tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80559048508548852222024-02-19T15:02:16.129-08:00IMMOBILE EXPLORATIONSMegan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.comBlogger352125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-11554088222530356142014-10-30T12:11:00.000-07:002014-10-30T12:13:34.623-07:00The Quality of Descent<div style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); background-color: white; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #444444; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue', HelveticaNeue, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; font-stretch: inherit; line-height: 19.6000003814697px; margin-bottom: 10px; outline: none 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
Oh, hey, I wrote a story and you can read it! "<a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/quality-descent/" target="_blank">The Quality of Descent"</a> is over at <em style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: none 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Lightspeed Magazine</em>. It’s about a girl with wings, love, falling, theatrical lies by way of magic show, and faith. I actually love this story a whole lot, though it took me forever to write and kind of hurt along the way.</div>
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<em style="-webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: none 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">"The trick begins like this: The magician throws an egg up into the air, where it flies — small and white and full of import — up and up, high into the black reaches of the proscenium. We await the descent, holding our breaths, expecting at any moment the crash of slapstick hilarity, exploding like a bomb. But the egg simply vanishes."</em></div>
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They even made an <a href="http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/www.lightspeedmagazine.com/podcasts/podcast_186-The_Quality_of_Descent-Megan_Kurashige.mp3" target="_blank">audio version</a> for their podcast. As a fan of audiobooks and radio plays and most situations that involve having a story read to me by someone with a nice voice, I’m over the moon about this. It’s the first time I’ve heard one of my stories read aloud by someone else and it makes me giddy.</div>
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The lovely Liz Argall also interviewed me about the story <a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/nonfiction/author-spotlight-megan-kurashige/" target="_blank">here</a>.</div>
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Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-40786858442468696882014-10-25T14:08:00.000-07:002014-10-25T14:08:23.974-07:00our show is so beautiful and it's making me sad<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So, <em>Peter and the Wolf</em>, the show I've been working on since January with <u><a href="http://www.sharpandfine.com/" target="_blank">Sharp & Fine</a></u> has turned out to be one of the most frustrating and most wonderful projects I've ever done. With three other dancers and four musicians, we've been figuring out how to tell a story in new ways. We have the musicians moving (even dancing) and the dancers sunk deep inside their characters and everyone making things up in the moment onstage, but all inside a structure and a story that we've spent months drafting together. It's been exploration that turned into excitement that got railroaded by frustration and beat up by strife that slid into anxiety and then, somehow, flew into the theater in a thousand pieces and transformed into a beautiful monster. It was a hard and sometimes awful process (Shan and I fought a whole lot over this one... nasty, truly sisterly fights), but the thing it's turned into lives up to the most surprising and meaningful parts of the stuff we found during it.</div>
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I think it might be the best show that my sister and I have made so far. Everyone in it is extraordinary. We've had two shows already and each time I've been onstage having a hard time not falling out of my own character because I'm so flattened by their goodness. It's exactly what I wanted the show to be, even though I didn't know what that was until it was done.</div>
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But, hardly anyone is coming to see it and I am so heartbroken about this. I feel like I'm letting our little band of tenacious, brave, and exceptionally, generously skilled players down because they're onstage, pouring so much effort into this story and it's spilling out to such a sparse audience. They deserve to have hearts to move and brains to challenge.</div>
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Reasons you should come see <em>Peter and the Wolf</em> tonight or tomorrow if you are anywhere near San Francisco:</div>
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<li>These artists are totally, fucking amazing. Let me give you their names: Katharine Hawthorne (Peter), Marissa Brown & Joshua Marshall (the Wolf, Josh on tenor sax), Carson Stein & Theo Padouvas (the Duck, Theo on cornet), Shannon Kurashige & Max Judelson (the Cat, Max on cello), Aram Shelton & me (the Bird, Aram on clarinet), Stephanie Buchner on lights. The dancers are really good. Like, some of my favorites ever, continuously forcing me to abandon my jadedness. And the musicians are incredible. And Stephanie is a magician who transforms a weird, brick theater into a surrealist interpretation of a forest going through a day and a night.</li>
<li>It's a really good dance show. And a really good music show. And the musicians dance too. </li>
<li>I have no idea when or if this will ever happen again. The thing about building a show on top of the talents of particular individuals is that it ends up fitting them exactly. I can't imagine <em>Peter</em> without every person already in it. Dance shows so often have such short public lives. One weekend and they're gone. </li>
<li>It's fun. People laughed out loud. An old couple (strangers, shockingly) stood up to clap, all alone in their row. My three-year-old cousin watched the entire show, happily fascinated.</li>
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Please come. It'll make me happy.</div>
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<strong><em>Peter and the Wolf</em> at ODC Theater, San Francisco</strong></div>
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<strong>Saturday, 10/25 at 8pm; Sunday, 10/26 at 2pm</strong></div>
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<strong>Tickets: $23 in advance, $28 at theater, $18 students/seniors</strong></div>
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<strong>All info here: <a data-mce-href="http://www.sharpandfine.com/peterandthewolf/" href="http://www.sharpandfine.com/peterandthewolf/" style="color: #444444;" target="_blank">http://www.sharpandfine.com/peterandthewolf/</a></strong></div>
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<span data-mce-style="line-height: 1.4;" style="line-height: 1.4;">Here are some more pictures to tempt you. All of these were taken by the marvelous <a data-mce-href="http://www.benjaminhersh.com/" href="http://www.benjaminhersh.com/" style="color: #444444;" target="_blank">Benjamin Hersh</a>.</span></div>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">(this one is me, with Aram, doing our bird duet. It's one of most enjoyable duets I've done in ages)</td></tr>
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Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-35837911557841604932014-05-25T22:20:00.000-07:002014-05-25T22:29:08.716-07:00expectations of chivalry<i>Chivalry: The brave, honorable, and courteous character attributed to the ideal knight; disinterested bravery, honor, and courtesy; chivalrousness. --Oxford English Dictionary</i><br />
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A few weeks ago, I was riding the BART from Oakland to San Francisco. It was night, but not yet very late. I was with my sister and a friend, three women on our way home from a music show in a friend of a friend's living room. We were dressed nicely, but not extraordinarily. We were sober, tired, and probably talking about books or food. Across the aisle from us were four young men, well dressed, not boisterous. They were talking about apps and office politics.<br />
