Showing posts with label Poetics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetics. Show all posts

Thursday, May 29, 2014

6 things I know to be true at twenty-six

I hadn't planned on blogging aujourd'hui. But my parents bought me flowers before leaving yesterday, and I had an especially good slumber last night, and I awoke this morn to birthday wishes and gratified contentness in officially being "26 years young" today.
{La promenade plantée}
  1. "One isn't necessarily born with courage, but one is born with potential. Without courage, we cannot practice any other virtue with consistency. We can't be kind, true, merciful, generous, or honest."
  2. We are as small as we are significant.
  3. "Love recognizes no barriers. It jumps hurdles, leaps fences, penetrates walls to arrive at its destination full of hope."
  4. Take the awkward firsts and second chances and the limitless opportunities to live greater if not more.
  5. "We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty."
  6. "Hate, it has caused a lot of problems in the world, but has not solved one yet."
Please attribute all quotations above to the ever-inspiring, late Maya Angelou--world-renowned poet, author, activist, scholar.

Friday, April 18, 2014

the dreams that come true

{Auxerre, France}
He told me he wanted to sail a boat around the world,
He wanted to take me with him.
We'd explore faraway lands and love each other and live exceptionally,
simply.

I smiled warmly as I sat in front of the computer screen
1,230 miles away. Northeast.
Thank God for AIM
and the college prep summer program that brought us together.

I was entranced by his intelligence and sense of adventure,
by the way his opinions varied from my own,
by his accent, of course.
I wanted to live his dreams in all their vastness.

That was for eventually though.
For now, I had a boyfriend and a part-time job,
and we were only entertaining a someday idea;
no harm in that.

There was, of course,
I just didn't let myself realize it until later.
We never did sail around the world,
and we fell out of whatever love we thought we were in.

Nothing turned out
as we'd so naively planned.

It was never supposed to.

He chose planes over boats.
I accumulated more dreams of my own,
and have gone about living them.
Still inspired by memories of a high school romance.

Also inspired by the recent passing of Colombian novelist, Gabriel Garcíá Márquez, who'd "entwined tales of time, memory ... love".

Monday, March 17, 2014

having a coke with you

Last week, after another day of writing at the library, I met Rachael for a drink. She asked about the Pays Basque. Her friend joined the conversation as I recounted Leslie and I's experiences in Biarritz, Bayonne, San Sebastián, and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. The trip reminded her of a poem, her favorite. She told me to look up the video of Frank O'Hara reading it aloud when I got home. I did. And it is beyond lovely so I'd like to share it avec toi. Hope you enjoy it as much as we do :) happy, happy St. Patrick's Day!

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

language comes back to you

Being home was just as significant as predicted... but I couldn't have anticipated the 'peace of mind' it'd send me off with. Even still (to continue with the vague-ness), now I'm not sure about Paris. Gosh I hope I fit as well as I felt I had before. It'll probably take a bit of conscious practice; much like reviving ma français will. Anyhow, as I wrap my head around that (and fly across the Atlantic), I'd like to share a timely piece by Annelies, a talented cook and wordsmith whom I've had the pleasure of meeting multiple times:
Language comes back to you--it’s a truth universally known, but often forgotten. You can also pick up conversations where you began them with cities previously visited.

For some, Paris plays the part as “city of lights” with the romance tropes that we who hunger for meaning might find under any rock we upend so long as it’s in the Tuileries. I tend to think of Paris more as a place of awakening.


On my second trip to Paris and with only a handful of days to breathe in the aroma of freshly baked bread from the nearby boulangerie or to “lick the windows” while window-shopping, I set off on my own as a single woman traveler. The hotel had been procured for its prime location near the opera house and because Oscar Wilde had darkened its doors. I had been in a bit of a crisis and felt a trip to Paris would sort it all out. Then again, I am often in these crises when I haven’t been writing.


Stowed away in my carry-on, I toted a small book of poetry by Rilke, a journal, blank postcards and colored pencils that would be my prompts to get back into the process. During this season of life, I had become obsessed with trying to find my writing voice and tried to will it into realization. Of all the prompts I had packed, the one I knew would be most important was the city itself. So, I planned loose adventures leaving room for inspiration to strike and move my feet in whatever unexpected direction was necessary to spur the muse along.


