I guess I should go back before my previous post and show something from the night before Thanksgiving of this year. I was sitting at my friends place playing cards and drinking a little (lot).


I stood there with the camera that I just happened to have in the car, and I remember the time being about 10:30pm and why was it so quiet while a house was burning down not even half a mile away from at least three houses? I sat for about 15 minutes watching the house and for the flashing lights of emergency vehicles as waves of heat and showers of ash surrounded me before I made the decision to continue home. As it turns out, it was an arson fire that the newspaper reported was called in at about 11:02pm, so I'm guessing authorities showed up shortly after I left. I can't help but wonder how many pointed questions I would've been asked had I been found sitting there staring with a camera in my hand. Talk about dodging a bullet.
Now fast forward to the day after my last final, Thursday, December 13th. Thursday afternoons were

As I said, finals were finished and Christmas break is now almost half over. In that time, I've been accepted to graduate school in the English department and have been given not only a tuition waiver but also an assistantship position with a stipend. My unexpected success has caused me to entertain thoughts of possibly going on after the MA for a PhD, but that's something I have time to consider. After that, I auditioned as lead singer for a band that invited me back to work with them. Good things have almost been dropping into my lap these past few weeks.

Since we're talking about snow and solitude, I wanted to take a minute to talk about the movie I saw a few weeks ago that I'm not sure helped me or hurt me at the time. As I mentioned in an earlier post, I had some hard times relatively recently. If you've ever read the book "Into The Wild", you already know the story behind Chris McCandless. He basically got tired of everything, gave away his money, burned his social security card and took off to wander around the country. As he wandered, he hatched the plot to go and venture into Alaska for a winter just to see if he could do it. During these hard times, I watched the movie based on the book and really started to feel that I wanted to disappear, to erase myself from society. In fact, I have to admit that I had tears running down my face as I watched because it made me think of just how wrong I felt everything was, and how I just wanted to separate myself from it and not belong to anything anymore. It was during this time that I revisited some of the poetry I've written over the years (which not a lot of people know about) and wrote a bit more. It was raw and it was painful, and this movie seemed to echo what I was (am?) feeling. One thing that I had to do was find the soundtrack, and as I suspected, it was by Eddie Vedder. The lyrics for the entire album can be found here, but the songs that seemed to grab my attention were:
No Ceiling
Comes the morning
When I can feel
That there's nothing left to be concealed
Moving on a scene surreal
No, my heart will never
Will never be far from here
Sure as I am breathing
Sure as I'm sad
I'll keep this wisdom in my flesh
I leave here believing more than I had
And there's a reason I'll be
A reason I'll be back
As I walk
The Hemisphere
Got my wish
To up and disappear
I been wounded
I been healed
Now for landing I been
Landing I been cleared
Sure as I'm leaving
Sure as I'm sad
I'll keep this wisdom
In my flesh
I leave here believing
More than I had
This Love has got
No Ceiling
and:
Long Nights
Have no fear
For when I'm alone
I'll be better off than I was before
I've got this light
I'll be around to grow
Who I was before
I cannot recall
Long nights allow me to feel...
I'm falling...I am falling
The lights go out
Let me feel
I'm falling
I am falling safely to the ground
Ah...
I'll take this soul that's inside me now
Like a brand new friend
I'll forever know
I've got this light
And the will to show
I will always be better than before
Long nights allow me to feel...
I'm falling...I am falling
The lights go out
Let me feel
I'm falling
I am falling safely to the ground
I highly recommend watching the movie, but only if you've read the book beforehand. I can't guarantee that it'll affect you like it did me, but then, no one experiences anything the same way. At the very least, maybe it will make you look at yourself and your surroundings and see something in a way you've never seen it before.
Here's the official video for the song Hard Sun that I found on YouTube:
I think it's time for me to fall asleep listening to the dog barking right outside my window at some boogeyman and get ready to run another three miles tomorrow morning. I hope everyone's having a good holiday so far.
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