Sunday, February 28, 2010

A Saturday Afternoon (in photos)

tea at higher ground with michael.


walk to old city. Book Trader finds. (and a small gift for someone...)






Meet with Min Hee, buy these from Urban. 


Acquire these items from Anthropologie 


Buy Intelligentsia loose leaf organic earl grey and a new tea infuser from De Bruno Brothers. 


buy my perfume and mascara at Sephora. 

Gelato at Capogiro (Apple/Tangerine) Min Hee got Avocado/Chocolate Malt 

at this point, we go our separate ways (but shared a wonderful day with a new friend!) I train it to Spring Garden and meet Justin and his friends at Arbol Cafe where Oscar, the owner greets me with a warm "Ti Kanis?" (Although Oscar is Paraguayan, he once worked at a Greek restaurant) 

More tea and conversation. 

Home. (In time to make dinner with a new friend)

Letters from Mikey

Let me preface this by explaining one of my dearest friendships. Michael Audette and I became friends in the ninth grade. We took Mr Bianca's social studies class together and became good friends by way of his friendships with Courtney Ober and Megan Smith (I believe we sat at the same lunch table at some point freshman year). Somewhere along the line, Mikey and I started seeing concerts together. My dad would drive us one way, his dad would usually drive us back (as far as worcester haha). Some of my fondest memories of these trips include..acquiring as many bouncy balls as possible and letting them loose in enclosed spaces. playing wall ball at the Palladium. Seeing American Nightmare...and living to tell about it. Watching Mike and his dad eat quarter pounders at a rest stop. Listening to Coheed and Cambria for the first time from an Equal Vision sampler..and kind of liking it.  

Things have changed a bit since I was 14 years old. I can't believe we've been friends for ten years ha. Mike has the worst and best luck ever (being struck by lightning...etc etc) Is the only person I know to have ever been admitted into a fraternity (at UMASS none the less) without drinking a drop of alcohol. Rode to Philly on a motorcycle from massachusetts once. Has owned more $25 dollar cars and white guitars than anyone I know. Has painted the Green Monster in his room..(almost to scale and with incredible precision). and he is one of my closest friends...
That said, Mikey has been sending me letters and packages over the last couple of months. I've decided to share them on the interweb in a series I'm calling Letters from Mikey. 

I received the following about a month ago:








(the dinosaur image is a tshirt.)




Sunday, January 17, 2010

On New Traditions. January Sixteenth ( in as few words as possible)

a jennifer jacobs birthday visit in south philly. apple and endive bday dinner with close friends. rose tea. hanging out with one of my favorites until i turned 24 at midnight. 12 am birthday wishes from my past. vegan cupcakes. a bouquet of wildflowers. sugar ray kareoke in the navy yard. phone calls from spain and greece. messages from massachusetts and new york and philadelphia and california and idaho and england. waking up to sleepy faces. the most beautiful january 16th spring day ever. bike ride with a dear friend. wandering the italian market. taking photos. tea at gleaners. used books and records and the sweetest kittens. my roommate. bike ride to chinatown with one of my nearest and dearest. chinese noodle shop in good company. blood orange and pear birthday gelato. falling in love with philly all over again. movie night in fishtown. an adopted birthday brunch (happy birthday joel) and more hanging out. 

this birthday was wonderful. thank you, philadelphia for newfound memories.  i saw (most) everyone i wanted to see without getting overwhelmed (like i usually do). I'm blessed and grateful and so very thankful that of all places in the world, I ended up here. 


Friday, November 20, 2009

barcelona in as few words as possible

many new friends. reconnecting with old friends. awe-inspiring architecture. antoni gaudi.  dinner parties..lentils and taters and salad and fresh fruit. mercadona! african film festival... in catalan and french. john cage and merce cunningham exhibit at macba. la rambla and crazy vendors. australians and how crazy they really are.  sangria and pan con tomate while gypsies played the spanish guitar in the gothic quarter. highlighters and dancing in old factories. Julio's "babies". baby kangaroos in the zoo. old men play bocci and chess while the sun set behind barca's version of the arc d'triumph. catalunyan chocolate made from old world recipes. joan miro. argentina and why i wish i could speak better spanish. 9 forms of transportation in 15 hours. si us plau! si us plau! 


and my favorite...walking the city with my best friend talking about old times and new times and all the times that we missed out on eachother's company. i love my sra. and i'm glad she's back. 

if i wasnt starting a new job...i honestly wouldve stayed for a month or two. at the same time, something in me felt as though the sweetness of it all had much to do with how little time i had there. it was all quite wonderfully sweet. 

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

On adolescence and adulthood.

It was then, amidst the song that induced a memory I had buried deep within the dark abyss of my mind. A place where the pains of your legacy continues pressing on strings with deft, calloused fingers on a carpeted floor stretched taut, the coarse, fibrous yarns spun of dashed ideals and the uncertainty of eighteen. The cold air pushes through ceiling slats and the pinkish-violet remains of the sun grasped the Philadelphia sky--only it wasn't Philly painted across the windowed canvas. In its stead, a skyline built in four years. A tragedy scrawled in pamphlets, left & leaving. A story I have yet to reconcile of a love never realized. The boy whose heart broke under the hot lamps of a life long dream that escaped his memory, never to return. That first cigarette, pressed clumsily upon wind-chapped lips, a falsely perceived adulthood. A stolen kiss, masked in the fading licorice haze of adolescence. Those quiet reflections, where I realized it was against the will of the Lord most high for us to live as individuals...only then, the seeds of poverty taking root in the depths of my very being. 