As the sun began to set the first evening, I wandered over to the square by the Louvre and noshed on a still warm crepe sighing from the weight of nutella inside. Its crisp edges gave way to chewy middles- just what I had remembered from eating crepes in the South of France years before, but had not been nailed in America just yet. I wiped my mouth with a napkin and tossed the paper crepe wrapper in the rubbish bin as I set out for my second visit to the Louvre.


Traveling alone let me set the pace. So, when I had heard that the Louvre maintained evening hours on Fridays, I leapt at the chance to see the art in a new light literally. The Mona Lisa had been moved to her own quarters with a fuzzy brown guardrail keeping gawkers at arm’s length. I wondered what it might be like to be the grand dame of the museum or at least the one that like a siren, called forth the flocks of tourists. After a nod in her direction, I paused in front of the giant David painting of a raft of people that spanned the length of a city block. I had studied this painting in art history and remembered that in spite of the melee of bodies crushed onto the raft, no feet were visible, which the artist accomplished with deft skill.


From there, I moved onto the Flemish painters, my favorite section, apart from the incredible relics from Egypt. Here, I could find my favorite van Ruisdael with the sweeping sky and pastoral setting, even as several black birds dotted the sky, flying off toward darkening clouds in the distance. In another room, I tarried, as I always must, in front of Rembrandt’s “Bathsheba” whose hand is flung in desperation, holding a letter that has just informed her of her husband’s death. The emotion (Regret? Shame? Longing?) Rembrandt captured in her face and eyes has always bewitched me.


Crossing from one gallery to another, the sun began to outline the buildings as it began plunging into night. Armed with my slew of stories (No feet! Regret! Shame! Longing!) I eventually wound my way out of this beloved museum and by way through the corridor of mummies. (Another story to snip off and carry away).


I had mused that a visit to Paris alone might be terribly lonely, experiencing all of its sights, sounds and wonders. But this practice of observance, of drinking the city in by footsteps through one arrondissement to the next grounded me with ideas and the truth of my own existence that might spill over into character sketching at a café while sipping a noisette or colored pencil drawings for my memory to pore over years later. Sometimes, if we are honest with ourselves, we need the challenge of being alone with ourselves long enough to remember our voice has accompanied us all along.

Annelies Zijderveld hails from the Lone Star state, but has called San Francisco home for over a decade. Her work can be seen in Blind Pen Journal, Web del Sol, the Huffington Post, Arthouse America, and Sated Magazine among other publications. She is the associate editor of Poetry International, a journal dedicated to showcasing emerging and established voices from the international community. Alimentum Journal selected her food and poetry blog, The Food Poet, as one of their favorite food blogs in 2013. She taught a workshop in mixed media poetry at New England College in the summer of 2012, from which she has an MFA poetry degree. An exhibit of her food poetry displayed at the Abbey in Santa Cruz in 2013. Connect with her on twitter, facebook, pinterest or join the Google+ food poetry community.
Words by A. Zijderveld; Photo by D. Alvarez

