Thursday, February 26, 2009

NIEVEEEEE!!!!

Jaja! Ah, la amo. Esta nieve en Ferndale, y en Bellingham, y esta mucho frio....

PERO NO TENGO IR A LA ESCUELA POR. LA. MANANA.

:D

Haha! Ah, I love it. It's snowing in Ferndale, and in Bellingham, and it's very cold....

BUT I DON'T HAVE TO GO TO SCHOOL IN. THE. MORNING.

Or all day, because today is a self-inflicted snowday and that makes everything extremely happy.

^_^

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Today

Today is the sort of day in which the Weather never seems to make up its mind. One moment you're attacked by rays of the prodigal Sun, the next you must dodge for cover and the nearest tea kettle to escape the rain.

Today is a Cookie day.

Today is a good day to compose paintings in soap suds, to sing "Taylor the Latte Boy", to harmonize with a friend to VeggieTales, to drink tea...

To be alive, for Today is alive.

Today is the day that the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it

When we rejoice in Today, everday Today, we rejoice in Tomorrow and Yesterday too. When we choose to "be where we are", when we choose to rejoice in the When of Now, we are rejoicing in every moment.

There are days when the terrible good of God should turn our dancing into sorrow, and when the grief of this world, and our own evils, should render us silent.

But for Today, can we know the joy of the present?

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Wisdom From the Pater*

(*My Pater, not our beloved Cult Leader from bygone days...;)

"Reverse psychology doesn't work with God."

-Dad

^_^

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Dumbo and the Dilemma of Dreams

The bond between an infant and her most beloved cartoon character is strong, my friends. Let us observe the story of one child, a child who felt most achingly the kinship between herself and a lovably big-eared elephant...

Once upon a Whittier house, in a VHS player that sat upon the old unused fireplace, there lived Dumbo. The elephant. Now, Dumbo was a poor soul, mocked and bruised for his ears, which were in monstrous proportion to his body. He existed in misery, for in his cassette-tape world, there was only 'repeat', and 'rewind', forcing him to live every humiliation and every scornful snicker over, and over, and over again...

The injustice was unbearable.

Fortunately for Dumbo, his primary observer (though he had no knowledge of her existence) felt his pain, watched his every hurt, and yearned to rescue the pitiable pachyderm. What decent soul in the world could not hope for Dumbo's salvation? Who could ignore the cries of the innocent?

The more desensitized of our world might, but certainly not this five-year-old! One day, as she replayed the painful story yet again, she had had enough.

"This must end!" she cried, determined. And so she hatched a plan.

Which involved wresting the cassette from its VHS cave, uncovering its hatch, and attempting to rescue poor Dumbo from his constantly-repeated life.

Unfortunately for Dumbo, the little heroine's mother was watching this epic feat and wondering which mental disorder her daughter had acquired. The cassette was gently restored to its home, and the child was sadly resigned to watching the horrors of Dumbo's life yet again.

Ah, youth.

****

Okay, so my days of attempting to rescue the more tragic of Disney's characters are over, but I'm pretty sure my empathy for the fictional has not. (By the way, after my selfless--albeit failed--mission to save Dumbo, my parents actually went to my uncle-who-is-a-counselor-for-people-with-mental-difficulties to make sure that I wasn't crazy. He assured them that I was fine, but I have my doubts...)

What is the purpose of story? Of characters? Of sculpting words into personalities, with whom we can either empathize or despise?

Along the course of my life, I've had various addictions to various stories, ranging anywhere from Harry Potter to my most current phase, the Naruto manga. These characters, as well as 'people' who come from my own mind, pop up on sketchbooks, Nutrition or Communications notes, and pretty much fill up my brain.

One thing I've noticed is that I never gravitate towards the more realistic stories. As much as I respect Tolstoy, I can't really see anyone doing fanart of Levin or Anna Karenina (though his vivid imagery is astounding). I don't know who else has this 'problem', but I can't keep my head, heart or hands away from fantastical popcorn books.

There is something about the almost-but-not-quite "reality" of speculative literature that makes the imagination explode. There is something about characters who one could so easily imagine (but never see) in real life living in that sort of world that whisks you off your common-sense and into the fictional dream of another's hand.

It makes me go "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHH".

When does the emotional connection become dangerous?

There are so many things that I want to ask but can't, because this is just a blog, but what do you guys think? I have this sort of moral dilemma and questioning of my grounding in reality every few years or so, and so far I think I'm at a healthy level of insanity...

ARGH that was a lot of rambling. Maybe I should start speaking in third person to reduce the quanitities of "I"'s in these posts...:S

Sunday, February 1, 2009

In lieu of anything interesting to say...

I present to you Miss Mimosa Blue! Amateur Detective and Professional Daydreamer! :D



She likes unnecessary hats, Belgian waffles with fresh strawberries, and the 20's. She is currently being courted by the French author, Bernard Bonhomme, who makes his first appearance in The Adventures of Columbus the Pigeon.

Miss Blue popped out of my head after perusing a random fashion magazine, which announced that the color 'Mimosa' would be in major vogue last fall. Lo and behold, how can one resist such a wonderful sounding color?! Mimosamimosamimosa...

^_^

P.S. By the way, the blog's current color scheme is patterned after Mimosa. :D