Archive for the ‘I Hate Writing’ Category

Old Uzbek Words for Crying; Programming Note

July 1, 2015

In Old Uzbek, there are ONE HUNDRED words for crying!  Here are some:

Wanting to cry and not being able to

Being caused to sob by something

Loudly crying like thunder in the clouds

In gasps

Weeping inwardly or secretly

Ceaselessly in a high voice

In hiccups

While uttering the sound “hay hay”

I’ll be gone for a bit because I’m going on my HONEYMOON.  Peace out suckers!

My Favorite Blurbs

June 28, 2015

My most favorite reviews of my writing:

“Intelligent but grim” ~ Publishers’ Weekly

“Surprisingly non-douchey” ~AL, The New Yorker

A Project That Almost Certainly Wouldn’t Be Worth It

April 29, 2015

So you guys know I’m moving to England, right?  It’s true––beginning early May, Itinerant Daughter will be… well, really fucking itinerant for a quite a while.  Oh, backing up: that’s because I’m traveling a bit before moving, to, among other places, Charleston, Ohio, Los Angeles, Rhode Island, Italy, and then the big move happens in mid-August.  So I’ve been thinking a lot about what to do with my books––not surprisingly, I have about four thousand of them––and am wondering if now is the time to make good on that idea I had, which was to bar myself from buying new books until I had read all the ones in my library I haven’t read.  I probably won’t make good on this idea because whenever I think about it, I immediately frown and consider all the books that I have that I legit don’t want to read (my fiance’s legal books––do my fiance’s books count?––as well as The Flamethrowers, because my interest just waned over time, Clarice Lispector’s An Apple in the Dark, Tolstoy’s The Kingdom of God is Within You, Henry James’s Daisy Miller, My Lunches With Orson and countless reference texts––do those count?) as well as those I should want to read but don’t (The Magus by John Fowles, Last Last Chance by Fiona Maazel, The Russian Debutante’s Handbook, Rosie Schaap’s Drinking With Men, Anthropology of an American Girl, which I almost immediately regretted buying as if I foresaw this very issue.)  Then I think about all the books I’ve read pieces of––select essays in an anthology, maybe, or a few stories by Vladimir Nabokov and Kafka out of their collections, and very occasionally books I began but didn’t warm to, like John Gregory Dunne’s Vegas––and whether I would have to read the entire text over again or parse out which sections I had read and which ones I hadn’t.  And then finally, I consider the fact that this would probably take me any number of days and result in a piece that I could sell only to The Paris Review and be paid $200 for, which if you calculated it out would mean I had made something like ten cents an hour.  So I guess I’ve decided not to do it.

If I had time (which I don’t, because I’m actually making headway on some books so GOSH leave me alone) I’d write an essay called “The Fascinating Religious Themes in the Bruce Jenner Interview.”  Did anyone else notice how many times they used the word “soul?”

Texts from Writer Friends

April 12, 2015

KM: I just invented the perfect metaphor for doing these line edits.  It feels like having eyebrows plucked, but IN YOUR SOUL.

Sleeping

March 15, 2015

I slept about 14 out of the last 24 hours and yet I still feel like a lump.  No good when you’re trying to write about Wittgenstein.  What gives, biology?

I don't sleep in heels because I'm not a fucking moron, but otherwise this picture just about sums it up.

I don’t sleep in heels because I’m not a fucking moron, but otherwise this picture just about sums it up.

Little Children

March 11, 2015

I keep seeing this new meme (or something) about giving advice to one’s younger self.  Five years ago, I thought this was a cute idea, but now, something about it strikes me as presumptuous, and… self-patronizing?  I didn’t know what it was, exactly, until a few days ago, I had occasion to meet with a European teenage girl who goes to boarding school in the suburbs near where I live.  She had long straight brown hair, happy eyes, and, though she was finishing up a day doing activities with her theater group and marching for women’s rights, was full of optimistic (but not annoying!) energy.  And then I realized why the whole conceit annoyed me: this girl couldn’t learn anything from me.  Even if she could (i.e. “High school sucks for everyone!”) she probably shouldn’t.  Youthful spirit is something that is taken from us, not something we shed like a cocoon.  This is just a theory, though.  And it’s a pretty pessimistic way to put it, at that.  For a realistic but sweeter version of same, see Meghan Daum, from her essay “Not What It Used To Be”:

