sundries, now with footnotes!
Apr. 24th, 2010 02:21 pmPatty: "Did you write bad poetry?"
Me: "Everyone writes bad poetry at some point."
Patty: "Did you use the word effulgent?"
Me: "Entirely possible."
Also, hey, James Marsters can act.
This is, of course, rather fraught for me, and led to Patty asking why I even wanted to go.
"I just want someone else to see it, to know it's real. When I talk about it, no one believes me. Plus, you'll really like the library."3
"Won't I be at your side?" she asked.
"Maybe I'll be at yours."
Predictably, all of this raises the eternal question of what to wear.
For me, there's no such thing as what makes me comfortable. How can there be when anything I own may feel like drag one day and feel like my own skin the next? And how can there be when I am so innately political, that I'm aware of the agenda of anything I put on?
If I wear a dress am I being vengeful by showing off my awesome body in a way that makes me a hypocrite about body policing, shame and desire? Will I look like I'm trying too hard? Will I seem as weak as I imagine all of them to be? Those delicate women who wouldn't want to offend but once called my father to tell him I was a cock-sucking whore -- when I was twelve.
If I wear a suit (which, you know, is nicer, because it's more me, and hello, armour and make of in-jokes) will it seem just like I'm trying to shock? Will people whisper about how they always knew or about how I'm an artist? Will Patty be assumed to be the alumna and me the dyketastic partner? Will they say, "you know, the only reason I never thought she was a lesbian was because she was just so bad at sports"?
And on and on and on it goes. But I do have to go, to prove to myself that I am not afraid. For me, Hewitt has been a story without end. Now it gets to have one, even if I choose to continue my association thereafter.
But here's something, two somethings, I've never told you, and I guess it matters. First, Hewitt has a terrible reputation. Second? The Hewitt motto is "By Faith and By Courage" and the crest and all involves tall ships at sea. The weird thing about me isn't that all the pieces of me don't seem to fit, it's that they all actually do.
1 Wow, check out the graduating class photos along the staircases. White dresses mandatory, with advance approval required from the school, because if two girls got the same dress, that would be really embarrassing. I remember girls used to bring in custom sketches of dresses, and we wondered if people would get something really fabulous to get multi-use out of it -- debutante ball, wedding -- but people had the resources that that wasn't necessary; or, if they didn't have the resources, wasn't relevant, since they'd never be a debutante or have a big deal wedding.
2 Also? That staircase? Only seniors and faculty members were allowed to use it. Everyone else had to use the servants' stairs.
3 Woah, shit, that reading room thing in the upper half of that photo is new! It's pretty cool, but I wonder how much it mars the effect of the library as I remember it. It had once been the formal dining room in them mansion that housed the Upper School. I used to take French in the servants' quarters.
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Date: 2010-04-24 07:50 pm (UTC)I actually had a vehement discussion in one of my lit classes in college where some woman said she'd be truly embarrassed to have someone write her a love poem (I think we were discussing Burn's "Red, Red Rose".) I told her that I thought it was the most romantic thing in the world, to be the inspiration to cause someone to want to create something and that I would treasure even goofy poetry. I <3 William; Cecily didn't deserve him.
I've been to my 10 and 20 year reunions and they both went better than I expected. Out of a graduating class of 266 maybe about 100-125 students came to the first one and less than 75 came to the second one. People were generally nicer than I expected.
You'll do fine at your reunion. You are interesting, intelligent, entertaining, and can be as gorgeous/handsome as you want to be. Take multiple outfits, wear what you feel like, and have fun.
My kidlet was totally weirded out about the Oregonian death fungus. I had to explain to her that both our odds of going to Oregon and the odds of it coming here, made it something about which she didn't have to worry. It's still weird, though.
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Date: 2010-04-24 07:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-04-24 10:09 pm (UTC)I hope it's interesting and fun with very little angst.
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Date: 2010-04-24 10:11 pm (UTC)