A strange sense of nostalgia overcame me yesterday, resulting in an urge to go garage sale shopping this summer in the hopes of finding a fantastic old typewriter and a Polaroid camera. Because what better way to write? And perfection in the form of instant photos on a road trip would be the most perfect sort of perfection. These things, like my ward’s Austrian armoire, built in 1846, have such character, character that society’s been gradually replacing with cheap standards and efficiency. It occurred to me that the character of each generation can be seen, heard, felt, in the markings on their tables and the pops in their records, and with a heavy heart, I sighed for the standardized blandness that has taken the place of imperfections which shaped the past. I sighed for the assembly line art that sells the death of a generation’s individuality. How fiercely in need we are of a renaissance! Those old things, this intricately handmade piece of furniture, they make my heart flutter. So I decided to snoop through a piece of an old woman’s history (with permission, of course). The waft of musky air that surprised me when I opened the doors with the slim skeleton key was like the euphoric aroma of an old book. It was the smell of 19th century Europe, the wood shavings on a craftsman’s floor in Vienna. It made me cry. For the way things were, for the way things are, and for the beauty that will be lost to the past, that future generations will never get to enjoy. In the midst of all my musing, as I was running my fingers over the carpenter’s red-painted initials and wondering who he was and if he had a family and if they appreciated his talent and finally picturing them happy around a dinner table he carved with his own bare hands, laughing and loving, what should catch my eye but an old Polaroid, still functioning, with film and all, and I was back in 21st century America, capturing a moment, a feeling, history. His. Hers. Mine. Instant gratification with the flash of a bulb.
As Gertrude Stein wrote, “a rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.” Instead of roses, I hope you all take this long weekend to stop and smell the things we sometimes forget to appreciate. Don’t take the little moments for granted. ♥
| Society: | Every girl is beautiful. |
| Fat girls: | Really? |
| Skinny girls: | Really? |
| Curvy girls: | Really? |
| Scene girls: | Really? |
| Preppy girls: | Really? |
| White girls: | Really? |
| Black girls: | Really? |
| Society: | Wait let me be more specific |
| Society: | You need to have boobs the size of Canada, an ass that will put Nicki Minaj to shame, perfect porcelain skin with nary a single blemish, straight white teeth that will blind somebody that looks at them without sunglasses, hair that is thick and flows like a waterfall made of rainbows and unicorn tears, eyelashes that will touch your forehead and look natural doing it, soft hairless skin, and a smolder that will fry a chicken in a basket. You also have to be a size 00 because guys love it when they can see your ribcage. |
| Girls: | |
| Society: | |
| Girls: | |
| Society: | |
| Girls: | |
| Society: | Why is everybody getting depressed all of a sudden? |
(Source: raindancenaked)
(Source: tastefullyoffensive)