Thursday, November 20th, 2008 | Author: brooke

i spend too much money on food, and i’m not saving any.  in fact i’m going through my savings at a time when i could actually be saving it.  blurgh.  fuck.  i keep saying i’ll save, but i don’t.  i need to save b/c at some point my prof is going to run out of funding and that will probably be before i’m done and then i may have to find a job that i can’t do at home in bed at 2am or at cafe ibis after i have lunch with a friend.  a truer confession is that i just spend spend spend on all this money on comfort food.  do you know how many times a week i go to the grocery store?  A LOT.  it’s all comfort food, because i need lots of that these days.  i could live for months on what i have at my house (supplemented by milk of course).  :P

another true confession is that i hate when i’m sitting at ibis and people stand around my table talking about paintings.  it’s happening right now and it’s happened before.  i find it very rude.  sit at another table and talk about a painting, don’t stand at my table and do it.

i need to get this annual report (AR) out.  i hate AR’s.  they cut into time when i need to be procrastinating on things like finishing up practicums and putting together my comps list.  i could be at home sleeping off my big greasy lunch i just spent too much money  on!

btw, it’s the transgender day of remembrance.

oh and btw, 2.  if you’ve not seen the puppy cam - you must go see it.  they are really cute and even brighten my dark heart a bit on my darkest days these days..

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008 | Author: brooke

i went to the meeting of our governing body today at pastor p’s church. it’s official, i’m a member of his church and his denomination. at some point pastor p will baptize me. whoo hoo. i would use an exclamation point, but i’m feeling rough today, although in this moment i’ll admit the sugar rush from the licorice i’ve been eating has just kicked in so i’m temporarily feeling better.

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yes. i like licorice.
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i finally chatted with my dad about my mental health so i’ll write a bit more here. it’s not good these days. i’ve been struggling, a lot for a long long time. but i have a counselor i’m working with. she’s put a different spin on it, in fact a completely different spin than my previous work and believes that something that has been plaguing me for years can be made to stop. but to get there will take a lot of work. here’s what i facebooked on monday after my counseling session:

Brooke is thinking that if today is any indication, the work that lies ahead is going to be really freakin hard

and here’s what i twitted yesterday:

thinking that by the time I recover from yesterday’s counseling session it’ll be time for another hard one. 5 weeks till a break from this.

fun. lots of fun. i tell ya. :P but now that i’m no longer lds i can drink alcohol. this weekend i’m hoping to get together with a new friend and do some of that (as in some i mean like maybe 2 hard apple ciders).

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i was quoted in 2 papers today. the statesman - usu’s paper and the herald-journal, logan’s paper.  i was portrayed as an angry queer by both papers because, unfortunately, while i was a bit angry, i wasn’t as angry as the quotes made me seem.  i actually had some words of peace for the lds church as well.  and so before i get to the article (beyond the cut), here’s what i sent to some of my very favorite mormons today:

re: a little damage control

in case you saw the article either in the statesman or the herald journal about the panel i was on on Tuesday, i was quoted and i wasn’t very nice to the LDS church in my quote.  what they left out of my quote was the nice part - i said “I will fight tooth and nail for the LDS church to deny marriage between same gendered partners within it’s walls”  and then the rest of it - “When you’re talking about taking away somebody’s rights who does not believe what you believe theologically, that’s when to me it crosses the line.”

anyhow - i just wanted y’all - my LDS friends who i hope will still like me after reading that - to know the whole of the quote.  and it probably doesn’t surprise you where i fall on the issue.

if i offended any of you in anyway, please let me know.  i am happy to dialogue about it with you.

Hostility rising
By Kim Burgess

more…

Sunday, November 16th, 2008 | Author: brooke

Free video streaming by Ustream

Category: Uncategorized  | One Comment
Saturday, November 15th, 2008 | Author: brooke

30-50 people came out to march for marriage equality in logan, with only 36 hours notice. i carried a sign that said “member of pastor p’s denomination for marriage equality”  (pastor p saw it and liked it).  thanks to my sweet friend j.d. and his fellow organizer i for putting it together.  the pictures from around the country are inspiring.

Thursday, November 13th, 2008 | Author: brooke

here - a picture of the river that is so much a part of me that it runs in my veins - the new river - while it is still small in north carolina.

