First page of the face archive.

my song is on itunes; and life is life is life is life is life.

Posted by jessica on Jan 13, 2012 with 60 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
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There is a half eaten bowl of tomato soup right next to me. At first, I almost burnt it because I was so distracted with all the hubbub of my song going live on itunes. And then, after barely rescuing it from that, I let it go cold before I could even finish it. And, uh-huh, for the same reason as before.

Hubbub.

Song.

On itunes.

People I have never met before buying it and using wonderfully expressive language to tell me that, in so many, words: they like it.

They effing like it.

Can I tell you something? In the spring of this year, I packed one polka dotted suitcase, a canvas tote bag that has now sat on the subway floors more times than I care to think about, and a guitar. I said good-bye to my parents and the dogs and got on the Chinatown bus headed to NYC with tears in my eyes. And then on my face. And then on my shirt. I was reading my copy of The Grief Club and I was thinking how just about everything in life seems to point to this one consuming lesson: LET GO. 

Because you just lose it anyway.

And I guess it’s easier to willingly let something go, than to have it pried from your white-knuckled fingers, huh?

I remember thinking, This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be moving to NYC by myself. He should be with me. And forgive me if I don’t mention exactly who he is right now. But the truth is that in one day–one cataclysmic day–he had left. My dream job (touring with the broadway show, A Chorus Line) had ended, and my house was no longer a home. I felt a deep sense of dysphoria. Actually, let me put it bluntly; crudely, even (cause it was raw, what I felt): I felt like everything I loved had turned to shit

But, what do you do? You keep being you. You make things and breathe and make jokes and find life interesting and practice kindness and forgive just as often as you need forgiveness, yourself (which is an awful lot, let’s be real); you appreciate the people who are still here and you learn to live without the people who have gone away; you dream, because god knows that if you stop dreaming, you become a robot and I’ve never heard of a robot moving anyone to tears or falling in love (there was that one robot who could read and that other robot who could kill–but still, we’re more than readers of other stories; more than killers of life); you find inspiration everywhere you are, darnit. EVERYWHERE. And if you haven’t found it, then you look harder, because it’s there–it has to be–because YOU’RE there. And you, we, every last one of us, can be–should be!–inspiring.

And you cry.

You let yourself cry as often as you need to; the pillow is well acquainted with your tears and some days you don’t even bother with mascara because it’s just gonna leave a little trail down your face, anyway.

But you also laugh.

You make fun of the mundane until there is a bit of the sublime in it, now that you’re laughing so hard; you realize that every bit of life matters and that, yes, that’s transcendent. The knowledge that every moment builds something that we call LIFE–and that life is all we have. Life and each other. And the God who gave us both.

You realize all this; it builds a reservoir in your heart. You pull from it when you see other people getting the things you dream of. The men who stay. The broadway shows. The charmed existence that really only looks that way from where you’re standing, anyway. But, like I said, that reservoir makes you realize something powerful: you’re on a journey and the story isn’t over. You don’t drive from Maine to Florida and stop off in Delaware for a spell, look around, only to complain about how Florida doesn’t have alligators, after all. You realize that, it’s okay, there’s no alligators yet–because your journey isn’t over. YET. Florida is still coming. Gators or bust!

So, all this to say, this is one heck of a journey. ALL OF IT. The grief and the joy–they each make the other that much more poignant and significant, I guess. And I have to say that I am grateful that I didn’t stop off in my grief and stay there forever, complaining that Florida has no gators, after all, if I can stretch that metaphor just a little bit further.

I am glad I kept on this journey; I have no idea where it will take me, but I never had, anyway. I thought I did, but life was all like, NOPE. So, nothing much has changed. I am on a journey. There are many bends in the road.

And tonight, I did a little dance in my living room while listening to ‘ain’t my friend.’ I danced in the very same leggings I wore in a certain video that has been making its rounds lately, if you wanna know the truth.

Not that I planned it that way, mind you; but what I have found is that sometimes life turns out better than we’d planned. Way better, actually.

and that was Sunday.

Posted by jessica on Nov 28, 2011 with 2 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
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“Jessica, right?” is what I heard directly to my left as a girl slid into a seat next to me.

A girl who I recognized because I’ve seen her at auditions. And she’s lovely.

“Oh my gosh, yes! It’s so good to see you–do you go to this church?” I asked, completely surprised to see a familiar face at this church in the city that I was trying out for the very first time this morning.

“Sometimes I do,” she said.

And that basically made my morning. Afterwards, we talked and had quite a nice conversation. I think I’ve made a new friend, guys.

