Thursday, May 22, 2014

what does love smell like?


My mom buys the grossest-smelling wax candle melts I’ve ever smelled. They’re all Better Homes and Gardens scents like Cinnamon Spice and Iced Winter Cranberry and Orange Cream Cupcake. Which, ok. If I want my house to smell like baked goods, it’s because there are in fact baked goods. Coming home to Buttercream Cookies wafting through the house, only to find an empty kitchen and no cookies and another wax melt on the warmer, should be illegal.

But the worst of all, the one I hate with a passion, is Line-Dried Linen. If you’ve never smelled it, this scent is like a field of cotton saturated in too-sweet perfume on a windless day, where the lack of breeze makes the scent stagnant and thick. Or like sitting behind a row of little old ladies in church with their perfume and hair spray and vague, moth ball smell. Basically, it gives me an instant headache. And mom loves it.

Every evening after dinner, and occasionally on afternoons if the house doesn’t smell fresh enough, my mother will drop two or three cubes of these wax melts into her ceramic, leaf-shaped warmer. She’ll settle down at the kitchen table, only five feet away, and read the newspaper in her bifocals. (Front page, Sports, Nation, Comics, and TV listings, like clockwork.) At which point, I’ll find an excuse to leave the room. While it’s impressive, the amount of superhuman strength she possesses in order to breathe in such proximity to that toxic scent, I never stick around to ponder it. I curl up on the couch with a stack of papers to grade, or on the green rug of my bedroom floor with my laptop, like I am now, and try to ignore it.

I’m sitting here right now, by the way, because Line-Dried Linen is slowly melting in her ceramic warmer. But this time, I’m home alone.

You see, my mother is in the hospital as I write this. The word echoes in my head on a loop, mom mom mom, settles in the pit of my stomach like a stone. As I cleaned the house, did the laundry, and scrolled through my tumblr feed, it was a stream of constant dread needling at me. She’s going to be ok, but I keep thinking, what if. What if her simple staph infection gets worse? What if the hospital germs make it worse? I once saw an episode of Grey’s Anatomy where a patient went in with the hiccups and died; there was another where a lady died of a staph infection.

So when I got a text saying they’re keeping me another 24 hrs L  the panic that had been floating quietly around me all day solidified into a lump in my throat and I put the damned Line-Dried Linen on the wax burner. It’s funny because you look around at all the reminders of a person—the trappings of a busy, meaningful (if cluttered) life like they indicate permanence. You say, well that’s her fleece jacket draped over a kitchen chair; those are her treasured violets in the windowsill, she’s not going to just leave them. She has to come back. But if there’s one thing we as humans should know by now, there is no life in things. They do not contain light, only reflect it like the moon. We can’t take them with us, and they can’t tether us here on Earth.

I never stopped to wonder what the Line-Dried Linen smells like to my mom until now. I don’t know if the convenience of a strong scent distracting from a dirty house is its main advantage, or if it reminds her of something special. Maybe she associates the smell with something special and rare, like I do the scent of jasmine and lavender. Maybe it’s the one moment of clarity in her busy, scent-rich day that jolts her awake.

Here’s what I know, as I sit here alone: the familiar, overpowering scent of a wax melt burning in an empty house, the hum of my laptop, the now-familiar dread sinking in my stomach. And this is what I think love is: burning a loved one’s favorite scent, throwing open the windows, and praying the breeze will carry it to them and guide them home.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

some thoughts: 4-6-14


Why do we hide who we really are?
Our hopes, dreams, true selves--

When they are burning bright within us,

Desperate to love and be loved

Twisting and curling in on themselves

As too much heat and ambition stifle them

 

Why do we hide, when we have so much to give

And accomplish

And dream?

Why is it okay to tuck our true hearts back in the corner

Of our chests, never to bring them out?

And we say: one day. One day, when

The world is different, or my family or life or

Society is different, then I’ll show who I really am.

Be who I really am. We say:

No one will understand; I don’t want to cause too much

Trouble.

In the meantime, I’ll just do this, be this.

 

And if we feel guilty, we tell ourselves

It’s for the greater good, that we’re sacrificing

For the sake of others, people we love.

People who will never know what we give up. But.

If they knew, would they really be proud of us?

Accept our sacrifice, like intended?

Or

Would their eyes soften, blurred with tears and regret

At the loss, hearts breaking for what could have been?

For their own loss, the things they had to give up too?

And where does that leave us?

