416. I wrote a book. It’s called: DEAR JENNY, WE ARE ALL FIND
February 1st, 2012 § 11 Comments
To all the starlings, friends, family members and strangers who read this dank little blog: I just want to tell you that my first book of poetry, Dear Jenny, We Are All Find, is finally making its shy entrance into the world! You can pre-order it from Octopus Books right here. If you order it alongside Christopher DeWeese’s new book, The Black Forest, Octopus Books will send you a third book of your choice for free! This is the news that my heart has been saving, and now, I don’t have to keep it safe or secret anymore. Thank my flower brains, because I am now as happy as my imagination once promised was possible.
love,
Jenny
415. Locker rooms for the ashes of martyrs
January 22nd, 2012 § 17 Comments
Please forgive me for the months of silence, for not responding to your emails even though they were all long and beautiful and deserving of clarity and order and adventure, for being a weird friend and a weary friend, a reluctant stranger and someone who doesn’t know what to do with what she knows she wants to do, for being someone and also for being anyone and also for being the no one that no one is. This blog may be long overripe, and it may be time to move on, but I’m not sure yet.
If anyone who lives in New York City or the surrounding neighborhoods is interested in taking an advanced fiction writing workshop with this totally organized and totally inspired lady who e-sits before you now, typing with great conviction and meaning, please sign up for the fiction workshop I am teaching through the Sackett Street Writers’ Workshop. It starts the week of February 13th, and I will be teaching it in my living room in Williamsburg, Brooklyn! And I have cute teenage writers and equally cute college and college grad-age writers who can vouch for my dedication and weirdness as a teacher.
I went to Shanghai last month and visited my grandfather’s ashes in a giant locker room full of the ashes of famous martyrs. Was my grandfather a martyr? I saw my friend Sam, and for two short days I felt as creative as I’ve felt this entire year. That either speaks of a very fucked up year or my friend Sam is not a real person with the usual constraints of mortality and mediocrity, but a vertically-victorious person sent down by a tremendous deity to teach me valuable lessons that I then squander.
I found the tiny, tiny baby ring that once belonged to a boy I loved the most in the world but we don’t speak to each other anymore, and I’m so afraid I will lose the ring somehow, and one day when we talk again, if that happens, I will know that I lost his baby ring with his initials on it, and I will feel sad and pathetic and useless and incorrigible. My book of poetry is coming out very soon, and next month, I will be doing some readings for it in New York and Chicago, and instead of disappearing, I will be HERE, telling you about all things ME ME ME.
Speaking of ME, if you want to see photos of the food that makes me happy and gassy and the occasional pointless, sulky, GPOY(M?) you can follow me on instagram at jennybagel. Also, I recently wrote a few things for Rookie: a story about loving your (my) sibling too much, an essay about the brown and black and yellow girls on Of Another Fashion and why their pompadours and poodle skirts mean so much, and a little essay about being bullied and bullying others in high school. And oh, I made a playlist of my favorite 50′s and 60′s girl groups singing my favorite sassy songs that were about boys and also not about boys. It was for Rookie and also, of course, for you.
Love,
Jenny
413. France, how I remember it and am remembering it (the first tiny part of something that has infinite, changing parts)
October 21st, 2011 § 15 Comments
One year and three weeks ago, I arrived at Gare de Lyon in Paris and I took this photo. I honestly don’t even remember how I got from the airport to the train station. But somehow, I was there. In stretchy leggings that have yellow stains on the knees because I once cleaned the floors in my Iowa City apartment with this horrible cleaning solution that had a ton of bleach in it, and when I knelt down on the ground to clean, the floor bleached my black leggings yellow, and then when Michael came home, I showed him my pants, and he told me it was no big deal, but two days later, I cried and told him it was a big deal. That was a long long long ago then, and this picture of Gare de Lyon was just the then that was a little bit long ago.
I remember feeling like I was on the verge of something and also on the verge of nothing at all, and I remember thinking: I will always be about to do something really significant and it will always turn out to be nothing at all, or I will be doing nothing at all, and maybe something significant will happen to me. I was thinking of the ending of “At the Tolstoy Museum” by Barthleme that always makes me so sad, and always makes my students scratch their heads and say, “So was this dude just trying to be weird by writing this story?” And there’s a huge gap that I cannot bridge, like why for me, does this story move me so much, but for others, it’s just some smart-ass trying to be a weirdo?

