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cass, 21, living with hysteria. hello

all girls should have a poem
written for them even if
we have to turn this god-damn world
upside down to do it
--richard brautigan

email + @tarts + last.fm

radio silence? try my travelogue.

suddenly:
Girl’s Legs (via Swapatorium2)

suddenly:

Girl’s Legs (via Swapatorium2)

Comments (View) | 21 notes
Reblogged from suddenly.

Monday, September 21st 2009 9:11am
Cribbed this from the Powerhouse Museum flickr while I was looking for pictures of home to put on my dorm walls. Wow, I totally forgot how easy it is to stir up homesickness from unexpected sources. Is it nostalgia? I don’t know. A hundred years have passed since this picture was taken, but those waves are still the waves I danced through on New Years Eve and I have walked those rocky outcrops and these memories are interfering with my otherwise excellent Canadian ‘experience’. I don’t think I’ll ever lose my ties to home.

Cribbed this from the Powerhouse Museum flickr while I was looking for pictures of home to put on my dorm walls. Wow, I totally forgot how easy it is to stir up homesickness from unexpected sources. Is it nostalgia? I don’t know. A hundred years have passed since this picture was taken, but those waves are still the waves I danced through on New Years Eve and I have walked those rocky outcrops and these memories are interfering with my otherwise excellent Canadian ‘experience’. I don’t think I’ll ever lose my ties to home.

Comments (View) | 4 notes

Sunday, September 20th 2009 9:16am

"Many remarkable people deal with depression and anxiety all the time because they see the world differently than average people do. Their own failures and perceived failures are magnified. When others say, “Don’t worry about it,” they can’t understand why someone would think something like that. For this reason, a lot of geniuses throughout history have been chronically depressed."

-

I don’t know about ‘depressed’, but I’m frequently dismayed at the low expectations of those around me. Big thoughts, people!

From The Art of Nonconformity: The Decision To Be Remarkable, via withabang

Comments (View) | 169 notes

Saturday, September 19th 2009 11:36am

"We are all apprentices in a craft where no one ever becomes a master."

- ernest hemingway, the wild years.

Comments (View) | 4 notes

Monday, September 14th 2009 8:45am
(via kitsune noir)

(via kitsune noir)

Comments (View) | 11 notes

Sunday, September 13th 2009 8:25pm

muteness:

This is my new Korean jam. I’m stealing the internet to share this with you. This is serious business.

Oh my gosh, you guys, this is proccessed pop at its finest. Karen O lookalikes! Mary J Blige-style rapping in English and Korean! Ladies groping ladies, and teaser almost-kissing, and pimp canes. Friday is totally made.

Comments (View) | 13 notes
Reblogged from (mute)ness.

Friday, September 11th 2009 8:58am

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Plays: 45

Sondre Lerche - I Guess It’s Gonna Rain Today.

(via sarahjcooki)

It is. This is the perfect tune for today.

Comments (View) | 8 notes
Reblogged from c'est super.
Tags: tunes

Wednesday, September 9th 2009 9:13am

This is the money shot

antiguit:

Write a movie about painfully hip twentysomethings who appear confused about where they are in the Human Experience. Include several surreal nighttime shots of the city they inhabit. The soundtrack should prominently feature music by We Aeronauts.

You will find this activity potentially more economically lucrative than writing a term paper about politics, plus all the cool kids will dedicate blog entries to your movie.

Comments (View) | 3 notes
Reblogged from antgt.

