Tuesday, May 12, 2009

time. temps. tempo.

I am perhaps the most disorganised person on the planet.

Words cannot describe just how unorganised I am. But inevitably I will try.

Time, at the moment, probably bored with its conservative existence, has fixed its mischevious attention on me. I am probably only the ten billionth of billions, but it's irritating all the same.

It jumps in bounds. It shifts itself subtly around me so I don't even notice I'm moving till the clock reads five minutes past the deadline. This morning was particularly shocking. I swear it doesn't take me ten minutes to brush my teeth.

Every monday it's the same. Sunday nights I find myself detoriated into a quivering chaos, waking before the dawning of the monday exhausted with my frazzled, unorganised inclinations, throwing myself through a blur of trains or cars, doubling back because I've forgotten that USB, that foam core board, that craft knife, that analysis, trying to breathe deeply through the drive to the station, stubbornly avoiding the digital clock on my dash which I KNOW is accelerating but not even to a pace close to the speed my mind's running..... Hoping I don't miss the train.

I fall into Uni, and a vacant euphoria settles over me. I feel like air, my bones hollow, my blood light as cloud-bound rain. (Is that light? I hope so. Or else I just sounded like a noob.) And with this a clarity - a clarity in which I conceive another set of organisation methods, more procedures to implement, and I feel reborn and capable again.

I come home, I tidy my room, stick notes on the wall, gather myself together, make lists.

And then the rewound ball of twine of my existence slowly unravels again as the days come, one after the other.

And sunday comes again.

I realise books have something to do with this. Books, I think, might ultimately be my downfall. I rally at Dan Brown at the moment, even while I gobble up his pages.

Ess once verbalised to me something which I'd always suspected of myself. My room reflects how I feel inside. At the moment I will paint you a picture, for it might more easily convey the Indi of the moment (one who just missed her train and has decided in resignation to stay home today. PN: I need to find somewhere I can work. Uni doesn't seem to be suitable, neither does home with all its distractions.... or is it more a mind frame I have to find, rather that a real dimension? Or a combination of both? I wish I had a studio. I always tell myself to turn my room into a studio, with a bed adjacent, but that never seems to work either. I feel like I'm too big for it. I need a giant table and Goliath's shelves, scuffed wooden floors, a bay window covered in cushions with a green, leafy expanse beyond.... but now I'm fantasising.)

I have very little floor because a double mattress consumes most of it. A mattress that has no right to be there, no matter how comfortable it is. I have a double bed which I adore beside it, currently a twisted disaster zone of blankets, tissues, jackets and vests, and a hastily thrust-aside copy of Angels and Demons; and a set of drawers next to that laden with relatively few objects - my iPod Sirius, my red headphones, The Da Vinci Code, cds which I never use, a few books; and next to that, a wooden cupboard filled with paper, art pads (sketch, canvas, watercolour, bank) and other arty-things clustered together in what little space there is. I have on the opposite wall a desk covered in paper and assorted mark-makers, the walls covered in notes and pictures of tattoos I'm meant to have done for people, roiling my stomach with each glance, heavy with guilt and procrastination; I have shelves rising above my desk, tottering with cups full of pens, textas, pencils and gathered bits and pieces (buttons, a badge, a tiny teapot, an anklet made of tiny silver cogs) and books (journals never filled, drawings, language books, dictionaries. Propped up by a snowglobe). The carved wooden box at the foot of my bed is piled high with blankets, my own and my sisters, a silver handbag (a foreign article, my sisters, atop a Spiderman blanket), cloth bags full of books, and shoes scatter what little floor space there is around it.

The floor not covered by mattress is occupied by paper and dog toys. Nearly all available door knobs are strung with bags.

It looks like someone has detonated an Indi inside.



But it is Tuesday, not so detached from Monday, so I will breathe and tidy, and I will start again. If Time is testing me, I will pass.

2 comments:

Ess.... said...

I admit my post was no blog, and you surely did beat it. This comment is more of a blog than my post was;)

Your room is you and it is also your sanctuary(or at least it should be). It's where I feel free to listen and imagine, get caught up in my own world(for essentially that is what it is), carried far far away. I have tried to work in it, but to no avail. For me the train and one of the many uni libraries is where my work is completed.You will find your place for work. Just keep looking-wether it be physical or rather a state of mind. As I play with my room's design, I am in a way, exploring different parts of me, learning, organizing, hiding, categorizing, loving, puzzling...As I work my way through solving practical and visual elements of my room, I am also doing the same within. My mind becomes fixated when I am tackling an element of my room-I don't think of any thing else but the many different ways I can go about 'solving' the 'problem'. And when I have come up with the right solution for me at that period of my life, I feel satisfied and at ease. But until I get that feeling of peace, nothing, not even food distracts me from unwravelling, rewinding, remolding...

indi said...

perhaps you should be an interior designer Ess.

(I have the egg beside me. I love how ambiguous it is, and I love imagining 100 years from now, someone uncovering it somewhere in some dusty attic or at the bottom or an old suitcase, cupping it in their hands and wondering over the story behind it. It seems heavy with secrets, not only solid wood. I hope it travels everywhere with us.)