Monthly Archives: October 2002

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Thought-provoking stuff I’ve seen around but didn’t blog till today:

A sticker seen on a jeans ad that doesn’t look like it’s selling jeans at all. You know the kind of ad I mean: supermodel leaning forward, lots of skin, pouty shiny lips, the half-closed come-hither eyes… jeans? What jeans?

This image has been digitally altered to make you feel inadequate.

I was impressed. Some sort of sticker-wielding vigilante had slapped this, bold unadorned black text on a white background, right across the image. It was gone the next day. I hope enough people saw it; I hope the vigilante hits many other ads. Even more, I hope people get the message.

This is the sub-header on a blog I tripped across (sorry, no, I didn’t take down the URL, duh):

this life has been modified from its original version. it has been edited for content and formatted to fit your browser

It made me think about how we self-censor as we blog, how we (some consciously, some unconsciously) take the time to choose the exact words we want used to describe our lives, our beliefs, our thoughts. It’s all about how you paint an image. It’s all about audience, and our sense of self. It’s about communication.

Visual Pun Alert

Weather
————
Me

Okay, it’s lame. I really am feeling under the weather, though. Yesterday I didn’t pay much attention to my body, mostly because my husband stumbled in around noon with a migraine and went to bed with a cup of tea. I was more concerned about him. By the evening, though, I had horrible stomach pain, and thank all the gods that my co-professor agreed to take our Monday night class, because I, too, began developing a migraine. By the time I arrived in the classroom all I could think about were the evil twin stabs of pain in abdomen and eyes. I went home to a bath and bed and was asleep by eight. Bless you, Scarlet. You are a goddess.

I’m still unhappy this morning, but at least the headache is gone. Bed is my friend. So is laptop. Good bed. Good laptop.

I finally developed some film that had been sitting in our camera for an unknown amount of time, and discovered about fourteen photos from last Hallowe’en. If it had been Hallowe’en costumes it would have been more interesting, but it’s all store decor: bales of hay, gourds, corn stalks and so forth. They’re terrific, but not what I was expecting. I had no idea what I was expecting, but hay was definitely not it. Ironically, the remaining four or five photos from the roll are of this year’s Hallowe’en costume, that precious record I absolutely had to have should the next step fail, in order to prove to future generations that yes, it was lovely before I tempted fate by taking it apart again.

The very last photo is of me, playing my cello. As far as I know, a single photo exists of me playing my cello, taken at my only public recital at McGill about five years ago. There are three other cellists with me, playing an ensemble piece as the finale. Yes, there have been orchestra photos taken from our last two concerts in which my head is visible, but you can’t see me playing the instrument. There does exist a sketch, done by my ex-fiance as I played Handel for hours in an empty church with a flutist, and I love it, but it isn’t a full-length sketch; just the upper third. I’ve always wanted to see what I really look like with my cello, from the floor all the way up. This photograph does just that, and I love it too. I’m going to slip it behind all my music on my music stand so I can peek at it when I get discouraged.

The fact that it’s taken a year to finish a twenty-four exposure roll says to me that we’ve moved beyond the need to capture certain visual moments on film. We knew we were losing interest in photographing things when we realised that we were taking our camera on all our trips, but leaving it in the suitcase when we went out. Taking it along simply didn’t occur to us. Then, of course, the battery died, and it’s taken about six months to replace it – more proof we don’t think of the camera that often. I believe that we’ve reached a point where if we see something beautiful, we’ll pause to appreciate it, and then carry the memory of it in our hearts. Photos are a pale, pale reproduction of something that had colour and life, and I’ve been so disappointed by pictures I’ve taken that don’t look at all like the beauty I beheld with my own eyes. In addition to the disappointment, I find that if I carry a camera around, I look at my environment in a very different fashion. With a camera in your hands, you instinctively look for pictures and evaluate what you see in terms of a snap, and end up not enjoying where you are or what you’re doing as much as you could without it. Now, if you’re a photojournalist, that’s fine, or if you go somewhere with the express intention to photograph, then sure, that’s different too. I also understand the anonymity granted by a camera, as something to occupy your mind and hands.

However, for me, cameras have a time and a place. As a record of some sort, of what people were in attendance at an event, or what people were wearing (I’m a costume junkie, remember?), or the layout of a objects or a building… all those I can understand. Pictures jog the memory. There are excellent photographers, too, who have mastered the art of using eyes and camera simultaneously, who I’m sure don’t feel any loss to the experience for seeing it through a lens. I, on the other hand, can’t do it. I also understand photography as an artistic act. The camera can be used with the intent of creating art, being a tool like a pencil or a paintbrush. Again, though, it’s not for me, although I dearly love looking at the artistic photography produced by friends like Rob and Hobbes.

For me, a camera gets in the way of the experience. Glass and metal and light-sensitive film serving as the communication device between my heart and life? I’ll pass.

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(Inter)National Novel Writing Month. 50 000 words in 30 days.

Hmm.

Art for art’s sake does wonderful things to you. It makes you laugh. It makes you cry. It makes you want to take naps and go places wearing funny pants. Doing something just for the hell of it is a wonderful antidote to all the chores and “must-dos” of daily life. Writing a novel in a month is both exhilarating and stupid, and we would all do well to invite a little more spontaneous stupidity into our lives.

It sounds like a heck of a lot of fun. Insane, yes, but fun.

The other reason we do NaNoWriMo is because the glow from making big, messy art, and watching others make big, messy art, lasts for a long, long time. The act of sustained creation does bizarre, wonderful things to you. It changes the way you read. And changes, a little bit, your sense of self. We like that.

