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  • My Award Winning Essay!!

    I won a scholarship competition at school for “a personal essay.”  So, of course I thought I’d share it.  I’m very excited.  I’ll get an extra $1000 off school next year.  Not much…but I’ll take it!  Every little bit helps.

    Enjoy!

                I remember when my sister and I realized that our family was not like other peoples.  Joy and I are only 22 months apart and as such had a lot of the same friends in high school.  We were savoring our naughtiness, spending the night at Brenda’s while her parents were out of town, and our Mom and Dad were none the wiser. 

                Nine teenaged girls had spread themselves on Brenda’s basement floor, sipping on cheap beer and telling stories.  The little group was in hysterics at hearing how crazy, stupid, or dorky all of our parents were.  Joy and I couldn’t wait for our turn, snickering and giggling, nudging each other and dissolving into snorts each time our eyes met.

    In tag-team fashion, we told our story, each one of us picking up the line after the other would fall down laughing.   Mom didn’t drink very often, but when she did, it was well beyond the point of intoxication.  Joy and I had been watching Saturday Night Live in the living room, reacting loudly to Dana Carvey’s Church Lady.

    Mom and her friend Linda had been talking and doing shots in the kitchen.  She stumbled into the living room and yelled at us for being noisy, her arms gesticulating so wildly that her naked left breast kept popping out of her blouse.  The accidental flashing seemed to be in synch with Dana Carvey, punctuating each “Could it be Satan?” or “Well isn’t that special.”  The more it happened, the more we cracked up.  Her rage reached a near frenzy and she ran into the kitchen and came back out with her four shot glasses and threw them at us.

    However, in her stupor, the little glasses fell noiselessly on the carpet no more than ten inches in front of her.  Linda had come out to see what the commotion was and began to chortle at my mother.  The two of them began to roll with an infectious laughter that spread to my sister and me.  Finally, they returned to the kitchen and my sister and I to our regular Saturday night addiction.

    Our friends looked at us like we were insane.  Nobody could see why our story was so funny.  We thought it was completely obvious.  What isn’t funny about flashing boobs and drunks throwing shot glasses?  Soon, my sister and I found ourselves the subject of an impromptu intervention the likes of which Aaron Spelling and his teen dramas had never seen. 

    Our friends circled us, hurling questions.  Did our mother ever wear a bra?  Was she a drunk?  If she was, would she let them drink at our house?  Did she do anything really bad like drugs or beating us?  My sister and I were incredulous.  Why didn’t they get it?

    Mom has never taken to my sister and me sharing stories about our home life growing up.  Her mantra was always, “what goes on in this house, stays in this house.”  I think the Las Vegas commercials derived their famous ad line from her.  Moreover, she has convinced herself that our family was completely normal.

    As an adult, it became very important to me that she understand just how screwed up we really were.  This is still something I obsess about.  This summer when I visited her, she caught me reading “Our Mother’s, Ourselves” by Gina Shaw.

    “What are you reading that for?”  Her tone was accusatory and the book was snatched from my hands.

    “It’s to help me understand my relationship with you and how it has affected me.  Besides, I’m thirty-three and I can read what I like on my vacation.”  I snatch it back.  Actually, the book was required reading for my summer Psychology of Women course and I admittedly took perverse delight in irritating her.

    She steals it back, runs to her bedroom, and locks herself in.  Now I’m a little panicky.  I’ve written notes in the margin.  On the sections on mothers who love too much and narcissistic moms, I have highlighted copious amounts of text.  Sure enough, fifteen minutes later she comes out of her room in a flurry and crying foul.

    “Why are you always living in the past?  Why can’t you just let things go?”  Like a longsuffering parent with a petulant child, I roll my eyes and sigh. 

    “I’m not living in the past, I’m trying to deal with the past and learn from it.”

    “What do you have to deal with?  You had a roof over your head, you were always fed and clothed, and I sacrificed to send you to private school and college.”

    Our play begins, and even though the script bores us, we quickly sink back into our old roles.  I remind her that I went to both of those schools on full music scholarship.   She gives me an itemized statement of the costs of uniforms, books, music, private lessons, soccer cleats, and on and on.  That litany ends Act I:  How I’ve Sacrificed For You Kids. 

    My character always loses that argument, so I quickly segue to Act II:  Your Temper is Hellacious.  This is a double whammy for her.  For one, I’ve thrown a big word around and she is not entirely sure what it means, but she is sure it isn’t complimentary.  She also hates this subject because she knows its true and any claims to the contrary are quickly refuted.  There are people in this neighborhood whose ears are still ringing from arguments my parents had twenty years ago.  The sound waves generated by her yelling are still looping through space, ricocheting off the moon and back to earth.  This leads us to Act III:  You Think You’re So Goddamned Smart.” 

