Showing posts with label you saw it on paper first. Show all posts
Showing posts with label you saw it on paper first. Show all posts

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Pretty Girls Don't Light Their Own Cigarettes

Hello, look, here I am back on the Internet!
Obviously, I've been pretty busy, but I've been writing a lot, just not here. You may or may not be interested in checking things out on Autostraddle or The Eagle.

This actually is an abridged version of a piece I did for my creative writing class. Also it's only the first half because shit's just too long.

I was trying to figure out why I smoked.
--
Bugler Tobacco
"I never thought this would be us, never thought this would be me, you know? I mean, it's whatever though. Do you have a light? I left mine upstairs.
Thanks."

What the hell is going on? I wonder. I'm not wearing shoes, it's 5:57 a.m., and we're waiting outside the McDonald's because it doesn't open til 6.

"Brandon, roll me one? You can use my tobacco."

Marlboro Golds
My parents were smokers when I was younger, and a little smoke went a long way in our small Manhattan apartment. It crept out of the kitchen, where my parents lit Marlboros on the stove. It sneaked around the corner into the living room and settled in the fabric of the couch, where I would lay whining, "Paaaaa, how many more puffs before we can go to the paaaaark?"

Once I burned myself reaching out, fascinated, to touch the ember glowing orange on the end of my dad's cigarette while he knelt down to button my jacket.

I begged and pleaded and threw the occasional tantrum, and for my thirteenth birthday, they quit.

Camel Lights
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but it is also the truest form of rebellion, or that's what you can be tricked into thinking.

The summer of my sixteen, I learned to sneak and smoke and not get caught, because smoking is an art form of the young and stupid. The only girl I'd ever loved or loved since, even the way you love at sixteen, had gone across the sea to a place where you could smoke at our age. And she did, so I did, because I thought it romantic. I wanted to feel close. She bought a pack of Camel Lights. I followed suit. I wanted to feel close.

Late summer nights led to acrobatics, contorting my body to fit out my window, to bare feet on my roof. Coughing and sputtering like a 16-year-old with a cigarette does, I stood against my chimney, sharing secrets with the sleepy silhouettes of Clay Street and watching the cars pass pass pass through the gas station down the block.

Marlboro Reds
They slouched against walls in the faculty parking lot, those kids. They chain smoked Marlboro Reds because they were cheap and gave you a really nice headbuzz, or that's what they told me when leaving school late after leaving class on time, they offered me a Red.

For the most part though, that wasn't us, my friends and I. We were the good kids. We were always in class, and when we weren't in class, we were in the school. Honors courses, extra curricular activities, and early applications to college marked us.

And that was tiring.

Acing tests, we ducked out early to trade drags in ventilated bathroom stalls or, on the weekends, abandoned playgrounds. And while the cool kids were getting drunk in their parents' empty houses on Friday nights, our weekend cruises around town were incomplete without a stop at the convenience store to pick up a pack (requested in a gruff voice, as I thought one needed to sound tough to buy cigarettes) before heading down to the river to kill a pack and talk all night.

Smoke creeping into our lungs, we felt a pulsating rebellion moving through the chambers of our hearts, into our bodies, to our fingertips, still holding our cigarettes. We left high school desperate for change, but we were unsure if it was a change of scenery or a change in us.

Camel No. 9s
Having shaken the gruffness from my voice and the illegality from my age, I began to purchase Camel No. 9s. Each drag was unapologetic hometown nostalgia, every pack deceiving me into a fond re-creation of my high school experience. I disregarded ridicule or loneliness, favoring the last memories of my friends, an after-prom weekend at the Jersey Shore. We were sober still (kind of), and in our sweatshirts we beckoned the dawn and waited for our moments to become memories.

In college, packs once split among friends became my own. Piling up like bricks, instead of shutting us out, they walled us in with each other on smoke breaks, bumming one here and there, no big deal, got a light?

Parliament Lights
I could call it a social thing.
I could call it something I only do when I'm drunk.
I could call it a stress-relieving tactic.
I could call it something to do with my hands.

I could, and I have, but with a cigarette behind my ear at all times and smoke breaks working their way into my walks between classes, I finally have to admit it:

I'm a smoker.