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Standing in the aisle, there was a crazy drunk.<br />
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The crazy drunk was muttering, occasionally shouting, and he smelled of drink, drink, drink. He sat down next to my friend and reached into my lap to grab my hands. He had filthy hair, filthy clothes, and his hands were so dirty that I could feel his palms sticking to my wrists. He said something and then he laughed. His eyes were very wet and very red. I thought about how unfortunate it was that I had crossed my legs with my bad knee on top. What if I kicked him and I was at a disadvantage because I have a leg that is slightly less confident in force? "Don't touch me," I said. He laughed and laughed. He was a cartoon lunatic, every now and then thrusting his chin or chest at one of us so we would clutch and wilt.<br />
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We didn't say anything because we were scared. We are physically capable women. I don't think any of us would hesitate to tell off an overeager man in a bar, to deflect a grope with a swat or a slap. But, when the harassment is both drunk and unstable, when you can't trust the efficacy of shame in returning the situation to accepted boundaries, it seems safer to stay silent and hold still.<br />
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The four men across the aisle didn't say anything either. They looked at us out of the corner of their eyes and talked about bourbon and a co-worker's latest mistakes.<br />
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Eventually, the crazy drunk left us. He went to the other end of the car, slapped a man across the face, and started a fight. He had to be restrained by another man and pushed out of the train when we finally emerged from the tunnel that runs under the Bay.<br />
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People clapped for the man who restrained the crazy drunk. The four men across the aisle from us pointedly did not look. They talked about their plans for the weekend.<br />
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When my sister, friend, and I got off the train, we discovered that each of us was upset that the men across from us said nothing. We also discovered that each of us instantly felt guilty for feeling upset. We felt guilty for expecting a certain behavior, for expecting someone to rescue us from the situation. Why couldn't we do it ourselves? Aren't we strong? Aren't we adults? Why do we have the expectation that a person will intervene on our behalf, just because he is physically capable and a man?<br />
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We talked about how different a city is when you walk around it with a man from when you walk around it with another woman. We talked about how we have all been in situations where we were harassed, menaced, and scared by a man, but had the aggression immediately dissipate when another man leaned over and said, "are you bothering her?" Just that. "Are you bothering her?" We talked about how we have all been in similar situations where another woman asked the same thing and the harassment grew more belligerent, gleeful, unhinged. "How funny," says the man who harasses, gropes, or threatens us. "You're so angry. You look so pretty when you're angry." I have sat on a bus while a young man scraped a knife back and forth across the pole between us and told his friends that "girls like it when you have a knife, oh yeah, they think it's sexy," and I said nothing because I was scared.<br />
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It makes me feel both fussy and ridiculous to realize that I have expectations of chivalry from men. But, it makes me angry to know that, in certain situations, my desire to not be touched or threatened is not taken seriously until it is reinforced by a man. It makes me sad that experience has taught me that any upset I display has less effect than a man leaning over to say, "hey, man, are you bothering her?"Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-57689786050995878302014-02-18T15:17:00.000-08:002014-02-18T15:17:30.161-08:00"no one liked it when the cousins came up for air."<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgROxnyOU1LDk7a3_UNBu5ksKNQSMcj1aIrnohrkT0j7OblyCo0_h4cZBOhGkEtv3MgkBKH4q0ljZiHilCEDfSBvPTvUWbT1ZWdJLAurriu-Sn4nrt1vnEzUM0jmqJWih7zcLKORDRVcgvb/s1600/IMG_3262.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgROxnyOU1LDk7a3_UNBu5ksKNQSMcj1aIrnohrkT0j7OblyCo0_h4cZBOhGkEtv3MgkBKH4q0ljZiHilCEDfSBvPTvUWbT1ZWdJLAurriu-Sn4nrt1vnEzUM0jmqJWih7zcLKORDRVcgvb/s1600/IMG_3262.jpg" height="640" width="480" /></a></div>
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My sister and I had a conversation about dandyism and underground drug farms. It left me with a half-baked story idea that I may or may not end up working on because I am the laziest when it comes to doing research for stories.Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-63757999693848292312014-02-17T01:17:00.000-08:002014-02-17T01:17:18.258-08:00"oh, Margot," said the tape recorder<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiNV8zud_88bUq65gQH297TDcYDCUIF2VJWatthLtygl9dqo9gFexnjPdLMZcWFZ_yPldinTr_LGVXR_YTsZAKedbd87BJCG3orgoGgykf8a_sSPesPHD1BEAZTZ_TQbs8xDghTNEjarDrY/s1600/the+thief.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiNV8zud_88bUq65gQH297TDcYDCUIF2VJWatthLtygl9dqo9gFexnjPdLMZcWFZ_yPldinTr_LGVXR_YTsZAKedbd87BJCG3orgoGgykf8a_sSPesPHD1BEAZTZ_TQbs8xDghTNEjarDrY/s1600/the+thief.jpg" height="640" width="500" /></a></div>
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I'm working on a new short story. It's a little bit ridiculous. </div>
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A trick I've discovered: when bored with your own turns of phrase, particularly when you're as prone to lollygagging sentences as I am, it helps to draw a picture and write the words on the picture in as attractive a fashion as possible. Seeing them as actual objects on the paper makes me reconsider all those extra clotting words. I once had the pleasure of talking to Daniel Clowes. He told me that lettering by hand is sometimes the only way he can know what the word that should come next is. </div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-39313044872699485622014-01-24T01:34:00.000-08:002014-01-24T01:34:22.826-08:00stories (mine) of 2013I've left this blog cold and unattended for a long while. A long while in which many things happened and I acquired a taste for the sort of panicked mania that is brought on by working on something with equal amounts of passion and fear. <div>
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(More about this one day, maybe. Sharp & Fine put on a show that put me through the wringer and that I loved to pieces. It was called <i>Queen of Knives</i> and adapted from Neil Gaiman's poem of the same name. Pretty pictures <a href="http://sharpandfine.tumblr.com/post/69913588068/some-photos-from-sharp-fines-queen-of-knives-a" target="_blank">HERE</a>.)</div>
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So, 2013: the year of frequent passion and terror. And, somehow, also the first year I've ever had more than one story published. I had exactly one more than one--and for someone who finishes a story only rarely due to laziness and frequent distraction, having two come out in one year seems incredibly indulgent--and I am going to savor that fact for a little moment, feel very queenly and pleased with myself, before returning to the world of dance and passions and, hopefully, a bit less fear.</div>
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SHORT STORIES (MINE) OF 2013</div>
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<b>The Manticore, the Mermaid, and Me</b> (in <i><a href="http://www.indiebound.org/book/9780062236302" target="_blank">Unnatural Creatures</a></i>, ed. by Neil Gaiman and Maria Dahvana Headley, April 2013). A story about two young people who are very dear to each other, but who can't quite seem to see the same thing at the same time. Also, a story about a natural history museum, monsters, an overheated summer, and overheated hearts. Indulges my obsessions with rogue taxidermy and awkward transformations.</div>
