Thursday, November 8, 2012
I love the color yellow; either that of a fleeting taxi cab or a lingering pasture sunset.
I love shoes - regardless of if they're a pair of towering Christian Louboutons or clay-caked Tony Llama western kicks.
I love shopping - dreaming affront the glistening store windows of Bergdorfs, hilltop top emporiums beaconing with aromas of fresh produce, street side flea markets brimming with handmade wears in Northeast Georgia...and everywhere in between.
I love people. Doormen wearing fancy shoes they leave at work everyday. Ambitious young 20-something's with less money in their savings account than that which was spent on the leather Celine Luggage Tote swinging on their Yurman-stacked arms.
I love the goosebumps that tower on my arms from the booming voice
of an African American woman - when her cover of "Empire State of Mind" is echoing throughout Penn Station or "Sanctuary" is reverberating from the walls of a whitewash church building.
I love samples from fudge shops in middle Tennessee and sample sales in the garment district of midtown.
The South reminds me of freedom - the empty country road to Willacoochee in South Georgia and the view of Lady Liberty from the lowest subway stop on the 1 train, South Ferry.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Ode to Madison Lee
You, Madison Lee Seidel,
Have made collegiate evenings more merry,
Yager bomb, mohito, martini, and wine,
A daquri and vodka cranberry.
You slip me into dozens of Classic City Bars,
Fake address and age, I recite,
Sneaking in and out of Sideways and Bourbon,
Moonshine, Whisky, and Fahrenheit.
In the silkiest, shortest, most provocative dress,
I totter five-inches above beer-sloshed streets,
Flashing your smile while sporting my own,
(Sticky-boobs failing in dense Georgia heat).
Like the hangover goo spinning away with a flush,
Down the drain disappears cash and nutrition,
Though contributing to the dreaded, broke, freshman-fifteen,
You help me loose all inhibition.
Dancing on bars, drinking from fishbowls,
Unspeakable acts – so drastic,
But as I giggle and grope I’m hidden behind,
Your foreign face on a small piece of plastic.
With each round of shots I step further toward,
Blush-worthy mistakes - morning penance,
And thanks to you, I’ve bid adieu,
To wide-eyed naivety and innocence.
Blurry giggles of wild confusion,
The deafening hum of intoxication,
You’ve left me - both barfing in soil-soaked sinks,
And following him home in drunken elation.
And whether I wake up in a bed (that isn’t mine),
Or on a futon in Russell Hall,
Twelve hours later, with a fresh face of make-up,
I’m prepared for one more nighttime brawl.
At twenty-one candles, I’ll pass you down,
Make someone else memories - wild and free,
My nighttime, Athens alter-ego,
Thanks for the fun, dear, Madison Lee.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Pros of the Promise, Cons of Commitment
The blessing and curse of having a long term boyfriend in my early 20s are the constant inquiries as to the status of the second finger from my pinky on my left hand. 99.99999% of the time, the first poem found below reflects my opinions on the topic of platinum banded sparkly rings. On occasion, however, a fleeting moment of consideration causes my fingers to pause on a page of flamboyant white wedding dresses when perusing the glossy pages of of Vogue...
Don't be fooled. The bottom poem may be masked by romance, but it serves as a reminder of the perils and limited perimeters associated with young love and binding commitment.
Maybe one day. Not today. Until then, boyfriend can add to the bracelets on my arm as opposed to rings on my fingers and dog can serve as substitute to infant.
Don't be fooled. The bottom poem may be masked by romance, but it serves as a reminder of the perils and limited perimeters associated with young love and binding commitment.
Maybe one day. Not today. Until then, boyfriend can add to the bracelets on my arm as opposed to rings on my fingers and dog can serve as substitute to infant.
Limerick of Love
Don’t compromise my spirit free,
Don’t turn over a leaf on my family tree.
So YOU got a man,
And a ring on YOUR hand,
But, honey, don’t put no ring on me.
‘Till I’m good and ready, I’ll wait,
No joint bills, only hot dates,
You can’t change my last name,
I won’t stand for the same,
‘Cause I insist we hyphenate.
Can’t put a lock on my pocketbook,
Can’t matronize my on-trend look.
Don’t stick me in a kitchen,
‘Less you wanna hear my bitchin’
(And there ain’t nothin in my belly we’re gonna cook).
