Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Music is my boyfriend.

...That used to be the joke, back in college, when I did not really date real boys and spent most of my free time trying-to-or-making music. (If you want a good laugh, look at Melinda's old band...old enough that people weren't even using MySpace that much yet!)

But alas, my lover's gone...where'd you go? i miss you so...seems like it's been forever since you've been gone!..you know i love you...

(haha. i've always found it so interesting how easily love/romance/relationship metaphors are applied to music and especially to musical endeavors.)

and really, i love my friends, and i do miss classical music as much as everything else, but playing in friends' weddings just isn't quite what i'm talking about.

i miss road trips to random gigs in random cafes with next-to-no space...
i miss friends showing up in other cities just to support us
i miss awkward tune changes when the guys would try to make me kill time with the mic
i miss playing at Berkeley Cafe and being told i'm a badass "cello player"
i miss finally gathering the courage to show people i could sing
i miss accidentally awesome jam sessions
i miss a capella duets with my Tara Shannon (I've got everything we ever did tattooed on my heart)
i miss "roadie" Ginny helping with my music as it inevitably flutters everywhere!
i miss pulling off the hardest classical piece of my life without a teacher's help
i miss playing a part for the world premiere of a very talented classical composer! :)
i miss having a reason to hit up Sam Ash for specialized gear
i miss the joy of finally ditching some of the sheet music
i miss my case getting more compliments than me or my instrument combined
i miss being told i'm effing awesome by drunken music aficcionados
i miss feigning coolness for a photo shoot
i miss finally finding the exact right riff to fit the puzzle
i miss enjoying studio sessions
i miss putting myself to sleep with my borrowed guitar
i miss bumming rides to practice. Wait, not really...
...but i do miss harmonica send-offs on the return trip home!


Oh, Music. I miss you. I hope you're doing well.
;)

[image fm adriano agullo]


PS, if you can identify all the songs used in this post, you win a copy of OneLessFrame's "Biggest Hits: Straight From the Creek." (Sorry, Mich, you are probably the only person who could win this, but you're also probably the only person who already owns the prize...hah :)

Friday, September 26, 2008

I cannot beg you enough: please don't drink and drive.

...because it is not an exaggeration to say that if you do so, you could end up dead, or in prison.

My cousin Joanna was newly engaged and about to receive her teacher's license, when she was killed by another woman who chose to drive after drinking. Today, almost a year and half later, that woman was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

As my uncle said,

"There are no winners in a court like this."

Antonia Ramirez: Sentenced to 10 years in prison


Joanna Dalton Knepper
September 4, 1982 - April 22, 2007

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Thursday, September 11, 2008

death is weird

Even for "the believer," who believes that death is only the gateway for being fully united with Christ, ...death is still weird. especially when it's unexpected.



As of last week, a college friend and her family are having to weather her father's taking of his life.

A few weeks before that, another friend lost one of her best friends to a lake accident.

Months before that, my pastor's sweet life ended her battle with a brain tumor.

About a year before that, my cousin's life was taken in a car accident.

And I just got a random message from the younger sister of my childhood best friend, who passed away from a severe asthma attack shortly after I moved across the country. Clearly, over a decade later, her sister is still processing the loss of Jennifer (naturally).


(huh.. clearly, over a decade later, I am too.)


I kind of feel like I'm in this exclusive club for people who have known and loved other people who died in unexpected ways, "before their time."


All I can say for now is, it's a weird club! It truly is.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

True Stories

I was sitting in a hospital waiting room once, watching people and wondering what was going on in their lives. (I find hospitals and airports are good for that, given you spend so much time just sitting, and waiting.)

I started taking notes in my journal, I'm not sure why, and at one point copied down snatches of a phone conversation being had by a woman nearby: "I hate this place...I know, I know, listen to me. I haven't told anyone else—I haven't told anyone else. As much as it would kill me, I would do that for you. I love her more than me."

I couldn't possibly grasp any of her meaning, of course, but the next thing I wrote in my journal was simply, she's in pain. And then I stopped writing, I suppose because I was either done waiting, or couldn't bear to speculate any more about what was going on in the lives around me. Probably both.

I think about that woman now, and wonder why she hadn't "told anyone else" about this thing that was clearly a source of pain. And I think about the man on whom I was waiting in that room that day, a man who used to be very sick with AIDS, and who is now relatively healthy with AIDS, and I think about how you could never, ever know a glimpse of his true story just to look at him.

I think about how no one could ever know a glimpse of my true story to just to look at me.

Truth is, I've become convinced that every person has a story that can't be guessed at from the surface—they're stories that need to be told, if only someone was willing to listen.

A woman I admire recently posed the question, "why, as a society, are we not encouraging people to heal?" It's a good question, and it's something I've wondered myself for years, ever since I realized I had true stories that needed to be told in order for healing to come to pass. I’ve wondered, because some of them are stories that I can still barely share, having experienced that most people either don't want or don't know how to receive them.

The question at hand is not why we are inclined to keep our true stories to ourselves, but rather, why are we so inclined to try to shield ourselves from the brokenness of others (and consequently discourage people from healing)? It's pretty ironic, given that I have yet to get to know a person and then find that they haven't been broken in some way, themselves.

Every year, my church does a series of Sunday mornings in which our pastor interviews some folks who have been broken in one way or another. It's largely done to be authentic to the reality that a life of faith is not “perfect”-Christian-flavored peaches 'n' cream, and that it's disingenuous (not to mention unhealthy) to pretend it should be.

As a secondary effect, I imagine it can potentially be pretty cathartic for those being interviewed. I know from experience, though, that being in such an exposed situation might be much more than cathartic; it might be absolutely, terrifyingly necessary. Which is why it makes me sad to hear of the occasional complaint that, "this thing you’re doing up there on the stage— it isn't church." If you can't tell your story in church, where people are supposed to “be like Jesus” and therefore love you no matter what you've done or what has been done to you, where can you tell it?

So I guess it's no surprise that, having no such directive to love unconditionally, the rest of the world tends to be wary of people’s true stories (or tends to assume that one can guess at these stories, based on surface appearances). And I’m sure social scientists could point to some cultural, spiritual or other sorts of trends that have led to such mindsets. But none of that is the point, is it?

The point is that socially, we are somehow shamed into silence, when we should be encouraged to be open. Take, for example, the many women enduring some kind of abuse or exploitation who don't seek help because of shame, because the pain they live in somehow seems better than the pain of being exposed. Some cultures actually even hold to the belief that a woman who has been raped has been shamed, and that she ought to prefer death to being exposed and bringing that shame to her family. It's an extreme example, maybe, but it all stems from the same root problem, doesn't it? We aren't okay with being up-front-and-personal with the darker elements of that woman's story.

If we want to be healthier individuals with a healthier society, we must become a society that encourages people to heal. And this can only genuinely happen when people feel the freedom to share their true stories. So yes, it will probably take working through a good deal of discomfort to first enter into a world of brokenness, whether your own or someone else’s. But the thing is, the sense of shame, and the silence it causes—they’re holding us back.

I think about the woman on the phone in the hospital, and wonder where her life is now. Has she been able to tell anyone?

[photo by rwangsa on Flickr]