Showing posts with label Harry Potter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harry Potter. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Captain's Log, Day 30: Update on the State of the World

 

 Date: February 24, 2021

Time of post: 10:01 PM

Quarantine Day: 336

Last Song I Listened To: "Shape of You (Stormzy Remix)" by Ed Sheeran

Last Person I Communicated With: Sent Meg a Facebook message

Last Thing I Ate: tacos and Diet Coke

Last Thing I Read: The Ravens by Kass Morgan & Danielle Paige

Current Mood: *excited*

One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: graded some homework assignments, sent several tedious emails

One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: help Mom tidy up a little

One Reason I’m Stressed Today: lots of student emails about things I've definitely already explained

One Reason I’m Happy Today: Yesterday I got accepted to the (virtual) 2021 PCA/ACA Conference! I was going to go last year, but it was cancelled due to COVID. I’ll finally be presenting my Taylor Swift driving paper.

 

Dear Apocalypsers,

This is another interlude post, just to catch us all up on everything that’s happened in 2021 so far. It’s been a year already. So, to my grandchildren, when you read this, don’t repeat some of the language you see here but please know that Grandma was on the right side of history.

On January 6, literal domestic terrorists in the form of a MAGA mob broke into the fucking Capitol building and made it to the Senate floor—while Congress was in session. Thankfully, Congress was able to evacuate before the floor was breached, and they were all safe. Personally, I think Hawley (Missouri), Tuberville (Alabama), Cruz (Texas), and the rest of the Republicans (at this point, yes, all of them, because they should have denounced their party a long-ass time ago) should have just hung out with their constituents in the hallways. Those sorry excuses for human beings broke into Nancy Pelosi’s office (she’s the Speaker of the House). They were actively looking for Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Ortez. They wanted her dead. There’s a picture of an AssHat (what I will be calling the terrorists throughout this paragraph) pictured holding zip ties, like they were going to take hostages. As many people on Twitter pointed out, we ere *this close* to seeing executions live on national television.


And what did our sorry fucking excuse for a president do??? Trump just sat there. Literally! Some outlets said he was paralyzed; others basically insinuated that he was just fascinated like he was watching a TV show.

Fuck Trump. Fuck the Republican Congresspeople who egged it on. Fuck the individuals who partook in it. It’s fucking disgusting. I hope every last one of them burns in their own personal hell.

Oh, look, AssHat with zip ties. They were going to abduct people. It was so scary. [photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images]

And why did they do this, you might be asking? Because they were opposing the ratification of Joe Biden as President—because Trump fucking told them to. There were so many tweets about them planning this goddamn raid—and no one did a damn thing about it. Some of the fucking cops just let the mob waltz in and took selfies with them. (See why we need to defund, reallocate, and restructure the entire police force?)

I’d like to say I’m surprised. But I’m not. Trump has been inciting violence for years. It makes complete sense that it boiled over to this.



I was at Jennie’s apartment when it happened. We were writing an article on Taylor Swift those few days, and we just kept refreshing Twitter and watching the news. It was so surreal—and as more and more information came out about Trump and certain Congresspeople’s involvement, it just got worse. You don’t think about how you’ll react to an attempted coup. No matter how many times you’ve read or seen The Hunger Games, you probably won’t act that way when you’re faced with it. But it did feel like I was in the Districts watching an attack on the Capitol…but, in this case, the Capitol was actually trying to fix things. So we just sat with baited breath and watched—watched as the National Guard wasn’t called in; watched as Eugene Goodman led an angry mob away from the door where Congress was meeting; watched fucking terrorists with face paint and horns and Confederate flags scale walls and parade through the Capitol building.

And then it was over.

But can a country ever come back from a Presidentially-sanctioned coup? I don’t know. I don’t think so. Not completely. I guess we’ll see.

A rioter takes the Confederate flag into the Capitol building...which didn't even happen during the Civil War. [photo by Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA/EFE]


I guess there was one positive thing worth highlighting for posterity: the kids. Once again, Gen Z has proven that they really don’t mind shutting down Trump’s fascism using social media. I may have mentioned how the K-Pop stans bought all the tickets to a Trump rally and then didn’t go, and this has the same energy. The childrenof MAGA rioters were identifying their parents from pictures and reporting them to the police and FBI. It was pretty incredible (and hilarious) to watch. And I think, years from now, we’ll realize how brave that was.

