Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Lost Generation

I find myself missing the '90s lately. Maybe that is just my mid-40s talking, but with the recent '90s revival in fashion and other things, it seems like my teenage years are all around me. Except not really. Context is everything.

It's not that I miss that period of time historically or that I'm nostalgic for it.  I don't think it was simpler, it was just less fractured at a cultural level. (I certainly don't miss my personal fashion sense of those years...oy.  I was not a cool teenager.  I'm not a cool adult either, but let's just leave it there, hmm?)  I am enjoying my Doc Marten combat boots a great deal these days, however.  One of the perks of being an adult is being able to afford some of the things you couldn't as a teenager. 

It's more that I miss having common cultural touchstones.  GenX is the lost generation, if you ask me.  Everyone skips over us and goes straight from Boomers to Millennials.  Particularly those of us born in the late 1970s; the Oregon Trail mini-generation if you will.  I guess I get tired of that sometimes.  I want to be able to reference Pearl Jam, Third Eye Blind, the Goo-Goo Dolls, Dave Matthews Band, Hootie and the Blowfish, Collective Soul, Lilith Faire, Reality Bites, Life Goes On, Felicity, Saved by the Bell, CK One, coffee house culture, VHS and 8-track players, mix-tapes, and the pre-internet/cell phone days and not be met with blank incomprehension. Last fall, we had my husband's clerks over for a game night and played Apples to Apples.  Admittedly, our copy is about 15 years old, but I was surprised how many of the Zoomer clerks didn't get the pop culture references.  Demi Moore, people.  Michelle Pfieffer.  Sharon Stone.  And I'm not even particularly well-versed in pop culture.  I felt very old in that moment.

We are the generation who had an analog childhood and acquired a digital adulthood; we straddle the life worlds of Boomers and Millennials.  And now in our 40s and 50s, we are raising children and taking care of our aging Boomer or Great Depression parents.  Or grieving them when they are gone.  It's a busy season of life, a necessary one, a good one, but largely invisible.

I read Andrew Rannells' two books this past week; he is exactly the same age as me and grew up in the Midwest.  So much of the culture and touch points of his coming of age are familiar to me.  (Fair warning, his stories are very funny and enjoyable to me as a creative person who likes to perform, but his books are definitely not for everyone).  I felt the same kinship to Mary Harringon while reading her excellent book.  She is also exactly the same age as me and the context of her early adulthood is familiar in the same ways.  

One of the essays toward the end of Rannells' second book asks the question of how you mark time as an adult, particularly if you don't have kids.  That is to say, how do you know you are an adult if you don't have the so-called traditional markers of it?  It's an interesting question, marking time.  Our liturgical calendar and rhythms of family life are definitely the scaffolding for me, but I'm thinking more about internal markers.  

I sometimes wish I could go back and enjoy my early 20s more.  I was in such a hurry to be settled and socially awkward and insecure.  I'm still socially awkward but I'm working on it.  I felt a lot of pressure to be a responsible adult, to be financially independent and follow a quick narrow path to maturity.  It's been 20 years this year since I moved back to the States from Russia.  I don't regret the move there and sometimes wonder what might have been if I'd just taken the dead-end job I was offered after my original job ended and stayed longer.  

It is a dangerous slippery slope to play the what-if game, particularly in your 40s.  The major decisions of life are made, the path is relatively set.  Until it isn't.  If there is one thing characteristic of our current moment it is the basic instability of absolutely everything.  Liquid modernity writ large.  

Except that actually, my 40s are pretty great.  There's a certain sort of je ne sais quoi about this period of life, a kind of settledness within myself that I lacked at earlier ages (and wish I had had!)  I'm less afraid of things, more secure in myself, and find my horizons are much broader than they were previously.  The world simply is, and people simply are.  It is the way of things.  I'm tired of the us/them binary of so much public discourse, of the constant scare-mongering and catastrophizing.  We are all people just struggling through life.  Our most important job is to love one another.

For all that I am an historian and love to think about the past, I have always been someone thinking four steps ahead, often to my own detriment.  My recent reading of Charles Taylor's A Secular Age has given me some pause about that tendency.  It is a peculiarly modern thing to do--to push ahead with no regard for the present.  I suppose it is of a piece with trying to be anything other than what we actually are.  The conclusion I keep coming to is that we cannot go back.  

