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Felicity Fenton
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Wednesday

Her ponytail is more pony than tail

These ears are attached to songs by Ryuichi Sakamoto

One pear on this desk lays, bruised and battered 

Grandma Dot is no longer detoxing from anti-anxiety pills prescribed by her doctor to fend off grief 

100000000000 years old 100000000000 years young

If I make friends with strangers I don't have to do any of the real work 

"As long as you want" - Sappho translated by Anne Carson 

Boys and Men

Maybe the internet is a place people go to die 

By August. By September. By November. 

Irreversible sunshine 

Recommendation of letters 

 

 

 

tags: Ryuichi Sakamoto, Anne Carson, grandma dot
Wednesday 04.26.17
Posted by felicity fenton
 

Happenings

Right now:

Due to some recent broken knee hanky panky in the sack, an ache now throbs in my lower right spine. 

Beckett is asking for a kiss and a hug. Her breath smells like sugary pizza and metallic earwax. 

A pile of medical bills sits on my desk. I don't want to pay them. I'd rather do something else with that money. A trip to Tanzania. A pair of walkable shoes. A stocked refrigerator. 

I cannot comfortably spell refrigerator. 

The refrdsgerator hums. The reffridgeator festers.

One fly swarms around my studio occasionally bumping its multiple eyes into the window. 

I bend my knee to 90 degrees, feel my weakened muscles tense and shake, then slowly straighten my leg again. This action is daunting, but necessary. 

A stack of junk mail on my desk awaits shredding. This I will do tomorrow, with my teeth,  as part of my Process Mundane project. 

My grandma Dot sits alone in her house for the first time in her entire life. She will be 90 in a few days. I want the world to show up at her door to celebrate. 

more happenings
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Aug 20, 2014
Wednesday 9:09 pm
Aug 20, 2014
Aug 20, 2014
Jul 27, 2014
Happenings
Jul 27, 2014
Jul 27, 2014
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Mar 3, 2014
Happenings
Mar 3, 2014
Mar 3, 2014
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Dec 1, 2013
Happenings
Dec 1, 2013
Dec 1, 2013



tags: happenings, broken knee, process mundane, grandma dot
Sunday 07.27.14
Posted by felicity fenton
 

Grandpa Ben

Dear Grandpa,

You died this morning at 10:05 am New Jersey time. I was on my way to work, in the passenger's seat of my car with a broken knee propped up on the dusty dashboard when my mom told me you were gone. And though I was expecting this news, and though you left this world peacefully without any suffering, I was still clobbered by grief. Obviously I'm still grieving. I'm grieving the pieces of you that inevitably seeped into my everyday actions and spirit, and the other mysterious parts I'll never know.

You had a long life Grandpa. 89, nearly 90 years old. It was a rich, complex life that I was lucky to be a part of for more than 36 years. First as a baby, then as a child, then as a young adult, and again as a parent. You were there when, while gliding around the driveway in roller-skates, I fell flat on my face and knocked out my first front tooth. You were there when I accidentally broke your favorite antique guitar chair (and though I knew you were upset that it was broken, you never yelled at me). You were there the day before I left the country for India, so proud of me for traveling to other parts of the world. You were always there. Sitting outside, next to your basil and tomato plants, reading the New Yorker or The Nation, plays by George Bernard Shaw, or a biography of someone you were fascinated by at the time. Reading, reading, reading until eventually your eyes started to fail and you couldn’t read anymore. And despite how devastating the loss of your eye site was for you, you never complained. You just adopted a new series of rituals. You refocused your eyes to your ears and listened to NPR and baseball games, then later CSPAN on a giant, glaring TV. You listened carefully to the world around you, watching, enjoying, with a subtle smile on your ever-handsome face and a dapper hat atop your sweet mostly-bald head. 

Right now, your voice is in my ear. It says, I drink a cup of green tea every afternoon. It says, I never voted for Republicans or Democrats. I only support the Green Party. It says, Are you still living in Brooklyn? And, Dorothy, where is my coffee? And, How’s your novel coming along? And, You are looking good kid. I can smell the pipe tobacco on your sweater. I can feel a lull while listening to you play something that sounds like a slower version of Django Reinhardt on your guitar. I run my fingers along the spines of your books. I flip through their pages and sniff each one. They all have secrets tucked inside their pages. Random ephemera, ticket stubs and dry cleaners tickets, New Yorker cartoons and drawings made by me or my sisters. I hear a plethora of stories about your travels to Europe, boat rides in Sicily (your homeland) and your rascally youth in Brooklyn - dancing and dealing at underground jazz clubs, refusing to speak Italian with your mom, sleeping on the fire escape on hot summer nights and pushing cars into the East River with friends.

Thank you for being there for me grandpa. Thank you for living your life fully and presently. Thank you for inspiring me to travel, and read and play guitar. Thank you for always rooting for the underdogs. Thank you for giving me your eyes and nose. Thank you for showing me true gentleness. I love you in my heart. In my head. In my broken knee. Everywhere. I love you.  

tags: grandpa ben, RIP, grandma dot
Tuesday 07.01.14
Posted by felicity fenton
Comments: 6
 
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Go outside. Good things happen outside.