For one thing, it’s so hard to break from what you’re brought up with. Having social media and the Internet from such a young age does make it easier to be exposed to new ideas, and I’m sure that’s part of it. I also think that hatred is taught, so if these kids were seeing other stories online, it would be easier to ignore their parents’ bigotry. There’s also a lot more discourse about “just because they’re your parents doesn’t mean you owe them anything or that you have to love them”—which really flies in the face of what Boomers and Gen X were taught and then taught us (for the most part).

So all these little things definitely could have helped. But at the end of the day, these teenagers on TikTok and Twitter put themselves in risky situations to report their parents because it was the right thing to do. We don’t know what backlash they faced at home or from their extended families or from their communities. But they still did it. And that just kind of reinforces what all those dystopian YA books taught me: that young people are cool as hell, and that, given the chance, they’ll step up.

In related news (since it’s what the domestic terrorists were “protesting”), Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were sworn in as President and Vice President on January 20, 2021. I was honestly a little worried that something would happen at the Inauguration, but it seemed to have gone smoothly. They also sent a lot of National Guard to D.C., so that probably deterred some protests. Mom’s-coworker-Jill’s youngest song, Caden, was in D.C. with a few Alabama National Guard units, so that brought it all home a little. There are tons of pictures that went around showing what the Capitol Building looked like on the 6th vs. the 20th, and it was really sobering to see. But there was also a lot of hope. Like maybe things will get better under this new presidency. They have to.

The Capitol building on January 6th vs.


the Capitol building on January 20th during Biden's Inauguration


The highlight of the Inauguration, though, was Amanda Gorman. She was named the first ever National Youth Poet Laureate in 2017, and she stole the show. Which, like, I’m grateful that everyone got to see the power of literature in action on such a vulnerable day, but I was also a little surprised that people almost…weren’t seemingly aware of the magic of a good poetry reading.



 Even my dad—who has to live with me for goodness sakes!—was like, “Oh, wow, that was good!” And my cynical self can only think, “Yes, breaking news for 2021: poets are good public speakers. Shocking!” Gorman read the poem “The Hill We Climb,” and it really was incredible and poignant and the perfect balance of things we needed to hear—and I kind of expected it. I know so many incredibly talented poets by trade—Jacque, Winniebell, Mawi—and incredible hobbyist poets; I know why poetry matters. I know it can change people, and I know it can speak to people when other words fail. So I was very happy (to see Amanda Gorman, a young Black woman, have so much impact on a national scale) and very frustrated (to have it further confirmed that the Arts are not widely available and taught to students in ever field).

Insert "forever my First Lady" here
Other Inauguration highlights included Michelle Obama’s outfit, 






comparisons between Lady Gaga’s outfit and The Hunger Games (which is where this blog started, so that’s pretty apt), 

Truly  incredible. A fashion icon.











and, of course, Bernie Sanders using a meme of him to raise $1.8million for charity.

Truly, no one was safe from the Bernie memes. 
Here he is with the Golden Girls, looking cozy and
unbothered.


In other “good-but-harrowing” news—of which there is far too much these days—the whole Cline Clan has had their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. We were vaccinated on Thursday, February 11th at the Jacksonville Community Center. The actual process of getting vaccinated that day went fine. It was mostly smooth, no major problems—it was everything leading up to that point that was terrifying and terrible.

The week of February 1st, “they” (FEMA, Calhoun County, the State of Alabama???—I really don’t know, but it was circulating on Facebook) announced educators would be eligible for the next round of COVID vaccines and that Jacksonville Community Center would be added as a vaccination site one for 2 days. From what I understand—and, again, it was a mess, so information was not disseminated well—there were 1000 vaccines to give out each day…and we had to register online.

It was like the fucking Hunger Games. They used Eventbrite—yes, the same website you can buy concert tickets on—to give out “tickets.” (See side rant below.) The website went live at 7AM, and Mom, Dad, Eric, and I were each stationed at separate computers (me and Dad at home, Mom at work, and Eric at Wesley House dorm) refreshing the screen hoping that one of us would get in. (It reminded me a lot of my Sophomore year of college when Jennie, Bailey, Meg, and I all sat around to get a “good room” as soon as the housing website went up—but that seems so stupid in comparison to what was at stake here.)

