Archive for November, 2006

a short family history of ornaments

music for xmas tree beautification [click the play button]

when i go home for thanksgiving, i get excited about a lot of things, like:

1) eating pie (three kinds!!)

2) going to bed dorkaliciously early (10:30, yo)

3) visiting the movie theater constantly (although one thanksgiving my dad and i just had an alien marathon at home, which kicked the crap out of “it’s a wonderful life”)

4) hanging out with the fam (obvs)

but one of my most favorite things is decorating our xmas tree. it looks like this:

family tree

basically, if you get up close, you will see the story of our family. in one sentence, that story would be, “sarah is SUCH an only child.”

i love our tree because nothing matches, because some of the ornaments are broken, because my grandmother adored making things with sequins and shiny beads (thus, my penchant for All Things That Sparkle). when i was a child, i used to lay under the tree, with my head on the tree skirt my grandmother crafted (a sequined nativity scene, of course) and just stare up through the lights and dangles. i felt surrounded by my own holiday world, a safe, sweet place of cookies and ribbons and people laughing in the distance.

sometimes i still visit that place, even though my body doesn’t quite fit under the tree anymore.

therefore, in the spirit of holiday pantsing, i want to share a few of my favorite ornaments with you.

first and EXTREMELY foremost (as she would demand) comes my all time first best ornament, the Miss Piggy Angel.

miss piggy

every year, i would absolutely SQUEAL (much like miss piggy, actually) whenever i saw the box, i mean, mansion that she lives in for most of the year. the diva is always ALWAYS in a prominent place on the tree.

Facts About This Ornament: her wings are fuzzy, and she has a “real” diamond ring on her finger– over her purple glove!

next comes my second favorite, which, surprise surprise, is food-related.

ice cream!!!

yes, it’s a v. v. sparkley ice cream cone. i remember picking out this ornament at the store when i was little, because basically i just really really wanted to eat it.

Fact About This Ornament: you cannot eat it.

as a child, my mom would take me to one of the holiday stores in lafayette to pick out an ornament for every christmas. my fine taste is evident, even after all of these years, in the disco heart:

disco heart

this ornament pretty much screams, “a seven-year old girl thinks i’m totally rad!”

Fact About This Ornament: unfortunately, it does not automatically spin like a real disco ball.

like most parents, my mom and dad still love Every Single Thing I Ever Made As a Child… even if most critics would refer to it as “absolute crap” or “an abomination of art as we know it.”

exhibit a:

yes that cone is real

what, you thought there was just ONE ice cream cone on our tree? please. do you even KNOW me?

so i made this ornament in (i think) the third grade. and YES that is a real ice cream cone. from when i was in the third grade. which means… well, gross.

Fact About This Ornament: this is actually NOT the ice cream cone i originally made for my parents. the one i handcrafted for them disintegrated into dust by 2001. LUCKILY FOR OUR FAMILY LEGACY, i ALSO made one for my grandmother at the same time, and she, as grandmothers are prone to do, took much better care of her ornament. after she passed away, we put it on our tree. i predict that soon my parents will place it in air-tight container, safe from the further ravages of time.

exhibit b:

bluie!!!

you may not know it, but the technical term for this object is “bluie.”

Facts About This Ornament: A bluie is actually a used fabric sheet, the name stemming from the blue coloring of the object.

My grandmother would save me piles of bluies when i was a kid because i LOVED playing with them. i’m not kidding. i would stack them up to make pens for my plastic zoo animals or blaze trails through the house. Due to the significant role played by bluies in my life, it naturally became necessary to immortalize one in the form of a xmas ornament.

you have one on yr tree too, right?

we also have a lot of star wars ornaments, because my family is full of awesome nerds.

princess leia

trust me, if they made a mulder and scully ornament, we would buy it.

and, last but not least, the Hand of Sarah:

little hand

i love the fact that i opened my hand too wide so my pinky didn’t quite make it. straight outta 1982!!!

since i adore my family’s tree so much, of course i have my own miniature version. since 1989, my mom has given me tiny ornaments… which means decorating now, in 2006, requires a lot of manual labor. enter: my awesome friends.

my lovely felicity girls

during our usual felicity girls night on monday, jessica, kiersten and kc festivized my apartment while we drank spiced wine and ate cookies. oh it was wonderful!

la la la

Fact About Christmas: my heart rejoices.

brilliantly illuminated

filling up an empty room

so here’s me, writing in my new space. i’ve spent the last few weeks loading up my xanga things and unpacking them here, rifling through old posts and discovering tiny treasures i’d forgotten. there’s plenty of space here, a new place for everything, and yet, as always, i am left with a few odds and ends, old candles and crinkled notes and half-empty matchbooks, that i don’t quite know what to do with. but i’ve tucked them all away, here on the internets, because, unlike in my real apartment, they are safe from dust, from little bugs and life’s general turbulence.

each entry had to be unwrapped, and some handled with more delicacy than others. a few things didn’t look quite the same as i remembered, and others, like family christmas ornaments, greeted me with sweet nostalgia. surrounded by the words of these past three years, i felt rich… i felt overwhelmed… i felt a little older. taking inventory was like taking stock of my life, counting up the changes and emotions and reactions of a person that i am still only beginning to know.

this isn’t really a clean slate, then, but a chance to move around the same old furniture and see it in a different light… an excuse to clean out those dark, cobwebby corners and toss in a few throw pillows.

so i hope you like it here. i’m excited.

