hey world. here i am., make a little bird house in your soul, not about my hair

In which Lawrence Ferlinghetti takes the helm.

To cap my ridiculously overly scheduled week, I’m picking up a shift, working a wedding for a caterer.

On Yom Kippur.

Oops.

And then writing all day Sunday the boring, businessy stuff I have to write, not for you, my heathens.

And so again I ask your indulgence — yes, this will be a habit; you can’t possibly be surprised — and share with you some of my favorite words, from the pen of my favorite poet. This piece reads to me like running down a hill on a summer’s day, unable to slow or stop.

I Am Waiting

by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

I am waiting for my case to come up
and I am waiting
for a rebirth of wonder
and I am waiting for someone
to really discover America
and wail
and I am waiting
for the discovery
of a new symbolic western frontier


and I am waiting
for the American Eagle
to really spread its wings
and straighten up and fly right
and I am waiting
for the Age of Anxiety
to drop dead
and I am waiting
for the war to be fought
which will make the world safe
for anarchy
and I am waiting
for the final withering away
of all governments
and I am perpetually awaiting
a rebirth of wonder


I am waiting for the Second Coming
and I am waiting
for a religious revival
to sweep thru the state of Arizona
and I am waiting
for the Grapes of Wrath to be stored
and I am waiting
for them to prove
that God is really American
and I am waiting
to see God on television
piped onto church altars
if only they can find
the right channel
to tune in on
and I am waiting
for the Last Supper to be served again
with a strange new appetizer
and I am perpetually awaiting
a rebirth of wonder


I am waiting for my number to be called
and I am waiting
for the Salvation Army to take over
and I am waiting
for the meek to be blessed
and inherit the earth
without taxes
and I am waiting
for forests and animals
to reclaim the earth as theirs
and I am waiting
for a way to be devised
to destroy all nationalisms
without killing anybody
and I am waiting
for linnets and planets to fall like rain
and I am waiting for lovers and weepers
to lie down together again
in a new rebirth of wonder


I am waiting for the Great Divide to be crossed
and I am anxiously waiting
for the secret of eternal life to be discovered
by an obscure general practitioner
and I am waiting
for the storms of life
to be over
and I am waiting
to set sail for happiness
and I am waiting
for a reconstructed Mayflower
to reach America
with its picture story and tv rights
sold in advance to the natives
and I am waiting
for the lost music to sound again
in the Lost Continent
in a new rebirth of wonder


I am waiting for the day
that maketh all things clear
and I am awaiting retribution
for what America did
to Tom Sawyer
and I am waiting
for Alice in Wonderland
to retransmit to me
her total dream of innocence
and I am waiting
for Childe Roland to come
to the final darkest tower
and I am waiting
for Aphrodite
to grow live arms
at a final disarmament conference
in a new rebirth of wonder


I am waiting
to get some intimations
of immortality
by recollecting my early childhood
and I am waiting
for the green mornings to come again
youth’s dumb green fields come back again
and I am waiting
for some strains of unpremeditated art
to shake my typewriter
and I am waiting to write
the great indelible poem
and I am waiting
for the last long careless rapture
and I am perpetually waiting
for the fleeing lovers on the Grecian Urn
to catch each other up at last
and embrace
and I am awaiting
perpetually and forever
a renaissance of wonder

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, “I Am Waiting,” from A Coney Island of the Mind. Copyright © 1958 by Lawrence Ferlinghetti.

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hey world. here i am., twitter

In which I remain disappointingly earnest and use! fun! tabs!

It’s such a strange place to be, free of the indignance (which so is a word, WordPress, you asshole) and irreverence of my every day. I spend so much time being bemusedly outraged or in bimbo-like frustration, simply to entertain myself.

And fuck, I never woulda thunk it’d be so hard to be snarky, when you sit down to try to be.

I’m very good at judging, people. I do judgmental very well.

sincerity requires black-&-white closeups.

sincerity requires black-&-white closeups... that are apparently too small.

But it’s the new year, and there are crazy things abrewin’, family coming to town, others celebrating freedom, living in limbo with plans just out of reach.

