~*Ramblings of Fyre*~


Saturday, June 04, 2005
The weekly recap

Well, usually I'm more inclined to write several postings and put them all up on one day, but this week has been rather eventful and instead of trying to segregate topics that have run together in my mind and circumstantially overlapped, I'm going to just do a recap and try to break it down by day.

Bear with me.  Following you get a day by day with the titles I would have otherwise used, if I had created individual entries.

Memorial Day Weekend, or Shoot the Cat and Kill the Fish

Last weekend my landlord and landlady went out of town.  What this means for me is that I am tasked with the daunting responsibility of giving their diabetic, arthritic cat hypodermic shots of insulin.  Apparently, I am the only one brave enough to do this, so I do.  Thankfully they pay me (or deduct it off my rent, either way, I am compensated for this task).  I also feed all three cats and their (then) four fish.

The unfortunate part of all of this was that the large fish, the old fish, the one that Lynne is most attached to, was dying and had been sick for quite a while, so I found a note attached explaining, in detail, what I was to do with this fish in the event that he did die.

Well, all was fine until Sunday night, when I found the fish floating in the tank, near the bottom with its back end flopped over.  I assumed the fish was dead and stuck, so I thrust the net (and my hand, that tank is big) into the water to try to snag the fish.  It seized when I tried to net it and I realized that maybe, just maybe, the fish was not, in fact, dead yet.  When I looked, however, the fish was still floating in the same manner and not moving at all

Now, at this point, I had to draw on my knowledge of death and, in this situation, I called upon my favorite movie from my childhood, Stand By Me.  One thing I learned from that movie is that when you find a dead body, the appropriate response is to poke it with a stick.  I didn't have a stick, though, and that's kind of funky when you think about it, so I poked the fish with the net...  several times.  Finally (and I don't know, but maybe the poking acted as CPR), the fish started breathing visibly.  I apologized to the other fish in the tank and left knowing that the big fish was not going to make it through the night.

I came back the next morning to find the fish still in the same spot, in about the same situation, so again, I poked the fish.  This time when I poked it, it floated to the top of the tank so I could fish it out, wrap it in several layers of plastic and put it in the freezer.

RIP Apollo.  You are, so far as I can gather, the third death to affect me in May.  I am much less on edge knowing that the three has been satisfied.

Tuesday, or He's a bastard...  or not

I thought that we had plans over the weekend.  With the open mic looming in the very near future, I was starting to worry that my songs had only been heard by family members (and one phone concert).  Though I had initially wanted help picking out which songs to play, I had worked that part out.  Having thought the plans were for the weekend, having thought that, once again, I was blown off, I was ready to flip out and be the FyreGoddess in a tempered rage.

Imagine my surprise and disarmament when it was explained to me that there was miscommunication and we were, in fact, on for tonight.  I offered an out, which was brushed aside and spent a fun and eventful day at work.

That evening, I cleaned the house and prepared for company. 

(A side note that ties in later...  I also returned the key to the now-returned landlord/lady and we had a discussion about how much I wanted the three bedroom flat two doors up the street from me that I have been pining over for YEARS.  This will be explained, but I think that Fate was listening in...  as she is prone to do from time to time.)

The plans were set earlier in the day for around 8pm, which came and went, but I wasn't too concerned, people run late all the time.  I had offered the out which was not taken, so how could this be yet another instance of being blown off?  Around 8:45 I decided to nap.  Woke up at 9:15 and now was convinced that this was ridiculous.  People do not treat other people this way and goddammit, this is unacceptable.  Drunken Liz is excellent to vent to, but not so good for voice of reason advice.  Instead of going to bed, I had some food, another glass of wine and attempted to watch a movie.

The phone rang around 11:15.  It was (now termed, by Liz) "The Bastard" calling to apologize for forgetting about me (oh come on now, how is this even possible???) and to say that he was on his way.  He came by near to midnight and stayed until after 1.  I felt better about the upcoming open mic.

Needless to say I did not finish watching the movie which has been sitting on my DVD player for over a month now and should really go back to Netflix.

That night, I got 4 hours of sleep.  Ugh.  But I'm a big girl, I can party ok, this is not tragic.

