Showing posts with label dolly parton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dolly parton. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2014

shameful and other secrets

annual halloween performance of christian asplund's fall of the house of usher

1) my secret writing place--i found a new spot and no one knows where it is.

don't try to read what's in my notebook.  it's a secret.

2) moses' secret crazy carrot coconut soup & popovers.  if i have the wherewithal, i'll make it for halloween tomorrow night.

digging cheesy new country such as lady antebellum
3) i've been listening to the eagle, 101.5, salt lake city's new country station.

and early zeroes alicia
4) i'm obsessed with mariah carey's butterfly, alicia keys butterflyz, and dolly parton's love is like a butterfly.  what can i say.

questionable television programming

5) i watched every episode of californication in a week's time.



moses and i created this soup last summer.  


Crazy Coconut Carrot Soup

1 ½ T. coconut oil
1 ½ T. vegetable oil
1 ½ c. diced yellow onion
3 large minced garlic cloves
¾ cup diced celery
¼ cup washed and finely chopped cilantro stems
2 ½ t. kosher salt
1 t. ground cumin
1 t. garlic powder
¼ t. garlic chili oil
2 cups cubed  and peeled potato
2 cups cubed and peeled sweet potato
2 lbs. peeled and chopped carrots
6-8 c. water
1 32 oz. can diced tomatoes (including juice)
1 16 oz. can coconut milk
cilantro leaves for garnish

1)   In a large kettle, heat oil to medium and sauté onion, garlic, celery, and cilantro stems.  Saute gently for a few minutes until transluscent. 
2)   Add salt, garlic powder, cumin, and chili oil and cook for a few more minutes. 
3)   Add potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, water, and tomatoes and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat to medium low and simmer for about 40 minutes, or until all the vegetables are so tender that they fall apart when forked.
4)   Add coconut milk and blend with an immersion blender, or in batches in a regular blender or food processor. 
5)   Adjust salt to taste if necessary, and heat the soup for a few minutes on low.  Before serving, garnish bowls of soup with cilantro leaves.
6)   Serve with Cheddar Cheesy popovers on the side—delicious for dipping in the soup.

Cheddar-Cheesy Popovers
(makes 12 medium sized popovers)

5 medium eggs
1 c. 2% milk
½ c. half & half
1 ½ c. flour
1 ½ t. kosher salt
1 c. of your favorite cheddar, grated
cooking spray

1)   Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees.  Spray a cupcake tin with cooking spray.
2)   Beat eggs in medium mixing bowl.  Add milk and half & half.  Stir in salt, grated cheddar, and finally, flower.  Mix briskly with a wire whisk.  It’s okay if a few lumps remain in the batter—kind of like pancakes, if you over mix these, they will be tough.
3)   Fill cupcake tins 2/3 of the way with batter.
4)   Bake on 450 for 20 minutes. 
5)   Reduce heat to 375 degrees and bake for 12 minutes, then check on the popovers every two minutes until they are brown, dry, and crispy.
6)   Immediately remove from the cupcake tins so they don’t get soggy, and serve right after baking with your Crazy Coconut Carrot soup.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

small & barely perceptible

finished paisley notebook yesterday, started teal feather journal today.
monday and tuesday were full and pretty frantic, so today was slow and a little dull, a tiny bit depressing.  but a few small, good things happened.


sexy close-up of my artist's shrine/altar thingy.
1) yesterday i finished another artist's way morning pages notebook.  i did the artist's way last summer and, though i didn't have the huge breakthrough that some adherents profess to, i'm still noticing the changes that continue to occur.  now i'm quite wedded to the act of  spending time every morning writing in a meditative writing practice, one that's separate from my artistic writing practice.  a sitting meditation or a silent prayer practice has never worked  for me, but this notebook thing.  i'm trying not to sound fanatical about it.

as a formerly cynical person who didn't believe in anything. . . . i might be starting to develop some sort of. . . belief?

wow.

i can't believe i said that.

if you squint, these kind of look like a cool textile print or something.
2) sweet potato/russet potato garlic home fries.  the way they looked all lined up on the baking sheets, kind of design-y and all, brought me a surprising amount of pleasure.  and then they looked great after they were roasted and browned.  and then they tasted great.

