Swimming Upstream

Entries from March 2007

123 Meme

March 14, 2007 · 1 Comment

From Jade Park who got this from Loud Solitude, who got this from Ed Champion:

Turn to page 123 in your work-in-progress. (If you haven’t gotten to page 123 yet, then turn to page 23. If you haven’t gotten there yet, then get busy and write page 23.) Count down four sentences and then instead of just the fifth sentence, give us the whole paragraph.

So, from page 123 of my novel “in progress”:

Never. They asked him a few other things that nobody heard. Even upside down, he curved his back in a defiant squiggle that was unacceptable to the captors. One of the men, pulled out a large laquered board and motioned for Petros to come and look. No, Petros, don’t. His mother called from inside the house. He didn’t listen. He walked, one foot at a time to the front of the house. This was a tiny village, people did not live inside with shut windows and doors, they lived out in the plateia, in the courtyards around their house, in the tables that they placed outside in the summertime. His children could do nothing but watch and I suppose the communists wanted it that way. So that everyone could see exactly how if you refused to support the party, you were beaten in front of your children.

OK…well that’s from page 123 of the rough draft of the manuscript. It’s so rough and not in any order. I will also give you from page 23 of my thesis:

After a few minutes, before even knowing each other’s names we had already made up a mean song about Miss Blanca and we danced around the little pebble courtyard where we weren’t allowed to go. As we stepped on the stepping-stones in between the little garden of pansies and marigolds, Miss Blanca came out of her office with the old broom and shook it at us. “Watch out, Penny, she’s a witch,” said Dolores. “And these are graves,” she said, an air of ghost-like seriousness fluttered around her when the fog rolled in. Dolores pointed seriously at the granite plaque that was in the ground that said, in honor of Father O’Leary on it. “Don’t step on it. It’s bad luck.”

so strange–this meme.

If your reading this and you have a manuscript, consider yourself tagged. In other words, you gotta do it now on your blog.

Categories: writing

search engine terms (meme)

March 10, 2007 · Leave a Comment

In honor of Jade Park’s post on what brings people to her blog, I thought I would randomly post what has been bringing people to the Land of the Guppies lately:

Search Engine Terms
These are terms people used to find your blog.

Today

Search Views
Thuras diary pictures 1
latin word for soil 1
getting off the waitlist mfa 1

Yesterday

Search Views
wild guppy 1
swimming upstream novel 1
swimming upstream(I want you to make som 1
the life of dostoyevski 1
pictures of Thura windawi 1
wilde guppy 1
Swimming Upstream(favourite ) 1
i am a teacher i peed my pants cant hold 1

hahaha.

Categories: Uncategorized

*beautiful thing*

March 7, 2007 · 2 Comments

Three pink magnolias

The other day, I was driving from my work to my MFA program. I took sidestreets and crossed a small bridge. Right when I got across the bridge, I crossed the railroad tracks, and went under the freeway. I was trying to maneuver my car with one hand as I talked on my cell phone to my friend, the dancer. We were having a conversation of a somewhat spiritual nature. I forget the exact details of our exchange but it was something along the lines of when how we have to learn how to be happy with what we have and not to strive too hard forgetting to live life. She was approaching the idea from an Eastern mystic philosophy that she is currently learning, and I was talking about my own spiritual practice with Eastern Christianity. So as I drove, we talked. I told her about my MFA program, and how I am distancing myself from it.

There’s something about when I step foot on my MFA program’s campus; I get very, very tired. I went there this weekend. I went there again on Monday. I went there again today. Each time, I came home and took a nap, I fell down in my bed, exhausted by the people there, by the surroundings, by the heaviness of being “done.” It’s a kind of narcoleptic effect. I go to mfa program. I come home and sleep.

