on memory

What do you remember about being young…really, really young? 
My memory already seems to fail me; I can’t remember anything before my fifth birthday. I can’t forget that morning, when I followed my mom around, waiting to open up my birthday gifts. It was really dreary outside and I recall standing in the kitchen doorway, holding a box and shaking it to see what was inside. I remember someone telling me, “You’re five today!” and not understanding the difference between being five and being four. 
I remember a kindergarten day, when I came home from school and sat at the dining room table. I said to my mom, “I can spell ‘THE’,  T – H – E!”, so proud to spell a three letter word on my own. 
I remember learning to ride an old red bike on our crispy lawn. I remember Dad letting go, and falling,  and getting up, and trying again and again.
I remember sitting in my mom’s van with my siblings, waiting in the McDonald’s drive-thru for a Happy Meal. I remember bawling in the bath tub after our first dog was hit by a car. I remember plastering my bedroom wall with Hanson posters. I remember making the greatest Lego creations of my life, only to find my brothers had destroyed them. I remember waiting for my mom to pick me up from school, and I remember after 20 minutes, calling her from the secretary’s office to see if she was still coming for me.
I remember my aunts and uncles weddings and my grandfathers’ funerals. I remember cousins and second cousins being born. I remember people getting their licenses, birthday parties and proms. 
But I do not remember being this small.


I wish I did. Memory is such a curious thing. What recalls a moment? I see a Chrysler Voyager and imagine my family, all seven of us, squished in each seat making our way to somewhere. A piggy bank recalls all the times I dumped my many coins out on my bedroom floor and thought about how rich I was. Kermit the Frog reminds me of my sister’s bedroom and her many things I admired, a collection of memorabilia and boy bands, her perfect handwriting on Lisa Frank stationery. Watermelons resonate my childhood kitchen, and my mom’s collection hanging from every edge. Crab apples recall my favorite tree, a bittersweet blend of messy and operative, my crooked treehouse and a yard laced with a cream picket fence I could never see over. 
When I hear childhood, I think of bomber caps and Hannah Anderson stripes, Barbie dolls with their heads popped off, Jurassic Park and dirty water in our inflatable pool — running ’round and ’round until we were dizzy and the whirling water pulled us down. I think of 1390 KRRZ radio playing the Twins game in dad’s truck, the smell of grease sitting on saddle blanket seat covers. I think of Sunday Mass and sweet springs, going outside to clear the dirt for another fort. I think of insects in jars and critters in tanks and kids with magnifying glasses crucifying ants. 
Memory. I’m trying to hold on to everything, but much like Billy Collins’ poem Forgetfulness, the moments slip one by one to make way for new remembrances. I will never know what I was doing the day my little brother was born, or how my first day of Kindergarten went. I’m trying hard to picture myself in the old stories, of days with grandpas and family vacations, camps and games and sleepovers and school plays and…
Forgetfulness
The name of the author is the first to go
followed obediently by the title, the plot,
the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel
which suddenly becomes one you have never read,
never even heard of,
as if, one by one, the memories you used to harbor
decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,
to a little fishing village where there are no phones.
Long ago you kissed the names of the nine Muses goodbye
and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag,
and even now as you memorize the order of the planets,
something else is slipping away, a state flower perhaps,
the address of an uncle, the capital of Paraguay.
Whatever it is you are struggling to remember,
it is not poised on the tip of your tongue,
not even lurking in some obscure corner of your spleen.
It has floated away down a dark mythological river
whose name begins with an L as far as you can recall,
well on your own way to oblivion where you will join those
who have even forgotten how to swim and how to ride a bicycle.
No wonder you rise in the middle of the night
to look up the date of a famous battle in a book on war.
No wonder the moon in the window seems to have drifted
out of a love poem that you used to know by heart. 
Billy Collins

At least I have now to remember — and the last seven years of writings to look back at…

xx
j

weekend wrap-up

BYGONE WEEKEND. My overnight went much smoother than expected — and bonus! I got to attend my first-ever RODEO with my client! CHA-CHING!

This is going to sound really sappy, but the rodeo actually made me feel like a North Dakotan, and it made me proud of North Dakotans. The rodeo was a showcase of a lot of talent that comes from our state that I’ve rarely seen or heard about! Lots of cowboys and cowgirls for real!

