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L. H. Cole

L. H. Cole

Monthly Archives: February 2016

Thinking Ahead

22 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Blog, Fear, Writing

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blog, depression, loneliness, worry, writing

“Experience is simply the name we give our mistakes.” – Oscar Wilde

“Don’t ask what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive, and go do it. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” – Howard Thurman

“Don’t talk to me about rules, dear. Wherever I stay I make the goddamn rules.” – Maria Callas

Since I’ve been unable to write stories recently, I’ve decided to write about a topic that’s been on my mind for the last few days… weeks… well, years, honestly. I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the extent to which we should plan the future, and the extent to which we should be in the moment. I’ve usually tended towards the former, and only this last year have I really begun to think that I’ve been doing it wrong all along. I’ve talked about a lot of this before, but not recently, and it’s nice to remember where you’ve been once in a while, especially when you’re wondering where you’re going.

I don’t think I knew how terrified I was, before I came to college. I applied to fourteen universities, all within the top 50 or so, and waited. I worried constantly. I had decided to pursue Political Science, because perhaps in politics I would be able to make a significant difference in the world, and to minor in English or Creative Writing, because it was what I loved. I had a path, and I would stick to it, and hopefully, things would be alright.

They were not, not really – I went to university when I was already reeling from a variety of recent hits to my self-esteem. My high school friend group had self-destructed; I was still in denial that I was in love with one of my best friends back home; the lectures I attended left me cold. I was terrified of being alone and terrified that people would notice, and while I did ask for help from my sister, I wasn’t willing to admit how awful I felt while everyone around me seemed to be doing so well. My anxiety worsened when I returned home for spring break, and for the first time that year my guilt at being miserable solidified into hopelessness. I was homesick, depressed, and anxious. I hadn’t found my people (well, I’d found a few of them, but I hadn’t figured that out yet), and I had no idea if I ever would – if there were people like me at all. I want to say now that that seems silly, looking back, but I can’t. In the absence of evidence, it’s easy to imagine things won’t ever get better, and I wouldn’t laugh at anyone who feels that way now.

At the end of the year, I switched my major to English. I identified myself, first and foremost, as a writer – although I’m sure those of you who write know that the major is hardly a necessary part of the package. This new identity gave me somewhere authentic to branch out from, and the next year, instead of trying to do everything, I tried to do everything I could to Become a Writer. I interned as a staff writer at Clarion, started taking English courses, and submitted pieces to literary magazines. (I created this website, too!) I took the more challenging professors whenever I could, and spent hours sitting with the very kind and very clever writing fellow, Lauren. I made friends with the people in my specialty housing not quickly, precisely, but deeply, and for the first time in a long time, I was very happy. From that base of confidence, I was able to build even further, and plan my summer interning with Locus and my year abroad. Even now that I’m more secure, I encounter small failures. London let me down in many ways – my specific program wasn’t large enough for me to find a satisfying group of friends, my pocket money was stretched very thin, and I didn’t do well in the constant rain. But now I know what to look for and what to avoid for next time.

Where, then, did I go wrong, and where did I go right? I think I should’ve listened better to the people who told me to relax and see how it went, although in the area I come from relaxing is tacitly considered wasteful and unusual. I think I should’ve pursued what made me happy, rather than what I thought was important. Mostly, I think I didn’t realize that I could recover from failure, and that failure could be much more useful that success. My unhappiness served its purpose by guiding me away from things that didn’t suit me, and while I regret not having taken as many English classes as I would have liked, at least now I won’t regret not having tried politics. I know where I’m happy because I have been unhappy elsewhere, and that is a gift.

I still plan, but I’m trying to live more in the moment. I’ve been practicing mindfulness – a minimum of 10 minutes a day – and while I have a Google Calendar that would frighten you and Google Document full of plans, each section has a multitude of options. I know I want two years off before graduate school, ideally teaching English abroad, but I will have to wait to see which of the various programs I am interested in accepts me. I think I will need to go to graduate school, most likely for Psych or English, but I don’t know which programs I will apply to yet, and I realize that it is futile to look now, if only because ratings, accreditation, and even funding will change in the 3-4 years I have until then. More importantly, I might change, and why waste that time when I could spend it being here, doing the changing?

(At the moment, being here would involve doing my homework. I suppose there is that.)

I’ve learned that it’s important to be comfortable with uncertainty, and that the easiest way to do so is to try something new, especially when that involves failing, and especially when it involves failing with other people. I think that the adults who raise us sometimes give us the impression that if we fail, we’ll shatter, and won’t be able to pick ourselves up again, when the most valuable asset we could have is knowing we can recover from shattering. Once you’ve repaired yourself the first time, you develop a fantastic tool-kit, too – I know that if I wake up feeling awful, I should have a glass of water or four, eat, shower, throw on some makeup, meditate, and go for a walk, and that this or any one of these things will make me feel better. I know that when I write, I always feel less lonely, and that my friends – at least the friends worth keeping – won’t mind being asked for help once in a while. I know now that bravery has many faces, and that the most important of these is curiosity, because it makes us focus on who the people we meet are, rather than how they may see us. I know these things now, and I know that when I fail again, I will fail better than before. If I do not, I will have to change my strategy, and this is fine too.