This is the Paris that I first saw when I turned away from Gare de Lyon to look out onto the street. This is the way I walked in the four hours I had to kill between when I arrived at the train station and when my train was leaving for Avignon, and this what I looked out onto eight years ago, when I was living in Paris for the first time, and falling in love with a Scottish boy who worked at Shakespeare & Company. We were both in love with other people who were not living in Paris and also with each other, and we took a trip together at the end of my summer in Paris and his three years in Paris. We went to Nice and then Monte Carlo, where I climbed up a tree to watch an open-air French dubbed version of The Terminator 3, and I had an urinary tract infection so I peed in the tree and drank cranberry juice and laid my head on the shoulder of the boy I was so in love with and had so little time with, and a few years later we met again in Beijing and then never again, which is okay, because just remembering these things makes me feel lucky enough, especially during these times of profound loneliness, when I think I might not have a lot else to comfort me except little stories about things that have already happened, and during these times of profound loneliness, I can’t help but pity myself for not creating new stories to remember, but I have to remember that ever since I was alive, I have always felt as if I am not creating new stories to remember years later, and then years later, there are always things to remember.
One year ago, when I was walking through the streets of Paris for the first time in eight years, I was so hungry that I couldn’t push open the door to a little Vietnamese restaurant that was owned by a Chinese family who asked me if I was a student, and I said no, and then asked me if had a husband in France, and I said no, and then they said, Well aren’t you brave coming all alone to France at a time like this, and all of this was in Chinese, which is not a language I speak confidently, and I remember feeling lonely and scared and hungry and tired and homesick and excited.
This is the inside of Gare de Lyon. This is what it looked like last year, when I saw it for the first time in eight years, and then over the course of nine months, I saw it twenty more times, and each time I walked out of the train or walked onto the platform, I remember thinking, Something is happening to me. Something is happening right now. I am a part of this.
This was the view outside the window of my first apartment in Avignon. I don’t know if I talked about it on this blog, but I was living with a woman who began to have a disturbed relationship with me and my other roommate. There were nights when I didn’t want to sleep until 5 AM, because I knew if I stayed up, then I would wake up in the afternoon, and the woman whose house I was living in would be gone for the day. I had a roommate across the hall, who I loved and loved, and cooking pasta with her and cooking tom yum soup for her were the tiny parts of the day that made the big parts of my day bearable. Walking around Avignon with Martin and holding on to his shoulder when I felt dizzy from too many glasses of rosé were the big parts of the night that made the interminable stretch of day bearable.
This was the gate to the outside world. When le Mistral came into town, I had to push on the gate with both hands to get it to open, and trash cans would fly against this gate and wake me up in the middle of the night, except I probably wasn’t sleeping anyway, so I was already awake and pretending to be woken up as if I were really sleeping. Sometimes, when no one was home, I would lean against this gate and feel the sun on me. Have you ever felt the sun in the South of France? It is the warmest sun I have ever felt in my life.
This is how I felt the first week I was in Avignon, living in that house with the woman who wanted to make me her daughter and who was also cheating me out of a lot of money and who watched me like I was a creature she had never seen before. I felt blurred, inchoate. There were afternoons when I felt so lonely I swore I didn’t exist at all.
This was a night when I walked home from the centre-ville. It was a night when some of the language assistants were having a potluck, and somehow I was invited, and I remember wearing this sheer leopard print dress and a long sweater over it, and walking down Avenue Saint-Ruf and being followed by men on the street and men in cars and men on bicycles. They were saying things to me that I didn’t understand at the time, or maybe I understood a few words and I understood that they wanted me to stop and talk to them, but I walked with my eyes on the ground, and that was why I didn’t see much of Avignon in the first few days I live there because I was constantly looking down to avoid the men who followed me and asked me why I was shy, and did I speak English or what?