Wednesday, September 9th 2009 8:49am
bubububble:

i had just signed on to write a little about some anxiety i’ve been experiencing since before coming to smith, and i saw this and thought it fit. i thought that maybe my anxiousness was just me being nervous about returning to school, but it’s still here, and i’ve successfully returned. so.  i guess what i’m noticing/experiencing/(imagining?) is this really subtle and pervasive feeling of competition among a fair number of people i’ve met here. the people who i feel most comfortable around are the people who aren’t scrutinizing me, and don’t scrutinize themselves — they’re just interacting and existing and studying and other stuff.   but i feel like i’m constantly being sized up. and i feel like i’m not up to standard. i got invited to two parties this weekend, and i know that’s only because we have a mutual acquaintance - not because i fit the bill. and the pressure i’d feel if i went, to be funny and witty and pretty and interesting all at once, is really hard. it makes me feel like i’m gonna burst, or crumble.  i can’t be expected to perform. please please please don’t make me. i’ll read my books and write my essays and talk to you like another person, but not as someone i’m trying to out do, not as someone who i’d like to threaten because i’m threatened.  oh, and another thing - don’t think that just because i don’t want to compete, and i don’t want to be scrutinized, that i don’t have self-esteem. i do. i just don’t feel the need to use it to fuck with other people’s heads, or to throw my social weight around. i just refuse to be performing all the time for you.(also via lilichka, loveandzombies, girlsbooksfoodartlove,mymuffinroared, dtron, syrupandhoney)

bubububble:

i had just signed on to write a little about some anxiety i’ve been experiencing since before coming to smith, and i saw this and thought it fit. i thought that maybe my anxiousness was just me being nervous about returning to school, but it’s still here, and i’ve successfully returned. so. i guess what i’m noticing/experiencing/(imagining?) is this really subtle and pervasive feeling of competition among a fair number of people i’ve met here. the people who i feel most comfortable around are the people who aren’t scrutinizing me, and don’t scrutinize themselves — they’re just interacting and existing and studying and other stuff. but i feel like i’m constantly being sized up. and i feel like i’m not up to standard. i got invited to two parties this weekend, and i know that’s only because we have a mutual acquaintance - not because i fit the bill. and the pressure i’d feel if i went, to be funny and witty and pretty and interesting all at once, is really hard. it makes me feel like i’m gonna burst, or crumble.

i can’t be expected to perform. please please please don’t make me. i’ll read my books and write my essays and talk to you like another person, but not as someone i’m trying to out do, not as someone who i’d like to threaten because i’m threatened.

oh, and another thing - don’t think that just because i don’t want to compete, and i don’t want to be scrutinized, that i don’t have self-esteem. i do. i just don’t feel the need to use it to fuck with other people’s heads, or to throw my social weight around. i just refuse to be performing all the time for you.

(also via lilichkaloveandzombiesgirlsbooksfoodartlove,
mymuffinroareddtronsyrupandhoney)

Comments (View) | 63 notes
Reblogged from percolatin'.

Wednesday, September 9th 2009 8:46am
gratuitous picture of yourself on your first day of classes in another country, also wearing kitschy new sunglasses because the sun’s come out for once, also not wearing any pants

gratuitous picture of yourself on your first day of classes in another country, also wearing kitschy new sunglasses because the sun’s come out for once, also not wearing any pants

Comments (View) | 13 notes
Tags: shameless

Tuesday, September 8th 2009 9:37am

present-indicative

Two people asked me recently - each without knowing the other - why I have stopped shooting digital images. I answered, even though I admitted even while answering that I was just trying out various statements, that I was talking out loud to get to the truth. Because I didn’t actually know. 

But tonight, looking through my newest sets of film, I do know. I know why I haven’t picked up my digital camera. 

Because I stopped making accidents. I made lots of joy and surprises and lots of blurred images and risks, and I even tried lots of things that didn’t work. But shooting digitally gave me too many options to redo the shot, gave me too many opportunities to try again for a second shot, to make the fifth shot better, to make it perfect by ten if ten is what it took. 

None of that is inappropriate. Improving everyday is what any craft is about, after all! But I’m tired of so much control. I want to fuck up and not be able to do anything about it. Because I will either get tired of not making better decisions (in the frame, in the exposure, in the content, whatever) or I will be satisfied with whatever image rears its head and begin looking for something new in what I left for myself. 

I stopped making accidents in me. I want more accidents. I want less opportunities to fail even if it means all I do is fail.