    Now I’m sweating.  For someone who has struggled with self esteem issues, I am curiously afflicted with a superiority complex about my intellect and command of the English language.  She points out that I never know where my car keys are or for that matter, where I ever put anything.  I am also prone to losing papers and forgetting appointments.  My life comes to a screeching halt whenever I misplace my date-book.  I weakly counter that knowing where things are has to do with common sense not mental prowess.  Her right eyebrow arches in triumph:  “Common sense, my dear, is a form of intelligence.” 

    Our play continues, each of us performing a monologue regarding the sins and shortcomings of the other.  She accepts that she was hedonistic, overbearing, and punished us too harshly while I am forced to admit that I am stubborn, willful, and too smart for my own damn good.

    At last, the finale.  One or both of us is close to tears if they haven’t spilled already.  As the play comes to a close, neither of us is any closer to understanding the other or any nearer to overcoming our disappointment that both of us have failed to measure up to the other’s impossible standards.  Throughout my life, this very scenario has played out over and over, this tragicomedy once again taken off the shelf for another run in the theater of our relationship. 

    If we are fortunate, the play ends with a song.  The one thing we can agree on is music.  My gift is my voice and hers is the guitar.  On this summer day I am lucky.  She wipes the tears from her cheeks as I defiantly fight mine and watch her quietly go to the hall closet.  She tells me she doesn’t want to talk anymore and would it bother me terribly if she plays her guitar.  I mumble, only if I can sing along, and she nods her agreement. 

    I hear the familiar chords of what my mother used to call “Janette’s Moody Song.”  No matter how angry or frustrated I am, this song has always soothed me.  If I need that release of weeping, it helps to gently coax the tears.  She begins to sing Lanny Wolfe’s “My House is Full” and my trained soprano harmonizes above her bluesy alto.  One song is never enough, and soon fun is born from dysfunction.

     

  • By the way…

    Going into the final exam for my Algebra class, I had a D+.  The final exam was going to be worth 50% of the grade.  Well, all that studying and asking for math vibes to be sent to me must have worked because I got a B- on the final and ended up with a C in the class which means….I DON’T HAVE TO TAKE IT AGAIN!!!  I’ve never been so proud of such a lousy grade, but I worked really hard to get that C.  That was my first Algebra class in literally 20 years!  I was 14 the last time, and 34 this time.  So I am enjoying this small victory.

    Have a great day, and may you all do well at whatever tests you face today.

  • The Secret Death of Dreams

    New poem…

     

    The Secret Death of Dreams

    More than brick and mortar
    It was a new beginning,
    A sanctuary for the weary soul
    A base to build a life upon.

    The roots went deep in the earth
    And the ground was heavy with life
    Like a fertile woman
    Swollen with the bounty of harvest.

    The walls whispered into the ear
    Of possibility, of expectation,
    And the words were sweet
    With honeyed secrets.

    The air hummed a kind of song,
    And the dulcet music soon
    Resonated in the ears
    Filling them with longing.

    Above the roof, the sky beckoned
    Its blue warm, inviting,
    Filling the eyes with an aching light
    That entreated arms to reach for it.

    The structure crumbled beneath
    The weight of its assurance
    And the foundation shook
    Toppling in a heap of rubble.

    There was nothing more to sift through
    Except some silly childhood wishes
    And the keystones laid naked
    Beneath the unforgiving sun.

  • Dionysus

    I don’t think I’ve written something like this before.  I’m excited about this poem.  Its a little unusual for me…not quite sure what to make of it or even if I like it yet. 

    As always, your comments, critiques, etc., are coveted and always welcome.

    Janette

    Dionysus

     

    When the supplicant first worshipped

    the angel, his marble arms stretched

    to welcome her reverential embrace,

    and His face bore the marks of knowing,

    the skillfully carved body taut,

    muscled, and beckoning.  He came

    to life before her eyes, beauty and art

    personified, his wings melting into

    the still perfection of skin.

     

    She washed his form with grateful tears

    that her eyes should behold this wonder.

    His hairless torso glistened like gossamer

    beneath the afternoon sun and misting eyes.

    Love was not yet known to her

    and yet she ached.  How intimate,

    how intimate was his touch as she writhed,

    awakening beneath the sweetness

    of his breath, his hands, his body.

     

    Their coupling was an act of holiness

    beautiful in its violence, its fury,

    a complete giving over of the flesh.

    She explored every part of him, the

    tender pink of his nipples, the down

    of fire, yellow and white, the stone

    he was carved from both sturdy

    and pliable, this living shrine of

    rock and velvet, silk and sun.

