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Closing

First, given the title, I’m not actually doing another closing out of the site and whatnot. It refers to something a lot deeper. What this is about is doing one of those cathartic things they always tell you to do, but generally  goes completely against who I am. I have my past – my hurts, my sad stories, my hauntings and it’s my thing, or it has been for a good long while. A lot of it comes down to the things I keep in this medicine bag – items that generally remind me of some of those key moments in my history. This particular thing represents the closing out of those things, of my reliance on or addiction to them and signifies the main end of my minimalizing process, in which I cleaned the skeletons out of the closet with the old shirts.

When I wrote “Why I hate Breakups” and managed to make Cassie amazingly mad at me she mentioned that any hope of a future was gone – that she had buried it in the backyard by the fence. I’m not sure it’s possible to bury the future, but as I went through pages, pictures, trinkets, journals and whatnot over the last few days I came to grasp what influence the past had on my life and the terrible realization of how much history I have repeated. A lot of things went into the trash this week – a lot got boxed up to be out of the way, but the finality of it comes in the form of an old metal box that I put those essential representations in and, you guessed it, buried in the backyard – by the fence. Along with these things was supposed to go this letter I wrote, a reflection of sorts:

15 April 2008

The medicine bag was bought at a store in the mall sometime when I was around 16 or so, if I remember. It’s a simple light deerskin piece that I used to wear about my neck. Eventually it would collect memories: trinkets that serve as reminders of memories past. These are little things – if you looked at them you would think them fairly insignificant, but each carries with it memory powerful enough to drive me to my knees when I hold it. Perhaps it is for that reason above all others that these things need to move on, as do I – I’ve gained little from them other than reminders of a past that nothing can be done for.

There was an acorn in the bag once that I found around the first day of fall, but it passed along some time ago – I’m not sure when. It had fallen off a tree near the back entrance of Cypress Creek high school and I picked it up. It used to be that the acorn itself reminded me of those years -the fever years of post-adolescence in that strange moment between childhood and adulthood where everything exists in an exponential height of emotion. It won’t be going into the ground, but perhaps it left beforehand because I had passed over the longing for those years.

There is a perfectly smooth quartz in the bag -a shard. It recalls a search for faith, magic (or, to some degree, magick) and theology. It brings into memory years attempting to understand the great thereafter question: what next? It reminds me of the time I spend studying, reading, thinking and attempting to understand the nature of religion, belief and the passage into my own ideals, which have molded here and there. I think the names that I placed on such things have been fading over the last few years, giving way to a contentment with the passage and pull of that force which all religions turn to: the answer to the why. Most of my altar has dismantled and placed in the memory box: the faith and understanding remains, but the ritual never involved the incense burners and oracle cards – all exist as a way to try and communicate with, or understand, something higher, as is the way of belief systems. This object of that journey passes smoothly and without sadness, but rather with greater understanding and a contentment that nothing will ever be fully understood, but will remain.

Here we have a shark’s tooth necklace – the leather for it lost long ago. It is a gift from Christine, a pen pal who, for a moment in time, was something more. A girl I barely knew in Jr. High (7th Grade) who I would begin writing back and forth with when she moved to North Carolina. The story told in those letters resembles a lot of the plots of films or romances – a journey of two people beginning with little knowledge of one another and traveling through the coming of age. We talk, we have an intimacy of knowledge, I watch as her life changes as does mine. We fall in love, to a degree and await being able to see each other, but we change – we begin to have different ideas and our lives become a chasm that the writing won’t cross anymore. When she comes to see me, we barely spend time together. After that years pass before a final letter comes nicely, then fades away. I talked to Christine recently – she seems well. Her story is one that speaks to me of idealistic youth and understanding that people grow into who they will be. The shark’s tooth passes its bittersweet memory of years with only a minor bite, one we all must endure at some point, I think. It also is unique in the reminder of the fact that our little friendship and fleeting romance was possibly one of the last few of our age in this society to be carried on through post – these days, whith email, webcams, voice over IP and no long distance charges it would never have drawn that longing anticipation for a letter that was the nature of things in years past.