Planning calms me. I think of the Gotham writing course I plan to take as soon as I have sufficient funds, the possibility of Clarion in a summer of graduate school, perhaps a Stonecoast MFA when I hit thirty. I plan to apply to these things, but not because I should, or because the world needs my writing, or because I think that they’re important. They excite and delight me, and since nobody really knows how to live, my passion will have to be enough to guide me. I will allow myself greater flexibility now, greater forgiveness. I cannot foresee everything, and life wouldn’t be worth living if I could. I will weave what I can of my dreams into my life, and be thankful for the surprises – whether pleasant or educational. 

Earlier today, on the train to school, I was reading Trickster Makes the World, by Lewis Hyde. He described how Picasso would make each new student who came to him draw a circle. I immediately imagined myself in the same situation, as I usually do when reading, and winced, thinking of how abnormal and awful my circle would be compared to those of the real artists. I continued, only to find that Picasso made them draw the circle to see how they were unique – to see what made their style theirs. This evening, I was scrolling through my Facebook feed, and read a post that said something along these lines:

“When you look in the mirror,

all you see are imperfections.

But how can they be imperfections?

There is no one else with your face.”

I guess what it really comes down to is that it’s alright, perhaps better, to make yourself along the way. To make the way, too. You never know what you’re going to discover, and it’s much harder to find the really important things – love, a good idea, your missing glasses – when you’re afraid.

bridge

A bridge I saw in Cordoba. I hadn’t planned on coming here, and I got to see the most lovely things because I did.

A Warning Dream

18 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Uncategorized

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Last night I dreamed of crows,

crows in a house of open widows

— my house, in fact —

although the crows seemed to have

other ideas. I kicked at them,

but they only nipped my legs

and snickered in reply.

 

When I awoke,

I asked my sister what the crows

were, and she said

language.

It is the new language you are speaking,

beating at the doors of your mind

to be let in. I asked my friend,

and she said

culture,

it is the new culture beating at the door

to be let in. I asked my teacher,

and she said it was the new family

I lived with, anxiety at

the missing lock

on my door.

 

I think it is a warning, like any other:

Build your house while you may, Child,

but Life, Life will come for you.

Where will your walls be then, my dear,

when Life comes for you?

Build your house if you wish, Child:

plan it, prepare it — but

do not mistake structure

for safety. Life is coming for you;

even now, she walks from street corner

to street corner, sifts yellow pages

searching for your name.

Build your house if you must, Child,

but if you must prepare, prepare for her:

for soon, always, now,

she will be knocking

on your door.

 

Homesickness

18 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Uncategorized

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Tonight, I am itinerant,

and though now stiller than I’ve

ever been, I walk — no, fly —

beyond. But what

of returning?

Where to, when my tracks confuse sense, confound

logic. Where I have been,

there I am. But

always, I complain.

Why speak of homesickness

when clean, warm sheets wait for me?

Why speak of restlessness

when food, cheap and steaming

fills my belly

and my socks wait for me

soft and undirtied?

Surely she would be

the luckiest of women —

she who missed

but was never waiting for.

Call

16 Tuesday Feb 2016

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Have I kissed

the talons of despair?

Surely I would know;

I know at least, that I followed

the siren’s call and found

not paradise

but bone-littered shores.

How far

from home I must be.

How far

yet to go. Nothing to do, then,

but swim, knowing full well

that the carrion women wait for me,

that the twin rocks I mistook

for heaven’s gates

call out my name.

I wonder why

they want me so.

Perhaps, they too

are lonely.

 

To Fall Out of Love

14 Sunday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Uncategorized

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You’ll need time, of course
and lots of loving care.

You’ll need enough resolve not to
throw your hands up in the air.

You’ll need to let your hair down
and make a scary face.

And you’ll need loose clothes
because you’ll need to dance
all around the place.

Take a pinch of grit
and toss it in the pot.

Remember what you always were
and remember what you’re not.

Think of all the happy times,
that came before you knew
this person once so wonderful
who’s turned into a “who?”

Turn on the heat.

(We’re modern women, now, you know,
we use electric stoves. Sometimes we even
use an iron, to dry our ragged clothes.)

And now that you’ve gotten started,
throw all the memories in
of you and him and him and you
and everywhere you’ve been.

(The dreams, too, darling –
that you’ve been hiding up your sleeve
you must be fresh to start the fight
to begin to really leave.)

Spit in the pot
and add
a nice rosewater base
with just a little vinegar –
you can measure this by taste.

And when it’s boiling
good and well, and you’ve
bled just a drop, take it
to the wishing well
and throw it about the lot
Dribble it around the stones,
let not a drop inside
then let it steam a moment,
while your sweet time you bide.

Speak to the well.

“Who made me feel not good enough?
Who poked me full of holes?
Who made me waste all this time
believing I’m not whole?”

Look into the well. (Perhaps
you will find your answer; perhaps not.)
Make a face – the scariest you know
Don’t worry overmuch if the water
doesn’t match
what you wish it’d show.