Wednesday, or Why I need to fix the pickup

Mostly an uneventful day at work.  I invited the people I considered most likely to come to the Open Mic, to the open mic and spent the day wishing I could play my guitar all day long.  I tried, after getting home, to stay away from the strings so I didn't blister up before a performance and succeeded as well as can be expected, making sure to tune and practice before heading out the door.  I got there earlyish and signed up for later than I realized.

Happy surprise to find that Mother Judge was hosting the open mic.  This is someone I have known for probably 20 years, who was a second mother to my brother and has been a wonderful friend to me.  I thought that she had stopped hosting the open mics at this particular bar and she had, until about two weeks ago.  Brilliant!  So comforting and soothing to have this level of familiarity available to me.

What few friends actually made it there (not for lack of trying, I will give that up), made it before I went onstage, which was good.  They all did Courage with me, a tradition I have had for just about as long as I've been going to open mics, which is impressive since so few people in this world can stomach Jagermeister.  I'll say about this crowd at least (though it doesn't apply across the board) my friends ROCK.

So the pickup in my guitar is broken and has been for as long as this guitar has been in my possession.  As a result, since I didn't want to play with (*gasp*) someone else's guitar, I wound up having to mic my guitar.  This was not a problem, Caroline said that we were good and the sound was as well.

I should rephrase.  This was not a problem for the audience.  It was, however, a problem for me.  The monitors were such utter CRAP that I could not hear my guitar.  At all.  I could, however, hear my vocals, which would be fine if I hadn't spend the entire time I was onstage wondering if I was singing in the right key.

Convinced that I sounded horrible and rather embarrassed if that was the case, I ran offstage and back to the comfort of my little safe band of friends...  who were properly supportive and enthusiastic.  Caroline said "Give it up for FyreGoddess" and then...  I can't even begin to describe how much this next part means to me...  told the crowd that I sounded amazingly like my mother.

In my mind, in my life, when it comes to music, there is NO HIGHER COMPLIMENT than the one I was given in that moment.  I was lauded by my friends for my voice, my range and my songwriting, but coming from Mother Judge, who knows and has performed with my classically trained mother...  Words simply cannot convey it.  I am still melting over that.

We stayed at the bar until a little after 2, just hanging out and chatting about everything.  It was GREAT.  My buddies decided to grab some pizza, but I had a longer walk in the opposite direction as them and so decided to head on home. 

I was accosted shortly down the street by an old man asking me what I played, what instrument was on my back (you mean the instrument in my guitar case?  Yeah, it's a fucking fiddle).  I hate this question, it's always so contrived.  So I told him it was a guitar and he asked me if I could tell he was a musician too...  a drummer (yeah, I could tell by the fact that you're not carrying your drumsticks???  WTF???).  He proceeds to tell me that it's his birthday and I wish him a happy one.  He just turned 50.

Then...

"Can I tell you something?  I'm not usually attracted to caucasian women, but there's something about you.  You have a beautiful smile.  There's just something about you.  I just want to lick you."

At this point, I attempt to make a rapid getaway.  As I'm speed walking down the street, he shout after me "Just your big toe!  Let me lick your big toe!"

The worst part about this whole thing is not that it happened, but the fact that similar things happen to me all the time.  And people wonder why I don't like walking home by myself.

Maybe I am brave, afterall.

That night I got three hours of sleep.  Ugh.  This is getting ridiculous.

Thursday day, or Folk is Folk

We went to work late.  Thank the gods for that.  The extra half-hour or so must have made a difference, though I was still dragging ass.  The day was mostly uneventful at work until the afternoon.  Jason had told me about an open mic being held there in two weeks, so I called the organizer to sign up.  Of course, over the wall, they heard me signing up and after catcalling me for not having specifically invited them to the open mic the night before, they proceeded to sing Puff the Magic Dragon and If I Had A Hammer as loudly and off-key as they could.  (If you actually clicked those links, I will not apologize, you still have no concept of what I, personally, was subjected to, but you're closer than you are if you didn't.)

I explained that not only was that not the type of folk music I played, if I were to play it I would ROCK IT OUT, at which point I was subjected to a hard-rock version of Puff.  Good grief, I don't like being a target for this crap.  They ask me "Well, what do you play then?"  and I make the mistake of saying "Ask Murray."

Because (fuck you, Murray), he decides to tell them that I did a kickass rendition of Kumbaya at the open mic that night.  At this point, I decide to make my exit and go for a smoke with a couple of friends in the office...  one of whom attempted to come to the performance and had come the evening prior to help me get ready.

