Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Whatever Happened on Barry


He couldn't understand how a person could be so cavalier with the word "love."

"It's really, really hard for me to say that I love someone, cuz once I do, ....it's there, for, pretty much - "
"- yeah."
"I just can't understand how you could be happy with someone else not being with you."
"Because your happiness is my happiness."

What he didn't see was a girl, strutting down the street, her eyes bouncing eagerly all across an electric city avenue.  

She was walking quickly, and she was swinging her bags.  
She had on headphones.  
She was alone, but she was happy.  

This was the girl he wouldn't see, because he wasn't looking for her. 

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Morning Prayer


Give me a second chance, God.

Whatever you think you can send my way, I'm desperate for another shot at it.  You know my mind; you have to know my mind.  

There has been such a disconnect between the things you've sent me and what you seem to think I'm capable of holding on to.

I wonder at times if you even know me, if you even know my nature, or my thoughts, or the parts of me that I feel at times I can't even control, these empty soldiers that rise up in me to fight things, maim and destroy them, that later I end up grieving, and fruitlessly trying to nurse back to life, from death.

I need to hear you better.  I need to trust that there is a you inside of me that is my thought, that is my first instinct, that is my heart, that no part of me is stronger than my desire, and that my desires are ultimately good.  

I don't want to defeat myself again.

You have to come up with a better defense than I can protest against.  

I see what you've set up for me, I see where you've given me second chances and I see how I've been even more blind on this second time around.  I guess what I'm asking for is a third chance, a second second chance.  Please don't lead me to believe that you don't know what is lying underneath the surface of me.  That you don't know what is at the core, what is the well from which these ridiculous waves of fear seem to roll out from.  You have to be something that is all-knowing and all-powerful because you have to teach me to protect me from myself.  

Electrical Storm

“Come over here, take a look,” he said.  Because he does that, he just invites you over, it’s totally normal to him to have someone come over and take a look at his work.  I can’t understand this, this desire to have someone share in, or observe, the work I do, but this is because everything I do is about translating thought or emotion to page; there’s no process to watch that is of any interest, unless you like to watch people type, or hold a pen, pause, write, and then pause for a long time. 

I am here, at his apartment, again, because of an email.  Because I forced the moment to its crisis.  I did not understand why he never contacted me.  And why he wouldn’t even say something like “hey, good luck with your show.”  But that’s me.  I cannot empathize with someone who works 16 hours a day, according to him.  He’s right.

On the bus, on the way over, he texts me, “want to grab a bite?  I’m starving.” Should I accept this, it pushes my train departure back by another hour, at least; and though I sense I shouldn’t, I accept.

The lightening is so bright, its flash so vivid, that for one second, it is daylight; then, the black.  We sit, in the dark together, on his couch, staring at the storms intrusion. We rest our chins on our hands, which rest on the back of the leather couch. 

You are able to say you want to leave it when you have it; but when you don’t have it, you say you don’t want it.  In both ways, you don’t want it.  But it’s good for you.

When he received your card in the mail, and when he read your email, both on the same day, he called you. 

This voice kept saying in your head, “maybe he really likes you.”  And I didn’t listen. 

You now write with a semi-purpose.  You have a job.  You will likely get an apartment soon.  You are getting acting jobs.  But you have no one, whom you love, that loves you in return.  And the ones who do love you, whom you could snatch up in literally one phone call, you do not want; you’d rather never have another lover for the rest of your life than give in, out of principle, to one of these. 

He said, “maybe it’s best if you don’t see me for awhile.”  Did you bring the situation to this point, with your very thoughts, that you indulged, that you didn’t have to indulge in?  Did you bring the moment to its crisis? 

You have to show the good face around him, because if he sees that you are hurting, he won’t want to be near you. 

I do not get him.

You saw the façade of the University Club, and it made you want to leave town again.  But the part of you that has majority veto is comfortable, staying in Chicago, at the job you held before you left, playing it safe in your mother’s house, taking pills rather than selling everything you own in order to get an apartment, like a normal human being would do. 

It seems that, every opportunity you give him, bad or good, he takes; if you introduce even one element of doubt, allowing him an out, he takes that out. 

But all you can see is the bad; you are being offered things, things that you want, and you are literally taking them into your hands to throw them away.  You do this with him, all the time.  Or really, you used to, when you had the chance to do this. 

