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Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love.

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A friend of mine recommend I watch this TED talk by Elizabeth Gilbert and  I’m so glad I did.  She talks about how the “genius” inside of creative people is partly responsible for the inspiration and ability to execute our art – not solely us.  When we can’t take all the credit for success or all the blame for failure, we’re freed up to be an artist, an empty vessel that the art flows through.  This is extremely encouraging and the genius inside of me recommends that you watch it.

SEE THE TALK HERE

PS I just named my genuis.  Moth Reedwitch
She is a panpipe player and enchantment singer.
She lives close to crystal caverns and stalagtite grottos.
She is only seen in the enchanted moment between sleep and waking.
She collects crystals to wear on her dresses. She has gentle green butterfly wings.
This is according to the FIND YOUR FAIRY NAME website which is awesome.

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April 11, 2009 at 11:30 am

A couple photos of my new 3rd favorite city in the world.

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London.

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February 27, 2009 at 5:00 pm

I moved to London…

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…hence the radio silence.
I wrote this in December when I arrived and have no fear – more melancholic, moody posts about living abroad will be arriving before you know it.

Leaving.

It’s inevitable that I leave. It’s what I do. Sometimes I want to leave, sometimes I have to – but I always go. And I exist between those decisions to walk away – like a game of connect-the-dots. Everything that I leave is everything that defines me – the people, the cities, streets, cafes, windows, stairs, bridges, and park benches. I am all of these things that I love to remember.

I first left home when I was eighteen. I moved from the kelly green cornfields of rural Iowa to the cold, frantic streets of New York City. I left the house that I was born and raised in. It’s the house with the cement basement I used to roller skate in. My bedroom door slammed when the front door opened every morning as my dad left for work smelling like aftershave and Listerine. We had our Christmas tree in the room on the far left with the grand piano and black and white photos of my ancient relatives. I left that house, my older brother, younger sister and parents with two suitcases. I took the low ceiling from my bedroom, the smell of my mom’s perfume, the lilac bush from the front yard, the apple tree from the back yard and the way my dad’s beard scratched when he kissed my cheek.

I spent four years in New York City studying and wandering the streets. It smelled different from my home in Iowa – more like exhaust fumes than my mom’s cooking. It wasn’t as comfortable as Iowa and definitely not as friendly. But New York became my new home. I had a dysfunctional relationship with that city but there was love. I loved all the languages that filled the streets as I walked around, I loved the energy, I loved that New York is a city filled with dreamers and doers, and I love the Brooklyn Bridge. When I walked the bridge and stared out at the East River, I saw the Iowa River layered on top of it like I used to see from the pedestrian bridge in Iowa City. The East River would swallow up the Iowa River, but that’s inevitable. I took both of them with me when I left New York and I took some Chinese take-out, I took my closest friends, a Magnolia cupcake, the vintage bookstores, and the four-mile loop I loved to run in Central Park.

Istanbul, Turkey became my next home where I taught English, smoked too many cigarettes and, again, wandered the streets. When I stood at the edge of the Bosphorus River and watched the cars crawl across the Bosphorus Bridge, I saw the Brooklyn Bridge on top of it, and the pedestrian bridge in Iowa on top of that one. The waters swirled with the three rivers that I’d stood over and at one time called home. After a year, I left Istanbul but from it I took that bridge and those waters, I took the ancient, crumbling stairs outside of my apartment, and the toothless man in the corner store, and I took the smells and sounds of the streets like the shouting Boza man who passed my window at 9pm every night.

There have been many places in between and during New York and Istanbul. The chaotic and radiant colors of Bombay where the moaning streets sang me to sleep at night. A 24-hour prayer house in Innsbruck, Austria where a nun and I sat in silence together until the sun came up the next morning. The train journey in Italy I took with my closest friend through Tuscany to Florence where we emerged in sweaty clothes with an appetite for nothing but gelato and wine. The rainy streets of Paris that I ran through with my sister shouting phrases in French that we’d heard in the movies on the plane ride over. All of these places color the filter through which I see the world. I bring it all with me; every person, every street, bridge, window, every staircase, and slamming door. And when I go back to Iowa, when I pull into that driveway where my dad would spend Saturday mornings blowing the snow into piles along the side, I bring them with me there, too, and it becomes new. All the apartments I’ve lived in, now live inside that house in Iowa. That pedestrian bridge has walked across the Brooklyn Bridge and together they’ve stared at the Bosphorus Bridge, and all the other bridges that I’ve been to. All that I have been becomes all that I will be.

Maybe in order to change and grow, we must remember. Maybe in order to remember, we must keep moving, leaving. Perhaps the best way to keep present all that is absent is to go somewhere new. Every time I step on a plane, I’m back on that American Airlines plane that took me from my childhood home to my new life in New York City. Every time I walk across a bridge, I am over the East River with Lady Liberty in the distance and New York City just ahead of me. Every time I leave, I return home.