Maybe I’ll live on dreams in NYC,
Or snag a Pulitzer with a glossy magazine,
Our love is sweet and steady,
In five years I might be ready,
But for now, don’t put no ring on me.
For Richer or Poorer
She sits on the boxes, two rings on her finger,
Small smile resting on her face.
Paint peeling from the walls and the faint smell of cigarettes,
Echoing throughout empty space.
Tiny kitchen, living room, bedroom and bath,
There’s no better place than right here.
It’s new and exciting, passionate and stirring,
Sprinkled with fueling hints of fear.
Crammed in only a few feet of space,
They’re love-liberated and freed.
They haven’t got much, but their dreams and ambitions,
Are the only money they’ll need.
Designer handbags and sparkly dresses,
Compacted behind one closet door.
A fifty-two inch HD-TV,
Resting on a small dusty floor.
After years of down pillows, vacations, and credit cards,
A lifetime of most lavish treats.
The two are convinced of no greater luxury,
Than their lone mattress and crumple of sheets.
He’ll take her hand gently when she cries over cookbooks,
She’ll coddle him when he’s not well,
Together, they’ll decide about many tomorrows,
Their love leaving an inspired trail.
It’s all about learning, growing, and thriving,
This journey in which they’ve embarked.
Day after day of the fresh and unknown,
They’ll live on “till death do us part.”
Unloading the last of many packed boxes,
He holds her, kissing her again.
The future they’ve dreamed of, planned, and hoped for,
From here and now, it begins.
Friday, August 31, 2012
And then we were 21...
I was waiting patiently in the restaurant parking lot when I saw the red Chevy Cobalt pull onto the gravel driveway. I smiled. I remembered the glossy magazine cutout of the same car in yellow - alongside mementos from North Habersham Middle School - tacked to Cristen’s bulletin board.
She jumped out and we embraced. The headlights of a surrounding car caught the diamond on her left hand and sent glittering reflections across downtown Clarkesville. Arm in arm, we walked into the restaurant and took a seat in a corner booth where we could giggle and tell our most blush-worthy secrets without disturbing other diners - many of whom we recognized as mama’s coworkers or ex-boyfriend’s ex-girlfriends or retired high school football coaches.
“I’m more ready to be married than ready for the wedding,” she said flippantly, taking a sip from her water glass. Her phone flickered, and her smile was all too familiar…
Cristen was forever on the receiving end of love letters and phone calls from many a male admirer. The boys who frequented my basement for adolescent parties came to enjoy her vivacious confidence. She’d flip her silky blonde hair - I’d always believed in belonged in a Herbal Essence advertisement - and smirk and steal hearts…and then later, pillow to pillow, she’d tell me what their lips taste like and we’d narrow down the most promising of her male suitors.
But when Matthew, the man who’d seized her affections five years ago and sealed their future on one knee sought her out via text message during dinner, the joy in her eyes surpassed that which was evident when hundreds of boys were clamoring for her affections.
We ordered pizza, she and I. I remembered an afternoon when our dance company - as eleven-year-olds, we were junior members - ventured to a local, hippie-oasis pizza joint. Our fellow ballerinas ordered salads and vegetable plates, but Cristen and I ignored their disdainful stares as we tore into the greasiest of deep-dish pies…
Then, years later, in our Varsity cheerleading uniforms, stuffing our faces with five dollar boxes from Little Ceasars while we tied ribbons in our hair and fluffed our pompoms and grinned at any football player who happened to click by in his cleats in the hours before kickoff…
“What about you?” she asked. “What’s going on with you?”
“Well,” I blushed, my pink cheeks a product of disbelief and anticipation. “I found out last week that I, well, I got the internship!”
“Oh, Macy. That’s wonderful!”
We both remembered the white pleather trench I’d sported the Monday after Spring Break our 7th grade year; the cropped sweatshirts I’d paired with denim mini skirts when we were freshman; the graphic tees I’d snagged from thrift stores and worn under tousled blonde curls before we graduated. But this summer, I’d live in a world of shoes and clothes and cutting-edge fashion in the heart of one of the most prominent global apparel lines…and as one who’d been privy to my most far-fetched dreams over the years and loved me in the darkest days of my style evolution, she reveled in my excitement.
“I’ll leave the week before your wedding,” I told her. “But I’ll fly back from the city for it. Obviously.”
“And you’ll be here for my bachelorette?”
