Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Candy Jackpot!

So.... I should NOT be eating large quantities of sugar. At all. It is not good for me. Nononono. But then there are days that I just really want a chocolate milk and a Snickers bar, and it just so happens that I have accumulated a few dollars in change, and the work vending machines have chocolate milk and Snickers bars.
So like a guilty little kid, I walked down to the cafeteria with my handful of sweaty change. And I see that they have updated the candies! Not only are there Snickers bars, there are also Milky Ways and Reese's Pieces. Oh man. So then I stand there thinking, "Should I risk the sugar coma and get all 3 AND a chocolate milk?" Knowing full well I should not, and that I probably couldn't eat that much candy even if I tried. So I talk myself into doing something new and different, and ditching the Snickers for the Pieces and a Milky Way "for later." Knowing that "later" could be tomorrow, or an hour from now. I put in my 85 cents, and get some pieces. I put in 85 more, and press the buttons, and a rain of candy bars falls from the metal coil! Jesus just rewarded my merely partial over-indulgence with 3 free milky ways!
I hastily looked around, but no one saw, so I don't have to share! I quickly scooped up the chocolate-covered Jesus present, and walked away with a fist full of sugar, chuckling, "MWAHAHAHAHAHA! I AM the candy baron!"
 
It amazes me how people still treat me like a professional.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Huzzah!

I have joined the technological revolution.

My book is now available for Kindle: In Real Life, and Other Fictions

And also Nook!: In Real Life, and Other Fictions

So now you have no excuse not to have it with you everywhere.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

I Never Arrive On Time When We Travel Together

Today was "Poetry in Your Pocket" Day, so, I wrote a poem for the pockets of some pretty people I know.

I Never Arrive On Time When We Travel Together

Yesterday when we were walking
you tilted your head
just so!
Squinting up
and to the left
to check the sky for time.

When that slant of afternoon
sun flashed down
your upturned cheek
the clock stopped.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

The Trouble With Alices

I woke up at 4-ish in the morning, to the weird orange that the streetlights bounce off the snow and in through the thin cracks of our white plastic blinds. My Husband was still awake in the other room but he was oh-so-very quiet, and I thought, "I don't even have to pee, so why am I even awake?" And then I felt something unpleasantly poky in my hip, and I checked to see what it was, and what it was was a bit of broken porcelain. A fingernail tip's worth of white broken tea-cup, to be very precise; and what I couldn't figure out was how or why there was a bit of broken tea-cup in my bed, so I just said, "yes, of course" and put it on the nightstand and tried to go back to sleep.
In that dreamy mostly-sleeping-but-still-thinking sleep, when you feel little and big, both at the same time, I was thinking, "You only think finding a bit of broken tea-cup in your bed at 4 am, when it wasn't there when you got into bed at midnight is perfectly normal because of you read so many Alice stories when you were a child."
See, sometimes I think that there are 3 different types of Girl Heroes that you encounter as a kid, and that whichever one you identify with most as a girl will sort of determine your outlook and approach to life.

The first one is the Princess type, which is to say very loved and often of the elite class. The only misfortune she seems to encounter usually has nothing to do with her personally, but is more likely a circumstance of her privileged birth. She is brave and sweet but usually has a lot of help, which is fair, because nothing that happens to her is really her fault. In the end, she always end up married, usually to a king or a prince, and happily ever after, which is only what she deserves after suffering so patiently the slings and arrows of aristocracy.

Next, there is the Lone Girl against the Scary World type, like Gretel (lets face it, Hansel was fairly useless), Red Riding Hood, Thumbelina, or Gerta in the Snow Queen. She is usually impoverished. She doesn't encounter misfortune so much as flat out danger, and because she is usually still young and tiny, it is pretty much by her wits and charm that she survives. Interestingly, the danger that befalls her seems to be in equal measure from the world at large, which is well known to be an evil and dangerous place, and from her own poor or misinformed decisions. By relying on cleverness and eventually escaping danger and completing her mission, she usually has learned something very important, and comes out of things wiser and sometimes a little bit richer. Depending on story versions, she may still need help from big strong men along the way, but it is less because she is a girl, and more because she is a child. Though marriage is a possibility for the end of her story, it is not compulsory. The important thing here is not the ever-after, it is the lesson that will allow her to continue to grow into whatever sort of an adult clever, survival-savvy poor people grow up to be.

The last sort is probably the most interesting, but certainly the most problematic. Alices. Socio-economic background has little or no effect on determining an Alice. Instead, all Alices are highly precocious and vaguely dissatisfied with the world as is. An Alice will go on the most fantastic adventures, but any mischief that befalls her is purely of her own making. Her natural curiosity makes it impossible for her not to meddle in the affairs of others,which is where most if not all of her trouble comes from. Consider Alice herself, Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, Lucy from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Sarah in The Labyrinth, Sallie in The Adventures of Baron Von Munchhausen, and Ofelia in Pan's Labyrinth.

Now, Princess stories pretty much hinge on fate. There is a curse or a prophecy, typically. There is a tragedy that acts as catalyst. The princess is never scared or shaped by the tragedy, only the world around her is. The fatalist princess stays serene and on track, intrinsically knowing that somehow, with or without her efforts, everything will work out. Magical help is offered, the princess always accepts it blindly, the pieces fall in place, true love conquers all, and the end.