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Because of this story, I have an email thread in which Neil asks whether I have a story he might like and to which I reply, in the wee hours of the morning, by calling Neil and Maria the cat's pajamas, making the unrelated declaration that "I HATE LOVE," and blaming all email typos on a slew of French 75s.</div>
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<b><a href="http://www.electricvelocipede.com/2013/12/eating-the-pomegranate-by-megan-kurashige/" target="_blank">Eating the Pomegranate</a></b> (<i>Electric Velocipede</i>, December 2013). A story about things that I don't normally write stories about: sisters, strange fixations on appetite, Persephone. Also, a story about the things I'm always writing about: ghosts, disasters, people leaving. The people in this story are mostly unhappy, the kind of people I'd find a drag to be around if they were real, but who somehow became bizarrely inescapable when I made them up. I told myself, very specifically, that I didn't want to write about Persephone (I mean, how annoying is she, with her whiff of piteous manipulation?), but, apparently, I couldn't help myself.</div>
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This is what I look like after a year in which I have been very, very excited and equally nervous for a long time (and, it seems, incapable of scheduling a haircut). I think I am trying to look intense. My friend Lauren made a Marat/Sade comment. I have since made friends with my hairbrush again.</div>
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Cheers, 2013.</div>
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Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-3639284726658436262013-09-26T10:09:00.000-07:002013-09-26T10:17:38.485-07:00sharing a table with strangers<div style="text-align: center;">
A recent coffeeshop experience.</div>
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(or, call me Miss Lonelyhearts, apparently)</div>
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(click for larger + clearer)</div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-41013026194605425502013-09-21T13:09:00.003-07:002013-09-21T13:17:33.654-07:00thoughts on bus proximity<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
When I ride the bus alone, I sometimes wonder whether I am especially neurotic, or whether we are all guilty of fast-talking, interior monologues.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhdV_phQ21owR30FQf2fx86fltv8mlTDSZCTGpe2g5vpp2JgW-BQcLI2dko0rf42Q3hIGQY9DCcuvipB1ycQ_4mXshIM5F6ip9f8sJUCDKrzIP2dmxlBtGW0WEtQdXrw6OouosOfNI-xycD/s1600/IMG_2828.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;" target="_blank"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhdV_phQ21owR30FQf2fx86fltv8mlTDSZCTGpe2g5vpp2JgW-BQcLI2dko0rf42Q3hIGQY9DCcuvipB1ycQ_4mXshIM5F6ip9f8sJUCDKrzIP2dmxlBtGW0WEtQdXrw6OouosOfNI-xycD/s640/IMG_2828.jpg" width="462" /></a></div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-22887057032590725892013-08-20T00:13:00.000-07:002013-08-20T00:13:48.234-07:00playing badly<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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When I was a kid, I took piano lessons. I was probably around eight or ten. I don't remember much about them. I don't even remember why I wanted to take them in the first place. My parents were gentle and indulgent when it came to hobbies, and they encouraged my sister and me to try everything that we wanted to, as long as we liked it enough to take it seriously. I studied ballet, gymnastics, and horseback riding. I took lessons in drawing and writing. I read thick books filled with pictures of birds and commandeered my parents' bed as a base from which I could spend hours identifying various versions of the common sparrow.<br />
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I was not a musical child. My dad played the piano, so we always had a piano in the house, but he rarely touched it. We listened to music--classical music and oldies--and my mom would sometimes play the guitar and sing (my mom has a lovely voice), but my innate musical talent amounted to just about nothing. I took piano lessons for a little while, failed to become good at making music, failed to care enough to struggle through the discomfort of being bad at something, and stopped.<br />
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I used to dislike doing things I was bad at. They made me feel uncomfortable and stupid and conspicuously mortified, like a clown taking a pratfall with a whole neon world blinking in pity. I have always had a fear of looking stupid. It is one of my most annoying faults, the thing that will make me nod my head when I haven't the foggiest idea and sit glum on the sidelines while everyone else slides around in the mud.<br />
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I am bad at music. I have no talent or instinct for it. I have the dullest of ears and no sensitivity to the beautiful, mathematical landscapes of rhythm. Consciously remembering a melody is a struggle. I love music, am fascinated and moved and riled up by it, but I am, frankly, terrible at it.<br />
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In January, I started taking piano lessons. Once a week, I go to the <a href="http://sfcmc.org/" target="_blank">Community Music Center</a> in the Mission and am bad at playing the piano. It makes me incredibly happy. It is an enormous and alien pleasure to honestly take pleasure in the study of something I'm bad at. I have no real hope of becoming musical; my brain doesn't seem to be the right shape for it and my ideas don't speak music as a native language. When I want to say something, it never occurs to me to hum a tune. But, I love the way it feels to crawl toward minimal comprehension of a subject so enormously wonderful that it gets to stroll beloved through life. It reminds me of learning to read. Here, again, are the weird moments when a mark on a page becomes a recognizable object, then a symbol, then a block of symbols, then a magical, moveable strand of fluency. Here is a reminder that turning a page was once an awkward movement and not an invisible transition.<br />
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I get the dual thrills of struggling with the ideas and struggling with the fine motor control that underlie something that I adore, but have absolutely no stake in being good at. No one cares whether I become competent at making music or remain comically confused (except, maybe, my piano teacher, who is pure, delightful, Eastern European fanaticism). I am allowed the happiness of a slow motion plod toward small sparks of understanding, which somehow feel like little anvils falling on my head and bright little birds circling around, singing a stupidly cheerful tune.Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-15198301940718153652013-05-31T23:06:00.001-07:002013-05-31T23:06:46.626-07:00things I know about my neighbors (part 2)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEia5YNs0BqArak_rnQeg9oflDRHaA2vdvYaqWcCo2XNfuXyLudsFGdA1SAD2uROuQK2pJjTNguQW2ZEV6ZEvFJD_za5ys_xxFSpD3Vj7hbzBbZMusYkfHybHfIO2roT9qpiIj7leZeBzcYg/s1600/nieghbors2_web.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEia5YNs0BqArak_rnQeg9oflDRHaA2vdvYaqWcCo2XNfuXyLudsFGdA1SAD2uROuQK2pJjTNguQW2ZEV6ZEvFJD_za5ys_xxFSpD3Vj7hbzBbZMusYkfHybHfIO2roT9qpiIj7leZeBzcYg/s640/nieghbors2_web.jpg" width="424" /></a></div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-6445343734052015642013-05-28T10:21:00.000-07:002013-05-28T10:21:31.747-07:00things I know about my neighbors<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ4CkBDZcGntlgEJqljSjyxmRLcmbbyxf_ZYHgznAf79b0OfCg_o7mmE_-VH4AMK-ZYrA2H16P4Ku9LVA4NWoSq96Hj7MFbq_Lm7MOYuXCgPrtItBGZ41nLlmprQZm6Vs9LL4hGtsoZGAZ/s1600/neighbors1_web.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ4CkBDZcGntlgEJqljSjyxmRLcmbbyxf_ZYHgznAf79b0OfCg_o7mmE_-VH4AMK-ZYrA2H16P4Ku9LVA4NWoSq96Hj7MFbq_Lm7MOYuXCgPrtItBGZ41nLlmprQZm6Vs9LL4hGtsoZGAZ/s640/neighbors1_web.jpg" width="467" /></a></div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-79076109966664255782013-05-23T23:12:00.001-07:002013-05-23T23:12:42.933-07:00bass players<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga93NYa3hQUE4bGEiOgdCF7PpNRuEG4FJr1MVz1TTEbTgb-Il3sIqsn_w4JodkN2VlGB7hvX6WcleixuqwND2YJVe7gggdc6UgkTCxPALYTu0tR7ugquWfSnQW4cys7Xd9i_iVzyTJ8y_v/s1600/bass+players.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="491" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga93NYa3hQUE4bGEiOgdCF7PpNRuEG4FJr1MVz1TTEbTgb-Il3sIqsn_w4JodkN2VlGB7hvX6WcleixuqwND2YJVe7gggdc6UgkTCxPALYTu0tR7ugquWfSnQW4cys7Xd9i_iVzyTJ8y_v/s640/bass+players.jpg" width="640" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">bass players, 5/22/13</td></tr>
