Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Extremely Honest

Why are we all dishonest?

Honesty is a rare commodity.  I think that I've worked for some of the biggest liars in the state of NJ.  That's right, I'm not afraid to say it.
My experience working in the corporate world has not been positive.  I've been lied too, told to lie, cajoled into fudging the truth, expected to accept lies...

I don't have a whole ton of faith in people.  The thing is these aren't "evil" people.  No,  these folks are affluent upstanding citizens.
In sending out my resume, I've been thinking about my past work experiences.  Yeah, I've worked for a whole bunch of dishonest assholes.  It's enough to make me lose faith in human beings. 

Five years ago, after getting laid off by a dishonest businessman, I swore that I would never again work in an office.  I had done what I had to do to support myself, but I always felt that I was not contributing anything of value to society.`

Do we all have to just come to the conclusion that in order to live, we have to compromise our own morals?  When does that happen? 

 Last night I think we hit negative temperatures here in Kinnelon. 

It was so cold in my house that there was frost on the inside of my front windows.  Yeah, I can't afford heat.

At first I was horrified to be so poor that I can't plunk down the money for oil(even though it's cheaper than last year), but now I just think if only I can make it through to March everything will be fine. 
My boyfriend gave me an electric heater, I've got an electric blanket and four cats and a dog who sleep next to me at night...and on nights he's here James the human furnace keeps me warm. (Thanks baby, I wish you were next to me every night!)

But I don't really know.  In fact I really don't know anything these days. 

I always feel the need to explain my actions to people, like if I don't they won't like me or something, or worse yet they might even(gasp) judge me.  I've never been good at accepting help at all either.  People think that maybe I'm too prideful to accept help, but it's not that.  It's more that I don't like feeling that anyone has control over me except myself.  Strings are always attached to any help that I've received.  Maybe I just look at the world in a fucked up way, who knows.

So, I prefer to manage my life on my own. 

What is the hardest for me is glimpsing into other people's lives and seeing their fabulous lives played out online.  Okay, the thing is we all seem to try to spin our lives to impress these days.  I don't get it. 

Is it competition?  Is it insecurity?  I would really like to know. 
Me?  Well I'm just trying to stay alive.

In a little while, I'm going to my current job taking care of an elderly man.  I love my job, the only problem is I don't make enough money at all.  Hence the NO heat situation.

The strange thing is that I know someday, I will look back on this time, not with fondness, but with an appreciation for others. 

