"be brief and tell us everything."


Monday, January 14, 2013

best of music. 2012.

(I feel like it is worth noting that these are my favorite albums of 2012 that I have HEARD. if you strongly believe an album is missing from this list, it may be because I haven't heard it yet. I don't get paid to listen to music and write these, ya know. but how awesome would that be?!)

#1 Lana Del Rey-Born to Die
"Now my life is sweet like cinnamon. Like a fucking dream I'm living in. Baby love me cause I'm playing on the radio. How do you like me now?"

My interest in Lana Del Rey was sparked after all the controversy surrounding her SNL performance (proving all press is good press). When I caught up with the rest of society the next day, I was surprised at what I heard and saw. After watching the clip, I thought to myself, “I kind of enjoyed that.”

I spent the next week looking up Lana Del Rey on youtube and watched the video for her single “Born to Die” more times than I can count. Lana Del Rey is intriguing and unusual. Her style is a blend of hip-hop and indie goddess with gold chains, thick red lips, flower headbands and long, gouty fingernails.

Throughout “Born to Die” Lana Del Rey sings what she knows -the woes of a rich girl living the high life in L.A. Her music and lyrics are shallow and materialistic. For example, “National Anthem” imparts on us the importance of money (“Money is the reason we exist…the anthem of success”) and encourages us to wear mascara, party dresses and buys expensive cars.

“Off to the Races” has a list of lyrics seeping with drugs, sex, money and what seems to be, well, incest. (“He loves me with every beat of his cocaine heart…Light of his life, fire of his loins. Tell me you want me…give me them coins.”)

But somehow it all works. “Born to Die” is whiny and dramatic. And I like it. Perhaps it’s the excess and theatrics throughout the album and in Lana Del Rey herself that attracts me. Whatever it is, I guess the rest of America and I just have a different definition of “awful.”
Listen to: Born to Die

#2 Torche-Harmonicraft
"Kicking!"





















“Harmonicraft” grabs you by the throat with “Letting Go” and holds on tight through the rest of the album. Torche seems to have hit their stride with “Harmonicraft,” providing a fun and energetic rock album that can also be sober.

“Walk It Off” is a fast paced joy ride, “In Pieces” takes things more serious and “Solitary Traveler” strangely does provide a lonely and isolating feeling. It doesn’t take a musician (or a rocket scientist) to appreciate the drumming and guitar playing throughout this album; it’s grueling. (Name) can actually sing which sometimes seems like a lost art in heavy rock bands. 

“Harmonicraft” is full bodied and just an all around great rock album. It is just the right length at 38 minutes, careful not to fill time with needless guitar solos or repetitive jam sessions. “Harmonicraft” is packed-full from beginning to end and I’m totally exhausted by the last song.
Listen to: Reverse Inverted

#3 The Life and Times No One Loves You Like I Do
"Take the fucking weight off your shoulders." 


























From the first note of “No one Loves You Like I Do,” you know this album is going to have that classic Life and Times sound. Even the mediocre songs on the album are better than other rock bands’ best work. Throughout “No One Loves You Like I Do,” the songs flow easily from one to the next. The Life and Times know how to make a big sounding album that is steady and dark, yet enjoyable and their current release is no exception. (Remember that while listening to “No One Loves You Like I Do,” only 3 people are making all that noise.) As the epic song at the end of the album, Day 12, says, “I just can’t get you out of my head.” 
Listen to: Day One

#4 Fiona Apple-The Idler Wheel is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do
“Don’t let me ruin me. I may need a chaperone.”



























“The Idler Wheel” seems to be a direct reflection of Fiona Apple herself. She is quirky and complicated and has mastered being transparent with her audience. It’s evident that she writes as if she demands perfection from herself. Ms. Apple is a poet first and a musician for the lyricist. In “Left Alone” she eloquently puts the inward contradiction in all of us between wanting to be needed, and wanting to be left the hell alone. She is a brilliant writer who, through her music, takes us along on her journey. She has matured from the drugged out horny girl in “Criminal” (which by the way, is still one of my favorite videos of all time) to a serious artist with real and raw talent. I like Fiona Apple (ok, I am a bit obsessed with Fiona Apple) but I don’t except everyone to. She is a strange creature but like a fine wine, Fiona just seems to get better with age.
Listen to: Every Single Night

#5 Alt J-An Awesome Wave





















“An Awesome Wave” sounds like if Mewithoutyou made a weird synth R&B album. This may cause some of you to instantly stop reading but give this album a chance. The single, “Fitzpleasure,” is ultra groovy and funky and the rest of the album follows suite. As someone who appreciates good lyrics, I have no idea what he is saying 95% of the time and I still dig “An Awesome Wave.” Alt J may sound kind of gimmicky and that’s because it is. but that’s ok. 
Listen to: Breezeblocks

Saturday, January 5, 2013

2012 in tweets.

