Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Waves

Waves have a particular poetry
In that they can cancel
So what does that mean
For you or for me
Or the antibiotics that
Are coursing through my
Oh so healthy veins in that
That body we all want to
Escape for some reason

This beat makes me so happy
Does it you?
I can only hope
Even though you’re too emotional
And I’m too much of a dick
To even care about you
Or me

Or so you say, because
My mind knows my mind
And you don’t know my mind
My face betrays my words
You pick up on cues
You’re much too smart for me
You’re not mine
But I don’t want anyone

The reason to go
Is the reason to fill the aorta
Ventricles that we so often
Beat.  Suddenly I look at
The sky and all this
Vanishes from my mind
My mailbox beckons with
That horror of red dots
With numbers
With deals
With pleas for help



Second Nonfiction 10 Pages

Kendal Gast
ENGL 305
4-7-16
10 Pages2

To California and Back

            Breaking up is hard to do.  Going on a ten day vacation a week after is borderline insane.  But Erin and I wanted to make it work because not going would be too expensive.  So she invited her best friend Riley and I invited my roommate Immanuel.  See, when Erin and I bought the tickets in January we naively thought we would still be together by the time Spring Break rolled around.  With these two new travellers, we hoped, but never actually said to each other, that neither of us would punch each other in face on the car ride to the airport.  That didn’t happen, but there were plenty of “talks” throughout the journey up the coast of California.
            Flight 8029 arrived in San Diego around 2pm on Thursday, March 10th.  My aunt who isn’t really my aunt but my mom’s first cousin picked the four of us up and immediately drove to In-N-Out Burger.  Sadly, that would be our only taste of quality West Coast burgers.  Soon after dumping our 70-liter hiking bags (Spirit charges the shit out of everything) at Auntie Jayne’s place and borrowing a vehicle, Mission Beach came into view.
 I’ve been lucky enough to see both mountains and several different beaches on either coast, and deciding where I’d rather live is difficult…  Because isn’t that what it comes down to, the ocean or the mountains?  Either way, I would choose the mountains.  They’re infinitely more mysterious and seductive, pulling your vision to each peak or fold in the earth’s ancient crust when you’re in the midst of them, looking west.  Each time you blink feels like the first and last time you’ll ever see them; you try and soak up as much of the sublime size, the vast sprawl of trees, and mysterious tugging at your soul. 
The beach, on the other hand, has the same amount of terrifying sublimity as mountains but is, I’d argue, more joyful, more… happy.  Usually you experience the beach with people and together share the salty, vicarious sea breeze with the unrelenting shrieks of crashing waves.  That afternoon at Ocean beach was a perfect way to begin the trip because it reminded us land-locked Iowans that indeed, against our shocked disbelief, we had arrived in California.  But it was still winter there, technically, and the water was super cold.  By the time we had our drinks watching the sunset, the group wished we had brought our sweatshirts. 
            The next day, I began by driving my cousin to Point Loma Nazarene University, where she works.  It was during this car ride that I admitted Erin and I had broken up but were, nonetheless, here in San Diego together.
            “What?  Isn’t that super awkward?” Marie asked.
            “Kinda, but we talked about things before we left.  Besides, we know we’re going to get into an argument at some point,” I replied with a shrug.  It’s here I should explain that these cousins and I didn’t get along the greatest when we were younger.  Every four years my mother’s side of the family gathers for the Barz family reunion at some sort of private residence or, previously, at the family cabin in Minnesota.  We didn’t get along because when we tried having fun and do “family activities” together,  for the younger family members, antics would escalate higher and higher until someone started crying.  Practical jokes went to far when sprinkling flour on people and sticking their fingers in warm water got involved, games went to far when players got too physical, shit talking went to far when one person would be the butt of jokes for more than 10 minutes, or accidents would happen like dropping a couch on Megan.  Things had become a little better during the past two reunions, but I always felt some sort of tension.  Were we just going to ignore those years and not talk about them?  Apparently, because Marie wasn’t one for awkward conversations and I was simply enjoying their hospitality. 
            When I arrived back at the house the group prepared and we set off for Torrey Pines.  Nothing could have prepared us for what we encountered.  Situated just beyond the UC San Diego library, near the Torrey City Gliderport, the four of us stumbled upon the 300 foot Torrey cliffs overlooking the Pacific.  I was stunned.  The ocean stretched into nothingness beyond misty haze to the north and south.  It calmly melted with the western horizon, defined by a darker, greener blue than the sky.  Huge, cottony clouds drifted above that might as well have been close enough for us to reach out and grab on.  With the strong sea wind in our faces, paragliders took advantage as dozens wheeled up and over the cliffs.  Most never really strayed far from land, while some executed exhilarating, speedy downward spirals towards the waves below. 
            After losing and then finding Immanuel’s phone, we headed to Ocean Beach in search of fish tacos and a pier.  Just south of Mission Beach from yesterday, this was a slightly rougher beach and populated with homeless, according to Auntie Jayne.  Immanuel and I found this to be true following the amazing fish tacos a hole in the wall grill provided us.  Sitting on a bulkhead, finishing off the last half of my taco, a grungy short man walked up and sat down as if he knew us.
            “You guys like to smoke bud?” he drawled.  I looked at Immanuel and he returned the expression.
            “Um, yeah, we do,” I replied sheepishly, doing a quick check to see if the fuzz was around. 
            “Nice, so you guys wanna help a guy out so he can eat tonight?  I got some here, you want all of it?” hat-clad grungy man asked.  Out of a brown paper bag disguising his 40 ouncer, he produced the bag of weed.  I was aware before leaving that certain areas of California were known for easy access to marijuana, but I didn’t know it would walk up and present itself.  Hat-clad grungy man’s comment about needing money to eat struck me, and I wasn’t sure how to take it.  He really could need the money or it was just a tactic to make me feel bad.  Regardless, by the time hat-clad grungy man left, the temperature dropped and rain showers moved in. 
            Our last night in San Diego was great, normal even.  Earlier we spent the day exploring La Jolla Cove, littered with seals and sea lions sun bathing on the beach.  Before the group wandered back home, though, we returned again to Mission Beach for drinks and a basket of fries.  Everything is much more expensive on the California coast, as you can imagine.  Californians would balk at Wednesday’s dollar drinks for sure.  Everything seemed fine while Auntie Jayne and co. fed us take out pizza with even more drinks.  Things changed, however, when we entered the hot tub.  Erin and Riley left to take a break after awhile, but when they came back, Erin had some things to say to Immanuel and I.  But mostly me.  Aside from details that require more context for this kind of essay, what she said basically came down to was that my treatment of her over the past few days had been completely rude (somewhat true), she wasn’t having any fun (lies), and the only reason she was upset was because she cares (probably true).  It made for an awkward next morning on the bus ride to Los Angeles, but we talked and worked things out.  For a while at least. 

