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Is it sad that...

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One of my favourite things to do is to go to Real Food Daily (or another restaurant I love/feel comfortable in) and eat dinner by myself while I read/write. Is it sadder that that's how I spent my Saturday night?

I got a good poem out of it at least.

Random

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I really like how 12g says that you can bring all your Rule 12 motions at the same time. It's kind of like the Thanksgiving table of pretrial motions. You object to personal jurisdiction and right there at your elbow you can contend for a judgement on the pleadings while across the way you have subject matter jurisdiction and at the head of the table, grumpy grandpa 12b6, ready to send you home when you've been naughty.

Wow, and I actually hate Thanksgiving.

But I love my Rule 12 motions.

My first final

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is two weeks from tomorrow morning! Oh. My. Lord.

Tortious Quotational Misconduct

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Maybe this is one of those things that was only funny at 5:45am, but I thought I'd post it anyway.

"just as Justice Potter Stewart knew hardcore pornography when he saw it, we know a blatantly unfair, inequitable and unsupported apportionment of fault when we see it."--Associate Justice Miriam Vogel

Another quotation

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One I've been thinking about a lot lately as I'm revising for finals.

"Know what I read the other day? That Denver, Colorado, is moving closer to San Francisco, California, by an inch every ten years. An inch every ten years. That's the way the Rocky Mountains were formed, and that's the way the world changes. Not by stamping your foot to get your way. Not even by the bang of a gavel. It's by the choices we make, you know? All the time, you do what you think is right, every time. Slowly, the world starts to change. That's how we leave our imprint on life. An inch every ten years."--Maxine Gray from Judging Amy

A bit more definition

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I pulled an all nighter last night to get my head around the first half of LLE. I spend the night in Leavey library with Mark, Victoria and Jon, which, retrospectively, was probably why I didn't work as much as I should have, but was definitely worth it. I got through that stuff in LLE AND through some of the extra loose ends I've left dangling in Contracts.

Everything seems a lot clearer.

Right now I'm getting fed up with option contracts and reliance, so I may move back to Torts, which always puts me in a better mood. Mostly because there's nothing to get, to remember, it's all about being aware and in the moment and perfectly rationale. I love that everything is so perfectly organized in his world. He just knows exactly how to teach the subject so that we only know what we need to and we actually have to use it. The man is the Platonic form of a law professor. Seriously.

But I still favor Crayton. Just because he gets excited about the FRCP.

Two down, two to go

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On Friday. I am. Free. Joint and several liability, you will have no jurisdiction (personal, diversity, federal question or otherwise) over me!

If I can just make it a little farther...

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So if I can spend the hours between 4:30am and midnight tomorrow taking torts multiple choice questions, then I will finally feel okay about Tuesday, no matter what happens. Then all I have to do is pull all-nighters on Tuesday and Wednesday nights in order to understand civ pro and I can actually take my exam on Friday and let go of this semester. Whatever may come.

i haven't done that in a while

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i actually started crying during the torts exam today aka my 4.5 hour final from hell.

i left the room, cried, threw up, came back and nearly told the student service office i would not be coming back.

it's like the in-class essays from ms. olsen's ap lang class all over again.

A fitting start to the new semester, something to keep in mind

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nobody but you


nobody can save you but
yourself.
you will be put again and again
into nearly impossible
situations.
they will attempt again and again
through subterfuge, guise and
force
to make you submit, quit and/or die quietly
inside.

nobody can save you but
yourself
and it will be easy enough to fail
so very easily
but don't, don't, don't.
just watch them.
listen to them.
do you want to be like that?
a faceless, mindless, heartless
being?
do you want to experience
death before death?

nobody can save you but
yourself
and you're worth saving.
it's a war not easily won
but if anything is worth winning then
this is it.

think about it.
think about saving your self.

- Charles Bukowski

Reminds me of walking through the wet, wet Reed Canyon

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[Jan. 1st, 2008|09:15 pm]
When I am Among the Trees by Mary Oliver

When I am among the trees,
especially the willows and the honey locust,
equally the beech, the oaks and the pines,
they give off such hints of gladness,
I would almost say that they save me, and daily.