You are so used to the patterns of pain, and destruction, that when something opposes those patterns, you reject it immediately, like a food you cannot digest.  You spit on it and destroy it, because you don’t know what to do with it, because you don’t know what it is, what it means, and you are deeply, deeply afraid of it.  You are fearing the wrong things. 

You don’t even have a lot of feeling with your prayers, so it seems that they are not quite coming along like you’d like. 

“Jess, you can stay longer, you know; you don’t have to leave just because the rain has stopped.” 

“Oh, okay…but I have to…I have to wake up at five, I don’t know…I don’t know.  Hold on.”

You had a thought today that this would be the last time you’d ever see his apartment.  It was said in the same voice as when it said that you would see him that day, the day he was at the same sushi restaurant as you. 

You pray that it is not true, and, in fact, you reject it. 

You cannot quite believe that the storm is so bad that you actually ask him if you can stay at his place for a bit.  You wonder if the gods have set this up so that you would see that he actually does like you, that he is good, that you need to, literally, take a pause, rethink, and remember: "if the sky can crack, there must be some way back, to love, and only love."

And you say, ok. 

Now, you want to be the one selling his designs.  You wish you had taken him up on this, when you were at your worst, several months ago.  You wonder if your whole life is a test, and therefore, at what point are you going to get a right fucking answer?  When are you going to crack down, and understand the theorem, and fucking answer the question?

“What are your hours at work?”

“So, you think you’ll be moving into the city soon?”

“So, three months?”

         “Three months what?”

“Till you move to the city.”

         “Yeah, three, maybe four.  I think I want an apartment in Byron’s building.”

“In Byron’s?”

         “Yeah, they’ve got good spaces for cheap.”

“That’ll be explosive.” 

I think what is most telling about this last transaction is, I wanted the very thing that, if he had done, it would have been him, at his worst.

This could be good.  You could get back to it.  If you want it, you could get back to it.  It could be everything you want.  I know you refute this and you argue against it, but the truth is, you could have it.

He operates like no one you know.  You are trying to assess his English using a Chinese dictionary. 

It could be so easy.  You could love him, and you could just enjoy life, and ride your bike, and write books, and act, and make your money, and just be happy.  It actually is that easy.  You could just accept joy.  Just work hard, be normal about it, and do the things that you want, deep down, to do, but are afraid to do.  Maybe set up a challenge for yourself once a day; something you are afraid to do, that is a positive thing, something especially that you are afraid of, and don’t go to bed until you do it. 

You wish you could have the balls to say something like “I just don’t do the suburbs,” stick to it, because you have the strength of character to stick to things, like he does; where if he says he’ll do something, he does it; if he says he feels something, he means it. 

The lightening drives in at one spot, as if sticking in a knife, and twisting, and holding it there; you remember what it was like to be naked in this place; but now, he won’t even undress in front of you, and you are perplexed as to why.  And you realize, it’s because he doesn’t want to fuck with you.  This is to your benefit, because you are too wound up in him, or really, he in you. 

You think of what he accomplishes, and you are terrified at the idea of not attempting the same, of not striving for something, of not busting your ass to make a life for yourself. 

He has the coolest taste in music.  

Really, you just love every single thing about him.  

When the two of you started, it was impossible to be anything less than giddy, hovering around ecstasy whenever you were with him; he seems to conduct, as in, like a wire, electric happiness. 

But you are somewhere else, lately.  You are not walking with people.  You have chosen a different path.  One that permits you deep, deep, isolating grief.  You are walking in a valley with slate walls on either side and you know there is a stream of people beyond those walls but you disbelieve everything they say.  You know what you have done.  And no one is strong enough to convince you otherwise.

The rain has slowed.  It is no longer blowing sideways, like it was when you both ran across the street to stand under the awning of the ice cream shop, before you caught the cab that would drive you only one block up to his apartment.  

You know it is time to go, and it is the thing you want most, because this staying here, to be here with him, when he's offering, is almost more painful than you leaving. 

Your clothes are now dry; you had hung them over the edge of his bathtub.  You gather the things in the Whole Foods bag that you had come here for, the whole reason behind this meeting: a pyrex dish that you had left when you had brought him a cake you'd baked; a pack of sewing needles and thread that you intended to use to mend a shirt of his you'd torn; and boxing pads, that you brought one day when you sensed he could use a sparring partner.  