Category: my life  | Leave a Comment
Tuesday, November 11th, 2008 | Author: brooke

take obama.  a week ago i was in tears at his election.  my mind is visual and so the first image that came to my head was the (old) federal courthouse in eugene, and  how many times i’d stood there supporting peace and protesting the war.  i couldn’t believe we’d finally elected someone who’d been against this war from the very beginning.  the images in my head made me cry.  all of those pleas for peace to the top offices in this country were going to finally be heard!  all the work against the u.s.a. p.a.t.r.i.o.t. act was going to finally be heard by the top office!  the nearly 8 years of talking about guantanamo bay was finally going to be taken seriously by the top office in this country!  seriously - what came from my throat was a combination of laughter and tears.  i’m glad i didn’t care in the moment what it sounded like, because i must have sounded like i was truly crazy.

but then i think about jeremiah wright and the things he said that obama distanced himself from.  and i think about the speech that obama made as i was in the old city of hebron about a united jerusalem being the rightful capital of israel.  i think about the people of dheisheh and the almost daily horrors that they have to go through.  and the humanitarian horrors of the sudan.  and the poverty in appalachia.  and i wonder what obama is going to do for all of them.  i wonder if obama is going to remember his working class background, i wonder if obama is going to not think about being re-elected again but rather doing what needs to be done not to help someone like me - because even with my own personal struggles and being poor because i am a student, i am privileged - but rather to help those who’s voices we don’t hear unless some privileged person magnifies their voices for them.

it breaks my heart.  so much so that i can’t even read about it most days because of the guilt i carry that i’m not doing anything right now.  yep cherice - i get it - i can tell their stories, but - and you know this my friend - i don’t feel it is enough.  i’m here in my little white town in my ivory towers in northern utah and i don’t feel like i’m doing enough - even if i AM speaking about lgbt rights in a town that voted 29% (or some low percentage like that) for obama and 71% for mccain, and where i’m sure prop 8 would have passed by some even more ridiculously high percentage.

i get angry about it a lot and unfortunately people hear that anger.  i need to be better at all this.  but IT JUST ISN’T FAIR.

we have a history of not caring.  it’s amazing how when i start talking about palestine someone, inevitably, brings up the holocaust.  well, the jews needed to go somewhere, because look at what happened during the holocaust, and the united states believes in helping everyone and so for a population that that happened too we HAVE to help them! ha!  i’m really the wrong person to be bringing that up to because i have been studying that subject for at least 20 of my 35 years.

  • roosevelt knew about what was happening in the warsaw ghetto, thanks to the courage of partisans, but didn’t do anything.
  • roosevelt forbid any passengers from the ss st. louis to land in the united states
  • even with knowledge of kristallnacht, roosevelt and members of congress did not increase the numbers of jewish refugees allowed into the united states.

see?  and this is just one (seemingly unknown) example of how the men in the highest offices have stood silently by as those without voices continued not to have any - those who’s voices needed to be heard and acted upon weren’t.

as i was standing there on election night, after obama had been announced as the new president, talking with this new really cool person that another friend (and professor) of mine had introduced me too i talked to her about my disappointment with obama - that he’d moved to the center to get elected.  and she voiced a bit of hope - that i think a lot of people have - that he’ll just be centrist during the campaign, but once he gets elected he’ll remember those who’s stories break my heart.  that night i held on to that hope - and into wednesday even - i held on tightly to that hope because i wanted to be elated at obama’s election.  with the personal demons i’m currently battling i find myself without hope a lot.  with my memories of my trip to palestine i find myself without hope for the palestinians.  with my thoughts about the last 8 years (and if you ask my friend sue, the 16 years previous to those too) i find myself without hope.  and i wanted it (hope).  and waking up the next morning with the news about proposition 8 i wanted it even more.  i needed some hope and i wanted the party of hope i’d felt the night before to continue.

but a week later, and i see who obama’s chief of staff is and i wonder if he’s going to forget about the palestinians.  i wonder if he’ll just be one in a long line of us presidents to not really care about those who have to use their own bodies as bombs because they don’t have the privilege of getting aid from my government to pay for jets and bombs.  i wonder if he really will go into darfur and use some of the money that we’ve been spending in iraq - that he’ll save because he’s going to pull the troops out - to really stop that genocide.  i wonder if he’ll take some money from the big companies and their ceo’s and go into appalachia to give them health care.  i’m cynical, too cynical.  i’m bitter, too bitter.  i’m angry, too angry.  and i’m hopeless.  no barack, i don’t “got hope” because i can’t believe it until i see it.  i wish it could be different for me, i really really do.  i can’t tell you how much i want it to be different, i can’t tell you how much I (do i need to remind you - I, a person with SO much privilege) need the hope you spoke about during your campaign - that hope that you infused into so many young people and people of color.  i hope i get to see that hope to come to fruition, i hope my bitterness, cynicism, and anger is proved wrong.

