Tag Archive | college

Peace

I lived on campus in my second year of college. Back then, when you did that you placed yourself at the mercy of a housing office who assigned you your roommates. I HATED the prospect of that.

But sometimes, there is a wisdom to life.

At a time when I was trying to stay on on top of school deadlines, college payments with the accompanying business paperwork, work multiple jobs tightly scheduled together – I was coupled with what appeared as pure chaos. Just when I was trying to embody the ulta organized life, synonymous with adulting, I was paired with two hippies who orchestrated living together… with me.

I came home to my apartment one day, to find patterned sheets tacked up on walls, the smell of marijuana mixing with incense in the air, and a somewhat cluttered looking environment that looked like someone’s entire home had been moved into our small apartment. The Grateful Dead on BLAST.

It was an attack on my tightly ordered sensibilities, and in that moment, I wanted nothing to do with them. But I was raised with manners, so I was cordial.

The first roommate wore her blonde hair long, with ultra thin braids wrapped with yarn tucked at various corners for a style. And though we were young twenty something’s, she had a womanly vibe, not the girl-in-grown-up -pose aura like the rest of us. This young woman, who might be raked over today for her full bodied appearance, exuded love for her brand of femininity, Hippie and Dead Head status. It was something I noticed right off, in our first meeting.

Her friend, my other roommate, a thin blonde with a short cut and one braid allowed to remain, emerged at another point. An intellectual and more angsty type, she moved with hard lessons about her. Her joy more affected.

Both wearing clothing in a way, I had never experienced.

Colors and patterns mixed in a way that always looked thrown together, maybe unkept. And for someone who pressed her clothes, and carefully paired items together, this was an attack on my fashion values.

I imagine I walked around with a low key frown all the time, because of the avalanche to the senses this would become. My room became a communal setting with boyfriends visiting and staying over, and friends camping out while floating in and out of our shared spaces. A place where potluck meals and weed brownies were served. Parties held like pop-up events, for the on-campus hippie community.

My stance was to “endure” them like a bad circumstance, practicing manners but avoiding where and how I could.

Till our lives began to collide.

As young women, we had breakups, health diagnosis, heart breaking separations, disappointing professional challenges we were contending with in each other’s presence. So ultimately days happened where my resolve disappeared under the weight of life, and I’d meet a roommate in our shared area. In those moments, you cannot find the distant response to “Hello, how are you?”

So at some point, we ended up talking. Sharing, learning about each other – for real.

It transformed my experience, my approach and eventually how I saw them. I even found myself explaining or defending friends who would stop by our apartment, then later make scathing comments about what they found (or attempt cracking jokes about it).

Those days came and went…

Funny how the heart remembers, reframes, recasts, softens and decorates our experiences imbuing them with affection. I often remember those two women, and how we ended up bonding. How because of our sheer proximity, the natural human inclination to bond won out.

I hope they went on to have great loves, better friendships, and a life time of continued good music.

Death and the Lifeline…

Friday was my mother’s birthday. She would have been 82.

I’m still gutted and can’t breath properly when I think about her death.

But some days, I’m present to loving her more now than ever. Because I see her efforts as a mom, how she tried to raise these people who would be prepared for the world in certain ways, and always value, even protect one another as a tribe-band-siblings. And more and more, to her heart as a woman, her reach and passion for the world around her, in the absence of that trait, anywhere.

Then I’m gutted again, for the void of that. Seeing in the most profound way, how indispensable people truly are.

(A lesson I don’t think anyone truly gets, till a loved one who they are engaged with dies.)

But, I’ve been moving forward.

I moved out of New York. Went back to school. Been trying my hand at online dating off and on (the pits still).

Made my first short in years, in a directing class.

A simple assignment, 3 shots edited to sounds not from the shoot.

I felt like I had just gotten out of bed, pulled the cover back on my life.

Found the fire in the embers.

A Return To Where I Started?

When I was a teen, I became fascinated with American comics, so I began drawing them. I drew every type of story I wanted to see, and friends becoming intrigued started asking me for them. So I began promising friends who asked, a story of their own. It was a great little time.

Then this trend hit my school, with classmates becoming fascinated with what I was drawing during boring times in class. People would ask me to see, and I would oblige. Then that became requests.

Fore you know it, I was the resident storyteller. Taking requests and fulfilling excited demands to see my latest in class.

I became a little bit of an interruption. I would obey suggestions to put away my side activity, but the attention proved intoxicating enough to bring the comics back out. Also at that time, I had an increasing interest in boys and … well… things we were all becoming interested in at 13/14. So my comics began to reflect that pre-occupation.

But this gave rise to very involved discussions which my classmates now engaged in, not-so-secretly, as they passed the comics around. Then one day, said teacher decided she had had enough, and interrupted us, investigating where all the comics were, and rounding them up.

To my horror.

And now, I was officially a ‘trouble maker.’

But the rounding up wasn’t even the worse part in my mind, the worst part was what I depicted being seen by the adults in my life. That teacher then decided to take the comics to the principal, who then decided to discuss the content with me, then bring my parents into a conference. All very surreal for a 13 year old.

Well I lived, obviously. But that was the end of that.

I continued to cartoon, but I went into hiding with them. Drawing my stories just for me now. And soon, I grew a new fascination – movies. In fact an obsession, so I then aimed to combine cartooning with movies, and began drawing what I wanted to see in a movie, in cartoon form. Later that decision grew into an interest in animation, which I then went to college for. Til I began encountering the “live action” filmmakers.

I was as in awe of them, as much as movies, and soon I wanted to see what that world was made of. Make “live action movies.” But I had more of an art background, so I didn’t think I could really do it. Conveniently, I began becoming annoyed at the meticulous nature of cell animation.

Then at the height of my annoyance I left the animation coursework in the film production program, for “live action.” The head of my department easily switched my major. So soon, all my former training in drawing, painting, illustration and cartooning, took a back seat, then, fell by the way side.

Fast forward…to now. Recently, I’ve been looking at the visual elements of a story I am conceiving. Looking at how I could build this across platforms.

Then this happened…

…causing me to revisit a format for the story, I’d been resisting.

Animation can be beautiful can’t it? Anyway, I will attempt to write a feature animation, co-design an accompanying graphic novel, develop an app with video game and character pages. And I’ve started.