Friday, September 20, 2013

designing a life

The title for this post was inspired by the fact that this is the last part of Catherine's impromptu visit to Paris and she's a textile designer. But the significance goes a little deeper than that because she left me the following note before she left for Brussels. (Lara and I are hoping to spend a weekend there soon, by the way!) Hopefully pretty pictures will keep you patient with my introspection.
danielle--
thank you so much for hosting me (as impromptu as it was) & showing me around your 'hood! I am continually impressed by your ability to make changes, adapt, and thrive. your sense of adventure, intellect, & independence are to be admired. I am so lucky to have you as a friend!! good luck with everything - you will do great - as you already are.
Love you & see you sometime soon!
Catherine
I came home last Monday to find those words waiting for me. First thought: I definitely have the best friends in the whole wide world. Second thought: I guess I should stop being so hard on myself for not having life figured out yet. She's right, I am doing well thus far. This revelation complemented the rest from the Media Evolution Conference, and echoed a quote Lorelei recently shared.
"I would like to beg you, dear Sir, as well as I can, to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or books written in a very foreign language. Don't search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answer." -Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
After introducing Catherine to my original neighborhood in all its Parc Monceau glory, we metro-ed to the northernmost point of Canal Saint-Martin (near last year's Thanksgiving meal). We took our time weaving in and out of shops, even stumbling across frozen yogurt (!), until we made it to the Haut-Marais and decided on a very late Lebanese lunch at the Marché des Enfants-Rouge.
{Antoine et Lili}
{Baci Bisous' frozen yogurt, nature avec framboises}
{Artazart Design Bookstore}
{Hier, aujourd'hui, demain}
{Le Marché des Enfants Rouges' Lebanese falafel sandwiches, rosé carafe}
Next, I was completely obliged to take my design-minded friend to Merci--where we spent about an hour and a half, duh--and then out for 5€ mojitos at Le Kitch in celebration of a fellow grad student's birthday. It was so nice to sit back and relax in the company of familiar faces at a place I'm so comfortable in. There was a lovely sense of belonging. I felt... Parisian-esque, if you will.
Later that evening, we chose to extend our stroll through the rest of the Marais and across the Seine, all the way to the Long Hop so I could wish Lara a happy first day of grad school. 'Twas an extraordinary dimanche. And the following day, Monday, I went to PageYourself's office in the 20ème, and Catherine left me a note.

As a toddler, Sleeping Beauty (or "Seepy Booty") was my favorite movie. In kindergarten, I dressed up as Jasmine (from Aladdin) for Halloween. I can distinctly remember seeing Toy Story in theaters and Beauty and the Beast on Broadway. Basically, I was raised on fairytales and happy endings, and unknowingly became a GYPSY. I believe Walt's words in that: "we have a lot of story to tell," yet as I settle into my 25 years, I'm realizing how little control I have over them. It's not only up to me. The sweetest parts of life right now have been borne from la chance--whether it's joining a sorority at Syracuse (in Catherine's case, we pledged together) or meeting a special guy at a going-away party in Brooklyn (in Lara's case, he's a high school best friends of hers). Suffice to say, I'm finally okay with not knowing when I'm "coming back."

Sunday, June 30, 2013

matthew & laura

I'm just going to come out and say it: marriage freaks me out. Even as a self-proclaimed romantic, I can't begin to fathom what it's like to be so sure about spending (and sharing) the rest of your life with another. I imagine it'd be something like this..?
{via pinterest}
Even so, I'm confident the truest and deepest kind of love--one that perhaps I have yet to experience--has the power to bring about this certainty of commitment. I've seen it. Behold, photographic evidence from my beautiful friend's beautiful wedding:
Pure love... in her mother's eyes, in their embrace during the first dance, in the thoughtful words of the maid of honor (my old roommate)'s speech. I felt so privileged to share in such a happy, monumental evening (and with the perfect date, too).

Friday, March 1, 2013

cooking for two

Happy. Scared. I didn't realize it would be different the second time around, but it is. Then again, I didn't realize it would take so long for me to be ready again either. They say "time heals all wounds". I'm afraid my experience has taught me as such. I thought a change of scenery would fix things, and dating would distract me from feeling "broken", but what really did the trick was simply living, fully. 

Because it does get easier, each day, little by little. 
One day, you'll wake up and not think about him. You'll call your best friend, text your siblings, meet old co-workers for dinner, fall asleep soundly, alone in your bed. You'll realize it's been a couple of weeks since he's crossed your mind. And you won't even mind. 
Then, when you least expect it, you'll meet someone. They also say "it'll happen when you're not looking," and annoyingly, that cliché is true as well. You'll meet him and connect almost instantly. It'll remind you what that this might be meant to be ease feels like. It might be inconvenient though. You may have registered for grad school, applied for a visa, with solid plans to relocate. 
You have to go, too; to follow through with your unfiltered aspirations. This blossoming relationship may fizzle, but the hope won't. You'll finally be sure that there is more than one person for you, and more importantly, that you have to ability to truly connect with someone else. With that faith, you'll keep on living. You'll date again, optimistic; ready for a real relationship without the pressure. 
And eventually, it will happen again. You'll find the potential in another someone. Drinks will turn into dinners, dinners into brunches. Weeks will pass. You'll realize it's been years since you've wanted to be this vulnerable. You'll be happy, and scared, and happy. 
The internal confusion makes sense. You're all too familiar with the risks. You've been hurt before. You've healed before, too. You'll be able to take this chance; especially when it feels so worth it. 