Taylor observes that attempts to recreate the past in the present are doomed to failure because they take something that developed organically and creatively and mechanize it, stealing the life from it (747).  We can never go back to a unified societal vision because once you introduce choice into a system, the mere presence of an option fragilizes those choices.  We are all Cartesian Protestants now.  

At the same time, however, we can anchor our place in the world by reenacting the patterns of life passed on to our by our ancestors.  These reenactments bring both the people who have gone before us and the patterns they enacted closer to us, gathering time, as it were (719).  The idea of gathered time (a pre-modern concept) is very interesting to me, as it tracks with my theory of Orthodox time and the idea of God existing in an Eternal NOW.  To this theory I would add the image of the world's time as gathered in the way that fabric is gathered.  Dips and folds bring the pieces closer together, but also fan out below to allow movement.  The gathering can be relaxed or tightened, depending on the need.  

Taylor goes on to note that our restless search for meaning and mythos is part of the human condition and that to try to subvert that restlessness will only set us back and ultimately cause more suffering.  To live in the discomfort is actually part of human flourishing (622). We must learn to hold the ambiguity of life within ourselves and understand that the tension will never be resolved, but that we can hold it lightly.  That meaning exists in the world beyond our minds and selves and is there to be found if we care to look for it.  

I suppose the back and forth of life is part of holding that tension within oneself.  I don't *really* want to go back to my early 20s, even if I could.  There is so much that has been hard won along the way.  In the meantime, I'll be listening to The Bridge by Red Hot Chili Peppers, Crash by Dave Matthews Band, and Iris by the Goo Goo Dolls whilst stomping around in my combat boots.  I'm sure I've still got a black ribbon choker around here somewhere...if you know, you know.

_________

Cited:

Charles Taylor, A Secular Age. Boston: Harvard University Press, 2007.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

The Soul Cages

Japanese Kintsugi (gold repair)

Kate Davies had a post this spring that discussed why mending is important, not only for creative practice, but for the health of ourselves, our world, our souls.  The post is taken from her 2019 book Wheesht, and I keep thinking about mending as a larger concept.  

(Around the same time, I had a discussion with a friend about where to start with a novel, and I said to start with a big question or theme you want to work through.  I've been a bit stuck about where to go with my next book, but after that question, and reading Kate's post: Physician heal thyself.  I've been thinking about some big questions since then). 

I think it is interesting to consider what resonates culturally, as it speaks to what our deep anxieties and unmet needs are.  From a quick perusal of some popular fantasy fiction (and by popular, I mean fanatic reader followings, with millions of books sold), I notice a few things.  First is the desire for intimacy, but not just with a romantic partner (although that is present), but the desire for intimacy in a family setting.  To be truly known by your family, and if not by your family of origin, then the family you construct in its absence or dysfunction.  

Related to the first, the second is the desire for unconditional acceptance by one's romantic partner and family.  In this unconditional acceptance is the idea that you stick through the hard times, through thick and thin.  I do find there is an element of fantasy there, as the thick and thin times in these novels tend to come from external pressures rather than from self-generated interpersonal conflict, but that's something to tease apart another time.  

Finally, there is a deep desire for an enchanted world, and a fight to be had against the forces of evil. That is to say, a world that exists on more planes than we can perceive or rationally prove, and that has a spiritual dimension to it that is real and life-giving.  In fantasy novels, the enchantment often comes from within the characters themselves in the form of magical abilities, but there is also a kind of magic in the air of these stories that exists as atmosphere.  

I'm also increasingly bothered by stories where the resolution of the conflict is found by the protagonist "following their bliss," even if it means blowing apart a marriage or family, or leaving a rooted community.  I fail to see how that can ultimately feed the soul and make for lasting flourishing.  A plant without good roots will wither and die, even if it looks good initially.  Plants thrive around other plants.  Similarly, a plant that is in the process of rooting itself in the soil will sometimes look a little peaky and sad, but if you give it some time and care, it will often flourish dramatically.  

The meaning in the metaphor is that living rooted in community is messy and difficult.  Relationships are never clean and smooth, and there are always people in life that you'd rather not have to deal with.  But I also think those people are there to rub against my thorny bits, to smooth over my ragged edges.  Does it feel good?  Absolutely not.  Is it good for my soul?  Absolutely yes.