This weekend at the MFA program conference, I had a lot of chatter conversations. Hi how are you, geez it’s been so long, blah blah blah. I saw my former close friend, who is consumed by her own envy and has since become an acquaintance, we made polite conversation that didn’t make much sense. I ended up feeling drained. Maybe it is the feeling of obsessive striving that I get from the people there. It’s not that they’re that bad. It’s just that there’s a collective pressure there, and it may be a pressure I have been operating under for a long time–so that is why it affects me. But–the pressure is something like striving and simultaneously seeing oneself as great without the necessary introspection.

My dancer friend, who’s becoming a yoga teacher, said that in yoga, they call that feelling “maya” or “illusion”. Maya is the term that I think, if I understand her right, is when falsehood and self-conceit rule a person. I feel like intertwined with this idea is the idea of people who are always striving for something, in a kind of blindly ambitious way. I think it’s something similar to the concept of “plani” in the Greek Orthodox Christian mystic tradition. It’s the idea that someone is so consumed by their own self-worth, that they believe beyond a doubt in themselves and that they are always right. The Orthodox spiritual fathers and mothers, coming also from an Eastern tradition, see plani as “delusion”, or to quote the book I am reading, Gifts of the Desrt by Kyriacos C. Markides, plani is more specifically, “an error of perception and cognition related to spiritual matters that undermines one’s ascent to God. A product of human imperfection.”

This explanation somehow goes in my mind with the ideas I felt when leaving “professional day” at my MFA program. While the idea of helping students survive outside of grad. school is commendable, it felt like I was trapped in a room with a bunch of people (from my MFA program, and from other MFA programs) that all wanted something so badly, that they couldn’t help but strive and bite and scratch and act in such a manner collectively as a desperate pack of dogs trying to claw their way to success and fame. I was maybe one of these strivers when I first entered the program, and maybe now that’s why I have such an aversion to it. I’ve also been disgusted with the way that a few mutual classmates have treated a dear friend of mine, who has suffered a stroke. It seemed thoughtless and cruel, some of the things people have told her, and they seemed to be coming from a place of envy. What kind of people, don’t respect when somebody has suffered an physical ailment so huge?

When my dad was in the hospital for cancer my first year in the program, I felt a similar lack of empathy from those around me. When my insurance dropped me, when I totalled my car the first year, when my mom was in the hospital, when I had my own cancer scare, when I was staying up all night taking care of my grandmother when she was having night terrors, etc, when I was working, doing an internship and taking three classes a semester, I felt similarly alone the first year. I felt like instead of asking me what was wrong, people assumed I had cooties or something.

I wonder, is it the drive to perform that pushes everyone to be so passive-aggressive? Is it the idea that we all want, beyond anything else in this world, to publish our writing and to be read by others? Is it the fear that there may not be enough slots for all of us to succeed? How many of us want to be writers because we want fame? Because we are chasing after an illusion that doesn’t really exist? Because we want people to validate us?

I don’t know the answer. But all I know is that every time I step foot onto campus, I leave and I’m fine for a while, but then I collapse in the mid-afternoon into my bed, or onto the couch and take a nap. It really exhausts me.

In fact, at the professional survival day, the only real true conversation I had time to have, was with two people. The first one: my friend who had the stroke. The second was with a writer I had thought snubbed me because he didn’t see my email. He said something really human to me. He asked me how my writing was going and I started to tell him, but then I realized that I really didn’t know what to say. I told him, well, I don’t really know what the hell I’m doing, but I think I’m doing this. He looked at me and said in a kind of confiding way, “Guppie Girl, that’s the secret. Nobody really knows what the hell they’re doing.” I found this to be incredibly kind, especially since here I was admiring him for all of his writing awards and accolades and he was able to be human. I found this to be refreshing.

Then, on Monday afternoon, as I crossed the rail-road tracks, under the freeway, I saw this woman. She was rail-thin, of an indeterminate age, a white lady with a thin brown, pony tail who looked like either a speed or heroin addict begging for money on the center devider. I had a dollar in my cupholder, and I was at a stop light, so I told my friend, the dancer to hold on a minute. I put the phone down, rolled down my window and handed her the dollar. She took it and gasped, a silent ‘Thank you’. I looked at her, with such compassion, but with no pity. I just looked her. I looked at her as if she were a person who I’d known my entire life. She looked at me, and she said the usual thing that homeless people tell me, if I give them change, “God bless you.”