And it will be. Falling in love always is.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

new york vs. paris

Oh, New York. She catches you by surprise, pulls you in with excitement and effervescent variety. She has an air of unattainable coolness. You can know her, without ever really knowing her, and so you wait, intrigued and infatuated, to find out more. And then, there's Paris. She's a bit sweeter than her American neighbor. She romanticizes you with her charm and allures you with her beauty. She has a cold edge too, but it's somewhat disguised by years of sophisticated tradition. You feel envious yet privileged to be in her delicate, commanding presence.


Soon, I will be able to call both world cities home. Many more details to come...

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

as a woman

I like to explore new places. I enjoy being in a group of many just as much as I do wandering alone solo. Meeting new people, learning new things--this is what I delight in. Though, as carefree as I can be, I am careful when I travel. I seek adventure but with an cautious nature, as life can only be enjoyed if I am able to actually enjoy it. I am aware that, as a woman, there are realistic worries and unique risks. I can only be so independent; a truth no matter where I find myself.
Regardless of how you identify yourself or define feminism, this is worth a read:

For those who think I rant about the patriarchy and misogyny too much
by Julia Equality Maddera on Sunday, March 18, 2012 at 6:41pm ·
By Julia Maddera, Georgetown University '13

To the first man, who I met by the Eiffel Tower my second week in Paris, when I didn’t know better.  Who took me out four times, who waved little red flags that I tried to ignore.  Like asking me outright if I was a virgin on the first date, like calling me five different pet names when I’d asked him not to throughout the second, like saying he’d heard that feminists were not real women during the third, like disappearing for a week and a half after the fourth.  Who, as it turns out, was not the bullet, but the careening fourteen-wheeler that I narrowly managed to dodge.  Who admitted that he hit the young woman that his mother was trying to force him to marry.  Who didn’t want to marry her because he believes in romantic love.  Who doesn’t see the contradiction in those two sentences.

To the guy in my medieval literature class, who lent me one of Camus’ plays and showed me around the library.  Who wants to use his French education not to escape to the West, but to go back to his developing nation to teach at its eight-year-old university.  Who I admired until he asked me what my American boyfriend had thought about me coming to Paris, until he demanded to know why I didn’t have one (a boyfriend, that is), until he asked if it was required that I marry an American.  Who reached out and touched my earrings, without asking, the next time he saw me.  Who won’t take a hint. 

To the PhD student who tried to take me up to his apartment after a five minute conversation, when I had just wanted to get lunch, who said there’s a first time for everything.  Who told me that we were university students, living in a 21st century democracy, and that relations between men and women were different now, so what was I so scared of?  Who recoiled in shock when I told him that I had friends who’d been raped, and by other university students, at that.  Who does not have to think about rape on a daily basis.  Who insisted on paying for my lunch, because “it was a matter of honor.”  Who then physically prevented me from handing my money to the cashier, when I was trying to make it clear that this was not a date.  Who didn’t believe me when I said I didn’t want a boyfriend, five times.  Whose number I blocked the moment I stepped on the metro.  Who has called me three times since.  Who told me he wants to go into Senegalese politics.  Who, I can only hope, will listen to the women of his country better than he listened to me.

To the delivery guy on the red motorcycle idling outside of the apartments on Avenue de Porte de Vanves, the ones I walk past every day, who said bonsoir and who, because I said it in return to be polite, followed me to the metro as I walked, head twisted down, pretending that I didn’t understand the language I’ve studied for eight years.

To the two men Thursday night in le Marais, swaggering drunk toward me, ignoring the male friend standing by my side, who leered at my chest and slurred, “Bonsoir, comme tu es mignonne,” as I shoved past them, trying to sound angry, not afraid.  Who left me feeling fidgety and panicked, so when I took the night bus in the wrong direction and found myself alone with two other strange men at a bus stop at 2:30 A.M., I let the cab driver fleece me out of 25 euro just to take a taxi home.

