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I am fascinated by the way the seasons seem to belong to different worlds -- when I think back to summers past, shivering now in my long sweater, wishing for warmer socks and longer days, it doesn't seem quite reasonable that they should have happened in exactly the same places as the winter. I miss summer terribly just now -- I keep going back to folk music festivals past, and star-watching in the mountains of Virginia (? -- well, somewhere) just after my sixteenth birthday (on the back porch of our little holiday house, the stars and the clouds were dizzyingly close), reading Thomas Wharton for the first time, and War for the Oaks, and seeing Once, and Kyra being here, and shindigs with the gang, and most of all lying in the sun and being in the sun, and being warm, and not having to run from one place to another every time I go outside, because it wasn't so awful to be out in the weather. And long, long sunsets! 

Life without the kiosk proves to be pleasant, especially now that I am not missing all of the daylight hours. I forgot how lovely it is to see the sky change! And yesterday it was so warm; if only I hadn't been so silly and had realised it before so late in the afternoon, I could have run some errands. (My hair desperately wants dyeing.)

I have been trying my best not to fall into bad habits of being terribly lazy just because I haven't got to go to work, and it is mostly turning out all right, although my sleeping habits could use improvement. Today was sort of a wash because my body has decided to feel horrible, and I think it is the new medication, because I was feeling inexplicably and intensely panicky earlier, and now I am just very exhausted. I went to the library, which is about two blocks from my house, and when I came home I lay down on the bed and went to sleep without meaning to. So that is a bit of a bother. And I am still having trouble getting out of bed in the morning. But I have been getting some writing done (only I've got myself stuck on a passage, trying to figure out how I should write it -- foreshadowing is good, so that revelations make sense when you hear them later, and so one is a bit curious anyway, but the way this is going it seems almost suspicious, and -- you know what, this show-don't-tell business is much harder than it looks!), and Jonathan and I thrashed out some songs for Sunday all afternoon and evening yesterday. (Well, no, that gives us more productivity credit than we deserve. We wandered away from our duty several times, but it did get done in the end. :p)

And now I am overcome by a wave of exhaustion. Oh thank God that I haven't got to go to work tomorrow; it will be the first Sunday in months that is actually a day of rest. In preparation I am going to curl up in bed with the chocolate I haven't even eaten yet (it is probably a new record) and nurse this minor malady in the hopes that it will go away quickly if humoured.
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I didn't update for days because I had nothing to say, except I do have things to say, loads of them, and yet I can never seem to untangle them into words clear enough to type. And I don't know, exactly, if what I want to say is lovely or dreary, or rain-grey tired, which seems to be what my life is, once again, descending into. I feel tired, and though I have a compulsion to write in my pretty new hardback notebook every night, there doesn't seem to be much life to it, and when I read it over in the morning I'm always dissatisfied. 

I miss being on holiday and having things and people and the city. Egad, I miss the city. Sometimes I feel so compressed in this little town that I feel as if I may go mad, and yet there are too many things that tie me to it: the Meholicks, the Peaceable Kingdom, my backyard, the shop where I take my guitar lessons, Dad's music friends (who I shadow admiringly). I suppose that wherever one goes, almost, one leaves a part of oneself behind, and while one may have one true home, one still feels spread about, with a bit of an anchor here, a longing for there. I miss Boston sometimes so much that it almost hurts, and it's not just the city-feeling, it's Boston (and the Boston area in general), even with the mad traffic and the madder politics; it's the flavour and the places: Louisa May Alcott's home, creaky floors and furniture preserved in frozen antiquity; New Bedford with its still-cobblestone streets; the jammed-together tumbledown houses, a hundred, two hundred years old, divided into apartments; the history, Paul Revere's tiny house gasping for breath amidst city traffic and skyscrapers; the subways with their grimy windows and graffitti and strange people, and the subway stations full of vendors and noise and advertisements and people. It's the culture: the sheer number of writers who were born in or who lived in Massachusetts for a significant time is staggering. The museums, the subway musicians, the free concerts, the way you walk into a shop and hear five different languages at once, or look across the cityscape and find a mosque, a Catholic church, and assorted temples--Jewish, Buddhist, and who knows what else.

You know? It wasn't the same in Virginia Beach, and it won't be the same in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles (although I would never move to California: no winter, and too much pop culture!). 

I don't know what any of this has to do with anything, actually. I'm feeling tired and nostalgic and tired, trying not to be depressed and failing. I watched television today, tried to read, ate a little too much, played the same song three times on my guitar. I'm so sick of this house, and yet the idea that we may have to leave it abruptly frightens and disconcerts me. And I hate, hate, hate this not-knowing, this not-planning, this too-familiar uncertainty: I don't know what I'm doing in a month, or two, or three; if we'll be getting back to our feet, or if Dad will still be looking for something. I'm counting on college as an escape: no matter what happens, I will get out in two, maybe three years. I hope it doesn't take that long, but I never know anything. It took five years to get out of New England. (And here I am, wanting so badly to go back. That's how I know there was something amazing about it: even after how awful most of my time there was, I still love it like mad.) 

I don't know what I'm saying, now.
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(Alyssa and I, respectively, as pirates)

Well, here I am. It's nice to feel familiar keys under my fingertips and know where the bumps and ridges are, and how things behave, but everything's infinitesimally different, as it always is when I return from a trip, and the house seems smaller and darker, and this confounded dial-up and three-year-old computer are about to drive me through the wall. Today's nearly proven to be a rather glum day, other than the magnificent thunderstorm that showered sheets of rain and hail all over the yard, and--well, I'll get to the other.

I shall have freakish holiday picspam for all of you lot soon!

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