January
“You’re not voting for Ron Paul? You must LIKE paying taxes.”

February
“I love the show Top Gear. (UK version of course) and I don't even like cars!”

March
(No tweet due to fasting for lent)

April
“I once bought mascara simply because Zooey Deschanel did the commercial for it." #gotthelondonlook”

May
"Our hope is in Christ-not our circumstances-and in our circumstances Christ’s character does not change." #easiersaidthanbelieved #learning”

June
“Sand pits on playgrounds are the worst idea ever. It's like letting your child play in kitty litter.”

July
“We have grown so much as a society both nationally and internationally. Yet gymnasts still wear scrunchies. #why #toomanybarrettes”

August
“SHINER!”

September
“I love Sunday night football. Especially when the Steelers are playing.”

October
“Revisiting to Eisley's Room Noises today. What a great album and I swear I sound just like her when I sing along.”

November
“VOTE!”

December
“December, you remind me of spring. #wheresmysnow”

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Noah Gundersen.

Every so often, an artist comes along and inspires me. They churn something in the pit of my stomach that beckons me to be creative, to DO SOMETHING. For me, for now that artist is Noah Gundersen.

With just an acoustic guitar, a violin and a set of microphones, Noah Gundersen and his sister Abby managed to hush the Record Bar until you could hear the floor boards squeak. His unassuming presence and meek personality are a stark comparison to the deep and solid voice that filled up the venue like a thick fog. Meanwhile, Abby Gundersen is the unpretentious hero, quietly providing the harmony and smooth violin, which she played flawlessly. Together they form a sound like a harsh Tennessee whisky shot taken next to a warm winter fire.


With rich, religious undertones, you can almost see Gundersen growing up singing hymns in stained glass cathedrals with his siblings. He is clearly a seeker of truth, love and faith and writes music about maturing into his own thoughts and ideas on these tough subject matters. Gundersen’s lyrics are moving and poignant. Songs like ”Jesus, Jesus” have some of the most honest lyrics I have heard in a while. They are simple yet profound. He is unashamed and unafraid to ask questions and voice his spiritual insecurities. (which, if we are honest, we all have had from time to time. And guess what? God can handle it.)

Seriously just get on youtube and allow yourself to be sucked in.


I am thankful for this type of music and sincere song writing. This type of candor creates an atmosphere of community, of oneness, of sweet, reaffirming whisperings, “I’m not alone.” That’s the power of music my friends. Never underestimate it.

Some of my favorite Noah Gundersen Lyrics: 

“Say something awful as if fucking the world is your right.” -Family

“…I wanted to ask you, man what do you do in the daylight?” -Family

 “So bum me a cigarette buy me a beer ‘til I am happy to be here. I’m happy to here with all of my family; hookers in heels and the men who watch them like hungry black eels.” -Family

“Jesus, Jesus there are those that say they love you but some of them have treated me so God damn mean. And I know you said forgive them for they know not what they do but sometimes I’m pretty sure they do.” -Jesus, Jesus

“Jesus, Jesus it’s such a pretty place we live in and I know we’ve fucked it up but please be kind.”
 -Jesus, Jesus

“Jesus, Jesus I’m still looking for answers and I hope I always will be.” –Jesus, Jesus

“I want to hunt like David. I want to kill me a giant man. I want to slay my demons. But I’ve got lots of them.” –David

“Here I stand on the edge of the ledges that I’ve made…trying to be a better man for you.” –Ledges

“I’ve got plenty of time but I want everything now.” –Poor Mans Son

and he's a total babe, too.

Monday, October 29, 2012

happy october.

tis the season. 

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

a simple prayer.


"yes, Father! yes, and always, yes!" St. Francis de Sales

yes. I don't even know what I am saying yes to. but yes today. yes tomorrow. as a deer pants for the water, so my soul says yes to you.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

a post on balance. that some may find controversial.