The final moments of dusk shook me from reverie as the pinkish hues stretched upward, grasping the heavens in fear that the sun may never rise again. This is me now, years later and reminded that autumn exists in the city. The overwhelming stench of beautiful decay. The things I thought I'd never miss. 

Your funeral is magnificent, decorated in shades of mustard and olive. A procession of skeletal figures coming forth to pay their last respects. And you, that crooked smirk gracing a pert mouth. A snide retort prepared should the opportunity present itself. Your sallow skin, yellow-green in the corridor lighting, stretches over delicate bones. Though all the parts are there, no sound exists. The oxygen is removed from our lungs and we are momentarily frozen in time and place. There is overwhelming stillness in this peace only granted by Him. And I stay in that space until my lungs burn and my vision begins to fade forcing me to breathe, gasping and heaving. 

The figures glare. Unnerving. They read my every movement. My mouth. My hands. The rise and fall of my chest. Glorious, this ghastly procession. A parade of toothy smiles, pasted on unwelcome, yet familiar faces. Only then, I press my palm on the papery-thin flesh of your pallid cheek, A final attempt. A futile hope in resurrecting the dry pathways of your veins. Oh, soul-less creature. Oh, spirited son. 

"The dream is dead, the moment passed," His lower lip trembled slightly, betraying his confident tone. "And we are nothing. Born of the earth, we will return to our Father."

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Greece, In as few words as possible.

owls and morning doves. church bells: on the hour, the half hour. cool mornings followed by incredibly hot, dry days. morning bus trips to the city. walks through the agora. early morning trips to the mountainside, picking sage tea, oregano. glimpses of my history. stories. family. new friends, cousins i've yet to see in years. walks to the seaside. the calm, calm aegean. churches, monastaries. pakistani refugees. political turmoil and indecision. fresh figs. taking walks with pappou. petrified forest. the poet sappho. an abandoned turkish hotel. the graveyard. afternoons with marianthi. molyvos. the word hortofagos, and the fact that it means nothing here. photoz. coffee and icecream with pappou.

things i have yet to see, but will soon:
printizi, italy. the adriatic sea. patra. my baby xardefaki strati. my theo and thea. athina. the city.

things i miss:
my bike. philly. being able to speak english. good friends.


Friday, April 10, 2009

annotations on dollar bills and rent checks.

"I hate this city."
I cringed, my nose wrinkling as he punctuated the said statement with yet another angry jab at the horn. My driver appeared far to young to be this bitter. The strain of the city's unceasing traffic reflected in eyebrows so tightly knit, I began to doubt that they had ever looked any different. At once, in my own thoughts in the back seat of a gypsy cab in Long Island...I feel relief. Innate relief. A sigh from somewhere within the inner workings of my heart. And so began a story--his story--but a story nonetheless. Of a life once lived. Of youth now lost. Of love forgotten. 
And I listened. And I listened. 
I felt the pain of the child who would never know "normal", born into a loveless relationship. I saw a man, struggling to reconcile past aspirations, a man whose religion is defined by how much he's worth. Whose worth is defined by his wealth...quantified in dollar bills and rent checks. 
And I listened. And I listened. 
It was at that moment that the words came to me. They echoed in my ears and I knew that they were written before they were written. 
An hour prior to my return to Philly, I write these words in a small coffeeshop in the East Village (They brew Intelligentcia, you'd be proud) whose mosaic-tiled floors had seen better days. Whose baristas fit the bill. And whose earl gray is particularly strong, if I should say so myself. Perched upon a stool, seated at a round, marble-swirled tabletop, I have a wonderful view at the apex of Twelfth and "A" as Manhattan's characters go about their Wednesday morning. 
New York is yet a foreigner to me. Its actors so well versed in a script I don't yet understand. I'm still stumbling over the lines...not quite sure if I truly wish to memorize them, a part of me fearful that in conforming, by default I'd become The Artist or The Waitress, or worse...Girl One (or Two or Ten), a nameless face in this ongoing production. So, I play the part of The Visitor or The Tourist, an outsider reading the faces and examining the nuances, picking apart cryptic smiles and eyebrows tightly knit, for some sort of humanity lost, for loves now forgotten and lives once lived until I'm breathlessly anxious and scared...and I understand how these faces became masks. The city spins at an alarming pace; its inhabitants dizzy and drunk, barely grasping hold of any remaining truth. 
And it spins. And it spins. 
Then it stops, the constant clamor and clang that flooded my ears and polluted my vision comes to a screeching halt as an April snow, soft and delicate, spirals silently onto the now quiet pavement, as if this is God's way of reminding us that life presses on, that we are all players trying our best in our own way to figure it out. Suddenly, today is perfect in its imperfection. Today, in all of its chaos is perfect, because it isn't, because God wouldn't have it any other way. And I understand that I spend too much of my time in the details, ironing out the creases and folds with careful precision, analyzing every facet. It's okay. For the first time since I came to New York, I'm okay with all of it. 
The sunlight is now peaking through faded window shades, casting shadows that dance across paisley-papered walls and faces so deeply engrossed in laptops, books and magazines. Unexpectedly, it is once again a sunny April morning in New York, and that's alright with me. 
      The gypsy cab driver takes the scenic route to Stonybrook station. Glancing at the time, I'm glad that, for once in my life, I was early. 
     "How much do I owe you?" I ask my new friend. 
     "Nothing," He replies, smiling. I return the gesture and offer him a ten. The man, whose religion is defined by how much he's worth and whose worth is defined by his wealth. This man nods once more, smiles, refusing the bill. 
     "No. I've enjoyed our discussion--best of luck to you, miss." I bury his kindness in my heart, a memory for another time and place. In that moment, his face softened, allowing me a glimpse of a life once lived and a youth...not quite yet forgotten, perfect in all of its imperfections.