Archive for the ‘The sun has gone to bed.’ Category

Vinnie’s Says It Best

February 4, 2014

As I can’t possibly offer more to the outpouring of sadness following PSH’s death, let me instead allow the divine staff over at Vinnie’s Pizza do the talking for me.

Rest in pizza.

Rest in pizza.

Possibly the Sweetest Passage in All of Literature

September 2, 2013

The leaves were falling from the great oak at the meadow’s edge.  They were falling from all the trees.

One branch of the oak reached high above the others and stretched far out over the meadow.  Two leaves clung to its very tip.

“It isn’t the way it used to be,” said one leaf to the other.
“No, ” the other leaf answered.  “So many of us have fallen off tonight we’re almost the only ones left on our branch.”
“You never know who’s going to go next,” said the first leaf.  “Even when it was warm and the sun shone, a storm or a cloudburst would come sometimes, and many leaves were torn off, though they were still young.  You never know who’s going to go next.”
“The sun seldom shines now,” sighed the second leaf, “and when it does, it gives no warmth.  We must have warmth again.”
“Can it be true,” said the first leaf, “can it really be true, that others come to take our places when we’re gone and after them still others, and more and more?”
“It is really true,” whispered the second leaf.  “We can’t even begin to imagine it, it’s beyond our powers.”
“It makes me very sad,” added the first leaf.

They were silent a while.  Then the first leaf said quietly to herself, “Why must we fall?…”
The second leaf asked, “What happens to us when we have fallen?”
“We sink down…”
“What is under us?”
The first leaf answered, “I don’t know, some say one thing, some another, but nobody knows.”
“The second leaf asked, “Do we feel anything, do we know anything about ourselves when we’re down there?”
The first leaf answered, “Who knows?  Not one of all those down there has ever come back to tell us about it.”
They were silent again.  Then the first leaf said tenderly to the other, “Don’t worry so much about it, you’re trembling.”

“That’s nothing,” the second leaf answered, “I tremble at the least thing now.  I don’t feel so sure of my hold as I used to.”
“Let’s not talk any more about such things,” said the first leaf.

The other replied, “No, we’ll let be.  But––what else shall we talk about?”  She was silent, but went on after a little while.  “Which of us will go first?”
“There’s still plenty of time to worry about that,” the other leaf assured her.  “Let’s remember how beautiful it was, how wonderful, when the sun came out and shone so warmly that we thought we’d burst with life.  Do you remember?  And the morning dew, and the mild and splendid nights…”
“Now the nights are dreadful,” the second leaf complained, “and there is no end to them.”

“We shouldn’t complain,” said the first leaf gently.  “We’ve outlived many, many others.”
“Have I changed much?” asked the second leaf shyly but determinedly.

“Not in the least,” the first leaf assured her.  “You only think so because I’ve got to be so yellow and ugly.  But it’s different in your case.”
“You’re fooling me,” the second leaf said.

“No, really,” the first leaf exclaimed eagerly, “Believe me, you’re as lovely as the day you were born.  Here and there may be a little yellow spot but it’s hardly noticeable and it makes you handsomer, believe me.”

“Thanks,” whispered the second leaf, quite touched.  “I don’t believe you, not altogether, but I thank you because you’re so kind, you’ve always been so kind to me.  I’m just beginning to understand how kind you are.”
“Hush,” said the other leaf, and kept silent herself for she was too troubled to talk any more.

Then they were both silent.  Hours passed.

A moist wind blew, cold and hostile, through the treetops.

“Ah, now,” said the second leaf, “I…”  Then her voice broke off.  She was torn from her place and spun down.

Winter had come.

Sunday Blues

August 19, 2013

When you’re like me and suffer from SBD (Sunday Blues Syndrome) usually the only thing that can possibly help is poetry.  For the past hour, I’ve been crying over THIS SHIT (OMG) but considering the whole Internet is fawning over this man, perhaps I ought to make people branch out a little.  Below is my good friend (and sometimes-subject) Matthue Roth’s poem, “The Other Universe of Paris Hilton.”  Cheer up, Charlie.

 

There’s an alternate universe

where Paris Hilton has her shit together

and I’m a drunken heiress.

I show up fashionably late

to her party, having already

knocked back a few

and knocked out her bartender.

The reason why escapes me

but it would have been a great story

if you were there.

And, in this case

“fashionably late” means 5 a.m.,

Too late for the last guests to appreciate me

but not too late

for them to catch shards of glass

from the falling crystal

I crash into

on their way out.

I’m shaking my head,

crying all over the ruins

of the party

tasting salty vodka tears.

“Dammit,” I sniffle

“it isn’t fair.

I fucked up again

kissed Prince’s girlfriend at the afterparty

had a drunken orgy

with Christina Ricci

and 2 former Spice Girls

traded one of my six Swiss

bank accounts for coke

and did it off the roof

of my Hum-V

clocking ninety

off the chest of this underage nymphet.”