There are two for the next story: a famous one among my friends, or perhaps a notorious one. This one is about Alissa, a girl I became very close to in the middle teenage years of my life. A girl troubled, suicidal and running a phenomenal downward spiral for her age that I attempted to help pull back for a moment in time. To a degree I succeeded in this or, rather, I succeeded in letting her know that someone cared enough to pull back for a time. We shared a moment in time of happiness brief but compounded into absolute glory by that fire that can only exist in teenage years. No sex there, folks, it was only a kiss. Perhaps in my previous romantic nature this is what made it even more fantastic, but it might have also been my undoing. It was shortly thereafter I found that a friend of mine was with her and had been for a while – that she had deliberately deceived me. In the end I had to forgive him – he was just as surprised, to a degree, to find that she and I spent time together, but I did not forgive her and I would not for years. I completely cut contact with her, not even to express disappointment, and selfishly scoffed when I further heard that her situation once more worsened at a more alarming rate. Eventually she switched schools and I no longer saw her at all, but I always wondered. In later years I felt a fool for acting as I did and sometime would attempt to find her. It wasn’t until nearly seven years later that I got an email out of the blue from her apologizing for all those years ago – asking if I could ever forgive her. I forgave her immediately and perhaps I had a few years before, but did I forgive myself? I think not. I apologized to her, she said that I had every right to act that way. We exchanged emails, she seemed well and generally better. All the while, she continued to ask my forgiveness. That winter, she had planned to be in Houston during the same time I would be – she wanted to meet Misty and Malikai (Isabella was not yet born at this point). To hear her voice was a ghost talking out of years past and sounded as such – perhaps hind sight is 20/20 in that. She still talked about the old days, thanked me for always caring, and apologized. I tried to tell her everything was alright. At some point she cried. We never saw each other. The people she was staying with apparently had booked her plans too tightly and she had returned to stay with her boyfriend in Seattle. I told her that was alright – there would be another time. Before she hung up the phone, she said “Thank you for loving me.” – I can hear it right now. After not hearing from her for two months I emailed her to see if things were alright. It was her boyfriend, if I remember, who called Misty on a night I was working and told her he had just gotten my email and that Alissa was dead – that she had killed herself. The funeral had already passed.
The objects of Alissa’s memory, the only ones that I have, are a rock – perfectly smooth. It’s slashed and speckled in greens, reds and blacks. Alissa had brought it for me from the Rocky Mountains – she said she had found it above the tree line amidst many other dusty and otherwise plain looking stones. Sitting there, different than all the rest and shining, she said it had reminded her of me. The other is the last cone of an incense I found that was the exact scent she and I used to burn in her room – a scent I do not know the name of that instantly invokes memories of tears, laughter, stories and self-deprecation. Not for one moment have I ever forgiven myself for not remembering who Alissa was; for not knowing on that phone line why she wanted to be forgiven, for not seeing the signs of a farewell. Whether I know rationally that it was not my doing, I have carried her ghost for more than ten years now. The stone passes with the weight of the mountain it came from. The incense I will burn and say farewell – I cannot carry it any longer.

There is a blue press-on fingernail and a slightly bent band of white gold that await next. The nail was given to me by Misty in the first day or so that we knew each other – a fierce roller-coaster tumble into love, into the acceptance that would give me my children. The nail, an insignificant thing, I think speaks to the nature of my view of the small things – that something given is never trivial. The band was given to me on my birthday to be worn as a wedding band because we never had a wedding. I wore that band until around two weeks or so after she left, then I put it into the bag, vowing to return it to my finger when she returned to me. After years, I did let go completely of Misty, though, being the mother of my children, she has not left my life. There is a melancholy that comes with these things – a memory of years spent too much on wishful thinking, of being an “insufferable optimist” – with no regret. My children came from these things and while the memories and fetters of them may pass to the earth, the children continue to be a joy. Along with these passes a letter, a poem called “Secrets” that Misty wrote to me or to herself when she first felt that she loved me and told me secretly.

Next comes a woven band of jasmine or some other fragrant plant given to me by a free-spirited girl named Melanie, a squatter who blew in and out of my life like the wind during one of the darkest parts of it. It reminds me of her, and it reminds me of that time – a dark spiraling period of feverish months spent in and out of obsession, insanity, pain and self-degradation. Years later I still feel the aftershocks of that feeling, that dark panicking anxiety that has ruled my life in the months following every loss, every betrayal that I have endured. Ever since Alissa, I have found myself staring into that abyss again, given only a reprieve here and there for a time. The hooks of black steel from those depths have gripped me these past few days every step of letting these things go. This band passes to bind that darkness away and to help me forgive myself and, with hope, starve the beast back into the abyss.

