First page of the story archive.

it’s hard to be an artist; it’s easy to be an artist.

Posted by jessica on Jan 25, 2012 with 29 Comments
in Thoughts and Feelings
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It is neither easy nor difficult to be an artist.

It is; it simply is.

Does the turtle feel like it’s particularly hard to be a turtle? No, I think a turtle exists without any commentary on either the hardship or advantage of lugging a shell around. Maybe on really hot days he feels a little more burdened, a little like he wishes he could just dump the shell behind a few rocks for the day. He’d try a swim without it, for a change. But then, I’m betting once a predator shows up, he’s pretty grateful for that shell; pretty glad it’s not hidden behind a rock while his own soft skin is exposed.

I guess my point is, a turtle is a turtle all the time and it would waste time if it questioned the validity of its shell. Better for the turtle to just learn to use it well. Better for the turtle to be the best darn turtle around.

Each of us have a story to tell. Better for us not to waste too much time questioning the validity of that story, I think; better to live a life that shares that story with integrity, generosity, kindness, and truth.

My own story happens to come out a lot. I carry it around like a stone in my pocket. Sometimes the stone feels so heavy; it is then that I steal away to write. To compose. To sing. To dance. To capture the emotions that have turned into boulders on my shoulders and write them down. It is then that something magical happens; the boulders are dwarfed and changed. They become music notes and lyrics; steps and hard work; syntax connected by many semi-colons (some might even say too many. I would say there’s no such thing).

One day my therapist asked me to describe a particular trauma I’ve experienced. I picked the one that is right, well, here. Inside my brain. Written on my heart. It’s confusing because it’s the day that never should have happened, but did happen. The little girl who I once was–with the jagged bangs across a too big forehead and more dreams than pets (and I had a lot of pets, believe me)–still can’t understand it. I try to explain it to her. I also try to tell her that her haircut gets better, too. She says she doesn’t care about her hair and she maintains that dreams come true and love wins. There’s no sense in arguing with her. Just like there’s no sense in telling her to brush her hair.

And love does win. Eventually. Just not in every situation on earth. Just not in the way she anticipated, I guess.

But one day my therapist handed me a sheet of paper and some crayons. “Describe what happened,” she said. “Use sentences to tell me how it sounded and smelled and looked like. And draw it, too.”

I got to work. I am ridiculously excited whenever anyone tells me to draw pictures or write sentences. I am not even particularly great at drawing pictures; I just love to do it. I drew the scene. Like a comic book strip, I drew squares, one right after the other. I showed an empty bedroom, and I explained the sound of the door slamming. I put it down on paper. All of it. In crayon, of all things. What an adult situation to jot down in crayon; if it hadn’t hurt so much, the juxtaposition would almost be humorous.

Almost.

Then my therapist told me to tell her, to show her, to explain. I am not a therapist, so I might get this wrong, but she told me something about how trauma gets trapped in the feeling part of our brain. It’s visceral. A scene that is always just one slight reminder away. But putting it down on paper–in pictures and words–takes it from that part of the brain to another part. The analytical part. So we become reporters. The CSI of our own crime scene, in a way. We lose the extremely raw and overwhelmed reaction as we take it in and describe it. We own the memory, rather than the memory owning us.

The change brings freedom.

The change is oxygen in an airless room.

And, in a way, relaying my story–making my art–does the same thing for me. Not that everything I make or create comes from trauma. No, not at all. But some of it does. And the truth is that all of it comes from my story. My experiences. My feelings. And I am not sure quite how to maintain the balance of telling my story without somehow dragging the other characters in my story through the exposition. Characters who probably don’t want to be mentioned. I do this imperfectly, I am sure.

So, being an artist isn’t hard or easy. Or maybe, more accurately, it’s both. It’s hard to tell my story without somehow exposing other people to ears that are connected to minds that make judgements. And yet, it’s also easy to tell my story. Too easy. Because it happens. All the time, again and again, it happens. Without provocation, it feels, my story comes out. In my songs and words and movements and conversations.

And so here’s to telling our stories with grace and honesty. Here’s to constantly trying to prove that, though I have failed at it before and will almost definitely fail at it again, the two can coexist.

Grace and truth.

Art and story.

whiskey words.

Posted by jessica on Jan 2, 2012 with 3 Comments
in Thoughts and Feelings
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There are certain people who, just by being within earshot, make me feel like telling them every last thing I’ve felt or thought, seen or heard.

I guess you could say they’re the emotional equivalent of a long hard pull of whiskey.

Which reminds me of the ethiopian bar I went to last night.