            The four Iowans hit the ground running as soon as we disembarked from the greyhound.  Views through the large bus windows provided a rather bleak picture of LA and the surrounding suburbs.  Tiny homeless establishments were littered throughout the landscape, congregated near those large cement flood passages, especially under overpasses, and often in areas completely unexpected.  Power lines and grey manufacturing facilities filled our vision.  These less-than-hopeful sequences did little to ease my anxiety over a place to sleep that night.  Lack of planning on both Erin and my part left us scrambling through Airbnb and Couchsurfing to find a room.  Luckily, there was one in a hostel-like home, south of Korea Town. 
            An uber driver from El Salvador took us from the Greyhound station directly to the Chinese Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard.  Once there, we met Erin’s friend Tim who was, according to him and no one else, a Hollywood producer working under some Universal Studios director that he definitely did not have to get coffee for.  Tim showed us around the area, and we quickly realized you needed money to do most of things that looked fun.  But even then they really didn’t look all that great.  I didn’t really care to have my picture with some random street performer, take a tour through a theatre, get on a crowded vehicle through the streets, or buy cheap souvenirs.  Instead, we opted to go to a recording of @Midnight with Chris Hardwick.  That was actually really awesome to be a part of, and Erin even won a water bottle for being the best audience member. 
            That night, we took another uber to Good Times at Davey Wayne’s, a literal hole in the wall because you had to walk through a refrigerator to get inside.  They served spiked sno cones and a variety of mixed drinks.  But we didn’t stay long, and soon after leaving decided to head back to our little hostel in a rather dangerous neighborhood of town.  The rest of LA was spent at Santa Monica pier, the surrounding beaches, and in transit between there and where we were staying.  On Tuesday, notably, Riley, Erin, and I made the mistake (well, it was Erin’s idea) of renting bikes and riding them all the way to our Airbnb and then back to where we rented them.  We rode for 30 miles (there and back) on the dangerous, traffic-filled streets of LA.  But the bike lanes were pretty well laid out and the bikes had lights, so it wasn’t quite as bad even though I would’ve preferred a helmet. 
            I say so little of LA because it was, for the four of us, our least favorite city of the three we visited.  The interactions we had with people were subpar, things were considerably more expensive than in San Diego, and before we left for another bus I got a little homesick.  (Erin and I also got in another fight because she got drunk and I told her to shut up).  Perhaps it was because of more not planning, but there seemed to be only touristy activities, and those all cost money.  However, the beaches were great and the weather was perfect for everyday we went, which was… everyday.  Florida spring breakers might have got a better tan, but could they say they rented bikes and rode them through seedy neighborhoods and down busy LA boulevards? 