We come to the final story. Two things here that will be listed out of order. The first is a letter written to me by Cassie from her visit to her grandparents’ house. She had asked that I write her a letter to take with her and she had written this to me over the period of days she was there. It’s a wonderful letter, with the understanding that we needed the break, but with hope for the future, excitement with one another and love. I’m not sure she had even said she loved me by then. She says she sleeps with the letter that I had written her and the sappy valentine I had given her – longing for that goofy fluffy pink unicorn. Reading over this letter closes my airway and makes my skin seem to burn. I haven’t seen her in three weeks since I told her I couldn’t see her. I tried to look at the history of our relationship and tell myself that I had improved in many ways, but in cleaning things out I came upon a journal I had written during the time of my breakup with misty, reflecting on our relationship and found that many of the mistakes I made in both were too similar. I some fashion I managed to upset Cassie to the point of her stating there was no hope for a future – that she had buried it in the backyard by the fence. I have often wondered since if she was stating it literally; if there was some representative object of a memory, like that unicorn, that she might have physically buried. At least it was an inspiration for this idea. I don’t think I’ve improved much – I still try and check her online pages – when I see a new picture my heart jumps into my throat event though I’ve never thought her pictures really looked like her. With the letter is an object somewhat like that blue press-on nail, a trinket given to me by Cassie in the very early days of our relationship: a milk tab. She collected them and happen to bestow one upon me. At the point in my life I was, I was jaded and had a very poor opinion of relationships – still not being fully past Misty. Feigning an love of the single life that I would carry long into our relationship like a shield to protect myself from the fear of being hurt again, still as much as I believed that nothing more than a few dates or so would come of it, I found myself keeping the milk tab because the ring attached to it fit Cassie’s ring finger perfectly – a thing that scared me to death, that hit me in a place I felt too close for comfort whether I liked it or not. Today is two lunar months passed since she left and one day from two calendar months. As far as I know she has come to the place where the negative wins out – she has moved on.  I never know anything that goes on with her and she has taken steps to make sure of it, though still I don’t look too deep into that abyss: I already know too well what will be looking into me. Through these cleaning days that began last weekend I have seen the echoes of my past, heard the ghosts whisper and re-read a collection of stories that all end the same way with the same moral that I never seem to learn and it is for this reason that I put these things into the ground with the greatest weight of all, greater even than Alissa’s stone – that I, stubborn and unwilling to go against my own personal beliefs on how I presume to think things should be handled in these situations, always manage to say the wrong things, to act on the wrong instincts. So I place them in the ground with a resignation to the fact that I don’t know – that maybe I never did, but that either way whatever comes in the future cannot be marred with black marks from the past.

All of these things, sealed into a metal box along with a copy of this should someone want to wonder about these stories years ahead, will sit with me tonight as the children sleep, as Alissa’s last incense cone burns down to ashes and I will let their memory blow out with the smoke and realize that I do not need them anymore – that those memories have been weighed and understood, but can no longer be carried as chains for a ghost. I’ve spent the last months, including those up to when Cassie left, uncertain of many things and making strong changes in my life. So these bits of the past, small and rattling among ashes in a metal box but carrying the weight of some 13 or so years will go into the ground – buried in the backyard by the fence.

– GHosT

I never actually put a copy of the note in there as  I said I would – I forgot. If someday someone happens to dig up the box, they can just guess at it – if they were anything like me they would probably understand. There are a few things to arrange in the garage here and there and stacks of papers to go through and file or throw out, but cleaning up, the most cleaning I’ve ever done as far as stuff goes, is pretty much over at this point, aside from the minimal decorating and eventual changes to some things that would cost money I don’t have. Will I really change? I hope so. I don’t think I can do this cycle again – something had to give. The obsession, the anxiety, the head-circles have to stop here – I sat there on the porch with Alissa’s incense burning down, I said my goodbye and I buried her. In case you wanted to know, I’ve never visited her grave, but I have seen her death certificate. I have never known the circumstances if her suicide, but I didn’t kill her. I was a kid and, even at 21, I wasn’t that much more inclined to know such things for sure.