The ultimate goal is God Himself.  To be so consumed by that relationship that it is validated and real--a consummation.  To ascend the mountain and find ourselves at the foot of the Cross, on top of Golgotha, the place of Adam's skull.  Christ voluntarily eats the apple of death in order to pour life into Adam's skull and so reveals the purpose of death: to transform that death back into the glory of Eden in self-sacrifice.  He asks us to die on purpose, to die to ourselves, to our will, to provide the seeds for the flourishing of the world.

This cracking open of ourselves in service of mending and flourishing is bound to hurt, bound be discouraging at times, even oppressive.  But the Comforter has come and if we can keep the summit in sight, instead of trying to eat the apple again and again, perhaps we can make a little more progress on our journey.

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

All This Without You Bonus Content

 

Good morning all!  I have a new website for my writing and artwork.  I plan to keep writing in this space about the things I usually write about, but if you would like to keep abreast of book news and other tidbits, maybe put the new site in your RSS reader?  

I'm planning to share some bonus content from All This Without You over the next weeks, and perhaps do a giveaway.  One advantage to sharing some of this content on a website is that I can link to some of the things mentioned in the book to provide a more sensory experience.

For today, please enjoy a deleted scene from early in the book, including a musical link.  

If you want to know why I used images from the Cave of Swimmers to make the page headers, you'll have to read the book!

Friday, February 5, 2021

All This Without You--pre-order available!

I'm chuffed to say that my book is available for pre-order!  The paperback version should be live for pre-order by Monday, and the kindle version is available to pre-order now.  



All This Without You will release on February 16, 2021!


Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Talking Tuesday: The Iron Woman


 The Iron Woman

 

She has

a durable coat

forged of iron,

made in the fires of life.

 

This iron

worn thin,

reveals

obsidian glass

grown brittle.

 

Beneath the smooth

black surface

a soft thing

swells with

sadness and joy

the Feelings of Everything.

 

~Juliana Bibas

Summer 2020

 

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Yarn Along: May

~knitting~


I finished my Stoker pullover sweater and....it doesn't fit.  It blocked out really big, and putting it through the dryer didn't really help that much.  The color does me no favors, and I just don't like it.  Blerg.


I finished a little gray hat, which fits just as I want it to.  I made the smallest size for once, and made the crown height shorter, and that seems to be the right combo for the way I like to wear these.


The Lightweight Pullover is progressing apace.  I nearly pulled it out to make an Owls pullover, but decided to keep on keeping on, and I'm glad I did.  I'm past the torture part (the 9" collar and raglan increases) and now just working the body.  I think it will be nice for late fall, assuming it fits well.

~reading~


I finished a bunch of Lenten reading right before Pascha, namely Father Alexander Men's Inner Step Toward God (very good), plus dipping into Meditations for Holy Week.  I read a chapter or two in The Benedict Option as well.  


I started in on St. John Chryostom's Marriage and Family Life after devouring Philip Sherrard's Christianity and Eros.  Sherrard's book is slim but dense, and his third essay is kind of bonkers, but the other three are well worth the price of admission.


After reading a snippet of The Wilderness Journal somewhere else, I decided to give that book a go next.  I say that with hesitation, as I did not care for her last book at all, but I'm willing to be open-minded about this one, based on what I read so far.  


I have a book by Czesław Miłosz waiting on my stack as well.


~sewing~

I made a couple of lawn dresses for Birdie from some of my old dresses, a begged-for strawberry dress (four years running now), plus a birthday dress for Ponchik (photos coming soon).  


I reused the pockets from my dress, which worked a treat.


This fabric (below) was my absolute favorite of all the Liberty lawn knock off dresses I've made, but I had to come to terms with the fact that a) the style no longer suits me and b) the dress itself was a bit long in the teeth after four seasons heavy wearing.  It was still good enough in the middle to cut down for a little girl dress, however, so I'm glad to be able to see this fabric on my girls for a few more summers!  I cut it long and it has 1" of hem that can be let down, plus the elastic could be let out.


Reused the pockets on this one too.


I made a strawberry dress for Birdie out of some Penny Rose fabric several summers ago, and she was super sad when it didn't fit anymore, so now I've had to come up with a new strawberry dress a couple years running.  Last year's strawberry dress went into Ponchik's drawer this year.  Birdie was super sad about it and asked for another.  So here is iteration number 3!!


It's pretty cute if I do say so myself. (I used Simplicity 8101 for all three dresses because a) they are easy and fast to make, and are super easy to cut down my old dresses for and b) the girls can dress themselves in these dresses, unlike the Geranium which requires a bit of input from me).  I also think the S8101 is a better play dress.


