Just a reminder that in one week the polls will open and we'll have a chance to vote on serious decisions regarding our country. Look into the real facts if you haven't yet and get excited if you're able to vote. What a wonderful privilege we have here in America to have our voices heard! By the way, check out the amazing phone case I got here in Hawaii. The 'right' kind of phone case, if you know what I mean.
I'm such a nerd.
xoxo, madeline claire
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Aloha!
My family and I are in Hawaii, the island of Maui! We've been here together since Friday and it's been quite the adventure. When I say adventure I'm talking tsunami warning type of adventure. Saturday Canada was hit with an earthquake that caused waves to hit different coastlines. Maui was under warning, serious warning, complete with sirens and speakers reminding everyone to move to higher ground. Having memories of tsunami footage I saw when I was quite young gave me chills. I could picture the giant wave enveloping homes and lives. The sirens seemed to have a bad effect on traffic causing everyone to go into a mad scramble to stay safe. Yet the wave turned out to be 5 feet. Just 5 feet! I could have gone and played in that water! I am thankful, though. Nothing was damaged and all were safe.
Maui is lovely. The green trees and plants are breathtaking, the clean air is refreshing and I quite enjoy the signing birds. They're everywhere! We've experienced nature, and the tiny local towns. I tried sushi, and hated it... Little things like that. It's just wonderful to be here with family, making memories and trying new things.
I'll write more when I have time but until then, Aloha!
Xoxo, madeline claire
Maui is lovely. The green trees and plants are breathtaking, the clean air is refreshing and I quite enjoy the signing birds. They're everywhere! We've experienced nature, and the tiny local towns. I tried sushi, and hated it... Little things like that. It's just wonderful to be here with family, making memories and trying new things.
I'll write more when I have time but until then, Aloha!
Xoxo, madeline claire
Friday, October 12, 2012
The Woods are Lovely...
I find my mind to be very good company. All the thoughts, the ideas. I am filled with satisfaction when I spend time away from everything. There's peace and wonder, a collected state filled with inspiration... Going on walks, I love those moments. Walking along the pavement, through the neighborhood and park. If I were to say, "Under the trees and barefoot through the river" it would sound much more romantic and if I could, I would. But the truth of of the matter is, I live in a busy, fast-paced area. I can hear cars as I go along, and the birds aren't as loud. There are no locusts and I don't feel the excitement of wondering if I'll run into a wild animal. Yet, I'm still content. Because if I really allow myself to be inside, thoughtfully surveying my mind, the world around can truly become anything.
Well, now it's time for a cup of tea. The weather is all together perfect and rainy.
xoxo,
madeline claire
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Good luck.
Yesterday I went to Barnes & Noble by myself to relax a little bit. I perused the shelves slowly. Reading all sorts of binding. From classics, to the disturbing latest teen books, to the poetry... As I gazed down the isles I felt collected and calm. That is, until I had a visiter while enjoying the art books. A woman stood beside me and started to tell me about an art book sale at some store. That was nice, so I thanked her. She then asked if I was serious about art. I told her yes, that I'm planning to major in art at college. "What do you plan to do with that?" She wondered aloud. "My dream is to become an Art Therapist. But we'll see." I replied. Her answer? "Ha! Good luck with that one!"
Back away from the tactless woman.
Good luck with that one? Really? I didn't let her less-than-encouraging attitude bother me. I just allowed it to perplex me for sometime. I just wonder what was going on in her mind in those moments. Do I look like a lost cause? Are hopes and ambitions pointless to her? How sad to think that she feels so hopeless about reaching for goals that she'd say that to someone else. It came out of her mouth in such a casual way, she had to be used to saying things like that.
Anyway, I also had a man ask me how much I made in two years. Um. None of your business. And the guy staring at me while I was trying to read a book made my concentration (and enjoyment of the book) fly out the window. Barnes & Noble alone is not the trip I was hoping for. Oh well. I guess I'll start going there when I need a good laugh, or a few creeper stories.
xoxo, madeline claire
P.S. I bought a book titled, Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankle. He's a famous psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor. The book is about his journey within the concentration camp. I'm very excited to read it.
