29 August 2008

Certitude

Project Blog It

Freedom from doubt, especially in matters of faith or opinion; certainty.

In asking myself what I am certain of, I realized that the only true answer I can give is that there is very little of which I am certain. Certitude requires absolutes, and I’ve never been fond of absolutes. They pin you down, lock you in, and can limit you. I want freedom to be fluid in what I think, how I am, and what I believe.

And yet, certitude is one of those wiggly concepts, itself unpinnable. The minute I say I can’t be certain of anything, I realize there are in fact things that I am certain of. I’m certain that I love Thai food. I’m certain that I want to live in Europe at some point in my life. I’m certain that there’s value in being a decent human being. What I realize in making this list though, is that these certainties are time-specific. I am certain now that I love Thai food. I am not certain that I will always love Thai food. And so on.

So, if my certainty is time and context-specific, is it really certainty. Does certitude need to transcend any qualifiers to be certitude? I’m not sure.


Please check the blogs listed on the right for companion pieces to this week's prompt. Road Trip Girl will be posting late over the next couple of weeks as she is being true to her name and is currently on a road trip!

Next week’s prompt: movement

22 August 2008

The Function of Art

Project Blog It

The beauty of art is that it is, at once, both utterly functionless and completely filled with function.

Art is (perhaps) inessential to sustaining life. I don’t rely on it to feed, shelter, or protect me. But it does sustain the mind, the soul, and the heart.

Art is a reflection and a product of a context, a culture, and a history. And it’s a reflection that remains flexible. Art is able to shift and move among cultures, contexts, and histories while still remaining relevant.

Art’s function is to be that touchstone whereby the individual as well as the group sees itself reflected, finds a way to communicate ideas, concepts, feelings, experiences, and finds a way to challenge, honor, and comment on the very state of being.

Art is powerful and wonderful, and yes, even essential in its inessentiality.


Please check the blogs listed on the right for companion pieces to this week's prompt.

Next week’s prompt: Certitude

15 August 2008

The Other Seven Dwarfs

Project Blog It

Surly views the world as the primary source of personal torment. Rather than “whistle while he works,” Surly, in a nod to his increasingly anti-social tendencies, wishes he could WFH (work from home) permanently—so long as the other dwarfs stay down in the mine.

Sassy’s joy in life is to throw his attitude around in a mildly biting, but amusing way. Rather than selling all of the diamonds he digs from the mine, he’d rather set them into shiny pretty things to wear and catch peoples’ eyes. He was much happier before Snow White showed up and got all of the attention.

Sleazy was never more happy than when Snow White came along. Living for so long with six short men put him on edge. He spends most of his time finding excuses for climbing ladders to clean ceiling fans and change light bulbs just so he can get high enough to peak down Snow White’s blouse.

Snarky finds Snow White annoying and useless. With the other dwarfs constantly mooning over her, nothing seems to get done. He wonders why Snow White can’t at least clean the cottage and cook dinner rather than sing and dance with wildlife all day.

Sarcastic likes to comment on the “shortcomings” of the other dwarfs. None have been successful in winning over Snow White. You know what they say about small hands and feet. And Sarcastic believes Snow White clearly knows too.

Snarly is generally pissed off. He can’t understand why seven men with an unlimited supply of diamonds have to live together in a woodland cottage and perform manual labor every day. His dream is to live a life of leisure aboard a yacht in the Mediterranean with Snow White all to himself.

Superior is the shortest of the dwarfs, and yet he can’t help but look down upon them all. Snow White may be beautiful and charming, but Superior knows he can do better.


Please check the blogs listed on the right for companion pieces to this week's prompt.

Next week’s prompt: What’s the function of art?

08 August 2008

Strawberries

Project Blog It

When I was a kid, I often wondered if eating fruit seeds would cause fruit trees to grow in my belly and pop out of my nose, ears, and mouth. This wonder actually started out of fear after accidentally eating an apple seed. I was taught not to eat apple cores and seeds. I, being a naive child, believed that we weren't supposed to eat the seeds because doing so was somehow dangerous, rather than the true fact that apple seeds simply aren't appetizing. On the school playground, I inadvertently swallowed an apple seed and proceeded to enter a mild state of panic thinking I had done something wrong. My classmates warned me that an apple tree would now grow from my belly.