He, being the smartass he is, asks me "Why didn't you play me the songs you actually performed?  I didn't get to hear Kumbaya."  And, after several further smartass comments decides it would be a GOOD IDEA to sing Kumbaya in the hallway at work, which later elicits comments to me of "Was that you singing earlier?"  From numerous people.

Yeah, and these are the friends who DON'T suck.  Pity me.

Thursday night, or Poke me with a sharp stick

Mike and I decided to see Crash at the Spectrum after a conversation at the open mic the night before.  Now, I had decided to NOT see this movie after reading the Filthy Critic's review, passed on to me by Murray, but after Lauren's recommendation (coupled with many drinks and a shared love of all things Card), I reconsidered.  Another factor in this is that Mike is an excellent movie buddy, something I have found to be rare these days.

Since we had both been up obscenely late the night before, we determined that we were going to take turns poking each other with a sharp stick to wake the other one up as we passed out in a darkened movie theater.  This was not necessary, since the movie was thoroughly engrossing and rather woke us both up from our sleep-deprivation-induced comas.

That review is utter crap.  It was an excellent movie.  I laughed, I was horrified and my cake was damned good.  Reminded me of Robert Altman, whose tedium I enjoy...  only it was shorter...  and less tedious.  I highly recommend this movie, but I warn you, if you see it, the laughter is awkward, and almost feels guilty and inappropriate.  Racial tensions is a difficult subject to tackle, but this was done with tact, humor and a grain of salt.

Sushi for dinner and another late (but not overly late) night.

I'm sleeping, but I'm starting to have a rough time of it.

Friday, or Fate works in mysterious ways

More mocking.  More Kumbaya (and again, I say fuck you, Murray).  Work was work and I got home WAY late.  But, and I had no idea this was coming, the best was yet to come.

I think this is the best news I have gotten ALL YEAR.  The three-bedroom flat with hardwood floors and a walk-in closet has FINALLY come available!  And I am next in line!  I move in in two weeks and I will have two weeks after that to accomplish this.

It's all very exciting.

Conclusion

So there you have it, the week in review.  I'm sure you voyeurs will forgive me for not writing other entries this week since I have had no time, no sleep and ridiculous amounts of non-motivation in terms of the internet.

Don't expect this to happen often, since it took me several hours to download (so to speak) the entire drama of a week, but it's been therapeutic.  Lesson learned from the post several back, hit the "Save Draft" button as often as you can.

If you made it this far, my dears, you are more patient than I am...  at least you are if you did it in one sitting.

Now I'm off to find someone...  anyone to celebrate with!

~FG };^>

Posted at 19:00 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Sunday, May 29, 2005
Well off the radar

I've been thinking about the mainstream these days and I've come to a conclusion.  It is my belief that television serves to attempt to define normal to mainstream America, while movies try to spotlight that which is deemed unusual.

I was never really able to relate to much on television.  Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed the shows that I watched, but never were they something that I could say "Yeah, I've been there".  Even movies, though, spotlighting those unusual people and unusual situations were few and far between that I could directly relate to.

I went to see Off the Map this weekend.  I told my mother that I like movies about kids with unique upbringings and this one certainly fit the bill.  While I wasn't raised in New Mexico or on a farm, the similarities between Bo's young life and mine were rife and obvious.  I found myself smiling and the early image in the movie of Bo, living with free spirit parents who had no money, reading Forbes magazine.  I, personally, used to watch the stock reports.  When you grow up without money, you want to know as much about it as you can.

The behaviors and situations in the movie were very close to my memories and I find myself nostalgic since seeing it.  The review I read essentially panned the movie and as I read it, I found myself wondering if this woman was raised in a stable neighborhood, went to public school, had all the things kids take for granted like a television, an allowance, a brand new bicycle on Christmas morning.  These experiences are the sorts of things that most people assume just happen, but I can tell you from experience that there are more of us who were raised like Bo (or something similar) than anyone actually realizes.

You have to understand, I was raised in a VW bus by travelling street musicians.  At least, that's the summation that I've come to embrace.  Hippies...  no, free spirits who helped to foster my imagination, a father who hitchhiked to work and a mother who preferred herbal remedies and never (to my memory) *bought* a birthday cake from the store.