Labels:
ambitions,
art,
book store,
books,
creepy,
dream crushers,
dreams,
good luck
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Drifting like... A piece of driftwood?
This week has been one of those long, interesting weeks full of many activities but not enough production. At least it sort of feels that way. Emotional instability isn't helpful when it comes to getting things done and I find myself drifting around the house in a contemplative manner during the day and complete night owl behavior at night.
I have accomplished lots of reading, researching and self-awareness over the past week. But in terms of life and plans and getting that driver's license... I'm a little lost. As far as Romney's and Obama's apposing gun views go, I could tell you the facts. But I should probably also register to vote. Why is it hard grasp onto the fine details, the things that hide in the corners of your mind that keep you awake at night. All the "should's" and the countless "I have to do that" spring out of nowhere. Then, upon wakening... Nothing. They've left only to haunt you the following night.
I do believe that the things I have done this week have worth. More worth then so many daily tasks. I just wish I could organize my mind enough to fathom both. I like to think, I adore it. But there's that connection to reality that I fall away from at times... I'm better at dreaming.
xoxo, madeline Claire
Labels:
distraction,
emotions,
learning,
organization,
quotes,
thoughts
Monday, August 20, 2012
pajamas. painting. perfection.
I just sat down with my coffee. It's almost 11:30 and I'm still in my pajamas.
Oh well.
Oh well.
Tonight I have art class, the last official class of the summer. My art piece still isn't done but it was the first time I've ever attempted a oil portrait, so there's room for grace, right? But grace or not, I'm a perfectionist and I find myself lying awake at night thinking about every detail of the portrait. I've been to both the Getty Museum and the Getty Villa in the last week and I keep comparing my work to the works of the greats... A bad idea all together. Why would I do that if they had plenty of practice and I've only tried once? It's so hard to build on experience when in my head I see all the sketches and paintings I would do if I had the courage. I'll find it, I know that. Courage comes throughout the journey, you don't often have it at the start. And that's okay.
With the words of my favourite, van Gogh. Cheerio.
xoxo, madeline claire
Sunday, August 19, 2012
hello!
I finally put together a pinterest account. Although I'm still trying to fighour out all the bells and whistles that come along with this site I thought I'd still share the link to my personal account. I've only pinned a few things so far, but check back for more in the future!
there's so much beauty in the world it hurts.
Madeline Claire (dandelionwishhh) on Pinterest
Madeline Claire (dandelionwishhh) on Pinterest
xoxo, madeline claire
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Counting.
We're slowly losing summer, one long, hot day at a time. In CA we've been hanging out in 90 + degree weather. The last simmering days of August leave me dreaming about fall and winter. When I can pull out those winter boots and warm jackets. The sky will be become a little darker and deeper, the air will smell different and the tan I got, which, can't really even be considered a tan will fade along with the heat.
Sorry, I'm getting carried away... It's still only August 15th. The official day of fall starts September 22nd. I'll take a breath and enjoy the only summer 2012 will have. It's been a pretty good one, if I do say so myself.
xoxo, madeline claire
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
keep exploring
Good morning readers!
I came across the most beautiful images of two-worlds colliding today... I swear it's like a dream.
Completely breathtaking, I would love to go down this just to breath in some of the beauty. This lake is called Green Lake and lies in Austria. "During the winter, the lake is only 1–2 m deep and the surrounding area is used as a county park. However, during the spring, when the temperature rises and the water melts the basin of land below the mountains fill with water." - Green lake in Austria - StumbleUpon
I don't know about you, but when I see this kind of thing it makes me want to travel so much it hurts. The secrets that lie beyond our own backyard, our own state or country. Places we had no idea existed until we see photos of them on the internet and almost die from a pull to visit them. Travel lets you go beyond yourself, you fall into something pure and real. God created nature, and He made perfect. Perfect in a way like nothing else.
