Sunday, August 16, 2020

a stream of words [six]


/one./
//two.//
///three.///
////four.////
/////five./////



in order to find out
what number this 
"stream of consciousness" post was
(it's six, by the way, but you already knew that, 
if you're reading this.
when i was getting ready to prepare this post, 
i did not.) 
i looked through a few of the past years 
to find the last one i did
and, in doing so, 
i stumbled upon words
and times
and events
that i've forgotten about. 
not that they are totally gone from my memory
(the blog posts help me to remember), 
but because
they feel like they are from another world, 
another timeline. 
parties, 
trips to nyc, 
people in stadiums, 
baseball games
unmasked 
close together 
sharing germs
sharing breath 
sharing moments with strangers. 

i was reminded 
that in late 2019 
early 2020
i was feeling more of myself again 
feeling more at home 
in my skin 
with my mind 
with my program. 
and. 
the pandemic has taken many things away 
from all of us 
in different ways, 
different degrees. 
[it is the same storm, 
but we are in different boats.] 
and for me
it has taken away
what might have been 
some of the most interesting, 
fulfilling, 
and looked-forward-to parts 
of my phd years
(the opportunity 
to delve in the archives, 
to travel and live abroad again). 
i remember
one of my advisors saying to me in january 
(when i was applying for research funding) 
that she was envious 
that to go back to those stages of research 
--of travel, trial, and error--
they were good parts of the process, 
of the program. 
but now. 
now, it's uncertain when those opportunities will come. 
time marches on,
but the clock to my funding
has not stopped. 
so much is uncertain. 
i do what i can
and pray for openings
for the healing of the world 
(for both altruistic and selfish reasons). 
but the waiting is unbearable at times. 
and i know
there are people 
who have it worse. 
that i know. 
but it is still hard. 
it is still unfair. 

i've been feeling burnt out this week. 
i finished teaching a class online, 
and this week i have felt the exhaustion 
as my body and my mind 
just needed a break. 
sam was gone during part of this week 
(back in utah for a friend's wedding) 
and so
after i finished grading
i found myself watching bbc period dramas
little dorrit
tess of the d'urbervilles 
little women (which was not bbc, 
but rather pbs). 
and. 
although it was a different week 
than what i usually do, 
it was nice. 
necessary, even. 
i could have written more
i could have transcribed more documents
there are so many things i could have done
but instead
i watched some bbc period dramas
to try to recover
from burn out. 

one of my pandemic projects
(i know, i know--
my dissertation should be my 
true pandemic project--
but tell me how i'm really 
supposed to get that done 
when i can't get to any of 
the archives i need?) 
has been to write a sort-of
memoir
[more of like a mosaic]
of my twenties. 
it has been good to remember. 
also been good to try 
to synthesize. 
what i will do with it 
i don't know
but. 
it will be there for me
if anything else. 
to remember how i've grown
changed
and deepened. 

i've been thinking a lot about history lately 
its uses
and abuses. 
this summer has given me a lot to think about 
in regards to that. 
and
although right now
i am ruminating on those thoughts
before they germinate
i do take issue 
with people thinking that history 
is memory 
or that memory 
is nostalgia 
or that history is calcified, 
or that history is theology--
commandments set in stone. 
there is so much we don't know. 
so much 
we just don't know. 
history is a tool. 
it is interpretative. 
and it can be a handmaid
to good or evil. 
"history may be servitude, 
history may be freedom." 

i have been thinking 
recently
frequently 
of a poem by the brilliant writer, 
tracy k. smith 
and her thoughts on history 
in her poem "new road station"
and if you, dear reader, 
and i were sitting together
i would take out my phone 
and find this poem
and share it with you. 
so i will do so now: 

History is in a hurry. It moves like a woman 
Corralling her children onto a crowded bus. 

History spits, Go, go, go, lurching at the horizon, 
Hammering the driver's headrest with her fist. 

Nothing else moves. The flies settle in place
Watching with their million eyes, never bored. 

The crows strike their bargain with the breeze. 
They cluck and caw at the women in their frenzy, 

The ones who suck their teeth, whose skirts
Are bathed in mud. But history is not a woman, 

And it is not the crowd forming in a square. 
It is not the bright swarm of voices chanting No 

And Now, or even the rapt silence of a room 
Where a film of history is right now being screened. 

Perhaps history is the bus that will only wait so long 
Before [cranking its engine and] barreling down 

The road. Maybe it is the voice coming in 
Through the radio like a long distance call. 

Or the child in the crook of his mother's arm
Who believes history must sleep inside a tomb, 

Or the belly of a bomb. 

and after i had shared it 
i would ask your thoughts about it
and share my own.

i have many thoughts, 
but i will leave you with these: 

so many things history is not
even when we want it to be. 
what history is
is harder to place. 

