The Art of Lonely Sloppiness


In about two weeks I’ll be left alone in the apartment I normally share with a close friend. The period of isolation will likely last for 16 days until I leave the United States to go home to Norway. I dread this event and its consequences for my psyche, health and social life. 

I worry that I won’t get up in the morning. I worry that I’ll stop cooking and resort to bread and peanut butter for all my meals. I worry that I’ll drink five cups of coffee a day and only read. 
But mainly I worry that the only reason I function regularly is because I have some external presence that can keep me in check. Don’t get me wrong, my roommate is not very intrusive at all, and we’re both extremely private people who need to be alone a lot. Yet somehow I function with her; I can feel like alone and focused although she’s sitting next to me. It took some time to get to this point, about all of last semester, during which I was conspicuously absent a lot of the time because I was still getting adjusted to sharing my space with someone.




Not that she’s my first roommate ever. I just find it so much easier to live with people I hardly know. We leave each other alone, and I can be as antisocial as I want. Now, I’m usually quite good at talking to people I both do and don’t know, and when I’m in a social setting I give it everything I have. Then, when I go home afterwards, I need to charge back up by reading, cooking, drinking coffee, staring into space. After the tumultuous unpredictability of interacting with other humans I can finally escape into the safe canyons of my mind—I don’t know the terrain, but it’s an exhilarating exploration that I love and only feel like I can do alone.

Until I got used to living with my roommate, that is. 

I sometimes secretly desire an hour or two alone in our apartment. I think it’s what I want, and I drink cups on cups on cups of coffee and work out in our living room with loud music (otherwise I’d be too embarassed) and bake bread. I enjoy myself! 
One, two hours go by, and I miss her. I want to tell her stuff. I want her to make me fried eggs with onion. I want to show her things I made. I want to sit quietly in the same room as her with headphones on. I know she’s there.

The premise of the project Dear-Data is beautiful to me: two women send each other postcards of their graphic visualizations of the personal datasets they’ve gathered throughout the weeks. They decide what they’ll collect—drinks in a week, compliments received and given, efficiency—and then they send each other a postcard with a graphic representation of this as well as a key with how to read it. It’s often beautiful, at times hard to read, and always surprising. 

That is why I’m afraid of my roommate leaving. No matter how happy I might be alone, this desire is always, always a deception for me. I begin missing her. I want to speak to my family. I text a friend and ask to see her. Do I want to think of myself as a loner? Do I tell myself I am? Or am I just a normal human being? Likely. 

Last week I wrote that I’m constantly surprised by people. One of the reasons I sometimes choose to isolate myself is because I know what people are going to do. They’ll burden me, demand things from me, confine me into a box and worst of all, try to do things for me or even spend time. It’s scary as shit, all of the time. Getting a text message is wonderful, but then I have to reply, and then all I want is to be left alone.




It’s weird how I make myself do a lot of things for another person who doesn’t even know that they’re my catalyst. I’d likely not do a lot of the things I do daily if it wasn’t for her. The thing is, I just want to be as good as I can. Not for her, not so she can see it and then care about me. But rather, because someone else will see me I am forced to have the self-respect to change out of my pajamas and sit up straight in my chair as I do my homework. Is it self-censoring? Is it Foucault again (four years of undergrad and I’m done with him, hopefully forever)? 
I like to think of myself as independent and relatively autonomous, but I’m not. Everything I am is made up of other people, and this isn’t a bad thing, but I’m realizing that this even applies on the tiniest level of when to set my alarm clock in the morning. 

Dear-Data goes beyond the Quantified Selfers in this way. They’re accountable to one another. I suspect that, when you know someone else will be reading it, you make it more understandable. 
Meanwhile, I’m constructing an intricate and completely packed schedule for the 16 days I’ll be spending alone where I see at least one other person every day. 



Recap of: so many things!



(Poem by Olav H. Hauge that is so beautiful you'll just have to learn Norwegian for it. Something something blood, basically.)



So I went back over a bunch of photos from around this time a year ago, and it feels incredibly weird. Not only to avoid falling into the two holes of either I was amazing and still am! and/or I'm such a jerk and haven't changed at all...

Which is always a challenge? A teacher I had last semester described it as the genius-jerk spectrum, where at any given point you're either at the I'm a genius! or I'm a jerk... side of things.

Anyways.


Things like this.