Chills. Lets go exploring, shall we?
xoxo, madeline claire
Labels:
adventure,
austria,
blogging,
daisychains,
exploring,
travel,
trees,
underwater
Thursday, July 12, 2012
On the edge.
Tomorrow I turn 18.
Really? Because I've spent all my life wondering about this. I've waited and pondered, questioned and guessed. I never thought I would be this girl the day before this birthday. I thought with 18 came knowing and understanding. I'm so far from knowing all that I want to know. It's such a shock, because I've always thought I would look older and seem older. The girl I see in the mirror looks young and naive. Yet, she's on the edge of adulthood. Today I'm considered an adolescent, tomorrow, I'll be an adult. Today I'm unable to sign my own permission slips and get a tattoo. Tomorrow, I can.
Yet I won't be any smarter. It's just another day of life. I'm on the edge of a different experience, but I've got the same head to go along with it. Life keeps going. Laws remain laws, rules stay settled. Tomorrow, Madeline Claire will be an "adult" but she doesn't want to be. I know another day won't change my essence or the soul inside, yet there are things that will change. I hate change. I like being grounded. Change is bittersweet and sentimental, sometimes I don't want to face that. But here I am, so it's time to face it. Too soon or not, here I come.
My birthday, 2003, 9 years old.
Senior Photo, 2012, 17 years old.
xoxo,
Madeline Claire
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Awe: Linda McCartney
Yesterday I was on stumbleupon and I stumbled across these photos by Linda McCartney. I won't get into how much I love Paul McCartney and the rest of The Beatles, this is Linda's turn. Click Linda's name in blue and it will take you to the stumbleupon link to see the rest of the photos. It's well worth your time, because she captures life. Pure life.
xoxo,
Madeline Claire
xoxo,
Madeline Claire
I've always been interested in photography but lately that interest has grown by quite a bit. I think I'm starting to approach the more technical side of things as I begin to decide on and buy my very own "fancy camera." Excitement! When I think about having a device that can save moments in a beautiful image for years to come it amazes me. Aren't we lucky to be in a day and age where that is possible
Monday, June 11, 2012
Art for the day:
Labels:
art,
daisychains,
edwardhopper,
iconic,
lines
The Fault in Our Stars
"My thoughts are stars I cannot fathom into constellations."
Diagnosed with Stage IV thyroid cancer at 13, Hazel was prepared to die until, at 14, a medical miracle shrunk the tumours in her lungs... for now.
Two years post-miracle, sixteen-year-old Hazel is post-everything else, too; post-high school, post-friends and post-normalcy. And even though she could live for a long time (whatever that means), Hazel lives tethered to an oxygen tank, the tumours tenuously kept at bay with a constant chemical assault.
Enter Augustus Waters. A match made at cancer kid support group, Augustus is gorgeous, in remission, and shockingly to her, interested in Hazel. Being with Augustus is both an unexpected destination and a long-needed journey, pushing Hazel to re-examine how sickness and health, life and death, will define her and the legacy that everyone leaves behind. - Goodreads
If you had walked into my room Thursday night as I sat propped up in bed you may have thought my cat died or I had just heard awful news or that my heart had been broken into a million pieces.
I was just finishing this book.
Rewind a little bit. On Wednesday my thoughtful friend Claire let me borrow this book, "A Fault in Our Stars" I was extremely excited. Yet, the look of fondness mixed with sadness that she gave me reassured me that this book was going to be an emotional ride. I didn't mind though. I prefer books that make me feel intense emotions.
It was an easy read, so it didn't take long to finish. But long time or short time, it will always stay with me. I fell in love with Hazel and Augustus. They were both so quirky and real. Something about the trials they go through as cancer patients give them beautiful and dark insight into the world we live in, and the decisions they make in the world they know they will someday leave behind. I didn't agree with all their beliefs and choices but it served as a brilliant insight into the depth of the human mind. Obviously, judging by my Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close review, I can't get enough about the human mind. What can I say?