Utah summer nights

I am convinced that Utah summer nights are some of the most magical nights around. 

I love that, even when days can be 100+ degrees, that the nights become bearable--with temperatures in the 80s or even 70s. 

I love the way it stays light until 10:00, or sometimes even 10:30 at night. 

I love what summer nights bring: picnics, bonfires, sunsets, and fireworks.  

And I love that so many people I love are in Utah during the summer. 

Sam and I went to Utah in July to see family. Of course, because of Covid restrictions, we weren't able to see as many people as we would have liked to, but with proper restrictions (masks, social distancing, being outside, etc.), we were able to spend some time with close family and friends. We also got to go on a lot of hikes, which was so nice. I miss being able to just get up into the mountains within twenty or thirty minutes. 

So, since I forgot to blog/post while I was there, please enjoy this montage of Utah views and faces. 

[a series of many, many hikes]


[late july wildflowers]

[a sam in a beloved habitat, part i]

[a sam in a beloved habitat, part ii]


[a sam in a beloved habitat, part iii (with his beloved)]

[loved, loved this hike]

[with bailey and james on top of the world!]

[a sam in a beloved habitat, part iv]

[with em and nate! we love them.]

[stole this from katy's instagram story. but yes. it's true. this was the first time we had all been together in two years!] 

[cambridge crew.]

[and an oxford gathering with the lovely briana and dani!]

[we took a day trip with my family to spring, city, utah. it is a beautiful little town. beautiful (the entire town is on the national historic register), and little (the town has a population of about 1100).]

[some old houses]


[loving the hollyhocks.]

[the water well. where, apparently, many courtships had their beginnings.]

[a cool, old door handle.]

[spring city views of the la sal mountains.]

[haiii.]

[spring city cemetery]


[after our trip to spring city, sam, sarah, evan, and i tried to find clarion, utah, which is now a ghost town, but used to be a jewish farming settlement in the 1920s. we couldn't find it--we were there, but it really is such a ghost town that we couldn't find it or its tiny graveyard--but we did swing by the manti temple and it is very pretty.]


[as are its views.]

[i am becoming better at making cakes. this was a golden oreo cake i made for my mom's birthday.]

[i made this cake in dc for the fourth of july.]

[and last, but not least, utah sunsets.]

[fin. but we'll be back. utah is home.] 

Berry picking

 Yesterday, Sam and I went with Sam's mom and sister and with my aunt, uncle, and cousins to go berry- and peach-picking at Larriland Farms in Maryland. 

It was one of the best things that I've done this August. That's not a hyperbole. That is real. 

It was nice being out in the country; it was nice to have a socially-distant activity which felt pretty normal; it was nice to get yummy raspberries and blackberries (and to make plans for yummy crisps, pies, and ice cream); and it was nice to spend time with family. 


[it was overcast most of the day, which also made it a perfect day for berry-picking]

[every way is the right way.]

[a boy with his berries.]

[soooooo many blackberries. we will be having blackberry crips for literal days.]

[we also went flower picking, which was incredibly calming for me. i wish i had my own fields of flowers to walk into and to commune with the butterflies.]

[the finished product.]


ten years.

a little more than ten years ago, i started this blog
to document my experiences, 
opportunities, conversations, 
friendships
while i studied abroad 
at the university of cambridge
for a few months. 

i knew that summer was magical then. 
(and looking back over my 
journal from that time,
delight dances off the pages.) 

but i don't think i truly grasped
how much that summer 
would change the trajectory 
and the shape
and the loves
of my life. 

in june, 
those who could 
of our byu-pkp 2010 group
got together 
in utah 
or over zoom 
to gather
reminiscence 
and create 
new memories. 
and just--
to remember 
how much cambridge meant to us; 
how much we still mean 
to each other. 

it was a delightful couple of days. 

[masked-up cambridge friends]


[listening to other cambridge friends on the zoom call]

[hello, friends!]

[wouldn't be a proper reunion in utah without a hike]

[sam came, too. and, of course he's wearing his queens' college shirt.]


towards the end of one of the nights
we talked about what cambridge meant to us. 
and i could--and can--honestly say 
that for me, 
the two most life-changing decisions 
that i made these past ten years
(if i had to choose two) 
would be going to cambridge
and going on a mission to ukraine.
 
because 
so many other decisions and happenstances
are connected to those. 
i would not have gone to oxford 
if i had not gone to cambridge. 
and i don't know 
if sam and i would have met
and fallen in love 
if i had not gone to cambridge, either. 

so many things we don't know. 

but what i do know
is there are places in this world 
that are touched with magic 
and that i am grateful 
for people in my life
who have loved me for who i am 
but who have also allowed me 
to change, grow, and shine.