            San Francisco ended our journey up along California.  It was my favorite part of the trip, Immanuel’s as well, while Riley and Erin preferred San Diego.  Immanuel also pulled through in booking us a hotel in the Tenderloin when repeated searches through Airbnb yielded either too expensive or wrongly dated rooms.  It was in San Fran that we saw the classic China town, the Fisherman’s wharf, ate a phenomenal seafood dinner, visited the gay bars (the nightlife in San Fran was the best of the three cities - by far), and almost ate at a deaf pizzeria.  But San Francisco was also the place I learned that I didn’t want to live on the west coast.  At least not yet.  I felt and feel a stronger draw for New York and the artists that call the city home.  I also realized that travelling long distances doesn’t need to be hard.  You can easily pack everything you need for 10 days, definitely more, into an even smaller bag than what we used.  
By Sunday we were all ready to go back to Iowa, and we did make it after another cramped Spirit ride.  Erin and I haven’t gotten back together, but during the trip she helped me understand that what I have to offer the world is significant.  That even though my degree is only in English, I know I still have the determination and attitude to contribute.  Contribute what?  I don’t know.  Truthfully, I’m not okay with not knowing. All I know is that there’s something that I need to do.  But at the same time I am okay with it, not knowing, because if college has taught me anything, it’s that I’m not the only one.


            