At the potluck, I wore red lipstick and brought cheese and crackers just like everyone else who brought cheese and crackers, and at some point in the night, I was talking to some girls and they said that they were amazed by “the spread” and I thought, “What spread? It’s just bread and cheese and a huge platter of potato gratin.” You know when you talk to someone and you just know–you just know–that person will never become someone that you will want to share your secrets with, or even worse, that person might not ever be someone who will crack the kind of jokes that make you laugh or be the kind of person who laughs at the jokes you crack, and maybe one night you will stumble out of a strange French club together and maybe on another night or the same night, that person will run across a highway divider and pee in the bushes on the other side of the road and then run back with his zipper unzipped and flowers in his hands for you, and maybe you will feel so old and so strange about it all that you just start walking home by yourself, and the next day, you hear a story about how he gave those flowers to some other girl, and you will think, That makes so much more sense.
I want to explain how strange I felt walking home that night. How I kept wondering, Is this my life? Are these the people who I will grow close to one day? And somehow, it didn’t feel right. Honest to goodness, they were really lovely people. It was nice to split a bottle of wine with them. It was nice to eat cookies with them. It was nice to run into them in the street. But you know when some people seem so many planets and moons away from who you are and how you have been, that it only makes you feel even more conspicuously alone before, during, and after spending time with them? Like, What a fucking weirdo I am. Why do I have to be so fucking strange all the fucking time. And I cringe writing these words because I probably wrote these exact words in my teenage diary, and here I am, far from being a teenager, and feeling no different from how I felt twelve years ago, when I thought maybe I was just too fucking strange to be liked and loved by people who weren’t related to me by blood.
That’s how I felt that night, walking home to an apartment where I was living with a woman who wanted to be a part of my life in a way that I didn’t want, and I sat on the curb and listened to the same five embarrassing songs I listened to on repeat during my first month in Avignon, and a man drove past me on the street and asked me to go home with him, and then asked me to give him a cigarette, and then asked me to at least keep him company, and I wanted to say in French, “Please, will you leave me alone, I was just about to have a poignant moment alone, but now you’ve spoiled my cry,” but I was too shy and too bad at French at the time. I remember the next day, I woke up to the warmest sun that I have ever felt, and a few days after that, maybe a day or two later, I met the person who would later become my best friend.
A few weeks later, we moved in together and spent so many afternoons feeling small and vast on our balcony. We spent so many evenings feeling negligible and profoundly important on our balcony, in our shadowless living room. We drank hot toddies and clung to each other. I went to Paris and Edinburgh by myself and when I came back, I wondered if we were falling in love. We were. I went to Nice. I went to New York. We went to Paris together. I took the train to Paris with someone I loved. I went to Morocco with my friends. I went to Marseille to visit Laura. I went to Marseille to visit Marianne. I went to Paris to see my mom. I took my mom to Nice. I went to La Ciotat to visit Laura. I went to Tarascon to sleep at Claire’s house. I went to Les Angles to play games at Bruno’s. I went to the other side of Avignon to watch the Jersey Shore at Rémy’s. I went to Villeneuve to eat lunch at Cécile’s. I went through Arles to eat beef at Veronique’s, and we walked along the Rhône on a day that was windy as fuck. I went to Nîmes to have Thanksgiving dinner with Hervé. It was an amazing dinner. I went to Paris so many times. I was in love the whole time. And I was scared and scared and happy and not happy.
It’s hard and it’s easy to think about these things. Like what do I do with the part of me that wants to go on adventures abroad because I have always chased and am still chasing after the kind of loneliness that has always accompanied that first phase of displacement? Like my first month in France, when I lived inside my head, but everyone else only ever saw my Chinese face, my visibly femme body. And then comes that period of utter, inconsolable, unrelenting fear, when you think, What if this isn’t a phase? What if my life will always be like this here? And those were my late October days, when Avignon was on strike, and no matter how brilliantly warm the sun felt on my back, I swore I was going to collapse from wanting so much and existing so crudely, and then–to quote the brilliant Junot Diaz–”the nictitating membrane obscuring the world suddenly lifts,” and then–then what?
I live in Williamsburg now. Now what? What now?
Love,
Jenny
408. My my metrocard & my bad bad
August 15th, 2011 § 14 Comments
If you liked my last post, here‘s it’s bigger, badder, sadder, happier, cuter, so so so much more beautiful friend, written to break your heart and the heart inside your heart by none other than the inimitable Julia. Thank you so much for your comments on my last post and thank you so much for your comments on any post and thank you so much for reading and not commenting (I’m not being facetious!) because I’m still amazed that anyone reads what I write–my sporadic and maniacal non-insights and so-so photos. O, thank you!