I often wonder what life would be like as a stay at home mom. And sometimes my heart aches to be home with Lola and not have to worry about working full time. As a working mother, I seem to constantly be asking myself, “Am I going to regret working during these precious early years when she is grown? Should I be spending more time with her? What about her development? Is she being nurtured properly? Is someone else raising my child?” Let me just say up front that I HAVE to work to honor a contract I made in nursing school. (and partly too, to help pay our bills.) It’s called the “HCA loan” and it’s a boring story with lots of legal language but basically this contract paid for my school if I promised to work full time for an HCA hospital for three years after graduation. If I didn’t have a $65,000 loan hanging over my head, I may consider more seriously staying at home. But I also know that God put a desire in my heart years before lola was even thought of. And working right now is part of that bigger plan God has that is just for me.

Anyway, as a nurse, I work 3 days a week than I am off 4-6 days in a row. I get to experience both the “working mom” realm and the “stay at home mom” world. I often hear/see things like “You clock out after work; a stay at home mom’s work never ends! If you think all I do all day with the kids is sit around and play on the computer, you should try it! A stay at home mom works the equivalent of 900 hours a week!” Being a homemaker offers its own unique struggles, sure, but I am just going to be honest here; the working mother has it rough. I like to remind people that working mothers still have to do everything a stay at home mom does. We still have to cook, clean, fix dinner, wash our spouse’s underwear and occasionally give our child a bath all nestled between working 40+ hours a week. Yes, the human adult interaction and break from the mundane tasks of laundry and sweeping the floor and picking up books for the one hundredth time and not dealing with a toodlers temper is great but lets remember I am WORKING when I am gone. I’m not sipping lattes and reading on the back porch. I sometimes have to deal with unappreciative control freaks that are rude who make me miss being around a 2 year old. Some shifts I don’t even find time pee let alone eat lunch or have a conversation with a co-worker. (The craziness that is the life of a nurse is an entirely different post so I will move on.) I know in my heart that my personality does not fit staying home with lola everyday. I would get bored and anxious. And I think she would too. She is an active social butterfly who is full of energy and needs to get out of the house. And like I said earlier, being a nurse is something God has for me and just because I have a child now doesn’t change the desire God placed in my heart when I was 10 years old. I do however wish I could work less and stop with the “who is going to watch lola on what days” chaos.

So what’s the point of all this?

As a working mother, I find myself constantly trying to find balance. Balance between work, raising Lola, being Brandon’s wife and time to myself.

A blog I recently read encouraged us not to try and find balance but instead surrender each day to God and obey what it is he wants from you that day, that moment. Just like the weather, life too, has seasons. A season can be years or months but it can also be a day, or even just an afternoon. Should today be focused on being a good employee, working hard and helping others? Or is this week a week to fully engage and nurture Lola? Is this afternoon for you to write and refuel and be by yourself? By surrendering each day, I can go forward WITHOUT GUILT knowing this is the season in which God has me. When Christ is leading my life, whichever direction I am going, I can go confidently knowing this is where he wants me, even if it’s just for a season. In surrender and obedience, there is freedom.

I don’t want this to be the war of who’s got it worst. I’m Just trying to encourage those of us who wear multiple hats.

Here is the link to the blog post.

http://thenatos.blogspot.com/2012/05/is-that-really-question-you-should-ask.html

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Grief.


“Amazing grace, how sweet the sound,” my uncle sang sweetly through cracked vocals as the heart monitor beeped, counting down my grandmother’s final moments.

“That saved a wretch like me.”

She was bloated, huge. We had pumped liters upon liters of fluid into her body to save her life. Her face was swollen beyond recognition, the color of her skin bruised and a yellowing jaundiced. In our innocent attempt to save her life we had morphed her into someone physically none of us recognized. Her mouth was gaped slightly open, her lips cracked and dry. The tube down her throat and taped to her mouth provided a mechanical breathing symphony as we all stood at her bedside, silent and still, listening. The heart monitored wailed a slow and steady zero, indicating a heartbeat could no longer be detected. 

“She’s gone. That’s it,” my mother starred blankly at my grandma’s body. Her bangs were greased to her forehead, her eyes red and heavy.

“She’s dead.”