And then, tonight, I got to spend time with some friends while waiting to sing at a Cabaret. A very musical theater cabaret. At which my friend and I covered an Eminem/Dr. Dre song. Let’s just say it was something different. Oh gosh, the accompanist was quite a good sport, though; I am pretty sure she’d never accompanied a song quite like that before. But, really, a song is a song is a song. I mean, keep time and play the right chords and everything should be okay.

Speaking of everything being okay, life is such a balance.  We must understand the reality of how sometimes things are just not gonna be okay, and yet continue to believe that they will be.

I had a late dinner tonight with friends–all of us are performers–and we discussed how you have to be a little bit naive and ridiculous in the way you believe in yourself in this business. Yes, a thousand people can do what you do–and yet, when you walk into a room and sing, your job is to convince them that you bring something absolutely unique to the table and their search was over as soon as you opened your mouth.

Sounds crazy.

It is a little crazy.

Sounds vain.

It’s not.

It’s the truth; do what you do, committed to the fact that you are unique.

We all know that this is a big world, full of lots of talented people. And yet, believing that we do have something special to offer keeps us running alongside them; keeps us continuing to hone our craft and do what we do with the belief that it means something and contributes to our to this world’s sense of purpose or beauty or meaning or hey, just plain gets those bills paid.

Cause I sure don’t mind that, either.

Anyway, yes, live in reality–but believe in yourself.

Which is quite a tightrope to walk sometimes.

I wish you the world.

Posted by jessica on Nov 25, 2011 with 2 Comments
in Loved Ones, MP3, video
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So, this song. I wrote it for some dear friends in A Chorus Line. My life went through such an about face right when I got off tour, though, that I completely forgot about it for a while. Until I suddenly remembered. At least that it happened, I mean. “Remember that song I wrote for [...]

crying less, but crying, still.

Posted by jessica on Nov 20, 2011 with 11 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Loved Ones, Thoughts and Feelings
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While feeling sad earlier today, I ponder calling an old friend. Right when I decide to do it, I happen to see his status on that social network that I don’t really want to mention here, for some reason–not in this space, not today–and I read: “Dropped my phone in the toilet–email me, if you [...]

all full up tonight.

Posted by jessica on Nov 18, 2011 with 2 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Thoughts and Feelings
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All full up. Oh, it’s terrible English, I know–and I cannot remember where I first heard this phrase–but it keeps running through my mind tonight. I have this sense of contentment, of wellness, that feels even bigger than my body, if that makes sense. Like my fingers only go so far when I reach; but, [...]

all of it.

Posted by jessica on Nov 16, 2011 with 8 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
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“Um, um…excuse me?” I heard that over and over again while teaching tot dance. We’d be sitting in a circle doing our warm-up, stretching our bodies and pointing our feet–all while exhibiting all sorts of different emotions on our faces–when, inevitably, I’d get interrupted. “Excuse me? Miss? EXCUSE ME?!” “Yes?” I said to whichever tiny [...]

shhhhh.

Posted by jessica on Sep 23, 2011 with 5 Comments
in Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
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My parents’ million pound dog just stepped on my face and I don’t even care. That’s how tired I am right now. Today we started teching Chicago. It was fun. Partly because I didn’t have to wear my heels and instead could wear my rad duckboots (since we weren’t dancing full out), and partly because [...]

body odor and a black eye.

Posted by jessica on Aug 11, 2011 with 8 Comments
in Funny Stuff
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I’m just going to write frankly for a moment, if you don’t mind. Smells. They effect me. They highly effect me. Both positively and negatively. A guy who smells good? It’s over. Okay, it’s not over. But I don’t mind breathing next to him. And I don’t mean he has to bathe in cologne. No, [...]

dreamy.

Posted by jessica on Aug 1, 2011 with 22 Comments
in Performance, there are pictures here, Thoughts and Feelings
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The grocer in my little mostly Spanish speaking neighborhood took in the rose I was holding and the smile on my face and said, “Well, you had a good day.” And he was spot on. Actually, this weekend has been quite dreamy. I got to sing in Philly on Friday, at the new World Cafe [...]

body language.

Posted by jessica on Jul 29, 2011 with 2 Comments
in Funny Stuff, Thoughts and Feelings
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I’ve heard that ninety percent of communication is done through body language. And today, I saw it. See, I was riding on the subway, just sitting down, lost in my world of music. There was a small-ish space next to me and then a lady was sitting in the space right next to that. A [...]