Friday, December 2, 2011

it's a bright guilty world


Congress bridge at home in Austin at dusk.



Have I mentioned how much I love Austin?  Because I love it.  It has both the most music and the most Mexican Free-tail bats in the nation.  Okay, only the second one is actually vouched for.  But still!  Pretty awesome.

When I was little and we lived in Houston, my dad would come up to Austin all the time for business trips.  We would always go to Zilker Park and then go see the bats and that was pretty much my whole view of Austin—killer playgrounds with seal statues you could pretend to ride, and bats everywhere all the time.

Being home was the best even if it did mean I stayed up ALL NIGHT watching reality television and reading my brother’s scary books about the Amazon and researching shark-diving companies for reasons that will be explained later in this post.

Anyway: the future.

I received the official job offer in my mailbox today which means:

1.     I didn’t just dream it and think it was true and then tell everyone.  (WHAT IF THAT HAPPENED.)
2.     I am asking for all business attire and professional lady accessories for Christmas instead of, like, comic books and silent German films.*

That’s pretty much it, actually.

Here’s my job:

I will be a systems integration analyst for Accenture in their San Francisco office. 

San Francisco.  Obvi.


Here’s what it says I will be doing on the website:

“Systems Integration Consulting involves working in teams with other knowledgeable and highly skilled individuals, which makes for an enjoyable and productive environment. You will likely work on complex projects for international companies. They will look to you to help them define their needs and then design and implement adaptable yet predictable and easy-to-maintain solutions that support their strategic business imperatives.”

Which is all very vague which they tell me is de rigueur in consulting.

Basically I’m a baby consultant.  In a few years if it all goes okay I’ll be a real
consultant.  I’ll go around places and learn things and then in a few years tell other people what to do.

I have been reluctant to post about it because literally I have the same superstitions of like a third century pagan hedge-witch (whaat where did that analogy come from?  I have a lot of superstitions, is what I mean) and I was afraid that if I posted about the job it would somehow jinx it and the offer would be rescinded.

So here’s hoping it’s still valid tomorrow.

Anyways: San Francisco!  I’ve been there twice and it’s extremely lovely.  I researched it online and I was reminded of a fact that I had repressed after reading The Devil’s Teeth.   Instead of bats, it has the most and/or biggest (I forgot) great white shark population in the nation ever. EVER. 

And they are friendly!  You can pet them!


I pretty much have what I assume millions of people share because for sure something weird fuels Shark Week, and what David Foster Wallace pretty aptly named “an atavistic shark fetish.”  Like, I have regular nightmares about these guys.

I don't know why.  He's smiling!  He's all, like, OH HI!!!


Nope, I guess I wasn’t going anywhere with that. 

Anyway:  SAN FRANCISCO!!  

The setting of many a film noir.



In whose Chinatown the finale of one of my favorite movies takes place.

I am kind of flashing back to my Orson Welles phase and cringing, also. 



 So it should be fun and I'm excited and hopefully I'll swim with sharks and have dramatic sexy shootouts in halls of mirrors.


*Hahaha like I didn’t also ask for comic books and silent German films.

Monday, November 14, 2011

oh don't be such a dramanticore

I have read the book this is from exactly one million three times.
This is a picture of Loki, the trickster god.
He is contemplating his children and probably regretting his decision to have children with as many ponies and giants as he did.


So when I'm stressed these days I like regress to childhood/adolescence and consume all the same things I did when I was younger.  In this case, my shiny copy of D'Aulaire's Book of Norse Myths which has an introduction by Michael Chabon so I can pretend it's a super sophisticated thing to do.

(YES I'm supposed to be studying for a D and C test right now that is why blogging is so urgent.)

I was going to make a larger point about how I kind of like the Norse mythos more than the Greek one because the gods are in fact mortal, and they totally know how their lives are going to end--which is bloodily and terribly and mostly at the hands of each other, which you think would make things awkward but they all deal with it pretty well it seems.