There is a loss when you walk out his door.  You can feel a vacuum created when it shuts, with no great ceremony, with no dramatic closure.  Only, the vacuum is not for him; it is in you.  There is a cavern inside you, there has been, since you began to end things, through your insecurity, your fear.  In the attempt to protect, they destroyed you further.  They saw an empty spot and they sensed he could fill it, and they sealed it off, only by protecting that hole, they made it bigger.  You don't even feel your body touch the ground as you move down the hall.  You don't feel anything, except loss.

You have been utterly ruined by the inability of everyone around you to, in fact, ground you, like a wire.  

You walk down the hallway to the elevator, and you remember the movie, and something from it that you once said to him. 

"As Ray Porter watches Mirabelle walk away, he feels a loss.  How is it possible, he thinks, to miss a woman whom he kept at a distance so that when she was gone, he would not miss her?  Only then does he realize how wanting part of her, and not all of her, had hurt them both, and how he cannot justify his actions except that, well, it was life."

Monday, May 25, 2009

You Can Charm Me Out of Pop But Not $40.

I'm walking towards the ENTER door at Jewel when I see a group of young guys leaning against the wall.  

"Hey miss, hold on a second!"

"What?  What do you need?" I say, turning, and kind of sighing cuz I know the homeslice making his way over is going to hit me up for money.

"Are you a nice and friendly person?" He asks.  He has a flaw on his lip and as he comes closer I can see it's a cut.  This guy just got into a fight recently.  
"No, no I'm not."
He blanches and seems to halt in space, mid-air in a leap, before he lands on his on his right foot and bounds over to me. 
"What's goin' on?" I ask him.  
"Hi, I'm just surveying people and - don't look at my lip, I see you looking at my lip!"
"I am looking at your lip, did you get in a fight?" 
He blinks hard and I got him. "Yeah, I did, everyone thinks this is like a cold sore or something but it's not."
"Well, did you hit the guy hard?  How's he doing?"
"Well, it was a friend of mine, but he's got this black eye and his lips are all busted up, but I walked away with this," as he points to his lip.
"Hey, good job man, I respect that," I say and reach for his hand.  We smack palms and pull away with snaps and he goes "Why, you fight?"
"No, but I box."
"Aw!  Lemme do that again" and reaches for my hand and we snap even harder, laughing.  I watch him reach towards me to handle my bicep as he says "Flex for me...hey, nice."
"Naw, this is shit, I haven't done much in awhile." 
"I'm Mike."
"I'm Jessica." 

Apparently, Mike is trying to sell magazines for a contest in his home state of Washington.  He kept pulling out a black leather bound agenda chocked with envelope-sized printed papers.  I know this, because Mike came in with me to shop for pop for my mom.  He told me he was participating in this contest to eventually pay for school.

He was a cute guy; a bit taller than me, in a crewneck DKNY sweater and baggy jeans.  He looked and moved like he could have been an extra in Step Up.  Or Step Up 2.  

We grabbed the pop and he said "let's sit down for a while, here's my office," and motioned to a display of a deck table and some chairs.   I reclined and listened to him tell me about how he had sustained an injury which depleted him of all his college scholarships for basketball.  So he'll eventually go to school to study physical therapy.  "Once you get injured, man, it's all over.  It's like nobody even wanted to talk  to me," he said about the schools that had courted him.  

Mike was a very charismatic individual, a great talker, intelligent, persistent, and he was very cute, and he seemed very honest, and I know that if we were to date, we would sure get along well and grocery shopping would be a lot of fun; I do the choosing, he'd do the lifting. 

But I don't fork out money to no one.  You've got to sleep with me to get that.   


My Destiny


Every time I come home eager to write, I feel like the Messiah is waiting to embrace me. 

It Is Written That It Is Still Unwritten



Diego and I went walking today and I found myself in familiar territory, in all sorts of ways.  

We tend to traverse the same streets, since, well, we live in a neighborhood.  

(It's a bit hard to write this, and I'm resistant to doing so, because of what it admits in me.)

So, we make a square by covering several blocks, and then Diego pulls me in the same direction...to walk the same square again.  

As we're walking, I'm kind of smirking, trying to play it off to the kids we passed...again...like "Heh heh!  I'm just following him!  I know we just saw you playing ball in the street.  How's it going....again?"  And it made me pause: did God lead me down this path again by utilizing my little dog?  And did I miss something that I was supposed to see the first time?  I look around me and examine the houses, the garages, the lawns, the trees and bushes, the front walks.  What did I overlook?   