Of all of us, Mom got in. And she called me. She sounded so scared, because she honestly didn’t know what to do once she got in and she was terrified that she wouldn’t be able to get us all tickets. So I tried to talk her through it without actually seeing her screen. In the meantime, though, I sat with Dad, who had managed to make it “into the queue” just in case something went wrong. (My computer, which was just in another room of our house, never did make it that far.)

The sign-up was weird. We needed to get 4 tickets, so we needed to sign up for 4 separate spots. The website would let us select up to 8 tickets at a time. At the time, Mom thought she would need to fill out the information for each ticket separately, and—this will stick with me forever—she started with Dad’s name. There were several minutes there where my mother—my big-hearted, sassy, impatient, loud, ridiculously strong and smart and giving mother—thought she was going to have to choose what order to get her family this vaccine, thinking that she might not be able to get all 4 forms filled out before all the spots were taken. And she put Dad’s name first—because he’s in his 60s, and he has diabetes, and he’s on kidney dialysis. And I like to think that anyone in my family would have done that, too, but I think it’s human nature to put your own name first when you’re under that kind of pressure. On one hand, it’s self-preservation, but, on the other, it’s a knee-jerk reaction. But Mom started with Dad. And I’ll probably cry every time I think about that for the rest of my life.

So that’s how Dad’s name ended up on all 4 of our tickets. At no point did Mom have to go back and put in different names. (Which makes sense because it’s Eventbrite. When I bought Jonas Brothers concert tickets, I bought all 5 tickets on my card, and everyone paid me back. No need to do them individually.) The whole “one name” thing did cause a bit of an issue when we went to get tickets, but the nice people running it reassured us that we weren’t the only people it happened to. It was an issue with the system (no shit).

After Dad got the confirmation email confirming “his” tickets, I was still on the phone with Mom. I remember saying “You did it, Mom. We’re in.” I remember looking at those tickets like they were gold, like I was Charlie-freaking-Bucket, and I was going to willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory. And, at this point, a vaccine is about as valuable.

I cried that day. And I felt guilty. K-State is teaching online. I don’t even teach in Alabama. I couldn’t help but feel like I was “taking” a vaccine from an elementary school teacher who is teaching in-person or a grandmother who’s been teaching for 50 years and is extra vulnerable. I’ve just always put others first (which I feel weird even saying), and this is honestly why I wouldn’t do well in a zombie apocalypse scenario. But I know that I need this vaccine just as much or more so than others. I will be going back to in-person teaching, and I do have an autoimmune disease (as much as I try to deny it). So I got it…and I tried not to feel too bad about it.

 (Here’s my side rant—it’s so fucking surreal to use Eventbrite. I understand that it’s probably a useful format, but no one changed any of the language. When we were waiting to get in, they told us that we were “in the queue for a popular event.” When we got the tickets, they said, “Congratulations! You’ve got tickets!” The whole thing felt like some twisted event that the Capitol would throw. It was sickening. Like, it still gives me shivers to think that this was being treated the same way as the Jonas Brothers concert was.)


As a palette cleanser, I’ll end with all my good-good news! Thankfully, there’s been some of that!


First, I’M PUBLISHED!!! I got the email in September, and I couldn’t really say anything about it until the end of January when the issue came out. But I’m published in the inaugural issue of The Journal of Fantasy and Fan Cultures. Adrianna Gordey actually sent me a link to the CFP back late last Spring because they were doing a special Harry Potter issue! Obviously, I knew that was meant for me, so I submitted the paper I wrote for Anne Phillips’ seminar class. Of course, not 2 week later, JKR went full-on TERF, and I thought I lost everything that made me special as a scholar. That set publication back some, as did COVID, but I was really pleased to see that they went through with it. It’s a small journal specifically for graduate students, but the topic was so fitting that I knew I wanted to be part of it. And it’s just the first of many, I’m sure.

In other Potter-related good news (which there isn’t much of these days), Phil nominated my Master’s Project for the ChLA Graduate Student Essay Award!! Needless to say, I was shocked. Someone from my cohort has won that award or been an honor recipient the last 2 years—Molly Burt was awarded an Honorable Mention for it our first year, and Dustin Vann won it last year—so that’s immediately what I thought about when Phil wanted to nominate me. Now, I should be thrilled, because that means he thinks my paper’s on par with the best Children’s Lit graduate work in the country and that my paper could even win it—and, like, Phil’s a big deal. He knows Children’s Lit—but I’m actually just kind of nervous about the “legacy” of K-State. Ebony Elizabeth Thomas once called us the “Avengers of Children’s Lit!” That’s just a little bit of pressure. But I made a lot of edits to my project, and I really like the finished product, so even if it doesn’t win, I’d like to pursue publication for it. I had Jamie Bienhoff (who graduated from K-State 2 years ahead of me) look at it, and she thought it was really good and accessible and relevant, so I’m excited about its potential. Obviously, I struggle with balancing confidence and expectations, and I don’t want to get my hopes up too much, but it would feel so good (and wildly surreal) to win that. I guess we’ll see.

