Round green shapes of varying sizes glow against the black background. The text reads, "Immersive."

Immersive #17: Mind Map

Creator’s Note: We use mind maps to draw out hierarchical relations, clarifying relations developed within the networks of the mind. These help us draw connections between related and unrelated topics to better visualize how everything comes together in the larger picture. In our own lives, we create hierarchies in who and what we connect the most with, which ultimately affects how we shape our identities. As a result, through this week’s graphic, we explore this web of relationships and analyze the sources where we base our identity upon. Hope you all enjoy.

Art Biz with Liz: Holiday Crafts

Throughout finals season, my inbox has become inundated with news about wellness events. Arts and craft sessions often fill up quickly, and with a busy schedule I decided to take up my own art projects.

While I’m sad at how quickly the school year has flown by, I’m looking forward to a break. I’m also looking forward to the holiday season! If you’ve kept up with my content, you know I love arts and crafts. For Christmas this year, my housemate and I decorated stockings for our friend group. Stuffed with candy and other goodies, the stockings looked great adorned in glitter glue. I also enjoyed making handmade ornaments. The snowflake ornaments still need ribbon, but the only materials required for these—besides the wooden base—were white paint, glitter glue, and sharpie. Handmade ornaments are a wonderful craft to give as a gift because of how unique, collectible, and personalized they are. They are more than decorations for a Christmas tree, as they capture meaning and memories. I messed up these last two, but the process was fun, and the recipients enjoyed them.

Making holiday crafts is a fun activity for people of all ages to enjoy. For college students, it could be something done as a break from finals or something to look forward to. Plus, it’s a great activity to do with friends in cozy pajamas. What are you waiting for? Turn up the holiday music, make yourself some cocoa or cocktails, and get to crafting!

The Queerness of Horror

Horror movies aren’t exactly well known for their loving depictions of queer people, especially trans women. And yet so much of horror has inspired drag culture and is influenced by queer culture. The inventor of the science fiction genre, Mary Shelley, was likely bisexual, and one of the earliest vampire novels “Carmilla” was an overtly sapphic story. The Bride of Frankenstein featured Dr. Septimus Pretorious, who was very noticeably gay and played by queer actor Ernest Thesiger. The forgotten sequel to Dracula, Dracula’s Daughter, is all about a lesbian vampire who seduced female victims in a very sexual way. 

Clearly, the horror genre has its roots in some very queer soil. And modern (or more modern) horror movies were not exactly subtle with their queer-coding and homoerotic undercurrents. 1985’s A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge could literally be the most gruesome and horrific queer romance of Freddy Krueger and Jesse. Jennifer’s Body, a cult classic, features the bisexual Jennifer Check murdering men and being the gay awakening of so many bi and lesbian women for years to come. 1991’s The Silence of the Lambs of course features Buffalo Bill dissecting women and using their bodies to make a “woman suit” when he is denied sex reassignment surgery. Of course, associating trans women with being gruesome murderers isn’t exactly good representation and overall becomes very dangerous for trans people. But it just illustrates how essential queerness has been to horror for years.

More modern horror movies include slightly less horrible queer representation, such as It Chapter 2 and the new trilogy Fear Street on Netflix. But the inspirations from the older classics clearly make themselves known in drag culture especially. Look no further than the last two seasons of Drag Race, which featured a Freddy Krueger-inspired look from Crystal Methyd (season 12) and a Pinhead from Hellraiser-inspired finale gown courtesy of Gottmik (season 13). Or consider season 4 of Dragula, which had their first challenge of the season as reimagining a horror icon (and featured such icons as Other Mother, the Bride of Frankenstein, and that big marshmallow from the ending of Ghostbusters). Horror movies drew inherently from queerness and drag, and today, queer culture and drag draw so many of their inspirations from those same horror movies.

For myself, this past Halloween I bought far too many little tacks and spent several hours gluing them onto my face to create my own Pinhead-inspired look. As someone who leans more into the horror genre of drag and has a bald head regularly, it only seemed appropriate to finally create a homage to one of the most iconic horror characters.