As the story progressed I didn't want it to end, but I didn't want it to keep going either. There was this bittersweet knowing throughout the entire book that I will not allow myself to write due to spoilers. That's the trouble with writing about this book, there's so many dangers of slipping out a spoiler. I have to say this though. Augustus and Hazel were in love. In real love. Hazel, 16 and Augustus, 17. Augustus tells Hazel that he's not in the business of denying himself pleasures in life. Not after everything he's gone through. (Don't quote me on that I'm just laying out the principle). So soon they are on adventures together filled with stunningly beautiful moments. Part of what makes the love so honest is that they know what the other is dealing with. Death could be moments away, weeks away, or years away. And maybe, just maybe, they'd get lucky and be able to live out a long life. They both live in a fear of loving the other and having to leave them behind as they make their way out of this earth, but only so much of that can be stopped. Together they learn, recite poetry and become closely knit in a bond that they've needed for many years. A bond that nothing could ever wreck or destroy, something that lies internally within their beings for forever.
So thus I finished. In tears. In complete shock, in complete awe. I wanted to shout at someone that I hate cancer. I wanted to express something more eloquent then that. This post was awful to write, because everything I wanted to say could hardly be expressed, but here it is.
xoxo,
madeline
"Much of my life had been devoted to trying not to cry in front of people who loved me, so I knew what Augustus was doing. You clench your teeth. You look up. You tell yourself that if they see you cry, it will hurt them, and you will be nothing but a Sadness in their lives, and you must not become a mere sadness, so you will not cry, and you say all of this to yourself while looking up at the ceiling, and then you swallow even though your throat does not want to close and you look at the person who loves you and smile."
"When you go into the ER, one of the first things they ask you to do is rate your pain on a scale of one to ten, and from there they decide which drugs to use and how quickly to use them. I'd been asked this question hundreds of times over the years, and I remember once early on when I couldn't get my breath and it felt like my chest was on fire, flames licking the inside of my ribs fighting for a way to burn out of my body, my parents took me to the ER. nurse asked me about the pain, and I couldn't even speak, so I held up nine fingers.
Later, after they'd given me something, the nurse came in and she was kind of stroking my head while she took my blood pressure and said, "You know how I know you're a fighter? You called a ten a nine."
But that wasn't quite right. I called it a nine because I was saving my ten. And here it was, the great and terrible ten, slamming me again and again as I lay still and alone in my bed staring at the ceiling, the waves tossing me against the rocks then pulling me back out to sea so they could launch me again into the jagged face of the cliff, leaving me floating faceup on the water, undrowned."
Labels:
a fault in our stars,
beautiful,
blogging,
books,
daisychains,
john green,
sad
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
"Nine-year-old Oskar Schell has embarked on an urgent, secret mission that will take him through the five boroughs of New York. His goal is to find the lock that matches a mysterious key that belonged to his father, who died in the World Trade Center on the morning of September 11. This seemingly impossible task will bring Oskar into contact with survivors of all sorts on an exhilarating, affecting, often hilarious, and ultimately healing journey." - from Goodreads
So many emotions hit me while reading this story. Crying was unavoidable, laughter was impossible to suppress and wonder filled my mind. After I saw the film, (Film post) I was determined to read the book. I'm glad I did but I also have to be honest. Honestly, I had to skim in some chapters because the content was well... interesting. It made me sad because the beauty of the story was sometimes lost in a worldly distortion. Still, the journey Oskar goes on, the pain and devastation, along with the joy and healing rang true. Oskar was an extremely well invented character, as a young boy with Aspergers everything he saw was in such a different light that what most people experience. All the moments were Oskar missed his dad, was angry at his mom and hated the very thought of his school friends was so honest and real. The entire time I was reading I felt like I was reading about something that our world ignores. How Foer did it, I don't know. But he created a beautiful story with such depth into the human mind, such feeling towards the loss on September 11th, leaving that story saved in my memory for always.