Finally, still academic-related but not about Harry Potter, this week I got re-accepted to the Popular Culture Association (PCA) national conference! I was supposed to present last year when it was in Philadelphia, but it got COVID cancelled. Jacque, Noelle, Molly, Dustin, Mikayla, Lexi, Katherine Dubke, and I were all going to go and share an Air BnB and take a day trip to NYC. It was slated as our “last hurrah,” and I was so, so, so excited. I will never be over the fact that I should have had that experience by now. (I was going to see the Balto statue in Central Park!!! Like, that’s my DREAM!) And we were all going to present fun papers that weren’t related to our schoolwork, because we would all be done with our defenses by then. I was going to present a paper on driving allusions in Taylor Swift songs…and that’s exactly what I’m going to do this year!




PCA is virtual this year, so I’ll 100% get to present, and I’m so excited for that. As you may have heard, she’s also dropped 2 more albums since this time last year, so I have even more material to work with! This paper started when Mikayla and I were sitting on the floor of my spare room crafting and listening to T. Swift (as we do pretty regularly), and one of us said, “She’s never the one driving in her songs.” And I think it was me who then came up with the conspiracy that “maybe she can’t drive.” And then we just started spitballing back and forth about driving and when she drives and when she doesn’t drive—and that was before Lover dropped. Mikayla said something to the effect of, “If she drives on Lover [because it will be the first album she owns outright], you know you’ll have to write about it.” And then, lo and behold, in “I Think He Knows,” she says, “Lyrical smile, indigo eyes, hand on my thigh / We can follow the sparks, I’ll drive.” And, well, a promise is a promise.

 

So those are the highlights of 2021. I’ll see you tomorrow for a special, uber reflective birthday post.

Until then, may the odds be ever in our favor,

Katie

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 19: A Rug Gets Pulled from Under My Feet


Date: June 11, 2020
Time of post: 2:20 AM
Quarantine Day: 78
Last Song I Listened To: “Better” by Ben Platt
Last Person I Communicated With: GroupMe chat! (Talking about The Black Flamingo by Dean Atta)
Last Thing I Ate: chips and quseo
Last Thing I Read: I read song lyrics, does that count?
Current Mood: sad, scared
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: helped Mikayla and Tyler move their new mattress out of my apartment (they had it shipped to me while they were out of town)
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: again, feel less sad (a common goal)
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: the world is a dumpster fire (x2)
One Reason I’m Happy Today: Mikayla and Dustin came over last night and we talked and watched Pitch Perfect 3 and Ben Platt’s Radio City Music Hall performance

Dear Apocalypsers,

(Trigger Warning: This post discusses transphobia and J.K. Rowling’s recent statements. Also, I use a few choice words, so please pardon any harsh language.)

I know that this isn’t the most important thing right now, but I’m kind of feeling like my life is unraveling because of J.K. Rowling’s recent statements. I do not recommend reading her full post/essay that’s on her website. It’s super hard to get through. It’s not an apology. She’s trying to define “womanhood” based on her own experiences, and I know the Internet used to joke that she was “the queen,” but she sure as hell isn’t God, so I don’t know why she thinks she has the definitive say on what makes a “real” woman.

As anyone who knows me knows, Harry Potter has been a huge factor in my life. It has, quite literally, shaped who I am as a person. I read the second book when I was 7 (approximately 2003), because the library didn’t have the first one, but I knew my mom had read them, and I wanted to, too.

The books and movies were foundational to my childhood; they helped me form my morals. They taught me that love is more powerful than hate; they taught me that discrimination should not be tolerated; they taught me about friendship and loyalty and doing what’s right even if it means breaking some rules; they taught me that even those in authority can be corrupt and fallible. Every book, especially fantasy books, that I tried to read after Harry Potter fell flat. It wasn’t until my senior year of high school that I finished another fantasy series. I read all of Richelle Mead’s Vampire Academy books (including the Bloodlines spinoff) that spring, and I read Cassandra Clare’s The Mortal Instruments series and The Infernal Devices prequels that summer. (Side note: when my friend was trying to get me to read TMI and TID, she told me, “They’re my Harry Potter.” I’ve never forgotten that. In an instant, that explained how much those books meant to her.)