First Nonfiction 10 Pages

Kendal Gast
ENGL 305
2-23-16
10 Pages
Untitled College Reflection

Latching on to a thought, I let it take me.  It’s like grabbing onto a rope dangling from a helicopter: I have to jump before it swings away.  There’s obviously stuff I want to say and experiences I know will benefit others, but they’re locked away in my supposed forgetfulness.  Because we remember everything that happens to us apparently.  That’s where all the wrinkles come from.  Or maybe that was just a joke by some friends who always thought my brain was smooth.  Either way, I’m going to talk about college, because that’s where I am, that’s what a college student does,(because its our whole life, as we are always more than happy to loudly boast) and I need reflection time… because I’m graduating.  And that’s pretty fucking scary.  Six months from now I don’t have a clue where I’m going to be and my first federal loan payment will be due.  I don’t know how much its going to be.  My parents will not be around to help.  Sure, its 2016 though and they’re only a phone call away - if there’s good service. 
Can you hear me now? 
I only have two months left of school.  I’ve been going to school for 16 years of my life.  I am 21 years old.  Only five years of my life have not been in the presence of a teacher, or someone telling me what to do.  Now, that isn’t very fair to educators and should not be taken in that way.  My mom is a teacher and so is my grandmother.  I probably want to be a teacher.  The point is, for all the western world has given me, I am free to do as I wish. 
Can you hear me now?
And as Spidey’s uncle always said, “With great power, comes great responsibility”.  That is another obvious statement, a commonplace if you’re studied in classical rhetoric.  The power, obviously, is freedom.  Within the borders of the United States, I have freedom to do whatever I want.  I could become a trucker and pay back my loans within a year.  I could write for a regional newspaper or publication and take a decade to pay back my loans.  I could go back home and take over the thousand acres we farm.  But I don’t know how to wield this power that was given to me.  Indeed, I did not earn the power nor freedom that I or some other college graduate possesses.  It was more or less handed to me with the expectation that I would go along with what everyone else did and end up with a job somewhere, happy to slowly pay off my loans with a job I only kinda-sorta like. 
I believe the way I or anybody else to fully utilize the power they’ve been given is to have a set of guiding principles.  Or laws.  But I do have a set of laws I already follow, its just more unconscious and… buried.  Take, for instance, the desire to do no harm, or non-maleficence.  If there is a non-violent way to reach an agreement, then that’s the way I prefer to go.  However, if someone is threatening my life or a life that I love with violence, then violence is warranted.  Another example would be finish whatever I start.  My parents drilled this into me all the time when I wanted to quit band, football, musicals, or little league baseball.
Can you hear me now?
I’m going back to my first semester here at Iowa State.  I moved into Helser by myself and lost two boxes for an hour.  My roommate and I found each other on the freshman Facebook page and he moved in soon after I did.  His parents were strange, both business executives and rather out of touch with college life and a younger generation.  We both were pledged to different fraternities, much to my disappointment, and he was there every night those first four days.  That was probably part of the reason why I decided to listen to my “brothers” (huge quotations right there) and move in that fourth night.  After a concerned and very hesitant talk with my mom and dad, the one guy from my high school who signed me up and three others bros arrived and packed up all my stuff. 
The next semester was an uphill battle.  Every weekend I would go home and try to nurse my ego and confidence to a level that would get me through the next week, but the constant back and forth only made things worse.  It made me question everything on top of the daily school workload and annoying bros never thinking they needed to clean the food off their plates.  There was one weekend, though, that really taught me the attitude of frat guys.  Living in a house with unsupervised adolescent boys creates a lot of… explosions, not messes.  That week it wasn’t even my job to clean the party room bathrooms, but the house manager decided to be a wimp and micromanage by sending out a text telling the general house population that the toilet and sink needed to be cleaned.  Painfully aware of his fruitless demand, I took the stairs down into the sticky floor depths of the party room. 
What I found could only be a product of fraternities.  Ignorance refused to fix the sink, or the toilet.  And as a result, puke, urine, shit, spit, alcohol, and a number of other unidentifiable objects festered in the toilet.  The sink on the other hand, contained all that except shit.  Who poops in a sink, even if you are drunk?  Determined to show my worth and team spirit, I ran upstairs for ammonia and bleach, among other cleaning utensils.  Among the nefarious smells that I had to get way closer to than I ever wanted to be, there was another acidic, ammonia smell that overpowered everything else.  Little did I know the combination of ammonia and bleach produces a toxic gas not meant to be inhaled by human lungs.  Luckily the bathroom door was open and I took several breaks. 
After finishing the bathroom, I went to find an older bro who supposedly knew how things worked in the junky house, because I definitely didn’t know anything about unclogging a sink or toilet.  They were shocked upon witnessing the clean bathroom.
