Showing posts with label Deep Thoughts with Natasha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deep Thoughts with Natasha. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Get Your Freak On

For a man to have the slightest chance, to even be considered an Official Crush, he has to be unattainable.

Yes gentleman, step right up.

If you want to be the object of my quiet affection, if you want your name doodled on my notebook, and if you want to have ridiculous expectations thrust upon you every time we communicate - then please be one of the following:

Gay
Married
Taken
Live Far Away (The further the better.)
Disinterested
Distant
Player
Self-Absorbed
Commitmentphobe
Unable to reciprocate affection
Too Cool for School
Famous
Freak
Unintelligible
Annoyed by Me
In a Band (Like on the radio.)
Non-English Speaking

Yes, if you are any of these things and you will be in the running to be my next Official Crush.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Two Turn Tables and a Microphone

One thing I've picked up from the show I'm doing is the music. No, it's not a musical, but there are a ton of songs (that I've never heard of) that are used for the transitions throughout the show.

100% of the music is hardcore rap.

Now, despite appearances, I don't listen to hardcore rap. And I've been trying to understand it and really get a sense of what the hell the rappers are saying, and why they're saying it. To do that, I've done some research. I've found the following diagrams (courtesy of jamphat.com) helpful in understanding the heart of the music:
























Sunday, November 18, 2007

Growing Pains

I need plan.

I'm not one of those people who have their lives planned out. I don't own a road map. I don't have step by step instructions of how I'm going to make my hopes and dreams a reality. So far, I've just prayed, trusted and had faith. And while this plan of attack has gotten me quite far, I am at the point in my life where I feel the need to start writing shit down.

I'm at a place where I feel the need to be strategic, specific and deliberate about how I go about making my dreams a reality. I don't wish to forsake my previous methods of acquisition (they're the reason I'm here), I just hope to engage my mind and my heart as I work to navigate this slippery slope of the artists life.

Here are some rockin' websites that have gotten me jazzed about pressing towards the mark:
www.43things.com
www.43places.com

Friday, September 28, 2007

Poop

After three straight days of feeling like poop, and with all the strength I could muster, I went to perform in tonight's improv shows. On the way down, I rocked out to melancholy jams. Good, sad shit, like: Elephant (Damien Rice), Speed of the Sound of Loneliness (an Amos Lee cover), and Vagabond (Foy Vance). Clearly I was in the perfect mood to do some yuk-yuk make 'em ups.

So, I'm at the stop light, about to cross the street and head into the theater. I was standing there, looking out at the world with soulful, deep, and painful eyes. I was having a moment. Just then, as I was taking my self too seriously, a bird pooped on me.

It wasn't the gross, white poop you'd expect. It was beyond gross. It was the nearly-fatal-because-I-almost-ran-into-on-coming-traffic-because-it-was-so-horrific, bloody bird poop. Yep, bloody. Either this bird ate a ton of cherries and berries, or shortly after defecating on me it fell from the sky and died.

I ran across the street with the bloody poop/bird abortion on my arm - holding it out in front of me like it might jump from my arm to my mouth at any moment. I finally made it to the theater and ran inside to quickly wash my arm (gagging the whole time).


Oh life! You teach me so many lessons!

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Ring of Fire

Joey Comeau is the writer of one of my favorite online comic strips, A Softer World. He's, well, just brilliant. I love his other writings too. I like the way he sounds, and the way he sees the world. He thinks big, and dreams bigger and says things in a way that really resonates with me.

Here's one of his journal entries that, well makes me happy:

"Today I hope that my collection agents take a break from tirelessly trying to track me down, and I hope someone touches them on the elbow and says, "God you have lovely eyes." I hope they come home tonight and they don't even get in the door before someone is ripping their clothes off and fucking them crazy. I hope they fall asleep exhausted and empty and full of senseless optimism for the future. I hope this for you, too. I hope that you are out shopping and, without knowing why, you have to run to the bathroom and touch yourself. I hope that you finish with your brow sweaty and short of breath and I hope you are embarrassed but strangely proud."

There's something so vulnerable and accessible about they way he writes. He writes without apology, and I like that. I want to be able to live like that, without apology.