I’ll turn around. I’ll go back and pick up my digital camera and maybe even make something I love with it. But I want to be able to see something, have it, fall deeply in love with it and then let it go. I even want to lose it. Because with enough practice, I gain even when I lose, even if it’s just one moment I gain, just one image, just one successfully mediocre photo.

(via the ingoing)

Comments (View) | 4 notes

Sunday, September 6th 2009 12:21am

Stephen Fry on Writing - Emerging into the Light

Cut and pasted from here:

A deadline met: such relief. You would think that after so many years I might have mastered the art – not of writing – but of putting myself in a position to write. Many writers are, like me, fascinated by process. From an early age I wanted to know whether authors worked by morning or night, whether they typed or wrote by hand and if so on what kind of paper, whether they had their backs to the window, drank wine, sat, stood or lay on their backs with their legs in the air.

I don’t profess to understand the reasons, but I work best in the mornings. And by mornings I mean mornings. When I have any serious piece of writing to complete I start by getting up early, about 6 say, and I sit in front of my computer screen till mid-afternoon. As the days pass the hour of rising becomes earlier and earlier until I’m going to bed at 7 or 8 at night and flinging back the duvet ready to write at 4 or even 3 in the morning.

In the old days I used a manual typewriter until I graduated to a golfball and finally one of those Brother machines that could keep a whole line in RAM before printing it out. I usually scribbled in longhand first, something I still often do. In 1982 I bought a BBC Acorn for £399. It came complete with a firmware programme called Wordwise which I adored and which, in my fond memory, was the best word processor ever. I used it to write the book (ie story and dialogue) of a stage musical, saving on cassette tape as I went along and finally outputting to a daisywheel printer. The show was enough of a hit to allow me to indulge my passion for computer gadgetry for the rest of my life. I still tremble at the insanity which propelled me to outlay £7,000 on an Apple Laserwriter in the autumn of 1984. But the gear, gadgets and gismos were ultimately irrelevant of course. It was all about coffee and cigarettes. Sitting in a study in Norfolk, curtains drawn (I cannot bear natural light when I’m writing), staring at that flashing I-beam on the screen. Cursing at the cursor.

Other writers may have written in the afternoons, used school exercise books and coloured pencils, sipped water and gazed out of the window but my way was my way and by the time I had written my first novel a kind of superstition told me that it would be tempting providence to change. I might frighten off those shy Muses. So, aside from the miracle of managing to give up cigarettes two and half years ago, I have kept to the same system. Well, system is hardly the word. But … it’s still so bloody difficult. I may always have been weirdly fascinated by the processes and outward routines of other writers, but deeper than that I really needed to know how much they too grunted, swore and howled at the sheer horror of having to write. “I sit at the typewriter and curse a bit,” said one of my earliest literary heroes, P. G. Wodehouse. Was he a special case?

I began writing seriously when I was about thirteen. Out streamed poetry, stories and novels, the latter of which were always aborted early, usually half way through the second chapter. It took my friend Douglas Adams to encourage me to go further and he did this by pointing out that the reason I had never managed to finish a novel was that I had never properly understood how difficult, how ragingly and absurdly difficult, it is to do. “It is almost impossibly hard,” he told me. It is supposed to be. But once you truly understand how difficult it is,” he added, with signature paradoxicality, “it all becomes a lot easier.” It was many years later that Clive James quoted to me Thomas Mann’s superb crystallisation of this “A writer,” said Mann, “is a person for whom writing is more difficult than for other people.” How liberating that definition is. If any of you out there have ever been put off writing it might well be because you found it so insanely hard and therefore, like me, gave up and abandoned your masterworks early, regretfully assuming that you weren’t cut from the right cloth, that it must come more easily to true, natural-born writers. Perhaps you can start again now, in the knowledge that since the whole experience was so grindingly horrible you might be the real thing after all. Of course finding it difficult and managing to complete are just the first stages. They are what earn you the uniform and the brass buttons, as it were. They don’t guarantee that what you complete is any good, or even readable. That is quite a different kettle of wax, a whole other ball of fish.