This wonder about eating fruit seeds eventually became a mildly amusing joke--eating the seeds of anything would incite some comment about foliage sprouting forth from ones innards. I am not unique in such humor. It seems that jokes about plant life growing from within the human body are a collective cultural experience, something parents, aunts, and uncles tease children about.

I still occasionally joke about trees and plants growing from my body. I often eat the seeds of fruits, partly because I kind of like them, and partly because I'm too lazy to pick them out, watermelon being the prime example. I love watermelon. I don't like seedless watermelons. And so I eat the watermelon seeds, only passing up those that fall from the melon on their own.

To be honest, I sort of like the idea of plants growing from my ears and nose. How convenient would that be? Simple reach around to the back of my head and pick a ripe apple. If I timed my fruit consumption right, I could harvest various fruit crops throughout the year. When my apple limbs were finished producing, I could pick cantaloupes from the vines growing out of my belly button, and so on. Although, admittedly, it might be difficult to carry around those heavy watermelons.

Ultimately though, I know that fruit trees and vines do not, sadly, grow from the human body. Cat bodies, however, are another story entirely. A few weeks ago, I fed my sleek black cat some strawberry ice cream. This wasn't strawberry-flavored ice cream. It was the full-fledged, all natural, real deal, with fresh strawberries and lots of strawberry seeds. Kitty loved it, lapping up every drop and cleaning the saucer. It wasn't too long after he ate the ice cream though, that I noticed a change. He seemed to swell a bit, and he rolled about as if someone was tickling him from the inside. Within a few hours, I saw thin whitish curls emerging from his ears. I thought he had worms, but those curls soon turned a deep shade of green and unfurled into leaves that matched the green of his eyes. By morning, strawberries had sprouted from the vines, now wrapped about his neck, belly, and tail. A giant strawberry hung from each ear like a set of earrings, and a whole cluster dangled from the tip of his tail. My cat, rather than finding this situation disturbing, seemed delighted. He merely had to turn his head slightly to take a bite of the luscious strawberries that decorated his ears. By the time he'd finished one, another had grown in his place.

I have to say, his shiny black coat, the bright red of the glistening berries, and the deep green of the vines that match his eyes made a beautiful portrait. He looked like the quintessential cat peeking out from the bushes. The only difference is that he was now also the bush.

Kitty continues to produce berries and eat them with gusto. It's actually made my job as a pet owner easier because I no longer have to put food out for him. But I gotta tell ya, it sure would be nice if he'd share.




Please check the blogs listed on the right for companion pieces to this week's prompt.



Next week's prompt: What are the names of the seven other dwarfs?


01 August 2008

Pure and Utter Nonsense

Project Blog It

Like Ivory, I can only, at best, achieve 99 44/100% pure and utter nonsense.

I am utterly incapable of fully freeing myself from what I believe to be an appropriate level of reserve. But there is that 66/100 of a percent that gives me hope that I can overcome my Puritanical tendencies and engage in unbounded absurdity now and then.


Why did the chicken cross the road?


By definition, there is no sense in careless silliness. Ludicrousness is consummately undiluted and uncorrupted.


The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain.


I bought a cup of coffee for two dollars and no cents.

Me sense of smell is nearly nonexistent. My olfactory system, far from impeccable, has no sense.

I used to feed my dog Purina. It would have been unadulterated all-out preposterousness to feed him anything else.


Please check the blogs listed on the right for companion pieces to this week's prompt.

Next week's prompt: Strawberries

Seventeen Wrapped Up

Seventeen years ago we made a decision. A decision to try to build a life together. It's been a typical seventeen years: joy and happiness and love, coupled with struggle and pain and frustration.

It's been a life, a very typical life, shared.

Seventeen years ago we made a decision. It was the right decision.

Happy Anniversary Francois, and thank you for bringing magic to our lives.