Do you pity the idea that much of my childhood was uninfluenced by television?  That the box was thrown out on a regular basis?  Don't.  I met people and had experiences that others can't even conceive of happening to someone as young as I was.  My imagination was cultivated and encouraged so that I didn't NEED preformed images or the stylings of someone else's amusement.

I learned things before I was 8 years old that some people don't learn until their 30's or later.  I knew things that have since become cultural icons to my generation, well before it was time for them to enter the spotlight.  I was shunned and outcast as a teenager until people realized that I already was what they wanted to become - my own person.  As an adult, now, I am often mocked and teased, but it's done in a friendly loving manner (most of the time anyway, rarely with malicious intent), and I can see that people appreciate hearing the stories of someone whose upbringing, whose life they can't even really conceive of.

For the most part, these are not even things that they cover in movies.

So I find myself looking for...  not validation, but perhaps looking for empathy, looking for those others who are off the radar, who know the difficulty of taking the amazing childhood and the unique upbringing and becoming a sane, whole, healthy person.  Maybe sometimes even one who is more whole, more sane, than those who are repressed like they were trained to be and deny themselves the joy of being fully their own person, whatever that may mean.

~FG };^>

Posted at 11:52 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Friday, May 27, 2005
I don't *do* messages

Snotty as it sounds, it's totally true.  I don't really do voice mail/answering machine (do people still have those?!) messages.  I listen to them, I reply to them, but I rarely, if ever, leave them.  Usually, if I do it's because I've already called a couple of times and in these days of Caller ID, I might as well tell you WHY I just tried to call 5 times, even if it was a stupid reason.

There are reasons for me not leaving messages, though.  It's really more for the sake of others.  As you may have noticed, simply from reading the blog, I have a tendency to ramble.  FyreGoddess IRL isn't all that much different than internet FG.  Frankly, if anything, I think I'm more subdued and tactful on the internet.  Seeing what you're about to say is a lot easier than running it through your head before the words come tumbling out of your mouth.

But we are talking about messages.

This tendency of mine to ramble comes out strongly when I start talking to the dead air of the recorder.  I start off simple and with a purpose, but the runaway train that is my thought process just jumps the track suddenly and without me even realizing it.

"Hey, this is Fyre, I'm just calling to let you know [whatever I was supposed to let you know].  Thinking about it, though, I'm starting to think that maybe [alternative to the set plan] and you know, when I was talking to [random person] earlier, s/he suggested that I might want to [something completely unrelated].  Did I mention how much I enjoyed [doing that thing or having that conversation].  So, um, yeah, that's why I called.

OH YEAH!  I almost forgot, and I wanted to make a point to mention to you that [irreverent comment about some strange thing only I would ever come up with].  And make sure that you tell someone else that [further irreverency]..."

And on and on and on.

Last night, Allison and I were talking about this phenomenon.  It seems to be some kind of a Virgo trait because I was a victim (from another Virgo I know) and Allison was explaining to me about a friend of hers (go on, guess her sun sign) victimizing others.  I quietly and embarrassedly (??) admitted that I, too, am one of those people.

These days I work to curb that sort of thing.  I have two pat messages stocked up for such occasions.  One is specifically for those few (ok, let's admit it, that ONE) friend(s) who never answer the damned phone.  That message is simply "Dammit!"  The other is for the few who have not yet been subjected to either the rambling voice mail or the speech about the rambling voice mail, simply stating "Yeah, I don't do messages."

What strikes me as odd, though, is how few people who get that second message actually take the time to explain to me that telling them about how I don't *do* messages is, in and of itself, me leaving them a message, pointless though it may be.

I think that if no one had caller ID, I would never leave any messages at all, except the ones I practice beforehand...  and the ones where I just say "Dammit!"...  Who am I kidding, if there was no caller ID I would leave way more messages, and I'd probably be a lot better about it.

As it stands, you know someone called.  You know it was me.  Would you rather I tie up your voice mail for 15 minutes or just call me back to find out whatever it was that I wanted in the first place?

~FG };^>

Posted at 10:54 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  

Flowers are like pets?

This is an incredibly interesting article about how human emotional connections have led to the evolution and cultivation of pretty flowers.

I kid you not.  Fascinating read.

~FG };^>

Posted at 08:52 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  

*sigh*

Wrote for an hour and the program stopped responding.

Good grief, it is now *officially* Ordeal Week.  Dammit!