To the group of teenage boys loitering on the corner by my apartment, who decided to sound a siren at my approach because I was wearing a knee-length dress and a bulky sweater.  Who made me regret forgoing tights because I had wanted to feel the spring air on my calves for once.  Who will never have to wear an itchy pair of pantyhose in their entire lives.  To whom I said nothing, because I still have to walk past that corner twice a day for the next three-and-a-half months, because there were five of them and one of me. 

To the three men standing on the corner of the periphery five minutes later when I was crossing the street.  To the one who motioned for his friends to turn and look at me, quick, and then left his wolf-whistle ringing in my ears, shame like sunburn covering my face.  Who didn’t care that it was broad daylight.  Who made me wish that I could swear a blue streak back in French, without my accent betraying that I am American, which is another word for “easy” here.

To the two men at sunset on the bridge by Saint Michel, in the middle of tourist central, who made skeeting noises at me, like a pair of sputtering mosquitoes, to get my attention.  Who laughed when I flipped them off, and who kept hissing at me anyway.  Who forced me to keep checking over my shoulder, all the way to the metro, to make sure that I wasn’t being followed.

But also to the French friend who blamed my problems with French men on my university in the northern suburbs, a Parisian synonym for emeutes, gang violence, and immigration.  Who insisted that if he brought me to his upper-crust private (white) university—where the French elite reproduces itself into perpetuity—I would meet nicer French guys.  Who forced me to defend the men who’d harassed me against his barely-veiled, racist critique.

And also to the American friend at home who nearly rolled his eyes as he half-listened to my stories, who said, “Oh god, it’s hard being so attractive, isn’t it?” as if I was being vain.  Who laughs and does not understand why I always duck out of the frame of photographs, who knows nothing of what my body means to me. 

And that’s just two months in Paris. 

To all the Italian men who made me wish I had dyed my hair black before studying in Florence, who kept me from going out dancing because I got sick of feeling them creeping up behind me, sneaking their hands around my waist (and lower) when I’d already said NO three times.

To the six-foot-something Georgetown student who prided himself on protecting the girls from being groped on the dance floor.  Who chose to write about the rape of the Sabine woman for that week’s assignment.  Who described the way her breast slipped free of her tunic when she fell, as if he was writing a porno, not a rape scene, who had the woman fall in love with her Roman rapist the next morning, after he spun her a tale of the coming glory of his country. Who said “in a fit of passion, she thrust herself upon his member” and was not joking.  Who ended the story with the titular character saying to her children that she had been raped, but only at first.

To the seventh-grade boy who told my younger sister that he could rape her, if he wanted to.

To the gang of twenty-five year-olds in the Jeep who hollered at her as they drove past, leering at her thirteen-year-old body dressed in sweat pants and a tank top.  Who made my sister, fearless on the soccer field and in the classroom and in the karate studio, run home crying. Who were the reason she became afraid to walk the dog by herself in our “safe, suburban” neighborhood.

To my father, who said, “What white male privilege?”  Who was not being ironic.

If you have any reaction to any of the above, please share your thoughts below.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

romantic mexican in chinatown

Gifts: M&M holiday pretzelsGolden Girl valentines, Taiwanese pineapple cakes
Drinks: cilantro fresca (pictured), margarita de la casa, pulque clásico (older than tequila and stronger than beer, pulque is a fermented alcohol made from the agave plant--it also has a slight old, sweaty shoe aftertaste... yum?)
Food: guacamole clásico, sikil pak (Mayan pumpkin seed dip),  taco pescado zarandeado & taco carnita (pictured), borrachos ("drunk" beans with pulque)
Valentine's Day Dates: Anna, Leslie, Megan
This Valentine's Day,  I celebrated love with three single friends at PulqueriaWe met after work. From an inconspicuous street in Chinatown, we ventured down an unmarked stairwell and through a blue door. We exchanged gifts and stories, ate well, drank lots, and danced while seated in our cozy booth. The four and a half hours passed quickly. Dare I say it was almost perfect? Hope yours was, too.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