“A little game I like to play is to look back on various critical junctures in my life and imagine what advice my older self might dispense to my younger self.  The way I picture it, my younger self will be going about her business and my older self will suddenly appear out of nowhere, like a goon sent in to settle a debt.  I always imagine my older self grabbing my younger self by the collar or even shoving her in some manner.  At first, Younger Self is frightened and irritated (Older Self speaks harshly to her) but a feeling of calm quickly sets in over the encounter.  Young Self sits there rapt, as though receiving the wisdom of Yoda or of some musician she idolizes, such as Joni Mitchell.  But Older Self is no Yoda.  Older Self is stern and sharp.  Older Self has adopted the emphatic, no-nonsense speaking style of formidable women with whom she worked in countless New York City offices before deciding she never again wanted to work anywhere but her own home (a place where, over the years, she has lost a certain amount of people skills and has been known to begin a conversation as though slamming a cleaver into a side of raw beef.)  Older Self begins her sentences with ‘Listen’ and ‘Look.’  She says, ‘Listen what you’re into right now isn’t working for you.’  She says, ‘Look, do yourself a favor and get out of this whole situation.  Leave this college.  Forget about this boy you’re sleeping with but not actually dating.  Stop pretending you did the reading for your Chaucer seminar when you didn’t and never will.’

“To which Younger Self will ask, ‘Okay, then what should I do?’ And of course Older Self has no answer, because Older Self did not leave the college, did not drop the boy, did not stop pretending to have read Chaucer.  And the cumulative effect of all those failures (or missed opportunities, blown chances, fuckups, whatever) is sitting right here, administering a tongue-lashing to her younger self (which is to say herself) about actions or inactions that were never going to be anything other than what they were.  And at that point the blob of unfortunate yet inevitable life choices, at which point I stop the little game and nudge my mind back into real time and try to think about other things, such as what I might have for dinner that night or what might happen when I die.”

 

The Tyranny of the Beach

February 13, 2015

An essay I wrote back in late October, which I loved but no one else did.

The Tyranny of the Beach

I’m writing this from a small room on the first floor of the Betsy Hotel in South Beach, Miami. I can see that it’s sunny outside through the slits of my blinds, but I’m in a black muumuu frock, the air conditioner set to bone chilling. The weather report tells me it’s seventy-seven degrees, with a zero percent chance of rain; to contrast, back in Brooklyn, where I live, it’s forty-five degrees, and it has rained almost an inch in the past twenty-four hours. “Rain is widespread throughout the area,” the report tells me. In other words, it’s the forecast in hell, every single day of the year.

My life is good, right? No, it’s great, because I forgot to mention above that I didn’t pay for this hotel room, the six beverages in my mini-bar were complimentary, and I’ve had delightful staff members to serve my every need here for the past six days. I’m a writer-in-residence, perhaps the most plum position an artist can attain. Here at the Betsy, their admirable goal is to do nothing other than give the writer-in-residence a quiet room and time to write. Not a soul bothers me. No one, that is, except for that wide stretch of sand abutting the ocean about five hundred feet from my desk.

