Crooked Fool: Grandma’s Secret Basement Art Show

My grandmother was an interesting woman. A Trump, conflict, and Pee Wee Herman-hating, family and church-loving, obsessive picture taking, quilting and crafting former teacher, she was perpetually baffled that the two L’s in “tortilla” made a Y sound, and saw all of my shows twice. There’s a lot I could say. But this isn’t actually about her.

It’s about all the random shit she left behind.

Currently, in an old, crappy townhouse I share with two roommates, I have a number of small crafts with a little paint signature that reads “Sharon,” followed by a year. There’s a painting of Holly Hobby, an old children’s character my mom used to love; a ceramic smiley-faced pumpkin; and a series of random fruits painted on various wooden wall decorations. There’s also a full-sized, handmade quilt hanging in my bedroom, originally gifted to her good friend Lynette. Decades later, she would three-way call me while I was trying to order a bagel, giddy and laughing with her old friend, to tell me that the old quilt would be sent to me in short order.

And then there were the pictures. Somehow, I got volunteered to make a slideshow for her funeral, and my mom insisted that we go through every single picture she had. There were Rubbermaid tubs full of them. She had filled several of those cardboard filing boxes. And then, when we thought we were done, somebody opened the closet in her study, revealing stacks more. And none of that included the ones she had taken after she got a smartphone. Then, of course, the church had a strict policy against slideshows at funerals (???????), so we played it before the service and I ran around the church hassling everyone to go in early and view the 130 slides.

Grandpa sold the house not long after she died, leaving a mess of clutter to sift through. Both at the house and the storage unit after, I pulled the most random old crafts out of boxes and bins. Even with the entire family going through things, I’m sure some got thrown out. And I honestly couldn’t have kept everything if I wanted to.

But I’m still glad she made them. And I’m glad she kept them. The point of it all wasn’t to end up in some fancy art show or to sell stuff on Etsy as a side hustle. It was just to create beauty where she could. To make the things she wanted to make. Seeing the weird nonsense she made when she was bored in the 70’s speaks to her humanity: the person she was and how she inhabited the world.

And even if every last craft had been thrown away, I would still have been glad that she made them. Just like I’m glad when a small town theatre company puts on a show or a local band plays at my favorite bar.

And especially as someone working in the arts and facing the ever-present pressure to gain recognition and make my mark in an ever-more competitive market, it’s helpful to remember that the value in her creations is not that they made money or made her famous. It’s that she made the things she wanted to make because she could. She declared without words what she saw as beautiful. She proclaimed her divinity and her humanity. And for that reason, I hope that someday whoever I leave behind will see evidence of the things I created with my own hands, body, and voice while I was here, even if they weren’t funded, and even if no critic will ever praise them. It’s not all about getting famous or being recognized in a thousand years. It’s about our human right and need to create.

Even if we are nobody for the rest of our lives and die forgotten, we can still have our say.

Crooked Fool: Dance it Crooked

Meander, twist

Dancing around

No lines, no limits, all angle

Twisting, turning

Like the branches of a tree

Like an ancient river

And yet somehow this is wrong

Every day

Stretching away pain

Exploding power into muscles

Insisting.

And trying to remember that the enemy isn’t my body

It’s the expectation that if you can’t do things one way

You shouldn’t do them at all

Insisting

On movement

Because it heals

And I don’t have to do it standing “straight”

Breath expanding

Crushed against ribs

Heart pounding more than it should

Feeling deeply into each muscle

Because crooked things can be beautiful

But take a bit of searching

Breathe

Sharp exhale

Dizzy

Lightheaded

Still moving

Insisting

For me

Dance

In a spiral

In a twist

Roll

Leap

You’re not made of glass

Don’t let them tell you so

This dance is resistance

Against the idea that only certain kinds of bodies can do it “right”

That some bodies should only exist in breakable inaction

Noiselessness

Cooperation

Convenience

Move

Dance

Spine

Breath

Because you were not meant to be shackled into stillness

The Bursley Pirate Ship: FLOOD EDITION

PIRATE SHIP FACT: Even medieval pirate ships had drainage systems to disperse the effects of ship flooding (the Middle Ages started around 476 A. D. for reference).

I started this blog with a metaphor. I did not mean to manifest the symbolism.

Last Thursday marked Bursley Hall’s brief run as the Ann Arbor Kalahari. After a pipe broke on the fifth floor of Sanford House, the four floors below became aquatic as well, with over half of each hall experiencing flooding from under their doors and walls. The building was evacuated at around 1 AM while campus officers dealt with the damage.

