The Birkin Blog

Seduce my mind and you can have my body.

Lasting Relationships December 11, 2008

Filed under: Relationships — Colette @ 11:32 pm
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There are few things in life that are as comforting and soothing as a hot cup of tea. When I am lonely, when I am sick, when I am feeling creative and especially when I am bonding with the women in my family; it is usually over a hot cup of tea. Sunday afternoons in the summer or blustery winter’s evenings, tea seems to be the unchanged constant in the most intimate conversations of my life.

My tastes have changed over the years and growing up in a tea drinking household the flavors have grown with me. As a child listening to my mother, aunts and grandmother talk at the dining room table I had my own lukewarm cup of raspberry herbal tea. I would sip at poignant breaks in the conversation, raising my pinky for effect. This was my time to be among women and learn the art of and joy in sharing yourself and learning the familial history that is the story of my own life’s journey. Sitting in the dining room chairs my patent leather shoes dangling a few inches above the floor, I felt like a grown up and like I had become a part of some secret society. A world I had not known before was opened up to me as the matriarchs of my family smiled down at what could only be described as tepid sugar water but I drank that raspberry tea as if it were nectar from the gods.

As I grew into a young woman still living at home I graduated to Earl Grey to prove I could drink the strong brew that everyone else enjoyed. I of course still filled half the cup with sugar and lemon juice. It was only after I realized the difference between my mother’s taste in tea and my Grandmothers that I began to develop my own tea preferences. My mother will allow the bag to sit in the pot until the water is cold. My grandmother dips the bag in twice and puts it to the side as she prefers a lighter tea. I have learned that I prefer the tea my grandmother’s way. But had I never met such selective connoisseurs, I might be one of those American women who does not know the difference between strong or weak tea.

I left for college and studied abroad in Italy. During my adventures my family always made sure to send me a little box of tea in every care package. The flavor reminded me of home and helped keep me awake when I studied, calmed my nerves after a long day and let me know I was loved by a family that was physically far away but no further than a hot cup of tea. While traveling in Ireland, I shared a hot cup of tea with my best friend. In front of a roaring fire in her flat we made plans for our future. Tea cups warming our chilly hands we discussed our hopes and our dreams for the lives we would lead. We stayed up all night talking and sharing our most intimate thoughts sipping tea and imagining what excitement was next in store for us.

Throughout my life, tea has not only been the marker of a good conversation or the beginning of a never ending card game, it has become synonymous with the passage of time, the sharing of traditions and moments of personal growth and revelation. When a woman in my family puts the kettle on and sits down to talk, you know she means business. And when someone says they don’t have a minute for even one cup of tea, you know something’s going on. Some people read their fortunes in the tea leaves at the bottom of their mug. My great fortune is in the women I drink my tea with. As the years pass and conversation ebbs and flows, I learn more about them as people and through their wisdom, more about myself and the woman I would like to become. Sharing a cup of tea is our tradition, it is our ritual and it is a gift I share with my female friends, family and someday my children.

 

Behavior December 2, 2008

Filed under: Short Story — Colette @ 11:32 pm

Whence wondering wandering while

The weeping willow whines

Tentatively thinking thoroughly

The tender timber tangles

My mutterings matter much

To me my mysterious meandering

Creating clouded concrete contentions

Coming complete circle

Voluntarily voicing volcanically

Verily voluptuous voyeurs

Cringing crying creating

Citizens complain critically

 

Personal comedy of errors December 2, 2008

Filed under: The Human Social Experiment — Colette @ 11:23 pm
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When I look at life, I’m always so optimistic. I am naively cheerful about the silver lining that I’m so sure is on its way. Maybe that makes me a joy to be around or maybe it just makes me a pain in the ass. Take this year for starters, I didn’t really want to leave home and then I have to fly back to Chicago for school. I get here and for two weeks I get nothing but the run around from financial aid which really is no aid at all. It would be more aptly named, financial pain in my ass. I finally get the administrative block off of my account. Then I have twenty-four hours to register for six classes, get twelve signatures and all the proper forms submitted and approved by the dean to be re-enrolled. I feel it would be appropriate to point out that I had already enrolled. Due to some clerical error I was removed from all of my classes, so all of this could have been avoided. Though I did everything on my end to assure this did not happen, apparently someone else did not. I settle for four classes I like. Then I think I’ll catch up, I’ll get on track.