In a circle of good intentions and incongruous outcomes

That plays on a loop

Drawn out like a scene from Tolstoy

With no end in sight. And when did this become our lives?

 

All of us carry around within us something precious,

Special, life-changing even.

But we lock it away;

We stumble in the ensuing darkness looking for an alternative,

But there is no substitute for light.

We all carry around lights within us,

Waiting to illuminate the world with joy

Goodness

Creativity

And love. And all we gain from shuttering it,

Locking it away,

Is darkness.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Someone called me a hipster today and I couldn't figure out why I was so upset...so I wrote a manifesto.

I am not a hipster. I care too much to be nonchalant. I listen to pop music and never download music to my iTunes but when I do it’s because the song makes me happy and brings up a specific memory. Like singing and dancing with my youngest cousin to Taylor Swift’s “22” this summer. And then I still fret over the $1.29. I literally have Spice Girls from 1998 or whenever on my playlist. And I don’t go shopping, but when I do I go to Goodwill and thrift shops and buy things I think look pretty on me. Sometimes they are trendy and sometimes they are not, and I’m proud to say at the ripe old age of 28 that I really don’t give a shit if anybody likes it. And when I’ve been good I splurge and go to Old Navy, which is so mainstream you can’t even deal with it. I don’t wear aviators or eat all organic and I would never, ever wear a white-girl indian headdress because hello, that’s just wrong. I hate Priuses and can’t ride a bicycle, and I’m 100% ok with that. I wear Converse but I also have patent heels and flip flops, and 9 times out of 10 comfort dictates what I wear rather than style. I couldn’t care less about what’s hot or trendy or hipster, but I don’t judge you on what you wear or listen to or drive as long as you leave me the hell alone. And I think that’s exceptionally fair. I don’t go to Starbucks or music festivals, but if I did I’d have a really good time and observe my surroundings like the freaking Discovery channel and still be polite. I don’t have a Mac because I’m broke and I refuse to buy something on the principle that it’s just cool, what the hell? I drive the same car that I’ve had since college and take good care of my things because they need to last a long time. I also don’t like change. I think ironic moustaches are stupid and you look ridiculous wearing cutoff shorts and combat boots and a beanie in winter, but it’s your body and if you want to freeze your ass off, that’s fine with me. But for the record, yes, you look like a dumbass. I like puns and things that make me nostalgic and summer. I love my job and helping people and making them laugh unexpectedly. I want to be a better person and change the world. I don’t like bad attitudes, and can’t stand when people care more about what someone else thinks than their own opinion. I can’t stand when people parrot back other people’s political ideology without really saying anything. I hate when people make assumptions about things and people they don’t know the first thing about. I don’t know everything, so I don’t pretend to. I don’t have an opinion on everything like it’s a matter of life or death and don’t talk just to be heard. I don’t say all this just to be mean, and chances are no one will ever see it anyway, least of all the people it’s targeting, and I’m not even going to lose sleep over it. My happiness and self-worth don’t depend on being accepted by everyone, but I do want to be understood. The thought of being misunderstood or misquoted causes me actual distress, and there’s nothing I can do about it, is there. Life goes on. I like skinny jeans, but I also like my Victoria’s Secret Pink sweatpants. I eat at McDonald’s. I shop at Walmart, and I don’t feel the need to apologize. I care about the environment and animal rights and the lower class, and I donate to charity. But I don’t go around telling people how to live their lives. I don’t endorse boycotts because I have a brain of my own, thanks, and don’t care what everybody thinks. I like vintage tee shirts, and some of my most prized possessions are clothes that have been passed down to me or given as gifts. I love gifts. I still wear a sleep shirt that I got when I was 10 years old, and it’s soft and familiar and full of holes I couldn’t stand to patch--holes I’ve earned. But oh dear. I like boys with pretty hair in skinny jeans and edgy jewelry. I like boys in beanies who take pictures of inanimate objects and post them on Instagram. Boys who go to music festivals and write novels on their Macs and do other things I can’t afford but don’t necessarily hate. I’m a sucker for longish hair and pretty smiles and awkward limbs accentuated by skinny jeans and sweaters. God, we need more boys in sweaters. I am absolutely gone for boys that show their personalities through their clothes and tattoos and iPods and shoes. I like boys that don’t just say they support a cause, but go to rallies and lectures and act. I don’t care if they drive shit cars or have holes in their clothes or wear band tee shirts I’ve never heard of. If they are quirky and polite and grounded, I am willing to overlook this. And maybe it's silly to think about this, because honestly, who cares what we wear? How do you define yourself--by your clothes, your music, your friends, your hobbies? Who cares what's hip and what's mainstream? Because here's the thing: at the end of the day, you have to live with yourself. You have to be proud of yourself and what you've chosen. At that moment, no one else matters. It doesn't matter if you listened to the coolest, most indie bands; it doesn't matter how skinny your jeans were. You matter. And maybe we don't tell ourselves, and each other, this enough, but it's true: you matter. And when it comes right down to it, I don't care if it's a hipster or a jock or a prep telling me that I made a difference--just that I did, to someone. You may not see me at Starbucks or camping out at Leeds Festival, dancing with a flower crown in my hair, and I definitely don't ride an old-school Schwinn bicycle. I won't be the one with the coolest, most up-and-coming fashions or undiscovered artists on my iPod. And I'm not, and will probably never be, a vegan. I'm too short and too average looking to make a bold statement. But I'm here too, and I care about what's going on in the world around me. It's one of my biggest goals in life to treat others kindly and make them smile. So if you see me, give me a chance. Underneath my average, un-hip appearance, I'm just like you, only different. And I'll look past your faults if you look past mine. Please and thank you, hipsters. --Caitlin

