Veteran’s Hands

I’ve been working on a new story; it’s not yet complete – or at least, I’m not 100% happy with it yet – but I really wanted some feedback on the idea and how it seemed to be progressing so far.

It started out as a descriptive exercise for one of my classes – something to the effect of “describe a character and their life using only a body part.” I came up with the paragraph that uses a million semi-colons (you’ll see it) as the original bit, but then something about it stuck with me and practically begged me to expand.

This is what I’ve come up with.

xoxo YoshiAnn

P.S. Photo of hands courtesy of Battousai.

Veteran’s Hands

I stood aloof from the crowd, reading and re-reading his eulogy.  I had to get it right, had to make sure that, in death, his true story was told. His story, his truth, but my voice, my words. I promised myself long ago that in this, if nothing else, I wouldn’t fail him. The pastor read a passage from the good book, and all around platitudes were made:

Oh, we’re so sorry for your loss.

He was a good man, he’ll be greatly missed.

He did his country proud, he’ll be remembered.

It was time. I walked slowly up to the podium, and stood there, just to the left of the sturdy oak casket.

“My father was a good man. He did his country proud. He’ll be remembered. He’ll be missed,” I paused, wondering if even one of the faces staring back at me had caught on.

Not a one. My dad would’ve, he was smart that way.

I continued, “It was hard being his daughter, I wasn’t ever really sure what he was thinking.  I don’t have a lot of good memories, or really any memories of my father. But I have notions of him, ideas about him that just stuck with me.”

A few puzzled expressions and nervous laughter floated my way.

I went on. “I always noticed his hands. When I was a little girl, they seemed like the biggest things in the world.  Daddy’s hands. They could fix anything, or make anything, or do anything!  His hands were invincible, therefore he was invincible. It may seem odd to you, but for me, my father’s hands told me everything I would ever need to know about him.  They taught me about the man he had been, the man he was. The last time I saw my father, the first thing I did was look at his hands – they were so different than I remembered.”

Now, I got a few nods.  The puzzled expressions faded, replaced by somber curiosity.

I kept at it. “Sitting at home last week, it struck me that I no longer have a dad. All I have left is the notion of his hands as I last saw them. So, I’m going to share that with you, because when my dad first discovered that I was a writer, he made me promise to tell his story.  And I put it off, because what young girl wants to write about veterans and war and pain, when you can write about love and hope and beauty. So I may be a little bit late, but this is one promise I refuse to break.”

The church was silent. Still, I went on. “His hands were big – ‘real mans’ hands,’ his mother, my grandmother, would always say. Long, calloused fingers. Tanned, wrinkled skin.  His hands showed wear; they had lived as he had – hard and fast, with passion, with pain. They were old hands; hands that had gotten him through the hard years of the Depression; hands that had pulled triggers in the trenches of North Africa during that second, bitter World War; hands that twiddled and flexed, in anxiety, when the war was over; hands that took my mother’s hands in marriage on a beautiful summer day in 1949; hands that held me close just a few moments after birth.  His hands told his story – they were strong and proud.  And then, towards the end, like the last time I saw him, my father’s hands were defeated.  Wrinkled hands. Curved, deformed, arthritic hands with black fingernails, wrapped around a bottle of rum.”

More silence, but my point was not yet made. “Isn’t it sad, you might say, that this is my final notion of the man who raised me. But I would say, that defeated in the end or not, my father’s hands lived. My father lived. His story may not have been a happy story, or the kind of story I would normally write. But as I wrote this, his eulogy, it occurred to me, that my father’s story wasn’t just about hardship and war and pain, it was about beauty, and hope, and most importantly,  love.”

Double the Fun!

So, I had to give a speech about using knitting as a form of therapy for stress, anxiety and depression this morning, and in preparing for that I did a quick rummage through my “unfinished projects” knitting basket.

Now, I love to knit – there have been times when I knit hours and hours in one day, and then other times where I don’t get a chance to pick up my needles for weeks! I’m also VERY easily distracted, which means that I have  a million unfinished knitting projects, because I’ll start one this week, then just start something else in the middle of it.

Anyways, for my speech I wanted to do a live demonstration of knitting, as well as get the audience to feel all that yummy, deliciously soft yarn.  I think I may have won a few converts today; they loved petting the yarn!