I had my BFA review on Friday with my committee (two graphic design instructors and I selected my sculpture instructor as the third committee member). They accepted me into the BFA program, then told me I need to make timelines and work my butt off! I hope so. We discussed possible project ideas for the upcoming semester — it’s going to be a ton of work (my instructors are pushing 8 hour days, five days a week — “your full time job”). I’m not sure where I’m going to take my project. Three things I know for sure are that I want it to be A) beautiful 2) colorful and III ) BIG! Now I need to find a way to meld those things together…

Also, you’ll notice the new layout of this page. I did a bit of spring cleaning and de-cluttered the blog. Additions to the page include an ‘about me’ page where I get wild and spill all my oddities, and ‘contact’ where you can find every possible way on earth to reach me (almost).

Olé! That’s all.

xx
j

this is your life

I WENT TO SLEEP WITH A HEADACHE THIS EVENING — woke up three hours later, confused as to where I was, what time had passed. I didn’t have a drop of caffeine today, a miracle.

I…don’t feel right lately. Funky. When I think about feeling unwell, I recall a conversation I had with one of my clients a few weeks ago. She asked why we don’t feel right sometimes, why we get sick.
I had to think about answering that question. I suppose it’s something I haven’t often had to put into words; when you don’t feel right, you don’t feel right. It’s hard to explain it to someone, because every body feels a different sickness and sometimes it’s hard to describe. My stomach hurts, I have a headache, my chest is pounding, I’m shaking. There are so many ailments that until we feel them, we can’t understand really how they feel.

Thinking of ways to simplify an explanation, I said to my client, “Our bodies are very complex. Think about everything that goes into making your body work: all of the pumping, the flowing, the beating and digesting. All of the nerves and cells and brainwaves. All of your systems are working in harmony to make you live—and if one thing in your body isn’t on track—even one little thing—you won’t feel right. So with everything going on in your body, it’s only natural for things to sometimes go wrong.”
“Oh.”
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
I’m still at school, feeling that there’s something that needs to be done (there isn’t). Tomorrow I have a review with a committee for my BFA year — I’m hoping good things will come out of it, but expecting a wake-up call…
Finally, I want to finish with this beautiful manifesto that my aunt Kelly posted today. As I read through it every word rang true, and it was comforting. Being that I just quit a job I didn’t like, I’m consistently searching for happiness, I’m itching to travel, and I truly want to open myself up to new things…this is beautiful. Thank you, Kelly!

vicariously wednesday

via Sartorialist

Today I’m living vicariously through this Italian women, who has four things I’m digging:
a) Lennon-style frames (also similiar to this babe — I’m seeing a trend?)
2) a b-e-a-utiful messenger bag, probably hand-crafted by some 92-year old Italian leathersmith, every stitch a work of art
III) Rocking olive tights and green wedges…and even more rocking that she’s riding in them
FOUR) VESPA. Vespa. Vespa. Vespa. I love mopeds!

two funny things before i call it a night:

1. I have one roommate. She’s really great and we get along beautifully, probably because we have nothing in common.

Anyway, my roommate and I have the funniest relationship. Don’t get me wrong, we’ve never had a fight or disagreement of any sort. I don’t know how else to describe it but a “symphony of circumvention.” For example, we’ve both been home for the past two days, but we’ve never actually seen one another. I might be in my room and she’ll be in the bathroom, then I’ll move out to the kitchen and she’ll be in her room, then I’ll be in the bathroom and she’ll be in the kitchen. It’s the strangest, most perfect harmony. Then I’ll try to catch her, and come out of my room and she’ll just be sneaking out the door…like hide-and-seek, but…a symphony of circumvention!
B. I’ve posted photos in the past of a few of the things I’ve created over the past year or so. What you might notice about many of these projects — namely the sculptural ones — is that they tend to be larger in scale.
The other day I ran into an acquaintance, who mentioned he’d visited the gallery and seen my sign.
“That sign is huge!” he commented. “How long did it take you to make?”
I tossed around the timeline in my head, until I figured it took me two-ish months to complete. “Yeah, it’s big,” I said. “I gravitate toward making big things because I’m small.”
“Ahh, I gotcha,” he replied, “Napoleon complex!”
I might as well have said, “EUREKA!” because at that moment I felt that he’d diagnosed a disease I’ve had for 23 years.
Has anyone heard of this? Little people compensating with big things? Why didn’t I think of this before?
(P.S. He was 5’6″…4.5 inches taller than me!)
xx
j

cookie crumbs

I DECIDED IT WAS A GOOD IDEA TO DO HOMEWORK IN BED. Needless to say, it’s warm and cozy, but not much homework getting done. I keep passing out every four minutes and waking up to the smell of Oreos (sitting next to me in bed). Trying to get through a d-e-n-s-e reading about hypermediacy and transparent immediacy. Yikes.