Apparently the forming of the matzah balls brings a girl some nostalgia.

I made my soup the goishe way; I didn’t start yesterday.

Tossed some chicken thighs into a pan to start the sear.

Chopped carrots, onions, celery and parsnip.

Picked out just the right bay leaf.

Snipped parsley fresh from the garden.

I’ve been in a fight with God for years. After a lifetime of questioning and belief, spurred, actually, within myself and not from family or other pressures, it became too hard to believe.

With this new year come new opportunities, new chances to fuck up, new reasons to be kind or cruel, new people to meet, new men to fuck, new books to read, new words to write.

The temperature cools, and despite my best efforts, I talk to God. I try to think of praise or questions, to avoid those pleas within me. After all, I can’t ask if I won’t believe, right?

But of course I ask. What else is God for?

Of course, as well, it will always be easy for my hands to knead dough, to chop vegetables, to unconsciously mutter prayers.

And I’ve been mostly successful in ignoring it all, just giving up practice.

Yet now I’ve got this lens on, ever seeking that moment I’ll write about, imbue with meaning or recraft, hiiiilariously, in prose.

Which, frankly, makes avoiding introspection a huge pain in the ass.

I believe in people, just as I believe in the power of butter.

I believe in love, as I know cream & flour join to start the best sausage gravy.

I know I’ll see holiness in the actions of others, the way orange juice makes balsamic so sweet.

I trust there’s evil, just as I know, once out of every 10 or so times, I’ll overblanch the potatoes.

And I believe so strongly in these things, from toes to eyebrows to elbows to those little lines that have just recently appeared around my mouth.

I know, I know, I’m just boozily describing my naivete in florid detail. You’re welcome.

What’s really striking to me, though, is how much I believe in you, this community, with usually made-up names and craftily cropped avatars.

We present so much artifice, so many masks, and yet for some, are more honest in this life than in the ones where we actually see other people.

And fuck, I’m earnest, but I’m so glad for you.

Today, interestingly, I ask that this status quo continue. No matter how frustrating nor how angsty we all know I am. No matter how impatient I find myself, unable to write anything but the sincere. and, well, boozy.

Happy new year, my friends.

I need another drink.

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hey world. here i am.

In which I show no discipline, no respect for religion and get all verklempt with love.

I sat down to write funny today, since tomorrow is one of those important days, where I should, at least, keep irreverence to a middle and respect my elders. Or something like that.

And since it’s my first opportunity for, like, some sort of discipline, I figure I should so write something new. I suppose it shouldn’t surprise anyone discipline and self control aren’t, uh, well, strong suits of mine.

But I started to write, oh, eightish times today?

(If I had been counting, we’d have specificity. Counting is also one of those ‘weaknesses,’ we could say, of mine.)

And each time, I’ve been drawn back, every moment, to a letter I wrote weeks ago – it was, indeed, the moment I realized I’d missed all of this, the writing, the community, the connections.

(Yes, I’ll stop being trite soon, I promise.)

I hope she doesn’t mind I’m sharing this with the world – and I know she knows every word is true.


For Margot, on her birthday.


Ladygirlmine,


As you read this and the many other wonderful sentiments that I know have come to you today, I hope — as I always have — you feel — as I know you do — from your toes to your eyelashes, from your knees to your teeth, how much love you inspire in this world.

We’ve had this conversation before, about each other, about who we are individually and to the other, about what we want, where we wish to be and it always seems the answer is love. Not a surprise, really, since we’ve each devoted so much of our lives to love: successfully, sadly, sacrificially, sweetly — with music or baking or stripy socks.

I’ve had a lot of time to think recently, you know. I could make a career out of the time I’ve spent trying to figure out what I want, who I am, who I want, what I am — and how others, and love, fit into those equations.

I’ve felt for a little while now, at least a month or two, that I have been on the brink of figuring ‘it’ out. I’ve captured and rejoiced in decisions that feel more solid, right and true in the last six months than ever before in my life.