(hint:  it's all about the flaky salt, which you should add before, during, and after the roasting process.)

believe me when i say:  flaky salt must be applied before, during, and after
3) moses was home recovering from strep throat today.  it's a great moment when, suddenly, the antibiotics have done their job and the kid starts eating and jumping around and laughing again.  i always say strep throat trumps a virus any day. (except when you're an adult :( )  24 hours of pink liquid and you're golden.

i might need to ask for her new book, dream more, for christmas. . . .
4)  dolly parton and stephen colbert singing love is like a butterfly together.  i'm sorry.  i know i need to join a dolly super fan support group, but i love her SO much.  i love her laugh, especially, and the way, even though she's lost a lot of her voice to age, she still works it, still has so much soul.

legwear: yoga pants

looking forward to: seeing anna karenina with friends this weekend

inspiration: dolly's laugh

Friday, August 31, 2012

for the love of dolly

girl got herself out of a tight place
last week we watched tai uhlman's documentary for the love of dolly. this slight but intriguing documentary features footage five dolly super-fans doing their quirky, sad, over-the-top fan stuff, like creating porcelain dolly dolls, getting plastic surgery to look more like dolly, and planning elaborate costumes for the annual opening parade at dollywood.  one of the fans is a developmentally disabled man whose dolly obsession is his portal to the larger world. two troubled young women structure their lives around pilgrimages to dollywood and recreating dolly's "tennessee mountain home" in their back yard, and a gay couple builds a life around creating and collecting dolly memorabilia and singing along with their favorite dolly song hello god.

by virtue of it's subject, the documentary keeps your attention, but you feel a bit voyeuristic, and wonder if this was a little bit of an easy target, somewhat akin to criticisms leveled at waiting for guffman, you hope that you're laughing with, not at, the subjects of the film.

the filmmaking is somewhat artless, especially compared to the other documentary we saw last week, ai wei wei: never sorry.  but there are interesting moments when the footage delves into the fans' backstories, and the reasons for their obsessions begin to emerge:  one young woman has suffered abuse at the hands of her family, and talks about the prayer she would offer every night even as a pre-schooler:  that dolly would be her mother and sing her a lullaby every night.  the man who makes the porcelain dollys discusses the guilt he felt when his wife died in a car accident even as he was in the process of leaving her for his current partner.

as one who verges on dolly superfandom, i wish we would have gotten a little more of a sense of the things that make dolly so compelling, such a rich personality and talent.  a singer who can make you sob even while singing most inane lyrics in the world, lyrics like:

Hello God, are you out there?
Can you hear us, are you listenin' any more?
Hello God, if we're still on speakin' terms
Can you help us like before?



i enjoyed this film well enough, but didn't think it really did dolly or it's fascinating subjects full justice.  what causes a person to want to negate her own life in the worship of another, and why is the worship directed at dolly?  i wished for a fuller exploration of these questions.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

what you can't see with your eye

carne asada & taco al pastor


1.  the taste of summer in a carne asada taco from the taco paraiso truck at the provo farmer's market.  (city of provo, let us have food trucks please!)

2.  cecily in the tub singing adele.

3. dolly parton's melismas.  what happens in between each note.  the genius & soul & hallelujah of it.

4.  waking up every morning when moses gets in bed with us.

5. the smoky smell of lula's camping gear.

6. beethoven on the piano late at night when christian is playing.

7. shaved fennel.

8.  ingrid's skin & eva's chicken tikka masala.

9.  richard linklater.

10.  spring birds at 4 a.m.


