building this life

this year's mantra

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Yesterday I wrote about resolutions. Live with less (stuff) is my big one.

 

I wrote that it'd be my mantra for this new year. And almost immediately after publishing that, I thought, No that's not right. A mantra is not a resolution, not really (at least, not in this case). And maybe I should have a mantra? 

 

Immediately I knew, this would be the year I'd live by the code of Mary Oliver--her words would be the star I'd follow home.

 

"...you only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves." | from Wild Geese

 

 

 

Anyone out there with their own 2014 mantras?

 

 

 

round these parts | ushering in 2014

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I WELCOMED 2013 FROM AN F TRAIN TRAVELING SOUTH. Somewhere between subway stops the clock struck twelve and the conductor made an announcement and the simplicity of it was an odd sort of perfection. But this year I thought I'd do something a bit more typical...and celebrate. Really celebrate. With pomp and circumstance and dressing-up--a dress that required no bra and sky-high-heels and fake eyelashes!  So I did what I thought was really very clever and bought an overpriced ticket to a party...

 

I know, I know, it sounds dodgy already. But it was a party hosted by Sleep No More (which is a truly excellent theatrical event that I can't recommend enough). I thought it was going to be like the anti-New-Years-New-Year. I thought the ticket price + formal dress code + off-the-beaten-path-nature-of-the-show would attract a slightly more mature crowd (meaning not-just-drunk-twenty-year-olds). And I thought the very notion of "crowd" would be...well not so crowded--crowded, but not in an uncomfortable way.

 

I hated it. I hated every moment of it.

 

It was so crowded I couldn't breathe or think, let alone enjoy myself. It took forever to get in, forever to check our coats, forever to reach the bar. I've never been pushed so much or had so much champagne spilled on me or witnessed so many skirmishes between s0-called "adults". When I told someone at work about it, a few days later, he said: Oh, you just needed to drink more. Which, truly, would have been the only way to recoup my money. But when I was there all I could think was, that means just drinking for the sake of drinking (chugging) and having minimal fun only to feel like hell the next day. And when I told him this he said: You know what that means? You're getting old. Nothing to be done about that. 

 

This is all to say: next New Year's Eve   I'm hosting a house party. A. very. small. house. party. A party. And I'm going to love every minute of it.

 

(That being said, if you ever do go to a black and white party, wear white. I say this because 90% of the people wear black and so you immediately stand out and there's something to be said for that. How I really felt about the Sleep No More New Year's Ball...a waste of a damn fine outfit).

 

DESPITE THE YEAR'S INAUSPICIOUS BEGINNING, THE START OF 2014 HAS BEEN PRETTY EXCELLENT. A friend and I were chatting on New Year's Day and he was teasing me about the cold weather here in New York (and it is. absolutely. cold {though not Minnesota-cold so I'm keenly aware things could be worse}). He was doing said teasing all while sitting pretty in balmy Miami. I told him that Miami didn't impress me--I'd rather be in Buenos Aires. Or Sydney. And he said he'd rather be in Paris.

 

THE REST IS, AS THEY SAY, HISTORY. 

 

To say I'm excited would be a gross underestimation of my current state... I'm barely breathing. I can't say the word Paris louder than a whisper. It's all I can think about. And the promise of it has colored 2014 quite nicely.

 

ON THE RESOLUTION FRONT...Last year I got off Facebook and here I am, one year in, and I don't think I could have made a better decision. Of course there are updates I miss out on, but by and large the upside way outweighs any loss. It was a time suck. And one that often left me feeling pretty crummy. In coming up with a resolution for this new year I wanted something comparable--something that wasn't as pedantic as hit the gym four days a week or smile eight times a day (a ridiculous example, but you understand, yes?). I wanted something that felt like a loose invitation to a better life. So the lipstick and high heels and dangly earrings? That's all good fun, and I intend, very much, to actually do those things because I think those sort of things are important. But my real resolution (my mantra for the year) is to live with less stuff. I've bought a lot of junk over the years, which is bad for the environment, bad for my wallet, but now puts me in the unique position to look at an item and have some idea about quality, price, and whether or not it has longevity--longevity in terms of wear and longevity in terms of my own personal taste. It also means investing in what I do own...taking the skirts that are too large to the tailor (why did it take me twenty-eight years to figure out the genius that is a tailor!! {and so cheap!}, dry-cleaning my blouses, and on and on. And the thing is... investing in higher quality things is part of investing in one's life and investing in one's life feels really damn good.

 

"I make myself rich by making my wants few." | Henry David Thoreau

 

Let's dance 2014... I'm ready.

 

2014

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...Wear high heels . Don't slouch . Smile more . Live with less . Say yes . Keep the kitchen sink clean . Read . Read more . Make the bed . Leap . Tell the truth . Make space . Carry a camera . Make mistakes and then move on . Laugh . Laugh a lot . Be unyielding . Don't compromise . And by compromise I mean settle . Don't apologize . Not for your life . Write about it . Keep going . Text less, call more . Say things out loud . Be patient . Wear dangly earrings . Curl your hair . Dance . Dance in your apartment . Dance in public . Dance even though you're really pretty terrible at it . Ask for what you need . Assert your worth . Pull out the bright lipstick . Practice confidence . Own everything--mistakes and blessings and delayed discoveries . Bloom . Be something in bloom . Sink into mystery . Move your body . Because you can . Because it's good for you . Because it deserves as much . Stretch more . Kiss more . Give love freely . Give thanks . For everything . For the gift that is this next year ...

christmas in new york

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(My grown up shoes. The glitter leaves a trail...perhaps, inevitably).

photo 1-28Screen Shot 2013-12-23 at 8.16.56 AM(That Chagall in the background may be one of my very favorites. Ever).