 

TOLAROIDS: Saying goodbye to fall

I think that after all the snowfall we got recently we can confidently say that fall is officially over. As we are in this period of awkward transition between fall in winter when all the colorful leaves are gone but it’s still not cold enough for snow to stay on the ground, I’ve decided to post a little tribute to the Arb in colors and specifically my first ever walk there this semester. Enjoy and, well, happy finals week, I hope the happy bright colors make it a bit better 🙂

 

 

If you have any questions, comments, or just want to chat you can find me at @akilian.jpg on Instagram or at akilian@umich.edu 🙂

The Rise of the Band Geeks, Episode 9: The Cymbal Reserves According to Hal

As university students are swallowed up by impending finals and writer’s block, one marching band freshman wastes his time by compiling exhaustive profiles of all seven cymbal reserves…*

  1. Hugh Beckham Aport (freshman).  The first Hugh on the cymbal line when everyone’s last name is an alphabetical order, though he goes by his middle name, Beckham.  Undeclared, but says he wants to study either chemical or mechanical engineering depending on how much the pre-rec courses destroy his will to live.  Claims to love chameleons, but he mixed up a picture of a chameleon with that of an iguana, so we have our doubts.
  2. Marcin Budzinski (sophomore).  Computer Science (CS) major.  Lives in Detroit and speaks fluent Polish.  Only joined band this year after not opting to do it online last year because “My computer is where I code and play games, not cymbals.”  Bit of a snarky boi who doesn’t like chicken nuggets.
  3. Amos Frankiewicz (freshman).  Prospective CS major.  Currently getting a C in EECS 183 (which he always complains about).  That’s about it.
  4. Franklin Franklin (freshman).  Not really sure what this dude wants to study, but I do know he’s obsessed with these stuffed octopi that can be reversed between a happy and a sad/angry face.  He currently has upwards of 10 of them and frequently brings them to practice during the regular season.  For some reason, he talks about himself in the third person with a dramatic voice.  Rumor has it his middle name is also Franklin.
  5. Hugh Addison “Hal” Lubanski (freshman).  Prospective CS major (again).  Is without a doubt, the coolest, most impassioned, and most dedicated football fan in the cymbal section and possibly the MMB, the only exception being the Fearless Leader of the band.  Proponent of the most requested dining hall tater tots.
  6. Millicent Polaco (sophomore).  Another CS major.  Likes to dye her hair and listen to depressing punk music (but not Mr. Brightside).  Usually irritated by the awesomeness of people in the section like Hal.  Hates stuffed octopi for some ungodly reason.  Probably practices witchcraft in her spare time.
  7. Maren Thomas (freshman).  Undeclared freshman in College of Engineering.  Hopes to study aerospace.  Is one of those people who likes physics and does calculus for fun.

The author of this compendium did not do anything stupid in compiling this list.**

 

*This is 100,000% fictional.

**Not entirely true.  He wrote this list when he should have been studying.***

***As did I.

Happy studying!  May you get As on all your final exams and projects!

Scribble #9: Support System

“I don’t need a support system,”

It’s easy for me to get caught up in schoolwork. Personally, it’s one of my favorite places to be, completely engrossed in the essay that I am writing or the exam that I am studying for. Learning is something that I have always loved to do, and finals week puts my commitment to learning into overdrive. Unfortunately, during weeks like last week and this one, my fascination turns to reclusion.

“Put your hand on my heart and listen.”

The more time I spend away from people, the less time I want to spend with people, including my most beloved friends. I get used to my cycle of entering that special place of focus in my brain and sitting with one task for hours at a time to the point that any sort of social interaction is exhausting just to think about.

“What I need is a dedication to last me all the way through.”

The truth is that I rely on my friends when I am doing well, so I shouldn’t stop relying on them just because I feel overwhelmed. Like Liz Phair sings in Support System, support from loved ones should not stop when things get difficult. Especially during exam weeks, when nearly everyone is experiencing increased stress, there’s nothing wrong with reaching out and telling my friends that it’s been a crazy week for me as long as I take their mental well-being into account as well. In my experience, my friends are usually happy to know that I feel comfortable being honest about how I’ve been feeling and relieved to know that they are able to commiserate with me about the stress of wrapping up the semester, too.

“Pointing the finger, I’m counting on loving you.”

Staying up far later than I should have talking with friends last night might have made me more tired than usual today, but it also reminded me that I’m not alone. Just because I isolated myself to focus for a few days does not mean my support system is gone. Letting them know how I feel is important, too. It’s nothing personal against my friends, I just get caught up in my own world sometimes which leads to my own self-isolation. Telling my friends about this – and telling them that I miss them – is always a helpful step in our relationships. 

“Over and above the passion, I’m connected to you.”

Even though it’s an ongoing process for me to stop guilting myself for resting when there is still work to be done, taking breaks is necessary and healthy. Just because I don’t see my friends as often during busy and overwhelming weeks does not mean that we don’t still love each other, and I need to remember that when I once again have more time to socialize. My restorative experiences with my friends this week have been a healthy reminder that, for me, there are things – and people – that are just as important as (if not more important than) my essays and exams. 

Listen to Support System here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2SoouRP1X8