And then I was going to relate it to myself and how I cannot even make decisions right now but then I realized THAT IS SO BORING THE MOST BORING.

Suffice to say--I'm almost afraid to write this because it might jinx it, but I heard back from that job I interviewed with today.  The HR person said I did really well in my interviews and she's forwarded my info to the official recruiters of the various cities to see if there's demand for me.

I should hear back within the next week.

Of course that is all contingent on me passing this freaking test and so graduating, so I'm gonna get back to studying/weeping with boredom.


Mostly weeping.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

just another future song


Good idea?  Yeah?

(What if I just listened to “Shake it Out” nonstop. ILU Florence.)

I got this email from the company that I interviewed with today, asking what my availability date might be and the my top three cities I might like to live in.

(Which is probably pretty good news—I mean if they weren’t even considering me, they probably wouldn’t care what cities I might like to live in.  Unless it’s part of a really cruel rejection policy where they get postcards from all the cities I put and write SUCKS FOR YOU YOU CAN'T LIVE HERE on them all and then mail them to me, which does seem a little unreasonable if just from a cost perspective.)

But so instead of being happy, because I obviously enjoy suffering, I instead launched myself into this weird stomach-turning vertigo spiral (which emotion is pretty much on my proverbial speed-dial at this point). I have like not countenanced actually graduating, much less getting a job, etc.  Not to be all angsty but for various reasons it’s always been kind of hard for me to actually imagine, like, any sort of good future at all.  So I couldn't even choose and instead just called everyone for advice.  

(Sorry, people I called!  You were very sweet and patient and helpful.)

Spoiler: I pulled myself together enough to respond.

I decided on:
            
            1. New York
            2. San Francisco
            3. Seattle
            3b. Minneapolis

So I guess we’ll see in a few weeks.  Even if I don’t get the job, which, I mean, let’s keep our expectations realistic, it was good to kind of start thinking about that sort of thing.

Also.

Here are some entries from the “Classic Literature in One Interaction” Series that Madeline and I have going:


She's like....maybe not.

Phantom of the Opera:

PHANTOM: HEYCHRISTINEI’MYOURDAD.
CHRISTINE: Awesome!
PHANTOM: I mean…let’s have sex?
CHRISTINE: Uh…nah.


Chose this one for a reason.

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde:

JEKYLL: I’m nice and awesome!
HYDE: JK LOLZ.
JEKYLL: Dammit.

Or more.

Pride and Prejudice:

DARCY: I’m a huge jerk!
ELIZABETH: Yeah you are.
DARCY: (leaning in and whispering) but a sexy jerk.
ELIZABETH: LET’S HAVE FIVE THOUSAND BABIES.


This is before Voldemort lost all his hair.

Wuthering Heights:

HEATHCLIFF. Man I’m a troubled youth!
CATHERINE: LALALALA LOOKITME.
HEATHCLIFF: Ohmigod I love you.
CATHERINE: Nope byeeeeeeeeee
HEATHCLIFF: Sadface. ANGRYFACE.
CATHERINE: LALALALA LOOKITME I’M A GHOST.
HEATHCLIFF: Ohmigod I love you.

OK YOU WIN EVERYTHING IS THE WORST.


All Cormac McCarthy:

CORMAC: Everything is terrible forever but at least I have this thesaurus.

Monday, October 31, 2011

well I remember halloween

my spirit animal.  (not power animal.  maybe.)

This week I defended my thesis and flew to San Francisco for a job interview and went to two haunted houses and dressed up as Marla Singer and saw my awesome awesome cousins and became addicted to Mac makeup and had a story published and made a playlist of Nightmare Before Christmas, Space Oddity and its covers, and 4 jillion hours of childrens choirs covering rock songs and rock bands covering opera songs and then listened to it for 4 jillion hours.

I want to write about these things but I'm a little frazzled, and there's also that Halloween marathon on.

Here are some other things instead.  Some of them happened.  Some of them I wrote down on a piece of scrap paper that I use when I'm working to kind of siphon stray thoughts or phrases, pensieve-style.