But I knew I was on the edge of something more – something that would complete at least a very small corner of the puzzle, something to weigh it down, hold it tight, anchor my love, my plans, my dreams.

I knew it was coming, but I had no clue what it would be. A Grand Idea, perhaps? A Blueprint For The Future?

It would be something that required extraneous capitalization, something that called out for emphasis.

It dawned on me that these decisions I’ve made have been, at least in part, decisions I’d considered in my past but never acknowledged or allowed to be thought fully into fruition. The kind of person I want to be, the kind of person I want with me, a bed & breakfast, a career ‘hostess’ — these are notions I’ve held in the past. I simply never knew they could be real, and mine.

And so I realized, too, that this Big Something that loomed before me, just out of sight, would no doubt be one of the many thoughts or whims or fancies I passed by, let slip away.

I was wrong. In part, anyway. It’s a notion I’ve always known. It’s something we grow up with, hope to create on our own, live in or seeking – but I never let it leave. I just wasn’t looking in the right place.

So here comes your birthday.

I think of you, of how to celebrate you.

I run you over my mind, like a pencil on my fingers, a cat weaving in and out of my legs, a brook running over pebbles and sand.

I think of how tiny your mouth is, how strong your hands are, how quickly your mind moves.

I think of the pressure of your hug, the flutter of your eyelashes as you wink, the way you quickly run your hands back and forth through your hair when it’s wet.

I think of the excitement in your voice when you speak, the disorganized way you pack your suitcases, every time, the leftward direction in which your eyes move when you’re trying not to roll them.

And it hits me.

You feel like home.

Divorce and crazy and moving and Judaism and schools and college and all of the ridiculous factors that tear us away from the notion of ‘home’ — it’s as though they’re all books on a shelf, obscuring those behind them. And all I need to do is pick them up and move them.

But nothing stands before you in my head or my heart.

I need not move a thing to feel you, love you, know that you are my home.

I know the way that you smell, from the different products you use to that smell that is you.

I can close my eyes and see the way you hold a pencil or wear a flower behind your ear.

I can hear the thud of a bag you’ve picked up and thrown over your shoulder, the ubiquitous luggage.

I can taste your scones, your breakfasts, that ridiculous dairy-free whipped cream.

I can hear giggles over fruit choices in grocery stores and feel calluses that crack on fingers.

I know in you the orange of a band uniform, the purple of sumac, the blue of a swimming pool.

I feel you in the sun on my face at a wine-filled picnic and in the cool marble under my hands, leaning against the stairs at a national gallery.

I can see the lines around the corners of your mouth as it opens, wide, to smile.

I feel the weight of your sigh as it leaves your chest and the flood of your laughter as it washes over me.

I feel you and I feel home. Distance is but a measure.

And that’s science.

We all know how I feel about science.

And so you guide my life. You guide my home. I will live my life in search of the other corners, the other pieces.

I will create home.

I will write home.

I will sing home.

I will love home.

That’s my Something Grand. It’s my Framework For Life, my Blueprint For The Future. Home. And you will always be a part of it, a vital part of it, for you are the spark that makes my home.


Happy birthday, Ladygirl. I love you.

i completely stole this photo from tamar. kisses, baby!

i completely stole this photo from tamar. kisses, baby!

I sat down to write funny today, since tomorrowimportant is one of those days, where I should, at least, keep irreverence to a middle and respect my elders. Or something like that.

And since it’s my first opportunity for, like, some sort of discipline, I figure I should sostrong suits write something new. I suppose it shouldn’t surprise anyone discipline and self control aren’t, uh, well, of mine.

But I started to write, oh, eightish times today? (If I had been counting, we’d have specificity. Counting is also one of those ‘weaknesses,’ we could say, of mine.)

And each time, I’ve been drawn back, every moment, to a letter I wrote weeks ago – it was, indeed, the moment I realized I’d missed all of this, the writing, the community, the connections.

(Yes, I’ll stop being trite soon, I promise.)

I hope she doesn’t mind I’m sharing this with the world – and I know she knows every word is true.