Go home.

Take a bath, though make sure
to sing as the water drains
and all your grief should slip away
and leave you
almost sane

Disclaimer:
Spell should take 6 months
to a year
for complete efficacy, provided
you avoid completely
its inspiration.

 

autumn-benjamin-thomas-kennington

Autumn, by Benjamin Thomas Kennington

Breadcrumbs

10 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Uncategorized

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Far from home you wander
Darkness nests in your hair
He whispers in a soft voice
Of welcoming emptinesses

I cannot guide you home
How long it’s been since I
knew you
But, do not fear:
I, too, will give you
Something for the journey:
A little something
It is not my journey

See these white stones
the polished pebbles
Of my soul
I will drop them for you
A lead towards the light

(Though I have known the darkness better
Longer
We are friends
He and I?
At least
He shows me how
To carve
The stones
Of his
Sweet absence)

Silly, to think my sacrifice
Might buy your ransom
I have only so much soul
to light the way by

And the Darkness is
Like all Darkness
Darkness Infinite

Well, Hansel
Follow my breadcrumbs
If you dare
But know before you walk:
My power is not that of the hunter your father
But of the witch devourer

(No angel, I,
to balance on the head
of a pin. No, I
must dance in circles
about the fire)

Though both
You remember
May eat you alive

vampire

Vampire, 1893 by Edvard Munch

February Updates!

07 Sunday Feb 2016

Posted by L. H. Cole in Uncategorized

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Bienvenidos! This is your February blog post and update on my adventures. Since my last post, I have…

  • Settled into my homestay in Madrid. Say hi to mi perra, Trini!

trini.jpg

  • The apartment is lovely – dark wood floors, simple crystal chandeliers, and always very clean. My food is simple, good, and most importantly, made by someone else. Did you know they leave the heads on their fish in Spain?
  • 20160203_211555.jpg

    La trucha — the trout. Way too much spine. Actual nightmare.

  • Enrolled at university and begun the arduous task of registering for classes. I will be learning about Spanish literature after the war, for sure, but the process for registration is excessively bureaucratic, so even a month into my program I couldn’t tell you my schedule.
  • Explored Spain, ate many tapas, drank many glasses of vino tinto, and explored los clubes. Last night I ate Puerto Rican food, the night before, Japanese, and I’m learning all about Spanish food. I really like their tortilla de patatas and ensaladilla rusa (only with homemade mayonesa), and their wonderful chocolate caliente, which is so thick you can dip churros in.
  • Made new friends!
lucas
face
12655951_10153582954492730_1143551939_o

 

  • Parque del Buen Retiro…
20160207_153657

Look at the little green bird! Darling.

20160119_102559

Lucifer being Lucifer, tasteful snake

20160130_163926.jpg

Casual.

I am very, very lucky to be here, and my Spanish, while still rusty, has already begun to improve. I have gone from understanding 50% in my first class on la Posguerra to understanding 90% in the second. The readings are slowly killing me, but perhaps when I rise from the grave I will speak Spanish? Is that how that works? I live in hope.

I have managed to write a couple short stories, and some fun scenes with my various characters. I am resisting using credit to buy a Speculative Fiction course at Gotham, and telling myself I’ll do it over the summer. I am working on getting a job teaching English to Spanish children, and dreaming of the day when my schedule will finally become… well, a schedule. I’ve found a great local parque that I enjoy, above, and a lovely favorite cafe, though I have yet to find a favorite, cheap bar. I am constantly irritated by how difficult it is to get a hold of my non-expat friends, as the time zones are so different, and miss them far more than I would like to, perhaps even almost as much as they deserve. Sooner or later I’ll see them or give them a call, but in the mean time, I will distract myself with Madrid, Spain, and Europe.

Here are the places I have yet to visit, but hope to! Perhaps not all on this trip. 

Places in Madrid to Visit:

  • Parque de Capricho – looks lovely in the pictures. Yet to see.
  • Malasaña – The hipster neighborhood of Madrid.
  • El Prado – One of the best art museums in the world.
  • Chueca – The gay neighborhood of Madrid! Great shopping, cute dogs.
  • Calle Huertas – My host mom said it was cool. Clubs, that sort of thing.
  • Parque Europeo – This park apparently has miniatures (well, large miniatures) of all the great monuments of Europe.
  • Plaza Santana — Good place to go for a night out.
  • Cafe Gijón — Cafe where many writers gathered after Franco’s regime.

Cities Around Spain to Visit:

  • Sevilla 
  • Toledo
  • Malaga 
  • Valencia 
  • Segovia
  • Granada

Spring Break Cities:

  • Nice
  • Marseilles
  • Cannes
  • Florence
  • Rome
  • Venice
  • Pisa
  • Milan

Cities Around Europe to Visit… Eventually:

  • Dublin
  • Amsterdam
  • Prague
  • Krakow
  • Lisbon
  • Porto
  • Copenhagan
  • Berlin

Thanks for reading! Next blog post to come pronto, i.e., probably March.

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