Then I proceed to lurch

a souvenir of the evening

all over the Persian rug

that Paris worked

285 shifts at Wal-Mart

to pay for.

Luckily,

she doesn’t notice.

She’s by the medicine cabinet

with an ace bandage,

Neosporin,

and some orange juice.

“Don’t worry,”

she consoles me,

“in another world

you’re an Orthodox Jew.

You pray to G-d constantly

You never break anyone’s heart

Girls don’t only want you for your body

People call to confide in you

at six in the morning

and you never, ever

get laid.”

“So in this other universe,” I say,

“what are you?”

“Oh,” says Paris,

brushing away a tear,

“don’t concern yourself

with that.”

OKAY

August 9, 2013

So I know I owe everyone a little more WRITING and little less quipping/re-blogging of images, but I couldn’t help but share this: the other night, before I went to bed, I randomly checked the live feed of Andy Warhol’s grave (it’s a thing) and this is what I saw:

11:57 PM, Tuesday, August 6th.

11:57 PM, Tuesday, August 6th.

Emails With My Boss

July 1, 2013

PM: I certainly like your mentioning Bruno Bettelheim’s book which meant a lot to me a thousand years ago when I read it.

ID: Oddly enough, I think Bruno Bettelheim was in my dream last night?

PM: He was not very good looking. Do you just dream of brainy Jews?

ID: On good nights, yes…

Someone Go and Report Back

May 18, 2013
***** Also on SATURDAY *****

 

Feeling Gloomy

Feeling Gloomy NYC trudges mournfully onward. We may have had thrown a gigantic party upon our return to NYC last month, but that doesn’t really make us happy. No, the skies are still gray, and we still wear black on the outside because black is how we feel on the inside.
That said, we hope you will come join us in our misery once again at the world’s only party devoted to sad music. We will very mournfully wheel around the dancefloor to our favorite songs. Hankies are not required, but strongly encouraged.
Feeling Gloomy, the world’s only dance party devoted to sad music, has returned to NYC. The night has been taken on by brothers grim Gordon and Nathaniel Gloom who promise you more downbeat BPMs than you can handle. They will be joined by DJ Grim Reaper who really does look like death.

Smuggled over from the Gloomy old UK (where its now 7 years old) it has thrived in the land of the free, bringing great, gloomy, British tunes to the good ole US of A for over three years now. The boys will be rifling through their record collections to select anything from the Cure to Dolly Parton. As long as the lyrics are gloomy and you can dance to it, it may well be thrown down. Don’t forget if it’s your birthday you will get the chance to come up and blow out the candles on the cake as the crowd sing Unhappy Birthday and commiserate with you for being another year nearer the grave. So come on New York. Join Feeling Gloomy in its new home and put on your red shoes to dance those blues. Dress to depress.

 

Grand Victory
245 Grand Street, between Driggs and Roebling, Williamsburg, Brooklyn
11p- 4a; $6 door
feelinggloomy.com

Insomnia

May 12, 2013

In kindergarten, my friends and I used to play a game with the globe in our classroom.  We would put our finger on it and spin it around really quickly, and wherever our finger landed when the globe stopped spinning was where we would live.  I did a similar thing, tonight, while having insomnia, and playing with my full-length e-text of The Bell Jar.

“From the tip of every branch, like a fat purple fig, a wonderful future beckoned and winked. One fig was a husband and a happy home and children, and another fig was a famous poet and another fig was a brilliant professor, and another fig was Ee Gee, the amazing editor, and another fig was Europe and Africa and South America, and another fig was Constantin and Socrates and Attila and a pack of other lovers with queer names and offbeat professions, and another fig was an Olympic lady crew champion, and beyond and above these figs were many more figs I couldn’t quite make out.”

I was only allowed one paragraph.

This Changes My Whole Worldview

January 20, 2013
The cruel moon hangs out of reach

The cruel moon hangs out of reach

“Contrary to popular belief, there is no connection between lunar phases and the incidence of psychological problems. This is the conclusion reached by a team of researchers directed by Professor Geneviève Belleville of Université Laval’s School of Psychology after having examined the relationship between the moon’s phases and the number of patients who show up at hospital emergency rooms experiencing psychological problems.”

More here.

Good Riddance to the Super Moon

October 5, 2012

… which has been driving me and those I know a little wacky in the past ten days.  Tonight is the last night it has its hold on us.  Prepare to return to “normal.”  In honor, here’s a hate poem to the moon by Brenda Shaughnessy.

“I’m Over the Moon”

 

I don’t like what the moon is supposed to do.

Confuse me, ovulate me,

 

spoon-feed me longing. A kind of ancient

date-rape drug. So I’ll howl at you, moon,

 

I’m angry. I’ll take back the night. Using me to

swoon at your questionable light,

 

you had me chasing you,

the world’s worst lover, over and over

 

hoping for a mirror, a whisper, insight.

But you disappear for nights on end

 

with all my erotic mysteries

and my entire unconscious mind.