So I’ll leave you with a blast from the 80s that I’ve loved since I was a kid, which has some bearing on the situation, and I’ll return later.

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Minimalize

“The shit you own ends up owning you.”

- Tyler Durden, Fight Club

Well, I haven’t updated this thing in a while. It’s just been one of those weeks. My daughter was sick all week and so I spent the majority of my days watching out for her and doing things around the house. One of the main things I’ve been doing over the last few days is going minimalist.

When I moved into my house, I had very little stuff cluttering up the place, as is usual for me moving. I’ve always loved moving into a new space, it has this clean, uncluttered feel to it. See, clutter is a bad thing for anyone – it stresses you out, because you see what isn’t getting done and they say things out of place have a certain reflection on one’s life. With ADHD it gets worse because it’s easier to get completely off track at any point. Inevitably, after a while in an apartment I would always wind up with that problem – too much stuff filling the limited space I had. Generally it made me dislike the space, feel crammed and generally stressed – because I’d constantly think of just throwing it all out, but then I’d think “Hey, I need that stuff.”

Thing is, I don’t need it. I really like to have the things I work on or do primarily and have everything else out of sight or gone. Over the last few months I’ve been feeling that way. So I’ve taken pretty much all the furniture out of my room in favor of setting up the closet to organize the clothes and all that. I’ve actually set up the room in as much of a feng shui arrangement as I can. You might think that silly, but I do put a bit of stock in the stuff – there’s research that actually backs it up; not that that proves anything. I’m not doen with all of it yet, but man the house already feels cleaner and has more space. With the minimalist look, cleaning becomes simplicity and distractions are kept very low, which allows me to get more done – accomplishment wise. Some of the stuff out in the shed in boxes will go this week and I’m trying to work up enough junk to do a garage sale or something – maybe turn some of the old junk into cash to put toward some ideas I have for the new design. All-in-all, it’s part of this transition I guess, the process of moving away from the lifestyle I almost wound up resigned to. I should reasonably have things in order to give me the best advantage by the time I get back to school.

There isn’t much ranting in this bit – no super opinions, just an update. With the kids out this weekend I got out and hung around the square a bit Friday, then went to one of Bone Doggy’s shows on Saturday night. Good times. He’s booking me to play sometime in June and July, which should be fun. Perhaps I’ll have something to actually say later this week. For now, I’m just relaxing, listening to a bit of Pink Floyd and winding down from the weekend. Life’s not too bad, all-in-all.

Music

“Well it goes like this: the Fourth, the Fifth, the Minor fall and the Major lift…”
Leonard Cohen, Hallelujah

It really does, actually – it goes just like that. When Cohen (or Buckley if you prefer) hits that melody it goes F (the fourth to C Major), the fifth (G), the minor fall (Am) and the Major lift (back to F major). When Buckley plays it he capos the 5th fret, keying the open to A D G C E A, which Buckley plays like G to Em, but actually comes out in C to Am so that his version keys as Cohen’s, though Buckley uses the higher sounds of the upper strings and some work in the progression to make the song sound very different.

When I started taking Adderall for my ADHD, it was a lot like taking off glasses you’ve been wearing your entire life, ones that have never been washed and look like building windows from a David Fincher movie. Not only was I able to get work done better, sit for longer periods, but I actually considered that I might really be able to pull off going back to college. There was one other thing I hadn’t expected though. I had picked up my guitar, as I do just about every day and was noodling about when I started playing a finger exercise, one of those that helps your dexterity and gets you scale and improvisation positions more into muscle memory and all that. See, I used to do these every now and then, maybe two or three times before I would play something else. At the point I looked up I’d been doing it for around an hour and was barely thinking about it. I thought it amusing, put the guitar down and went about my day.

By a week of doing this instead of running the same songs over and over I had to learn new exercises because the others became too easy. I started working on scales again, harmonic minors, major modes and all that. By a month I was playing progressions that I had considered to be out of my league. By the time Cassie and I split I was putting together chords that I didn’t think my fingers would make.

Now I’m sight reading for the first time since I was in choir when I was 12, working on sweeps and jazz progressions and picking up new material by the hour. Aside from that I’m able to tell you why the chords work here and not there and whip a solo with some accuracy even over some of the stuff I hear in KNTU. I started readin Berklee Press’s Modern Method for Guitar and deciphered the theory material in several of the books. It’s like having been telling stories your whole life as an illiterate, then suddenly learning to read and write.