Ok…nothing abnormal, there. But something felt very different about this interaction.

Then, the lady burst into tears. They were real tears. And I thought that maybe, she wasn’t sad, but was in a way, happy. That they were the gift of tears, a kind of spiritual joy that she was having. A release of some kind. I don’t know what it was exactly. But I felt such compassion for her, as a sister. I couldn’t explain it in the moment, and I didn’t do it justice. I sat and then I told her, I wish I had another dollar or something else to give you right now. She shook her head and breathed, no it’s not that. She continued to cry.

It was as if, as I watched her, as if her soul was naked, and who she was was layed bare. It was as if for the first time, she was making some kind of change. I felt that in my heart she had begged for the money to get drugs, but that she was aware that she had hit bottom, and maybe was vowing to make a change and get help. I don’t know.

The Greeks call this metanoia, a kind of “fundamental transformation of the mind and heart that takes the form of profound repentance. The beginning of the process, and a necessary stage, of the soul’s reunification with God.” (again this is from Makrides’ book). I have to say, that I felt love for this woman in this moment. And then the moment passed, I realized the light had turned green, and some jerk honked at me, so I said goodbye to her and went on my way.

I left the experience with goosebumps on my arm. I tried explaining what happened to my friend, the dancer who was still on the other end of the phone which I had momentarily forgotten was on the passenger seat waiting for me. But I don’t feel like I can really, truly put this experience into words.

It just taught me the incredible power of compassion. It can move people to tears. It can change horrible situations. It can console the unconsolable, it can give hope to the hopeless. That day I trafficked in compassion, trading thoughtful stares for tears at the center devider near the railroad tracks, stealing a brief moment of humanity. Me — a tiny ant– before the awesome face of kindness, the fleeting ephemeral nature of life.

close-up-flower.jpg

Categories: MFA programs · life · writing

to whore or not to whore (one’s blog for money)

March 5, 2007 · 4 Comments

Dear Advice Column,

Okay, so I’ve read about it. And now I’m tempted to try it. I don’t literally mean whoring myself out. That I would never do. But what I’m talking about is writing ad-copy for goods and services on my blog for money. I don’t know if this is necessarily selling out, but there is a new phenomenom in blogging where companies will pay you if you mention somebody’s business in your blogpost three times. In some cases, you can even say something bad about their business, just as long as you put a link to the company website in your post. The company will then pay you, the blogger anywhere from 3 to 20 bucks per job. This virtual cash will accumulate in a paypall account, and you will little by little be able to pay the bills. The only requirement for most of these sights is that you need to have a blog more than 90 days old with a certain amount of traffic minimum. I have just met these requirements and at the same time, I wonder, should I do it? Is this the equivalent of a magazine buying ad-space? Would you do it? What do people out there in cyber-space think about blogging for cash? Do you think it’s totally completely whoring yourself, or could it be a legitimate way to pay the bills. Or is rationalizing this, similar to 3rd-wave feminists who call prostitutes “sex-workers”? By the way, I can’t stand this rationalization of prostitution and I am a feminist.

I don’t want to get rich by blogging for money, but it would be interesting to earn a side income, though I doubt it would amount to more than pocket change. Would people actually buy the products I sold? Would the spare change I acquired from blogging be enough to fund a vacation to a beautiful place? Or would it kill the integrity of my blog? I don’t know. I’m still undecided on this one. But I thought I would say something about it because I’ve been thinking about it.

At the end of my MFA program, here I trying to become practical again, but failing miserably. Is this just another dream? The thought has crossed my mind a few times. What should I do?

Sincerely,

Confused in California

Categories: writing