True Story: We are crazy creative. We are jump-happy joyful. We want to share the love. I skip next door with a plateful of confection perfection. ME: Huzzah! THEM: We're Republican.
Um, right. Because that's what yesterday was all about.
Apart from that small sadness, WHAT A DAY! The crowd, the speech, Aretha's bow. And, tip: do stay up long past midnight to catch The Report, no matter the homework and school. Especially if your South Carolinian (?) roommate has a y'all to match Colbert's.
21.1.09
sunshine, we all see the same sky
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21.1.09
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20.1.09
to choose our better history
I loved today. Waking up ready for the excitement. A cup of pear tea and my fingernails America-red. Racing home from class to catch the full coverage. Standing for the oath. Listening to the speech and then reading it all over again. Crying through it all.
Boy, I love America.
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E.
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20.1.09
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19.1.09
there's a world of shiny people somewhere else
Last Saturday we set out for some serious star-stalking at Sundance, which is too much alliteration even for me. As always, the parents laughed. As per usual, we kids proved them wrong. This weekend round was our best yet, with a full list of names any paparazzi could be proud of. Collectively, we spied:
:::Chris Ashworth (from The Wire)
:::Ashley Judd
:::Emma Roberts
:::Jay (from The City)
:::Michael Richards
:::Andie MacDowell
:::Robby Krieger (The Doors)
:::John Cleese
:::Dominic Monaghan
:::Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth director)
Plus, the long day was entirely educational. Aside from recurring life lessons such as when it's this cold in Salt Lake, it will be doubly cold in Park City, and wear hats and scarves, I learned:
1:::Keep close the the guys with the cameras. Not only do they lead you straight to celebrity, they're also perfect fodder for story + dialogue (it's a blessed thing I had my creative writing journal with me).
2:::Ms. Judd wears waaaay too much makeup. You can stop being envious of her beauty now.
3:::As shallow as it is, this star business is scarily addictive. And try as I thought to understand it, I still don't know why. They're people, we're people, we should all move on. Yet I'm there too, caught in the throng of fans outside the Film Lounge, desperate for only a glimpse. Much inner reflection and evaluation this weekend, though not enough to stop me when it came to Mob Mentality.
So: star-studded, educational, and thought-provoking---I vote Sundance a winner. And word on the Main Street says John Krasinski might be making an appearance this weekend . . . anyone up for Round Two?
ps: I have pretty sisters. And pretty, pretty friends.
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E.
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19.1.09
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10.1.09
anyone lived in a pretty how town
Sometimes, I don't want to be here. In this town, on this campus. I feel too much of a pull to my city, to my family. To countries across oceans. Other times, like today times, I find it strangely satisfying.
1::: A Friday night with the girls---with all the insanity, insight, and constant laughter, it's like we never left Siena.
2::: Amphigorey, Also. Because Edward Gorey not only gets the writing right, the illustration's my favorite as well. Because I've read it just about every semester. And because I checked out another dozen books today, so why not this one?
3::: My dad's the new constant on my "recent recipients" texting list. Never thought it would happen, so love that it did.
4::: Debating The Killers' dancer/denser in a frozen Brigham Square.
and
5::: Scone party tomorrow---a Sunday tradition we didn't have to leave in Cardiff.
I am re-remembering that, when what you love is far, you (and only you) have the memory to bring it back again. Hooray for old books made new, family only a phone away, and new friends that feel they've been with me all along.
image via {ellemoss} , post title courtesy of mr. e.e.
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E.
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10.1.09
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9.1.09
love notes
dear London,
They say love at first sight, but I didn't need to see you to know. I've felt it, lived it, known it nearly my entire life: we're MFEO.
I realise a lot of people say that to you---thousands of people, millions---daily. And why not? You're beautiful. That winding river, silently swifting past the marvels of ages. You're brilliant, the wit and words of centuries at your call. You're fascinating, never wanting for a story antique or contemporary, and you're open, welcoming, kind. For even after all that, you loved me back. You knew me, too. You said Yes, this is what you've been waiting for. Yes, I've been waiting for you, too. And those few months we had together were some of the best, my world transformed; I'm light, I'm quick, I'm joy at your touch.
