a re-introduction of sorts: hi, hello, it is 2022, and i miss the internet

// Tuesday, February 22, 2022

today, in things that make me feel old: i do not understand this blog editor and also, i may have fucked up my theme slightly. (what are blocks? if i add a photo will it look stupid, or will it work? do i need to resize my photo before i upload it? is the internet smart enough now that it won’t matter? why is my sidebar font big by default relative to my post text? what did i do when i coded this child theme 5+ years ago??? why do i only remember what pixel-sized fonts mean and have no lingering knowledge about what 1.5rem means?)

which is to say: hi. i do not know what i will write here. i do not know how often i will be here, and i don’t have a plan to have a plan for this space, other than i want to be in it more often than i have been the last few years. I like that this is a domain I own. I bought ~fancy business cards~ from Rifle Paper Co. because I wanted to remind myself that I am a person who writes; I am a writer; I like typography and nice layouts and while my layout is currently questionable (yes, i am essentially right now acting as if this is LJ in 2004, deal), I want to have a spot that is mine on the internet. I feel like I should clarify that nothing about this is or will be a business; I just got the cards because I wanted them, and have wanted them for a long time. And also because I am old now, I got suckered in by a sale.

since i last wrote in this space, i’ve gotten married and moved cross-country back to the east coast. it has been wonderful, and weird, and somehow it is still a pandemic even though in may of 2020 it was still easy for me here in this space and out of this space to think that by now, in february of 2022, we’d be back to “normal” which now feels kind of laughably naive.

i don’t know what this year will bring, but i’ve read 27 books so far and i’ve cut out a sewing pattern and i’ve started 2 hats. ideally i all also cut fabric and finish two hats, but: i am trying to remember that it is worth counting the small things as well. not everything needs to be about only finished things.

so with that: i need a screen break. hi. welcome. here’s to doing the thing, whatever that means.

hi

// Tuesday, June 16, 2020

lol the 100 days project, that was a thing that did not happen. but i have started journaling more consistently, and i have done some yoga, and i sewed a tote bag. and we’re so many states of global and national crisis. so, you know, adjusted goals or whatever.

will i write more words on here? will i post regularly? is this just a post to see if Automatic was finally able to fix my weird blog title email issue?

anyone’s guess, except that it isn’t. times have gotten real fucking weird, and are lots of juxtapositions all the time always, since i last posted on here. i still don’t know what this site is, or is meant to be. i still want to write. i will probably still attempt every so often to figure out a way to write on here consistently, because i miss writing words on the internet, doing the thing and shouting into the void, or whatever, since that has always been the way that i am with this sort of thing, where it’s technically for an audience but also not for an audience because it’s just me, being me, typing and submitting and doing the thing without editing because i like how my my typing voice is when i don’t overthink it too much.

over the last few weeks, i have been reading, and engaging, and learning, constantly learning, and fighting against my own defensiveness to figure out what’s underneath that. and i have bene donating, because there are many ways to do a thing and donating is one of those ways and it is important. black lives matter. black trans lives matter. black queer lives matter. i am so happy about the supreme court decision that the civil rights law protects LGBTQ+ workers.

donate. vote. protest if that makes sense for your situation. read. learn. do the thing. (i know four people read this. i know you all know all of the things. but i just want to make sure that i have written those words here, in this space, because it is important to do the work AND acknowledge that it is important to do the work.)

more soon.

day 4!

// Monday, May 4, 2020

there was a post I saw this week on Facebook or twitter or Instagram that rather succinctly said that anything worth doing is worth doing half-assed. tomorrow I’ll find the thing, or try to: but I think there something to be said for that. I strive, in a lot of ways, for perfection, and sometimes that can be paralyzing. For the last few years when I’ve attempted this project that has definitely been the case.

So this is simply a post to say hello, it is day four, this is not a great post but it is me doing the thing. forming a habit, even if not perfectly.

May the Fourth be with you, etcetera.

on being me, always

// Sunday, May 3, 2020

Day 3 of 100: Forward progress. Maybe this will actually be a habit. A forewarning, here: I have things to say but my mind is disjointed, so I am trying to embrace the freewrite a bit. (Sidenote, and relatedly: lol forever, past!Melissa, that you thought you’d someday turn this into a “real blog” whatever that means – because here’s the thing: I am me. I am the human being that writes the long winded post that maybe means something, and also maybe doesn’t, and just kind of likes how words sound when they’re strung together a certain way. I don’t want to lose that, and honestly, I want to get back to it. Because I am all about the prose poems, and the things that are not that but aspire to be.)