Suddenly I remembered when I first came home from California about 14 months ago.  I was searching through boxes and boxes of old journals and keepsakes, reading things I recorded over a decade ago.  

Nothing had changed. 
Yes, I had hit a sort of apex in my life, going to school, moving out, and shacking up with someone I thought I was going to marry.  And then later, after all of that had either abandoned me or I'd abandoned it, moving to California, to be with someone I loved, and trying to make a fresh start.   But I've ended up back here, literally right where I began, and I'm still struggling with the same problems:  I fall for guys in the same way; I'm still feeling like I'm not living up to my potential; and I've found that, as of this year, after about a decade-long hiatus, I've got the same issues with friends.

When I read these things, and realized this a year ago, it freaked me out.  

But I've changed, over the last few weeks.  It's been somewhat immediate and somewhat a long time in the making.  It's been both all at once, and incremental.  I've done it by making small, different choices, in the simplest and seeming least-consequential moments, and forcing myself to think differently, to think dynamically, and proactively, but I've changed, and I know this.  I've come to accept certain things about myself that I've spent my whole life fighting.  I've come to realize and more importantly, embrace with two hands, elements of my nature that are beautiful, and special, and that I shouldn't try to change, even if I wanted to.   I've stopped fighting some things, and I've started fighting other things.   Basically, I'm finding it a better life to not resist: stop resisting doing the things I know I should be doing.  

I started to stop thinking that I need to be someone that I can never, ever be.  And it's a good thing.  A really good thing.  Nothing is quite so liberating as when you release yourself from an impossible demand, made impossible by nature.  Flowers can't be fish, no matter how much they try, and it's a better life for everyone that they don't try.  

I still have much to work on, but I look forward to the upcoming challenges, knowing now that there are two future worlds for me: the way I always used to do it, or the new way.  It's going to be uncomfortable, and a bit startling, and I can no longer afford to go on autopilot, but I look forward to all of this immensely.  I am piloting this ship and I can choose a different future for myself.  I am going to speak up.  If I don't want it, I am not going to go along with it.  I am not going to resist who I am, nor what I know is true and good, deep in  my heart.  This is my life, goddammit.   It is written that it is still unwritten. 

Diego and I carried along on our walk, making it towards the end of our second lap, and I found myself paused for a moment, on the sidewalk, as he sniffed around a tree.  I was standing there, rooted to the ground, like I was an oak, staring into nothing.  I wonder if I've ever stood so still in my life.  For a moment, I was literally the center of gravity.  Nothing on me nor about me moved even a millimeter.  

Finally, Diego pulled out of the range of the leash and me as a tree came to an end.  

We walked towards my house and I felt the lightest rain on my skin.  The sky has been a muted white-gray all day, and the sun was nowhere specific but had been diffused everywhere.  It was no longer a round star; it was now a round shell of white gray, covering us.  It was nowhere, and yet, everywhere. 


Saturday, May 23, 2009

You're a Celebrity. So, Gimme Your Playlist.


Jessica Cakuls's Playlist
Release Date: May 23, 2009
Total:  23 songs 
$29.67 

Jessica Cakuls currently sells bridal gowns to the tri-state area's most discerning clientele.  She can be seen in syndication on "Watching Meta Cook...and Then Eating It," "Yes, That Is a Pancake I Pulled Out of My Purse," " How to Eat Five Breakfasts on a Table for Four," and "Obsessive Painting: The Formative Years."   If you are lucky enough to catch her in the flesh, she is probably out walking her dog, and you will probably see her with her face lifted to the sky, staring at a leaf on a tree.  She will one day be a financially independent individual; how she does this is yet to be revealed to her.  She believes in love, she once thought she was Jesus Christ when she didn't sleep for two weeks straight, and to her, everything sparkles.  Literally.  

"Scythian Empires," Andrew Bird.  "Really, this whole album is just remarkable.  It was so hard to choose one track, but 'Scythian Empires' and its lyrics - 'kings of Macedonia' - reminds me of Alexander the Great, whom I'm obsessed with.  This album was playing when I first hooked up with a very dynamic guy I fell in love with, and I will always remember being in his apartment, and the blue light caused by the night's falling snow, as we kissed.  It was heaven.  I also did my first painting as an adult to this album.  Incidentally, I cannot break up a song from this album into another playlist.  To me, the album is heard in it's entirety, or not at all.  It's utterly sacred to me.  Andrew Bird, you rule!  I'll follow you anywhere." 