I am so distant from the hope of myself,
in which I have goodness, and discernment,
and never hurry through the world
but walk slowly, and bow often.

Around me the trees stir in their leaves
and call out, "Stay awhile."
The light flows from their branches.

And they call again, "It's simple," they say,
"and you too have come
into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled
with light, and to shine."

so yes

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i didn't fail civ pro and torts. still waiting for word on contracts and lle. but yeah. it'll be ok.

Con law is amazing

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“Those of you who want to know more about Bong Hits for Jesus, you can meet me on campus behind the gym.”—Prof Garet

heartbroken

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i got my heart broken today. by a trial motion.

it's rather nice to be done and a californian at once

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So I finish my last final of the year, Crim Law, and walk out to the beautiful sunshine and I find out that gay marriage is not only legalized in California, but that the CA Supreme Court also said that homosexuality is a suspect classification triggering strict scrutiny. Before I nerd out completely on that, I just wanted to express how much I cried on the way home listening to NPR. I know it's not about me, but I feel so proud that finally, finally, finally people I care about can express their loving relationships in the same way I always could.

God I feel so free and happy. Free from the worst year of my life. Happy for the freedom of others.

I've been thinking about this poem and Mary Oliver a lot recently

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It is one of those poems, like Mark Strand's "Lines for Winter," that truly calms me. Calms my bones and heart in a way I can't particularly describe in any great clarity. There are another few great Mary Oliver poems that do the same. I should find them.

Wild Geese

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting--
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

My Motto

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I'm not sure if I've mentioned this before, but this has been my motto for quite some time. And I would like to think I'm sticking with it.

Maxine: You know what I read the other day? That Denver, Colorado is moving closer to San Francisco, California by an inch every ten years. Amy: Is this relevant? Maxine: An inch every ten years. That's the way the Rocky Mountains were formed, and that's the way the world changes. Not by stamping your foot to get your way. Not even by the bang of a gavel. It's by the choices that we make, you know, all the time. You do what you think is right, every time. Slowly, the world starts to change. That's how we leave our imprint on life -- an inch every ten years.

suck it up.

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i'm pretty sure i'm a hardass. yeah, i feel like reed has been less than helpful in that department. it didn't create my perfectionism or even exacerbate it. it just presented it with an opportunity to grow--made it okay and acceptable, even lauded me for exhibiting those characteristics.

one of the things i loved about reed was that people got things done. no matter what. even if it (nearly) was going to kill you. I'm not sure why this was so comforting to me. but it was. there's this great power in knowing that you can do whatever you want to do if you just suck it up. suck it up. that was my motto. whether i knew it or not. and i don't see why it's that much worse than saying "you can do it." isn't "suck it up" really what you get when "you can do it." has a bad hair day or misses her bus?

when i run a committee-heck when i serve on one--i expect that kind of devotion. where you just will yourself to get everything done--no breaks, no parties, no nonsense. Here's the problem. Most people did not do that in college. most people don't believe in that. most people "need to let off steam." most people, most people, most people. i don't do well with most people. i need to stop that. i need to learn how to deal with "most people." and not solve the problem by doing all the work myself.

Yay for Wendy Cope

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This kind of expresses and explains my view on things--how I loath parties, love to be at home alone, etc.

Being Boring by Wendy Cope

If you ask me 'What's new?', I have nothing to say
Except that the garden is growing.
I had a slight cold but it's better today.
I'm content with the way things are going.
Yes, he is the same as he usually is,
Still eating and sleeping and snoring.
I get on with my work. He gets on with his.
I know this is all very boring.

There was drama enough in my turbulent past:
Tears and passion - I've used up a tankful.
No news is good news, and long may it last,
If nothing much happens, I'm thankful.
A happier cabbage you never did see,
My vegetable spirits are soaring.
If you're after excitement, steer well clear of me.
I want to go on being boring.

I don't go to parties. Well, what are they for,
If you don't need to find a new lover?
You drink and you listen and drink a bit more
And you take the next day to recover.
Someone to stay home with was all my desire
And, now that I've found a safe mooring,
I've just one ambition in life: I aspire
To go on and on being boring.