Come sit on me, it says. Wiggle your toes in my white granular body. Gaze out at my vast blue neighbor. Drink a pina colada on top of me. But I resist the siren call of that steamy temptress and remain inside. If this were strictly a vacation, I’d be more than happy to decamp for a padded beach lounger. But it’s not, really––this is sacred time I was given to get elbow-deep in my work, and my work requires me to be alone, inside, and, preferably, in dim lighting. This is only partially because my subject matter tends to be of the darker variety: mental illness, unsolvable mysteries, religious fanaticism, and literature of the same. From a perusal of Mason Curry’s frothy but entertaining book Daily Rituals: How Artists Work, it’s clear that most artists, even those who engage with the happiest of material, require some cushioning distance from the outside world while working. For many, this means a few hours of complete isolation buttressed by a strictly imposed schedule, with a slice of time set aside for a romp outdoors. The sanest types rely on afternoon walks through the French countryside or the narrow streets of Copenhagen; others, like Marcel Proust and Jonathan Franzen, maniacally deprive themselves of stimulation, even, as Franzen did, resorting to wearing blindfolds AND ear plugs to enter a state of heightened concentration. Suffice it to say, I’m not nearly as stringent as Franzen, although I am pleased that my little office here is lined in sound-absorbing cork, just like Proust’s infamous bedroom at 102 Boulevard Hausman was.

So for the sake of my sleek MacBook Air and my ability to focus, I remain indoors and solitary. Rilke, who advised young poets to “love your solitude and bear the pain it causes you,” would be proud. My mother, who rationally wonders why you’d buy a plane ticket to Miami only to come back pasty, would not. The one happy loophole in this is reading. Reading is an occupational necessity in my work, and also, something that can be done while basking in the sun. Still in this, there are unexpected snafus. Over my stay here, I’ve been reading Kathryn Harrison’s new biography of Joan of Arc in order to review it. The story of a martyred teenage schizophrenic is not exactly beach reading; add Harrison’s gloomy tone and my PTSD-like flashbacks to reading The Kiss over Yom Kippur, and you’ve got a recipe for a melancholia that just isn’t sustainable on the bustling, joyful beaches of South Florida. A European family in front of me––the mother topless––joins hands and races off toward the water; a man saunters by, music playing on his cell phone. “Excuse me, but I might drink a little more than I should… tonight.” He moves his upper bodily rhythmically to the beat. I force my eyes back down to the page: “No eyewitness remembered Joan pulling the bolt from her own breast, and reports of her doing so, like that in the Chronique de la Pucelle, are likely apocryphal, Joan’s valiant defense of her inviolate body amplifying her virginity.” Gertrude Stein apparently enjoyed working outside because she liked to look at “cows and rocks” while she scribbled; I’d be curious to see what the vision of male buttocks in a g-string would have done to Tender Buttons.

Back in my mid-twenties, I worked for a true crime writer who insisted that tropical environments were most conducive to writing. As an adult, he had migrated from New York to spend the colder months most often in Mykonos, Ibiza, or Miami, all places with cloudless skies, skimpily-clad sunbathers, and a steady unssst unssst ussst techno beat emanating from hidden speakers.  When the writer and I were alone together, working on his book, he would tell me his preferred winter schedule ad nauseam: wake up, eat breakfast, go running, head to the beach, sunbathe naked, then write a little (by hand, in those days) and swim, write a little and swim, and so on.  By the time I was his employee, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis had robbed him of the ability to hold a tissue, let alone race down to the water’s edge. Even if he could have weathered an eight-hour flight to Athens, it would have been nearly impossible for him to traverse those narrow cobblestone streets in a mammoth motorized wheelchair.  But Miami, as everyone likes to joke, is friendly to the old and/or infirm, and it also met his personal requirements: it was lively, full of tan, good-looking people, and above all, warm.  “The warm weather is much better for my health,” he would say, and while there was some validity to that, I was always tempted to voice my suspicion that the escape from winter had more to do with his desire to be near a nude beach than his hope that the phlegm production in his throat would abate.  So when it started to get chilly in New York, we would board a JetBlue flight to Florida and giggle about those poor suckers who were silly enough to suffer through the cold. The beach didn’t pose as much of a threat to me then, because it was so readily accessible and I didn’t feel I would lose it, sort of like how native Parisians don’t feel pressured to visit the Louvre every day. Still, I found myself secretly giddy on the occasional stormy day, even if that meant watching my writer boss sit moping by the sliding glass doors in the apartment, watching his beloved coastline pummeled by raindrops.