Harry Potter followed me into my academics. My senior year of high school, my AP Lit teacher told the class—but mostly me—that we only needed to write about works of “literary merit” on the AP exam, and Harry Potter wasn’t considered literary merit as of 2014. (To this day, I stand by my opinion that the third essay question was begging for me to write about Harry Potter. [Am I allowed to say what it was? They told us that it was a big “no-no” to talk about the essay question topics. Is there a statute of limitations on AP exam questions? You know what? Screw it. I’ll tell you. I already got a 5 on it and now have 2 college degrees in English. They can’t stop me.] The question basically said, “Write about a work where a character’s sacrifice shapes the narrative.” I could write a book on sacrifice in Harry Potter. Instead, I wrote about The Crucible, and kind of how John Proctor’s death [when he could have lived had he have just lied and confessed to witchcraft] was the culmination of themes in the play.) In undergrad, I didn’t have much opportunity to write about Harry Potter, but it made up a chunk of the paper that I used as my grad school writing sample. I was analyzing Shakespearean references in pop culture, and I talked about the parallels between the graveyard scene in Goblet of Fire and a scene in Macbeth. I wrote “Words are our most inexhaustible source of magic” on my undergrad graduation cap, because that’s what I’ve lived by since 2011. (I know it’s a movie quote; don’t hate me.)
The rest of this quote is, "...capable of both inflicting injury and remedying it." I feel like Rowling has proved the former this week.


But grad school—yeah, I was kind of the Harry Potter girl. Everyone knew. My statement of intent opened with a riff off of the opening of Sorcerer’s Stone: “Miss Katie Cline, of Jacksonville, Alabama, was proud to say that she was perfectly abnormal, thank you very much. She was the first person you’d expect to be involved in anything strange or magical, because that was just the kind of “nonsense” she held to.” I wrote my Master’s Project on the gendered relationship between cats and women in the series. I took an entire Harry Potter class (where I ended up writing the paper that formed about a third of my Master’s project). I wrote two other major papers on the series, one in my Intro to Grad Studies class and one in my Illustrations seminar. Every single one of my conference presentations (that haven’t been cancelled by COVID) have been about Harry Potter.


Me (center) last April at the Harry Potter-themed re-opening at The Dusty Bookshelf. (You can support them here if you want!)

But the things Rowling said are terrible. Now, I by no means think the series itself is perfect. I’m able to critique it and complicate it, but to see the disgusting things that creator said about transgender people breaks my heart, and it’s unacceptable. How fucking dare she say those things? Does she not realize what her books have done for people in the LGBTQ+ community? (I am not a member of this community, but I’ve seen posts from people sharing how Potter helped them.) Does she not care? Did her millions of dollars make her feel safe or make her forget her humanity? Or, worse, does she honestly believe these things?

Honestly, I have no love for J.K. Rowling anymore. I can’t, in good conscience, support her. Not when she clearly doesn’t support her readers (and, like, people in general). I used to be the teen on the Internet who sang her praises. I thought she could do no wrong. But I’ve grown, and I’m not as naΓ―ve, and I know that she is far, far from perfect—and that she’s getting farther away from it with every tweet, it seems. Still, it hurt a little when I unfollowed her on Twitter and when I altered my bio and when I changed my Facebook profile picture to a graduation picture that didn’t include a Potter book. I thought those books would be a constant that carried me through every low in life for my whole life.

Now, I’m not sure. They may be just a memory.

(Every other sentence out of my mouth is a Harry Potter reference. I really wanted to write, “The things we lose have a way of coming back to us, if not always in the way we expect,” but it doesn’t feel right to use her words when she can’t even live by them. Did she ever mean them?)

I guess everyone has to rebuild their life from scratch at least once. For my parents, that moment was the tornado that destroyed my childhood home in 2018. They had lived there for 23 years, and we lost a lot in that storm. I feel like this moment might be my first (and hopefully last, but I’m not that optimistic) moment to rebuild mine—but in a different way.