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Looking ahead...

I've been thinking a lot about the places I still want to go in my life. As I'm thinking about this, and about Italy as usual, I suddenly feel kind of...afraid.

The first time I traveled, after all, was ideal in so many ways because I had no real expectations or reasons to be afraid. I was nervous, sure, but at the same time, the fact that I was doing something totally new and brave gave me confidence. I boarded that first flight to Italy with unusual courage, and now, I wonder if I've lost it.

To be honest, just the thought of going on a family vacation out of the country makes me kind of scared. For whatever reason, where I once saw adventure and the thrill of a challenge, I now see anxiety and fear of disappointment.

But the thought of never traveling again makes me feel claustrophobic, like I'm running out of time. Because really, I do want to go to other places. I want to go to:

*Morocco

*France

*Wales (to trace my ancestors on my dad's side!)

*Israel

*Italy (of course)

*China, a la Paul Theroux in "Riding the Iron Rooster: by Train through China"

Also, I have to say that lately this desire to travel is even more urgent because I haven't been well. And the thought of illness dictating when and where I can go makes me feel claustrophobic all over again. Recently I found out I have a sleep disorder that has become pretty debilitating. I really want things to just go back to the way they were before, when I was in Italy. It's no coincidence that that was also the healthiest I've ever been. No wonder I want to go back.

Have you ever felt like all of a sudden, for whatever reason, the clock is ticking? That it's now or never if you want to change your life?

Sitting here in my house near midnight, it seems impossible that I could ever be in any of those great places I want to see. I can't believe my sleep disorder has affected so many areas of my life. Mostly, I'm afraid that I'M not the person I was before--namely, someone who could pack up and move off in search of adventure at a moment's notice.

I'm sending this out tonight into the blogosphere hoping that we'll all get to where we want to be--me, you, whoever you are--and that when we get there, it'll be even better than we imagined. Safe travels no matter where life takes you,

Caitlin

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

FAIL

Dear Microsoft,

Approximately seven minutes ago, out of the blue, you shut down my online grade book session and systematically denied all further attempts to restore my work.

You will notice that I have selected the option, "Don't send error report," because I don't want to send an error report, I want you to FIX THE ERROR. True, this is not the first time your substandard programming has vaporized my data, but it is the most inconvenient by far. I was in the process of posting 9 weeks grades, which I have been procrastinating doing for several days because computer spreadsheets are horrible, and all of a sudden, they're gone.

I'm not the kind of person to get all up in arms about a totally manageable problem; no, I refreshed my browser, exited out, and then restarted the computer when all that didn't work. And then I tried five more times, just to be sure. Because I'm thorough.

You are completely responsible for my breakdown in productivity tonight, and for any future penalties I may incur because I got behind.