Monday, August 3, 2009

When Faraway Things Seem Close

This post is long overdue.
Originally intended to be a cross-post with Emily, this was written by both of us at various points throughout the 24 hours leading up to Pride Weekend. Intoxicated and driving around my hometown and the surrounding highways aimlessly, we stopped at a CVS to purchase a notebook. And by that I mean I got nervous, shoved two dollars in Emily's hand, and made her go buy a notebook. I don't think we kept this up as long as we intended. Nevertheless, I present to you the chronicle of two really anxious girls overwhelmed by possibility. And Tegan and Sara a little bit.

---------------------------------------------------

June 26 2009 10:30 pm (Emily)

I GOT INTO Katrina’s house last night at 1 am. I went 24 hours without sleep and woke up at 1 pm.

We drove around Rockland aimlessly listening to Tegan and Sara which was so epic it cannot properly be described. We should ideas and dreams and things that would make us happy. I’m having an I-Thou relationship with the road. The roads in America are all the same.

We have the same idols and we constantly bring the conversation back to autostraddle. We auto-dance. We are auto-hot. We are auto-blazed, auto-drunk. We auto-win.

We don’t know how to get there. All we know is that City Girl is the best Tegan and Sara song and it’s possible to be nowhere and not lost at the same time.

The road is magnificent.
-
June 26 2009 10:45 pm (Katrina)

WE'VE BEEN ON the highway searching for the overlook for about 20 minutes. It probably would have been only ten, but as I am probably in no condition to be driving, I’ve been going at a steady 40 mph on a 65. This adds a new element to auto-blazed.

I look over at the clock. 10:40. There is so much night to be had. It reminds me of DC, of the apartment, where we’d be too high on uppers to sleep but too stoned to have a real conversation. It’d be 2:30 and we’d feel like the night was so new. 10:40 is so early and I wonder if this is what it’s like to not know you’re young.

If someone asked me how long I’d been young for, I’d say my whole life. If you asked me when I’d stop being young, I would tell you that’s not up to me. When does one stop being young? Do you wake up and know, or is it something that only occurs in retrospect? And if youth is defined by behaviour, I plan to always be young. If growing up means giving up your voice and forsaking your selfish desires , and well... being no fun, then, regardless of the number of years we've actually been around.. well, I’m gonna be forever young. So suck it, Rod Stewart.
-

June 27 2009 1:51 pm (Emily)

DRIVING IN THE CAR with Katrina’s parents. We’re listening to The Clash. My heart was pounding at the beginning, thoughts like “holy shit” kept going through my head and I almost forgot where we were going. To be honest, when “Rudie Can’t Fail” came on I felt relaxed, it was a little sound from home, something familiar. Because everything here is new. Every step I take is one into the unknown and it is both exhilarating and terrifying. In fact the past two days have been exhilarating and terrifying and these next two should be so intense I’m expecting my heart to explode at any time.

Except I’ve got this feeling we’re all in this together and together we can deal with anything.

Katrina joked about me sleeping in the car to avoid questions but now her brother is passed out next to me.

We’re about to get on the highway and it’s end to end traffic. My heart begins to pound again. I just want to get there.

I don’t know if the nerves are from pretending to be from Boston and going to AU or from meeting autostraddle and really Riese really. Both options are plausible.

I am having a heart attack again. We are on Lexington.

2:34 pm we are on the corner of Lexington and 56th.
-
June 27th 2009 2:44 (Katrina)

WE JUST DROPPED EMILY off at Brooke’s which means we pulled off this incredible charade.

Waking up at a quarter to noon and laying on top of the sheets listening to “City Girl” on repeat, we knew we wouldn't be this still again.

Tegan and Sara were singing about me when they said “I know you’re scared even though you say that you’re not”. They know this as I try to stride confidently through my house in my baptism-ready dress and heels, sending secretive, self-assured smirks to Emily, trying to convince her we’ll make it through the car ride.

We will, and we do. Off I go to the house of God.

---------------------------------------------------------------
Also, if you just read that and thought to yourself, "Well that was cool, but I'd prefer it as a stoner comedy," here's a badly edited video that was never really supposed to see the light of day, due to its bad jokes and continual breathless laughter over nothing.


I'm working on a lot of things right now. While you wait anxiously for them, check out how the rest of this weekend turned out by clicking my link at the top or reading Emily's exceptionally beautiful coverage of the same event. You could also do both.