Sunday, April 8, 2012

new road trip songs

every time we take a road trip, i end up with at least one, maybe two, favorite new songs.  okay, maybe even three. 

you know the ones that you play over and over again until you've memorized every lick & nuance?

well, here are mine from friday's road trip.  i haven't really learned them completely yet because my children banned me from playing them as many times as i wanted to, but i'll get there, oh believe me, i'll get there.

surprise!  they're all dolly songs.  here's the order of favoriteness:
 




Saturday, February 11, 2012

From One Girl in a Tight Place to Another

Really feeling my tight place today and I'm not sure what to do about it.  Thinking about the following this evening.

1.  My laptop computer of four years is on its last legs. The dude at the Genius Bar confirmed this today. The thought of all four of us here sharing one computer makes me nervous given that it's also our "TV" and "radio."  Has anyone ordered a used computer on Ebay? How'd that work out for you?
2.  Today was almost completely lackluster.  I worked for most of the day--multi-tasking while there.  I did have a brisk bike ride home.

3.  My bike had a new wheel put on it yesterday.  The bike boys sternly advised that I oil my chain.  And then later that day, some annoying middle-aged biker man pointed out bolt that had to be replaced.  I must remember to oil my chain.

4.  I got caught up on all email from students.

5.  And while this doesn't exactly fit in with the trivial musings above, I was shocked (but perhaps not surprised given the gossip I know of her life) to learn about the death of Whitney Houston.  I hadn't been following her that closely and I was never a fan.  Perhaps if I had been 10/15 years younger than Whitney, I dunno . . . . But as her contemporary, I never related to her musical aesthetic.  She wasn't really ever singing to me.   However, at the same time, I appreciated the enormous impact she had on pop music and culture. I can't help but think that, like Michael, she kicked down racial barriers, and I could openly acknowledge her out-sized talent, her beauty and charisma.  She was one of the handful of great American divas.  And the world needs divas--more than ever, doesn't it?  Her biggest hit (below) was penned by another out-sized American diva, Dolly Parton.  Near the end Whitney, from what had been put in circulation, really seemed to be a girl in a tight place.

So because of that, I'm going to do this. In tribute, here's Whitney eight years ago:

>

Monday, January 30, 2012

minaj--complicit or critical?


>
first, let's get right down to tights, since this is the LAST DAY for our tights giveaway.  to convince yourself that you really need some new tights stat, checkout the beautiful turquoise, sky, robin's egg blue-blue pair on minaj in the opening of "moment 4 life."

and then tell me if she hangs with drake to make herself appear, through juxtaposition, even more overwhelmingly rad and charismatic.

and THEN

we need to talk.

i read a fantastic discussion about "stupid hoe" on the blog nuñez daughter, linked by the super rad (and i actually mean rad as in radical this time) crunk feminist collective.

here are two bits from kismet nuñez's article:

Minaj hurts my head.  She perplexes me.  I think of her as Trickster, two-faced in her betrayal of global black feminist possibility and powerful in her contradictory elucidation of black woman’s power within the realms of celebrity and hip hop.  Reading her as Ellegua, that frightful guardian of the crossroads and the in-between and the everything-that-is-not-yet seems to fit an artist who switches alter egos as easily as she switches clothes.  Conjuring the ritual and physicality of possession seems to fit a celebrity who changes clothes as she changes personality, putting on her and taking off her tropes as each personality comes down.  The sometimes garish, sometimes delightful carnival of color, glitter and expression–even the repetitive dancehall/house music refrain–also fit a woman whose aesthetic choices continually find their footing in her Trinidadian roots.
In other words, I think of Nicki Minaj as diasporic black, as radical, and as speculative.

AND

But what if she isn’t supposed to be the vision?
What if she is just the oracle?  The vessel?  A portent of things to come?
What if she is just the keeper of the crossroads?

the first time i was aware of radical re-appropriation was with madonna in the late 80's/early 90's.  and you might say that dolly parton presaged madonna in exploiting femininity/the male gaze to be "in charge".  to make $$, to change her personna like she changes wigs and one-piece zip up pant suits (minaj and parton share a proclivity for both wigs and one piece zip-up suits that highlight their outsized secondary sexual characteristics.)