"Sunday Smile," Beirut.  "Again, another album which, in it's entirety, I consider to be perfection.  This is the song that drew me in, but I heard about the band from Evangeline Lilly's playlist.  I was haunted by the 30 seconds I heard.   This album has seen me through from the most carefree of afternoons, walking my dog, to crying my heart out, in the dark of night, thinking of all the things I no longer have, and the people I've done wrong.  Utterly life-changing, and so simple in how it does it." 

"Sweet Thing," Van Morrisson.  "This song is simply perfect."

"Little Star," Madonna.  "Such a different type of song for her, a lullaby, actually.  I think of it as a song to the person I know I am, the invaluable jewel, the little star that was created in love: 'may the angels protect you, and sadness forget you, little star...'  I lost a man I had loved about a year ago, and he didn't really like Madonna's music, but he absolutely loved this song, and because of him, I looked at it with new eyes.  Amazing, what another person reveals to you."

"Last Goodbye," Jeff Buckley.  "I can remember, as an insomniacal high-schooler, being awake at about 2 am one morning, and this clip of new music from then-unknown artists came on MTV, and this was a featured song.  I had to stay awake to wait to see the whole video, and it was a song that played in my head for literally weeks on end and definitely was all I could think about all that next day in class.  I was obsessed with him, and I thought that I would meet Jeff Buckley before he became really famous, which I knew he would,  and tell him how much I loved his music, and that he would fall in love with me."

"Lonely Girl," Pink.  "This song is such an anthem for me.  Starts off with uncertainty, and then she uses the same lines in the chorus to shout out her strength and defiance at the end: 'I'm just trying to make all my dreams come true....'  It's amazing, and in one song, I see for myself the journey I know I will take as a person.  Thank you, Pink!  Your grit and your angst are the hottest and finest we've got from a woman in pop today."

"Read My Mind," The Killers.   "There’s something about their guitar licks and their lyrics, to me they are on the verge of a U2-like stardom.  They have an amazing ability to be completely and even painfully honest, but there’s a hopefulness about it all that cannot be denied.  When it comes down to it, they really just make me feel so good, and so alive, and reinvigorated.  Rocking out to this tune makes me feel so inspired and alive and energized that I feel like I could fly.  I want to jump all over furniture when it plays."  

"One Tree Hill,"  U2.  "An over-looked, absolute gem off of 'Joshua Tree,' another amazing album.  Utterly impossible to choose just one from their entire repertoire.  I think they're the greatest rock band, unparalleled.  They gave dignity to rock and roll music.  You could no longer call it 'The Devil's Music' when they came onto the scene.  Any song by U2 tends to be so gripping, so emotionally intense  for me, I actually need to prepare myself before listening to them, because they're just too much.  They hit a raw nerve that I allow to be struck only every so often."

"Paper Planes," M.I.A.  "I can be fairly 'in the cave', in terms of pop culture.  When I heard this song roll out during 'Slumdog Millionaire,' I was floored, by the visuals onscreen, and by this sound: so intense, so gritty, and so totally inspiring to me.  I was utterly a changed person when I heard it.   And I feel like the biggest bad-ass whenever I hear it.   A friend of mine made up a dance to it and one of my fondest memories, ever, was when she casually performed it, at work one day.  This song resonates through my cells."

"Smooth Criminal," Michael Jackson.  "Say what you want about his recent legal problems and accusations, but this man put the 80's over his knee and spanked it, and it walked away with glitter on its ass from his glove, and we all loved him for it.   No one had better moves, no one had better production, and no one will forget his 'Thriller' album cover.  I think every current pop artist who doesn't use an electric guitar owes a lot, a lot a lot to MJ as an influence.  This song energizes me in such a way... all I want to do is dance - VICIOUSLY - when I hear it." 

"Trouble," Cat Stevens.  "This song plays in the first 'Alias' episode, when she's telling Danny about joining SD-6.  It's such a heart-wrenching song.   I knew I'd heard it before, but it's forever tied to those images, and that sadness for her character, whom I'm obsessed with - I love spy chicks.  When I'm feeling frightened or sad, this is the song I instinctively start humming, without even realizing." 

"Hey You," Madonna.  "She's the Queen, and she out-Beatled the Beatles with this one.  It's totally the opposite of everything she's done, and I think it's utterly her most inspiring, most spiritually evolved song.  It cuts me right to the grain, so I can only hear it every so often. When I first heard it, which was by watching the video, I broke down in tears and cried, literally, for hours on end.  Heartbreaking, inspiring, beautiful, hopeful, and just divine....like her!"