Eventually I will talk about how  HOLY CRAP, dude, he was on FIRE.    For now we will say nothing more than Bully Hill makes a cheap, but tasty wine; Jason R0XX0RS!  for the little stupid things; and holy crap he was on FIRE!

*sigh*

Some of the things I was saying were important...  and poignant.  Worth attempting to write again for sure.  Tonight, though, it's time to sleep off the cheap red wine and attempt to not have a clusterfuck of tomorrow.

Just a minor note, for the record...

I like it when you voyeurs come out of the woodwork.  Comment, people, I like to know where those hits are coming from.

~FG };^>

Posted at 00:12 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Thursday, May 26, 2005
Suck ass week.

It still hasn't stopped raining.  I can feel it in my mood.  I usually like the rain, at the very least I don't mind it, but this rain just compounds all the other crap that is going on.

This week I have been mourning and grieving, worrying, dealing with the fuck-ups of others, I've been blown off, I've been stood up and I really want to pick a fight with someone, anyone at this point.

It has come to my attention that people are actually reading my blog...  and yet, I don't really feel like censoring myself in the hopes of not offending someone or not being true to my own thoughts.  Voyeurs, the lot of you! 

I'm pissy, I'm tired, my whole body aches.  I feel like ordeal and drama is permeating every aspect of my life right now, which sucks, because until Friday when I got home from work everything was going so well!

I need a good solid distraction.  I know that I'm hoping that, for tonight, Star Wars will suffice and, I'm sure, during the actual movie, it will, but with so many other things outright SUCKING ASS, I'm definitely concerned with how long it will actually last.

Even my music is becoming difficult to take comfort in for a million different reasons.  I have blisters on three of the four fingers on my left hand, so playing is actually painful physically and I haven't picked up my guitar since.  Probably better to let them heal instead of literally playing 'til my fingers bleed and not being able to play for a week.

I loathe promises.  Almost (but not quite) as much as I loathe apologies.  I can't be the only one to have noticed how often the two go hand in hand.  Promises lead to apologies most of the time. 

Yeah, and the Ordeal happened on a Wednesday.  Fitting, isn't it?

It really needs to stop raining.  Literally and figuratively.

~FG };^/

Posted at 10:13 by FyreGoddess
Furthermore... (1)  




Monday, May 23, 2005
Always looking for distractions.

I have come to realize that these days I am desperately seeking distractions from whatever real things are going on in my life.  Working insane hours and exhausting myself, fighting with a very close friend (although "fighting" seems like quite the understatement) and peeving at another, death touching my life, it all just wears on me.

Amanda told me the other day that she had never seen me be *such* a girl about a boy before.  Probably because I never so much needed the distraction.  It's a relief to let myself yammer on and on about something silly that, in the grand scheme of things, makes little to no difference at all.  Even when I am worrying or sad or frustrated, I can take comfort in the fact that, as of right now, none of that matters.  The things that do matter, the drama and the pain, those are the things I know I can't avoid, they are the things I know I can't get rid of, but sometimes I just need a break from the drama.

I have tried so hard for so long to rid myself of messy drama and *just* when I think it's gone, it comes tearing right back again.

I am so tired.  I am completely worn out emotionally.  I haven't yet shut off, I haven't become entirely cold or emotionally stunted, but I'm starting to become afraid that it will hit me again soon.  It's a pattern that I fall into periodically, but I don't particularly want to do that again.

They say that things like deaths or births or marriages happen in threes.  I don't know if I truly believe that, but I am superstitious enough to be rather on edge waiting for another one to come down the pipes, since this month has brought two that touched me to varying degrees.

Throwing myself into my music with the goal of performing again.  It's the only distraction that seems to work at all right now.  Hopefully it will be my lasting lifeline to sanity, because right now I feel pretty on edge.  I'm not wanting to walk off the cliff of despair, but this middle ground isn't really the best place for a picnic either.

Dammit!  And I had such a nice week last week.  At least I can say that things were happy and light right up to the moment I learned about what this week would bring.

You know, the rain doesn't help any.

~FG };^/

Posted at 11:23 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Tuesday, May 17, 2005
Gen X - What is it that defines us?

Thanks to Belit for permission to use her words here  (originally posted on the Stratics Off-Topic Forum):

Revelations and Generalizations:

GENERATION X

Sounds so blah. Doesn't it? It's no wonder why most of our generation is so damned apathetic. But it's bigger than that.