I thought my mom would like some time with the body but instead she insisted we leave the hospital as soon as possible. I quickly grabbed our belongings that had piled up in the waiting room the last 36 hours. My dad had his arm around my mother who was visibly losing control with each step. As we came to the exit of the hospital, the automatic doors slide open and a giant gust of December wind hit us in the face and left its bitter sting on our cheeks. 

As if triggered by the frigid air, my mother pushed away from my father, turned to us and petitioned, “My mother is going to be outside in this!” she motioned towards the air, the dark.

“She is going to be buried in the cold ground! She is going to be so cold!” when we could offer no answer, no reason or words of reassurance to this difficult truth, she collapsed to her knees, unable to stand any longer.

I started to walk towards her when my dad stopped me. He slowly shook his head and pulled me back.
“Just let her grieve,” He said.

“Here?” I said, embarrassed.

“Outside? In front of the hospital?”  I looked around for confirmation that she was making a scene and that people were watching and being traumatized, but I was answered with the silent and empty blackness of the middle of the night.

It seemed so inappropriate, so impersonal. But grief isn’t punctual or proper. It knows no manners and follows no rules. Sure it loves the lonely of the night but it also strikes loud and unannounced in the busy of the day, in movie theatres or business meetings or even in hospital parking lots because that is when we least expect it. The three of us, my brother, my father and myself, could do nothing but stand in a neat little row behind her, watching as she angrily cried.

Since we were visiting from out of state, we were staying, of all places, at my grandmother’s house. Surely there was a hotel or a friend of the families that would take us in even at this ungodly hour of the night. It seemed like a horrible idea, walking into her house, smelling her smell, seeing her clothes, her dishes, her favorite chair. But my mother insisted.

Being in my grandmother’s house made me angry. In her bedroom was her suitcase, half unpacked on the edge of the bed. You could almost see her standing there, shirt in hand when she suddenly remembered she needed milk for in the morning. She left to run an errand. Not die. She would have never left dirty dishes in the sink or the sandwich bread on the counter. Who was going to wash the dishes from the last meal my grandma ever ate? It all became so real and so unfair. She wasn’t ready. 

We weren’t ready.

There was still laundry in the washing machine.

My mom went around the house, weeping and acting like a drunk lunatic. In the bedroom, she opened drawers, smelled socks, hugged pillows, threw towels all the while being completely oblivious to anything but her grief. That what grief does. It shreds you of all inhibitions and narrows your thoughts so the only thing you can focus on is the pain in your chest, the sickening feeling that this is it, you will never see them, hug them, kiss them, laugh, cry, yell or have fun with them ever again. This is all that is left, material things like a pink bathrobe. She curled herself up into a ball, melting her body into my grandma’s blouses and pants. She sobbed quietly than loudly. She opened up the closet door and fell into the clothes, dragging them to the floor with her. She gripped my grandmother’s shirts and pressing them to her nose, suffocating herself with her mother’s scent.
 
She suddenly looked at me and was quiet, like the hush before the storm.

When our eyes met, I saw they were heavy and empty. She wasn’t there; she was lost in anguish. I had never seen anyone act like this and it scared me. I was worried about what she might say or what she might ask of me. My throat was dry with nervousness of what I should say or do.

“Will you help me take a bath?” she whispered. 

My mother sat in the bathtub, knees to chest rocking back and forth. She splashed the steaming hot water over her breasts and on her face. I placed the detachable showerhead over her worn frame and let the water pour over her head, onto her back and over her face.

Something interesting happens overtime to a family. The role of each member over time slowly begins to change. In almost every situation, the roles slowly begin to reverse. In that moment, I was a child bathing her mother.

As I knelt over the ceramic bathtub, she began to sob. She begged and pleaded. To whom I wasn’t sure but she beat her first against her head and cried, “I WANT MY MOMMA!”

My mother had morphed into a begging child. I felt useless. The beating against the face became harder, the water hotter and the splashing more violent.

“I WANT MY MOMMA!”

I felt weak. I squeezed the shampoo into my hand and washed my mothers hair.
“I begged God, I begged him…”

I felt frightened. I began to cry. I cried because my mother was in the most emotional pain I had ever seen. Her insides were breaking, melting away with regret and her soul was filling up with the emptiness you feel only when you miss someone. Her heart felt on fire with the realization that she would never see her mother again. As humans we want to fix things and make the pain of our loved ones go away with words. There were no words. All I could do was sob right along beside her.