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thanksgiving really snuck up on me this year. maybe because life has been relatively sane, so i don’t find myself reaching desperately for a day of consistency, of family traditions and comfort food. when things are easy, sometimes i stop searching so intently for those little rays of light, the sunbeams and silver linings that illuminate my life, regardless of a contrasting darkness.

and so i’m excited, about driving home on roads crowded with other people doing the same, our communal commute towards loved ones and pie and beds that remember our shapes.

and so i’m thoughtful, about this year and where it has taken me… where i want it to take me.

and so i’m trying, to remember to be grateful, appreciative, sincere in my love.

today i read this article by gary kamiya, and i had to post the last few paragraphs. i hope you enjoy it, but really i’m posting it for myself, so i can keep the words close.
and so i’m remembering.

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Were those blazoned days a one-shot blessing conferred by the sword of Damocles? And is it an illusion for me to believe that I can get them back? That seems to be what Philip Larkin says in his 1955 poem “Reference Back”:

“Truly, though our element is time,
We are not suited to the long perspectives
Open at each instant of our lives.
They link us to our losses: worse,
They show us what we have as it once was,
Blindingly undiminished, just as though
By acting differently we could have kept it so.”

I think Larkin is only half right. The things that we’ve done in life can’t be changed. But we can still change our minds; we can begin again. It is, alas, a process more like work than like revelation. (Indeed, the obsession with re-experiencing lost revelations, a particular vice of my epiphany-addled generation, stands in the way of living.) If we can learn to see the world as it is, even with its lost illusions, pain and decay, Larkin’s “blindingly undiminished” past, with its inevitable losses, can inspire not just regret, but also its companion: acceptance. You must remember this… To clearly see what once was, in all its eternal illumination, is an act of homage to ourselves, and to life, that does not deny what we have lost.

The Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz lived through the Nazi occupation of Poland, and saw much of Europe destroyed. In a long poem titled “From the Rising of the Sun,” he recalls himself as a boy in his native Lithuania, looking at the fields that he, a poet in his 60s, is remembering. It is a meditation on how memory both preserves and creates a perfect world — a preservation that does not alter the finality of its loss.

“That boy, does he already suspect
that beauty is always elsewhere and always delusive? …
He sees what I see even now. Oh but he was clever,
Attentive, as if things were instantly changed by memory.
Riding in a cart, he looked back to retain as much as possible.
Which means he knew what was needed for some ultimate moment
When he would compose from fragments a world perfect at last.”

There is no perfection without fragments. “There is a crack, a crack in everything,” Leonard Cohen sings. “That’s how the light gets in.”

And so this Thanksgiving, when my mother gives thanks that we are all together, and perhaps invokes the memory of two dearly beloved family members who were taken from us too soon, I will try to remember Uncle Bob’s laugh, and Aunt Wendy’s songs, and the good times that we have all had together. And maybe not there at the table, but sometime, I will try to keep an old, broken promise to be good to myself. And I will try to remember how everything — the trees in the park, a child’s face, the clouds drifting over a mountain — was once brilliantly illuminated. And let my dark lost years be sad, and my green and hopeful ones be happy, and know that from some perspective far above them, they are the same. And not look away. And give thanks for it all.

wurstfest: batter and deep fry my heart!

fa fa fa fa fried food

last weekend, meredith, matt, mandy, henri and i drove up to new braunfels to celebrate sausage, which really means lots of eating and drinking and socializing, i.e. pantsing.

for posh, festivals are simply an excuse to eat as much cray fried food as possible, ESPECIALLY if it is on a stick. therefore, this entry will be highlighted by the various delicacies i enjoyed, a decision that i’m sure shocks all of you out there on the nets.

upon arrival, we immediately purchased a traditional german dinner plate, complete with sausage and sauerkraut. below you will see meredith modeling her food for you:



thank you, meredith. Continue reading ‘wurstfest: batter and deep fry my heart!’

pants of the end times

lady sovereign & missy elliot will blast yr brains out harder than a nuclear holocaust.

even though my state is still super duper red, yesterday turned out pretty ok, yeah? i mean, besides our whole governor situation. seriously, this whole “no term limits” thing is pretty much one of the worst ideas ever, right above my recurring issue with Eating Too Much Fried Cheese.

so last night COULD have been the end of the world… but not really, cos that actually happened on saturday night when we threw an “apocalypse WOW!” party at henri’s house. everyone’s always talking about avian flu and nuclear bombs and global warming blah blah blah but helloooooo the apocalypse is what you MAKE of it, people. and WE made it freaking awesome.

here’s yr hostess, as tank girl (from the comic, NOT the annoying lori petty kind):

Continue reading ‘pants of the end times’

OMG OMG OMG

another positive change: i’ve got sound, yo! here’s a remix to shake yr boo-tay in celebration.

britney spears FILED FOR DIVORCE TODAY.

SWEET CRACKER SANDWICH IT’S FINALLY HAPPENING.

now, let’s see if these winds of precious, precious change will affect the elections today. i mean, if we’re kicking k-fed out of the house, we should be able to kick some republicans out, too.

welcome back, britters.

boston pants party

yep. still no music. hemeh.
wherein our intrepid posh explores cemeteries, learns about pirates and tackles a big breakfast.

last weekend, henri and i went up to boston so he could do a few more shows at the coolidge. well, that was the excuse. the REAL reasons we went up to boston were:

1) to hang out with george (works at the coolidge) & his lovely wife, jenny
2) to eat dessert at finale
3) to buy things at trader joe’s
4) to see this:

!!!!!!!!!! autumn leaves!!!!

Continue reading ‘boston pants party’