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December 18, 2006

The Boy's Impression

Erm...he did his impression of me, which I think is so wrong (I still prefer mine!) But i like the ice-cream and the wedding veil...

heh...

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the girl: why am I wearing the red shorts and singlet?
the boy: cooling...heaven so hot.
the girl:!!!!

Posted by lainey at 12:51 AM | Comments (0)

Lainey's Impressions (aka the mindless things one does to avoid studying for GRE)

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The Boy

Artist's notes:
According to him, the hair and the eyes should be black and the background should be heaven (but who says a living room with a couch can't be heaven?).

I gave him a light sabre for his love of sci-fi flicks, especially Star Wars; a guitar for well, his passion and expertise in guitar-playing; a sling bag for the memory of our first few dates when he was still carefree and always carrying a grey sling bag with him. (He's only lugging his laptop bag now)

And this is my erm...self-portrait..

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The Girl

Posted by lainey at 12:16 AM | Comments (0)

December 11, 2006

Stirring To Life

Thanks to Denise, I discovered this and I've just read the one thing that'd made me feel alive in the past few weeks.

I do miss Saturn sometimes, those topsy-turvy, free-wheeling emotions, the passion! the angst! the anger! the madness!

Being in control makes me feel like a messed up robot repeating my motions over and over and over again.
---------
Lit (or: to the scientist I am not speaking to any more) | Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz

Don’t say you didn’t see this coming, Jason.

Don’t say you didn’t realize this would be my reaction
and that you never intended for me to get all worked up,
because if that were true, then you are dumber
than Lenny from Mice and Men, blinder than Oedipus
and Tierus put together and can feel less
than a Dalton Trumbo character.

You put the Dick in Dickens and the Boo in kowski
and are more Coward-ly then Noël.

But you don’t understand any of these references,
Do you, Jason? Because you ‘don’t read’.
You are a geology major and you once told me
That, ‘Scientists don’t read popular literature,
Cristin, we have more important things to do’.

Well, fuck you.

Be glad you don’t read, Jason,
because maybe you won’t understand this
as I scream it to you on your front lawn,
on Christmas Day, brandishing three hypodermic needles,
a ginsu knife and a letter of permission
from Bret Easton Ellis.

Jason, you are more absurd than Ionesco.
You are more abstract than Joyce,
more inconsistent than Agatha Christie
and more Satanic than Rushdie’s verses.

I can’t believe I used to want to Sappho you, Jason.
I used to want to Pablo Neruda you,
to Anais Nin And Henry Miller you. I used to want
to be O for you, to blow for you in ways
that even Odysseus’ sails couldn’t handle.
But self-imposed illiteracy isn’t a turn-on.

You used to make fun of me being a writer,
saying ‘Scientists cure diseases,
what do writers do?’

But of course, you wouldn’t understand, Jason.
I mean, have you ever gotten an inner thirsting
for Zora Neale Hurston?
Or heard angels herald for you
to read F Scott Fitzgerald?
Have you ever had a beat attack for Jack Kerouac?
The only Morrison you know is Jim, and you think
you’re the noble one?

Go Plath yourself.

Your heart is so dark, that even Joseph Conrad
couldn’t see it, and it is so buried under bullshit
that even Poe’s cops couldn’t hear it.

Your mind is as empty as the libraries in Fahrenheit 451.
Your mind is as empty as Silas Marner’s coffers.
Your mind is as empty as Huckleberry Finn’s wallet.

And some people might say that this poem
is just a pretentious exercise
in seeing how many literary references
I can come up with.

And some people might complain that this poem is,
at its core, shallow, expressing the same emotion again,
and again, and again. (I mean, there are only so many times
you can articulate your contempt for Jason,
before people get bored.)

But you know what, Jason? Those people would be wrong.

Because this is not the poem I am writing to express
my hatred for you.

This poem is the poem I am writing because we aren’t speaking,
and it is making my heart hurt so bad, it is all I
can do just to get up off the floor sometimes.

And this is the poem I am writing instead of writing
the ‘I miss having breakfast with you’ poem, instead of
writing the ‘Let’s walk dogs in our old schoolyard
again’ poem.

Instead of the ‘How are you doing?’ poem, the ‘I miss you’ poem,
the ‘I wish I was making fun of how much you like Garth
Brooks while sitting in front of your parents’ house
in your jeep’ poem, instead of the ‘Holidays are coming around
and you know what that means: SUICIDE!’ poem.

I am writing this so that I can stop wanting to write
the ‘I could fall in love with you again so quickly
if only you would say one more word to me’ poem.

But I am tired of loving you, Jason
cause you don’t love me right.

And if some pretentious-ass poem can stop me
From thinking about the way your laugh sounds,
about the way your skin feels in the rain,
about how I would rather be miserable with you,
then happy with anyone else in the world.

If some pretentious-ass poem can do all that?
Then I am gone with the wind, I am on the road,
I have flown over the fucking cuckoo’s nest,
I am gone, I am gone, I am gone.

I am.

Posted by lainey at 11:59 PM | Comments (0)

December 02, 2006

Movie: Sketches of Frank Gehry

pollacksketch.jpg


This week's Date Night movie is Sketches of Frank Gehry. I chose the film amongst all the fab films because I didn't think it was going to last long in the theatres. What a fabulous season for movies!

So watching the film was like listening in to a conversation between two really good friends. It was so easy to get inspired by genius and Gehry's seemingly amicable personality. But mostly, I was awed by the beautiful pictures of his wonderful buildings, so unreal and fairytale like. I almost wanted to jump on a plane when I got out of the theatre - to go walk around the Guggenheim Bilbao in Spain and admire art in an extraordinary space or to listen to a symphony at LA's Disney Concert Hall.

There are some architects I deeply admire, because they do make the world a better place to live in, by making our spaces more beautiful.

Posted by lainey at 12:39 AM | Comments (0)