slightly shy

I'm like Virginia Woolf but not as smart.

HOLY SHIT YOU GUYS I JUST TALKED TO SASHA FRERE JONES. Sorry for never getting over this.

4:02
Comment From Danielle 

Can I be real for a minute? I think the source of everyone’s strong hate-reaction is leftover and unresolved anger at some popular highschool girl. It’s the combination of passivity and success— the person who publicy refuses to engage yet clearly cares a lot. The lip implants probably don’t help either.

4:04

That’s a good guess. There is so much passivity in her work, the way she barely gets the words of “Video Games” out—that she may not even enjoy having wealth, hers or others, or success. It’s hard to watch someone get all the eyeballs and gumballs and not get a little excited, at least.

OH MY GOD GUYS SASHA FRERE JONES IS ANSWERING A QUESTION I ASKED HIM.

What.

Unless you deal with kids on a regular basis, you cannot grasp the degree to which Talia was being a motherfucker. She is seven. She likes to tell me that her mother allows her to do things which we both know her mother does not allow her to do. She is not a good kid or a bad kid. She is a child.  You can tell that there is a show going on in her head and she won’t show you all of it. She looks at you from the sides of her eyes. She will turn out fine, because she has great parents. She will turn out fine, because she has texture and she will have guidance.

We have to leave for school, and she won’t go. “I know you won’t leave me,” she says. “Don’t make that bet because that is a bet you will lose,” I say. Thomas and I do our usual morning race to my car. He is four and so I let him win. I will stop letting him win when he turns six, maybe. Talia waits by the window inside the house, looking out evenly at me. I feel like Winston Churchill, giving her one last eyebrow and a sharp finger pull toward me. She blinks slowly and calmly. “And we’re off,” I say to Thomas.

We drive away. Of course we only circle the block once, but I am filled with the silent almost-glee of justice. This is the juice that keeps you young. Maybe the things that we think keep us young are really just thematic notes we first feel vibrate throughout us in childhood. We are gone for maybe three minutes.

When I come back, Talia is crying on the porch. Suddenly, I am deflated. “I’m sorry,” I say. I am the nanny. I’m not supposed to make the children cry. But I also say “Next time don’t make a bet you can’t follow through on.”

Was that right or was that wrong?

Finally bought Q-tips today

JANUARY 31, A DAY THAT WILL LIVE IN INFAMY.

Seriously, the human body is magical and disgusting.

I can  make another person inside me. Oh my god, who thought that was a good idea?

Replacing Kanye West’s claim that George Bush does not care about black people, this is my new favorite political moment.

graspthesun:

This is still my favorite dance routine EVER

garfield poem

You guys remember when I said that all of my poems were going to be about Garfield? Here is the beginning of the end.

*  *  *  *  *

Beginning this morning, Garfield the cat
is on a diet, and last week he bought himself
a book by Camus.

“I’m tired of being a schmuck,” he says.
He has bought an Eric Satie album
to which he listens intently
during the long, empty afternoons. Secretly,
he is considering a beret.

After a month, Jon asks him
“How do I look?” and Garfield says
“Maybe it doesn’t matter if this girl likes you
or not. Maybe you should call your Dad.”
“Since when does a cat smoke cigarettes” says Jon.
“If life is worth living,” says Garfield
“you should take off that bowtie.”

Now, Garfield is sitting in the window,
watching Odie in the yard. He wonders
if Odie has ever felt heartbreak. What gold in his fur
in the afternoon light, but what does it mean?
Garfield barely even wants to kick him
any more.

Garfield has stopped keeping track of Mondays,
and has decided against the beret. Jon has made him
another appointment with the vet. Garfield is resigned. “This life”
he says “is ridiculous. If this is a joke,
it’s getting old.”

But still,  the days stack on each other. The vet doesn’t call
Jon back, and Garfield is reading
Wallace Stevens. Jon talks to himself,  and Odie, living in a four second bubble, sustains countless injuries,
but  Garfield says little,
appreciating the cadence of the days, and observing the loneliness
of our orbits. it is impossible to tell
if the joke is winding down. Garfield watches
the moon as he sits on the backyard
fence. He has stopped  looking for the end.

Continued

But sometimes I think “I had the chance to go to Princeton. And I blew it by telling Paul Muldoon that he was getting paid for the equivalent of teaching people how to go for a walk.

I literally said that to him.

17 year old me was either way smarter or way dumber than me right now.

I try not to think about this ever. I think about this at least once a day.

Continued.

To be fair, they kind of deserved it. I told them I thought teaching creative writing was useless.

And I still think it is.

I just know not to say it now.

The biggest confession I will ever confess on the internet

When I was 17,  I won an award from Princeton for poetry, and they paid for me to go eat lunch with the creative writing faculty, intending to offer me acceptance.

And I was a huge asshole to everyone there. I refused to read my poem out loud. I was… such an asshole.

And I blew it.

That’s what happened.