17.4.11
she went that-a way
15.4.11
OMT
the security guys were listening to LoveLine and i laughed as i signed in because all i heard was,
"well we started using toys a couple months ago..."
the funniest part is what they didn't know-
i was listening on the drive over.
we had nintendo and a thermos full of the hot black stuff.
did i really zone out and imagine that mario and luigi had a secret brother named sal?
hour one: twenty minutes each to talk about ourselves and what we love and what we don't love and who; we concluded that what happened at LCB stays at LCB
hour two: interpreting dreams and the lights upstairs or lack thereof
hour three: psycho boyfriends and psycho girlfriends
hour four: mixtapes and movies and demotapes and not one of us cracked open a mic
hour five: egos. actually, we dedicated a little bit of each hour specifically to egos; we also went on an adventure during the fifth hour- the stairs led us to the floors above and then floors above floors
hour six: we'd been talking for five hours and still, not one of us had cracked open a mic so we finished our sentences and realized what time it was. the overnight that overruled.
we opened the mic to say goodbye and tell everybody but nobody that we'd been there all along
14.4.11
young and restless
11.4.11
the chase
9.4.11
do you think you guys can handle the R-rated version?
When Ed Kang finished speaking for our class that monday night, there was one thing that really floored me, his age. after all of his crazy ass stories about prostituting women and getting involved in things that aren’t normal for us, i was truly amazed at his sense of inner peace and maturity.
When he asked us if we wanted the sugarcoated version or if we could handle the R-rated version, i looked over at Bryan and i remember giving him the eye-brow thinking, what kind of skeletons is this guy packing in his closet? never would i have imagined that he was involved in the things that he told us about. listening to him was like reading subtitles for a movie that was too graphic to watch; but he didn’t make me uncomfortable at all. the way he spoke was so colloquial, so effortless – of course it’s not the first time he’s been in front of people and certainly not the last. Ed Kang made an uncomfortable topic, approachable because, i think, of where he is today in his life.
Ed is a super rad guy. he wasn’t talking just to run his mouth; he was talking to run our minds. you can tell that he likes the surprise in an audience’s face when he tells us his story. And i feel like that is something important to the speaker itself; satisfaction. i always go into my speeches thinking, i want people to be impressed with my speech or i want people to learn things, but Ed made me realize that i, as the speaker should go into and come out of speeches satisfied and smarter. isn’t it just as much about me as it is about the audience? there were so many people in the room and sometimes it was as if he was talking only to you. i went home that night and just kept thinking about how young he was when he got involved in all of that shady business and how far he’s come. i thought about how young he still is and about how much more he can accomplish.