We are the generation stuck between the "Save the World" 80's and the "Lookin' out for Number 1" 90's. We were the first exposed to the opening of closets and people loud and proud about their sexual orientation. We have been bombarded with information that all previous generations wish they knew at our age.. so make sure to forcefeed the next generations!
We have witnessed the fall of televised christianity. And then people wonder why we are more apt to follow non traditional religions. He have been burnt out before we even got a chance to try.

We are the information age. We are the generation if instant gratification. If it can't be done in five minutes, we don't want it. It's like I try to explain to my hubby... he is a conventioal oven, I am a microwave. He is slow, and deliberate and patient. I need to have it done yesterday, and I have very limited patients that is usually reserved only for my children. We have seen the aspects of war that most people cringe, and to us, it is no big deal. We live in the age medical miracles. We know that if we go into the hospital for a major surgery, we are going to wake up in a few hours and be fine. We have become numb to most, if not all sorts of violence. It is shoved in our faces every day. It doesn't matter if we want it or not, it's there.

We have been pushed and pulled in all directions by the folks who "know what is the best" for us. We haven't really been allowed to make our own mistakes and learn from them. So you wonder why we are so immature about certain aspects of life. You wonder why we make so much noise, but do so little about it. You wonder why we don't want to grow up and why most of us refuse to.


I am not making excuses for anyone, especialy not myself. I do not make excuses for myself, nor do I appologize when I know I am right. I am just trying to make my voice heard. Are my words falling on deaf ears? I hope not.


Me too, Belit.  Making your voice heard is so important for people of our generation and yet it's something we don't do nearly enough of.  The defining points in our upbringing and in our childhoods were watching the radicals of the previous generation sell-out and focus on money.  We watched the Challenger explode and the space program (or at least the public interest in it) peter out.  We learned from the children of the 60's that even with the best intentions, you cannot change the world, at least not for the better, and even if you succeed a little bit, not for very long.  We learned from our parents that they would fall into the same lines of thinking as their parents did, judging our music and hairstyles and clothing styles harshly and we learned that when we became parents we would do the same things.

We watched as AIDS was discovered and named and we watched a child of our generation, Ryan White, die from this virtually unknown disease.  We listened in our classrooms as our teachers explained the importance of condom usage and then watched on the news as the politicians explained to our parents that easy access to such important things was inappropriate for people too young or too self-conscious to go to a drug store and buy them.

We watched as our peers attempted suicide in numbers that infected pop culture and made the news.  We watched our peers become teen mothers in greater numbers.  There was still shame, but less stigma.  No longer were these young women sent away, they remained in our classes with us and then disappeared to have/raise the baby.  We watched as our parents divorced with alarming frequency.

We watched as the world changed drastically around us, through no doing of our own.  We heard stories of the changes directly affected by our parents, but, as far as I can tell, we didn't reap any benefits from that. 

We are MTV, we are cable, we are cordless phones and pagers, we are early computers.  What defines our generation is nothing we've actually done, but the things that were done around us, as Belit states, at a rapid pace.  Things changed faster than our parents could keep up, but we could, and we did, but we did nothing to create it or to even coax it, we were always just along for the ride.

We learned that everything has to be newer, better, faster, NOW and, for the most part, we are often impatient over everything.  So much changed in our world as we grew and now that we are grown we have come to expect that these things will, no, should still be changing at the pace we choose.

We take things for granted that should shock us, but we take them in stride.  We are jaded and bitter, but accepting.  We all know that we won't likely see a dime of our hard-earned Social Security, but we've known that for a while.  We will care for the larger number of people in the previous generation, but we do not expect that the generation behind us will do the same for us...  I think most of us doubt that it would ever even cross their minds.

We are a small generation of watchers.  We grew up hearing that one day we would run the world, and maybe we will, but we won't do it alone, and we will still be the minority.  We gather wisdom from witnessing and judging that which goes on around us.  It's not that we're apathetic, it's that we're powerless, and even if we're not, we've been made to feel so, simply because we have had NO SAY in the changes in the world for as long as we've been around.

So we accept things.  We watch things going on around us.  We pay attention to the world and do what little we can to feel like we're contributing, but what we're really doing is watching.

