Tuesday, November 30, 2010

cxii

“The easiest thing to do on earth is not write.”
-William Goldman

            A self-realization: I write about not writing, too often. I’ll scroll through the digital trove of poems and paragraphs, finding snippets of snarky complaining about writer’s block in most every corner. It happens.

            Hypothetically, an entire month can go by before I can motivate myself to write a quick sentence or even jot down a quick midnight thought. I can go for weeks at a time, letting my thoughts build up and up and up and up and up until finally they disappear in a sort of neural anti-climax, where I will be left with narrow nothings to fill the white digi-space.

            Sort of like this.

Monday, November 29, 2010

cxi

“For my ally is the Force, and a powerful ally it is. Life creates it, makes it grow. Its energy surrounds us and binds us. Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter. You must feel the Force around you; here, between you, me, the tree, the rock, everywhere...”
-Yoda

I am a director. Or, at least, I like to think of me as a director, small time in the corner of my dorm room, splicing together low definition cuts with cheap software.

I’ve been technically making movies since I was four years old, roughly moving the plastic limbs of my stormtroopers, jerkily stopping the camera to create a strange illusion of motion.  And as I would attach thin threads of floss to heavy starships (to make them fly on film), I discovered very early in my life that there is something graceful about being “behind the scenes,” that there is nothing more frustrating or humbling than sitting at a computer, trying to edit down a sequence of scenes to utter exactness.

You lose track of all time as you try to breathe life and believability into frames of digital captures. I’ve learned about patience and humility from these quiet hours, slowly mastering the art of OCD-fueled cutting, editing, perfecting.

When other kids were growing up, they idolized quarterbacks and goalies, hung up posters of Patrick Ewing (I think) and Troy Aikman in their rooms, living vicariously through their hard-court buzzer-beaters, their game-winning touchdown passes. But I was that one weird little kid, who enjoyed the bonus features at the end of the movies, who read every single “Making Of” book that the small public library had to offer, who wanted to someday be like George Lucas or Steven Spielberg or Peter Jackson, my idols.

            And today one of my idols died: Irvin Kershner, director of, not only my favorite Star Wars movie, but easily my favorite film of all time: The Empire Strikes Back. This was the movie, with its snow battles and duels, that ignited my love for storytelling, my love for creating new somethings. (And it even happened on the very day I was about to mail him a replica clapboard from to autograph, which will now sit in front of me forever, unsigned, acting as a motivator for my future: my future writing, my future directing, my future being.)

            I had the honor of hearing him giving a talk a few years ago, hearing him gently remembering how he created the latex puppets and steaming vents, hearing him making the audience laugh and reminiscence with him, taking them on one final journey back down the film strip.

He was speaking about the importance of inquisitiveness to a child, another four-year-old stop-motion-God-in-the-making when he said:

"Good. You keep asking those questions. Don't ever think that something isn't important enough to ask your dad about, son. That's how you learn. That's how we all learn. Maybe your dad won't have all the answers, but those questions you can figure out together."

            So today I will watch his movie as a bittersweet homage , mouthing the words to every memorized line with a pathetically teary grin, answering some of these questions with him, and sending him off to the all-surrounding, all-binding Force with some style.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

cx

“Yeah, Mom, I just got back home. I’m unpacking now.”
-Anonymous Handsome Devil

            It’s weird that I consider this poorly-lit, falling-apart, too-cold room to be my “home” now. 

            And now I am back, sideways-squatting in this narrow bed, getting used to it again after sleeping in my old, wide, beautiful bed back in Dallas for half of a week. And I can't shut my body down for the night because of the beating mechanics of my heart and the wiry conflicts and emotions swirling around in the deep whatevers of my brain. And all I can really do is let the noise of the almost-broken air-conditioner to waft over me, and let me sleep.

            I miss my home. My other home.

Monday, November 1, 2010

cix

“A day without a nap is like a cupcake without frosting.” 
-Terri Guillemets


            Napping has officially taken over my life. Feeling “rested” is my daily quest, brought on by the consistently recurring cycle of goingtobedlate and wakingupwaytooearly. My countable afternoons are being wasted and slowly disappearing with the change of the wall calendar; entire evenings disappear because of a poorly-placed three-hour “four o’clock rest”, sleeping through my phone alarm, sleeping through the day around me.

            Today I woke up at 1:51, the afternoon sky shining feebly into my blinds, my entire day (and a certain astronomy class) gone forever. And it was raining. At least, I think it was raining. From my bed it took me a good two minutes to mentally register the quiet crashing sounds outside my window as a thunderstorm, the rhythmic percussions slowly drawing me back and back and back to sleep.

            And so my eyes were and are lullabied shut into another nap cycle. Not that this is a problem: tonight wouldn’t have been productive, anyway.