More fog. This fence row borders our property. Shot facing South. The second is a cropped section of the first and edited with a bit more light. If you have an opinion or can educate me about these photos, I'm open.
...art is tragedy. Art is loss. It's the fleeting breath of a foregone moment, the intimacy of things undone, the summer season that passes. It's the peeled lemon and bony fish in the corner of a Dutch still life, rotten and dead and gone. It's him lying next to you, legs tangled with yours, only to know he'll be specter in your thoughts by next month, next week, ten minutes from now. This is what makes it art, Charlotte, and you've always understood that. You've always understood, above everything, that what makes beauty is pain. Every time you love, pieces of you break off and get replaced by something you steal from someone else. It seems like it's the right shape but it's slightly different every time, so that eventually, very very quietly and over days and days and days, you are tranasformed into something unrecognizable, and it happens so slowly you don't even notice, like shedding scales and making new ones. What an appropriate passage t...
My mother died March 24, 2024. I'm having a hard time processing that, I guess. It is only starting to hurt. When I was little ("like a number approaching infinity, say, 6") and not so little, but younger (30), I could not imagine a world without my mother. To consider such a place and time was unbearably painful. Yet, here I am. And, often, it saddens and confuses me to say, I don't feel anything. More, when the loss was new, I am ashamed that I felt relief. I was her caretaker. I wasn't all that great at it. She told me so regularly. She told me I was a disappointment. She told me I lacked compassion. She was sad and lonely and she wanted me to split my soul open and share everything with her. She wanted me to satify her needs for connection and give her the opportunity to mother me in my distress. "Ann. Why are you so unhappy?" I think I tried at least a few couple times, but i...
I am here to depsit the first time I drank a strawberry soda. Mountains of ice and underneath a greiny pink slush, a taste like what I imagined kissing to be. The fizz rose to my brain and I heard God and God said: order a second strawberry soda, Bertie. I never want the memory of that first drink to fade. When I'm an old man and all my senses have dulled, I want to taste my twelfth summer again-- The Antidote is a prairie witch. Maybe you are like me and haven't run into a prairie witch before. Maybe after the WWII they all retired. But a prairie witch is a person who absorbs the memories of her clients into herself and stores them. The client is thereby freed of the memory but can collect it back at any later time- so long as he retains the receipt with the identifying number. Sometimes people want to bank special memories to relive later (see above) but, more often, they want to forget something horrible, painful, and, parti...
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