I also made another plain denim skirt for me, out of the leftovers from my Maudie skirt.  On the left is the Maudie skirt, on the right the new one.  It is slightly shorter and bit more pegged at the hem.


I lined the pockets with my favorite Liberty knock off lawn (that I remade Birdie's dress out of).  There are fumes of both fabrics left now.


I ended up having to take in both skirts last week, since the Maudie skirt had gotten too big, and the new one drooped weirdly in the back because of poor fit on the backside.  


Both fit much better now.  I also did a few alterations to some other things in my closet, but I'm not super happy with them.  My skirt situation needs some serious attention.  

~writing~

I'm still querying agents for the manuscript, and starting to work with feedback from beta readers.  (I plan to have another round of beta reading in June).  I sent off a query to FSG, which was terrifying. #punchingabovemyweight  #wayabove


~watching~

All kinds of random stuff I've seen before because I need comfort watching and nothing new is especially appealing.  I'm looking forward to The Spanish Princess on Starz later this month.  I have a couple of foreign films in my queue that I really do want to see, but I haven't been in the right headspace to absorb them properly, so I'm waiting to watch them.

Although!  I did go to an actual movie theater on Tuesday to see Avengers: End Game.  It was worth every penny--I won't spoil it for anyone, but it is a completely satisfying ending to the long story arc that the MCU has been working on all these years.  Well done!!


That's all for me!  Linking with Ginny for Yarn Along.


Sunday, March 17, 2019

Thrifting

You ever stand at the cusp of a moment that you know is the beginning of some kind of change?  But you don't really know what?  December 31 was such a moment for me.  We spent the holiday with some friends of ours in New York state, just over the line from Connecticut.  It was a marvelous few days, in a rustic setting, and there was a lot of unhurried conversation and general relaxation.  Our friends did a little dance party for the kids before we put them to bed (probably not the best idea, but it was New Year's Eve), and after, as most of the adults sat up and talked, I had a strong feeling that I was at the start of something.  I still don't know what that is, but I can feel it--change is coming.  I'm kind of holding my breath, waiting for whatever it is to happen.

For the past 18 months or so, I've been hard at work on my second novel (no news there).  This book has taken a lot of work, particularly emotional work, because of the nature of the story.  The characters go through some pretty tough things, and in order to write that journey, I had to travel that road with them.  Sometimes it felt like I was never going to get to the end of it. 

In January, I worked to some self-imposed deadlines, and then to some exterior deadlines, as I pushed to get the book to the point that I could pass it off to my three beta readers.  This meant not only a lot of polishing of the text, but I had to cut the novel from 170K words to 102K.  It was painful!! 

My goal was to get the manuscript to my readers by mid-February so that I could spend Lent working on query letters to shop the novel around, and also start developing my next book (I have three or four good ideas bubbling on the stove, so to speak, but have to develop and/or research them). 

I did meet my deadlines, and my manuscript is with my beta readers, but I'm at loose ends.  After having such a large portion of my creative space occupied by these characters and their story, it is strange to have them gone.  Sort of like saying good-bye to a long term houseguest.  I mean, I know I'll have to work on the manuscript again when I get it back later this spring, and there is still the arduous task of shopping the book around, but I'm no longer stitching the story from whole cloth.  I'll be doing alterations, to get the fit right. 

All that has meant that I've put sewing on the back burner.  The way back burner.  I find my sew-jo is kind of missing action (although I'm knitting tons, so there's that).  I have two dresses I'd like to make for late spring/summer, but that is all that is on my sewing list at the moment (and frankly, the dresses are optional).  I'm dithering about patterns unsure what to use, what will fit me best and suit me.  I  find myself reexamining my style, considering what suits me and flatters my today-body during this season of my life, which is one of almost constant churn (and lots of toast).

My winter clothes are mostly shop-bought or thrifted, and while I felt bad about it initially, I realized that there is a finite amount of creative energy in myself, and I've channelled most of it into the book, and the rest into my knitting.  In this cold season, that is a better use of my time. 

One of my goals for this year is to deepen my routines and rhythms, so that I don't have to think so much about them--I'll just do them.  This isn't a particularly profound goal, but it does mean a bit of mindfulness about how I spend my time at home, and about being emotionally present with my children.  They are moving into new stages, and that means different things for me as a parent. 