“Oh this won’t go unnoticed, trust me, we notice shit like this,” he said in his forced lower register.  Did I mention frat guys have a really bad habit of swearing?  This bro obviously did not how to fix the plumbing, and neither did the little pledge that showed up along with the older bro.  For some reason, he (the pledge) decided to take over and assert his “frat bro masculinity” over the two of us and explain how the repair needed to be done.  By this time I was out, and left the two bros to argue things over.  
            Can you hear me now?
            But that’s not to say the frat was completely awful.  They didn’t physically haze any pledge.  No one laid a hand on me, nor anyone else that I heard of.  The food was alright and didn’t poison anybody.  Even if the first chef that was there got fired.  New pledges were always given a chance and tried to feel welcome, even if only from the same handful of dudes every time.  But really, they all gave me a chance.  They were willing to invite me amongst their ranks and live the shared experiences unique to fraternities and sororities.  I never would have learned, had I not joined a fraternity, that supporting conformity was definitely not something I wanted to be a part of or have to deal with.  I never would have learned to be that much more confident in myself so I can stand up to those fools who yell at me for not wanting to go to some dumb football game.  I learned that I wanted to be on my own, and I was okay with that.
            The next semester, after looking on craigslist and finding what appeared to be a great apartment very near campus, I moved into my first apartment.  There were three other guys living there, me being the first rando craigslist kid.  I got all excited about my first real place and bought a bunch of posters and tacked them all over my walls.  I bought a bookshelf so I could display a portion of my book collection, and my dad bought me a single bed.  The dresser I was handed down sat beneath my hand picked television and Playstation 3.  I shared a bathroom with one of my roommates and the other two shared the second bathroom.  Unsurprisingly and rather to my preference, I did all the cleaning in the bathroom.  Had I relied on Tim, (all names are changed in this paper) the toilet would still have pee and hair caked on it while the sink showed permanent toothpaste stains. 
            My biggest challenge was food.  The first time I went into HyVee, all I could think was, “These people know that I don’t know what I’m doing.  They know I’m a freshman and think I’m weird cause I want to buy peanut butter from the peanut grinding machine.”  But then I remembered I could buy whatever I wanted, and I forgot about all that.  I bought Honey Bunches of Oats and Captain Crunch Berries.  For some reason I wanted oatmeal and bought a container of Quaker Oats.  My family always bought that nasty blue  called skim milk, and whenever we travelled and our hosts had 2%, I jumped at the chance and always asked for a glass.  So obviously I bought a gallon with the blue cap and walked out with a huge grin on my face. 
            Things got a little out of hand when I started incorporating exercise into my daily routine.  Being a skinny guy with stickly arms, I knew I had the opportunity to change things and grow biceps as large as I wanted.  I read in this book called The Four Hour Body, a unique book about hacking your way to extreme fitness and better human performance, that drinking a gallon of milk a day was a surefire way to pack on the pounds.  So I did.  I was concerned about the cost and logistics of having to purchase two to three gallons of milk every few days, but I knew things would work themselves out.  By day four I felt funny and could never seem to clear my throat of phlegm, and for two weeks I kept this up.  The book recommended I do this for a month.  By the end I had only gained a bigger gut and a strong aversion to any food with dairy.  Luckily I did not develop an unpleasant reaction to any type of dairy product I consumed thereafter.  Instead, I learned that while authors may have good intentions with wanting to improve peoples’ lives, readers experiment at their own risk. 
            Sophomore was not quite as memorable, aside from my 30-year-old Columbian roommate.  The spring of 2015 introduced me to the absolute perils of over sharing and a non-receptive, critical audience.  It happened in English 404, Advanced Fiction.  We were practicing aspects of fiction stories like dialogue, setting, internal thought, and actions.  All of our proactive led up to a substantial short story with no page limit.  During the dialogue exercise, I made a food of myself by writing with only inside jokes and esoteric topics only very few people know about.  (Read: my best friends).  That initial story colored everyone’s perception of my work.  I could see and feel this weird tension when we all had to discuss my writing during workshop.  And this is only my perspective; I’m making it into a bigger deal than it probably needs to be.  Which brings me to what I took away from that class:  I can’t care about what everyone thinks.  Caring isn’t possible, it isn’t helpful, and it doesn’t allow any more growth if I focus on it so much.  Instead, I focus on those people who are willing to read my work rather than out of obligation because of a class.  But more importantly, I focus on composing words that I know I can stand behind and believe in.  Ones that make me happy I suffered through to put down on the page. 