& then

there's gaga.  but i don't wanna talk about her.  i find her as uninteresting as drake.

the points here are three:

1) can you radically re-appropriate, i mean really, in a HYPEr capitalist market?

2) this whole thing about women using their sexuality to be in charge of stuff, i mean, that's not new, right?  remember salome?

3) does shapeshifting/ changing your image frequently equal empowerment.

i'm with nunez that minaj is endlessly fascinating.  i want to know what feminists writing their dissertations on minaj are saying,  and if it's legit, or if it's a bunch of HYPE.

and yes, if you are, like me, of a certain generation, and not accustomed to the stuff the kids these days are listening, you might beware before watching this video.

unless, of course, you plan to take it all in stride as you de-contextualize minaj's (her producer's?) imagery and language and view it all through the lens of radical re-appropriation.






inspiration: radical re-appropriation of tights
legwear:  snakeskin jeans
looking forward:  to the sundance best of fest screenings tonight

Sunday, January 29, 2012

keeping sabbath



when i was a child growing up in a mesa, arizona orange grove that was, lot by lot, being bulldozed and replaced with 70's ranch-style ramblers with desert landscaping in front and a few citrus trees remaining in back, around kidney shaped pools, the sabbath day was both arduous and wonderful.  sometimes boring, sometimes peaceful,

& almost always brimming with delicious and only-on-sunday foods. *

we had three separate church meetings on sunday, and i remember my mother in a slip, nude hose with a reinforced toe & bone-colored high-heeled sandals, browning a spattering roast with a big fork while the exhaust fan hummed away and handel's water music (we listened to this every sunday without fail) accompanied her on my dad's reel-to-reel.  or perhaps she was putting her famous tender rolls--both crescent and clover-shaped--into the oven.  this was either before sunday school or in between sunday school and sacrament meeting.  my dad had already attended early morning preisthood, leaving my mother alone, as mothers usually were back then, to dress, feed, groom and transport seven children to church in our station wagon.

in actuality, the grooming started the day before.  all kids who grow up mormon know the drill from this primary song:

saturday is a special day/it's the day we get ready for sunday./ we clean the house and we shop at the store/ so we won't have to work until monday.

we brush our clothes and we shine our shoes/ and we call it our get the work done day./ then we trim our nails and shampoo our hair/ so we can be ready for sunday.

at our house, with five girls, this involved saturday night shampoos and a lot of pink sponge rollers.  my sisters and i all have fine straight hair, and my mother was a little impatient, so our curls were often bedraggled by the time sunday school was over, and there was always a stray piece of straight hair that had escaped the the curlers.  not like sister nancy m's girls (she had fourteen children) who wore impeccably hand-made matching dresses and pinafores and had ringlets that reached at least to the mid-back.

in fairness to my mother's hair skills, sister nancy m's girls had thick curly hair, so she could make ringlets with only a spray bottle and a finger, and they would last all day.

(let me also mention here sister delores w., the chorister, who had countless hair pieces and false lashes, who wore as much make-up as dolly parton and put just as much effort into her styling, who had a similar platinum-blonde shade of hair as dolly, who never wore the same maxi-dress twice, and whose style i vowed to emulate when i grew up.  she had ten children and drove a custom painted yellow van with checkers on the side and a sign reading: "the w. family taxi service".)

(btw, in our densely mormon neighborhood, i felt that seven children was a very average, perhaps even small & kind of wimpy, number of children for a good lds family to have.)

the sabbath ended, back in the day, with toasted cheese sandwiches (open face with tomato, mayo, s & p) campbell's tomato soup, and hot chocolate while watching wild kingdom and wonderful world of disney.  in slips or pajamas.

a little boring and a little fun, and eminently soothing.

this all came to mind today as i've been preparing sunday dinner.  normally we are lucky enough to go to bam's house for dinner, at least in the winter (she summers in canada), but today i wanted to give her a day off and cook dinner for grandma beth and grandpa woody, who we normally don't see on sundays.