I know that these next few years are going to be a lot of churn for everyone and I want to make sure that my relationship with my kids is strong enough to get through it with them.  My goal is not to prevent their mistakes or save them from them, but to accompany them in their struggles, as they find their way to adulthood.  I hope to give them the tools to make good choices in their lives, and to build a foundation that they can lean on as adults, but I can't force them or control them in their choices either.  That has been an interesting lesson to learn, and one that I will need to continually remind myself of as they mature.

In a related matter, I've thought a lot these past weeks about what it is to love.  I think love is a radical acceptance of a person where they are, as they are, who they are.  Not to try to change them to suit yourself, just accompanying them on their journey, while you are on yours. 

This is a difficult lesson to learn.  I have special needs kids, and there is always in me the impulse to try and make my kids seem "normal" so that they won't stick out or be made fun of.  But that isn't who they are, and trying to deny that reality doesn't help anyone in the long run.  It's uncomfortable for me to be that radically accepting and loving.  But I know that I need to work more at it within myself. 

A lot of blather about not very much, but sometimes I find it helpful just to put this stuff down, if only for myself.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Yarn Along: December

~knitting~


A Carbeth!!  I wrote about my Shetland style arc last month, and I dove right into making a Carbeth pullover sweater shortly after.  I had unwound my Yellow Brick Road cardigan last winter, after wearing it a few times and not being happy with how it fit or looked on me, and was wondering what to do with the reclaimed yarn.  


I love having that color in my closet, but I couldn't settle on a pattern.  Then I realized that I could double the yarn and make gauge for the Carbeth, so off I went!  I didn't have quite enough for the whole sweater on hand, so I had order a couple more skeins, but this project went fast!  I would have been done in under a week if I hadn't had to wait for yarn.


I got it off needles on Saturday and promptly wore it to church on Sunday, without blocking it.  I loved it!!  I did block it on Sunday night, and I think the body of the sweater blocked slightly longer than it had been.  


I'm going to try and block out 2" from the body next time, as it looks better when it just skims my waistband, but the sleeves blocked out better than they were, and the collar is just right now.  It is superwash wool (worsted Swish in Jade from KnitPicks) so lacking that, I can always tighten it up in the dryer without worry.


I used Tasha's mods on the body to make it tapered at the waist, since boxy sweaters tend not to look great on me.  I'm quite chuffed with the result.  Also: it is super warm, and I am all about warm this season.

Weird action shot, but it shows the lines of the back neck nicely!
I also ordered some DK merino yarn around Thanksgiving during a great sale on Little Knits.  I was looking for yarn for Hannah Fettig's Lightweight Pullover, but I realized I could double it up for a Carbeth Cardigan instead.  I had gotten some yellow bulky yarn for it, but I didn't love the color, and this daisy merino is just what I wanted, so I swatched it yesterday and cast on last night.  So fast and satisfying--I'm really looking forward to wearing this one!


I'm still going to make the Lightweight Pullover--I'd bought yarn to make two, so I'll probably use the navy or purple yarn for that.  (Although I might end up with a navy Carbeth, who knows.  I have enough yarn for either).


I also darned Ponchik's mittens again.  I had darned them last winter with dark green yarn, so I went ahead and darned the new places with the same.


I should probably add that I gave away my Major John Andre Rivel to a friend.  It just didn't look right on me and while I liked how it fit in the shoulders and I found the process of knitting it enjoyable, I didn't like the way the body looked.  It looks fabulous on my friend, so I'm glad it has a nice home!!  I also gave my Gemini to a dear friend and it looks WAY better on her than it ever did on me.  I'm so happy about it!

~reading~


I finished Stasiland (excellent) and The Kremlin's Candidate (abrupt ending), and started on Jasper Fford's Lost in a Good Book (hilarious!) I also restarted Kristen Lavransdatter, although I am finding it slow going.  

I also just got this book: 

and I'm eager to read it soon.

~writing~

The big binder with the yellow post its is the messy first draft.
I'm in full revision mode on the novel, and finished integrating the first round of edits yesterday.  I'm making a big global POV change (from first person to third limited), so that is going to take a bit of doing.  I spent several hours yesterday on it, and my eyes were crossed by the end.  My next task is to print a clean copy and make an editorial map to make sure each scene and chapter has a purpose and that all the plot points hang together nicely.  