My friend Dustin, who watched me try not to cry while I tried to explain all this, is a saint. Honestly, one of the best people I’ve ever met. We live in the same apartment complex, so he brought me a White Claw and when I said, “I thought this [Harry Potter scholarship] was one thing I had figured out in my life, but…now….” with my voice cracking and tears in my eyes, he said, “I know a lot of your academic work has been about Harry Potter, but you don’t have to decide right this second what you’re going to do about it. But, if anyone could find a way to still write about it in a way that matters, it’s you.”


One of my M.A. graduation pictures with my Master's Project...which I wrote on Harry Potter.

Like I said, Dustin is a saint. Because, I’m not sure if that’s true. I’m a cishet (cisgender-heterosexual) white woman. I don’t know if I’m the person who needs to write about Rowling anymore—and I cried as I typed that, because that’s been what I’ve wanted to do for about 10 years now. But I don’t know if I have the voice or the angle that the world needs to hear. I can’t speak to the series from a queer, Black, or POC perspective. And, frankly, there’s already been a lot of feminist scholarship on the series already. I’m afraid that I’ve come around too late. And I’ll eventually be okay with that—right now it just hurts like hell knowing that this dream has been derailed for a while, if not forever. 

But I’ve loved reading these different perspectives so far. (I especially love Ebony Elizabeth Thomas’ discussions of Black Hermione in her book The Dark Fantastic (2019)!) And can’t wait to see the scholarship that comes out in the next few years that takes an explicitly queer and/or trans approach. I just feel like I might need to step back and let those people write from their perspectives. (I say that like anyone ever recognized me in the field, anyway. It’s not really stepping back as much as deciding not to take up that space.)

Right now—in the middle of a pandemic, political unrest, the Black Lives Matter movement, and just about 2 days after Rowling’s latest tweets went out—I don’t think I have it in me to say goodbye to Harry Potter completely, and I hope anyone who reads this can respect that I’m grappling with a lot inside me right now. I wholeheartedly disagree with her tweets and their message. Trans women are women. Trans men are men. Nonbinary identities (and all identities) are valid, and no one is entitled to more respect or humanity than anyone else. The books are just so much a part of me, as I’ve tried to explain. In a statement with The Trevor Project, Daniel Radcliffe wrote this:

“To all the people who now feel that their experience of the books has been tarnished or diminished, I am deeply sorry for the pain these comments have caused you. I really hope that you don’t entirely lose what was valuable in these stories to you. If these books taught you that love is the strongest force in the universe, capable of overcoming anything; if they taught you that strength is found in diversity, and that dogmatic ideas of pureness lead to the oppression of vulnerable groups; if you believe that a particular character is trans, nonbinary, or gender fluid, or that they are gay or bisexual; if you found anything in these stories that resonated with you and helped you at any time in your life — then that is between you and the book that you read, and it is sacred. And in my opinion nobody can touch that. It means to you what it means to you and I hope that these comments will not taint that too much.”

For me, at least, I can separate the books from the author. I completely understand if that’s not possible for everyone. (Trust me, I feel a little guilty and dirty, like I have to keep one of my biggest passions a secret now, because I can’t give it up cold turkey.) But I’d be lying if I said the books didn’t change my life. I honestly believe they made me a better person, a good enough person to see that Rowling is wrong.

I don’t know exactly how I’m going to go on from here. I don’t know what my academic career will be about. I guess I need a new series to become immersed in. (I’m taking suggestions.) Again, I know that this is the most trivial thing to be concerned with right now, with so much else going on. I contemplated even writing this, but, like I’ve said in other posts, writing this blog has been a way for me to cope with everything that’s happening, and I can’t ignore this. I can't leave these thoughts to fester in my head for any longer. My heart hurts too much already thinking about how this one chapter of my life has ended so forcibly and suddenly and painfully.

I’ll try to end this on as positive a note as possible.

There have been a lot of responses to Rowling’s tweet that have challenged her and flat-out disagreed with her and encouraged trans fans that they are valid and loved within the Potter community. Besides Daniels Radcliffe’s statement, Eddie Redmayne has issued a statement, and I’ve seen tweets from Emma Watson, Bonnie Wright, Evanna Lynch, and Katie Leung (hers is pretty cheeky, and as one tweet I saw said, "the most Ravenclaw thing"), and I’m sure I’ve missed some and that more will come. Other prominent Potter people, like the scholar Melissa Anelli and the band Harry and the Potters have critiqued Rowling’s tweets, too.






