Monday, March 16, 2009

come for the show, stay for the company

I admit that I forgot about this blog. Life since Madison has been erratic to say the least and I'm sure this wasn't the only thing that fell through the cracks.

An entire semester came and went. I voted in my first Presidential election. I survived yet another holiday season. My band put out a record and then broke up. And, to some extent, I've come out of all of this with more realistic expectations about life than ever before.

I've struggled with this notion of being a realist. I suppose it's nice for some to live with high hopes and a strong sense of faith and optimism, but it's never worked for me. Society probably expects me to be idealistic. I'm a college student at an art school, a musician and writer, a left-leaning feminist, a product of a fairly cozy suburban upbringing which many would assume left me with the distinct impression that everything will work out if you let it, that this world is a generally nice place to live. But I've never subscribed to these idealistic concepts.

Being a realist has its pros and cons. Because of your realistic expectations, you are rarely devastated when things don't pan out quite perfectly and you are uplifted by the more pleasant surprises. The problems really only rear their heads in interactions with idealists. Idealists think of realists as cold and pessimistic, the bearers of the bad news that "real life isn't like that." In this way, realists become the bad guys, the anti-dreamers, the folks idealists blame for the world not living up to their expectations. Of course, realists retaliate with the sentiment that idealists are immature and impractical.

In a way, this is why my band broke up--the age-old idealism vs. realism debate. I think my comrades believed that the band could be our own microcosm of holistic democracy, that we could all be best friends and band mates at once, and so any tension or disagreement was highly upsetting to them. I knew better from the beginning and many of the predicaments we experienced along the way involved me trying to demonstrate this idea to the others. We were not all equally invested, and so we could not all have an equal say. In the end, they could not understand, acknowledge, or accept this and I had to walk away.

I always end up falling on the side of realism and practicality. Believe or not, this often involves a leap of faith and ambition (but that's for another day). It also involves a kind of emotional distance or detachment, something that comes more than naturally to me. After the initial breakup of my band, I wrote this in my paper journal (old school, I know):

I don't know how deeply I am really affected by any of this. There was a point where I tried to--and for a moment even thought I did--feel something like genuine suffering, but I doubt the possibility of this ever actually occurring, since I am always at a remove from own life. I am more likely to observe than to experience. Any emotional effects I endure are usually the result of my detached reaction to the circumstances and not the circumstances themselves. That way, I never experience genuine pain, but, of course, this comes at the questionably worthy price of never experiencing genuine... anything. I feel like a fraud. Most of my interactions are forced. Not in a sociopathic way, but in the way that means you never really experience anything first-hand because every moment of your life is infected with some self-reflexive virus, some spectator impulse, some echo breathing meta, meta, meta.
This also has its pros and cons. Ultimately, I think it depends on how you choose to live your life and how much value you put on experiencing strong emotions. Some people crave strong emotions--they thrive on drama. In many ways, I am the anti-drama queen, with the one glaring exception of my long-time conviction that life is, essentially, theater.

Monday, August 25, 2008

me too, i think

I just got back from Madison, WI. I spent a week there with my band mates at a friend's apartment and it was not at all what I expected. Being from New York, I am inclined to think of the Midwest as cornfield after cornfield, full of people who don't believe in television and who voted for Bush twice. I am not wrong to assume that, because it is that. But what I did not expect was the incredible little city of Madison that sits there awkwardly, surrounded by miles of the middle of nowhere.

Madison has a lake with terrace where you can sit with friends and pitchers of beer. It has fabulous eateries and an enviable weekly farmer's market. It has gorgeous architecture and nice people. It has an art museum and countless skate spots. It has street musicians record stores. You can walk everywhere. And you want to.

It is always nice to be pleasantly surprised.

The experience, even just the mac & cheese pizza, was worth the 16-hour drive I endured yesterday. The drive was grueling, but it also gave me a chance to talk out mostly everything in my life that has been bothering me with Andy. We kept each other awake discussing the band, tattoos, family issues, relationships, our own convoluted psyches, life, death, you name it. I made leaps forward toward making a number of life decisions, whether they regarded getting my lip pierced, buying a new microphone, or giving a new relationship a chance.

Now I am in White Plains and I am wondering where to go from here. I have a vague idea of what my goals are. Finishing a record, moving out, booking a tour, generally opening up to people. They all seem so out of reach, but somehow I know that they are closer than they feel. All these little spokes in the wheel, these Sorting-Self-Out tasks, are becoming more and more visible in the proverbial sideview mirror of life all the time. Cheesy, maybe. But I just back from Wisconsin. It's been a cheesy week.

No more puns, ever, I swear.

Anyway, I am ready for life to hit me like a ton of bricks.

Any day now.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

a change of pace

I think that for a year, I will move to some exquisite, unsung European city, take a lover, have a profound sexual awakening, and write tacky poetry about my body's likeness to flowers and waterfalls. Then, when I come back, none of this will even matter anymore and I can start from scratch.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

introduction

There isn't all that much to say yet.
How about letting the music speak for itself?
(At least for now.)