~watching~

First Reformed--excellent film, although the ending is kind of bonkers.  I wish there were more films like this that were really grappling with what it is to have faith, especially in our current age.  It's interesting to me that Paul Schrader is the guy asking these questions.  I thought Ethan Hawke's performance was great.  My only quibble (aside from the ending) is that someone did not do their homework about the Reformed Church.  No Reformed pastor is going to wear a clerical collar, and he certainly wouldn't wear an alb in the service.  And communion doesn't look like that.  I think someone was trying to make it look Anglican.  Which is fine, except the church is clearly Reformed!

Also watched Wings of Desire, which was a slow film, but worth it.  Lots of existential questions there.  I think I still prefer City of Angels, which is based on Wings of Desire, but they are both good.

There is a foreign mini series on Amazon that I recommend: Maximillian and Marie De Bourgone, which is about the late medieval period in Europe, and the conflicts between the Holy Roman Emperor, Burgundy, and France.  Fascinating to watch and extremely well done.

I think I mentioned Bodyguard on Netflix last month, but if not, watch it!  Richard Madden and Keely Hawes are so good in it.  It's also just been nominated for a bunch of awards, all well-deserved.

~listening~

Roman Hurko's Vespers album is wonderful.  I highly recommend it.  My secular playlist is a little sad right now, so I'm casting around for an album to refresh it a bit.  So far, no luck.

Linking with Ginny for Yarn Along!

Friday, August 10, 2018

All Bodies Are Good Bodies


I’ve long been intrigued by maps.  I took a class in historical cartography in graduate school and loved every minute of it.  (I considered focusing my studies on medieval maps, but ended up moving in a different direction with it.)  Maps have many layers of meaning, and ancient maps are coded with many different symbols and signs that provide a window into the worldview of the time they were produced.

One of my favorite quotes is about maps.  I’ve shared it here before, in an entirely different context, but I’ll do so again, because it is so beautiful.

“We die containing a richness of lovers and tribes, tastes we have swallowed, bodies we have plunged into and swum up as if rivers of wisdom, characters we have climbed into as if trees, fears we have hidden in as if caves.

‘I wish for all this to be marked on by body when I am dead. I believe in such cartography - to be marked by nature, not just to label ourselves on a map like the names of rich men and women on buildings. We are communal histories, communal books. We are not owned or monogamous in our taste or experience.”

~Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient

Recently, I’ve been thinking more about the concept of the body as a map.  I just finished reading an interesting, if slightly dense, book on corporeal feminism and philosophy called Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism by Elizabeth Grosz.  Some of the book is a bit dated, and I do feel that Grosz’ discussion veers off into unhelpful territories at times, but there have been some real gems in terms of thinking about the female form, at least from a philosophical point of view.

I’ve alluded to this a few times in the past couple of months, but I’m just going to come out and say it plain.  I’m profoundly uncomfortable in my body right now.  It’s a very weird place to be, because, paradoxically, I was in a more body positive place when I was heavier.

I’ve always been a pretty harsh critic of the image in the mirror (it is worse right now).  I’ve written pretty extensively about my struggles with weight, with body changes, the way I feel in my body.  I would say I even had a good sense of humor about my body’s quirks.  I suppose I thought it would get better if I lost weight.  I’m down 30 pounds and it isn’t that much better.  I mean, yes, I feel better physically, and yes, it is super nice to fit into smaller sizes and to be able to grade my slopers down.  But my body is still unpredictable and fluctuates a lot within my cycles (3-5 pounds every couple of weeks, depending on where I am) and my waistbands still feel tight at the end of the day because of gastroparesis.  I’m constantly frustrated by my body’s unwillingness to do anything “normally.”

I want to lose more weight, but I’m less motivated to work on the last 15 pounds because I know it will take another level of asceticism with my food life that I’m having a hard time contemplating.  Losing 15 pounds won’t change the basic shape of my body, or alter its composition or quirks or proportion.  I also think it won’t fix what ails me inside.

To be clear, this is about me.  (Because I’m narcissistic that way).  I am quite body positive about everyone around me.  I celebrate what My Body Model is trying to do with its message of body positivity and size inclusivity.  I love that Gretchen Hirch, Sarai at Colette, Closet Case Patterns, Sonya Philip, and other indie pattern sellers are trying to change the visual cultural ideal by using images of women of all shapes, sizes, and ages on their patterns and in their books and magazines.  I appreciate that Gertie slopes from a larger size and the proportions of her patterns are close to my own proportions.  I adore Gwendoline Christie, who is 6’3” and wore 6” heels to publicize a movie with her much shorter male co-stars.  I’ve already written about my girl crush on Tilda Swinton, who is probably my body positivity model.  Swinton: ‘A body is a body, and everyone has one.’