I spent more time than I care to admit today fighting with the layout design I barely remember working on 6 years ago, and while I can say for certain that I don’t see anything that should be removing my site title in post subscription emails, I can also say I did not dive deep into the meaning of various site file terms. I can say that I achieved a small victory and the “submit” button of the subscribe widget is now readable. So I guess that is something? Trying to focus on the small victories these days, I guess. Here’s to that. I also found a way to use the classic editor on here, and my oh my do I enjoy it more than the new one. I am a creature of habit, even if I’m not always the best at forming new habits.

I’ve been missing the beach a lot recently, thinking about time spent outside and in nature and that feeling of just…existing, without thinking that everything is terrible and the world is going to hell. But: I think there is something fascinating that we’re all witnessing, in some strange way, in these strange times. There’s a reprioritization, a collective understanding in a way that maybe there hadn’t been – at least in some circles, a heightened awareness of what, precisely, is actually important. And I don’t in any way at all mean to imply that that’s a silver lining, because we are in a global pandemic; for the love of all things, it would just be better if we, you know, weren’t in the midst of that, and could hug each other and visit friends and go to restaurants and generally just go outside without wondering what might happen. (If you told me three months ago that I’d be quite anxious about going to the grocery store, I would have thought you were very odd, and I would have been very confused.)

I, like others in these times, obviously, have been thinking a lot about health, about illness, about death. I reread my post about my mom (tw: death, but mostly it’s about life, and feelings, and not her death) – on going quiet and silences – recently (yesterday? today? last week? what is time?!), and it remains one of my favorite things I’ve written. I’ve been thinking a lot about her, and words, and the words I wrote in that post, too: I wrote that post almost exactly 4 years ago. Mother’s Day is next weekend. Every year I think it will be…better, and it is, but it it is also, somehow, exactly the same. This year there is a bit less advertising, I guess, if only because there is less shopping? I don’t know, exactly. This year is weirder, to be sure – and I have feelings about that – about her, and this time we’re in,  but I’m not sure they are feelings meant for this blog. But it’s still a year, without my mom, where there are many things I’d love to talk to her about.

This week, my cousin – older, though I’m bad with numbers and can’t tell you exactly, but much closer to my mom’s generation than mine, has high school age kids – sent me the photo of a photo that is the featured image of this post, along with several others he found of me, of my parents, of my cousins. I know it’s a common thing of our ~millennial generation~ to wax poetic about simpler times, but like: I don’t want everything to be lost to old phones and dead hard drives and backup drives tucked into drawers that can’t be plugged into anything anymore without adapters that are expensive or hard to find (not that I am, um, speaking from experience here at all). I think there is something to be said about artsy, spur of the moment photos that capture a feeling more than an image of a thing, but the image is there, too.

I realize the…something like irony, of writing about all of this on the internet, which is not a tangible thing in a notebook and not a thing that lives forever (I mean, it does, and I love the wayback machine as much as anyone, but still). But here’s the thing: typing is how I think through words, which is a phrase I used to use a lot on a couple of sites that aren’t quite defunct but basically are, and I am trying to find my way back to that.

Happy Sunday night. Here’s hoping this week brings whatever we all need, whatever that may be.

(My Yoast plugin is so mad at me. 45% of my sentences contain more than 20 words, apparently. Hashtag I am me, always.)

may 2! day 2, etc.

// Saturday, May 2, 2020

So naturally, since I said no one got posts emailed, of course yesterday’s post emailed (hi e and sr and t??). Today’s project, which may or may not have worked, is fixing it so that WordPress/Jetpack doesn’t call this ~my great WordPress blog~ in those emails. No idea if it worked, so: yes. Hi.

I have things I want to post about tomorrow! Real things! But it is 11:19pm pacific and it’s day two of my restarted thing, and I’ll be dammed if I’m not going to at least make it a week.

Happy Saturday. Today T and I learned we can screen mirror NYT crosswords on the tv, so here’s to being very millennial and very old all at the same time.

(How many typos will I have today?! Yesterday was just one, I think…)

just do the thing: a modified 100 day project

// Friday, May 1, 2020

So I missed the real beginning of the 100 day project. Which is to say that I didn’t miss it at all, but did it exactly the same as I have the last couple of years: I realized it was starting, I had no plan, and so I made a half-assed attempt at coming up with a goal, like “write in a notebook for 100 days” or something, and then, to no one’s surprise at all (read: me. this was not a shared project), I didn’t, you know, do the thing. Because I didn’t have a concrete plan, or really any sort of motivation, because we’re in these weird pandemic times and I’ve got a lot of existential questioning that happens on a regular basis.