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(Thank goodness for friends who understand the importance of a damn fine cheese plate).

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For all of the things to do in New York, and all the glamorous places to go, almost nothing beats a house party.

 

I find that so much in this city belongs to the public domain. Walking and taking the subway and traveling and eating--nearly everything is done in view of others. There's a reason everyone gets comfortable with crying in public here, you sort of have to. And because so much is public, that makes the private spaces that much more sacred. Not just anyone can be invited over the threshold and into your home. So when someone does open their door for you, well, it can make for a really lovely evening.

 

I'm so lucky to have the girlfriends that I've met in this city. I'm keeping them for life, that much I know. Even when, as I imagine will happen, time and fate scatter us across the country (or the world), I'm keeping them.

 

Good food, good wine, much laughter, and an apartment all lit up with lights and stories...I wouldn't have it any other way.

 

Sunday nights have a way of inviting in loneliness like no other, but last night--well, last night was good. A family night in the most expansive sense of the word.

 

A perfect start to the holiday week.

 

 

how murphy's law has me hiding from men

  There’s a running joke amongst my girlfriends that I can’t find an American man to save my life.

 

Actually, they think the joke is I don’t want to.

 

And while it’s true that I love a foreign man, the joke for me (or on me) feels like that of all the men I meet, not one of them is from here.

 

The last two guys I dated were chance encounters at restaurants. The first came up to me, the other I approached. I didn’t pick them out of a lineup and say, Oh that one there, he’s clearly from somewhere else.  

 

And yet they were. Brazilian and Nicaraguan, respectively.  (I mean, come on).

 

Sitting at the bar one night with the last man I dated, my tongue loosed by a little too much whiskey (always the whiskey) I revealed a bit about his predecessors and he chuckled, raised his eyebrows, Oh, so you have a thing for Latin man?

 

Immediately I blushed because yes, yes, of course I do!—point of fact: always have—but I was embarrassed to have him distill it so simply—he with his dark, curly hair (always the dark, curly hair) and deep brown eyes.

 

When I told my girlfriend Kim, she said, Who doesn’t have a thing for Latin men? Just ask a gay man.

 

Which was a fair and comforting (and true) point.

 

I took the subway home about a week ago, a gigantic humidifier between my hands (because the heat in older New York apartments, while extremely fortunate, is unrelenting in it’s pursuit to suck moisture from the air). I was transferring at Broadway-Lafayette and loathing the city with every fiber of my being—which usually translates to me giving death glares to anyone who happens to cross my path--when a tall gentleman moved in front of me. I sort of looked at him impudently before my death stare softened at the realization that he was not-altogether-bad-looking.

 

In the wake of our held glance he angled into position to get on the same subway car—immediately I knew what game he was playing at, I've played it myself.

 

Usually the game ends at the shared, silent train ride, but this gentleman upped the ante, sat close by, started chatting.

 

And out of his mouth came a lovely lilting accent: French.

 

Of course.

 

Before I knew it, we were exiting the train at the same stop, he was asking me to a drink, and because I’m a firm believer in saying yes-to-almost-anything-at-least-once, I was consenting. A drink? Why yes, of course.

 

And such is how I came to find myself in a dingy Brooklyn bar with a humidifier beneath my feet and a Frenchman by my side.

 

The drink was fine. And the guy seemed kind. Owned a restaurant. Was reading Catcher in the Rye. We talked about music, a little. He walked me home. Kissed me. And it was fine. He kept laughing in a way that I imagine is as close to a giggle as you’ll get from a grown man—it was sweet—he seemed surprised by the whole thing.

 

And it felt nice to surprise a man.

 

But the thing about getting over someone is that a casual drink with someone else is…well…not as exciting as one would hope.

 

So I told him so. When we spoke again, I told him so.

 

You see, in matters of casual drinks and first-night-kisses and everything-that-follows-after I am of the opinion that up-front-honesty is the best policy. Saves a whole lotta mess and confusion and possible hurt.

 

However, in this particular case there was 1. the possibility that my English didn’t quite translate 2. the very likely chance that his persistence led to my waffling  and 3. both 1 + 2—so the notion of a second date or proper-first-date or, rather the impossibility-of-either, didn’t quite land.

 

And for this reason I’ve twice this week hidden from the tall, swarthy Frenchman who lives in my neighborhood.

 

Physically. Actually, physically hidden.

 

Because when you live off the same stop as a person and you don’t want to run into them…Murphy’s Law has it that you’re bound to.

 

So twice this week I’ve been that crazy girl turning circles on her heels, so very “busy” with her phone, that girl hiding behind the very skinny trees that pepper the sparse sidewalks, that girl tracking the movement of a person who may or may not be the man (he was too far ahead to tell) she had a drink at a bar with, while her feet were tucked atop a box containing a humidifier.

 

I’ve never been a girl who moves quickly from one man to the next. Often I wish I was—I imagine it might be easier (or at least more fun)—I mean French-kissing a Frenchman is something everyone should check of the life-list, if for no other reason than to have a laugh about the pun of it. Instead I’m the girl who heads home and cleans up and cooks a meal and has a single glass of wine and listens to music and falls asleep to old episodes of Frasier.

 

Because, well the thing is, those simple activities center me—set me right. And when I’m good with myself, the kissing comes easier, and saying yes comes easier, and adventure comes easier.

 

And I don’t hate New York so much.

 

And things feel a bit more possible—foreign men and American, too.