 

How long do I try to get water from a stone?

It’s like having a bad boyfriend in a good band.

 

Better off alone. I’m going to write hard

and fast into you moon, face-fucking.

 

Something you wouldn’t understand.

You with no swampy sexual

 

promise but what we glue onto you.

That’s not real. You have no begging

 

cunt. No panties ripped off and the crotch

sucked. No lacerating spasms

 

sending electrical sparks through the toes.

Stars have those.

 

What do you have? You’re a tool, moon.

Now, noon. There’s a hero.

 

The obvious sun, no bulls hit, the enemy

of poets and lovers, sleepers and creatures.

 

But my lovers have never been able to read

my mind. I’ve had to learn to be direct.

 

It’s hard to learn that, hard to do.

The sun is worth ten of you.

 

You don’t hold a candle

to that complexity, that solid craze.

 

Like an animal carcass on the road at night,

picked at by crows,

 

haunting walkers and drivers. Your face

regularly sliced up by the moving

 

frames of car windows. Your light is drawn,

quartered, your dreams are stolen.

 

You change shape and turn away,

letting night solve all night’s problems alone.

Shulamith Firestone Meets Diane Arbus

September 22, 2012

This is from Shulamith’s second and final book Airless Spaces, which is basically comprised of tiny portraits of “losers,” many of whom meet in mental hospitals.    Followers of the sad prodigal ladies and the art they make will recognize Diane instantly despite Shulamith’s use of a pseudonym.  This is from a title, btw, entitled “Suicides I’ve Known,” which I’m pissed I never thought of first (although I haven’t actually known any suicides so…)

YVONNE TREE

Before I ever met Yvonne Tree I met her in her work: square, straightforward compositions on the grotesque.  I was a young art student then, and I had a Yashica 2 1/4 camera and I enjoyed composing on it.  She had a strong influence on me, though I stopped short of getting into actual carnival grotesquerie as too sensationalistic.  But the static posed quality of some of her frames affected my own photography –– I am thinking now of her famous twin girls staring at the camera.

When I came to New York and began organizing women’s liberation groups, we were to do publicity for a major piece in the New York Times.  We were offered a choice of photographers and she was one of them.  I was flattered to have such a great photographer assigned to us, and convinced the others that we should go for her.  So we got her.

She was delicate-boned, thin and pretty, if in a mousy sort of way.  What I mean is she did not stand out as strong among the rest of us strapping girls.  One night she accompanied us on  an “action” to retrieve my pay from a withholding boss.  (I was working as a waitress at McGregor’s Garage on St. Mark’s Place.) We ganged up on the boss and I threw a glass of water in his face.  We got the pay.  But Yvonne had stayed outside the whole time, quaking for possible damage to her expensive camera.

When the piece for the Times finally came out, the women were outraged at her photographs, which were of zombielike dykes all alone in a room.  She had used one or two women from another group (who were not even typical) and distanced them in the space.  I guess you could tell they were photos by Yvonne Tree.

I realized my poor judgment in swaying others in her favor when she apologized for the strangeness of the photographs, pleading that this was her “eye” and she was incapable of shooting a normal journalistic picture.  I had rather thought she was doing this assignment for commercial reasons and that she would adapt her style accordingly, but I was wrong.  Anyway, I believed her that she couldn’t help it.

Later she destroyed a whole roll and only that which had been printed with the article on women’s liberation remained with the New York Times.  She, however, gave me as a casual gift one unused print that remained, ruined for any practical use by a large crease across the left corner.  “You’re not a beautiful girl,” she said, “but somehow in this picture…”  And it was true, I looked stunning in the picture, a whole aura surrounded me; I was circled by other women who looked supplementary.  I was wearing a long silver ring on the first finger of my right hand, my “Jupiter” finger –– when I seldom wore a ring –– and generally I read as the leader of the group.

In a taxicab once she had talked a little about the breakup of her long marriage –– she seemed to be about forty at the time –– to a young guy who had launched her on her career as one of the few significant female artists of that era.  Otherwise I had no clue that she was deeply depressed, other than her tearing up the roll of women’s lib shots which were neither fish nor fowl –– neither her usual strong grotesques, nor a good journalistic visual account of what was developing in women’s liberation.

Anyhow, a month and a half later we heard a shocking story: her body had been found in the bathtub, drained of blood.  She had apparently chosen to go by cutting her wrists and then hastening the flow of blood by letting it seep into warm water.  It all sounded gruesome.  I had had no idea she was in such a desperate state.

I held on to the picture as exceedingly valuable.  I hid it in some newspapers behind an old trunk, and then later decided to put it in a cardboard roll in another place I had.  When I came out of the hospital, I had no money, so I called a curator at the Museum of MOdern Art to see if they might not want to buy the picture, one of her last good shots.  But they were content to settle for the New York Times shots, in which I had (gratefully) not been included.  In any case, I checked for the roll of cardboard, and it had been thrown out in my absence.

~Shulamith Firestone, OBM