I go to buy books. I realize that I probably will not make it through another month when financial pain in my ass will put another block on my account and have me kicked out of my classes. Optimistic I know, but for the time being I’m set, I’m ready, everything is great and then I get sick. Too sick to read, or move, or think about homework but I still do it. I’m up working until one in the morning. Then I get sicker, until I get better. Once I am healed I head off to the library to get my work done. I’m at the library for a good four hours when I realize my wallet has been stolen. Someone has taken all of my personal items and stolen my identity and yet I am taking it in stride. Now I have to tell my roommates that I cannot join them on our planned trip to the University of Kentucky for the weekend because I have no wallet, no credit card and no way of paying my own way.

I wake up in the morning to the roommates excitedly packing. As they debate on what to wear, I file my police report. I explain to the officer on duty that all of my medical, financial and personal identification and my cell phone have been stolen. When enquiring as to the value of said phone, she bursts out laughing when I tell her I paid $15 for it. Apparently this is hysterical at 8 a.m. on a Friday morning at the police station. I go over my story again with campus police. Much to my chagrin I will again be featured in the student paper for something stupid, damn eager underaged investigative reporters.

I must face my roommates and explain that although I would love to share in their adventures, I must now stay home by myself to try to resolve this minor crisis. Only they don’t accept no for an answer. Julie tells me I’m going to Kentucky, no questions asked. I’ll pay her back whenever I can and if I can’t then I won’t and she doesn’t care either way. She’s not getting stuck in a car by herself with Karen for over ten hours. I can do my homework on the drive down, which I’m sure you all know doesn’t happen. I’m too busy singing ‘The Devil Went Down to Georgia’ to notice. I have a brilliant time. I meet great people, we attend fun parties, I kiss new boys and we go to exciting sporting events. All in all my faith in humanity and my positive outlook has been shaken but inevitably is renewed. I can finally see why I’m always so damn cheerful, because despite all evidence to the contrary, things can always get better even when they seem to be worse.

 

Best laid plans… December 2, 2008

Filed under: Relationships — Colette @ 2:01 am
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Planning for the life I will someday lead does not revolve around the degrees I must earn or the successes I must have. Rather, my imaginary life to be is a compilation of laughter in the sun on lazy afternoons, the anger of too much energy and passionate love, the warm feeling I get in my grandmother’s arms and the sweet surrender each of us imagines home to be like when we are away. There is so much materialism in the world. Even with all this idealism, I still hope for a home that looks and feels a certain way and a family that portrays a certain image. How silly that superficiality invades my dreams.

I am more comfortable with people like myself and not the pretentious and superficial world in which I am perpetually lost. I feel as if the world in which I live is oftentimes so contradictory. I fit in with different groups of people, perhaps I am too accommodating. But I have never had a relationship with someone from a higher economic background. Perhaps it makes me uncomfortable to consider that I might not hold all the cards when it comes to decorum, class and beauty. Perhaps it is the fear of leaving my comfort zone. Which brings me to my current tangent, is life something that just happens and imposes itself upon us or is life something that you do with a purpose and a goal in mind?

Do I choose the men I date? Or is there some chemical trigger that relies on my baser instincts that has nothing to do with the life I imagine myself living. Because right here and right now, this is it, this is life. It’s not what I imagined but it works, it’s happening, every day some more of it slips by and I’m wondering if this moment if this day is the one where everything changes. Where I find the man I fall in love with, where the glass slipper fits and I don’t have to live in the ruin to which I am accustomed, when all the work I put forth into my education and career is finally recognized and valued. But these days are not predictable, and life never is it seems. Which leads me to conclude that planning is really a waste of time because life is not waiting for me to make up my mind and I refuse to let another opportunity slip by because it’s not part of my plan.

 

Guilty Pleasures December 2, 2008

Filed under: Short Story — Colette @ 1:44 am
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Don’t keep me here but keep me safe, from reality. I like my world of make-believe. I don’t want to leave it. There’s a world of broken glass and broken dreams out there, where souls and hearts are crushed. We, in this moonlight are safe. Guarded from the sins we’ve committed. Fiercely holding on to the night, the police of this city can’t capture us. We escape over this lake. This lake where webs of tomorrow hang from the stars and your kiss still lingers on my lips. This place between real and surreal, pretend and make believe. Where snakes and scorpions are trapped beneath the glass of the water’s surface. We walk across the ripples, floating into oblivion, free from consequences.