--What do you even do if this happens:

During my thesis defense, my advisor was telling me I needed to organize my graphs in a more clear manner, so it would be immediately clear what information I was trying to convey.

"These sort of [clear, punchy, aha-moment] graphs," he said, "is what we call in academia: the money shot."

And inside I was all like HAHAHAHA THAT'S NOT AN ACADEMIA TERM.

And then he just, like, kept saying it.

Should I have said something?  Pulled him aside later?  Just did what I did and have him keep cracking up undergrads?  WHO KNOWS.

--I cannot handle grown women wearing fuzzy hats with ears especially when they go on and on about how tiny they are among other unforgivable things.  I'm sorry I tried and I just can't.

--I effing love Halloween and haunted houses.  I like old horror slasher movies where the rules are so archaic and the acting so bad it's pretty much religious pageantry.

--San Francisco is beautiful; I think the interview went okay; I love the ocean and non-traditional gender presentation.

--Good luck to all delicate sardines in the Mediterranean sea.



Sunday, October 16, 2011

monster bio

I felt this picture worked thematically and added some much-needed classic hollywood sophistication. ha.


I’m supposed to write a bio for a monster story anthology thing published THIS HALLOWEEN.  It has to be 250 words or less.  I have to not sound like a giant soandso.  It was easy last time because I used a fake name and just made up some stuff.

So instead I’m watching Thor and getting all indignant like I knew I would because I realized I had not been really indignant like all week.

DRAFT ONE
All Bridgette Tuckfield wears is black and white; not on purpose.  She lives in Austin in her heart.  –Bot is her preferred diminutive morpheme for others.  She has shelves of rose-flavored or scented things sometimes she only eats one thing for weeks at a time like tomato soup or lettuce heads or peanut butter and jelly and ahhhhh.

DRAFT TWO
Bridgette Tuckfield experiences identity crises like twice a month but they are heavily exacerbated by writing bios

THREE
Is Tom Hiddleston kind of handsome?  I think he might be?  Is that an acceptable criterion to see the Avengers?  Why do I care about this.

FOUR
 Bridgette Tuckfield is 25 and graduates in December AAAH THAT’S SO PATHETIC.

FIVE
Why is it not Halloween yet.  Also, do I want more soup?

SIX
AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH^@&*#%@^&$&!$@&#

SEVEN
Man. Natalie Portman is giving it her all and it is not saving this movie.

EIGHT
Bridgette Day Tuckfield enjoys writing and monsters and graduating in 2011, in any order.

Yeah?  That last one?  Too clever-clever?  Too stupid?  This is the worst.  Maybe I just should publish under a fake name again.

Also: of course I want more soup.  Trick question!  I ALWAYS want more soup.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

who needs heroes anyway

Me.  And this is a story about me.  Doing what I'm doing in this picture--CREATING.

I just applied for This American Life to be an intern for the spring.  As part of the application (which turned out to be like novella length holy crap) you had to share a favorite personal story.

This was harder than it sounded.  I tried to brainstorm.  Has anything ever happened to me, I thought, mind whirling.  No.   No it hasn't.  Have I ever done anything interesting?  NO.  OH NO, I realized.  I've never done anything.  I've had no experiences.  I GREW UP IN A DARK ROOM.  I'VE LIVED IN A DARK ROOM ALL MY LIFE.  LIKE SOME HIDEOUS PERMUTATION OF THE GOOD OLD ALLEGORY OF THE CAVE. 

AAAAHHHHHHH.

Then I calmed down and called my sister who in general has a better grip on my own life than I do and she reminded me of something that happened when I was little, so I went with that.

And this is what I wrote:

When I was little—and all stories that start that way are pretty awful, like, just because you think you were precocious and adorable does not mean the rest of the world does, etc.—but so anyway. When I was little I wrote a story.