“It was nice of the owner to tell us about all their fancy whiskeys with their fancy prices,” my friend said to me, as we were listening to Shakey Jack unlock melodies from
his hard working steel guitar.
“That we weren’t gonna buy tonight,” he added.
“Or any night,” I also added.
But, from what I hear, whiskey can undo the reservations that we strictly adhere to in more sober moments.

Once I read a story in which the girl was hanging out with the boy that she’d loved for a very long time. Perhaps, by this point, the days she loved him outnumbered the days she didn’t. She felt sick, so took many draughts from an old cough syrup bottle. Only it wasn’t cough syrup; it was whiskey. She didn’t say another word the entire evening. If she did, she said it’d be a hole in the dam, and all her feelings for this boy would come pouring out like the ocean itself. And he’d have drowned in it–her love. And the kinds of words she was in danger of saying weren’t the kind you could say on Saturday and take back on Sunday. No, these were changing words. Whiskey words.

And, well, like I said–there are a few people who can make me feel like spilling my own whiskey words. So I shut my mouth tight. I wait for the morning. For sobriety. For people who aren’t so scared of my love. My friends don’t drown in it. Certainly my family thinks the water is warm, the perfect temperature for swimming, is what they say of it.

They don’t pull whiskey words from me .

And the few who have managed to do so–not that it’s their fault, mind you–well, now I try to be more like that girl who got drunk on what she thought was cough syrup. Close my mouth; bite my lips till they bleed, if need be. Say nothing; do a lot till I look up to find them gone. Just like I wanted; just like I was afraid of.

And after a while, the moment passes and I am okay.

I swallow my whiskey words and wait till a time that will come, eventually; a time when “love will not break [my] heart, but dismiss [my] fears,” as Mumford and Sons say.

reading and pinching.

Posted by jessica on Dec 24, 2011 with 4 Comments
in Loved Ones, there are pictures here, Thoughts and Feelings
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Lately, I’ve been reading novels. Yes, this is noteworthy, because I spent about two years reading just about every book on healing and co-dependency and heart-brokenness and grief that I could get my hands on. And then one day I was just like, Huh, I think I’d like to read a good yarn again. Actually, [...]

you’re better than that.

Posted by jessica on Dec 12, 2011 with 4 Comments
in Loved Ones, MP3, Performance, video
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I wrote this song today. I was thinking about some decisions I’ve made lately; mostly about who I want to get close to. And then I thought about a friend I have. A dear and beautiful friend with whom I recently shared a conversation. “You know you’re better than that, right?” I said, after listening [...]

what a strange fairy tale this is.

Posted by jessica on Dec 6, 2011 with 8 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Thoughts and Feelings
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*Today was a rainy day. I was on a bus and feeling sentimental and pensive. So, I wrote this. Just don’t say you weren’t warned.  There is a reason that I spent so much time in Narnia as a child. Yes, the world that Lewis created, I mean. It was always my dream to go there. [...]

strange (and wonderful) as fiction.

Posted by jessica on Nov 29, 2011 with 2 Comments
in Funny Stuff, Performance, Thoughts and Feelings
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I really wonder where to start. I remember feeling the same way at my first therapy session. Luckily for me, there was this one glaring, um, situation that led me–no, more like paraded me! With banners and balloons and countless advil pm’s later!–into my therapist’s office, so I had an idea of where to start, but still. [...]

yellow couch music.

Posted by jessica on Nov 17, 2011 with 4 Comments
in Performance, there are pictures here
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The Paper Janes played a show tonight. I am one half of the Paper Janes. Well, since we brought a couch on stage with us tonight, perhaps I am more like one third of the Paper Janes. Anyway. We had a really good time; I really love that yellow couch of Shane’s. It looks like [...]

knowledge when I’d rather not know.

Posted by jessica on Nov 7, 2011 with 10 Comments
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Thoughts and Feelings
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The very first devastation I was introduced to occurred when I was still small. It was the realization that people I loved very much would someday die. That was just about too much for my soft little heart to handle, and I spent many moments ducking into nearby closets and pantries (yes, my parents’ house [...]

life today.

Posted by jessica on Sep 29, 2011 with 4 Comments
in Funny Stuff, Performance, there are pictures here, Thoughts and Feelings
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Um, I’m exhausted. It’s hard work being that girl in the picture. Seven shows a week now, starting tonight. Well, tonight was our first preview, anyway. And I have to admit that while I was putting on my makeup, I was pretty excited. To dance and sing and act and be on a stage again. [...]

little dress, little dream.

Posted by jessica on Aug 25, 2011 with 6 Comments
in Thoughts and Feelings
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So, a tiny dream of mine just came true. Albeit, it is not the noblest of dreams. Not even close. But a dream is a dream no matter how small. Or something like that. Anyway. I just came across an Amazon gift card that had kindly been given to me by my pop’s dear cousin, [...]