The day of the funeral I turned on the TV to find a happy and smiling actress with a pearly white smile staring back at me, excited that the Crest Whitening Toothpaste had worked in just enough time to impress her first date. I had been so consumed with keeping my mom safe from herself that seeing that commercial reminded me that no matter what happens the world keeps going, the earth keeps spinning. Nothing stops and waits for us. There are still commercials and sitcoms and weddings and graduations whether we are stuck in our grief or not. All I could think of though was that I had just lost my grandma and I was slowly losing my mom too. How could anyone care about toothpaste?

The car pulled up to the burial site. Along with my cousins, we carried my grandmother in her casket and placed her on the cloth strips that would lower her into the ground. It’s an uncomfortable feeling carrying someone you love to their grave. I was honored, yet horrified. I had to keep telling myself she wasn’t in there. The grandmother I knew and loved, laughed and drank latte’s with was not in that coffin. It was just her shell like how a butterfly abandons its cocoon. Except this shell still looked like my grandma. It had her smooth, winkled skin and painted red fingernails. An old cocoon never looks like the butterfly. 

It was cold. The wind blew with a bitter and angry revenge and the entire earth seemed to be covered in a grey film, a fog, and a desperate appearance of lifelessness. Death. I was freezing. I rocked back and forth on my heels. I wanted to walk back to the car and sit on the leather seats and shiver until the chill past. I felt selfish for being cold.

The pile of dirt that would be placed over my grandma’s grave sat piled high about 15 yards from where I stood. It could be seen perfectly from the burial site.  “That’s nice,” I sarcastically thought.
“They could have at least tried to cover it with a tarp or something. I guess at least we know the grave is fresh.” 

My mother sat in a chair inches from the casket. She had taken a xanax or three to get through the service and cried appropriately, though who is to say what is appropriate when you are burying your mother.

The service was short and after the final prayer ended, everyone lingered unsure of what to do next, not really wanting it to truly be over. My uncle Danny, a tall man with blue jeans and a tight leather jacket, touched the casket with a tender hand, while the other remained in his coat pocket. He paused a moment, then silently bent down and gently kissed the casket. It was a humbling moment, watching a grown man showing respect. He was alone and innocent in his act and didn’t know I saw him do it.
The next time we would be here, grass would be spouting up over the dead ground and flowers in bloom would be placed on tombstones throughout the graveyard. The sun would be warm and welcoming and we would squat down and brush the leaves off of the tombstones where my grandma and grandpa lay. But that was not today. Today the ground was cold and bare, the wind cruel and mocking.

At the time I had no idea this was a season in my life I would never forget. But that’s kind of how it goes. I’m pretty sure if we did know, it would ruin the moment. We would position ourselves just so or try to look a certain way and say certain things. Everything would be so dramatic, so unnatural. But I guess it would have been nice to have been prepared.

Grief physically hurts. It squeezes your chest, making your body nauseated and sick with no relief. It leaves you frail and apathetic and drains you of anticipating anything enjoyable in life. Grief leaves you painfully aware of a loved one’s absence when something unexpectedly reminds you of them. Grief narrows our vision. It is the only thing we can see. Everything else is blurred or distorted. (If we can even see anything else at all.) To not be able to see anything outside of your present circumstance is to be hopeless.

Time does not heal our wounds. Time creates distance. And the further we travel away from our grief, the wider our field of vision becomes. But it’s a long and harsh road that unfortunately never really ends, just becomes more bearable. Some that pass through grief don’t survive and most are never the same after walking through it. It’s a road that cannot be traveled alone. 

My job when I watched my mom crumble with grief was not to fix the hurt but to be a presence, a hand to hold on the dark days, an ear to listen or a voice to say, “I may not know how you feel or know the right words to say. I’m not sure what will make you feel better, or if anything will. But as long as you need me, you are not alone. I’m not going anywhere.”

My mother often asks me when she will stop missing her mom. The honest answer is never. But with each passing day distance is created and we are able to enjoy life again without guilt. We are able to feel things other than sorrow. Laughter returns. We start to experience life’s simple pleasures once more in the form of finishing a good book, a good meal. For my mother, it was holding the new life of a grandchild against her chest; a baby sleeping peacefully in her arms that made her feel life was worth living again. And slowly, like how the first dandelion in spring fights its way through the winters ground, hope returns.