Monday, May 31, 2010

The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

There are many themes from this book that people growing up in America can relate to, of that I am certain.  In some ways the story about Charlie and his friends can be summed up by quoting Sam's monologue in the last letter before the epilogue:

"So tomorrow, I'm leaving.  And I'm not going to let that happen again with anyone else. I'm going to do what I want to do. I'm going the be who I really am. And I'm going to figure out what that is. But right now I'm here with you. And I want to know where you are, what you need, and what you want to do."

Charlie writes to us, the readers.  He trusts us as listeners and as people who don't "try to sleep with people even though you could have."  I won't go into much detail about the book, but I wish I had read it in high school.  I wish I would have read it my freshman year of high school.  I found myself thinking, throughout the story, that I had had a teacher who was like Bill.  Maybe things could have gone differently.  But then again, as Charlie astutely points out in the epilogue, as he comes to understand himself and really "be there"  : 

"We don't have the power to choose where we come from, we can still choose where we go from there."

Dear Charlie,

Thanks.

Love always,
Dan

Up next:  After 21 years of my life, I am going to read On the Road... and I hope it doesn't ruin me.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

On Top of a Mountain

Electricity flows through my fingertips and a tangible vibration resolves inside me. A blank page, a pencil, laying my hands on a keyboard to type, even picking up my harmonica from time to time, definitely when I get on my bike in the mornings. There is an energy in the world, what ever you believe in, there is a tangible Force that may be man-made or not, but I have felt it.

The potential outcome of every day is unknown. The story that makes up our lives is constantly unraveling, it is the law of the universe for things to tend towards disorder, it takes immense amounts of energy to reverse that reaction. Use it, benefit from the disorder. Once you learn to do that who knows where you will go.

Finals week is here, I anticipate a lot of work, hopefully with good results. I also am thinking about the summer. I am already desperately in need of a change of scene, but prudence says to not spend the money and to go back to St. Louis seems dangerous. St. Louis may be where some of my friends are, and my family is, but there is nothing but a guest room at my Aunt's house and not any way for me to get work done. Maybe I'm being childish, should I have just gone home for the first time since college started and lived with my messed up family? I don't know...

To focus the theme of this post, to reign in this jumbling rant. Disorder is the subject here. There are millions of opportunities every day. Some people have some sort of path in front of them. A logical stair step towards some goal. I feel like my goals are at different peaks of separate mountain ranges and I only have my bare hands. Over dramatic? Very.

Just got to tuck in and keep going.


Workshops filled with experiments
Music
Paintings
Solar Panels
Science Journalism?
Peace Corp
Grad School
Design School?

I'm glad no one reads this, posting it seems narcissistic...