Thursday, January 21, 2010

Movements

By Cecilia Miller and Sarah Jordan Stout, circa 2007

Movements

Surrealism

Minimalism

Rennaisance

Impressionism

Romanticism

Abstract

Ice age

Post modern

Materialism

Beat

Nascar

Realism

Antiromanticist

Calvinism

Hobbinism

Star trek o mania

Star bucks o mania

Star wars o mania

Starter home o mania

Star o mania

Maniaism

patriotimism

Deductionism

Excessisism

Taoism

Judaism- that was fun for a little while

Macroscopism

Optimism

Coptimism

Moptimism

Floptimism

Crackoptimism

Cubism

Schism

Pessimism

Snotissism

Elitist

Fleetist

Feelitist

Tellitist

Vegetarian

Vegan

TVegan

Albino

Creationism

Recreationism

Satanist

Satinist

The ultimate paradox: Textistintualism.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

user names, eggs

I can track my migration back to Tennessee by the change in my online user name. At loyno.edu, I was "sjstout." At utk.edu, I am "sstout7". These are being-verbs here, people! My online identity is altered. Maybe sstout7 is a more competent humanoid. Maybe sstout7 negotiates the tides of life with inner-ding (anyone watch that emotions tv series?) and confidence. Maybe sstout7 is more comfortable than sjstout. Maybe more comfortable isn't so good. Maybe the 7 stands for 7 times better than before. 7 times the sexiness! 7 times the brains!

Tonight's dinner menu was two eggs that Thad made.

Monday, January 11, 2010

being worried about not being worried

Laying here in my bed, being here in the condo, it does not feel so strange. When I close my eyes, I can nearly orient myself anywhere, and besides that, my cheese, cracker, and peanut butter dinner tasted pretty good. Really, the only thing that feels amiss is my boxspring under the mattress. Its the first time since highschool I've had a box spring and the difference is palpable. You can always feel the various resistances among surfaces: when you place a glass down on granite, versus wood, versus plastic. The resonance, the "give," is all whack. Thats how I feel on this bed, a little floated, and little insulated, from the frame.

As I type that last line, I know this insulated feeling extends beyond my form to this bed structure. I am suspicious that I am not reacting more to this transition. True, I've been preparing myself to transfer from Loyola to UT since a little after Thanksgiving, but the roar of emotions and anxiety I used to feel are gone now that I am home. Does geography have to do thought patterns? While school sometimes was painful down there in bouyou-land (I'm just kidding; New Orleans isn't like that, just the rest of the state) I knew, through the tumultuose anxiety and "mind games," I was atleast (at best?) alive and thinking, and that as long as I could maintain that state of discomfort, I was could be aware of some of the strings in this life-game. Now that I am home, the view from my window is downgraded from New Orleans garden district to two-story office building and reception tower. The rambling trolley I hear in the distance is actually a cargo train.

Worst yet, I predicted this predicament. I totally called it. And at the time, I added, "And since I will be home and comfortable, I will be aware of all these differences, "sadments" (my noun hybrid of things that are sad) and will hardly mourn them as I do now in anticipation because I will be numb, and the world will seize me and all my emotions will be tempered to be moderate, proportioned, acceptable." And you may say, well that sounds a little melodramatic, but I will tell you, no, it only sounds that way because your emotions are more monochromatic than you would like to admit. And now that I am home and these prophesies are coming true, and I realize that the final clincher, final nail in the coffin, is that-I can say-the proof is, I am not mourning. I am floating insulated, and the thoughts that agonized me and horrified me when I was away are no more than a small pea between my mattress and boxspring.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

1/2 Inch

Well we got our snow, though it wasn't much. We made it outdoors too, to walk the streets of ice and slush, to inspect the frozen dew. The sky was filmy, yellow, and faded. I think we were the last people on earth. And when we made it to the adandoned park, it was nothing but fields and frosty terf. The dog was happy. Look at her she's happy. She likes the cold and the emptiness. Then I thought, if we were the last people on earth, I would sure miss my parents.



Monday, January 4, 2010

My spacial mapping of life:

My spacial mapping of life:
There is all the things you learn in school; and, these higher-thinking, logical things make you sane.
Then there is all the things in the world that are insane but incessant and surrounding.
And somewhere, somehow those two paths supposedly meet and go together. But they don't. Becuase where they don't meet is instead where they try to meet, which is a crisis point.