(btw, grandpa woody paid me high compliment last week at the golden corral when he said, "why, their food is almost as good as your cooking.)

i went with an old school menu:  turkey with stuffing*mashed potatoes and gravy* garlic seared green beans* waldorf salad* dinner rolls with rosemary and kosher salt*cranberry orange relish.  

i cooked in heels and these rad zig-zaggy lacy tights (charcoal and bone) that c. picked up at the ann arbor urban outfitters in december of '10.

& i thought about our slightly different way of keeping sabbath now.

& i wondered about how & when  & if you do it.

here's ours:

*church
*bach cantatas--we own all of them.  all.  guess how many he wrote.  that's right.  more than 300.  and they all sound the same. &we've been listening to a new one every week.  though of course i can't tell that it's a new one, because it sounds as same as the old one.
*grilled cheese sandwiches after church
*ny times:  i read modern love, all the food stuff, street style, what i wore, diagnosis, and i hope and pray that bill cunningham has a new slideshow up (he does today, and his narration is particularly rad, especially his comments about women choosing their looks)
*sunday dinner at bam's
*simpson's
*playing cards or the favorites game (this is a rad game.  i'll explain some other time).

inspiration: sunday rituals & tradition old and new & the mozart missa solemnis

looking forward: to making this french onion soup and this giardiniera

legwear:  urban outfitters charcoal and bone lace tights

*don't forget to read this article on mormon cookery.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Stuff to Get Me Through January When Tights Just Aren't Enough


(I don't know why these links aren't showing up as videos like they do in previous posts.  Hmmm.  My post looks so dull!  Suggestions?)

1.  TV on the Radio's song, "You," and its accompanying video:
2.  The fact that Dolly Parton's birthday is in January--TODAY she turns 66!
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/JA3JfsD6s4Y" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

3.  Reading about the amusing antics that seem to be part and parcel of the Republican primary.  I've long been interested in US elections as a pop cultural phenomenon, which brings me to spending intermittent moments in January thinking about one of my favorite films.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Z56oklL5KBo" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

4.  Janis Joplin's birthday is also in January--TODAY in fact.  She would have been 69.  I wonder what she and Dolly thought of each other.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/FVpDOIPx_sY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

5.  I don't only watch YouTube!  I also read poetry.  Yesterday, I thought about Larry Levis' poem "Caravaggio:  Swirl and Vortex" when I thought about how much I loved visiting Occupy Wall Street in the fall, how much I have loved--in my life--participating in mass movements like protests and elections, singing in a crowd, chanting in a yoga crowd, sitting in the crowd of a concert, being part of something bigger than myself, I guess.

I think that what was wrong with today was that I spent too much time inside, alone.

Here's Levis (and it happens to be one of the few lines of poetry I've memorized):

Once, I marched & linked arms with other exiles who wished to end a war, & . . .
Sometimes, walking in that crowd, I became the crowd, &, for that moment, it felt
Like entering the wide swirl & vortex of history.


The entire poem is here (but you really should read it as it was originally printed in his 1991 collection The Widening Spell of Leaves).  I promise it will get you through January, on the days that tights just aren't enough:  



