sundance, waterfalls, and the tree room dream.


this saturday the gorgeous Bev showed me the part of utah i've been longing to see since the day i arrived. and suddenly i think i might never leave. everything's better up in the mountains (girl talk included. who am i kidding? especially, girl talk!). i'm thinking of taking up residence in any of the several multi-million dollar homes nestled into the foliage. in fact, if i hang around long enough, maybe robert (redford) and i might just strike up a friendship.


let there be light.


God's country, indeed.

hello, utah!

yes, please, take me there.

Sundance that a-way!

waterfall, oh waterfall.

now i'm thinking of all the different ways to convince my father to take my mother and me to the tree room when they come to visit in just over a month.


the grocery store.




yesterday i rode my bike to the grocery store for asparagus and mascara.


two things all girls must have.

i headed to the produce and became giddy with excitement upon finding ultra-thin stalks (best for crisping in the oven).

and then worked my way over to cosmetics.

there i stood in front of the wall of wands. overwhelmed by variety i reached for the old standard: thin wand, conservative length extension.

but then something caught my eye. the new falsies mascara. you know, the mascara that promises eyelashes so big that they actually look fake. but who wants fake looking lashes, right? only loose women would want such a thing.

loose women, i say!

and yet.

maybe, just maybe i might want such a thing.

maybe, just maybe i stood in front of that wall of wands and reminded myself that this summer is an experiment. on all fronts. so why not try? why not try the one mascara that seems most inconsistent with my own loosely cobbled self-image?

and so i got it.

and the summer pedals on.


tonight was the first night i looked up and saw the stars.

tonight was the first night i looked up.



because i've been feasting on quotes today...



Your heart is like a great river after a long spell of rain, spilling over its banks. All signposts that once stood on the ground are gone, inundated and carried away by that rush of water. And still the rain beats down on the surface of the river. Every time you see a flood like that on the news you tell yourself: That’s it. That’s my heart.


murakami



thank you to the gorgeous reader
who sent this my way.


i have a pen pal.

i'm twenty-four years old and i have a pen pal for the first time in my life.

my pen pal doesn't know how to ride a bike.

i find this cause for great concern.

when i return to new york (yes, yes, the irony in that i had to go all the way to utah to get myself a pen pal back in the city) i plan to rectify his situation immediately.

i am a master bike rider. well, okay, maybe not. but i learned very quickly at a very young age. i wore red sweatpants to the park. my father made me wear them. it was hot. and need i remind you we were in texas? he thought they might protect my legs upon falling. but i didn't fall. not once. i was a natural. a sans training-wheels phenom. this experience set me up with unrealistic life-expectations...i assumed all transitions could be accomplished smoothly. ah well, we all learn eventually.

i digress. this is to be the post about coffee. and i'll be darned if i don't get to it eventually.

so my pen pal, in his kindness, offered writing prompts to help me through this difficult period known as writer's block.

he suggested i write about time. how i measure it. and this got me thinking about how i might define this past year. not the calendar year. but from last summer to now.

and i started to make a list.

this is the year of the bed bug.

of the everlasting funk.

the year if given a bit more time i might have fallen in love.

the year ned began his slow recession.

but the thing i keep coming back to is that this is the year i fell in love with a little house in australia. next to a park, down the street from the train, and across from a coffee shop.

the house that was all one level. with a spanning expanse of a kitchen. and a courtyard umbrella-ed by trees. a bathroom accessible only by backyard. clotheslines handing from roof to tree. this was a house that was lived in and loved. table-clothes slightly faded. granola on the counter. newspaper clippings littering the fridge. old photographs askant covering the white walls. this house was not my dream. it was never my dream. and yet i was in love. and i might just spend the rest of my life looking for something similar.