This is one of the pieces I brought with me today; it’s actually one of my own creations (pattern and all), using the combined techniques of “double knitting” and “entrelac.”  I call it  Double Knit Entrelac – yeah, original, I know!

See how it’s all two-sided and pretty! Yay!

If anyone would like the pattern for this scarf, just email me – it’s a little long (because it’s super detailed) to be published here!

xoxo YoshiAnn

Bow-Tastic!

It’s 33° out! Winter is definitely here.

I’ve got a big speech to give today – all about how knitting is a great form of stress relief!  

One of my professors told me that he sews to relieve stress, and that it’s the repetitive motion of making the stitches that clams him down – I totally get that.  What do you do to keep stress at bay?

xoxo YoshiAnn

Outfit Details: Sweater/ Wet Seal $22.50. Skirt/Old Navy $6.37 (on sale). Tights/ Macy’s $11.00.  Booties/ Wet Seal $29.50. Belt/ Chinatown $2.00.

Feeling Cheetah-liscious!

So I did this beautiful manicure a little while back, and I really wanted to share it!  It had static heart rates and cheetah print and c’mon, who doesn’t love static and cheetah print – CRAZINESS!

Anyways, it only took about half an hour, which I thought was a decent amount of time – especially since I’d never done anything quite so intricate before!

Also, a little sketchiness alert: I didn’t have any of those cool brushes they use in nail salons to draw little patterns, so I went OG [Original Gangsta, for those of you not in the know – P.S. I’m not really in the know either] and used …a TOOTHPICK to draw the designs (hehe)!  It was a whole bunch of fun, and y’all should definitely try it!

To do the static, I just did jagged-y lines with an alternate color (black) on top of my base color (hot pink). For the cheetah print, I painted my base color (yellow), then used the first alternate color (orange) to draw little dots in random places and the second alternate color (black) to draw half-moons/semi-circles around them!

What do you guys think?  Does anyone else love a DIY manicure?

xoxo YoshiAnn

P.S. I’m planning to replicate the cheetah print mani tonight, minus the static.  I’ll let you know how it goes!

Checks outs my arts! BAM…

As I’m sure you can tell by now, I’m feeling super crazy/excitable at the moment.  Just wanted to share a drawing of mine with y’all [shameless self promotion…just shameless].

rsz_james_(1)

Is pretty, no? If you said yes, then THANKS, I try (lol).  If you said no, SAD FACE…don’t worry though, I’ll keep trying to impress you! I am not a quitter!

xoxo YoshiAnn

The Ha-Ha Machine

I’ve always written to work through things; I may not have all the answers when I’m finished (or even any answers at all), but at least I get a story (or a poem) out of it!  

Last month was a crazy time for me, and writing this helped me figure out a lot of what was going on in my head as well as my priorities.  Long story short, unlike for my main character, my crisis moment was averted. Nonetheless, I hope you enjoy.

xoxo YoshiAnn

P.S. Photo of the Brooklyn Bridge courtesy of Andrew C. Mace.

The Ha-Ha Machine

He stepped onto the stage, taking care to place one wing-tipped shoe in front of the other, in sequential order, until he was standing dead center.  A blinding spotlight encompassed him. It lit up the whole world around him.  The wood creaked under his weight, its worn exterior bearing witness to the many people that had walked across its planks.  Dents and scratches marred the surface of the stage; to his right, a few of the boards were lifting at the corners, revealing the hollow shell underneath.  There was even a missing plank; the hole where it should have been lay just behind the crushed red velvet curtain. The sagging, discolored mass was riddled with holes, and barely held back on either side by fraying gold-plated ropes.

Feeling his eyes adjust to the light, he took a deep breath, prepared himself for his bit.  It was amateur night, and like the wood he stood on, he was worn, had definitely seen better days. He’d been in this race for almost five years now; it was a wonder they still let him in the club, a wonder that any of his material was still relevant enough to illicit a few laughs. Over the past half decade, the Cave had become a second home to him – if he was really being honest with himself, it was one of the only ones he’d ever known.  Countless nights he’d passed out by the bar and woken the next morning to find that he’d been carefully placed on one of the couches in the back.  It was the most care he’d ever gotten, and much more than he was sure he deserved.