I’ve decided to stay in New York instead of moving to China. This means I can’t sleep at night until I figure out where I should live and how and when and where and what will I do to make some sort of steady income. So if I’m a little silent these next few days, it’s because I’m going apeshit with writing cover letters and emailing potential sublets and rooms.
Martin took this photo of me in Avignon. I think we were reading at Le Cid Café–our favorite place to read and in the winter, sometimes they had vin chaud, which was nice and spiced and always had little bits of fruit. Gosh, is anyone here French and living in New York? I’d love to be your conversation partner. Or even if you don’t live in New York and want to chat with me in French on skype sometime. I miss speaking French and learning bad words.
Love,
Jenny
397. Ouch
March 27th, 2011 § 12 Comments
This French toast from Beretta in San Francisco is also a babe.
So much has happened since the last time I clack-clacked words onto the screen of FFW. Jenny, as always, is holding up the fort with aplomb, and her fandom grows by the day — which I don’t mind, never ever, because she deserves all of the glory that a gal can get. And she’s coming to stay with me in my ‘lil San Francisco apartment in one, two, three, four, five days, for a few glorious nights, for, as she’s mentioned, the wedding of a friend — a wedding where we’re going to see people we haven’t seen in ages, and where small reunions will happen in the background of a formal union.
These are some major things that have happened in my life as of late: I developed a large-ish ovarian cyst, had emergency surgery to have it removed, recovered from surgery for a month or more, developed a rotated pelvis and swollen vertebrae as a result, grew sad, grew happy, grew sadder, went to physical therapy, was rejected from Yaddo and MacDowell, reached 100k words in my novel and am now halfway through the book, finally, went through a painful week in which a friend said good-bye to me in a permanent sense and I can’t talk about that, cried a lot, took a lot of painkillers, worked with the dynamic and spectacular Functional Muse Dyana Valentine, and tried to, every single day, tell my friends that I love them.
“Ouch” is what I think about lately. “Ouch,” my clothes are not fitting me anymore because it is hard to maintain one’s weight when convalescing from major surgery. “Ouch,” words hurt. “Ouch,” I am overly sensitive 99% of the time, and 1% of the time I am insensitive in all of the worst ways.
“Ouch,” I want to be loved more and more. I dislike this about myself.
I haven’t bought new clothes in the last two months EXCEPT FOR this Madewell dress, which hasn’t arrived yet. This is what it looks like:
I am a foot shorter than this girl, weigh significantly more, and have much more of a chest, but the shape and silk and color call to me. And the pockets. It is essential for me to have pockets, because I listen to my iPod all day, every day.
Recently I came up with the phrase “coeur-color” in my novel and I’ve been obsessed with it ever since.
See you, kidlets and grownups.
xo,
mw
394. Japan
March 14th, 2011 § Leave a Comment
I just wanted to pop in with two links:
Arturo R. García has posted an open thread on Racialicious for links and information about donating to relief efforts in Japan. I would encourage everyone to check it out, especially the comments at the bottom, many of which sharply criticize and advise against donating to the Red Cross in light of the way they have handled donations for Katrina and Haiti. To be honest, I haven’t done enough research and investigation into the Red Cross and their efficacy as an organization, and I am still trying to learn more about where to best send my donation.
I also really appreciate this Boing Boing article, “Nuclear energy 101: Inside the “black box” of power plants,” by Maggie Koerth-Baker, that does what the NYT and Washington Post and other media outlets have not done at all–provide context for the nuclear emergency in Japan. She writes, “For the vast majority of people, nuclear power is a black box technology. Radioactive stuff goes in. Electricity (and nuclear waste) comes out. Somewhere in there, we’re aware that explosions and meltdowns can happen. Ninety-nine percent of the time, that set of information is enough to get by on. But, then, an emergency like this happens and, suddenly, keeping up-to-date on the news feels like you’ve walked in on the middle of a movie. Nobody pauses to catch you up on all the stuff you missed.”
Thanks, lady.