Some Matthew Dickman Poems

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I took a bit of time for myself this morning. I went to Le Pain Quotidien and read the most recent New Yorker with two excellent articles. One was a medical article about Superbugs--anti-biotic resistant bacteria--and the second was a piece on Frederic Bourdin, who is famous for impersonating (quite successfully) adolescents all over Europe despite being 30ish himself. And then there was this poem by Matthew Dickman. Usually I don't read New Yorker poetry because it's trashy--even trashier than their fiction. It's trashy because it's so insufferably highbrow and snobby and the opposite of what poetry should be. But, anyway, here's one that surprised me. Trouble, by Matthew Dickman (who's from PORTLAND!!). And one of his earlier poems that I really loved, Grief.

Trouble

Marilyn Monroe took all her sleeping pills
to bed when she was thirty-six, and Marlon Brando's daughter
hung in the Tahitian bedroom
of her mother's house,
while Stanley Adams shot himself in the head. Sometimes
you can look at the clouds or the trees
and they look nothing like clouds or trees or the sky or the ground.
The performance artist Kathy Change
set herself on fire while Bing Crosby's sons shot themselves
out of the music industry forever.
I sometimes wonder about the inner lives of polar bears. The French
philosopher Gilles Deleuze jumped
from an apartment windows into the world
and then out of it. Peg Entwistle, an actress with no lead
roles, leaped off the "H" in the HOLLYWOOD sign
when everything looked black and white
and David O. Selznick was king, circa 1932. Ernest Hemingway
put a shotgun to his head in Ketchum, Idaho
while his granddaughter, a model and actress, climbed the family tree
and overdosed on phenobarbital. My brother opened
thirteen fentanyl patches and stuck them on his body
until it wasn't his body anymore. I like
the way geese sound above a river. I like
the little soaps you find in hotel bathrooms because they're beautiful.
Sarah Kane hanged herself, Harold Pinter
brought her roses when she was still alive,
and Louis Lingg, the German anarchist, lit a cap of dynamite
in his own mouth
thought it took six hours for him
to die, 1887. Ludwig II of Bavaria drowned
and so did Hart Crane, John Barryman, and Virginia Woolf. If you are
traveling, you should always bring a book to read, especially
on the train. Andrew Martinez, the nude activist, died
in prison, naked, a bag
around his head, while in 1815 the Polish aristocrat and writer
Jan Potocki shot himself with a silver bullet.
Sara Teasdale swallowed a bottle of blues
after drawing a hot bath,
in which dozens of Roman senators opened their veins beneath the water.
Larry Walters became famous
for flying in a Sears patio chair and forty-five helium-filled
weather balloons. He reached an altitude of 16,000 feet
and then he landed. He was a man who flew.
He shot himself in the heart. In the morning, I get out of bed, I brush
my teeth, I wash my face, I get dressed in the clothes I like best.
I want to be good to myself.


Grief

When grief comes to you as a purple gorilla
you must count yourself lucky.
You must offer her what’s left
of your dinner, the book you were trying to finish
you must put aside,
and make her a place to sit at the foot of your bed,
her eyes moving from the clock
to the television and back again.
I am not afraid. She has been here before
and now I can recognize her gait
as she approaches the house.
Some nights, when I know she’s coming,
I unlock the door, lie down on my back,
and count her steps
from the street to the porch.

Tonight she brings a pencil and a ream of paper,
tells me to write down
everyone I have ever known,
and we separate them between the living and the dead
so she can pick each name at random.
I play her favorite Willie Nelson album
because she misses Texas
but I don’t ask why.
She hums a little,
the way my brother does when he gardens.
We sit for an hour
while she tells me how unreasonable I’ve been,
crying in the checkout line,
refusing to eat, refusing to shower,
all the smoking and all the drinking.
Eventually she puts one of her heavy
purple arms around me, leans
her head against mine,
and all of a sudden things are feeling romantic.
So I tell her,
things are feeling romantic.
She pulls another name, this time
from the dead,
and turns to me in that way that parents do
so you feel embarrassed or ashamed of something.
Romantic? she says,
reading the name out loud, slowly,
so I am aware of each syllable, each vowel
wrapping around the bones like new muscle,
the sound of that person’s body
and how reckless it is,
how careless that his name is in one pile and not the other.
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