“The meaning of my thoughts started to float away from me, like leaves that fall from a tree into a river, I was the tree, the world was the river.” - Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
"The boy asked the girl to say 'I love you' into her can, giving her no further explanation. And she didn't ask for any, or say 'That's silly' or 'We're too young for love,' or even suggest that she was saying 'I love you' because he asked her to. Instead she said, 'I love you' [...] The boy covered his can with a lid, removed it from the string, and put her love for him on a shelf in his closet. Of course, he never could open the can, because he would lose its contents. It was just enough to know it was there." - Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
stop this fog.
You know...
It's really taken forever for me to start blogging again. I don't know what's wrong with me. I sit down with a few ideas and they all leave as soon as I begin typing. It's depressing and irritating. I want so much to just express. Instead, I give the computer a few blank stares, I get up for water, I think about life, give the blank stare again and log out.
I'm determined for that to be over with. So I'm posting about the last couple books I have read.
Stay tuned.
the no longer silent,
madeline
It's really taken forever for me to start blogging again. I don't know what's wrong with me. I sit down with a few ideas and they all leave as soon as I begin typing. It's depressing and irritating. I want so much to just express. Instead, I give the computer a few blank stares, I get up for water, I think about life, give the blank stare again and log out.
I'm determined for that to be over with. So I'm posting about the last couple books I have read.
Stay tuned.
the no longer silent,
madeline
Thursday, February 23, 2012
If I...
If I...
If I could be in a class right now, I would want it to be ballet. That's me, the blonde one in the middle.
If I could do something mindless today, I would blow bubbles with someone.
If I where to watch a movie this evening, it would be 'Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close' It's so beautiful and heart-breaking. I love it's depth. (I wrote about it on Innermost)
If I could be somewhere else today, I would want it to be Guatemala. It changed my life. This photo is just a part of my time, a memory that is forever sealed in my mind. The pool was freezing and I could hardly move, but these little girls loved it so much, I couldn't not enjoy it. It was such a blessing.
The weekend is so close.
xoxo,
madeline
Labels:
ballet,
bubbles,
dance,
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close,
friendship,
Guatemala,
hopes,
if I,
love,
wishes
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
My muse.
I've posted a few works that Vincent van Gogh has done, but I just can't get enough of his talent. Awhile back I got to go to The Getty museum and see the Irises painting, (see below) it was incredible to me. I may seem a bit emotional, but I teared up. It was there, right in front of me. If you look in the corners of the frame you can see where the painting stops and the old canvas begins. So many years ago this was painted, and now we get to see the history, an insight into the past. It gives me chills.
If you put me in a room with many movie stars on one side, and a work of Vincent van Gogh's on the other, I would go for Vincent. No doubt. He struggled a lot in his life but never stopped painting. He could paint beauty, even though doctors and specialists would say it looks like he was Bipolar and had Epilepsy. It never stopped him. That makes his work even more important to me. I wonder about what kind of feelings went on in his mind as he painted. He was horribly depressed sometimes, which eventually led to his suicide, but he almost always panted with the brightest, most vibrant colours.
"As we advance in life it becomes more and more difficult, but in fighting the difficulties the inmost strength of the heart is developed."
"I am still far from being what I want to be, but with God's help I shall succeed."
"I see drawings and pictures in the poorest of huts and the dirtiest of corners."
"The fishermen know that the sea is dangerous and the storm terrible, but they have never found these dangers sufficient reason for remaining ashore."
"If you hear a voice within you say, 'you cannot paint,' then by all means paint, and that voice will be silenced."
-Vincent van Gogh
xoxo,
madeline
Labels:
art,
daisychains,
history,
the getty,
thoughts,
vincent van gogh
missing this.
It's really been too long since I've posted on here. I've been so wrapped up in everything, including my other blog, Innermost. I've decided to be more faithful to Daisy Chains because I enjoy posting on here so much. There's a lot I could say right here and right now, but I'll wait. Look for many new posts in the coming days.
xoxo,
madeline
xoxo,
madeline
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