Scene: little girl, honey curls. Wearing the same white flannel printed with rosebuds so small they look like measles. My nightgown matches my doll’s that I still pretend to play with when other girls are over. Blue eyes that look black because her eyes are so small. For some reason—some assignment, some activity, I had to write a new ending to a movie or story.
             
I had my own desk then—white—and I knew I made a point of sitting at it to complete the assignment, calling my mother in at one point to see me working. The desk was a sticking point between me and my mother. We had absolutely no money then (although I didn’t know it at the time) and I had just basically prostrated myself to get this desk so I could do homework at it like a real adult. However, once received, I continued to complete most of my academic and epistolary business on my stomach on the floor.

So I sit down at my desk, marker in hand. Since I was writing something that would no doubt impact the world, I judiciously chose a narrow purple marker that was all business compared to the broad shallow points of markers better suited to coloring.
            
Well, I remember thinking, marker poised over paper. This will be easy—I don’t even have to think about it. There’s one story in particular that the existing ending just doesn’t do at all.



I was five when Aladdin came out, and I remember losing count after how many times I had seen it after fifty. (I’m not sure why I was keeping count. Was I proud? Did I think that was something to be proud of? Probably.) Aladdin, of course, being the Disney movie supposedly based off the tale from the Arabian Nights but in fact being just kind of an animated version of the 1940 Thief of Baghdad, with June Duprez and the inimitable Conrad Veidt.



This dude was Cesare in Caligari, and the inspiration for both Jafar and the Joker.  But I digress.



The plot of Aladdin: Rebellious princess with kind but dim father seeks to escape marriage to king’s advisor Jafar, falls in love with a plucky dude hard on his luck with a puckish sidekick, there’s a genie, the plucky dude saves the day and everyone’s happy.

(But I mean everyone knows this.)

At the end of Aladdin, when all seems lost, the character Jafar has gotten all these magic powers so he can do whatever he wants. According to the film, what he wants is piles of money, his old boss dancing on puppet strings, and the princess in scanty clothes and chains serving him.

Totes a kids' movie.  Didn't scar anyone at all.

But so anyway. At the end, Aladdin (the hero) comes and challenges Jafar. At some point in the fight Jafar turns into a giant cobra and fights Aladdin. Of course he is defeated, and Aladdin marries Jasmine and everyone lives happily ever after.

They are pretty cute.  But I was having none of it.

I felt very strongly about how dumb the ending of Aladdin was, and how I could improve it.

So, intent on contributing my vision to the world, I wrote my story. Shared my truth with the world in magic marker.

I probably took an hour or more to really complete the thing, wrapping up all the loose ends and doing justice to the aesthetic and the characters. Also I kept changing my mind about phrasing, so I had to marker out a good deal of the prose. It looked like it was heavily redacted instead of edited.

Once finished, I proudly called my father into the room to read my story.

Can we just pause and look at how cute my dad is.

My father is the sweetest and most supportive man alive. I remember him walking in and smiling, and saying, “Oh wow, I can’t wait to read this! What story did you choose?”

“Aladdin,” I told him.

“That was a good idea,” he told me. He took my colorful pages and started to read.

The clearest thing I remember—and this is one of those crystal memories decontextualized and bizarre in its clarity—is exactly how his warm paternal smile darkened with confusion and probably even a little disbelief and disgust, before he recovered his smile.

This is the closest approximation I could find.  Madeline and I call this his "daughter face."

“Huh. Ok. Bridgette,” he said. “This is really great. Let me show Mom.”

“Oh! Of course,” I agreed. He brought it downstairs, and a few minutes later I heard a sort of dark laughter before my mother came up and asked my questions about my story, being really warm and supportive while still trying not to laugh while my father just sort of stood there.

I hadn’t written anything scatological or sexual or anything outside a standard little girl’s cultural vocabulary.

This is a summary of what I had written: At the big fight in the end, in the movie, Jafar traps Jasmine in a big hourglass before he turns into a giant cobra. About halfway through the fight, Aladdin manages to break her out. That’s where I come in.

