though,
often they become defined
and i have to work hard to get them to melt again