We never know what other people are experiencing on a day to day basis. 

~~~~~~~
I've been thinking about my Mom a lot.  How this time two years ago, she started to really go downhill. 

How I've always worried that I would become like Little Edie from Grey Gardens.
In fact this summer I was following the "Grey Gardens Guide to Landscaping." 



I think that it's hard for people to understand the loss of a parent in a brutal way.  The twisted mother/daughter symbiosis that occurs.  The regrets, longing, unspoken words, changed futures...but maybe I'm just a morbid person who doesn't deserve certain things in life.

I was reading Brooke Shield's memoir about her mother and herself.  Even though my  Mom was not an alcoholic or anything close to that, our relationship was fraught with very similar issues.   She also references Grey Gardens.  I found it to be hilarious.  I was living the same way, Brooke.  The same freaking way.

Being an only child for five years, I was all parts of my Mom's world.  Our lives were so intertwined that when it came time for me to go to Kindergarten I used to cry that I wouldn't be home with my Mommy.   I always loved the story of my birth, how she would tell me that I slept right next to her, or how she wanted a daughter so much, but was too afraid to hope for one.

My father worked nights when I was little, so I slept in my Mom's bed next to her for years.   Up until I was about twelve, I would wake up with bad dreams and crawl into bed with my Mom. 

In her last months, when she couldn't get out of her bed, I slept beside her again.  There was something comforting in knowing that she was near me.  I've been longing to sleep next to my Mom again, to feel safe and whole.  To have her kiss me goodnight and touch my hair, call me "Sari".    We fought so much at times.  The last few months of her life, we had disagreements and her fear pervaded my own existence.  Yet, she always asked, "Where is Sarah?" if I wasn't around, or "Sarah will take care of such and such."   

And I don't care if people think I should be over this loss by now.  Can you ever really get over losing your Mother???

This is just me, being honest.

There are days, when I can't get out of my bed(her bed) because I miss her so very much.  There are days when I curse her and am angry at things she did or didn't do.  But mostly I remember her with love.  Sometimes I wish that she'd been a "Mommy Dearest" so I wouldn't miss her soo much.

What wouldn't I give to hear her sing, "Summertime and the livin' is easy...hush little baby don't you cry?"

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

What I'm Reading? Watching? Listening???

My greatest dream is to read all the books on Harold Bloom's Canon.  I've hit quite a few on it, but have many to go.  Not to mention, I like to read other "newer" works also.

I find that whenever I get a bit of writer's block(which is not frequent) I can always stir up my mind by reading.  Kindle, while not as tactile as the real paper and cardboard has served me so well over the past few years.  Mainly because I read more than one book at a time.  I've been working on my own memoir and so I find myself drawn to the art of creative non-fiction.  Here is my list of several books that I've been absorbing into my brain over the past week or two:


1.  Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times : MEMOIR

  I am of course reading this because I love the show.  And of course books are always ten times better than TV.  Jenny Lee was a midwife in the East End of London during the 1950's and her memoir makes me sob like a baby(that's a good thing chickens!)
What I enjoyed:  The humanity of people struggling to live moves my heart, and spurs me on in my own life.

2. The Best American Short Stories 2012 :  SHORT STORIES

No folks, the short story is not dead.  It lives on as a fabulous art form still.  I admit that I read this one because it was included in the new Kindle Unlimited.  I was  also drawn to it because Tom Perotta was one of the editors...and I love his books.

What I enjoyed:  The diverse selection of writers and styles, some stood out more than others.  NO the short story is NOT dead!!

3. The Secret Speech(The Child 44 Trilogy) : NOVEL

This is the second book in the series.  Tom Rob Smith crafts a great Soviet era thriller that makes me want to swig back some Stoli and nosh on some caviar, blinis, and Borscht.  Since this is a trilogy, I suggest reading the first book, Child 44.  I could not put it down.   This book isn't as easy to get into but is also a good read. Plus, I hear that it is becoming a movie...

What I enjoyed:  The suspense and mystery, the dark Soviet Kruschev KGB world.

4. Rotten: No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs:  MEMOIR

I have no idea why I read this book.  I have never been a huge Sex Pistols fan or anything, but I started the preview on my Kindle and was drawn into this tale of the making of a modern artist.   He tells this story with biting wit and honesty...some of my favorite attributes.  I wonder what other fascinating tidbits it will include.  John Lydon has another memoir coming out this month too.

What I enjoyed: The descriptions of growing up in poverty in London  and every non-Sex Pistols part.  Also I prefer artists who are real, candid, and did not fall into it through the trappings of middle-classdom...the artists who've paid their dues per se.  John Lydon please adopt me.

5. The Lady with The Dog : SHORT STORY

Chekov at his finest.  Why are there so many fabulous Russian authors out there?  I mean these guys really knew how to craft a fascinating tale.  If only I could read Russian!!

What I enjoyed:  The sensual nature of this story, and c'mon he is Chekov!  I want to write like this guy.


6. A Grief Observed : Essay/Memoir

When CS Lewis began to pen this short tome, he was trying to make sense of his own emotions.  I wanted to read this earlier, but avoided it  due to my own desire not to read about other's grief.  However, this book made me cry and I recommend it for anyone.

What I enjoyed:  He pretty much calls God a Sadist...my thoughts at times.

CS Lewis. Man...I love him which brings me to the music of another Lewis.  Jenny Lewis.




Just One of the Guys(cause I'm also "just another lady without a baby")  I am loving this entire album called Voyager, which I really need to get on vinyl.

Sidenote: Jenny Lewis was in this great movie that played on the Disney channel back in the 80's(when that channel had substance) called A Friendship in Vienna



Here is is the FULL movie on Youtube!! Watch it!  You won't be disappointed.