I’d cheerfully throw myself into it, except… well… then I’d have to put aside the Great Canadian Novel for a whole month. And I really don’t want to do that, because as we all know, putting something aside means the likelihood of getting back to it decreases dramatically.

I could always write two novels concurrently, I suppose.

I am insane.

November is such a dreary month, though, with no holidays, dark skies, and chill and damp and depression. Naming it National Novel Writing Month is a great way to make it special. (Even more special that our annual November Sucks party.) I have no commitments in November, no holidays planned… nothng to get in the way.

I’d have to have a really good idea to start off with, before November begins. I’ve kind of had a young adult story kicking around in the back of my mind since I began the Great Canadian Novel, but it’s still nebulous. I’d have a couple of weeks to clarify it, though.

I think what attracts me about this project is that fact that it’s pure personal discipline. You aim for word count; you aim for doing it, pure and simple. No one reads it; no one evaluates it; it’s yours. You do it for the joy of writing. And to stick your tongue out at the omnipresent Internal Editor that criticises your choice of word, your attempts at style and tone.

And, face it; it’s insane. It’s a personal kind of insane, though, not the rifleman-in-the-clock-tower kind of insane. A glorious way to treat your inner child. Let’s write laughably awful yet lengthy prose together says the home page.

This requires serious thought.

Spirited Away

We saw Spirited Away with Ceri and Scott last night, and it was gratifying to see one of the large theatres at the AMC with that many people in it. Wonderful movie – I don’t know if I enjoyed it as much as I enjoyed Princess Mononoke, but it was excellent: well-paced, with every character memorable without over-developing the supporting cast or pulling focus from the main storyline. And a wonderful soundtrack by Hisaishi, of course.

I looked around the theatre at the crowd – mostly thirty-somethings like myself – and I thought that each and every one of them was there because this was a new Miyazaki movie, which was pretty impressive. With movie tickets on a Friday night costing thirteen dollars (*koff* *koff* – shows how long it’s been since I saw a movie on a weekend, and it will be a long, long time before I do it again; if I’d known the price I’d probably have rescheduled my viewing, regretfully missing that opening night show but very aware of the reality my finances operate within these days), I knew that from now on I’d really be paying attention to what kind of movies I choose to see, and where I choose to see them. I’ve already sworn off the Paramount (except for films like Lord of the Rings) for price and atmosphere; I’d hate to have to swear off the AMC as well.

It really made me think, though, about what kind of movies for which I wish to demonstrate support. I’ve never been the kind of person who goes to see a movie for the sake of seeing a movie; I’m already rather discriminating, which solves a lot of my problem right off the bat. Thirteen dollars for a film, though… last night’s movie was almost two and a half hours, which breaks down to $5.20 per hour, which is a pretty good deal for Miyazaki. I don’t see films in the theatre very often, and I don’t understand people who say, “Oh, it’s Tuesday/Friday night, let’s catch a film.” It’s a product and a service, as well as being entertainment, and frankly I don’t think most films are worth the money.

This one was, thank goodness. But then, it was a Miyazaki product. Sometimes you know it’s safe to spend the money.

Good Days

I had a fantastic day yesterday. That’s about it. Four hours of playing in the store, dinner with Ceri, a smash-bang-wow workshop, a request for a private workshop for a group on the South Shore, then drinks with friends.

On the way to the pub we stopped in at Renaud Bray and I picked up those inks, because I was paid for my full-time work last week and for last night’s workshop (private instruction is so much more lucrative than retail!) and I thought that I deserved a little treat for surviving the past two lean weeks. I now have those darling little oval pots of cuivre, marron, and spring green. Yay! We got home last night and the first thing I did was get out my dip pen, sit on the floor and make lines all over a sheet of blank parchment paper to see what it looked like. I’ll be paying Hydro off in full later today with a chunk of my earnings, but before that, the inks were a lovely little gift to myself. (Note to self: ink (both black and colour) for the printer would probably help too.)

Over dinner last night Ceri gave me her latest pages of creative effort, and for the first time since we began doing this exchange of writing in July, I had nothing to give her. I felt guilty when I left the flat yesterday morning, but then I told myself that I really didn’t have to feel that way since I had given her seventy-eight (!) pages of the Great Canadian Novel over the past three months. I did try to write earlier this week, honestly I did; but I opened the laptop, made a couple of corrections as I re-read the eleven pages of the latest section, and then stared at the screen for about twenty minutes. I’m stuck. Normally when I’m stuck, I jump to the next scene and then go back and fill in the necessary space with an event of some sort, but the next scene I had planned was Christmas shopping, and the characters were still only in mid-November with no way to get to early December. So when I shared that frustration with Ceri yesterday, she said, without missing a beat, “Make it snow,” which was absolutely brilliant and I don’t know why I hadn’t thought of it. Another of Ceri’s super-powers, by the way, is being a Muse for people. She gives them great ideas. She occasionally laments that alas, she doesn’t inspire herself in the same fashion, so I can only hope that our writing arrangement covers at least the deadline sort of inspiration that writers need. I did give her a nifty idea for her husband’s Hallowe’en costume, but I doubt it even comes close to repaying the Muse-debt that society has incurred to her.

I’m terribly looking forward to driving up to see my parents next weekend; I haven’t seen them since July, and we haven’t made the drive to Oakville in this new car yet. After its spectacular performance through New York and Pennsylvania, this five-hour spin should be a dream! Seven days to go!