Jul 27

He estado out of the loop por algunas semanas ya. No he visto a mi madre en dos semanas y no he hablado con mi padre en el mismo tiempo. La mayoría del tiempo lo he pasado enconada en mi casa, en un estado de estupor entre dormida y despierta, con un dolor de espalda que probablemente trae el nombre “Colchón Viejo” tallado en su origen, celebrando a media potencia cumpleaños y aniversarios…

Una de las razones para este comportamiento de hibernación en pleno verano es La Monografía. La Monografía, que me ha venido quitando el sueño desde principios de semestre, cuando (a mí nada más) se me ocurrió transar con la profesora: a cambio del primer examen parcial, mejor hago una monografía. Sonaba a “¡excelente idea, Diana Campo!”, especialmente porque quería ir acostumbrándome nuevamente a ese tipo de tarea académica para cuando me empiece el martirio de la maestría (ya falta poco, falta muy poco).

Lo que no me esperaba era la infatuación (rayando en adoración)  que iba a desarrollarse con la profesora: su nivel de conocimiento y erudición, especialmente acerca del tema que había escogido para la monografía, era intimidante. ¿A quién rayos se le ocurre ponerse a hablarle a la prof. Luce Lopez-Baralt acerca de Don Quijote?

A esta guanaja que está aquí.

Tras mi mamá haberme pagado (tan generosamente)  un cursillo de 10 horas contacto acerca del Quijote – con la propia profesora, en la Academia Puertorriqueña de la Lengua Española, – yo estaba cada vez menos y menos segura de mí misma. De lo que estaba segura era de que no había NADA que yo pudiera decir del Quijote que Luce no hubiese escuchado ya como 300 veces… ni aún cuando se trataba de un paralelo entre Don Quijote y The Neverending Story.

Yep! Pasar un verano torturándome con lecturas obligadas: best summer evah!

Esa ansiedad se convirtió en una fuerza paralizante: no importa cuánto leía o dejaba de leer, no me sentí apropiada en ningún momento. Ni James Parr, ni Ruth El-Saffar ni Jorge Luis Borges me ayudaron a sentirme en mayor confianza con el tema. La extensión del semestre por la huelga tampoco hizo mucho por mi bienestar emocional: tenía más tiempo pero, en vez de escribir o leer, era más tiempo para atormentarme con la tarea que me esperaba.

Lo que me sacudió fue mucho más pueril: un sueño. Mejor dicho: una pesadilla. Sin entrar en los detalles más absurdos de lo que vi, Luce me tenía reunida para hablar acerca de la monografía y comenzó a hacerme preguntas acerca de lo que yo pensaba acerca del Quijote. En resumen, la Luce de mi sueño estaba negándome la dualidad maravillosa de la locura de Don Quijote, cosa que me parecía absurda porque Luce es la primera en quedar deleitada con los juegos mágicos que Cervantes se gasta en su mejor novela.

...también había un cojonal de dulces y helado en el sueño, pero eso no viene al caso.

En fin, con ese sueño quedé asegurada de que lo que sabía del Quijote, lo sabía bien. Y me puse a escribir.

Y lo comparto con mis lectores porque no es justo que no actualice mi blog en una eternidad y luego no tenga nada que mostrar como resultado:

Monografia_DianaMCampo

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May 24
Lostie Prom Night
Posted by Diana in animals, fiction, life, scifi, tv on 05 24th, 2010| icon31 Comment »

Prom never felt so right. Last night was the long-awaited Lost series finale. After years of Tuesday get-togethers at Pepe’s house, this would be the last official TV-crew gathering. Every Tuesday for the last few years we’d get together, bring popcorn, cupcakes, wine, beer, whiskey, chips, etc, and have a geek-out feast. We also did this for Battlestar Galactica and Heroes, but these series are long finished and gone (or have been horribly malformed! Sorry, Heroes!). Lost is the last of its kind, so this one finale brings with it a taste of sadness and nostalgia… much like prom, you’re saying good-bye to Lostie classmates.

So a number of friends, slightly more than the ordinary TV-crew, agreed to meet up for the last time at Pepe’s house. And, like we do in cases in which some of us are traveling from more or less the same area, a few of these friends decided to meet up at my house first so we could carpool to Pepe’s. This is where the fun starts.

First we had Cecilia (one of Eze’s coworkers, charming as a button) come to our house in dire need of a shower. She’s been camping out at the Río Piedras campus during the strike, so she had no cell phone to call us up and let us know she was there, so she proceeded to climb the condo’s fence and then call out Eze’s name like a madwoman. In the process she got a tear in her lovely sundress, and as soon as she came up laughing her head off (she was slightly drunk), I knew it was going to be an epic night.

We carpooled there: Cecilia, Lynnie, Josian, Katiuska, Eze & I, and when we got there, the house was already full! (as I used to say to my sister on those Saturdays of yore: “Caaaasa llena!”) We arrived with more than an hour to spare, so we did what we always do when there’s a lull or pause in our TV-watching activities: we ate and we drank, we sat outside to talk shit and smoke, etc… And then I see Ceci come out from the kitchen juggling three plastic cups full to the brim, and she offers me two (one for me, one for Lynnie). I think *Hey, that looks like a handful, I should help her out and grab those two in her left hand* … always follow your hunches. I went to grab one and the second one cascaded on me.

Let's tint those clothes red!

Oh, the contents? Calimocho: a delicious mix of Coca Cola and wine. Thankfully, the top I was wearing was red. Not so lucky that my pants were a beige-y tone of gray: now I had a map of burgundy continents down my legs. I walked in and headed to the bathroom, where I tried a few on-the-spot solutions for the wine stains: commercial spot removers, hand sanitizer, and ultimately took my pants off and washed them off with Ivory.  Suffice it to say, I spent the rest of the night wearing wet pants.

The Lost finale in itself: there’s not much I can say that hasn’t been said. The event has been a mediatic carnival: people have either loved or hated what happened there. The one thing that I can say without being biased: the series was 6 full years of buildup on a fan-base that was as hardcore as they get. People obsessed over the tiniest little details, and read into every single line uttered in that show. I think it would’ve been unreasonable to expect EVERY viewer to love the finale. So many expectations were on the line with those last 2.5 hours, that some of those had to fall through. Some people felt it was a cop-out (memories of likewise comments about BSG’s finale come to me). I think it was an unconventional happy ending in a time in which morbid cynicism is the expected norm, and that took guts. Lost shall be missed, to some extent as the compelling story we grew to love and obsess about, and then as the easy motive to gather around each week as a family to watch a narrative that gave us topics to pore over for hours and hours.

…however, why the FUCK can’t dogs go to heaven!? C’mon, Damon & Lindeloff! What gives!

Vincent, we will miss you!

Vincent, we will miss you!

He’s probably hanging out with BSG’s Jake in a place way cooler than the island or Jack’s heaven.

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