The day I left you, I watched others' goodbyes from the bus. It was early morning, the shadows long outside the Underground, the sky working up a rainy grey. I watched a father and son, a goodbye with a gift. The father handed a small pot to him, a willowy orchid in full bloom. He patted the soil in, brushed imaginary imperfections from the lean stem. And then he held his boy in a long embrace, a cane to steady his shaking. The son was the last on our bus, clearing the final stair as the coach hissed into gear. I smiled because he looked like you, like the London I so love: British, through and through. He was middle-aged, wiry hair fast receding, with a nubby blue jumper over everyday chinos. I smiled because he held that plastic pot snug to his heart, careful of the flower's long neck and the low-ceilinged coach. I smiled because he wasn't two steps into the bus when his phone rang, which he answered instantly with a cheerful "Dad!"
Yes, I'm on the coach now, he reported. Walking down the aisle. Do you see me? Yes, the plant's lovely, dad. Mum's going to love it. And I'll take good care of it too, promise. It's got a seat all it's own back here---Oh! There you are! Can you see me, dad? Do you see me? Yes, that's it!
I turned, the voice far behind me now. He was standing, still clutching that snowy orchid in one hand, the chunky mobile in the other. But he was waving now, madly, wildly, even as the coach pulled far from Victoria Station and around the corner and out of the city. He sat down then, holding the phone back to his ear. Yes, dad. I love you, too.
I think about him often; about that morning; about leaving you. I cried, you know. But I also thought, How lovely, this gift. I still keep that small seed of True Love you gave me, now blossoming in memory and nurtured care. I'll take good care of it, I promise. It's got a place all it's own, and it--every day---calls me home.
always,
E.
posted by
E.
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9.1.09
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7.1.09
wie heiβt der Mann mit dem Scnurrbart?
Just because the Honor Code allows them, doesn't mean you should have one.
You are not cute, hip, edgy, or artsy
and I think we all learned a very long time ago
that whatever Lindsay's up to doesn't count as cool
posted by
E.
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7.1.09
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5.1.09
the beat
Oh, hooray! A wonderful New Year and we're already five days in---Lauren flew in Friday, we scrapped Wooten House on Saturday, and moved into our last-minute-crisis apartment late last night. It's been a crazy weekend, to say the least, and what with today's full class schedule and some serious book buying to do, it's not over yet. So, please, put your hands together for the Lovely Liv, my super savvy sister who's going to take over the keyboard while I work on moving in, moving out, and moving back in again.
Let me back track--- When my mom, my little sister Naomi and myself went to Europe this November to pick up Elizabeth, we had this running joke about the JoBros and how Elizabeth is most compatable with the oldest one, Kevin. Take what you will from that, and if you can't quite imagine how unfortunate this is, I invite to watch a film of epic quality: CAMP ROCK. Okay, moving on. So Naomi and I were at Rite Aid (anyone who knows me, knows that Rite Aid is my one of my favorite places ever and my own personal weakness. The Delilah to my Samson, The Spencer Pratt to my Heidi. You get the picture.) and we were walking down the aisles, when in a serendipitous moment I reached for the beautiful, eloquently written Tiger Beat magazine. A classic. It's sure to have many gems hidden within the Jonas Brother, Miley Cyrus, Disney superstar filled pages. Sure enough we came across this little piece of heaven on Earth: Kevin Jonas, promising us true love in the year 2009. CLEARLY this was a sign. That is all I need to say.
What can we learn from this turn of fate? TIGER BEAT magazine is a compass which can guide us in our quest to find happiness this year. I have a good feeling about this year. Nine is my lucky number.
From me and E to you, wishing you a New Year filled with true love. Peace Out!
xoxo
LIV
posted by
E.
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5.1.09
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