memory

I was in 8th grade, my second period study hall, working on homework that wasn't important enough to remember now. A teacher from down the hall scrambled into our classroom with an announcement: a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. A few moments later, he rolled in a television and turned on the news. Other students took seats next to me. We watched as a plane hit the second tower, the news anchor unclear as to what she was explaining. I was confused, overwhelmed by the reactions around me, the commotion that soon followed. Within the next hour and a half, the elementary students were bused to our building and we were sent to our homeroom classes. My brother, nine at the time, watched a movie in our auditorium, unaware as to why. They didn't have a bomb shelter in his building. The phone rang every minute or so. Mr. Hayes shared as much information with us as he was able to. A terrorist attack. The Pentagon, too. Fifteen minutes later, my mom picked up my brother and me. My sister was already in the car. My dad wasn't reachable, but he also wasn't anywhere near the city; he was playing golf. Hundreds, thousands. September 11th, 2001 continued.
This morning I awoke in a world forever changed by the events of that day. I showered, ate, and solemnly reflected. Too many others have memories much more horrific than my own. My thoughts and my heart are with you.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

happy, happy

Last night was amazing. And this morning, I woke up to this email:
Happy Birrrrthday to Youuuu, 

Happy Birrrrthday to Youuuu, 
Happy Birrrrthday Dear Danielle, 
Happy Birrrrthday to Youuuu! 
A few years back, not so long ago, heaven and earth erupted into a major celebration with the news of your impending adventure into this very time and space. You see, someone like Danielle Alvarez doesn't come along all that often. In fact, there's never been a single one like you, nor is there ever ANY possibility that another will come again. You're an Angel among us. Someone, whose eyes see what no others will EVER see, whose ears hear what no others will EVER hear, and whose perspective and feelings will NEVER, ever be duplicated. Without YOU, the Universe, and ALL THAT IS, would be sadly less than it is. 
Quite simply: 
You're the kind of person, Danielle,
Who's hard to forget,
A one-in-a-million
To the people you've met.
Your friends are as varied
As the places you go,
And they all want to tell you
In case you don't know:
That you make a big difference
In the lives that you touch,
By taking so little
And giving so much!
Danielle, you are so AWESOME! For your birthday, friends and angels from every corner of the Universe, including buddies you didn't know you had, will be with you to wish you the HAPPIEST of days and an exciting new year in time and space. You won't be alone! 
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Danielle! 
We could all use some positive words of wisdom in our lives, so insert your name wherever it says mine, and wish yourself a happy day. You deserve it. Also, if you'd like to receive these kinds of emails daily, sign up for Notes from the Universe. It's my favorite... besides The Well Daily, of course. Alrighty then! The beach is calling. Hope you're enjoying your Memorial Day weekend.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

depths of a sunday


I believe true happiness comes from within. I believe that vegetables and chocolate have the same benefit to our overall well being. I believe the best opportunities arise when we aren't looking for them. I believe we depend on technology too much. I believe our comfort zones were never meant to be a permanent residence. I believe there is no place in the whole wide world quite like New York City. I believe that trust, followed by understanding, can bring world peace. I believe we are meant to breathe fresh air. I believe real friends are worth the effort to stay in touch with.  I believe that it isn't necessary to exercise every single day. I believe each one of us deserves kindness. I believe hugs are one of the most powerful gestures. I believe family is the most valuable thing we have, whether it be the one you were born into or the one you've created. I believe freshly brushed teeth are one of life's greatest pleasures. I believe experiences are priceless. I believe that complaining is a waste of time. (And, oh my gosh, is it annoying...) I believe we must respect the environment. I believe wandering is, sadly, becoming a lost art. I believe we all have something to contribute to the world. I believe wine is a food group. I believe that it's okay to be scared, so as long as it doesn't keep us from living. I believe consideration need not be neglected. I believe finding the beauty in each and every day is worth it. I believe books are a form of nourishment. I believe that intuition often acts as a sixth sense. I believe fun (no matter what it means to you) is necessary. I believe that if your life isn't satisfying, then there's something you need to change... and soon. I believe people enter our lives for a reason; just as some are intended to eventually leave. I believe we should never forget: at the core of each one of us unique beings is humanity. I believe that you are important.
Words by D. Alvarez, Photo by K. Ottomanelli

Monday, February 14, 2011

free

To be, to taste, to explore, to wander, to wonder, to think, to read, to travel, to embrace, to yoga, to listen, to write, to play, to chat, to choose, to laugh, to dance, to love.

Happy Valentine's Day.

Words by D. Alvarez, Photo by Kate Ottomanelli