And you know what else? Next time I am going to send an error report. I'm going to send like 500 of them, as a matter of fact. And they're going to be in IM speak or Wingdings or something totally pointless, if that's possible. And then I'm going to send a chain email to all of my contacts telling THEM to send error reports, and then I'll feel better. Thank you.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

things i still like anyway

They say that something's not really irresistible until it's officially against the rules. Maybe that's what happens in my case. Or maybe I'm bent on spiraling into self-destruction via a Top Model/Hostess cake coma? At any rate, at the ripe old age of 25 I realize I have acquired certain habits that are not up for negotiation. I like to think I'm open-minded and up for trying new things, but a girl has to know where to draw the line. So forget Lent and New Year's resolutions. Forget any magazines that contain the words "Health" or "Better" in the titles, except for collage-making purposes. Sorry, Women's Health. Adios, Prevention and Better Homes and Gardens. I'm doing just fine on my own, thanks.

So here goes, in no particular order:

1. I still like Coca Cola. This might actually be my number one. I could drink a Coke every day, and I will sacrifice my waistline and my dental health to keep consuming it. I don't know if the old myth is true about Coke, but I'm glad I wasn't around when the company reportedly included cocaine in the recipe. Not like I need to add fuel to the fire.

2. Watching Disney movies. Does Disney exposure give girls unrealistic expectations about love and values? Probably. Disney taught us that a woman has to be pretty and pliable to achieve true love. Pliable...like a Barbie with bendy arms and legs. Take a Barbie, and then give her a singing voice and a chipper attitude, and voila! The Disney princess. So she doesn't have any career ambitions or practical skills. She doesn't know a thing about current events. She doesn't really even have any brain waves. In the world of Disney, at least, she has an inherent value as a person. Er, princess. Doll...whatever. I don't care; I love the happy stories and sing-a-long tunes and beautiful ballgowns.

3. Junk food. At some point I just accepted that I was doing, and would continue to do, huge amounts of irreparable damage to my arteries, and then I penciled in "Junk food" near the top of my food pyramid and moved on. Even after Stacey's diabetic scare in the Babysitter's Club series as a kid, I knew that I would cut off my left foot before I gave up chocolate chip cookies and fried fish. Which may just happen if I keep it up. Long John Silver's can just owe me a prosthetic leg.

4. America's Next Top Model, Law and Order: SVU, Lifetime Original Movies, Tori and Dean, etc...Some reality shows, some classic dramas, I like to keep an open mind. Watching ANTM, I get the feeling that my life is not nearly as screwed up as I thought, yet I ignore the healthy impulse to change the channel and end up watching hour after hour. Oh no, she did not just imitate my signature pose! OMG did you see how much she ate today? Ignore her, she's a racist/snob/Southerner/third degree burn survivor who's always looking for a fight. It's glorious, even the blood-and-guts, scary, B-list cast scenarios of the Lifetime Original Movie. I can't get enough, and then finally something crosses the arbitrary line, and I change the channel in disgust, only to find myself wondering what happens next...Sure, I could be out rescuing abandoned puppies or writing the great American novel. But this is way more fun.

5. Comfortable, random clothes collected from years of thrift-store shopping. Some were great finds, and most of the rest are plain, broken in, outdated, you name it. So what if I eventually have to break down and buy a brand new shirt at retail price; 90% of the time, my random wardrobe is appropriate. Sure, it comprises many souvenir t-shirts from Laos and Florida bars and other places I've never seen, and several pairs of lounge pants with suspicious holes. There's something nice about slipping into something already broken-in and comfy, while imagining where it came from in the first place. Like Mom always said, just wash before you wear.

...To be continued...

Thursday, May 13, 2010

things i will never do...or never do again

I think that once I get started, this list could go on and on...but here are a few things that I will never, ever do, or in some cases, do again.

I will never:

1. eat cannoli. just the thought of it makes me want to throw up--which i did, violently, the last time i ate it.

2. eat maraschino cherries. trust me, once you taste fresh cherries, you'll never go back.

3. tan (in any form--tanning bed, laying out, spray tan, etc). yes, i know i'm pale--very, very pale. i don't care how attractive tans are; i'm more interested in healthy skin.

4. take a gypsy cab the first day in another country. they charge twice as much. they also can't drive. (shudder)

5. watch scary movies alone. final destination? what. was. i. thinking.

6. tease my kid (or any kid) about their weight, looks, or hobbies. people who won't let their kids be who they want to be should not perpetuate the human race, period.

7. deny myself a piece of cake, a nap, or an hour of brainless television.

8. visit any gas station restroom along Arkansas highway 14. trust me, they're very, very bad.

9. double park. i hate when people do this.

10. drink tequila anywhere i could be recognized. along those lines, i will also never again wear anything cherished out to a bar.

11. pretend i like Nicholas Sparks.

12. criticize someone who works hard for a living, no matter their profession.