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February 27, 2009 at 4:43 pm

A Severe Mercy

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This book amazes me.  I don’t care who or what you are – Atheist, Christian, Muslim, Democrat, Republican – this book is amazing.

Here is an excerpt from “A Severe Mercy” -

“Do fish complain of the sea for being wet? Or if they did, would that fact itself not strongly suggest that they had not always been, or would not always be, purely aquatic creatures?” Then, if we complain of time and take such joy in the seemingly timeless moment, what does that suggest? It suggests that we have not always been or will not always be purely temporal creatures. It suggest that we were created for eternity. Not only are we harried by time, we seem unable, despite a thousand generations, even to get used to it. We are always amazed at it – how fast it goes, how slowly it goes, how much of it is gone. Where, we cry, has the time gone? We aren’t adapted to it, not at home in it. If that is so, it may appear as a proof, or at least a powerful suggestion, that eternity exists and is our home.

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October 28, 2008 at 1:40 am

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Now that’s the spirit!

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I busted out of my office today around 1:30pm to find something for lunch.  I wasn’t sure where I was going – I figured I would have an easier time deciding if I left my computer(s), blackberry, and stacks of paperwork in my office and just started walking.  I turned left directly out of the building doors on 39th Street because my options in that direction were more appealing – Pret and Hale and Hearty – my two usual fall-backs.  THEN I saw the line of people coming out of some hole in the wall restaurant that I had never even noticed despite it’s 4-doors-down-the-street proximity to my office.  What the heck are they lining up for?  I’m not kidding there were 75 people in this line that stretched to the end of the block and threatened to curl around the corner of Broadway.

Cupcakes? No.

1/2 Price Broadway Tickets? No.

They were standing in line to get their $.99 “Recession Burgers” which City Burger (39th Street & Broadway) serves as a Recession Special every Tuesday.  Yes, that’s right.  People ARE lining up for food, even if they’re wearing stilettos and carrying Louis Vuitton bags.  I asked a couple people in line if the burgers are any good and the general consensus is YES.

Recession Burgers are pulling the Mid-town Manhattan community together during these rocky times.  Now that’s what I like to see.

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October 22, 2008 at 1:44 am

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My Big Bro.

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Right about now my brother should be on a plane in Kuwait with huge green bags and probably a couple guns slung over his shoulder. He’s been stationed in Iraq as an Army Medic for the past 15 months and he’s finally on the week-long journey back to America.

Last fall when he was on leave we had a bonfire in the woods behind my parents’ house. I asked Troy if he was ok and he said he couldn’t get the feeling that he was being watched out of his head. He kept thinking of how dark the woods were around us and that there could be guys watching him from any direction. It broke my heart that he was thinking about enemy fire coming from our woods as I sat there thinking about how cool my mom’s old boots were that I’d slipped on and whether I could finagle them back to New York with me. For my brother, the video games he played as a kid had just sprung to life except they weren’t accompanied by the cute music that Super Mario ran around defeating bad guys to.

My Grandpa was a World War II hero and when I say “hero” I mean every bit of it. I don’t feel less than that for my brother, but the circumstances are so different. The guys coming back don’t have the same welcome or feeling of accomplishment. Because of that I’m sorry for my brother. He may never see the end of what he just spent 15 months of his life fighting for. And while all the reports he gives us are great, like the time the guys on his base took their day off to paint white lines on the schoolyard so the kids could have a soccer field, or stories of the Iraqis teaching him Arabic, I can’t help but feel bad about the situation and the energy these guys poured out. Maybe it’s wrong because I really am proud of him, but something in me still hurts. I wish he was coming home reporting that no one else is getting blown up by a car bomb and the corruption in the government is gone and that he has faith in what he went over to try to accomplish. Maybe he does. Maybe I should. Either way, he’s on his way home and all of his guys are coming with him (which is rare). In my mind, they’ll have the theme to Super Mario Brothers playing as they load into their last plane and when they get here we’ll welcome them with country music and American food and all the handshakes, congratulations and thank you’s they can handle.

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March 22, 2008 at 4:08 am

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Art Exhibition

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Northwesterners,
If you can make it to this show, I recommend it. Marshall is a brilliant artist.
PiP Gallery 645 Everett Street in Portland, Oregon
April 1st – 31st.
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March 16, 2008 at 5:16 pm

Typography

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I know it’s nerdy.
I don’t know where it came from, or why, or what it means.
But I do.
I love typography.
I just spent almost two hours looking at fonts online.

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March 5, 2008 at 3:45 am

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The locals.

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March 4, 2008 at 3:21 pm

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Thirty Twelve

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GREAT font!

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March 1, 2008 at 4:53 pm

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