All bodies are good bodies.  (Rinse, repeat.  I need to frame this to remind myself). 

I think perhaps a lot of my own discomfort has to do with the gap between visual cultural ideals and my own body (I re-read this post while putting this one together, and it still holds up.  Much of what I’m noodling through here is just rehashing it from a different mental place). 

When the gap between my body and the cultural visual ideal was very wide (i.e. I was very fat), there was nothing for me to aspire to.  I knew that the visual cultural ideal was so far out of reach, why even bother about it?  I was talking about this with a friend with many children and she commented that it was kind of like being pregnant—you just can’t be bothered with living up to some unreasonable standard when your body is housing another human. 

Now that the gap is narrower, and I find I’m much more focused on the narrowness of that gap.  Because I’m human and I’m aware of the society in which I move and live.  I do try to be careful about my visual diet—I try to avoid shows and movies that are populated with Beautiful People, style magazines, and pictures of tall, thin people wearing clothing that will never look like that on me, no matter how much I weigh.  But still.  The visual ideal still lives in my head.

I had a sudden realization that what our culture really idolizes, and even fetishizes to a certain extent, is the idea of the body as a tabula rasa.  (Somehow, it always ends up back with Descartes, blast him).  The idea is that a person is born whole, pure, a blank canvas upon which to write; a disembodied mind carried around in a body that has little use beyond the decorative.  Setting aside the basic problems with this theory, let’s talk about the body as a blank canvas.  I remember when each of my children received their first scars—a mark on previously unblemished skin.  The scraped knees and elbows, the stitched chins and foreheads, the messiness of childhood, marked up on their bodies for the rest of their time on earth.  I felt a bit sad about it at the time, but now I’m coming to realize that it was silly to feel that way.  The marks upon our bodies show our lives.  It is unfortunate that our culture wants our bodies to remain unmarked, blank, unlived in, at least visually.  (One could extend this metaphor to the pictures with which we saturate our screens and magazines—homes are staged to look like no one lives there, stock photos of empty landscapes that appear uninhabited).  I don’t know about you, but as much as I find those types of images swoon-worthy, when I turn back to my real life, in my real body, in my real home, with six people inhabiting the space, the cognitive dissonance is enough to undo me.

Volatile Bodies has me thinking about the ways in which our intellectual framework for the physical body undermines a healthy view of it.  Starting from Descartes onward (as I said, it’s always down to Decartes), the thinking Western world has divorced the body from the mind, and placed the body on some lower inferior level, rather than seeing the body, mind, and spirit as an inextricably intertwined thing.  That it is all on the same level. 

I can try to change my own thinking about this, come at it from a more Eastern point of view, or even a pre-modern Western point of view, but I still have to live in this culture, in this time, with opposing messages and ideals.  It is impossible to ignore them.

Another point Grosz makes that I hadn’t focused on previously is that women’s bodies, rightly or wrongly, are culturally judged by their fluids, whereas male bodies are more culturally neutral (both from a purely corporeal aspect as well as a fluid standpoint).  To my mind, this makes for a lot of body shaming on the basis of things women have almost no control over, and shouldn’t be considered any more or less dirty than a man’s, but there it is.  It also reminded me of Mary Roach’s excellent book Bonk, which explores the connection of science and sexuality, and, in particular, sexuality in different cultural contexts.  She notes the differences in fluid preferences among different cultures, and the (sometimes bizarre) lengths that women go in order to conform to those standards.  She mentions that in places value “dryness,” women will pack sawdust or newspaper in their parts to achieve this, for example.  Can I just say this: all bodies produce fluid.  It is the normal and healthy way of things. 

All bodies are good bodies.

On the one hand, this whole thing is rather absurd: body image, our cultural obsession with a particular type of slenderness (starvation chic, shall we say).  For most of human history, people have struggled to have enough to eat.  It was only recently that slenderness became a visual cultural ideal.  In earlier ages, fatness was celebrated, envied, because it meant you had a surplus of food and could afford to eat more than you needed.  Recently, I read an interesting article on the depiction of mothers in 17th century Dutch paintings, and I was struck by how robust all the women are.