Here's one of his short stories, amazingly called, "The Girl Who Couldn't Come":

My problem is that I can't come unless Johnny Cash is playing. I can't orgasm without the sound of his voice in my ears. When I do hear him, I can't control myself. I'm afraid to drink in country bars because when they play a Johnny Cash song, I end up in the ladies room with a stranger, straining to hear the music from the dance floor.

He doesn't even have to be singing. I heard him give an interview on the radio once, when I was eighteen. Laying on my stomach in the living room, I found myself sliding back and forth against the carpet, my hand underneath me. The sound of him answering questions was as good as the albums I kept hidden under my bed. It possessed me, it wet me. I knew it was wrong, but I couldn't help it.

His voice is rough sex.

My mother came into the living room after that interview, right at the beginning of a song. I didn't see her as the music swelled and I rubbed myself and came, my eyes closed and bunches of shag carpet clutched in my fingers. She stood for a minute as I rocked in time to the music, and she said "I don't know how you can like this shit, honey. It's so rural."

It would be perfect if I could listen to Johnny Cash while I made love, but David doesn't seem to like it. He turns the CD player off before he comes to bed. And what can I say? Should I curl my fingers in his chest hair, press myself against him and whisper "Please?" How do I tell him "David, I can't come," without it being a big deal? Without him knowing that I've faked it. Without him being jealous. It isn't like I'm cheating on him. Johnny Cash is dead. And David is very much alive.

He's been at the library all day, and he smells like old newspapers at dinner. While we eat he talks and talks about Neal Ball, who in 1909 turned the first unassisted triple play. I nod and I plan what I'm going to say, word for word. I have to tell him. But admitting sexual hangups to a man is never as funny in real life as it is in your head. In my head I say "Hey David, remember all those times I came when we weren't listening to Johnny Cash? Do you remember all those orgasms?" A pause for effect, and then "About that," And what a great story that would make. Even if he left me, which I'm certain he will. It's a preemptive strike. Sure, I'm a pervert, but you can't even make a girl come.

Of course, it doesn't work out like that at all. I can plan and plan, but when we're sitting side by side on the edge of my bed, our clothes pulled open, all that comes out is mumbled nonsense. He has his cold hand up my front, tracing the wire of my bra. David. Indie rock boy with the tight shirts and baseball card collection. David, who talks about sex using sports
metaphors that are romantic instead of shallow, that turn sex into a game of heros and legends. David, who has never said "this was so good, did you come, I came, did you really come?" who
has never said "That was the best I've ever had," but who remembers sex as a series of plays, fouls, surprise victories and catches, describes them with veneration, his dark eyes intense, sincere. I can't bring myself to be cruel to him, even if I am scared, even if that's the smart thing
to do. So it just spills out.

"It isn't you, it's me, I just can't, without, I mean, I love you, I love your body, and being with you is wonderful, and I don't even think he's sexy, you know, he's just got this voice that, it fills me up and I, it really isn't you, ever since I was a little kid I've been obsessed, you know? And it's the same with other men, it isn't just you," and as his brow furrows and he pulls his hand out from beneath my shirt, I say "I can't come unless we're listening to Johnny Cash." Then David is standing, pulling his pants up, fastening the button. He turns away, and it feels like my stomach is sucking in air.

But then he's putting on some music, smiling.

"Well," he says as the first trumpeting notes of the song fill the room. I want to say something but instead I close my eyes to the music, and he sits on the bed behind me. His legs wrap around me and he's lifting my shirt. "Love," he whispers in my ear, his voice soft as Johnny Cash fills the room. "Is a burning thing." And it's working. It isn't Johnny Cash I'm hearing, but David. It's David's hands on my body. "And it makes" It's David fumbling at my skirt, pulling it down. And I'm turning to his neck, his shoulders. Pulling his shirt off while he sings along, his voice a little louder now, "A fiery ring." He's watching me. "Bound," he says, "By wild desire." I've got his pants, pulling them down to his calves. He's got his lips against my ear, his breath hot. "I fell in," he says, "to a ring of fire."

The End