tumblr page counter
The Author

Schmutzie is a writer and designer who has been blogging at Schmutzie.com since 2003. She is also the founder of Ninjamatics, Grace in Small Things, and the Canadian Weblog Awards. Read more »
contact Schmutzie follow by RSS and email Twitter Facebook Flickr StumbleUpon YouTube LinkedIn
Follow by email:
Sponsors



A fabulous selection of dresses at dressale.com

Business cards are free at Vistaprint.com
On the Twitters
Link to Schmutzie.com
Copy and paste the code below:

Schmutzie.com

<a href="http://www.schmutzie.com" title="Schmutzie.com"><img src="http://tinyurl.com/schmutzie-button" alt="Schmutzie.com" /></a>
Schmutzie Elsewhere
Founder, administrator,
designer, and blogger:
Ninjamatics
2011 Canadian Weblog Awards
Grace in Small Things

Contributing writer:
Aiming Low
BlogHer

Board member:


Other stuff:
Top Canadian Blogs - Top Blogs

Friday
Feb172012

Five Star Friday's 181st Edition Is Brought to You By Quentin Crisp



"Five Star Friday's 181st Edition Is Brought to You By Quentin Crisp":
This week's Five Star Friday is brought to you by a photograph of a mother and daughter, plumbing problems, finding a community, a suicide, bullying as affection, trauma, the death of a parent, weight prejudice, nostalgia, love, learning that you are enough, fat kinship in hot yoga, meeting an idol, and Quentin Crisp...
Wednesday
Feb152012

Me at Aiming Low: How He Met My Parents

a moustachioed man flaunts it

"How He Met My Parents":
I guess what's meant to be is meant to be, whether or not, by all outside appearances, it should have been a complete and epic failure.
Wednesday
Feb152012

Valentine's Day, Simmer, and Hot Pot Food Comas

Yesterday was Valentine's Day, in case the entire world didn't notify you, and so the Palinode took me out to a local restaurant's opening night.

Simmer 1

Simmer, Regina's newest spot, is a Chinese hot pot restaurant, which means they bring you platters of fresh meat and vegetables, which you then cook yourself in a small pot of boiling broth right at your table.

Simmer 15

We ate pickled radishes and cloves of garlic and cinnamon dinner rolls:

Simmer 6

Simmer 7

Yum.

Simmer 8

I liked how they took the opportunity to sell us the flowers right off the table:

Simmer 9

Simmer 14

And then we ate ALL of this, which seemed perfectly reasonable in the moment:

Simmer 11

Simmer 12

Simmer 13

And then we went home and slipped into hot pot comas, because on your tenth Valentine's Day together, it is perfectly acceptable to eat gross amounts of food, waddle home discussing your burgeoning food babies, and then pile through the entire first season of It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia.

Sexy times can happen later when we've regained the ability to see our own knees.

Burp.

----------------------------

PS. This is not an ad for Simmer, although I would advertise them, because they are local, their food is fresh and healthy, and the owner is one of those people who'll know your name and what you like the second time you go there, so, if you're in Regina, go!
Monday
Feb132012

Ageism, Gender Norms, and Rocking the Short Hair

I got this weird idea in my head that, because I'm turning forty this year, this would be my last chance to grow my hair out, which is pretty stupid.

hair's up for clipping

It turns out that I have all of these presuppositions about life after forty that I don't really notice I have until I base actual life decisions on them, and then I realize that I am dangerously close to turning into that person who sells all her flashy jewellery and any clothing with an ounce of cheer in it because it's her fortieth birthday and she has to accept that it's her old lady times now.

I decided that I had to TAKE A STAND against my own ageism, as though this were some kind of revolutionary power struggle against an oppressive political regime, and I secretly chose to let my hair grown out. I felt vert boot stompy, very 1990s riot grrrl about the matter (if that riot grrrl could see the adoption of 1950s' gender norms as rebellion, that is).

So, after my last haircut in late November, which left it at just under an inch long — I've been cutting my own hair with clippers for years now — I left it to grow. I imagined it growing down around my face and whisping under my chin. I imagined how it would feel to tuck it behind my ears again, or how it might look kind of poetic and tortured as it fell across my eyes while I worked furiously over a hard piece of writing.