            The most memorable relationships that we experience often begin without either person realizing what is going on.  Last semester I auditioned for the 10 Minute Play festival with my roommate and we both got parts, but in different plays.  He was placed with one other person and I was placed with two other actors and a director.   The play was called The Sin Eater, and I was the older brother of a girl who supposedly died.  This creepy guy called the sin eater would come into my sister’s bedroom and “eat the sins off her chest”, so that she may rest peacefully and the older brother could continue on with his ultra-pious life.  It was a tricky play; the text balanced comedy and tragedy but in performance would usually sway one way or another.  We, the overachieving arteests we are, aimed at performing both elements to really nail it in the feels for the audience. 
            Can you hear me now?
            One night after rehearsal, my director and I, Candice, were talking and carried the conversation over to the library.  In these instances, both parties have intentions to study, but rarely does it work out.  Most of the time is spent talking, which for some reason happens way more often in libraries than what should happen.  Either way, I end up doing more listening than talking to Candice.  Besides being more talkative and energetic, Candice also had way more experiences than I did and thus more to say, and recently, at the time, things were not going well for her.  The same could be said of me, but on that night I was doing more listening, as I said.  I think we both walked away from that conversation changed.  I was surprised at how much a person can go through but feel comfortable enough to talk about it openly, and I think she was surprised that there are people who do want to listen. 
            We perform the play, and it was a hit.  Of the two nights of performances, we were told several times that ours was particularly notable of the two.  What, did you want me to say that we crashed and burned?  Christmas break roles around and Candice comes over to sled after a snow and hang out with my friends.  Upon returning for the spring semester, we continued spending quite a bit of time together and becoming more involved with each other’s lives.  But there was tension, and it was because of a pretty common situation: we were acting like a couple but weren’t calling ourselves that or even acknowledging that we liked each other more than friends.  Like, like liked each other, you know?  So one night after an argument, I asked her out.  From there, all I can say is that it was only highs and lows.  There were never any plateaus in energy, happiness, or bitterness.  Intimate relationships are really difficult, and I don’t think they’re for everyone.  Simple solutions to disagreements are available, but rarely do they work out for either person.  There’s so much wrapped up in one individual saying to anther individual that they choose you, that they don’t want to share themselves with anyone else. 
I have already failed.  It is because I am scared.  Scared of what anyone who reads this will think.  Scared of exposing myself and what goes on within my mind to people outside of it.  The goals that I have in mind will eventually happen.  
But that’s something I often struggle with.  I have these really awesome moments of inspiration and confidence not only in myself but also in what can be done, what I have the ability to do, the ideas that I have, and the motivation I know I possess.  And then abruptly an hour or two later, everything is back to normal and I’ve forgotten nearly all of the revelations and mental epiphanies that washed over me.  
I would be lying if I said it doesn’t happen when substances run through my body.  Of course it’s more intense then, too.  It is difficult to describe, the feeling/experience, obviously more relatable if you, the reader/listener, have experienced something similar.  With substances it’s as if a lens is removed in front of my eyes or the lens already there is polished to an extreme degree, revealing my surroundings and reality for what they really are:  reality.  I think.  Whatever I see is sharp, detailed, nuanced, and horribly constructed.  What becomes most evident, especially in the midst of several people and especially in public places, is how everyone tries to cover themselves up or put on this little show.  For who?  Their friends?  Me?  
The show is for all of us.  The performer does not want the rest of us to know that they’re performing, trying to hide the fact that they’re uncomfortable with the way the are, look, or feel.  It’s funny to watch.  Often I just stare and get lost in all the information coming at me all at once, trying to sort out what’s important or wanting to simply let my mind wander from the next individual or odd thing my attention latches onto.  But then after awhile, I feel bad and want to run away; leave the public sphere and hole up in my room with a book or Casey Neistat video. 
Those will make me feel better, I tell myself.  
But I’m not so sure anymore.  Perhaps I never was truly sure.  Either way, it seems like there’s something missing in either situation.  Some sort of lie I refuse to tell myself in public situations or something actually meaningful to accomplish when I escape.  The missing link, however, could be the outdoors.  Typically in those wanting-to-escape situations, I’m much more happy on the journey back to my room.  It must be the outdoors.  I want it to be the outdoors.  But when I’m in class and especially right now, just plain old in the stage of school and completely engrossed in the assignments I need to accomplish before the next class period or due date, everything gets really mixed up and hard to pick up where I left off.