It’s a big week, again. Lucky for me, I’m no longer employed at the g-store, so a few extra days are open this week to do studious things (read my overdue library books, prepare for future disasters, brainwash myself into doing homework, etc.). I might get used to my new schedule — I work once every two weeks! It could be a terrible or a beautiful thing, I’ll see with time.
And crazy enough, the exhibit is already coming down at the end of this week (wow, that was fast!) to make room for a juried student exhibit. I’m entering a few pieces…they need some serious love before I can enter them, so there goes my weekend. All for you, art. All for you.
Lastly, I’m giving a superpresentation (see: really long talk) for my Contemporary Art & Design Theory class on Thursday. It’s about Italian sculptor and funny man artist Maurizio Cattelan, who made his name by mocking art.
Cattelan is outrageous; he steals, he jests, he fools, then he disappears. He rarely does interviews and when he does, often turns them into a joke or sends stand-ins to pose as him. He’s dark humor at it’s finest, but he’s just plain ridiculous. After reading several books about him, nothing surprises me anymore! Here are a few of my favorite works of his:
Untitled (1998), Picasso costume at MoMA.

Love Saves Life (1995), based on a Brothers Grimm story where a donkey, dog, cat, and cock fool humans and escape their suppressive farm lives to live in peace and harmony…until Cattelan creates Love Lasts Forever (1997)…
Love Lasts Forever (1997)
Hollywood (2001), a recreation of the famous sign in Sicily, Italy.
Him (2001), a childlike depiction of Hitler.
If you like what you see and are interested in Cattelan, check out this gallery page for tons more of his work (disclaimer: some might be slightly raunchy and/or offensive, but that’s just Cattelan).
Well, back to the books. It’s storming pretty nice outside (if that’s not an oxymoron) and I’ve eaten far too many cookies for my own good.
A happy, warm evening to all —
xx
j

hasty decisions

I DON’T REMEMBER A LOT OF MY DREAMS, but I can’t forget what I dreamt last night.

After what seemed like a hasty decision (as decisions often are in dreams) I decided to get married. The entire length of the engagement was a few days, during which time I somehow acquired a dress (?). No further arrangements were made — no church, attendants, time or location. I’m not even really sure who I told about the event, other than my mom and immediate family.
I remember the day coming, and waking up thinking, “this is my wedding day…this doesn’t feel like my wedding day…”, and I went about the day as though nothing special was happening, and my life wasn’t about to change. I didn’t have my nails or my hair done. I don’t even remember seeing my “husband-to-be,” whoever he was. It was just me, and just another day.
Toward the end of the afternoon, right around eight o’clock, I decided to put on my wedding dress with the hope that others might see and remember it was my wedding day. Since there were no plans, I didn’t know where I was going to get married, or who was going to marry me. My tentative plan was to drag my family to some weird, arbitrary place where I’d marry a stranger and live out the evening in spontaneity. It sounded great in my head, but when I realized no one wanted to go along with it…I felt foolish.
After some time waiting around in my wedding dress, I asked my mom, “Isn’t anyone coming to my wedding?” I remember her looking at me, searching for the words to tell me it was a bad idea. But all she could say was, “You have to stand by this person for a long time.” I felt naiveness and a sharp disappointment run through me, knowing I wasn’t ready.
I’m trying to connect this dream to real life, but all I can gather is a call for patience…
xx
j

zombified

I feel completely overwhelmed by everything right now, yet there is nothing happening. How can this be? Spring Break has become the opposite of it’s intentions: Not a break at all, but a catalyst for worry. The momentum I had before the break has disintegrated. I achieved what I achieved, I got my scholarship and exhibited, and now I feel that’s all I’m capable of. It’s a terrible sense of exhaustion — physically, mentally, emotionally. I feel incapable.

The only culprit I can think of is sleep. I’ve slept too much and now I don’t want anything else. Today I woke up for breakfast, then went back to bed until four in the afternoon. When I finally got out and about, the world seemed hazy and I felt like a zombie! Help!

And whether or not I like to admit it, this week has been tough with Heidi gone.

Spring Break goes to show that I need school in my life, to keep my mind happy and busy. Because right now, I. Just. Feel. Weird.

xx
j