The Lone Girl's story hinges on her own wits. Is she clever enough to get out of whatever she got into in the first place? Magic help may be offered, but the wise child has to be skeptical and wary, and identify whether the offered assistance really is help, or just a trap. Logic and vigilance are her primary resources. Things that happen are often unfortunate, but always make sense, and can be avoided or overcome with smarts.

Alices have different sorts of adventures. Contrarian adventures. Everything can be helpful, and everything can be a trap. Rules, when they exist, are paradoxical, or contradictory, and often force the Alice to hold two opposing beliefs at the same time. The worlds the Alice finds herself in, or the people she finds herself interacting with, are often completely mad, with that vague, nonsensical, unpredictable sort of madness that defies all diagnosis. It is the madness of fools, which means there is wisdom in it, but you have to be wise enough or foolish enough to sort out the sense from the nonsense, and, once you've gotten that far, you still have to worry about traps and deceptions. No one and nothing can be trusted. Food isn't safe. Physics is unreliable at best.
To offset all these trials, the Alice is given a motley group of wayward companions. They are flawed, but their failings are immediately obvious, and though at any given moment one of them may turn treacherous, it will always be because of the known weakness, and  in the end their shame and the kind understanding of the Alice will always turn them round to do the right thing. So that is a comfort. .

The main problem with the Alice then, is What Happens After?

The Princess gets her happily ever after.

The Lone Girl survives, learns her lessons, is rewarded in some way, and grows into womanhood.

The Alice very rarely has a lesson to learn. If she does, it is something like, "There is no place like home," or "I will not take these things for granted." While that is certainly wisdom of a sort, it doesn't lead to any significant change in the life circumstances the Alice left at the start of her adventure. When she returns, The Alice is changed with some profound (or profoundly trite) existential enlightenment, but nothing and no one around her is any different. The outcome is always that Alices come back a little peculiar.

Literature has never really dealt with what happens to an Alice when she grows up, but I suspect it goes something like this: She gets a normalish job, but, she inevitably will stumble upon a secret room, a hidden treasure, a lost diary, or an elevator with an extra button.
She may get married, but on her honeymoon she will have to deal with hotel ghosts, fairies hiding her shoes, or her lover being ensnared by a witch or a troll.
Eventually, she may have children of her own. She will have to actively work to avoid winding up with a changeling and having her baby stolen by fairies, goblins, or gypsies. She will also constantly worry that her own child may turn out to be an Alice, or worse yet, a Peter Pan.
In daily life, objects will regularly appear and disappear from her house. On her routine about the town, she will encounter doors to nowhere, gates to nothing, trains that go to unlisted destinations, and strangers that seem to know too much.
She will often have unwelcome and difficult house guests.
She will always notice plants growing out of season, fences around wild woods, messages coded in the architecture, alchemical formulae in library books, freak incidents of extreme weather, and the general misbehaving of time.
And inevitably, she'll find broken bits of tea-cup, inexplicably, in her bed.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Strange Days, The End Is Near!

I wake up with the light. Magnified by so much snow, it blushes the windowsill with a rose glow, and with the winterbirds piping in the lilac tree, and my husband radiating next to me, so hot I sleep in just a sheet, I can almost trick myself out of January, into spring.
I want to think there are buds on the trees, that the window is opened, that an earthy breezy seeps in. That maybe the crocus are peeking through the last of the snow in the garden, questing up for the sun with their green fingertips, and the robins will arrive at any moment.
But the alarm clock goes off, and the weatherman says more snow, and maybe birds, will fall from the sky by Wednesday.
We live in strange times.

When the train was late again that day, on the closing of November (the third time in a week; that's how you know it's winter) and I watched a bunch of blackbirds wheel and swarm, explode and reverse, I was thinking of people I loved, scattering the country, migrating their seasons. I was thinking of the unseen concert of our comings and goings, how we've splintered and regrouped over years, the magnet hearts that draw us.
Swollen with new hope and comforted despite the gray, and the cold, and the leaving sun, I thought, "We are like birds, we know where to go." I abandoned the train and just walked home, whistling "Bye Bye Blackbird," a little off key, without a trace of irony or the slightest ghost of foreboding.
So much for omens.
Or maybe I'm just losing my psychic abilities. But I didn't see the New Year coming, with all its cracks and catastrophes. Thundersnow, and the suffocated south. New York trapped in ice and blackouts. The frays of fish washed dead on shores, devil crabs in droves, and red snappers in New Zealand by the hundreds with their eyes gone missing. Thousands of birds that dropped from the sky dead and heavy and scientists who only say (with too much confidence and not enough explanation) cause of death - High Impact Trauma. Impact with what? Are the aliens coming? Or is this the Wrath of God on the Gays like the lady on the Christian network says?
My head is full of lists and names: a cloud of red-winged blackbirds first, and followed by a worm of robins. A clattering of jackdaws fell in Sweden with a murder of crows (and no one thought the pun was funny anymore) and then there was the scourge of starlings and the plague of grackles, and lastly, sadly, almost sweetly the pitying of turtledoves that fell down on the streets of Rome.
Whoever chose the collective nouns for birds knew more of omens than I.
And now a wondering dread sets in, and I don't feel singing or smiling and safe.
These days I avoid the train altogether. Though every morning I wish it spring, the storms keep coming one by one. I make coffee and sit at the window, and watch the sky for snow and lightening.
I watch the sky for raining toads, and yes, for fire.