He looked up into expectant faces, and thought about something the guy before him had said: “Dying is easy. It’s comedy that’s hard.”  Truer words had never been spoken he thought and launched into a not-quite-new, but not-quite-dead routine.

“So I was walking down Main St. the other day…”

Several bad puns and awkward silences later, the light near the back of the bar flashed red.  His time was up.  The audience seemed relieved, if the chorale of “boos” and the refusal of those in the front row to meet his eyes was anything to go by. Placing the mic back in its cradle, he slouched off towards stage left.  His feet dragged along the decaying wood.  As he stepped out of view and into the comfort afforded by the sagging curtains, he realized something everybody else seemed to already know: he was washed up. It was time for him to make a less than graceful final exit.

Seeking solace in the only way he knew how, he made his way to the back of the Cave and sat at the far end of the bar.

“Hit me with a little bit of the good stuff Johnny,” he murmured when the barkeep turned in his direction.

“Sure Mikey.” And then, almost as an afterthought, “Hey, it wasn’t so bad tonight. Maybe those guys up front just weren’t smart enough to get it, eh?”

He looked up, and the most sardonic of smiles played across his features, “You know it, Johnny-boy.”

When the whiskey hit the back of his throat, he felt the burn all the way down to his toes.  It didn’t faze him, and it certainly didn’t stop him from ordering another, and another, and another.  Somewhere through the fuzz, he thought that tomorrow he’d wake up to find himself on the yellow paisley couch around back.  It was a thought he couldn’t bear.

Picking himself up from off the bar, he started towards the door.

“Mikey. Mikey! Where ya headed man?”

He turned to face the bartender, and though it took him a minute, his brain processed the concern in his friend’s voice.

“I just need some air,” he slurred, “I won’t be a minute.”  And with that, he turned and walked out the door.

The night air hit him squarely in the face, sobered him up just enough to put a dumb idea into his head.  Slowly, dragging himself along walls and railings he made his way to the suspension bridge four blocks away.  It was a big grey and metal contraption; he walked that bridge every day of his life – it was the shortest way from his childhood home to all the schools he’d attended, and when he’d moved into that shabby little one-bedroom ten minutes away from his parent’s place, he’d walked the bridge to get to his dead-end job as a flyer distributor. He also walked it to get to the Cave.  That bridge had witnessed him at his best, and at his worst.

Using the railing as his guide, and putting one wing-tipped shoe in front of the other, he made his way until he was dead center. Drunk as he was, he managed to climb up until he was standing with his back against a cold metal beam.  The wind whipped his hair back and fro, but he was too far gone to care; his fingers firmly gripping the beam, he looked down into the inky water below him.  It was far down; he remembered reading once that, at road level, the bridge was about a hundred feet above the water.

He tore his eyes from the black depths and lifted his head; he felt the wind in his hair, felt like he was finally doing something right.  He laughed. If only the crowds could see him now; he was sure he’d get more than awkward silence, more than a myriad of “boos.” Now, the whole expanse of the ocean was his audience, the bridge his stage.

He took a deep breath, prepared himself for his bit. And let go.

“So I was walking down Main St. the other day, and I see a lady standing by her dog, and he’s licking himself. I think, man I wish I could do that, right? And I guessed I musta said it out loud, cause next thing outta her mouth is, ‘You might want to pat him on the head first.’”


An Iconic (Or Not) Entry Into The Blogosphere!

In the past couple of months, I’ve become an avid blog reader.  Well, maybe “avid” is too strong a word – I not infrequently read several amazing lifestyle blogs, including A Beautiful Mess, Abby’s World and …love Maegan. I love what these women do; I’ve gotten such amazing ideas for DIY craft projects and  recipes,  in addition to fabulous hair tutorials, make-up/skin care tips, fashion tips and lots of pretty things to look at (in general).

I thought, well I could do that – with my own twist of course! So, now I’m blogging. Woo hoo!

Here, you’ll be able to follow me as I figure out all the summer, winter, fall and spring fashions that I love; the yummiest recipes for all occasions; any and everything to do with pretty hair, make-up and nail trends; my latest knitting projects (oh yeah) and my newest drawings interspersed with bits of some of my short stories and poetry.

I promise not to bore you to death! I’m an aspiring writer, so I’m a bit long-winded, but if you bear with me…it’ll be totally worth it (I think).

xoxo YoshiAnn