But now it’s May 1st. It’s a new month, where it’s a fresh start but everything still feels like the worst kind of groundhog day. But I am inspired to at least try to do the thing. And especially because I’ve realized the Jetpack email thing isn’t working, so no one knows I’ve actually “reactivated” this, so to speak, and I am accountable to the internet as a whole and to me, but only I know that, I have some hope. Because it’s my pressure, not perceived pressure of others.

I don’t have a plan for content, or a theme, or any of that. But for the next 100 days, I am going to write in this space, or just post – maybe pictures, I’m not sure – but definitely words. There will be words here, and I am going to do the thing.

Because I haven’t a fucking clue what 2020 is, but I think, looking back, I might want it documented in some way.

Also, I am going to figure out this block editor. And why Jetpack only kind of works. And also – some of my older posts might reappear. I think there are some – I know there is at least one – that I want to exist visibly on this site. So here’s to that.

Hope all of you who read this are staying healthy and safe to the best of of your abilities.

hello!

// Friday, March 27, 2020

hi. happy 2020. happy march, which has been a year in and of itself. i’m ~doing a thing~ and archived all of the old posts, and i need a placeholder post so that this site doesn’t look completely dumb while i rework and figure out a plan. what better time to resurrect an old wordpress blog (and this domain i pay for for email purposes but haven’t used for blogging in two years nearly to the day) than during this weird weird time we’re living in where it kind of feels like the world is ending?

i want to pretend that i’m doing lack of punctuation for the style, but really i’m not, it’s because i’m awkward half sitting on the floor while doing this so i remember to take a break and go outside for a walk the minute i’m done.

hi, friends and handful of people who subscribed via email six years ago. i hope you all are well. going to try, yet again, to make this into a thing, because if nothing else, i’ll think i’ll want something tangible to document this strange time.

ps i haven’t been in wordpress in a real way for years, this new editor is confusing and weird, apologies if this is looks odd and/or is a giant mess.

hi, hello (take two)

// Sunday, April 1, 2018

Hi, friends. Remember when I said I was going to be around these parts more? I was a little overambitious about that, I guess – which is to say I was clearly 100% wrong, as it’s now nearly 7 months after my last post where I said that was a thing that was going to happen. I’ve been working on trying to figure out what I want this site to be: in a way that is so very me, instead of writing the words and editing the pictures and doing the thing, I’ve been instead making lists within lists within lists of how to break down categories and tags and make things coherent in anticipation of eventually writing more words in this space.

I’ve been feeling, truly, like I’m in a space where I want to be creative again, where I want to document things the way that I used to do. I’ve slowly been continuing to knit the hat I started over 2.5 years ago, and it’s going moderately well, if glacially slow. I took a whole bunch of pictures when we recently went on vacation with some friends. I’ve read 5 books this year already (A is for Alibi, B is for Burglar, All Over the Place, Meet the Frugalwoods, and A Year of Less), which is on the one hand not great but on the other hand, and very embarrassingly, more books than I read all of last year. T and I have been watching Chef’s Table on Netflix. I got over the weird fear I had of our KitchenAid stand mixer (a ridiculous thing that is true: I had never actually seen one in use – let alone used one – outside of food shows on TV) and have now successfully made chocolate chip cookies after being led very astray by the terrible recipe in the Joy of Cooking.

The 100 Day Project begins on Instagram April 3rd, and while I don’t have a clear idea if I’ll stick to an Instagram thing this year (last year I tried, and failed, at doing 100 days of watercolor plants), but I’m determined to use it as motivation, broadly, to get back into actually doing things that are creative, instead of just thinking and talking about how I want to do more things that are creative.

So, yes. Hi. I’m glad to be back in this space. Happy April, friends.

hi, hello

// Friday, September 1, 2017

Happy September, friends. Happy 2017, actually. I’ve been quiet around these parts, but expect to see me around here more soon. The featured image for this post is from Santa Cruz in May, but it seems fitting to start this up again with a picture of the beach. 

Today it was 113 degrees, if you believe the thermometer on my car, but it’s September 1st and therefore the unofficial start of fall, and. Fall has always felt more like new beginnings to me than January. So. Here’s to hopefully cooler weather and finding my way back to thinking through words. I’ve missed this space.  

on going quiet and silences

// Wednesday, April 20, 2016

It’s been a while since I’ve written anything, let alone written anything here. That isn’t the right way to start this post, probably, but I’m not sure there is a right way to write any of this. I had planned to write a post about resolutions for 2016: about goals, about plans, about the importance of being in the moment more and appreciating conversations in whatever manner they came about.