It’s entirely possible that my love of music sits on par with my love of literature: my digital music collection alone exceeds 35,000 tracks in all genres – it took me 25 double-layer DVDs to back it up last week. I love the stuff, I consider it among man’s greatest achievements. I suppose it goes well with literature as well – both exist to evoke emotions in the listener/reader and, often, to tell a story. I started memorizing songs when I was two – I’ve always had a big thing for it, but I never thought I might really do anything with it. Over the years my tastes shift in favorites here and there, but it all comes back to a love of the form itself, from the Beethoven’s 9th to Fat Boy Slim’s Weapon of Choice, from N.W.A.’s Gangsta, Gangsta to Waylon Jennings’ Honky Tonk Heroes, from Operation Ivy’s The Crowd to Louis Armstrong’s A Kiss to Build a Dream On…I could go on for months according to my playlist. Right now it’s Joe Cocker on the speakers, wailing a gritty voice that seems like it barely could belong to him through I Shall Be Released.

I’ve begun treating the guitar as though I’m starting from the beginning, working through all the scales and chord formations in order with the theory and the actual notes on the staff. It’s hard as hell, honestly, especially when I already know a ton of ways to play the C Major scale, but when I turn a page and can count through a few measures without missing a note it hits something inside – it’s like learning to read again and there are some of you out there who know exactly what I mean by that.

Well I’ve done a lot on this page tonight, but I’ll leave you with something to listen to: both versions of Hallelujah that I spoke of in the beginning. Enjoy.

Leonard Cohen’s Original (for Faith)

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Jeff Buckley’s Cover (for Love)

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Cleaning it Up

Well, granted, it is a personal website/blog and whatnot, but all in all it’s not LiveJournal. See, one prima reason I deleted my LiveJournal was due to no small amount of disgust I found when reading some of the whiny, angst-ridden crap I wrote a few years back. If you think I let the Panic Rat out a few days ago, well, I had enough to satisfy NIMH for a year back then. At any rate, some of that material just doesn’t fit with what I’m going on with here so I’ve cleaned it out – I plan to get writing on a bit more of a note that befits more of how I feel on a regular basis, rather than how I feel on an anxiety run.

Afghanistan and a Menagerie

So I haven’t written anything in a while regarding literature, but lately I’ve taken to reading again, which makes me feel better about life in general. I’m going back to school, having decided that doing computer work was tolerable enough to turn me apathetic and make me compromise in a way that I swore I never would. So I’ve turned a 180 and decided to go back to pursuing studies in English and, this time with confidence, in music. With that comes a certain anxiety related with excitement, but also with a small amount of fear, as college is hard for me. On medication I hope that I can keep a focus on things, that I can keep myself from wandering away into the depths of thought at inopportune moments enough to do well. There is a lot I have to overcome, but the outlook in general is more pleasant than previous. I tend to keep things inside all to well and these days I wonder fairly often if my previous relationship didn’t suffer in the end from my own unwillingness to admit that I was unhappy with life in general. Cassie and I always tried not to lay out our problems at the same time. Neither of us liked seeming to compare in that way people often do (‘your day was bad? pssh…listen to MY day)

In the end with Cassie taking so much on I let things slide and didn’t talk about the reasons I was unhappy, I think, because I was always happy with her. Therefore, when her stress level was up, I generally wanted her to feel better and when things deteriorated, well, perhaps I was redirecting in my own right. I used to bring up how well we had it, when in all truth I didn’t feel great about my life situation until I really admitted to myself that I had begun the time honored process of selling out – of settling for something that wasn’t what I wanted to do, certainly not what I was passionate about, simply because I was good at it and it presented financial security and upward mobility. See, that may be fine for some people, but maybe I still listen to too much punk rock. I still remember being young, I’ll claim not that old today (though I’ll be a grumpy old man tomorrow), and I remember telling myself that I would never let myself slip into that state of apathy. I can understand that every job has days that you will hate, but this wasn’t about the bad days – it was about finding that I was successful for once, that everything seemed to be going my way, but sitting up feeling profoundly conflicted about it. This was compounded further by the fact that I would sit and realize that I didn’t read anymore, I didn’t write anymore. I didn’t learn anymore except for what would help me do a job for the benefit. I was preparing to retake more computer certifications. Still, the fact that I did not keep up with my writing, my reading, or my sometimes idiotic broadness of research made me feel heavy. I took that weight to work and I came home with it. I went to bed with it and tried to ignore it playing video games, which didn’t help. I like video games fine, but they’re really a waste of time. An acceptable one, we all waste time in our own ways, but I used to prefer to do it reading or learning. If you say ‘that’s not a waste of time’ well it can be argued, as can video games.