Jasmine, maybe or maybe not bearing the brunt of some projected feelings, decides right then and there that Aladdin is stupid and that Jafar is much cooler because he can turn into a giant snake.

Like, what more could you want in a man was my general thought I guess.

The whole hourglass thing (and preceding hour of narrative) was just kind of a misunderstanding. She voices this decision to Jafar, who’s all like, “awesome.” Aladdin voices his concerns about the development, and Jasmine tells him to shut up.

What a b.

Jafar asks her (politely) if she would like to join him in beating up Aladdin. She agrees wholeheartedly. As a sort of favor/surprise, Jafar also turns her into a giant snake. They beat Aladdin, of course, who runs away crying, while Jafar and Jasmine discovering a newfound respect and affection for one another. 

I mean they got along sometimes, right?

(ps don't google image search "jafar jasmine" for the love of all that is holy.)

At the end they get married. I can’t remember if they stayed snakes or not.

Probably they stayed snakes.

What I had written—creepy fanfic—solved a basic problem, for me.

Probably they might have felt more like this.

Everyone in the movie had had a happy ending. Except, as my young self noted, Jafar. Jafar was probably not the most jazzed with how everything played out.  And so I was not jazzed about that.

Basically designed with little girls in mind.  Oh god.  I just remembered I had a toy staff. 

I can’t really explain Jafar’s appeal to a young girl. He was flamboyant and femme and extremely funny, and used words my mom had to explain to me. But, he was obviously smarter than everyone else, and was pretty frustrated about his lack of power being proportional to how intelligent he was.

Also he could turn into a snake. And man, was I a little girl who loved me some reptiles. I’d often get excluded from playing “house” on the playground because I would insist that no house was complete without a resident velociraptor or dragon or, after seeing Aladdin, giant cobra.

Would have livened up a game of house, was what I held.

I like this story because it kind of instantiates a lot of tendencies and trends that would manifest themselves as a sort of themes in my life. 

I love little microcosmic moments like that.

This story of the story I wrote presaged my interest in fey sociopaths and weird power dynamics, and my willingness to forgive smart people pretty much anything. My absolute impatience with earnestness and physical beauty as values to be championed at all costs. My loving father consistently being horrified and bemused by his daughters. My absolute ignorance and later dismissal of what might come off as creepy to others, and my love of writing and sharing stories.

It’s a shape in a fragment in a fractal; inconsequential, revealing, ridiculous—like a ritual gesture in Noh theater. A specific angle of the face or fan in fact tells a whole history and future; a life in shorthand.

Everyone, upon reflection, has those microcosm stories because although people get wiser and more compassionate their basic drives and passions rarely change. 

This is one of mine.




 I may have been (still am) a little creepy, but I was the most adorable creepy dragon-girl around.



































Saturday, October 1, 2011

never sleep no nay never

I am still not asleep because I spent today with a migraine, which is not inherently interesting except that I get weirdly dissociative when these things hit about every six months and just in general act like someone who is on mushrooms all day. Which in this case included staying up all night curating my youtube favorites, because, priorities.

So here are the ones I watched again more than twice because I thought they were especially whatever they were:

Under the Great White Northern Lights aaaaaah this is the cutest.

WHY HAD I NOT SEEN THIS BEFORE LIKE LAST WEEK.

My first intro to Bauhaus. *cue nostalgia*  I bought the cd with this song at Tower when it was still there on the drag and I was fifteen.  Um though also this video is pretty sexy...so...be careful.

like...eighty-seven of the views on this video are from me.

Hal and Mario from the beginning of Infinite Jest.  THIS IS THE MOST FUNNY.  I DON'T CARE WHAT ANYONE ELSE SAYS.

except for maybe this.  no.  i will never stop watching this when i'm sad.  this is the pinnacle of the internet.

OK time to be serious again.

Karin is my other female role model.
love her.
Cocorosie.
bring me the disco king.

OK it worked; I'm too tired to post any more. :)