On the other hand, I see what our culture celebrates as normal and ideal in the female form, and I see all the ways I don’t measure up.  All the ways I cannot possibly measure up.  Gertie points out in her croquis book that the fashion industry standard is to use croquis that are nine heads tall (croquis are proportioned using the head as a unit of measurement).  The average woman is seven heads tall.  Just let that one sink in for a moment.  The visual cultural ideal that is being put out by the fashion industry is one that is physically unattainable for probably 98% of the female population.  Add to that the unrealistic way that our cultural standard bearers present themselves after major body-altering events like childbirth; is it any wonder that almost no one feels comfortable with their physical selves?  (And yes, I’m aware that celebrities are under an enormous amount of pressure to look “normal” again immediately after having a baby.  It’s just not right, for anyone). 

I read a mostly forgettable book a few weeks ago by Emily Bleeker called When I’m Gone.  One of the main female characters is described (in what I’m sure the author meant as a body positive thing) as a woman who prefers to eat cookies for dessert and sitting on the couch after dinner instead of fitting into a size 2.  It is clear the author wanted to make her character “relatable” by making her not skinny.  She goes on to describe the character as a size 10.  Well whoopdie doo.  Congratulations, you are still below the average size of American women.  Was that supposed to make me feel better?  Or like the character more?

I couldn’t help but think: this is what “fat” is to you, lady?  What if she were a size 12 or 14, or 16?  Or bigger?  Would she still be worth writing about?  Would her husband have laughed at her indulgence or would he have shamed her for it?  (In the book, her husband likes her fluff.  I have a hard time understanding how any woman who wears a size 10 can have that much fluff, if I’m being honest)

So what to do?

I can work harder on my visual diet—continue to be aware of what I’m putting in front of my eyes, about the images that provide a visual reference point for “normal.”  I can steer myself toward older images of women—those robust carriers of many children, those workers of the fields, milkers of cows, and generally hard-working women whose bodies reflect the lives they lived.  #lifegoals

I can seek out more body positive models.  It isn’t enough to avoid that which is bad for me; I should actively go toward that which is healthy and good.  For the ready-to wear that I thrift or buy new, I should stop shopping with clothing companies that don’t slope for my body type.  I’ve done enough thrifting over the years to know which brands tend to fit me well and which don’t (although be open to change—Target used to be a rank disaster for me, but they’ve changed their clothing game in the last two or three years and are using radically different slopers now).  I should stop torturing myself with brands and pattern companies that don’t slope for my body type (I’m looking at you, Boden and almost anything curated by Modcloth).  There is a whole other post I could write about the way that clothing companies make their clothing blocks and how that affects everything from the number size on the garment to the overall fit and feel of them.  Maybe I’ll get to that someday.

It is worth trying to think about the body in positive terms, so when I’m tempted to start parsing various things about my body that I don’t like, I put my hands over it, and remind myself of what that part has done.  “This belly has housed five humans.”  “These arms have carried four children.” “These breasts have nourished four babies.”  “These legs are strong and capable.”

The thing I’ve arrived at is two fold.  Number one is that I need to work on acceptance.  Acceptance that this body of mine is a map that has a lot of history marked on it.  That the stretch marks, the loose skin, gray hairs, scars, coffee-stained teeth, freckles, etc. are part of where I’ve been and who I am. 

Number two is to surround myself with other women who understand these struggles, and also women who have arrived at a place of body acceptance.  I’ve talked with so many women about these issues in the last few weeks, all at different places in this corporeal journey, and it was so helpful to hash it through with them.  The women who have learned to love their bodies gave me hope for the future.  The women struggling with post-partum changes, with peri-menopause, or just general life shifts that affect their bodies, commiserated with me, offered their thoughts and were generally so supportive of my own issues.

I suspect we all have someone or something in our lives that mocks our attempts at acceptance and contentment.  Maybe it is a relative or a friend, or a garment we loved to wear when our bodies were different.  Maybe it is just the magazines in the grocery check out line or the leggy skinny models on clothing websites.  Often these negative influences are not things we can excise from our lives.  My suggestion (and I make it as much to myself as anyone) is to dress to please yourself.  Wear clothes that fit now and feel good.  Don’t hang on to things for “someday.”  Don’t shame yourself with clothing that makes you feel terrible. 

All bodies are good bodies.

My great hope is that one day, perhaps some day soon, I can look at my body in the mirror, see all the contours of this map of mine, to see the marks of my history, of my tastes and experience, of my particular self, and be content.