"The Twist," Chubby Checker.  "Probably the most classic of oldies tunes.  It puts me in a good mood immediately.  How can you not be?  The Twist is like the first dance move every single person does as a toddler!  Go Chubby C. for coining the move and making one of the happiest songs ever created.  Pure joy."

"Light My Fire," The Doors.  "My dad was the music guru in our family.  I was listening to the Doors, Carole King, Simon and Garfunkel and Cat Stevens since I've had memory.  This was always my favorite, and I'm forever grateful to my pops for introducing me to music in such an unconventional, fun, and psychedelic way.  Go dad!" 

"Girl From the North Country," Bob Dylan.   "This song kills me.  I forever associate it with the older brother of my best friend from junior high, whom I absolutely loved and adored and who I wish I still spoke to....The nostalgia of it, the heartbreak of it, the wistfulness, the bittersweet hope that Dylan clings to...it's archetypal."

"Michaelangelo," Emmy Lou Harris.  "Off of her 'Red Dirt Girl' disc, this is my favorite song of hers, which is a very difficult statement to make, because she's an amazing voice, an amazing song-writer, and she got Bruce Springsteen and Dave Matthews to do back-up vocals for her.  This woman don't play.  She's a legend in country music and for good cause.  She will split your heart right open with her voice and her lyrics and you will come crawling, begging, crying for more, it's that good." 

"Lola," The Kinks.  "The first time I did karaoke, this was my song.  It always puts me in a good mood and it invigorates me like the first shot of Jameson for the evening.  Plus, the embracing of youthful trans-gender love in a big city?  Hello!  Way ahead of their time, these guys.  They rock hard and they do it with so, so much fun, you know you want to sing and dance along."

"The Zephyr Song," The Red Hot Chilli Peppers.  "I imagine my dog, Diego, running around in the sand, while the sun is setting, on a beach in southern California.  I'm going to get him there someday soon, and when he's scampering around wildly, his floppy ears flying in the breeze, in front of a radiant pink-orange sunset, this song will be playing, and life is going to be utterly, divinely, perfect."

"Rainbow Connection," Kermit the Frog.  "Um, hello!!  This is the sweetest, most innocent song ever!  'Who said that every wish, would be heard and answered, when wished on the morning star?  Somebody thought of it, and someone believed it, and look what it's done so far....'  Who else but Kermie could take metaphysics and noetics and sugar it up for the Playskool crowd?  Jim Henson is a genius, as his influence still remains to this day."

"I Believe (When I Fall In Love it Will Be Forever)," Stevie Wonder.  "I heard this in 'Hi-Fidelity,' and, well, fell in love with it.  It made me believe in love again, in the possibility of it, in the existence of it, for me, and that it will be everything I want, and that God will answer my prayers.  Stevie can make you believe in anything."

"All the Umbrellas in London," The Magnetic Fields.  "This song kills me.  I don't know how they did it, but they managed to make an utterly sweet and sad ballad inspire me, and make me feel hopeful.  And the lyrics are TT: 'cause I've got a sense of perfection, and nothing makes much sense at all....' " 

"Chicago," Sufjan Stevens.  "I first heard this during a road trip to NYC.   The lyrics are amazing, because even if you haven't sold your clothes to the state, or slept in parking lots, when you hear them, you know know this guy is still describing your life.  It pushed me over the edge and I broke down in tears.  Again, another tune that is utterly brilliant in it's ability to both make me cry and yet inspire me fully.  At times I feel like he wrote it about me, and that I'm going to do something really amazing for mankind, and this song will be sung about me." 

"It's the Hard-Knock Life," 'Annie' Soundtrack.   "When I was little, I wanted to be Annie.  I wore a dress that was pink but I called it my 'Annie' dress, and I even wanted her dirty Depression-era clothes, and of course her fabulous wardrobe once she moves in with Daddy Warbucks.  I just wanted her life!  I thought I was Annie.   This soundtrack to the motion picture always, always lifts my spirits and reminds me of being a kid." 


So, fellow celebrities who are not quite as famous as you one day will be!  Let me know what you listen to and why, and why you think others should listen to it, too.  I want to know what's on your mind and on your Ipod.   Music is a gift and should be shared.