Fair warning: this is not that post. This is not particularly edited (other than for typos and even then I’m sure I’ve missed some), or even well-thought out; it is a post because I have wanted and needed to write words here, but I haven’t yet.

I’ve written three thank you cards since February 6th, four if I count the one I wrote to my grandma. I should have written at least a dozen; I still am planning to write them. But writing – of all varieties – has been difficult lately.

I could come up with reasons for why I didn’t write more in early January (work, work travel), but that isn’t it, either. The truth of the thing is that I was trying to reconcile my heart of hearts with my everyday heart, trying to figure out what I knew versus knew versus thought I knew, because for me, in my life, those have always been very different things, or at the very least not a given that they are identical things. Because going home to Massachusetts for Christmas made me worry, but I couldn’t tell if it was the normal level of worrying or something else.

I remember when the above picture was taken. iPhoto tells me that it was taken at 3:01pm on October 25, 2014 using my DSLR, but it can’t tell me that I was standing next to my mom on Corporation Beach in Dennis on the Cape, on our first trip down since my grandma moved to Florida. That we were stealing some time alone while my grandma took a nap in the motel/inn/whatever we were staying in and Tommy took a nap in his car in the Corporation Beach parking lot, and my mom and I walked the full length of the beach, this taken on our walk out while we talked about missing the cape, and work, and how nice it was to take a mini-vacation, and how there were all sorts of future possibilities, and how great T was (is), and how Corporation Beach was still the same beach. And we found a few shells and walked back and walked up around the snack shack and the swings, and it was wonderful and cozy.

By October 2015, the next time my grandma came up for a visit from Florida, I was in California. My mom took a week off work and they went up to Bar Harbor together, and stayed in Jasper’s Restaurant and Motel (linked here only because it just took me like half an hour to think of the name), and had a bunch of their meals there and drove all around and went into the park and like. Apparently it was a lovely trip, minus a gravel road adventure that involved a ditch and local Maine dudes in pickup trucks finding them and literally pulling the car out of the ditch (adventure courtesy of the fact that my grandma got directions from Mapquest). I honest to God thought I’d be going with them on the next trip, so even though I thought about flying back for it, the fact that I didn’t have a job at the time seemed like the more pressing issue.

If you’re keeping track, I’ve written 601 words as of the end of that paragraph without saying the thing I’m trying to say. It’s a poem about oranges, right? That’s how this works? (I will forever reference “Why I Am Not A Painter” by Frank O’Hara, which I seem to have more or less imprinted on when I read it in high school(?).) So. Yes. The thing I am trying to say.

My mom died at the end of January. She was 63. There’s more to it than that (isn’t there always?), but what it comes down to is that I am devastated, but I am functioning: I’m just not back to being a full person yet. Or I am a full, real person, but in a way that is very different from the way I was before. People have been wonderful. I flew home immediately, and I did more things on no sleep in the 36 hours immediately following than I would have thought possible. And then over the course of a week, I planned a church service and wrote a eulogy. And wrote and placed a death notice in the Boston Globe, and then people who’d known her from the Cape fifty years ago came to the service, which was so unexpected and so nice.

I’ve been back in California since February 14th, minus a trip to Philadelphia for a friend’s wedding and a work trip. I’ve been handling logistics and waiting for the things to finalize that are outside of my control. I’ve got a pile of pictures and a memory book from the service that I haven’t been able to look at yet. I’ve got credit card companies to deal with and the logistics of trying to handle Massachusetts legalities from across the country. But I’ve also got weekly-ish phone calls from my dad, and letters from my grandma, and text check-ins from lovely people. It’s Real Life, but a different type than the one I’m used to living. I still have condolence emails to respond to – emails sitting read but marked unread at the top of my inbox since February.

I’m working on getting back into writing. My voice feels so far from my brain right now, because by and large I’ve got to do lists and white noise floating around in there, but I’m working on it. Gradually. I’ve started running again, finally: my runs are pathetic by any normal running standards right now – 12 minute one mile runs – but it gets me out of my head and into a place where I need to focus on breathing, and I think that’s a good thing.

I don’t know how to end this, really, but thanks for sticking around. I hope to fill this space with words and maybe even photographs on a more regular basis. I’ve been jotting out a better tagging system on scraps of agenda paper, which is my new equivalent to the backs of receipts. So there’s that. Moving towards moving forward.

Tell people you love that you love them.

cape-me-mom