Then, we talked lingerie. White lace for the wedding night, black leather for the first evening of the honeymoon. Our discussion migrated to more personal subjects, as even though she’d been the most desirable vixen of our many friends growing up, she - like all good Southern girls are urged to do - had kept her purity in tact.
After lingerie, we talked liquor - laughing about that blurry December afternoon when we’d taken our first (and last) shots of whiskey from an Ancient Age bottle I’d knicked from Nana’s cabinet. After liquor, we talked local drama - who from our hometown had gotten pregnant or mixed up with drugs or into Ivy League schools.
“How’s your daddy?” I changed the subject abruptly - hating to ask, but knowing I should.
She forced a smile and looked past me when she answered. “They’ve given him months, but not years.”
Fondest memories of the soft-spoken man in the red pick-up, driving us up from gymnastics class or dropping me back at my house after spend-the-night parties invaded my thoughts. Mr. Eddy picking on his guitar on Cristen’s front porch; Mr. Eddy singing along with the ancient country song on the radio; Mr. Eddy, the carnival worker who’d set his sights on Cristen’s mom and refused to leave town without her hand; Mr. Eddy nursing tomato sauce for the famous “Eddy Spaghetti;”Mr. Eddy praying with the most ragged of God-fearing woman by the alter on Sunday mornings…
“I get sad sometimes, yeah.” her voice was hoarse. “I worry about mom. I get mad at God. I regret my kids will never know him…”
“But then, I wake up in the morning and I look at my ring and I remember: there’s still a good man in my life. And, well, maybe the best is still yet to come.”
Cristen’s optimism drew us together years ago, and allowed our friendship to transcend the struggles of growing-up and attending separate colleges. Her positive outlook is inspiring - it’s like a needed antidote in a world poisoned with the venom of “can’ts” “won’ts” and “nevers.”
When she took me to her and Matthew’s house after dinner, the luminescence of her outlook on life was as bright as ever. She walked me through, room by room. Any scuff on the floor or room painted a difficult color, she’d assure me she and Matthew would improve after they were married. The overgrown backyard, she envisioned a grill, patio furniture and a goldendoodle. About the steep driveway, she laughed and said that they’d be spending infrequent Georgia snow days safely inside.
“It’s close to our high school,” she said of the location. “And, God willing, that’s where I’ll get a job next year. And the hospital is only half-an-hour away and he’ll only work 3 days a week -“
She sighed. “It’s going to be perfect.”
When she asked me where I’d plant my roots after graduation, I could only shrug my shoulders.
“They said we’d talk job opportunities at the end of the summer.” I said, trying to keep the blaring hope from my shaky voice.
Her eyes widened. “You might live in New York City?”
I shrugged nonchalantly, but my imagination was already running wild. “Will you come visit?”
Even though she only responded with a wink, I already knew the answer. When we finished our visit and drove separate directions, back to our respective collegiate lifestyles, our futures were as different as any two could be. She had a house. She would be a wife in less than a month. She had every indication of a job. I merely had a city of dreams and opportunities and unknowns awaiting me.
Our past, we’d traveled hand-in-hand. Our future, we’d embark upon heart-to-heart.
Hug your daddies. Love your friends.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Breakup Season
Bidding day, in Athens, on Milledge Ave.
Girls in white – both youthful and blithe.
Their blank teenage slate will soon be marred,
By the temptations of college life.
To their high school loves, they promise loyalty,
To stay faithful, honest, and chaste.
Yet between the two, both him and her,
Few relationships will actually last.
An innocent downtown shot (or two),
Clayton and Washington become blurry to watch,
Until, all too quick, a Lil Wayne tune overtakes,
Glitter from your skirt rubbing off on his crotch.
Shacking, by definition, is an impromptu “slumber party,”
For in Athens, love is free.
An embarrassed hustle back to Brumby in the morning,
In last night’s pumps and his oversized tee.
The secrets you keep from your man far away,
Veiled in blushes, stutters and shame.
When simultaneously, behind your back,
Without guilt – he’s doing the same.
For at his campus, with beer in tow,
Spiffy in his new frat gear.
He winks at every girl who passes him by,
Specifically, at her chest and her rear.
Until, one night, in a drunken slur,
Sloppy in indecisive cries,
“It’s not you, it’s me – I swear!”
And you bid your puppy-love goodbye.