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Last night, I went to see the San Francisco Symphony play Elliott Carter, Maurice Ravel, and George Gershwin. Really, I went to hear the Ravel and Gershwin. Really, I went to see the clarinet player just about wriggle out of his tailcoat with the excitement of the first solo of <i>Rhapsody in Blue</i>.<br />
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I sat in the magical, $15 seats that put you right up behind the musicians. The percussion and the brass are extremely loud there, and you have an excellent view of the luxuriously full complement of basses. My sister and I shared the long, carpeted bench with elderly Russian couples who didn't seem to mind when we pulled out our notebooks and pencils.Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-84402198143141867132013-05-02T00:51:00.000-07:002013-05-02T10:44:35.078-07:00"The Manticore, the Mermaid, and Me"<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiel71mHTHvL-QHFxNbRXgCgcp0oP1SDwjpKII3qwY1DTN31YyXmAeVeow3Db0Tj2g1EM2HFZBFQfLv09PEc1dWuR3zj22WEmQJDaCjHYR5Ka2K9XjpIeyfhawbz2baTBjoyMy1WI2G_16L/s1600/manticore_web.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiel71mHTHvL-QHFxNbRXgCgcp0oP1SDwjpKII3qwY1DTN31YyXmAeVeow3Db0Tj2g1EM2HFZBFQfLv09PEc1dWuR3zj22WEmQJDaCjHYR5Ka2K9XjpIeyfhawbz2baTBjoyMy1WI2G_16L/s640/manticore_web.jpg" width="449" /></a></div>
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Whenever I see Neil Gaiman, he asks me whether I've been writing. Most of the time, I mumble something about how I'm working on this project or that project, slowly, oh so slowly, but--my god!--dance just eats up all the time in the world and how will a story ever finish itself?</div>
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The answer is that it won't. Sometimes, this makes me feel guilty.</div>
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Sometimes, I throw myself into a chair (or, more likely, across a bed) and fling words on paper until the story is finished.</div>
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It's hard though. And since dance really does eat up all the time in my world, it's embarrassingly rare.</div>
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When Neil asks if you have a story that might fit into a book he is putting together, the answer is obviously<i> yes</i>, even if you are typing this out in a state of tipsiness and are not entirely sure whether or not you have such a story. The answer is still <i>yes</i>, even if you discover that the story you thought might fit is actually in a state of sad disrepair, an untouched and confusing first draft on a pile of papers festering at the bottom of a cardboard box. The answer remains <i>yes</i> all through the night and next day as you strip, cannibalize, and restring the story and discover, after many hours of labor, to your great surprise and delight, that it works.</div>
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So, I am ridiculously thrilled to say that a story of mine is in a fat, gorgeous book edited by Neil and Maria Dahvana Headley. <i><a href="http://www.indiebound.org/book/9780062236296" target="_blank">Unnatural Creatures</a></i> is a collection of sixteen stories about unlikely and impossible beasts. The other authors are ones who I admire like crazy, ones whose stories have made me cry, or made me happy, or given me terrible nightmares for weeks (see: E. Nesbit.) Sales of the book benefit <a href="http://826dc.org/" target="_blank">826 DC</a>. The 826 organizations are amazing and magical, a force of marvelous good.</div>
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You can read Neil's post about the book <a href="http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2013/04/unnatural-creatures-and-other-things.html" target="_blank">HERE</a>. You can read Maria's post about the book <a href="http://mariadahvanaheadley.wordpress.com/2013/04/23/unnatural-creatures-released/" target="_blank">HERE</a>.</div>
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My story is called "The Manticore, the Mermaid, and Me." Neil and Maria gave me this title. It makes me think of an old movie from the 1960s that doesn't exist and this makes me very happy.</div>
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<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-31972568312595413372013-04-22T23:05:00.001-07:002013-04-22T23:05:16.675-07:00the neighbors upstairs<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTGLsZip6LcWNI0MNBumuJ8ygQBfFq7usx1i69rTq8vhKGnEKg_9s7sbbLsTDU3qReOj8fUTaIduw6_3Mv_TcthoCq-fIdip4CHy_D6ZMl730KFJOIDaSfbrKLdEXyUXrx9mt3ThetO3rq/s1600/photo-13.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgTGLsZip6LcWNI0MNBumuJ8ygQBfFq7usx1i69rTq8vhKGnEKg_9s7sbbLsTDU3qReOj8fUTaIduw6_3Mv_TcthoCq-fIdip4CHy_D6ZMl730KFJOIDaSfbrKLdEXyUXrx9mt3ThetO3rq/s640/photo-13.JPG" width="459" /></a></div>
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I am convinced that sometimes the neighbors upstairs turn into rhinoceroses or elephants or some other pachyderms and practice line dancing up and down the hall.Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-35245803367954082752013-03-12T17:22:00.000-07:002013-03-12T17:22:04.324-07:00postcard for H. McCalden<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJWdvj07zqKxnE-srBvqQ81xh1X1NB42ZzNg1YEaEvfqk_8meI-GF3Rat9WUUHdMZHDgNw6YG8OspwUZoWn9MWAOFVg-yWAVtlPKhK5Xd9lJo_y-4aLXAadR5Q-ysyYbWdWjHx98x4gwnO/s1600/photo-8.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="480" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJWdvj07zqKxnE-srBvqQ81xh1X1NB42ZzNg1YEaEvfqk_8meI-GF3Rat9WUUHdMZHDgNw6YG8OspwUZoWn9MWAOFVg-yWAVtlPKhK5Xd9lJo_y-4aLXAadR5Q-ysyYbWdWjHx98x4gwnO/s640/photo-8.JPG" width="640" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">under two bridges</td></tr>
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<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-5715330965510600132013-02-24T22:46:00.003-08:002013-02-24T22:46:56.403-08:00on love: definitionsShan and I asked our dancers to bring in pieces of text that, to them, spoke about love. It's an easy thing to ask and a difficult thing to do, and I wasn't sure what the purpose of these texts would be, except that we felt the act of choosing them and sharing them might be important for the project in general, if not for the movement in particular.<br />
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I have a hazy idea that the pieces we chose are artifacts from the edifice we've each constructed to put under the word "love." There are some enormous things, a few great engines that drive our lives, that we can vaguely define in a universal way, but can only understand within the narratives we build for ourselves. And it's really weird to poke at the tangle of what I mean when I say "love," and to wonder what it is that causes me to adopt it, to come to it as a conclusion, to add up a certain assortment of reactions and desires and convictions and find the sum to be "love."</div>
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I half-remember reading something as a kid that said there was no way to know whether you and anyone else in the world really meant the same thing when you said the word "red." </div>
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And now we can really understand what the meaning of music is. <i>It's the way it makes you feel when you hear it</i>. Finally, we've taken the last giant step, and we're there; we know what music means now. We don't have to know everything about sharps and flats and chords to understand music. If it tells us something--not a story or a picture, but a feeling--if it makes us change inside, then we are understanding it. That's all there is to it. Because those feelings belong to the music. They're not <i>extra</i>, like the stories and pictures we talked about before; they're not outside the music. They're what music is about.</blockquote>
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And the most wonderful thing of all is that there's no limit to the different kinds of feelings music can make you have. Some of those feelings are so special they can't even be described in words. Sometimes we can name the things we feel, like joy or sadness or love or hate or peacefulness. But there are other feelings so deep and special that we have no words for them, and that's where music is especially marvelous. It names the feelings for us, only in notes instead of words.</blockquote>
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It's all in the way music moves. We must never forget that music is movement, always going somewhere, shifting and changing and flowing from one note to another. That movement can tell us more about the way we feel than a million words can. </blockquote>
That's from Leonard Bernstein's <i>Young People's Concerts</i>.<br />
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Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,<br />
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone<br />
Silence the pianos and with muffled drum<br />
Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come. </blockquote>
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Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead<br />
Scribbling on the sky the message "He is dead."<br />
Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves,<br />
Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves. </blockquote>
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He was my North, my South, my East and West,<br />
My working week and my Sunday rest,<br />
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;<br />
I thought that love would last forever: I was wrong. </blockquote>
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The stars are not wanted now; put out every one,<br />
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun,<br />
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood;<br />
For nothing now can ever come to any good.</blockquote>
It's really only the first two lines of the third stanza for me. It's "Funeral Blues" by W. H. Auden, but I always knew it as a moment from a movie that flew off the screen and hit me in the face. I can't remember anything else about <i>Four Weddings and a Funeral.</i><br />
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I am a draper mad with love. I love you more than all the flannelette and calico, candlewick, dimity, crash and merino, tussore, crepon, muslin, poplin, ticking and twill in the whole Cloth Hall of the world. I have come to take you away to my Emporium on the hill, where the change hums on wires. Throw away your little bed socks and your Welsh wool knitted jacket, I will warm the sheets like an electric toaster, I will lie by your side like the Sunday roast.</blockquote>
That's from <i>Under Milk Wood</i> by Dylan Thomas. I don't know <i>Under Milk Wood</i> at all. I've barely read anything by Dylan Thomas, except for a few poems slogged through when I was fourteen and impressionable and a friend gave me a book of Thomas and a book of Whitman because they were "the best poets in ever."<br />
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I'm not sure what these are in terms of my own bricks and mortar, but they do say "love" to me, beyond just the word.<br />
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Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-25146182578943338872013-02-18T20:36:00.000-08:002013-02-18T20:36:01.115-08:00tunes recently enjoyed no. 4<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhu87pZQB8Jj0lULwvhmVhNaBLjSNvmWmPk0V50FyLM-154w6qtXTE4Epl8ks6eqzjYI4tpGq4gUL_H12vpXeOy_fP2NgUV1uGPtMnYeWrj2fsKkvWtozZVjoD37x_J0jFFrrpGb-YxJdu9/s1600/29546_10152461321670721_39020993_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhu87pZQB8Jj0lULwvhmVhNaBLjSNvmWmPk0V50FyLM-154w6qtXTE4Epl8ks6eqzjYI4tpGq4gUL_H12vpXeOy_fP2NgUV1uGPtMnYeWrj2fsKkvWtozZVjoD37x_J0jFFrrpGb-YxJdu9/s400/29546_10152461321670721_39020993_n.jpg" width="321" /></a></div>
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<a href="http://youtu.be/c1I1uUpuoWQ" target="_blank">So Am I</a> - George Gershwin<br />
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During the entire month of January, I was completely obsessed with <i>Gershwin Plays Gershwin: The Piano Rolls</i>. I listened to it on repeat, incessantly and without any real analytical thought. I wanted it to be the background to everything, for some reason, so I put it on, over and over, until they were pleasantly engraved into my brain and I caught myself enjoying the creepy sensation of listening to the memory of a tune as clearly as if it were actually playing.<br />
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This is my favorite song from the album. It makes me think of a late night, happily tipsy dance--stately gliding upset by bobbing changes of pace and unexpected leaps in altitude. Dreamy.<br />
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<a href="http://youtu.be/5N9hJGHAy5k" target="_blank">Andante from Violin Concerto No. 1 in A minor</a> - J. S. Bach<br />
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My sister and I recently discovered that the San Francisco Symphony offers some surprisingly cheap seats and we are now getting into the habit of taking advantage of this fact. We went to see a program organized around the talents of Alexander Barantschik, principal violinist. It was a program of old chestnuts, pieces that I (and probably everyone else in the audience) have been inescapably exposed to. They're in movies, on commercials, in cafes, in bookstores, in the vast and general cultural air... and I was completely shocked to find myself tearing up over this particular piece, eyes welling out of control over something so familiar, but so weirdly live.<br />
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It's a sad and stately beauty, this slow and almost plodding base with the violin singing across the top of it. It's very lovely, but not a piece that I usually go crazy for, so the efficiency with which it dragged me to the point of tears was a bit of a shock.<br />
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(the video features Yehudi Menuhin)<br />
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ2fakxWzHQ&feature=share&list=PLXtcG2zbOYSqVTUZHZ8Yua9nW5Jahh_Ji" target="_blank">Serenade in D major</a>, <i>Serenata notturna</i>- Mozart<br />
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This was the last piece on the aforementioned program of old chestnuts. It feels very earnest, a sunny and forthright bit of virtuosic glee. Hearing it and seeing it played live is fun. We sat in the odd bleacher-like seats perched at the back of the stage where you can peer down at the musicians and see, up close, these fascinating, alien habits and tics that slide along under the performance of the music itself. Watching excellent music played live is possibly my favorite thing in the world right now. I can't get enough of it. There's the aural pleasure of sounds with texture and distance and breath, of course, but the visual realization that those sounds are coming from human beings is somehow enormously satisfying. I like seeing how the violinists slide their bows onto shelves under their music when they're required to pluck strings with their fingers. I like seeing the principal bassist (whose name is Scott Pingle and who is extraordinary) exchange glances with the percussionist before their respective solos. I like seeing this collection of people turn into a strange and beautiful beast that makes music. It's as if all the information that comes in from my eyeballs sets my curiosity on fire so I can listen better.<br />
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<a href="http://youtu.be/_smG-o1lVMc" target="_blank">Partita No. 3 in E major</a> - J. S. Bach<br />
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I love this piece. The "Loure" in particular just wrenches my heart out because it's such a stringent stunner. It's so inarguably, intelligently ravishing, and it seems like every violinist pours themselves into it, souls pressed right out of their bodies and into the air via that flimsy box of wood. An illusion, obviously, but an irresistible one.<br />
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Gil Shaham reminded me of Dick Van Dyke. Long and off-kilter and warmly silly. I never expected to see a violinist move an entire symphony hall into a fit of giggles, but he managed it with panache.<br />
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<a href="http://youtu.be/jqVrNK4uiB4" target="_blank">These Arms of Mine</a> - Otis Redding<br />
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This song is one that I imagine I will love forever, no matter where or for what it is appropriated. The way the beat goes on and on underneath a voice that's almost embarrassingly, sentimentally full of want... it gets me every time.<br />
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Ina Rae, the singer who we're working with on our current Sharp & Fine project, sang us a version of this that started out in classical, opera voice and tumbled down into something looser. It was amazing, even unfinished. I'm really hoping that it will fit into the finished piece because I think the entire audience will be left in tears.<br />
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<a href="http://piki.bandcamp.com/track/tow-away-zone" target="_blank">Tow Away Zone</a> - Sam Ospovat<br />
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Sam Ospovat, an incredible drummer, recently asked me to help him create some movement for a live performance of this improv-based composition. I listened to it a lot beforehand, at first because I felt like I should (even though I knew it would sound completely different in the show) and then because I felt like it was this weird and magical room that transformed itself every time I opened the door on it.<br />
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I used to have an enormous prejudice again contemporary improvised music. I was afraid of it, in the same way that I'm still afraid of things labeled "performance art."Afraid of boredom, confusion, and unpleasantness that you can't escape because you are at a show and good manners dictate that you shouldn't just walk out because you don't "like" something. But, having heard and seen more music like this performed live, I find myself starting to enjoy some of it. It's so interesting, so obviously full of ideas and strictures, both followed and defied, even if I can't understand most of the language it's speaking in.<br />
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<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-10560073759200151332013-02-02T00:02:00.001-08:002013-02-02T00:02:27.846-08:00the man with the pomeranian<div>
<i>1/31/13, a hat shop in North Beach, San Francisco</i></div>
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"..."<div>
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I assumed the man was speaking gibberish. The sound had come from behind me and I ignored it for a while in the hope that it might go away.</div>
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"..."</div>
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The gibberish became more insistent, with discernible repeated syllables, and I turned around because this was a music show and I can't bear the thought of a scene in an audience, even a very small scene in a small audience, in a hat shop half-filled by a very loud brass band.</div>
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"Aren't you Chinese?"</div>
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I had to explain to the man that I am not Chinese. He looked like Omar Sharif, if Omar Sharif was leached of all color and afflicted with a form of plastic surgery that tugged his eyebrows into points. He was carrying an enormous Pomeranian under one arm.</div>
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"Is that your boyfriend playing the trumpet?"</div>
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I had to explain to the man with the enormous Pomeranian that the fellow playing the trumpet was not my boyfriend. The man opened his eyes, very wide and very shiny, and everything in his face pulled up under his pointed eyebrows into a smile of delight.</div>
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"In that case," the man said, "I'd like you to meet Buddy. I think the two of you would get along fine."</div>
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The Pomeranian, which was much larger than I thought it possible for a Pomeranian to be, a giant slab of fluff beached on the length of the man's arm, extended a paw.</div>
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Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-46410096030823564922013-01-22T21:31:00.000-08:002013-01-22T21:31:08.750-08:00worth it<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha-MNzlDvSyurYveZsr5grGs5osq3W49qRDeJVpi9i38tbSRjKypWSM0vOGf8vzPzOZWNXKIS19lCuR7XrpbrxnVkgBujrPyXNG1IUj-MLLPeZpT_2WGn9oD9yXk8lSPq-1WnfRCZHOvm4/s1600/photo-26.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha-MNzlDvSyurYveZsr5grGs5osq3W49qRDeJVpi9i38tbSRjKypWSM0vOGf8vzPzOZWNXKIS19lCuR7XrpbrxnVkgBujrPyXNG1IUj-MLLPeZpT_2WGn9oD9yXk8lSPq-1WnfRCZHOvm4/s640/photo-26.JPG" width="480" /></a></div>
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for H. McCalden</div>
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(thanks for the advice)</div>
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-41533949194205181612013-01-10T00:52:00.000-08:002013-01-10T00:52:13.124-08:00why I believe in reading books on trainsOne of my great pleasures while riding the train (and I speak of "the train" not as the grandly nostalgic epitome of mass-transit pleasure, but as the everyday, many person vehicle) is seeing the number of people who spend their time there, trapped shoulder-to-shoulder and knee-to-knee, with their faces in books. I sit on the abused, plastic-upholstered seat that is my own for the space of a ride, stare at all the pages being turned, and feel happiness. It's a genuine wash of that emotion too; I do not exaggerate by calling it "happiness." A blooming glow of satisfaction unfurls in my heart, camaraderie (manufactured falsely, no doubt), and the absurd sensation that here is one of those tiny signs that indicate that the world will be alright. That things are, at the bottom of it all, on the road to good. <br /><br /> At first I thought this ridiculous feeling was the result of being a bookish person. I love books. I love some of them dearly. I love them so much that I'm convinced I'll write one at some point in the not too far off future. I love them so much that I work in bookstores in my spare time and press them into the hands of other people, judging them, yes, but also feeling always a little bit like we are winking at each other. Of course my heart is warmed by the books on the train! The world keeps telling us that the book is faltering and we say, "No! I read them on the train." <br /><br /> And then I thought about it some more and realized that the damage goes deeper than that, that I'm a believer in a frenzy of belief. I was brought up on books, spoiled with books. I've read so many of them in my life that they're one of the great pillars that hold up my world. The way I understand living, the good and the bad and the things worth wanting, has been sifted down and tempered by the things I've read. The poles of my desires are tethered to the stories I've consumed. I can't point to specifics because they aren't specific. There's no particular novel or character that took my hand and led me on my way. But the shape of this thing that I consider me, any depth or conviction that I possess, has been partially cultivated by the books I've read. Books stuff me with lives I will never live. When I was a kid, they gave me the chance to try on things like passion, suffering, and heroism, all blown up beyond the scope of a shy girl with a happy family in a calmly wonderful swathe of suburbia. <br /><br /> I am not religious. But there are three things that I believe in with complete and utter fervency: art, the people I love, and books. Not books as objects. As much as I, personally, pine for my stacks of squared up paper, if I'm really honest, I don't give a fig about whether a book comes bound or on a screen. But, books as a translation of life between one person and another, books as a joy ride to figuring out what you think matters… that gives me the shivers. <div>
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And that's why I believe in reading books on trains.</div>
Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-69956365553159786592012-12-10T00:07:00.000-08:002012-12-10T00:07:20.942-08:00tunes recently enjoyed no. 3<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAuJNyTT4BXwBNmpyPYiwhOhadQ2kvOgRBZiFt0tny0WrGY5pvInUiW1jptdkBh8I39OLfyVAp6pONhtz_30dmJTh5BZcVH_foslOsD6FNiGyoN0ueQASmK4frb4sAJ7TDexHPLXdmds9o/s1600/539365_10152193140865721_264961805_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="416" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAuJNyTT4BXwBNmpyPYiwhOhadQ2kvOgRBZiFt0tny0WrGY5pvInUiW1jptdkBh8I39OLfyVAp6pONhtz_30dmJTh5BZcVH_foslOsD6FNiGyoN0ueQASmK4frb4sAJ7TDexHPLXdmds9o/s640/539365_10152193140865721_264961805_n.jpg" width="640" /></a></div>
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<a href="http://youtu.be/GN6XCbu7Sj8" target="_blank">Arpeggione Sonata in A Minor by Franz Schubert</a> - Mstislav Rostropovich and Benjamin Britten<br />
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Lorin Benedict, who is a <a href="http://lorinbenedict.com/home.html" target="_blank">very fine singer of weird and wonderful songs</a>, recommended this particular recording to me. It's intoxicating. There's such enormous sensitivity in it, like a conversation between two creatures in the dark whose skins are entirely covered with antennae tuned precisely to each other's frequency. I don't know enough about music to talk about it with any real intelligence. I'm trapped in the world of metaphors, in saying what things are sort of like, sort of remind me of, sort of, kind of, and not what they actually are. This is just... beautiful. Pleasant and interesting on my ear. Sounds, alternating anchors and wild kites, that pull me right up to them.<br />
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<a href="http://youtu.be/08rvt2Ly-7A" target="_blank">Symphony No. 3 by Charles Ives</a><br />
<br />
I started listening to Charles Ives because of Leonard Bernstein, who I am completely obsessed with right now. (The <a href="http://youtu.be/U3HLqCHO08s" target="_blank">Norton lectures</a> that he gave at Harvard in 1973 are my current companions in the land of sleeplessness.) Ives's music makes me feel like I'm at the center of a collision between epic loveliness, creepy jocularity, and patiently endured, long suffered melancholy. He goes from something that makes me think of cathedrals and underground lakes to a maddening march with no remorse. It's interesting. And I can't get enough of <i>interesting</i> music right now. What does that limp word even mean? I don't know. I want music that makes me desire nothing so much as listening through to the end, that my ears want to puzzle over and my brain wants to think about. Not opaque stuff that abrades, but stuff with corners to peer around, sharp objects that stab you, layers to shuffle through.<br />
<br />
This recording is, unsurprisingly, the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://youtu.be/9YrCEA1bdMA" target="_blank">Vanishing Lady</a> - Rickard Brothers<br />
<br />
I'm a sucker for anything that references magic shows. This song is ridiculous, swooping, and full of these amazingly maddening repeats. It spends almost three and a half minutes telling you to watch closely for this moment of vanishing, cranking you up and up for some sort of happening that never actually happens. And then it completely betrays you with a fade out. But, I like it.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://youtu.be/SbKGsEK_T9g" target="_blank">I've Just Seen a Face</a> - The Beatles<br />
<br />
I love these lyrics. You know that absurd joy of recognition? Oh, yes! That is exactly how I feel and how I've felt. I know this. I know this! It's silly; why is it so satisfying to spot fragments of your own life in someone else's infinitely more clever, more well-turned, more piercing song?<br />
<br />
Aside from the lyrics, this song makes me feel like running. It keeps going and going and those beautiful guitar bits come in with all these short, clipped words flying at you, and it makes me wish I could be a person with crazy parkour skills so I could leap off buildings and skitter off walls.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://youtu.be/hj9671V_UxA" target="_blank">Nothin' in the World Can Stop Me Worryin' 'Bout That Girl</a> - The Kinks<br />
<br />
This song is so pent-up and anxious and full of absurd angst. I imagine someone locking themselves in a closet and singing this. I like how the twangy, strong sounds pound away in the basement while the voice floats above it, high and fretting. I'm not sure why that makes me like it, but the space in between those two things feels somehow both silly and perfect.Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-43819753603013545522012-12-05T00:36:00.002-08:002012-12-05T00:36:47.032-08:00forcing the endA few years ago, a friend of mine killed herself. She had moved away several years before that, so we weren't close at the time. And before that, we had been friends, but never the kind of friends that strip their conversations down to brass tacks. When I thought of her, I thought of a glorious girl, wild on one edge and sad on the other, but never so wild or so sad that I could suspect the depth of either. I guess I didn't know her well at all.<br />
<br />
I was sad when I found out, very sad, but it faded because I didn't like to think about it and, as I've said, I discovered that I didn't know her well. I was unfamiliar with a world in which this could happen, and unfamiliar with the person who could make it so. The unfamiliarity and incomprehension didn't lessen the sadness, but they made me want to turn away from it as quickly as possible, to put it away in a box, to not examine or look at it because the alternative--the realization that the stock of memories that I already had of her was it, finite, closed off from any possibility of change or addition--was a horror that I wanted to refuse.<br />
<br />
It's entirely possible that even if she were still alive I would never have seen her again, that I would have only run across postings on Facebook or vague mentions from mutual friends or old photographs of parties that would make me smile and then forget and go about my day.<br />
<br />
But, I will definitely never see her again and she does not go about doing things, living things that I will never hear about. The thought has emerged, unexpectedly, several times this year. It bobs to the surface from whatever depth it normally lurks at. It feels like something seizing the inside of my skin.<br />
<br />
A few days ago, someone I know was skittering around the subject of forcing the end. "If this happens," they said, "I will have no life. And if I have no life, I won't want it anyway." I don't think they were serious, even though their situation is honestly a long, almost inevitable corridor of hardship and unhappiness. I tried to say something to soothe and calm, but I could barely look them in the eye. I am a coward who shrivels before bleakness and desperation. The thought of coming across the end of hope is more than I can understand or even admit to the possibility of. It makes me incredibly sad.<br />
<br />
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-35930507267141688582012-11-28T15:19:00.000-08:002012-11-28T15:19:01.263-08:00stage blood<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKQxJGALCkfeTe-49DiqjzGY5x0B7tA4NXq8xj5iW2cFkaCn2JyUVBQfpuxejgPDshLKCj0JrVYk4PxqSew6jL8LaTLJ-6tg638Fx1EYz3Wob-Z8JKmBvF4sx7AEN-0p-U6dD4NoPM3_rI/s1600/photo-13.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="466" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKQxJGALCkfeTe-49DiqjzGY5x0B7tA4NXq8xj5iW2cFkaCn2JyUVBQfpuxejgPDshLKCj0JrVYk4PxqSew6jL8LaTLJ-6tg638Fx1EYz3Wob-Z8JKmBvF4sx7AEN-0p-U6dD4NoPM3_rI/s640/photo-13.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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I read something that a friend sent me. Then I drew this.</div>
Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-33817322821331404762012-11-26T18:09:00.001-08:002012-11-26T18:11:11.005-08:00"the night we drank cold wine"I recently did edits on a story that I hadn't looked at in a very long time.<br />
<br />
In 2009, I wrote a story that was supposed to be about fairy balls, wine, and dancing. In 2010, I sold it to <i>Electric Velocipede</i>, where it sat comfortably and lazily while EV went through some changes in their publishing situation and I slowly forgot about it. In October 2012, I received an email full of editorial comments for a story that felt like a distant, time-travelling cousin.<br />
<br />
When I wrote "The Night We Drank Cold Wine," I felt terrible for one of the characters. <i>You poor, dear girl</i>, I would say to her in my head,<i> how unlucky and foolish can you possibly be? </i>I could, as a writer, understand her choices. I could not, as a person, quite get the feel for them.<br />
<br />
Three years later, I get it.<br />
<br />
This probably says something about my powers of clairvoyance or the salutary qualities of either fiction or three years of living.<br />
<br />
"The Night We Drank Cold Wine" is, at long last, out in <i>Electric Velocipede #25</i>. You can read it <a href="http://www.electricvelocipede.com/2012/11/the-night-we-drank-cold-wine-by-megan-kurashige/" target="_blank">HERE</a>. If you do, I'd love to hear what you think. I am astonishingly nervous. This is only my second ever published story and I'm still a-quiver with the novelty and terror of the experience.<br />
<br />
It starts like this:<br />
<br />
<i>Being late, Rhodes says, is just a symptom of bad luck. It doesn't have anything to do with the person waiting.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>He tells me this so I can imagine all the unlucky things that keep him from where he wants to be: misplaced keys, traffic jams, a stopped clock, bad directions. Sometimes, Rhodes leaves without thinking about how to get where he's going. He wanders from his door, takes the circuitous route, and ends up somewhere else, having never paused to check the time. When he's really late, he calls.</i>Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8055904850854885222.post-69098127405624189922012-11-21T00:36:00.000-08:002012-11-25T23:07:43.754-08:00the orange tree<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiqwpcXsn49hb8ADZkzGCp-1veD_7mk342R-wWj_2Atv7Z1wwDUG-ktjoDYmGS_wM9OFxZ15Se4aqiw0tQgOkY5L2OT2V2jiTfkBfZzW4uEpuBtUuUYIoL9vNboLNII_sadGcMHrBzf75DJ/s1600/photo-8.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="480" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiqwpcXsn49hb8ADZkzGCp-1veD_7mk342R-wWj_2Atv7Z1wwDUG-ktjoDYmGS_wM9OFxZ15Se4aqiw0tQgOkY5L2OT2V2jiTfkBfZzW4uEpuBtUuUYIoL9vNboLNII_sadGcMHrBzf75DJ/s640/photo-8.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
<br />
The woman's life hadn't lived up to expectation. It was, not to put too fine a point on it, a disappointment. Every morning, she woke up, put on some clothes, and went to sit in the vacant lot that she could have seen just fine from her bedroom window. She sat next to the tree that grew in the center of the vacant lot and waited.<br />
<br />
Her chair was one of those fold-out deals with a mesh seat designed to stay dry, stay clean, hold up under sun and rain and sagging posteriors, but it failed in all respects except the last, which it only accomplished with great resentment.<br />
<br />
The woman sat in the chair and shifted, uncomfortably.<br />
<br />
Every now and then, a young man or a young woman stumbled into the vacant lot, their faces sunburned and knees at the point of collapse. "Thank God," they would say. Or, "Holy smokes." Or, they wouldn't say anything at all and instead staggered forward as if they were, at last, arriving somewhere.<br />
<br />
And the woman would say, "Please, take your pick." And the young man or young woman would step up to the tree, barely seeing the woman sitting in the chair beside it. They reached into the dark, glossy leaves and pulled down an orange, perfect every time. "Your heart's desire," the woman would say, "I hope you like it." The young people rarely heard. They were gone, the orange clutched to their chests, their feet kicking up high behind them. They never bothered to say a simple thank you, never offered the smallest gesture of gratitude, never thought that, maybe, the woman might appreciate something from the cheap coffee shop on the corner, that a hot cup of coffee, in a situation like this, goes a long way to making up for a lack of manners.<br />
<br />
Skimp on the charity and you might as well call it low-grade misery.<br />
<br />
One morning, the woman woke up. She put on some clothes and went to the vacant lot where the tree was waiting.<br />
<br />
"Tree," she said, "don't you think enough is enough?"<br />
<br />
The tree didn't answer. It was not that kind of tree. The woman wrapped her arms around its trunk and pulled. It was not a very large tree and, after struggling for some hours, the woman uprooted it. She lifted it onto her shoulders and began to walk. She walked out of the vacant lot. She walked past her house. She walked down the street and ignored the smell of burnt coffee coming from the shop on the corner. She walked until she got tired, and then she shifted the tree to her other shoulder and walked some more.<br />
<br />
The woman walked out of the town, through a suburb, and on until she came to the beach. She put the tree down in the sand.<br />
<br />
"Tree," she said, "this is your chance." She reached down into the tree's dark, glossy leaves and pulled out an orange. It was perfect: round and richly dimpled. The woman dug her fingers into the perfect flesh and pulled the orange apart.<br />
<br />
A man tumbled out. He was small at first, having just emerged from an orange, and then he grew. He was handsome, he was naked, and he looked confused. "Where am I?" he asked.<br />
<br />
"At the beach," the woman said.<br />
<br />
"What is a beach?" The man was staring at her as if she were the only thing in the world. He couldn't be bothered, it seemed, to take in anything else, not the sand or the salted wind or the water stretching out to the sky.<br />
<br />
"Are you serious?" the woman asked.<br />
<br />
"I suppose so." The man was staring so hard that his eyes were beginning to water.<br />
<br />
"Are you stupid?" the woman asked.<br />
<br />
"I suppose I am."<br />
<br />
The woman picked up the tree again. She dragged it to the ocean and pushed it in, slogging into the water until the waves started to pull the tree out instead of pushing it back to shore. The man watched her the entire time. It didn't occur to him to offer to help.<br />
<br />
"Goodbye," the woman said.<br />
<br />
"What does that mean?"<br />
<br />
"It means you stay here and I go somewhere else." The woman walked back up the beach. There was water and sand in her shoes, but she ignored the discomfort. The man walked beside her for a little while, which was awkward since he was naked, and then behind her for a little more. Then he sat down on the side of the road. She hoped he would be alright. It was entirely possible that the tree had made a mistake, that he was someone else's heart's desire, someone who would find him on the side of the road and pick him up, despite the nakedness, in an act of good samaritan meeting hapless hitchhiker, a story to tell friends and children and grandchildren, solid evidence for the existence of luck or fate.<br />
<br />
The woman thought about this as she walked back to the town where she lived, in a small house next to a vacant lot. There was a coffee shop on the corner, and when the woman put her hand in her pocket, she was pleased to discover a few bills, enough for a coffee and something sweet. She sincerely hoped she hadn't made a mistake.<br />
<br />Megan Kurashigehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15634436831771950903noreply@blogger.com1