LARRY LEVIS

Caravaggio: Swirl & Vortex
     (reprinted by permisson of University of Pittsburgh Press)
In the Borghese, Caravaggio, painter of boy whores, street punk, exile & murderer,
Left behind his own face in the decapitated, swollen, leaden-eyed head of Goliath,
And left the eyelids slightly open, & left on the face of David a look of pity
Mingling with disgust. A peach face; a death mask. If you look closely you can see
It is the same face, & the boy, murdering the man, is murdering his own boyhood,
His robe open & exposing a bare left shoulder. In 1603, it meant he was available,
For sale on the street where Ranuccio Tomassoni is falling, & Caravaggio,
Puzzled that a man would die so easily, turns & runs.
Wasn't it like this, after all? And this self-portrait, David holding him by a lock
Of hair? Couldn't it destroy time if he offered himself up like this, empurpled,
Bloated, the crime paid for in advance? To die before one dies, & keep painting?
This town, & that town, & exile? I stood there looking at it a long time.
A man whose only politics was rage. By 1970, tinted orchards & mass graves.
~
The song that closed the Fillmore was "Johnny B. Goode," as Garcia played it,
Without regret, the doors closing forever & the whole Haight evacuated, as if
Waiting for the touch of the renovator, for the new boutiques that would open—
The patina of sunset glinting in the high, dark windows.
Once, I marched & linked arms with other exiles who wished to end a war, & . . .
Sometimes, walking in that crowd, I became the crowd, &, for that moment, it felt
Like entering the wide swirl & vortex of history. In the end,
Of course, you could either stay & get arrested, or else go home.
In the end, of course, the war finished without us in an empty row of horse stalls
Littered with clothing that had been confiscated.
~
I had a friend in high school who looked like Caravaggio, or like Goliath—
Especially when he woke at dawn on someone's couch. (In early summer,
In California, half the senior class would skinny-dip & drink after midnight
In the unfinished suburb bordering the town, because, in the demonstration models,
They finished the pools before the houses sold. . . . Above us, the lush stars thickened.)
Two years later, thinking he heard someone call his name, he strolled three yards
Off a path & stepped on a land mine.
~
Time's sovereign. It rides the backs of names cut into marble. And to get
Back, one must descend, as if into a mass grave. All along the memorial, small
Offerings, letters, a bottle of bourbon, photographs, a joint of marijuana slipped
Into a wedding ring. You see, you must descend; it is one of the styles
Of Hell. And it takes a while to find the name you might be looking for; it is
Meant to take a while. You can touch the names, if you want to. You can kiss them,
You can try to tease out some final meaning with your lips.
The boy who was standing next to me said simply: "You can cry. . . . It's O.K., here."
~
"Whistlers," is what they called them. A doctor told me who'd worked the decks
Of a hospital ship anchored off Seoul. You could tell the ones who wouldn't last
By the sound, sometimes high-pitched as a coach's whistle, the wind made going
Through them. I didn't believe him at first, & so then he went into greater
Detail. . . . Some evenings, after there had been heavy casualties & a brisk wind,
He'd stare off a moment & think of a farm in Nebraska, of the way wheat
Bent in the wind below a slight rise, & no one around for miles. All he wanted,
He told me, after working in such close quarters for twelve hours, for sixteen
Hours, was that sudden sensation of spaciousness—wind, & no one there.
My friend, Zamora, used to chug warm vodka from the bottle, then execute a perfect
Reverse one-&-a-half gainer from the high board into the water. Sometimes,
When I think of him, I get confused. Someone is calling to him, & then
I'm actually thinking of Caravaggio . . . in his painting. I want to go up to it
And close both the eyelids. They are still half open & it seems a little obscene
To leave them like that.  






Tuesday, January 17, 2012

candlelit dinner & quotidiana


i'm a bit of an evangelist about family eating and cooking. though i am a hapless housekeeper and a moth-eaten mother, one thing i've been pretty consistent about for many years is cooking for and eating with my family. i've tried to spread the good news about the benefits of doing this this to my students, and have been teaching and writing on the subject for years.

today in my writing about food class, we visited the cheese monger at the local market and bought a selection of cheeses for a cheese tasting, and my copy of michael pollan's food rules: an eater's manual arrived in the mail today.