Monday, November 10th, 2008 | Author: brooke

maybe you’ve noticed a drop in posts about palestine recently around here?  well, i have.  why?  because i feel utterly helpless about the situation over there.  i look at the headlines from the rss feeds –> and i can’t even go to the stories because i know that they will, for the most part, be filled with heart break.  and me?  i’m not even over there doing a tiny bit - i’m not even in a position to say “I AM DOING SOMETHING” because i’m not doing anything.  and i want to be.  i want nothing more than to be doing something, but - and this is a cop-out - my life is taking precedence.  i’m making a decision to take care of some health issues that have been plaguing me for most of my life, and working (not to well at this) at moving forward with this degree.  and i feel utterly guilty, and i know i shouldn’t feel guilty, but i do.   i have an idea about a grant i want to persue, but will that help out the daily trauma facing so many there?  this would be a grant focusing on education.  i tend to be one who wants to help out at the very root, stop the suffering where it begins (in the face of settlers and idf guns) but that’s not my area of expertise, and besides - so many others are working in that arena.  *sigh*  so that’s why there haven’t been any posts about palestine recently, because my heart isn’t strong enough to take it when i’m not taking action.  *sigh*

Category: palestine  | One Comment
Sunday, November 09th, 2008 | Author: brooke

sometimes i’m just disgusted with myself.  we were going along all happy and stuff during the new members meeting at church (sidelight - yes, i’m joining pastor p’s church and he’ll baptize me into his denomination) and we were talking about what it means to join a church.  someone brought up the analogy of being married vs living together and the different commitments.  i went along with that - even though i don’t think that marriage is necessarily more of a commitment than living together.. but then someone said “it’s like just hanging out” and didn’t even let them finish their sentence.  *igh*  i went off on how my papa and stepmother lived together for 15 - 20 years (i forget how long) before ever getting married and they were FAR more committed when they were ‘just living together’ (esp. after all those years) than most young couples who are married.

*igh*  my excuse is that i felt all protective about my papa and that i thought that that remark about living together being ‘just hanging out’ was making a judgment that someone had no right to make.

on the other hand.  i had no right to make the comment i made either.  the tone of my comment was just as judgmental as the one i was accusing of being judgmental.  i had no right to jump in like i did.  i hate that i’m triggered so easily and jump down people’s throats like that.  it annoys me to no end about myself  - especially since i preach all this tolerance and crap and i am often the very opposite.  i need to apologize to this person next sunday at church.

i watch pastor p. being all tolerant and kind and forgiving of others.  hell - i’ve been a real ass to the guy recently (not purposely) and he forgave me.  i’m going to be at this church until i finish this degree and this ability not to be so triggered is one thing that i’m hoping i’ll be able to learn from pastor p (and others) before i leave.  i’ll be a much much better person for it and i’ll like myself a lot better for it as well.

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on another topic - prop 8.  (yes, yes, i know - you are tired of hearing about prop 8.  i’m not).  some links from around the blogsphere beyond the break about prop 8 + a great picture i took from quaker dave’s website.
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Thursday, November 06th, 2008 | Author: brooke

my friend marshall has written a great piece on proposition 8: no props for proposition 8

Wednesday, November 05th, 2008 | Author: brooke


a hat for a.l. her favorite color + flowered buttons. she is one lucky little girl. ;-D. seriously though i hope she likes it.


my papa and his lawn sign, and at night there is a 500 watt light that shines on it. see? it really is in the blood.

and - this from susan in her post on her reaction to obama’s election:

I’ve felt like an underdog since I was a teenage hippie and raged against segregation, gay rights, women’s rights, but I never really knew what it’s like to be discriminated against. There’s a massive difference between being inconvenienced and being discriminated against.

i was looking for words to explain how i felt when i came out as queer and became a part of a group that is discriminated against all day, and i finally found them.  thank you susan.