While I was up at the university taking care of re-application and all that, I happened to stop by the bookstore and ask the clerk there to recommend a book to me. I do this when I’m at book stores and have no idea what to get, because a lot of the best books we read in our lives are recommended and we likely would not have heard of them otherwise. I’m not a book reviewer and more of a writer of fiction than comp papers, so I’ll tell you ahead of time when I review a book I don’t review it, I tell you what I thought of it the same as if we were having a drink. If you want me to analyze, I’m quite capable, but I don’t recommend books that way. I won’t tell you to read Lord of the Flies because of its profound allegory on the nature of man, I’ll tell you to read it because it’s a good damned book. That, in the end, is all you really need to know. If you want to analyze, you can read it again. What I did find, as I have so many times before when I’ve taken a hiatus from the written word, is that it is some way an essential thing for me. I’m not sure why. Perhaps its my imagination; perhaps my interest in hearing stories. To me, reading can make life complete in a way that other activities cannot. I love cinema as well, but it’s not the same. Reading is more than being entertained – it’s hearing a story but making it your own. The author breathes the story out and you inhale it, breath it in, let it hit your head and you exhale a cloud of images that are yours alone, no one else will see them the same way. It’s not supposed to be a metaphor for pot smoking, I don’t, but it was as good as any I could come up with on the fly. To me, it’s something that, when I forget it, it usually I have forgotten something about myself. Now that I think on it, I can say that every time my life has taken a bit of a downturn has been a time when I was not reading. Perhaps the lack of literature is a symptom of the malaise. I guess that’s what I’m getting at. I doubt it’s a coincidence.

At any rate, I’ve babbled on about my life enough. Here are my opinions on books that I’ve recently buried myself in:

The Kite Runner – by Khaled Hosseini

This novel, the first by the author, is an amazing first work. In a series of flashbacks, it recounts the story of a boy growing into a man in Afhanistan, his relationship with his father and a slave boy who is his best friend and an event that causes him such guilt as to haunt him into adulthood, long after he has since moved away from war-torn Afghanistan and made a new life in America. The story is filled with the culture of the setting and spans an impressive time frame of the main characters life. The author is very good at being direct in his descriptions and imagery without being overly wordy, though my only complaint on this one is that there is a point (you’ll know if you’ve read it) where one plot twist seems a bit too many. Overall though this is an amazing first novel for the author and a worthwhile read.

Animal Farm – by George Orwell

I am still in the habit of periodically returning to the classics and this is one I’ve never gotten around to reading. It’s very easy to see why this is a classic – few books can illustrate the phrase “the pen is mightier than the sword” better than this one. Orwell takes a fable about animals taking control of their farm and turns it into a downward spiral of contradiction, corruption and satirical allegory that is difficult to rival. If you had to read this one for school, I recommend you read it again, as most books are better when you read them of your own accord. An amazing read, short and to the point, and an important work of literature.

The Life of Pi – by Yann Martel

I’d been recommended this one by a few people and came across it on a list of “Books to Read Before You Die.” Cassie happened to have a copy of this one among the books still here at the house so I picked it up and I was not disappointed. This book is amazing. The story is paced very well, the imagery and emotion of it are profound and the author grips you right to the end. By the time I was halfway into this book, I knew it was a good read, but by the end I can very well see why it may be an important work of fiction. There aren’t a lot of recent books that struck me as this one did. Read it.

There you have the extent of my reviews. I could sit and talk about these for quite sometime about them, but I generally do that with folks who like to take literature to that level – not all of us do. I prefer to give broad statements about my opinion on a book because as much as I like to study literature, at the end of the day, he most simplistic reason I enjoy it is because I love a good story.

Learned a New Song


I sing…