To build a home

The smoke is bugging me so I’ve been struggling to find things to do. I don’t feel sharp or engaged in my coursework. Instead I feel off and anxious, waiting for the day when the air gets better and things return to normal. It’s perfect for mundane tasks. I have a huge stack of books that need sifting through. To be put in my quote spreadsheet, to be entered into the notes for various ongoing projects.

I am planning on doing a post/essay on commonplace books, I have several in my pile awaiting my time and attention, about my faith that this method of dealing with books makes sense. I don’t want to own them. I grew up amongst the chaos of hoarding and have moved around a lot. Books are heavy. I usually get them out of the library. It’s nice having the quotes in a digital and searchable format. I am trying to have faith that this thing I’m doing makes sense and is leading me somewhere.

It does have the perk of revisiting the work a second time as I go through and find the quotes I wanted to collect.

That’s what I do though, I just collect interesting photos
— Biza Butler, Design Matters with Debbie Millman

I collect quotes, ideas, wisdom. I try to make connections. I hope to do more than just have piles of books and to do lists. I hope to do things with these quotes. I hope that this workflow is leading me somewhere. That I can move beyond the comfort of reading and do more reading.

Because books feel like home. I often feel incredibly alone in this world, I think a lot of us do. I’m queer and neurodivergent, I don’t operate on the same wave length as many in this world. But as a writer I have the perk of a collection of material written by people who share a big thing in common with me. It’s easy to relate to these words. When I’ve had nobody I’ve had books to keep me company. During these strange times of fracture upon fracture upon fracture (global warming, housing crisis, covid, wildfire smoke) I have books. When the world returns to normal and uni ends I can go forth and try to find more physical spaces that feel like home, I can try to build a home for myself in this strange world.

Although we were both visitors, the interaction made me feel for a moment as though that club and Tokyo were home — as if I’d always been there. Maybe home was simply any place where you felt seen and welcome
— Samra Habib, We Have Always Been Here

Flashback Friday: North central Calgary times

Going through files — if I can get my files in order then I can get my life in order, right — and found a couple of gems from my Calgary life back in 2017.

One is of the Rosso, one of the few local coffee chains that has bothered to open a location in the North (looking at you Phil & Sebastian). The South always felt cooler so it was nice to have a local spot to go to.

The other is from a Confederation Creek protest march. Those were the days of raucous watershed activism.

It's everywhere

I’ve been reading Austin Kleon’s books, one of my potentially unreasonable library acquisitions — some of you hoard toilet paper, I freaked out about stationary and books. I know I won’t get through all of these but I feel better knowing I have some options while I am stuck at home.

He talks a lot about the creative process and I share his down to earth, process focused approach. Creativity isn’t mystical, it’s getting up every day and doing a small chunk of work. I’ve broken Set Your Watch to Moscow Time into sections and find that much easier. I can finish one chapter or one section of a chapter. I can wrap my head around that. And it adds up.

I didn’t get much writing done when I was having a lot of trouble sleeping for a few months in the height of job search anxiety but I’m back to it and hoping to find twenty minutes a day to work on it. If I do that I could have a submittable draft by the end of my program. It’s fun once I get the momentum going and stop thinking about how daunting the publishing process is. I want to keep working on it because I want pieces of myself that aren’t my coursework. I want to connect with that other side of myself.

I also want to just finish this project once and for all. I want to finish it within a decade of taking the trip so that I can move onto other things.

For now it’s the perfect thing to work on because I’ve finished a few drafts and just need to do edits and fill in gaps. Other things are in the gathering stage. I’m collecting quotes, ideas, facts, research, inspiration from different places and putting them into folders with the hope of gathering them together eventually. I’m not there yet but I’m working on it. I’m being patient and knowing that the things I come across now will become the books I write over the next decade. The second, third, fourth, fifths that come after Set Your Watch to Moscow Time and the lessons I learn working on it.

As I seek out certain things and want to collect them I start to find them everywhere. One of my top studio choices has a book about metaphors and stories as a text it is built around. I am working on a book about otters that is based around a metaphor/simile. I have a word document that is just quotes about metaphors.

I’m also thinking a lot about joy. It’s related to one of the metaphors in the otter book and I’m thinking of focusing on it for my graduate project.

For the first time in years I feel really good. Six years ago I started to feel more and more anxious while riding my bike. I was about to start my MSc in Urban Strategies and Design and was really into active transit. I was also broke so I rode my bike because a monthly transit pass was too onerous of an expense. I went from being a timid but relatively intrepid cyclist to hunching on the sidewalk with my bike perched on it’s kickstand frozen and unable to continue. I steadily became less and less able to ride a bike. I moved to Scotland and avoided biking with the excuse that they drive on the other side of the road but really I didn’t think I could do it. I went to Copenhagen and didn’t rent a bike because I was sure it would just freak me out a lot.

It felt like I was losing pieces of myself and that my world was getting smaller and smaller. Mental health issues that had been running in the background started to take up more and more space. The first time I went to therapy was to talk about my cycling phobia. It only took four years of doing exposures on and off but I can ride a bike again. I’m not worried about freaking out. I don’t spend more time walking my bike than riding it. Being on a bike and having it be a pleasant experience is a really simple thing unless you’ve spent four years working at being able to do it. Then it’s a big accomplishment. I am trying to enjoy being able to do this thing again, trying to relish the rewards of my work.

There are other ways my life is getting bigger too. Since being diagnosed with ADHD things that used to be overwhelming feel more manageable. I’m dealing with my to deal with folders instead of shoving things places because I have no idea how to cope with them. I feel calmer. I am actually finishing some of my projects.

I want to spend eight months thinking about joy, thinking about the small things that really add up to a good life. These are the types of things that I think are the answer to the problems we face. Joy isn’t frivolous. It’s an anchor, a north star, it’s the best of us. Now that I am looking for joy I see it everywhere. In the Schitt’s Creek behind the scenes episode on CBC, in a child playing soccer with his father at UBC, in running my hands through the tips of tall grass. It’s the feeling of gliding along main mall under the shade of aging oak trees with the wind in my face, my legs propelling me forward and my mind being at peace.

I used to walk up to the Salisbury Crags in Edinburgh in search of some respite from the stress of group work and my program. While I sat there perched about the city I felt like the world melted away, like my troubles didn’t matter. I think that’s a big part of what drew me to landscape in the first place.

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Reading stuffs

The last few years the main way I’ve gotten news has been by scrolling through my Twitter feed. As I try to spend less time on the platform and change the way I’m using it I wonder how and if I’m going to stay up to date on the world around me. I’ve been doing an odd thing, which is actually going to sites. I’m making a folder of places to read things when I’m in the mood to read something. It’s a throwback to a bygone era but it sure feels good.

I’m also feeling like my trusty old quote spreadsheet is a bit stale so perhaps this will let me refresh it a bit. New voices definitely needed. Until then I’m switching it from a daily to a weekly goal. You can quote me on that.