For naive freshman girls beginning many tomorrows,
These first months are emotional treason.
Though they’ll find someone new next Saturday night,
Right now, it’s break-up season.
Girls in white – both youthful and blithe.
Their blank teenage slate will soon be marred,
By the temptations of college life.
To their high school loves, they promise loyalty,
To stay faithful, honest, and chaste.
Yet between the two, both him and her,
Few relationships will actually last.
An innocent downtown shot (or two),
Clayton and Washington become blurry to watch,
Until, all too quick, a Lil Wayne tune overtakes,
Glitter from your skirt rubbing off on his crotch.
Shacking, by definition, is an impromptu “slumber party,”
For in Athens, love is free.
An embarrassed hustle back to Brumby in the morning,
In last night’s pumps and his oversized tee.
The secrets you keep from your man far away,
Veiled in blushes, stutters and shame.
When simultaneously, behind your back,
Without guilt – he’s doing the same.
For at his campus, with beer in tow,
Spiffy in his new frat gear.
He winks at every girl who passes him by,
Specifically, at her chest and her rear.
Until, one night, in a drunken slur,
Sloppy in indecisive cries,
“It’s not you, it’s me – I swear!”
And you bid your puppy-love goodbye.
For naive freshman girls beginning many tomorrows,
These first months are emotional treason.
Though they’ll find someone new next Saturday night,
Right now, it’s break-up season.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Sweet Talk.
I remember wearing a white robe and stepping wide-eyed into the baptistery corridor. The lukewarm water barely skimmed the bottom of my six-year-old neck. I held my breath the entire time the pastor spoke of innocence and Christian rebirth; when I emerged from the sacred backwards tilt, my face was purple and the female faces of my Baptist congregation were red with tear stains.
Now, I'm 21. I was a bridesmaid in my best friends wedding last June and I'm scheduled to serve as Maid of Honor in another's the June coming up. Over the summer, my roommate and fellow fashion industry intern in NYC was proposed to with a sliver of diamond on a silver plated band in Central Park.
My senior year of college began Monday. That afternoon, I stood outside my sorority house and beckoned with the cadence of familiar cheers a group of the most confident and disillusioned teenage women on Milledge Avenue - all innocent, wearing white sundresses and brimming with excitement.
Southern women are defined by and obsessed with the prospect of wearing white. We pledge our hopes and dreams and fears within God, sweet talkin’ gentleman and big-haired groups of fellow Georgia peaches. Some of us pray for the tenacity to stand firm in our cowgirl boots and conquer the world with unwavering morals and the doe-eyed ingenuity our mamas instilled within us. Still, others strive toward a life of potluck dinners and ironing dress shirts and spending a handful of evenings in hospital delivery rooms.
Southern Belles are certainly a spectacle, but our tendencies aren’t superficial. We’re livin’ lives we’ve heard of in country music tunes and witnessed within our neighbors for generations. With a penchant for the romantic and the classically unattainable, we’re spending the fairytale our 20s plastered with bright red smiles and backlit by the hope of a Georgia sunset.
Now, I'm 21. I was a bridesmaid in my best friends wedding last June and I'm scheduled to serve as Maid of Honor in another's the June coming up. Over the summer, my roommate and fellow fashion industry intern in NYC was proposed to with a sliver of diamond on a silver plated band in Central Park.
My senior year of college began Monday. That afternoon, I stood outside my sorority house and beckoned with the cadence of familiar cheers a group of the most confident and disillusioned teenage women on Milledge Avenue - all innocent, wearing white sundresses and brimming with excitement.
Southern women are defined by and obsessed with the prospect of wearing white. We pledge our hopes and dreams and fears within God, sweet talkin’ gentleman and big-haired groups of fellow Georgia peaches. Some of us pray for the tenacity to stand firm in our cowgirl boots and conquer the world with unwavering morals and the doe-eyed ingenuity our mamas instilled within us. Still, others strive toward a life of potluck dinners and ironing dress shirts and spending a handful of evenings in hospital delivery rooms.
Southern Belles are certainly a spectacle, but our tendencies aren’t superficial. We’re livin’ lives we’ve heard of in country music tunes and witnessed within our neighbors for generations. With a penchant for the romantic and the classically unattainable, we’re spending the fairytale our 20s plastered with bright red smiles and backlit by the hope of a Georgia sunset.
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