&

i ran into two cool new magazines/journals/websites espousing some of my favorite ideas about how we can have healthier emotional, physical, spiritual, and aesthetic lives by eating and cooking together more: kinfolk and walkin kitchen. if you like those, you might also want to check out alimentum.

last food class, we brainstormed ideas for improving our family food culture. one idea that appealed to all of us was the candlelit dinner as an every day occurrence, especially in winter time.

a lot of pollan's rules are no-brainers, and one of the effects and intended purposes of his book is that when you read some of them, like only eat food that will eventually rot or only eat food cooked by humans you become startled at the strange state of our food culture.

but the two rules that spoke to me today, and fit in best with what julie and i are trying to do with our blog are these: #76--place a bouquet of flowers on the table and everything will taste twice as good and #78--eat with other people as often as you can. i love things that take into account that most of our lives are humdrum, daily events that we do to keep alive, and then go ahead and transform the quotidian into something more beautiful, special, tasty, lovely, sexy, interesting or even a little more complicated. today was about that for me.

how can this day be a little more special? i love to hear what other people do to make this happen in their daily lives--put on a great pair of tights? listen to music? take a bath? eat chocolate? go for a walk? read poetry? i spent a lot of years trying to make big changes, and mostly failed. now i'm working on the small ones.

today's inspiration: eat your dinner, no matter what it is, with someone else & some candles or flowers. music doesn't hurt, either.

tights: grey, with cork wedge sandals. ingrid highly disapproves of tights with sandals, but they give me a little frisson because when i was 12 i was allowed to wear my first pair of nude hose (l'eggs, in the egg shaped container) with a pair of naturalizer wedge sandals (wine colored). that went along with permission to shave my legs, wear make-up, and attend young women's. it was thrilling. i remembered this whilst watching 9 to 5 last weekend--jane, lily, and dolly all wore an open-toed shoe paired with nude hose. in every single scene.

p.s. speaking of quotidian, check out patrick madden's book quotidiana. his love for the everyday is inspired. i think you'd like it.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

swank



so many little moments of inspiration today.

& so many little sad and happy moments.

first: the mountains.

the mountains.

i fell out of bed and went up to sundance with c. this morning to wait in line for ninety minutes for the best of fest tickets, free to locals, for the sundance film festival. the line was long and cooooold. i couldn't feel my toes. but the company was good. we waited in line with a dozen friends (locals) who are stalwarts about attending the festival (a half-dozen of these friends were siblings in one of those dynastic mormon families--cool, smart, liberal, interesting, artsy and large in number all with the same wide nordic eyes and cheek-bones. it thrills me that as adults they still like to hang out and attend sundance together).

then a short jaunt for a 44 oz. diet coke/dr. pepper cocktail at chevron with eva and friends before c. took her to the airport, manhattan bound again.

i will miss my beautiful girl more than i can say.

i imagined new york, and missed it, and wondered for the thousandth time what calls me back to the mountains always, though i see myself as one more at home in the gleaming temple of civilization rather than wandering the back-country of timpanogas.

then a glorious, swank afternoon with ingrid and lula, eating seven-layer bean dip with fritos in my bed and watching 9 to 5. o dolly! and lily! and jane! and their early eighties office attire.

that morning, on the drive down from sundance, i read in byu's student review a quote from political science professor valerie hudson, on her way to a swank endowed chair or something at texas a & m, saying that she didn't feel lds women were allowed their full equality: "despite the lds church's revolutionary doctrine concerning women, lds culture, lds traditions, and lds chapel practice often do not live up to the doctrinal vision we have been given by our prophetic leadership. . . . we as a people must stop living beneath our privileges on this score."

hudson has some interesting views on feminism, politics, and gender, many of which i disagree with, but i thought she was spot-on with that assessment. and she has done some of the most important work i know of in establishing the truth that gender parity is one of the most essential factors to the success of the human race with her woman stats project. she has provided sound empirical data that national security and welfare are dependent on the degree to which the women in a nation are a) alive and present, b) educated, and c) have access to freedom in public life.

for that reason, she's one of my heroines.

