either/or

I spent a good few hours yesterday reading foundational theory for the Gender & Sexuality class that I’m taking this semester. A common theme among the assigned articles was the breaking down of false dichotomies like woman/man, female/male, gay/straight, etc. This is a concept that feels very intuitive to me. When I first came across the formal idea years ago, it was less of an “aha!” moment and more of an “of course” one.

Mutual exclusivity, generally, has never sat well with me. I’ve said this here before: I am a lover of intersections, of cross-roads. The places where things meet and intertwine excite me and, in many ways, I enjoy the murkiness that presents itself when things are less Black/White and more one big pile of messy gray. As well, I simply don’t think most things can be pulled apart that easily. Different people, ideas, cultures exist alongside one another simultaneously, and often spill over and drip onto each other. We can try to compartmentalize and separate them, but it’s not a simple chore.

I wonder, too, if it’s necessary. To be elementary about it, can’t we all walk and chew gum at the same time? I often think many things at the same time, and I would venture to guess that you do, too. (“Sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast,” said the Queen.) We all have ideas about things that bump up against our ideas about other things. Sometimes we contradict ourselves, sometimes we sound like hypocrites. Human beings, and the ideas and objects we produce, are multi-faceted and diverse. That’s one of the reasons that I like being one so damn much. We have a lot going on, and not all of it makes sense or fits together easily.

For Christmas, my Mom gave me a Kindle. I love it! It’s fun and exciting and convenient and clever. A couple of days later, I stopped by a bookstore to pick up a book that a friend suggested I read. Since then I’ve gone back and forth between reading books on my e-reader and reading the kind that require you to turn pages. The experience of each is different, yet far more alike than not. When we dichotomize concepts (or physical objects), we set them apart from one another. Each thing is the opposite of the other, the absence of the other. If a book is on paper, it is not electronic, and vice versa. But that idea does not often hold up in real life. I can both enjoy my Kindle and my hard copies – each has its place in my life and aside from their obvious physical differences, you can’t separate them neatly. They’re both books, after all, just different versions of one other. Saying a paper book written with ink is distinct from an electronic book denies the very real fact of electronic paper and electronic ink. The separation between the two is gray (as is their individual value).

Then again, if you’ll allow me to walk and chew in real-time, it’s also entirely necessary to pull things apart, to look at different pieces, figure out how the cogs work individually. We have to analyze the parts in order to make sense of the whole. When looking at sexuality, for instance, we have to understand how the categories of Gay and Straight function in order to make sense of anything in between or outside. In some ways, the compartmentalization of ideas allows us to broaden our definitions of them. The only way we can call a dichotomy false is if we understand that there are parts that don’t fit within its boundaries.

So where does that leave us? We need to compartmentalize to make sense of a thing, but we can’t compartmentalize most things entirely. We have to look both at the tiny pieces to understand the whole, and the whole to understand the pieces, often at the same time.  There are overlaps and underlaps and circularlaps and… now I’m just making up words. Messy, indeed.

turn the page

In my hall closet, there are two large boxes of books, published mostly during the 1800′s and early 1900′s. I got them through a very generous friend, who found no use for them himself. Although I’ve had them for a few months now, I haven’t yet made the time to go through them thoroughly to see what treasures may lie inside. Not literal treasures, mind you – the treasures of a story, of a journey, of a lifetime, or many.

I am a bibliophile. My favorite possessions are my books, and I’ve got quite a lot of them. In equal measure are ones I have read and ones I haven’t. I find both categories equally important. One of my goals in life is to have a proper library in my home – floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, a ridiculously efficient cataloging system, and a comfy couch and chair to enjoy them in. Probably well-worn leather. Probably brown. With throw blankets and footstools. There will be soft yet bright lighting, and a cup of coffee or tea that always stays hot and never runs dry. Time will stand still, I’ll never need to sleep, my eyes will never tire or cross. I’ll just read, and read, and read.

Hey, it’s a fantasy, right?

One of my favorite smells is that of an old book. A few years ago I had the joy of travelling to Ireland with some friends. During our trip we visited the Trinity College Old Library in Dublin, which holds 200,000 of the school’s oldest books, as well as the Book of Kells. The whole experience was incredible, but what sticks with me the most was the smell. “Old Book Smell” has been described as dusty and paper-like, grassy and acidic, and everything in between. Apparently there are a plethora of different scents that go into making that one particular aroma. To me, it smells like comfort. It smells like every person that has ever smiled at you one the street, every shoulder you’ve ever cried on, every couch you’ve ever relaxed into after a long day. It smells like the feeling you get when a chapter of your life has ended, and you look back and know that everything was exactly as it should have been, good and bad.

It smells like a story, a journey, a lifetime.

The advent of the e-reader has me thinking a lot about books lately. I don’t own one myself, although I have played with them a time or two. Being the geek that I am, I think they’re pretty neat. There are a lot of properties of and possibilities for the e-reader that I think are invaluable. They are lightweight, which makes them far easier to hold for long periods than a heavy hardcover. There are large text and read-aloud functions for those with poor eyesight. Having all of your books in one device means not having to lug around many at once, which is especially great for those with back pain. Being able to download books online instead of having to go to the store means people who are home-bound or in rural areas have access to reading material they may not otherwise have gotten easily. I could write a whole post on why the e-reader is an amazing addition to our world.

However. What excites me the most about the boxes of books in my hall closet is not the books themselves, but what lies within them. The inscriptions from one friend to another, the memos and grocery lists used as bookmarks, the notes in the margins and underlines of the text. The one- and two-hundred years of history they have seen. The lives of those who read them and whose presence lingers in the pages.

The smell.

And as much as I think the e-reader is invaluable, and important, and incredible, the only smell it has is plastic. Yes, you can underline and highlight and make notes, but there will never be a handwritten love letter tucked quietly between the pages. You will never open an e-reader and have a person’s history fall out, or be able to tell how well it was loved by the creases in its spine. As much as the actual writing of a book is important to me, even more important is what you discover when you read between the lines. There may be books in those boxes that I will never actually read, but that I will keep because the people that had them before me are evident in their pages. There are pieces of us that stay alive inside of the things that we cherish, and when you take a deep breathe and inhale the aroma of an old book, you can feel those pieces come to life once more.

Pieces of a story, of a journey, of a lifetime, or many.

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