Captured and Lost: Reflection on How Images Taint and Manipulate Memory
One thought that has been pulsing through my mind is the irreparability of memory lost to images. With the collection of moving and still images, we concentrate our memory on that which we repeatedly observe. What we begin to most remember no longer is the recollection of the event, but the recollection of what these images present to us.
When We Stop Listening
Today I have finished my 192 paged A4 Dingbats notebook. I have spent the last 359 days carving into its pages with anger, panic, sadness, joy, love. Here is one of the poems that I wrote nearly a year ago, that would otherwise be forgotten to the bookshelves that harbour away the confessions of my past.
The Neon Glow, Reflecting Upon Growing Up
It’s night— sky starless, streetlights absent, roads barn of human life except for the neon sign illuminating in the distance. There is a sensational pull of light mimicking the insect attractions to all that glows as we grown closer to its source. It’s 8:43 pm. Seems early for the world to be asleep beyond the sign that welcomes us. And welcome we are to a place none other than Burger King, home of the Impossible Whopper.
How to Create Your Sustainable Dorm Room
What if we reframed our college itinerary to buying what we NEED and doing so in an eco-friendly way? Buying less, buying things that will last, and buying things that are an investment not only to our youthful and aging selves but also to the planet.
Precision and Ambiguity: The Role of History in Rosanna Warren’s Poem “The Mink”
Throughout Rosanna Warren’s poem “The Mink,” the speaker compares her constant remembrance of one of her memories to the predatory nature of a mink. Through the mink’s movements, Warren shares the infinitely guaranteed presence of history that nobody can willfully remove, while also emphasizing the ambiguity of how that history will take shape in day-to-day life.
Symptoms of Society
The constant flare in my mind exists in the hopelessness I sometimes feel for humanity. My generation is addicted to a virtual world so deeply that even the most peaceful of places serve only a drop of fulfillment. It’s scary.
Things I’ve Learned
Here are a few things I’ve learned in the past few days. Take what you may from them, and interpret them how you wish. I just want to get some of my thoughts into the world :)
Memories of Ash, a poem
The days pass by like a burning page
curling at the edges
as flames destroy any ounce
of physicality except for a
single piece of ash
that is memory.
This I Believe
I believe in the broken. I believe in the mismatched unconventional things that the binoculars often looking at the greener grass on the other side often overlook. I believe in the seed that can grow from the most tarnished of soils and become a grand yellow tulip.
I guess I believe this way because I believe I was that seed and still am.
A Piece of Paper, Poem
A piece of paper is supposed
To span
Across a length
Of space.
But
When
The Beauty Behind the Trash
Every day I watch as family, friends, and strangers fill their garbage bins full. Recycling becomes second priority and litter, a convenience to some. I see the plastic bags stuck in trees or the plastic bottles and cans lining the water’s edge. There is literally a garbage patch in the middle of the pacific ocean-spanning over 1.6 million square kilometers.
Knowing all this and more about our pollution crisis, I could not bring myself to send away the plastics I knew would never live purposefully again, their fates sealed by the trash can. I began keeping most of all usable waste I found: cereal bags, balloons, bottle caps, empty paint tubes, wraps from my sprained ankle, plastic bags, guitar strings and tons more.
My Hike To Serenity
I went to the Adirondacks this summer in Upstate New York for my first time. I have lived in New York my entire life. I’ve made my way traveling from Buffalo to New York City quite a few times, but the in-between of New York was just the interstate connecting these two cities. I went from one hustling city trying to rebuild itself, to the biggest hustling city in the world.
Then, I was invited by my dear friend Julia to her family’s cabage in Inlet, New York, a small town in the Adirondacks. A cabage for all those wondering is an inventive word created by yours truly which is a house that is the combination between a cabin and a cottage. I said yes in an instant (because why would I not), and soon enough I was on my way from my home in New York to this brand new world I hadn’t yet explored.
Planning for the Unplanned, The Hidden Adventures in the Adirondacks
Over the course of my trip to the Adirondacks, I am growing to realize that the best moments are those far from planned. One can plan every detail, attempt to schedule every minute, but it’s when the plan diverts to the unexpected that I find the greatest jumps for joy.
This week my friend Julia, and I went on a pedal-powered four-seated steel welded “vehicle” which is designed to ride atop the old railroad tracks in Thendara, New York.
My Thoughts on Friendship
Friendship.
The thing many of us value beyond all else. The binding agent that makes us feel whole. That makes us laugh. That makes us smile. That makes us care. That keeps us alive. The complex bond between humans that is supposed to mean something.
Mean what?
I Cannot See My Reflection
Everytime I look in a mirror or see myself in a reflection, I smile.
No, it is not because I am in love with my looks.
I judge myself for every small self-defined imperfection.
Whether that be my Pinnochio length nose
Or thin lips
Or puffy cheeks
Or inconsistent eyebrows
Or pimples that never seem to go away
Or eyes that are not the same size
Whatever it is that day, I still try and smile.
Balance is Arbitrary
Every day that passes, my appreciation and observation of the artful complexities in the world around me grows. I am not sure if this is just my brain growing as it develops with age or me simply seeing more than I have before. It’s probably a combination of both. I used to just view everything as a useless creation that should not hold the power and strength that that particular thing does. I would discredit the creator perhaps out of jealousy and comparison to myself. Though I do disagree with the heightened appraisal of popular figureheads in society, the work people do produce should be appreciated.
100 Percent Does Not Mean Full
Today my report card came in. Junior year. The last year that counts for class rank at my high school. I looked down the line seeing the final grades of each class: 97, 98, 97, 98, 98, 98, 100, 100. All the numbers look good, but I have never felt more unfulfilled from seeing a 97 or 98 repeated over and over. These numbers used to fill me with pride and designate my accomplishments, but now they are no less foreign than trying to read a dialect that is not my native tongue.
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