and the idea that we must "stop living beneath our privileges" rang out to me today with many implications. it goes back to the recent themes i've been harping on about living without regret, noticing the things that are free and good and appreciating them, and also perhaps a bit of re-framing for myself.

for instance: i don't need to pine for the skyscrapers of manhattan when i've got the skyscrapers of the wasatch mountains so close by that i can touch them. can i see them as temples of culture, the rock formations as sculpture in the MOMA, a hike as an artistic act?

so, anyway, though, back to dolly & co.: when they haplessly end up kidnapping their sexist boss who had been endlessly harassing all of the women in the office, dolly, his secretary, realizes that she can "sign his name better than he can." dolly, lily, and jane immediately set out to implement such progressive policies for the office as on-site daycare, job sharing, colorful decor, and, most importantly, equal pay for equal work by writing a plethora of memos signed by dolly.

the gals know they've been living beneath their privilege, and they take that privelege back for themselves, creating better conditions for all of the workers in the office, male and female.

mmmm-hmmm.

then ingrid requested a little american in paris for her last hour at home. i spent an hour wishing that gene kelley was fred astaire, and that someone else had written the script. still fun, though. and "paris" was real swank.

then ingrid left for bryn mawr. wah. not before, however, making me laugh so hard i cried whilst she kept saying hilarious things in german about her wandernkostum.

you probably had to be there.

i feel a little sad and empty with her gone.

then cecily learned to make rice, and, with almost every crumb of food in our house eaten up, we ate beans and rice and a winter salad with the few vegetables left in the drawer.

but i just read this, from alex kapranos' fantastic little book sound bites:

mme. taroudant brings me a tagine d'agneau. The clay is black with splashes hardened by the unforgiving fire, the ghosts of a thousand meals. Prunes fall from the stone. l'agneau falls from the y-shaped bone. i can't tell what kind of bone. i try to summon some knowledge of agneau anatomy, but give up. i don't care. it's magnificent.

i don't know if kapranos has some sort of ghostwriter or what. he's a damned good writer and sound bites is one of my favorite food books.

now lula and i will finish sons of perdition, a surprisingly beautiful documentary about kids who leave the fundamentalist polygamist community of colorado city. i haven't finished it yet, but so far i recommend it.

free things: re-reading and re-watching books and movies around the house, using up all the food in the house, sitting at the table with the kids, laughing with ingrid, thinking a lot.

inspiring things: don't live beneath your privilege.

legwear: dammit. same jeans four days in a row. finally threw them into the laundry. finally a shower and change at 6.30 pm. in an hour i'll put on a decent outfit and go to a party. it will include either black or grey tights.

Friday, January 13, 2012

wings of a dove



this is the first, but surely not the last, time i will blog about dolly parton.

i think she's magic.

today i saw her new movie with queen latifah joyful noise. it was absolutely hideous, and i loved every minute of it. kind of like an episode of glee about gospel choirs.

the full-length choir numbers were fantastic. dolly barely has any voice left, but even then, it's ten times the voice of most other singers. everything in between the numbers was super awkwardly written, acted and directed. fun, though.

but my point is this: in one scene, the motley assortment of singers is on the choir bus and one of the choir members is bummed out, on his third marriage, living in a no account podunk town, newly fired with no job prospects in sight. he tells vi rose (latifah) that he doesn't know if he'll ever feel the spirit again. she reassures him that he will.

today my thing to look forward to, my free thing, my good thing, is that i know sometime soon i'll feel the spirit again. i always do.

love dolly's look in this video, her voice, and this fantastic song. hope you like it, too.

hope the spirit descends upon you any time now.

xo

legwear: jeans. jeggings. whatever you call them these days. i've been wearing them for a few days in a row now, when i'm not at work. cecily came home form school and said, "mom, why are you all dolled up?" i guess it was the lipstick and earrings, because the outfit wasn't much. guess i haven't been bringing it lately. need some fashion engergy, stat.