     

    The temple of this familiar

    haunted and haunting, the man-boy

    and the child-woman, the breaths of

    thankfulness, the weeping of the

    bittersweet, the honey of forgiveness,

    the hallowed ground of experience,

    Amen and Amen.

     

  • It’s 6:18 AM…and I haven’t been to bed yet!

    Between studying and good old fashioned nerves, my final is in 2 hours, 14 minutes, and I just couldn’t sleep tonight.  I can’t remember the last time I was this nerved up about an exam.  Dear God and whoever else may be listening, help me make it through the test awake & alert and then the drive home.  Then I can crash.  Damn you, Algebra!

  • Just a quickie ;)…

    Algebra final Saturday morning….wish me luck, send me prayers, good energy, sacrifice a chicken, etc.!

    Life will be much better for me after then!

    Love,

    Janette

  • New Poem

    Hi All,

    Spent this weekend at Mother’s for the holiday.  Hope your harvest and time of thanksgiving was well spent.  Here’s a new poem for you to check out, critique, comment on, whatever.

    Janette

    The Mother-Daughter Tango

    In this contest
    Neither will follow
    And both fight to see
    Who will stay on their feet the longest

    Arms and legs grow weary
    As each struggles to take the lead
    Toes pulsing painfully
    Beneath crushing steps

    They can’t hear the other’s music
    Yelling for their songs to be played louder and louder
    As the steps grow angry, frenzied
    And out of time.

    Poorly choreographed spins
    Flashes of costume, light and dark
    The crashing movement of rage
    Before the terrified audience

    The tango gives way to crushing defeat
    As both collapse beneath
    The weight of hurt
    And the strain of effort

    Both sigh, exhausted
    And the crowd goes home
    As confetti and memories are swept up
    Casualties of the dance.

  • Reflections on Gratitude

    Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours this Holiday.  I hope you have much to be thankful for.  May your God bless you today. 

    Some things I am grateful for:

    1.  Writing
    2.  Music
    3.  The Great Spirit
    4.  Love
    5.  Family, both actual and of the heart

    and Lastly…

    6.  For the giant meal that I will eat at 2 PM.

    And now a TAG to keep you occupied as you try to escape from those crazier of your relations….

    Tell me why you write…

    Why do I write?

    I write to be heard.

    I write to make a difference.

    I write to be relevant.

    I write to understand how I feel.

    I write to work out my salvation with fear and trembling.

    I write to exorcise demons, both internal and external.

    I write to make sense of the world around me.

    I write to be who and what I am.

    I write to embrace my past, present, and future.

    I write to connect with I AM.

    I write to set free that creativity inside of me,

    So that my words can grow, reach outside of their maker,

    And touch the world.

     

  • The Tedium of Political Correctness

    Hi Gang,

    I’ve grown disheartened by the current mindset that if you disagree with the political administration and their decisions that you are unpatriotic, a nazi, a hater of the troops, a detractor to freedom.  People having their own convictions and voices are what made the United States what it is today.  Here is my response to that.

    Janette

    Analysis of Celery:

    A Poem by Ogden Nash

     

     

    Celery

     

    Celery, raw

    Develops the jaw,

    But celery, stewed

    Is more quietly chewed.

     

                Ogden Nash, a twentieth century humorist poet, met with immense success during his writing career because of his comical verse and common-man accessibility.  It is easy for many to dismiss his verse as light, unmasked, or even trivial; however, when approaching his work with exhaustive analytical scrutiny, one is able to uncover his esoteric symbolism.

                At first glance, this short work is a comparison of celery in its natural raw state to its softer, perhaps more palatable, cooked state.  Upon closer examination, his statements provide a clear argument claiming that society should show tolerance and kindness one to another through the use of politically correct language.

                Consider the first half of the stanza, “Celery, raw, develops the jaw…”  One warrant to support this claim is that celery is what nutritionists call a “hard-chew” vegetable.  According to Adele Puhn, author of the book “5-Day Miracle Diet,” a hard-chew vegetable is difficult to masticate and may be challenging to ingest without first being softened by vigorous chewing. 

    Equally, statements that are discriminatory or demeaning such as, for example, “all West Virginians are slow,” or “men are pigs” are indeed not easy for most individuals to swallow.  One claim the poet makes is that like poorly chewed celery, politically incorrect speech lacks the seasoning of wisdom and the fine mincing of discretion.  Communication should be softened, gnashed, chomped, ground, and crushed so that it is edible for every person regardless of age, gender, religion, sexual orientation, body shape, race, color, creed, ethnic orientation, reading level, educational background, geographical location, sports team loyalty, or political affiliation.