Now, even at home but especially here, in the relentlessly perfect weather, I feel like an impotent version of the prophet Elijah: unable to raise the dead or hear the word of God, but always praying, praying, praying for rain. Yesterday, after promising myself I’d get some Vitamin D, I marched out of the front door, book in hand, headed for the beach. I didn’t get across the street before a few fat drops of rain landed right on my head, and I raced gleefully back inside to my room. I put on a bathrobe, opened to a passage explaining the medieval concept of “touching for scrofula” (the idea that a newly anointed king could heal tubercular wounds through his touch) and prepared to be serenaded by the sweet sounds of thunder. But twenty minutes went by, and all I could hear were the construction men revamping Deco Drive Cigars across the street yelling to one another in Spanish. I peeked out the window and saw––the horror!––aggressively bright sunshine, and beachgoers strolling along toward a swim, nary an umbrella in sight. I angrily grabbed the computer and looked up the weather in Whitehorse, the capital city of the Yukon province in Canada. Twenty-three degrees, with a 40% chance of light snow. Heaven.

***

But let’s face it: today, I’d rather be anywhere and unproductive than in the freezing horror that is New England.  Ideally, this little cove in Greece.

navagio3

 

 

Dispatches from Sundance

January 29, 2015

So we’ve seen some real clunkers out here and some great things, but the greatest of the great was an incredibly eerie horror film called The Witch, which takes place in pre-Salem New England.  A family gets booted out of their plantation for heresy and tries to make a go of it on their own near the forest, but then strange things start happening, and they all go basically batshit.  There are a number of animals UP TO NO GOOD in this flick, including a raven who stars in a particularly disturbing scene.  Of course when I walked out I wanted to rush to my computer and start writing a long-form piece about the ability to predict which child stars will succeed (Anya Taylor-Joy is fu-cking in-cre-di-ble), the “mass hysteria” in LeRoy, New York a few years back, the psychological purpose of fantasy films for adults, and refugee camps for accused witches in Ghana, but… oh yeah, right, no essays.

Oscar nod a-coming.

Oscar nod a-coming.

But what I did do is reach out to the Salem Witch Museum to ask the below, which I’ve been wondering about for years.  I REALLY hope my memory is correct on this one!

Hello!

I have a very random question about the Witch Trials themselves (not really about the museum) that has stuck in my brain for years, and that I’ve finally decided to put to rest.  About twenty years ago, when I was ten, my family visited Salem and visited a number of museums about the witch trials (perhaps yours?)  I distinctly remember during this visit one of the tour guides mentioning that all but one of the young girls suffering from “possession” completely recovered.  One, however, continued to have symptoms (fits and tics) for the rest of her life.  I believe she died young.  I can’t find any reference to this online, though, and as it was so many years ago, it’s entirely possible I’m mis-remembering it.  If anyone on staff can confirm or deny this, I’d be SO appreciative!

Thank you!

Best,

Itinerant Daughter

Removed!

January 7, 2015

 

 

Essays I Will Not Write

January 4, 2015

Again, I’m strengthening my resolve in this new calendar year to focus on the big projects rather than the essays that pop into my head all the time.  As William Styron’s daughter said of her father’s depression, he felt not comforted by the masterpieces he wrote, but hounded by the little pieces he had never gotten around to, “that they were like little beasts and he had watched them turn their backs on him and walk away.”  But I’m thinking, perhaps better to let them go than try to hold tightly to their leashes as they sprint toward the horizon?

So Internet, you’re welcome for this idea: a follow up to this New York Times article about travel blogger Meghan McEwan, who recently bought a very pretty house in the utterly magical Leelanau Peninsula in Michigan intending to turn it into a B&B.  Some things to cover in the article: do virtual dreams fail to satisfy?  Does critical expertise translate to practical know-how?  Is the Leelanau Peninsula the next big thing, or should we never speak of it again so that it remains untouched and pure?  Does she know where Mario Battali lives?  And so on.

You know what, fuck this––if any editor is interested, lemme know.  I can make time for it, depending on how many expenses you cover.

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