I was sitting the CLC when the fire alarm went off. This is terrible to publish publicly, but I was quite ready to sit out the alarm. It’s a testament to my lack of self preservation, but the chance that the smoke isn’t just from someone microwaving their popcorn for forty-five minutes is very slim at this point. Thankfully, someone with much better senses burst into the CLC and yelled “there’s BLACK WATER filling the hallway we gotta go right-“

Even I got that cue.

We quickly grabbed our belongings (because I’d rather drown than tell my parents I need a new computer) and headed towards Baits. As my friends and I passed Bursley on our walk, the steam we saw on the windows was cruel foreshadowing.

I remember laughing in Baits with everyone about how we should go do laps, a hall toilet was revolting, etc. Baits filled with confused Bursley kids till 1:30 am. While looking for positives, the Bursley residents looked around and found hope in the statement “at least we don’t live here.”

The second statement that was fueling me was “well it can’t be my hall.” Then my friend got a text from a source near the building.

We ran back to Bursley, swiped in probably twenty times cause the card reader was feeling needy, and ran to my roommate and I’s dorm. I looked across the floor and girls were already dumping their wet items into the hall. There was a pool of water at the center of the floor that everyone was hopping over like it was their 9 to 5, exhausted faces all around. The girls on my floor were already over it, and it had just begun.

After clearing out our belongings

I threw my door open to find the entire back flooded. Our fridge was swimming in a couple inches of water while the microwave and coffee machine were getting showered by the water pouring in from the window. Thankfully, I am surrounded by people who are way too nice who helped my roommate and I sort through our drenched belongings.

When I tucked myself into my friend’s couch (which was actually really comfortable), it was around 4 am. We later learned that a pipe broke on the fifth floor when two boys were playing football, and accidentally hit a sprinkler. Either Tom Brady reenrolled and got housed here to study musical theatre at the drama center, or Bursley is the only building in history with paper piping. Not only do we live in the woods, but now we live near the lake.

They offered us temporary housing in Stockwell, which I believe is one of the nicest dorms on campus. So from our perspective it’s like our decaying cabin in the woods got destroyed, but then the landlord for our cabin decided to give us keys to their penthouse, only to snatch it away in about a week. This is a university sponsored space so I do want to mention (for nuance) that yes yes, this is an accidental and isolated situation. I’ll ponder this more from the Qdoba in the West Quad basement.

At least this album cover came out of it.

Bursakopia

From the Sanford House lazy river while sipping dining hall apple juice on a flamingo floaty,

Captain Singh

Bursley Buccaneer: Sahithy “Solo” Prattipati

PIRATE SHIP FACT: To help them stay awake during longer trips, some pirates would drink coffee for its stimulating effects.

Saturday, November 9th – 8:47 p.m.

On Saturday nights, when as many in-state kids as possible have fled Bursley to their homes, the Community Learning Center (CLC) is eerily empty. A few of us were scattered between the couches, which is where Sahithy and I began yapping.

I told her to “tell me a story. Literally any story.” Getting content for this blog requires some desperate hail Marys for anecdotes. In that moment, I wonder how Sahithy (a friend I made in the first couple weeks on campus) felt when I cornered her during her study session looking for content. Thankfully, she lended me some of her time, and told me about her solo trip visit to India. I asked her for three major moments, not necessarily world shaking, but personal to her. She focused in on Goa, India.

A Debatable Brush With Death

On their drive to visit the mountains in Goa, Sahithy’s family loaded her into their car and drove up through the famous slopes. Not only was the incline dangerously steep, but water Sahithy described as almost “two feet high” barreled towards the car on their journey upwards. While she was pondering her near demise, the rest of her family was completely chill and assured her the conditions were normal. By the end, she wasn’t sure who was crazy.

The Hidden Falls

Throughout the mountains, there were humongous waterfalls that made her feel minuscule in comparison. Not only were they mind meltingly large, but they were located in hidden coves across the summit.

The Window Seat

Sahithy assured me that the entire trip was relatively relaxed, other than the reverse slip-and-slide up the mountain. However, before she discussed any of the moments above, she told me about the last event chronologically: the flight back. Usually the window seat is a win, but when you’re alone, anyone you could imagine could end up next to you. In her case, two six-foot tall men were passed out snoring to her right, for eleven plus hours. That meant that if she wanted to go to the bathroom, she would end up destabilizing two already uncomfortable people, who were packed in chairs with barely enough leg room for us small Indian women.

When she’s not battling mountain currents, Sahithy studies Business here at Michigan. Her story is inspiring to those who have never solo traveled, and terrifying if you are someone who uses the bathroom twice an hour on a plane (speaking generally, of course).

Still from the CLC,

Captain Singh