    The latter half of the stanza “But celery, stewed, is more quietly chewed” demonstrates the benefits of restrained discourse.  Bear in mind the following facts about stewing celery.  According to Mrs. Beeton, host of the popular U. K. cooking show “The Foody,” stewing celery is an arduous but worthwhile process.  The celery is washed thoroughly, trimmed carefully, chopped into bite size pieces, and boiled for 25 minutes until completely tender.  Mrs. Beeton goes on further to say that the dish is “well prepared and appropriate for every season.”  

    Imagine if this process was applied to vocal interaction.  The comparison between stewing celery and softening speech provide further support that the short poem is argumentative in nature.  If speech could be stewed like celery, differences of opinion would not digress into heated arguments.  Language would cease to be provocative or peppery.  Speaking would become a suitable activity delicately sweetened and correctly primed for each occasion.

    While the metaphors of celery and inflammatory language may be obvious to some, others may feel the comparisons made are far-fetched.  After all, celery is a common, ordinary vegetable found in kitchens, lunch boxes, and grocery stores across the global community. 

    Dieticians call celery a “negative” food.  According to Weight Watchers, a negative food is any food that costs your body more calories to digest than it adds to your body through the act of eating it.  This gives cause for many dieters to embrace this vegetable.  Is it possible that Ogden Nash had a distended waist line and wrote this poem merely to exonerate this venerable vegetable?

    One could also counter that the poem is not an argument or celebration, but merely a statement of fact.  Think on the action of eating raw celery.  It does, in point of fact, greatly exercise the jaw.  Certainly, if one were to eat a large amount of celery for an extended period of time, their facial muscles and joints would without a doubt be physically taxed.  If an individual were to hear another person eating raw celery, they would definitely agree that it is a most noisy act of dining.  

    Contrastingly, stewed celery is soft and often served with a cream sauce or melted butter.  While it may not be as nutritiously beneficial as its raw counterpart, it is certainly less demanding on the mandibles.  Most passers-by would not hear a restaurant guest as they quietly enjoyed this delicate dish.  Someone with a taste for stewed celery would conclude that this is merely a poem comparing the noises made by raw and cooked celery.

    While there is some evidence to support a claim that the work is a straightforward assertion on the properties of celery, there are several other factors regarding literature and the characteristics of poets in general that should be considered.

                Generally, what differentiates poetry from non-fiction, fiction, and other kinds of literature is its inherent use of symbolism.  More often than not, a poet will use descriptive devices such as metaphor, simile, and allegory to illustrate profound meaning in a non-threatening, secretive, or ironic way.  As a widely acclaimed poet, it is very likely that Ogden Nash would regularly make use of poetic strategy.  If one is to believe that the poem serves as a treatise for political correctness, it would be logical to conclude that in order to approach the mentioned subject in a genteel manner, he would mask his statements in imagery.

                However, one could counter that Ogden Nash wrote a substantial number of poems for children and according to the Encyclopedia Brittanica, he was considered a master of pun and word play.  When taking into account his mastery of pun and a droll sense of humor, it would be reasonable to assume that his poems could be taken both at face value and as allegory for the problems that faced society both in his day and in ours.  Conceivably, his capricious and unusual style served as commentary, but sometimes, celery is just celery.

                To relegate his work as two dimensional may not serve him the intellectual justice he deserves.  It seems hardly befitting to so dismiss the work of a man who wrote not only whimsical verse but studied at Harvard University, authored several books and two Broadway musicals, as well as served as a staff editor for The New Yorker.  Children and adults world-wide have enjoyed his poetry for its witty banter, but there was clearly there was more there than meets the eye.

                In conclusion, upon careful analysis, it would be reasonable to assert that the poetry of Ogden Nash is both figurative and literature.  As poetry by nature is representational, the most reasonable supposition is that the poem is in point of fact an argument. Enjoy the simplistic, good-natured absurdity, but remember to look at the collective implication of the work.  While doing this, remember this old proverb:  be sure to season your words, for one day, you may have to eat them.

     

  • Today is a Double Blog Day

    Hi all, this is my second post of the day.  RedHairedCelt asked everyone to post their first love.  For those of you who don’t know, mine is Jackson Browne. 

    A brilliant lyricist, talented songwriter, gifted guitarist and pianist, his mellow tenor has been the background music of my life.  Two years ago, he was a first draft inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

    Also, I think he’s got a great smile *blush* but that’s why he was, is, and always will be my secret boyfriend.

    Here is a young Jackson Browne:

                             

    Here is Jackson in his middle years:

                             

    And here he is now…the Silver Fox…yowza!