So weird! Like, my hair. Gosh. 

This is not about to be a post about how much I've changed (how little) or how fast time flies, and that is, in fact, all I know about what I'm currently writing: it will certainly not be this moral thing that I always end up clipping to my Evernote and then whine about or the Norwegian blogs about kids and families that I read lots of meaning into and then just... don't believe.

It'll be different!


I mean, this is the kind of stuff I did last year. In my studio, everything was a mess and I was painting/drawing with ink on the floors and walls (never to show anyone: my space was almost totally bare when the final show rolled around), and I was wondering about New York subway ads.


I still don't get it. I would sincerely love for someone to explain this ad to me. 

No, really, really.


One night I felt very lonely in a big group consisting of "my people." I drank too much but look surprisingly sober in a photo I found when I googled myself.


And it always felt like everything started out like this, so simply. Cleanly.


And ended up like this: feet cracking and lots of pain but also really good and dancing? 

I mean, I don't even know, and I write that all of the time. This is me thinking everything is very weird, and I'm about to graduate, and nothing and everything has a direction. Everyone is very keen on giving good and well-meant advice, but it all seems to go over my head: it has absolutely no meaning to me because I'm not there yet. I haven't lived that.

One thing I thought of today while accomplishments were being listed in class was that my father, 60 years old last year, just recently finished his bachelor's degree.

That's something I want to learn how to do. To do that. To do something like that.

It's 4:38 pm and time for oatmeal. All images by me.

things i’ve learned this spring part three


(pictures from here.)

that i miss common sense as often found in norway.

that cooking for someone makes me put in more effort, and it makes me not only eat bread and peanut butter all the time, and

i don’t know if i could live alone, BUT if i did i think i’d need a lot of rules and set plans. otherwise i’m scared i’d never see anyone.

i can’t wait to see my clothes in norway. they feel like old friends, and another life, in which i don’t only wear singlets and boys’ shorts. 

(and i miss having a fashion blog.)

what i spend my day on (if i let myself) is cooking, exercising, cooking more and more, cleaning a little bit, writing and reading. and then i have to force myself out of the house to interact with other human beings.



i am always, always so in awe of people around me: the barista who remembers my name (when i guiltily admit i can’t recall his); the handwritten letter i receive in return, clearly written with a beautiful and expensive pen on soft and thick paper, carefully selected words; the immediate concerns of those around me when i dare express a slight turn of mood away from the normal; my siblings, who are so funny and so great, and infinitely more mature and emotionally balanced than i am; 

and life.

and that to do something every single day is incredibly rewarding.

and something else that’s rewarding: finally finishing the large and physically heavy book you’ve attempted twice before, but now you have it, and it almost makes you cry with joy.

knowing more and more that food is a science and an incredible source of satisfaction, beauty and experiences.




things i’ve learned so far this year pt. II



(photo by me. the making of the art)


how to make parsnip latkes.

if something doesn’t work or breaks, it doesn’t really matter, and you don’t need to buy a new version or edition of it; wear socks on your hands instead of gloves, keep your backpack closed with a belt, and make notes on tea bags.

how to begin to think about excessive guilt and painfully exaggerated conscience, and 

to tell someone something as honestly as I can without being upset;

that something can feel wrong because it isn’t beautiful—

where the limits of propriety can lie for me, and where they perhaps could lie.

what my internal, biological challah-rhythm is (when the freezer begins to look half-full, mostly void of plastic bags with frozen bread, rolls, pastries…).

that home can be something very private and sacred i often want to keep to myself, and

that i need to take days off, and that this doesn’t make me a very productive person by my american standards. i love weekends and holidays a little too much, because they make work joyful, too.

that more people care about and love you than you might think.



(more of the art being in the made)




so far this spring!



this spring (so far) i have learned how to

..correctly steam an artichoke (20-35 minutes w/a crushed clove of garlic, slice of lemon, bay leaf)

..make the best hollandaise sauce i have ever tasted (sorry dad)

..ask people to teach me things that i want to learn (like how to stand on my hands, how to stretch the muscles in my middle and upper back, juggle, make chinese food (one day…), and use my laptop with accuracy and determination)

..charm your bike maintenance people in such a manner that they tighten your brakes (and you didnt even ask for it)

..sit still

..magically make anger disappear (my own—other’s i don’t know about); and I'm still working on this

..prefer to live without internet and with a crappy phone