We are the babysitters.  We will tell anyone who is willing to listen exactly what's going on and why.  We accept that no one will listen and that our hands are tied, but we will continue to talk about it until it makes some difference.

In some ways I feel like we're the ones who really know what's going on.  For good or bad, for conservative or liberal, for peace or war, we're watching.

Isn't that nice to know?

Doesn't that make you paranoid?

~FG };^>

Posted at 12:18 by FyreGoddess
Furthermore... (3)  

Temperance...

I have a penchant for melodrama.  I also have tendencies to overreact on a regular basis.

It is not the end of the world, it never was, and even though I sort of was acting/feeling like it was, I always knew it wasn't.  It's just the way I operate.

Too many things to think about.  Too little patience for letting things run their course.  Too much time on my hands.  Too much time fantasizing about what could be, whether or not it actually *is*.

These are the things that will eventually destroy me, of that I am sure.  These are the things that do, on a regular basis, serve to destroy parts of me.

I'm feeling more jaded than I was three days ago.  I can feel myself starting to chill emotionally.  This is a cycle that I fall into fairly often and, while I always come out, I come out just a little closer to bitter than I was before...  but sweet and bitter are opposite sides of the same coin and too much sugar is not good for anyone.  As sweet as I can be, as sweet as I often see life as being, I think that a little bitterness from time to time is probably good for me.

I need to learn patience.  I need to temper the way I operate and how I act and react.  Now is as good a time as any to start putting forth conscious effort into being better at not rushing things, futile though that may feel/seem/sound.

Temperance is the word of the moment.  Learning to accept things as they are, want though I may for them to change, I cannot control the world.  I know this, I have always known this, but I keep losing sight of it.

We are ever-changing, ever-evolving people - all of us.  I just don't understand why it's so difficult to make the conscious changes when the subconscious and unconscious changes happen with such frequency.

Let's try riding it out and not overthinking.  Let's try letting go of the thoughts that so often consume me.  Let's try something new.

It's time for a change.  Temperance is a good word.

~FG };^>

Posted at 11:53 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Saturday, May 14, 2005
Those grapes were probably sour anyway.

Broken hearted.  He didn't call.  I don't want to go out by myself anymore.

This sucks all around.

I just want to cry.

Here, have an excerpt from my latest song:

Nobody ever lives happily ever after
Those words from fairy tales, they only feed our dreams
And so we fall asleep with visions of Prince Charming
But in the real world, who really knows what that means.


~FG };`^<

Posted at 23:07 by FyreGoddess
Your thoughts?  




Next Page

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
As destructive as life,
   as healing as death;
An institutioner of strife,
   just as prone to bless.
It is all that is good,
   but with an evil trend;
As it was in the beginning,
   so shall it be the end.
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*







<< June 2005 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
 01 02 03 04
05 06 07 08 09 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30


Contact Me

If you want to be updated on this weblog Enter your email here:




rss feed







 Links:

 Friends and Family:

 MySpace - Where my music is.
 This is where the music gets recorded.
 Chicks Dig Villains - HotBadGuys.com
 They call him Jason...
 Beerbloggers.com
 The Anonymous Blog
 Just Parizad
 Jon'Spot


 Things we do when we're bored:

 Stratics Off-Topic forum (registration req.)
 Nationstates - Create your own nation.
  • See my Nation.
     Cutting edge techie news - Wired.com
     Digg.com
     People You Might Meet On The Internet
     Post Secret
     Astrology Zone.
     Anonymous Message Server
     Boxerjam.com
     Where I get to be a superhero

     Older essays and entries of interest:

     Ponderings on love...
     Opening the psychic channels
     Running away from home
     Wishlist
     Woman of extremes
     The listening conundrum
     ...and then I fell into a hole.
     The coming Robot Rebellion
     What makes a great blog?
     I enjoy being a girl, Part I, Part II
     12 years ago... 12 years later.
     Things you're not supposed to do...
     Talking to strangers
     Well off the radar
     Gen X - What is it that defines us?
     There are certain words...
     Wednesdays... the explanation.
     Giant Mutant Bees
     Perfect Moment
     Gossip vs. News
     Internet Crushes

     Useful links and information - get informed, stay safe:

     Stop sending me chain mail!
     Virus threats and responses.
     spamNEWS - how to fight back
     Eschew Obfuscation!



    Blogging-related stuff: