Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Indigo Girls are heavy.....

The Girls--Amy and Emily

Because I know many of you wonder why I have not blogged in nearly 2 months:

Not to be entirely cryptic, but I'll simply say that m'life life here in Moscow for the past couple months has been....hmmm....tough. And it's all my fault. Not that "fault" is something I am really into--at least I like to think I am not into fault and blame, but I do look for reasons in the way life turns out--reasons for life's situations and....and...and....stuff 'n stuff. Not for "meaning" really, just for reasons--like cause and effect. And because of this general view--because I believe that much in life depends on our own actions, I can pretty conclusively state that it is my fault that life has been...what did I say? Yeah, tough...

Why, you ask? Well, I think I have this self-defeating drive that compels me to make my life as complicated and as...heavy as possible. I do this in many diverse and disturbing ways.

Here's one example: I spent three plus years in New York City at Columbia working on an MFA in playwriting, building a network of contacts and colleagues in the theatre, receiving that MFA (not without, of course, going into enormous debt for that MFA) and then I promptly up and went to Russia to teach business English for an indefinite amount of time...hehehehe (coy, nervous laugh)...ha ha (short simply nervous laugh)....(long pause)....WHAT?

Mind you, everyone--and I mean EVERYONE (even my friends in Moscow) was like: "Now....whyyyyyy are you doing this?"

I had some really awesome, not- even- very-convincing, bullS**** answers prepared for such confrontations. I made it sound like it was financially really...umm....smart. Which maybe in some way, may have been true, but probably it wasn't....At any rate, I think I did convinced myself---sorta. Not really...

The real question is not some cosmological, fateful, search for the deep, eternal, heavy meaning in my life's experiences, but how do I actually stop myself, as the--let's face it--only person ultimately responsible for my own life's experiences, from making such lame decisions--which, the best I can tell, are designed (by myself) to make my life as complicated, circuitous, cryptic, and as unsuccessfully heavy as friggidy liggidy possible. Hmmmmmm.

Yes, one can say that every crisis is also a possibility and that we assign our own meaning to life's experiences. Yes, indeed. I agree! True dat! But tell me, o ye existentialists, why not avoid the crisis to begin with?

Am I making any sense? No? ...I know.

So--let me get to the Indigo Girls then:

When I was 16 or 17 I became acquainted with the Indigo Girls. They were awesome and they still are. I really dig 'em.

My favorite song was "Ghost" from the Girls' "Rites of Passage" album. "Ghost" is ridiculously lyrical and romantic and melodic and poetically stunning in that naive early-twenty-something in-love-for-the-first-time-with irony, allusion, alliteration, assonance, and just the beauty of language-kind-of-way. So, for a barely 17 year old junior in high school, listening to that song made me feel smart, deep, forward thinking and...heavy.



(I also think the eruption of bottled-up gay yearning resonated with me in some way...ya think?)

I remember Kathy Aitchison let me borrow their copy of the CD and I listened to it all the time in my bedroom on my new Sony 3-Disc CD changer. One time I made my Dad sit with me and listen to it--I think I even made him follow along with the lyrics in the CD booklet. So, we sat on the floor in my room and listened to it and both really enjoyed it and then we talked for while...

I remember at one point my Dad saying something like: "You know, these are really beautiful lyrics. But," he continued, "I remember listening to Dylan and Joni Mitchell and all those folk artists when I was your age and thinking 'wow, these lyrics are so deep'. Now, I'll go back sometimes and listen and I think: What does that even mean?" And he chuckled.

And I remember, nodding 'yeah' but also being kinda miffed. More so, I think my mind was a little blown because I knew he was right in some way.

At the same time, though, over the years, as I go back and listen to "Ghost" and as I think about the lyrics, I realize its actually a pretty explicable piece of poetry--(have a listen and explicate away--its fun)

Truthfully, it's the "Indigo Girls" later stuff that really makes you go "Now...WHAT are they saying?"

Ten years later, my friend Gretchen burned me a copy of the Girls' "Become You" album.


It was the summer I turned 27--It was the summer I did my first three triathlons and the summer I spent just about every spare minute I had rock-climbing, bouldering, running, swimming, or biking.

A guy I really thought I was in love with (it is so funny now-- it always is, right?) had broken up with me in April and in July I still wasn't over it.

I jammed my fingers and my unrequited love into the cracks of the Wasatch and into the sandy red-rock ledges of Moab and Maple Canyon with my friend Heidi.



I sliced that sense of loss and loneliness through the gray-brown waters of Pine View and Jordanelle and Deer Creek Reservoirs training with my friend Jeff.

Alone, on 90 degree plus afternoons, I'd run that yearning into the blacktop of side-streets in Clearfield or onto the rocky trails above the Weber State campus.



Never completely able to cover the 'real me' with the hours spent on the rock or in the gym or in the water or on the bike or running, I sang that pain like crazy at the top of my lungs and sang the f-ing hell outta the Girls' "Become You" lyrics driving in my air-conditioner-less 1988 red 2-door Honda Accord.

I drove back and forth between Ogden and Orem and Salt Lake and Moab and Zion and Maple Canyon and Jordanelle and Park City and I sang and sang the Girls' beautifully cryptic lyrics and my pain was either met or assuaged or both while I sang and the wind whipped through the open windows and tugged at the straps on my red climbing pack in the back-seat.

My favorite song from that album is " She's Saving Me" which is really...heavy. Most of it is so painfully beautiful it doesn't make one friggin bit of sense whatsoever.

Here's the first verse:

We were sittin' 'round a dyin' fire
Somebody lit incense
Somebody lit a cigarette
and passed the bottle around

It was just strawberry season
back-breakin' pickers in the patches
every thing's burnin' down to ashes
and down to the ground

I mean its gorgeous, right? But...what...does...it mean? The first stanza is pretty straightforward--its setting the scene. Beautifully, of course--very rustic, very earthy, very....lesbian-y . I like it.

Before I get to the chorus, I want to go--sorta unfairly, I suppose--to the 2nd verse. That's where you are really like: WHAAAAT?

I try to put it aside
but its too much bigger than me
There's a big brown hawk in the tree
lightin' and leavin'

And there's tea leaves tossin'
Its the pennies in my pocket
Dead star like a rocket
The arc of my grievin'

Right? Like excruciatingly beautiful, but.....WHAAAAT??????

So, maybe if I throw you the chorus that "magic access-point" into the meaning of every poem will appear.

She's saving me
I don't even think she knows it
It's a strange way to show it
as distant as last night's dream unravels

She's saving me
I'm a very lost soul
I was born with a hole in my heart
the size of my land-locked travels

Did it appear for you--that" magic access-point" to the deep heavy meaning?

It hasn't for me either, but I will say this-- the final two lines of the last stanza:

"I was born with a hole in my heart the size of my land-lock travels"

...These lines just about capture in poetry the best excuse I can muster for this morbid drive I have to defeat myself at every turn.

My travels lead me nowhere except away from my last journey and though the distance I cover and the dust I kick up is vast it still has failed to fill what I see as this gaping awareness since birth that I am destined to yearn for the unfulfillable. And since I long ago became convinced that the only destiny I have is the one I create for myself through my own choices and actions, I can't seem to understand why I constantly perseverate on that damn hole in my heart!!!

O' Stupid Soulful, Beautiful, Heavy Lyrics, why do you pull at my soul so? When I hear you, why do my neurons fire and why do the adrenaline and dopamine rush through my brain making me feel full of life and purpose and connection? In the end, you mean nothing more than the sum of these chemical reactions in my body propelling me on and convincing me that living another day as brilliant me is a worthy endeavor...



Tonight, after a rather pointless evening--after a week filled with heavy drama and complications of my own making, I walked home from the Metro contemplating these tough past two months. Bemoaning where they have led me and trying to come up with some reason for it all, I actually thought of this lame excuse:

"I was born with a hole in my heart the size of my land-locked travels"

I pulled my ipod out of my pocket, popped in the earbuds, scrolled through the artist list to the Girls', clicked on "Become You", toggled down to "She's Saving Me", pushed play and let the dopamine flow.

I sang as I walked through the dirty Moscow snow-rain and I indulged my pain. Instead of using that brisk walk to constructively think about what the f*** I can do to get me off this tough journey and onto something productive, I had myself a little cryptic, complex, beautiful and meaningless HEAVY!

I am pretty sure that Heavy is bad. So why do I always go for the easy rush that heavy and deep and complex and beautiful give instead of actually doing something?

I like to think that I don't have a problem with substances--no drugs, no cigarettes, no alcohol really (wine like three times a year)--but complicated, circuitous, heavy situations to make me feel that my life is full of meaning. Well, let me tell you--I need my hit!

But no more. I don't wanna use the same excuse I've been using since I first heard that painfully beautiful heavy lyric to explain away the choices I've made and I am too tired tonight to assign my own meaning to these past 6 months in Moscow and so...like any addict, I light up and throw back a few of the Girls' songs to forget about life for a while--I let heavy take me in his arms and I sing along...



OKAY--If any of you can assign any meaning to anything I just wrote I'll give 1000 rubles.



NOTE: current exchange rate: 36.50 rubles to 1 US Dollar.

I think I might be posting again more regularly soon.

19 comments:

just jen said...

yeah, i get it...

you are addicted to the "heavy".

i've witnessed for myself some of the high school "heavy".

i guess it's better than drugs...but only for your body, not for your soul.

please take better care of your heart...soap operas are only good for watching, not for living.

i missed you, don't stay away for so long.

Katie said...

Love your blog... such a good read!!

cathy said...

I can relate, music does something to us. It can be very uplifting, sedative, "Heavy"-in another term, When I'm down I naturally want music that will calm me and sometimes keep me down. I think music has it's own special access to our souls-we just don't understand how it works. But it does something to all of us. It's something humans have always had in common-around the world. Maybe if you only listen to inspiration Jesus Rock, you'll get it all together!!! can't stand that stuff. Love you Nate-get home soon.

Erin said...

I love you, and I'm so glad you're back to blogging! You know, I've always been a fan of "Ghost" as well. The Indigo Girls lyrics always have a way of reaching into the soul.
I feel you, dear friend. Thanks for sharing, and keep it coming! Please!

Mrs. Misses said...

This is what I'm saying to you....

The Indigo Girls have ALWAYS been that for me, and I'm sure everyone else in the world. I have always reveled in the HEAVY and I think that it is exactly what they produce, or maybe expand on. Whatever your situation is, the girls ABSOLUTELY enlarge and even antagonize your substantial into some serious heavy.

I think that Saving Me has specifically always been that for me and has even taken me to the point where I am imagining my situation all the way to my lesbian lover and how far gone I personally am that she is doing what she can to save me. I go all the way to transforming into a lesbian just for them. Because they sing the HELL out of it and seep into my hetero soul, flooding and clouding my perception on everything.

I have NOT been a lesbian reincarnate for a LOOOOONNG time. My substantial has turned into something positive and "productive" and emotionally dissolved that I don't feel the need to get the peace from them. I have it in other ways. The gift of poetry, emotion, sexual transformation and overindulgence in the grief, love, hate, drama and passion are gathering dust in my life.

It will come for you in your own ways. Part of it is the exploring and articulation of your situation. PLEASE keep articulating. And take from this what I might now...

Drive in space that peaceful place
You'd be my secret sharer
Front and back and all around the thin margin of error
Move too fast or move too slow or somewhere in between
Navigate the perfect distance so your getaway is clean

To me, just be our secret sharer and hurry and plan your getaway. Come back to us [me]. Even if that just means move somewhere in between what has been going on and continually keep us informed. You have way too many people who care about you to go on another 2-3 month hiatus.

Miss you.
And stop freakin' dissin' my posts.

Mrs. Misses said...

I guess more importantly...

Yes it's true I've gotten very moody over you
Don't think I don't sense your caution way across the room
Or across the phone lines, big black ocean, or [FB] conversation brief
We can't find a clear connection, and I can't get relief...

martha corinna said...

Nate, you always express yourself so well and beautifully.
There have been many times that I have felt the weight of what you write. But, things began to change dramatically for me 3.5 years ago. All I can say is that through acknowledgment of bad habits, a desire for 'good', the Lord's help, and hard work, I have been blessed to leave a lot of that weight behind and to begin to blossom into my potential(begin-I said).

The world of productivity and artistic desire can coexist. You can pursue one while pursuing the other. Just a thought.

One more thing, I believe one of the true beauties of life is sacrifice. I hope you get what I am trying to say. It is bitter sweet, but the beauty lies in the fact that we choose-choose what is perhaps best for the whole of what is 'right' over our own desires. Of course, this is something I have felt passionate about because of motherhood(motherhood, good motherhood, is sacrifice), but I believe truly fulfilled, great people, with depth, have had to sacrifice. Such is life, having to make hard choices. I've never agreed when people say you can have it all, it's such a load, there is always a choice and there is always a sacrifice. The beauty comes when you make the hard choice, and still feel love.

Anyway, enough of my sermon.
I love you and I miss you and I am glad we were able to speak the other day.

Anonymous said...

Well I get the music lyrics but then maybe it's because I am as effed up as them. they seem pretty straight forward actually. lol.

Give yourself a few years, you will see it. :P (insert wise look.. or wise ass look, either will work)

As to the rest, who doesn't make their own drama out of the drama that they already have in an attempt to make sense of it.

Reading the responses it seems that to some extent your friends can relate. It's human to try to work out life and it's human to never really work it all out.

So you went on a journey that was a poor choice, let yourself learn from it and follow your own path.

Then have a glass of wine and come home, I miss you. :)

Seriously though. These are the sort of conversations that I miss having with you. The offer to use my Ventrillo server to chit chat for free when you need an ear is still open. I miss you, did I mention that?

More importantly, or maybe just as important, I love you.

It doesn't matter if you give the money to anyone here, the only one who needs to get it is you. By that I mean the self discovery, while I realize you could use (from the sound of this blog) the one US buck, currently worth less than a $500 Monopoly note)

I need to not reply to these when I am still waking up.

HUGS
Amy Laurel

alpineone said...

Hey Nate,

It's great to have a post from you again!

Interestingly, during Christmastime, I kept thinking that I wanted to send you a new Christmas song from Mary Chapin Carpenter called "Come Darkness, Come Light." I sent it to all my friends this year as a gift from ITunes. But since I really don't know you except through reading your blog--and I didn't have your e-mail and all that's required to send you an ITunes song--I resisted that call. But after reading your post today, I felt a renewed determination to send you this song, even if only through a lame youtube link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_B7zUceNPU

I don't know if you'll find meaning or comfort in the lyrics, but maybe the song will speak to you in some way. Some words from the song say:

COME DARKNESS, COME LIGHT...
COME BROKEN, COME WHOLE
COME WOUNDED IN YOUR SOUL
COME DOUBTING, COME SURE
COME FEARFUL TO THIS DOOR
COME SEE WHAT LOVE IS FOR
ALLELUJAH
COME RUNNING, COME WALKING SLOW
COME WEARY ON YOUR BROKEN ROAD
COME SEE HIM,
SHED YOUR HEAVY LOAD
ALLELUJAH

I know it's not Christmas anymore. And maybe Christmas songs about the baby Jesus won't speak to what you're going through right now. But I felt in the words of this song something of the sentiments of your friends and family--and maybe even that baby Jesus--who all seem to love and honor your unique capacity to weave darkness and light together in soulful ways. It's inspiring to see that regardless of whether you are running, or triathaloning, or walking slow, those who love you are eager to see you shed your heavy load. Allelujah.

Katie Riggs Hansen said...

I think anyone who knows you gets it. Not that we totally get you, that would take away all the mystery and then there would need to be a deep search for more internal mystery because you lost yourself by others finding you.

So, in honor of the only album that has more wear than my Indigo Girls Collection, here are my words to you even though my boyfriend Jason Mraz recorded them, I felt them first:


Calm down
Deep breaths
And get yourself dressed instead
Of running around
And pulling all your threads saying
Breaking yourself up

If it's a broken part, replace it
If it's a broken arm then brace it
If it's a broken heart then face it

And hold your own
Know your name
And go your own way
Hold your own
Know your own name
And go your own way

And everything will be fine
Everything will be fine

Hang on
Help is on the way
Stay strong
I'm doing everything

Hold your own
Know your name
And go your own way
Hold your own
Know your name
And go your own way

And everything, everything will be fine
Everything

Are the details in the fabric
Are the things that make you panic
Are your thoughts results of static cling?

Are the things that make you blow
Hell, no reason, go on and scream
If you're shocked it's just the fault
Of faulty manufacturing.

Yeah everything will be fine
Everything in no time at all
Everything

Hold your own
And know your name
And go your own way

Are the details in the fabric (Hold your own, know your name)
Are the things that make you panic (Go your own way)
Is it Mother Nature's sewing machine?

Are the things that make you blow (Hold your own, know your name)
Hell no reason go on and scream
If you're shocked it's just the fault
(Go your own way)
Of faulty manufacturing

Everything will be fine
Everything in no time at all
Hearts will hold


Does this apply to your post? Not really but just know I really wanted to post Celine because that might make you laugh.

Love you, friend.

Herrick said...

Beautiful. Your post filled a bit the hole in my heart. It's nice when others can express what you can't verbalize yourself right now.

Kelly Jo said...

beautiful. I've missed you. I have more thoughts, but my pasta's almost done on the stove. I'll share them later. love you. . .

mags said...

Hi Nate,
I wanted to send you an email but I can't find your address anywhere. Write me when you have a minute...still at Drake.
Love,
Maggie

HappYness said...

Nate,

It is so good to see you after all these years! And I don't mean that in the standard greeting way it sounds. It really is good.

I've been blog stalking you for a while, and this post just absolutely brought me to tears. (I'm not a weepy girl). Not only do I absolutely love the Indigo Girls (the first and only time I ever agreed to sing in public, in front of people, on purpose, I sang Ghost), but I understand "heavy," in many ways, and on many levels.

Our "heavies," -yours and mine- are different, but they are ours. We own them.
"Dust in our eyes our own boots kicked up;
Heartsick we nursed along the way we picked up;
You may not see it when it's sticking to your skin;
But we're better off for all that we let in."

I think when it is all said and done, we'll be joyful for our experiences, and the learning and growth we gained. The good things we do, the mistakes we make... each has the potential to change us, to leave us better off, if we let it or make it so.

I hope you find what you are looking for, Nate... what you truly need. I hope you find peace, and joy, and more depth and poetry in all of this heavy. You have, and have always had, a beautiful soul.

David and Cori said...

sheesh....the responses on here were as deep as your post was...I took it a little more lightly and enjoyed the many things you have accomplished in your 33 years - plus the rock climbing picture was awesome!

CLARK JOHNSEN said...

Wow this is quite a return after not blogging for a while.. and since this was posted on Feb. 15th maybe you are still in that place. I'll be interested to hear your next report. Don't you kind of think that Russia also has a way of making you feel like that heaviness is innate to our human character? Russians are no joke when it comes to heaviness. While I was there I did some serious studies on the history of Russia, and all I read was Nobokov, Gogol, Turgenev, and Dostiesky. It was a lot. I managed to really delve into it all, but I ended up leaving only after 4 months, before it really took root. If you already have a propensity to heavy, I can see Russia augmenting it all. BUT MAYBE that's what drew you to Russia to begin with. You need to hit heavy rock bottom. Well you picked a good place-- and what? When you get there you will still be alive and you will be all the better because of it!

I'm excited to hear your next report..

The Lead Singer said...

Nate,
I want you to know how much I love and respect you. I feel like we get each other and you've always seemed connected to me and interested in my life and there were times when I felt that "hole in my heart" and heavy feeling and you welcomed me with open arms. I've always loved that about you, abreast of what I needed and where I was in my journey and path.

I'm interested to know, with fervor in fact, how your stint with heaviness continues. Sometimes I think that it's the heaviness that fuels life's trek to the unchartered waters and that ultimately lead us to a place peace. Needless to say, Nate, I love you and your path. You're an important friend to me even though I haven't spent near enough time with you as I would have liked.

I say, continue through the heaviness and allow it to teach you want it is you're earning to learn. There are reasons for your dive into that gaping hole, and when you find it, I think you'll look back at the quest as not a means to get there, but the grail itself. You're already whole and you're already perfect, it's how you come to realize it that makes the difference.

Thank you for sharing, I sincerely mean that.

You are loved.

Wyatt

Nicole said...

So...I love the Indigo Girls, and I love "Ghost." It is hauntingly beautiful. My friend and I used to sing their stuff all the time in high school, especially from the Swamp Ophelia album.

Anyway, I feel like every time I check in on you, you are in a different country. What is up with that?

TommyIndigo said...

Hi, I'm a new fan to your blog and still have a lot of reading to do! I'm gay too and travel frequently..can't wait to read more.

I'm a huge Indigo Girls fan (obsessed may be a more accurate term). Every one of their songs has a special connection to me in different ways.

As you mentioned, so many of their songs are really poetry put to music. Like poems, the meaning is not always apparent, and could even vary from person to person.

"She's Saving Me" is a song of special importance to me since my brother died. I understand it's about how loved ones who passed away come back to you in your dreams, and dealing with that grief.

Hence, the more cryptic lyrics...some of them are describing dream sequences, which can be disjointed thoughts.

Not to overanalyze, but here is what some of the lines mean to me:

Sitting around a dying fire, incense, cigarettes, etc - all references to ashes (i.e. death). The ashes come back at the end of the song too.

I try to put it aside...these next lines are about dealing with a flurry of grief feelings (too much bigger than me, the hawk, etc).

Tea leaves, heads-up pennies, dead star (shooting star) - good fortune

My favorite lines are the last verse (it feels like...). The mix of emotions you feel when grieving. I can relate to that, unfortunately.

Also, "All that we let in" in the album of the same name references death and is an Emily song too. That album was around the same time as Become You, so I wonder if someone close to Emily died around that time?

Anyway, hope things are well, and I'll read more on your blog right now.

Peace,
Tom