For Margot, on her birthday.

Ladygirlmine,

As you read this and the many other wonderful sentiments that I know have come to you today, I hope — as I always haveas I know you do — you feel — — from your toes to your eyelashes, from your knees to your teeth, how much love you inspire in this world.

We’ve had this conversation before, about each other, about who we are individually and to the other, about what we want, where we wish to be and it always seems the answer is love. Not a surprise, really, since we’ve each devoted so much of our lives to love: successfully, sadly, sacrificially, sweetly — with music or baking or stripy socks.

I’ve had a lot of time to think recently, you know. I could make a career out of the time I’ve spent trying to figure out what I want, who I am, who I want, what I am — and how others, and love, fit into those equations. I’ve felt for a little while now, at least a month or two, that I have been on the brink of figuring ‘it’ out. I’ve captured and rejoiced in decisions that feel more solid, right and true in the last six months than ever before in my life. But I knew I was on the edge of something more – something that would complete at least a very small corner of the puzzle, something to weigh it down, hold it tight, anchor my love, my plans, my dreams.

I knew it was coming, but I had no clue what it would be. A Grand Idea, perhaps? A Blueprint For The Future? It would be something that required extraneous capitalization, something that called out for emphasis.

It dawned on me that these decisions I’ve made have been, at least in part, decisions I’d considered in my past but never acknowledged or allowed to be thought fully into fruition. The kind of person I want to be, the kind of person I want with me, a bed & breakfast, a career ‘hostess’ — these are notions I’ve held in the past. I simply never knew they could be real, and mine.

And so I realized, too, that this Big Something that loomed before me, just out of sight, would no doubt be one of the many thoughts or whims or fancies I passed by, let slip away.

I was wrong. In part, anyway. It’s a notion I’ve always known. It’s something we grow up with, hope to create on our own, live in or seeking – but I never let it leave. I just wasn’t looking in the right place.

So here comes your birthday. I think of you, of how to celebrate you. I run you over my mind, like a pencil on my fingers, a cat weaving in and out of my legs, a brook running over pebbles and sand. I think of how tiny your mouth is, how strong your hands are, how quickly your mind moves. I think of the pressure of your hug, the flutter of your eyelashes as you wink, the way you quickly run your hands back and forth through your hair when it’s wet. I think of the excitement in your voice when you speak, the disorganized way you pack your suitcases, every time, the leftward direction in which your eyes move when you’re trying not to roll them.

And it hits me.

You feel like home.

Divorce and crazy and moving and Judaism and schools and college and all of the ridiculous factors that tear us away from the notion of ‘home’ — it’s as though they’re all books on a shelf, obscuring those behind them. And all I need to do is pick them up and move them.

But nothing stands before you in my head or my heart. I need not move a thing to feel you, love you, know that you are my home.

I know the way that you smell, from the different products you use to that smell that is you. I can close my eyes and see the way you hold a pencil or wear a flower behind your ear. I can hear the thud of a bag you’ve picked up and thrown over your shoulder, the ubiquitous luggage. I can taste your scones, your breakfasts, that ridiculous dairy-free whipped cream. I can hear giggles over fruit choices in grocery stores and feel calluses that crack on fingers. I know in you the orange of a band uniform, the purple of sumac, the blue of a swimming pool. I feel you in the sun on my face at a wine-filled picnic and in the cool marble under my hands, leaning against the stairs at a national gallery. I can see the lines around the corners of your mouth as it opens, wide, to smile. I feel the weight of your sigh as it leaves your chest and the flood of your laughter as it washes over me.

I feel you and I feel home. Distance is but a measure.

And that’s science.

We all know how I feel about science.

And so you guide my life. You guide my home. I will live my life in search of the other corners, the other pieces.

I will create home.

I will write home.

I will sing home.

I will love home.

That’s my Something Grand. It’s my Framework For Life, my Blueprint For The Future. Home. And you will always be a part of it, a vital part of it, for you are the spark that makes my home.

Happy birthday, Ladygirl. I love you.

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