It’s nice to see that there are people who read the same books I did, who developed the same guiding principles, who see the value of all life and the beauty that transgender people bring to the fandom and the world,

I don’t have a nice, succinct “global statement” (like the aforementioned AP Lit teacher taught us to end our essays with). I’m not sure I’ve processed this enough for that. I need to cry some more.

So, until then, may the odds be ever in our favor,
Katie

Saturday, May 2, 2020

Captain's Log, Day 14: I Come Back


Date: May 2, 2020
Time of post: 7:35 AM
Quarantine Day: 48
Last Song I Listened To: “Don’t Let It Break YourHeart” by Louis Tomlinson
Last Person I Communicated With: Mikayla Sharpless
Last Thing I Ate: spaghetti earl gray tea
Last Thing I Read: The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline
Current Mood: emotionally loaded
One Thing I’ve Accomplished Today: I’m writing this at 6AM; I’ve literally done nothing; yesterday I did dishes and baked brownies
One Thing I Want To Accomplish Today: vacuum; read for fun; write
One Reason I’m Stressed Today: so many decisions need to be made soon; goodbyes are coming
One Reason I’m Happy Today: Last night I found out that I won the Graduate Student Service Award!


Dear Apocalypsers,

It’s been nearly two weeks since my last entry. I think I needed time to recharge. Everything has been emotionally draining lately. I guess I didn’t realize how much isolation was taking out of me until schoolwork started to pick up, and then I was dealing with all my internalized stress and exhaustion plus end-of-semester schoolwork.
Repping my Ravenclaw pride back in 2016 before the
Cursed Child release party. 
I’m a massive Harry Potter fan, so I relate a lot of my life to the books and characters. That’s how I know, very firmly, that I’m a Ravenclaw/Hufflepuff mix—a Ravenpuff, if you will. I’d be Sorted into Ravenclaw, though, because I really believe in those values for myself: wit, learning, creativity. Ravenclaws have a tendency for being perfectionists and bookworms and academics; they’re sometimes daydreamers; they’re usually creative in some way, and they’re usually pretty high achievers. That’s what I strive for in myself, but I have the heart of a Hufflepuff: loyalty and hard work and friendship and love and acceptance. Hufflepuffs love comfort food and keeping the peace and doing what’s right and making sure everyone is taken care of; they usually have a soft side and avoid conflict (unless it’s one of their loved ones being wronged). And that’s exactly what I try to put out into the universe.

My undergrad graduation photos even featured a
stack of
Potter books and my McGonagall wand! 
So my Hufflepuff heart hurts a lot right now. My Ravenclaw mind knew that quarantine would catch up with me eventually, and I think it finally did. That glass bowl shattered, and I did, too. Not that other people really noticed. Heck, I didn’t even really notice until the last 24 hours or so when I started to feel better. I definitely don’t feel great, but I know what I want to do to get back to a good place, and my inner-Ravenclaw loves being able to have a plan. If I have a plan, I can work with it. I can make it happen. 

I’ve been taking in a lot of creative projects over the last 12 days. I’ve been reading—books, blogs, fanfics—both for class and for fun. I’ve been listening to a lot of music (mostly Taylor Swift, but I’ve also branched out into some new-to-me artists like Maisie Peters), and I’ve been watching a lot of creative shows on streaming services. (Part of the reason I’m up right now is because I watched the first 5 episodes of Next in Fashion on Netflix.) Subconsciously, I was feeling so empty, so I think I needed to refuel with the things that bring me joy, and when I finally tried to fall asleep around 4AM, I felt the need to create, something I haven’t felt in weeks. That’s how I can tell that I’m getting into a better place. So I decide to write this post instead of tossing and turning in bed. At least this way I can check something off my list.

But I’d lying if I said I’ve been on a consistent, upward trajectory, because I haven’t. We’re all grieving right now, and grief isn’t a straight line, and, recently, I’ve been struggling with the prospect of my upcoming goodbyes.

I knew before I even moved to Kansas that I’d have to say goodbye sooner than I wanted to. I don’t think I’ve ever felt ready for a goodbye—not in high school, when I’d known some of my friends for over a decade; not in undergrad, when I’d known my closest friends for 4 years and had lived with them for 3—so I knew that 2 years wasn’t nearly enough time. I distinctly remember feeling like “it wasn’t worth it” to form close friends in grad school because we’d just go our separate ways and my heart would break.

I was very wrong…and very right.