You might notice below that another of my peculiar writing habits is to leave off shaving while the authorial fever is upon me. I believe Tolstoy and Gertrude Stein were the same. Pip pip.

(via thesophie)

Comments (View) | 27 notes
Reblogged from thesophie.
Tags: writing

Saturday, September 5th 2009 9:13am

"i think it’s interesting considering how kind of unfashionable i probably am, but i think it’s kind of cool and sort of ironic. i do wear the same stuff over and over again and i don’t really go out of my way to buy expensive clothes or know what’s happening. it’s not a terrible message to send to people. style for me always comes from people who are doing things that have nothing to do with the fashion world, they’re usually artists or painters or musicians or writers. it all depends on what people are doing. i don’t flip out over someone just walking down the street or in a magazine doing nothing, it’s gotta be in the context of their life. what they’re wearing tells a story about what they’re doing, i like people wearing their art."

- alison mosshart (via sarazucker) (via alohanico) (via buyhercandy)

Comments (View) | 23 notes
Reblogged from buy her candy.

Saturday, September 5th 2009 9:10am
britticisms:


I noticed a couple of things recently. First, many of the songs that I’ve been posting recently have ‘girl’ in the title. Second, I own a lot of songs that have ‘girl’ in the title. Third, I haven’t made a mix outside of Brooklyn Radio in a while. Therefore, I present the latest “mixtape” for BRITTICISMS titled Songs About Girls. Most of the songs have ‘girl’ in the title, though I stretched a bit with the Os Mutantes song. Either way, the music is straight-forward, simple, and good listening.

“A Pretty Girl is Like…” by The Magnetic Fields
“A Minha Menina (My Girl)” by Os Mutantes
“Sunday Girl” by Blondie
“Velocity Girl” by Primal Scream
“Silly Girl” by Television Personalities
“Nowhere Girl” by B-Movie (1981 version)
“Girl Afraid” by The Smiths
“Girl on the Wing” by The Shins
“Graveyard Girl” by M83
“Girlfriend” by Phoenix
“Post-Modern Girls” by The Strokes and Regina Spektor
“Candy Girl (demo)” by Trailer Trash Tracys
“Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl” by Broken Social Scene
“Cherry Blossom Girl” by Air

DOWNLOAD THE MIX HERE.

britticisms:

I noticed a couple of things recently. First, many of the songs that I’ve been posting recently have ‘girl’ in the title. Second, I own a lot of songs that have ‘girl’ in the title. Third, I haven’t made a mix outside of Brooklyn Radio in a while. Therefore, I present the latest “mixtape” for BRITTICISMS titled Songs About Girls. Most of the songs have ‘girl’ in the title, though I stretched a bit with the Os Mutantes song. Either way, the music is straight-forward, simple, and good listening.

“A Pretty Girl is Like…” by The Magnetic Fields

“A Minha Menina (My Girl)” by Os Mutantes

“Sunday Girl” by Blondie

“Velocity Girl” by Primal Scream

“Silly Girl” by Television Personalities

“Nowhere Girl” by B-Movie (1981 version)

“Girl Afraid” by The Smiths

“Girl on the Wing” by The Shins

“Graveyard Girl” by M83

“Girlfriend” by Phoenix

“Post-Modern Girls” by The Strokes and Regina Spektor

“Candy Girl (demo)” by Trailer Trash Tracys

“Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl” by Broken Social Scene

“Cherry Blossom Girl” by Air

DOWNLOAD THE MIX HERE.

Comments (View) | 81 notes
Reblogged from BRITTICISMS.

Friday, September 4th 2009 10:07am
“99% of the things I feared the most never happened.”

In case you were wondering at the lack of updates, I’m kind of in another country right now, trying to see if I can bring this statistic down a bit. You can read my anxiety-ridden exploits here.

“99% of the things I feared the most never happened.”
In case you were wondering at the lack of updates, I’m kind of in another country right now, trying to see if I can bring this statistic down a bit. You can read my anxiety-ridden exploits here.

Comments (View) | 19 notes
Reblogged from chapter in your life.

Sunday, August 30th 2009 9:00pm