What I didn't imagine was how slow the process was going to be. Two months into my experiment with hair growth, it barely covered the tops of my ears, and one side seemed to have grown almost a half inch longer than the other side, and my cowlicks along my hairline were sticking out in tufts like baby ducks on the back of my neck.

The other thing I should have known would happen is that I got a creeping sense I was verging on drag, again. When I was a kid, I truly believed that I would grow up into a man, so when I threw a towel over my head to simulate long hair and belted out Diana Ross songs, I was dressing in drag, and I loved it, but as I grew older and family and friends worked to impose the adoption of feminine accoutrements upon me — I had to suffer through many sessions that involved having my hair curled to "soften" my appearance and being taught how to apply eyeshadow just so — it became a different kind of drag. The first was a gender bent laugh riot, but the second was a true misinterpretation of who I actually was. Makeshift wigs were fun, but being soldier-marched into gender conformity based on my genital structure was heartbreaking.

I admit to wearing eyeliner and mascara on a regular basis now, and I love a pair of heeled boots and a bright scarf, but I do gender on my own terms, mixing it all in with men's flannel shirts and jeans and letting my body hair grow as long and as thick as and where it will.

Somehow, though, longer hair feels like too much. It is somehow the line that, when crossed, tips me over into feeling like I did at fifteen when my mother paid her hairdressser to give my hair a "feminine softness" with toxic perms and texturizing shears. As soon as that hair creeps down around my ears, it feels like a deep and shameful lie is being committed. I'm that kid in 1988 again who can't reveal the truth that lies in the great grey areas of her heart.

time for a shearing

So, because I was rebelling against the ludicrous idea that no one can grow their hair after forty, I was growing my hair out, never mind the fact that I'm not actually forty yet, and then I ran headlong into my heart's battle with cultural gender norms. It's not surprising that this wasn't working out for me so well. No one wants to listen to a person whine about how long her hair is when it's barely over two inches, so I got with my previously successful program and sat down with my clippers a few days ago, snapped on the 7/8ths-of-an-inch attachment, and returned myself to my beautiful, nearly brush-cutted former self.

I realized that this was not about turning forty, and this was not about confronting gender norms. This was about, once again, accepting my own sense of beauty on my own terms, because really? How much sense does it make to go through the awkward process of growing one's hair out and to perform an uncomfortable level of female drag for over a year just because I'm going to be forty in ten-and-a-half months? It makes no sense at all.

Plus? I really do rock the short hair.

----------------------------

PS. I'm up for a 2012 Bloggie, for which there is voting to be done. Ahem.
Saturday
Feb112012

Unplugging the Cork

Shanan at Atlantis 7

Listen to Daniel Johnston's "Don't Let the Sun Go Down On Your Grievances":


I sat in the bathtub for a long time today. I did it for a long time yesterday, too.

I don't know what to do with my hands. I build a website. I do the laundry. I pet a cat. I crochet a scarf. I take a photo. My hands are moving, moving, moving, but it doesn't feel like they are doing anything.

This is going to sound more desperate or more sad than I intend.

I haven't been writing much, and when I do, my heart isn't there. I want it to be, and I have a lot of words in my brain, but I am disconnected from heart to head, from head to hands.

This is February. I know it is coming every year, and every year it lands in my lap, at once heavy and so light it might not even be there, and I am surprised at how much it feels like I can't touch anything, not really, how much it seems like all of life travels through this hollow tube.

I wasn't going to write about this. I wasn't going to tell anyone about it. I was just going to keep on keepin' on until March or April or May or whenever the hell this gets better and the words came back to me, but it hurts worse to sit here wordless, so I am letting this out in the hope that it unplugs the cork. That works sometimes.

I have been doing that thing where I compare my baseless woe to everyone's woes that have perfectly firm bases. That person has cancer, that person is getting divorced, that person has to put down their dog. It is as though part of me thinks I won't hurt anymore if I knock the hurt down in size relative to objectively greater pains.

I am one person. I only have one set of eyes, and they only look out of this one head, and it is February, and I am having the thirty-sixth terrible February in a row out of my thirty-nine years. Fuck objectivity.

There. I'm uncorked.