It took me about a week to honestly decide that I loved my cohort, and I know now that I wouldn’t have made it this far in grad school without them. They have been my greatest support system, and I can’t thank them enough for all they’ve done for me. I don’t regret how fast and hard we fell for each other. But I was right that 2 years hasn’t been long enough and that my heart is already breaking.

This isn’t the ending we deserved.

But I’ve spent 24 years getting used to life’s vague disappointments. I should probably stop thinking perfect happily evers are possible, but my Hufflepuff heart just won’t accept that. I am an eternal optimist, and if I had to choose between this experience of COVD and heartbreak or never having met my cohort, I’d take our current timeline every single time.

There’s a quote in Cassandra Clare’s book Clockwork Princess (2013) that keeps me going through these times: "Every meeting led to a parting, and so it would as long as life was mortal. In every meeting, there was some of the sorrow of parting, but in every parting, there was some of the joy of meeting as well” (507). Winnie the Pooh says it differently: “How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.” (And this may not even be an A.A. Milne quote, but that’s not relevant right now; the sentiment behind it is.)

In short, I have loved being in Kansas. I’ve made a home here. I’ve found a family. And I would stay longer if I could so I could take it all in and spend more time appreciating what I have, but I don’t know if that’s going to be possible. I might have to go back to Alabama. Don’t get me wrong; I love my biological family so much, but I feel like my hand s being forced here, and I hate being forced into something I don’t want to do.


I'm more than a little proud of this family we've created here.
 Here's us at the 
Department Holiday Party, December 13, 2019. 

Even during one of the most stressful and pivotal times of my life, though, it’s not nearly as stressful as what apocalyptic YA protagonists face, so I guess I should take the silver lining where I can get it. But one thing that my personal life and YA books do tend to share is an emphasis on chosen family. I grew up 16 hours away from my parents’ families—they’re from the same small town in Pennsylvania—and I only saw my aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins once a year—maybe twice if I was lucky—so I made a lot of “family” in Alabama. It never really occurred to me that there was any difference between my parents’ best friends, my Uncle Frank and Aunt Elaine and Uncle Lon and Aunt Karen, and my parents’ siblings, Uncle Bob, Uncle Chuck, Aunt Nan, and Uncle Alan. We spent as much time with blood relatives as chosen ones, and they all loved me the same—so maybe I’m just predisposed to form lifelong bonds with people.

But we see Katniss do that, too. She and Peeta stay in touch with Annie even after Finnick dies and the war ends. They still talk to Haymitch. These are the people they went through literal hell with; that’s an unbreakable bond.

We see Jane and Katherine come together in Dread Nation, first as unwillingly allies and later as something near friendship (and that relationship continues to build into Deathless Divide, which I’m reading now). They protect each other; they help each other; they’re really starting to—gasp!—care about each other.

And then there’s Frenchie, in The Marrow Thieves. He starts referring to Miig, Minerva, Wab, Chi-Boy, Tree and Zheegwon, Slopper, and RiRi as family almost as soon as he meets them, and it’s a phrase that’s reiterated throughout the book.

I think all my emotions about grad school and chosen family are best summed up in two quotes from two of my favorite YA series:
  1.  "Family isn’t blood. It’s the people who love you. The people who have your back”—Cassandra Clare City of Heavenly Fire (2014), pg. 111
  2. “Time is making fools of us again” --J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2005) 


Reveling in the Dusty Bookshelf's Harry Potter-themed re-opening
 in April 
2019, this time wearing by Beauxbatons girl outfit. 

There’s so much uncertainty right now, and that’s always been the hardest thing for my Ravenclaw mind to deal with. I hate not knowing more than I hate almost anything else—except maybe the dentist. It’s so hard to imagine how this situation will all play out. I don’t know if having these YA books helps me—because I can empathize with the love the characters have for their chosen families—or scares me—because, you know, death and destruction and war and revolution.

I really want the odds to be in our favor…just this once.


Katie






Bibliography:

Clare, Cassandra. City of Heavenly Fire. Simon & Schuster, 2014.


                 Clockwork Princess. Simon & Schuster, 2013.


Collins, Suzanne. Mockingjay. Scholastic, 2012.


Dimaline, Cherie. The Marrow Thieves. Dancing Cat Books, 2017.


Ireland, Justina. Dread Nation. HarperCollins, 2018.


Rowling, J.K. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Scholastic, 2005.