
“Desire builds me a rotten church to lay down in.”
— Duncan Slagle, from “Ghazal for the Loneliness that Must Have Killed Lilith,” FATHER HUNT

…Students were convinced that their first job out of college would not only determine their career trajectory, but also their intrinsic value for the rest of their lives. I told one student, whose dozens of internship and fellowship applications yielded no results, that she should move somewhere fun, get any job, and figure out what interests her and what kind of work she doesn’t want to do — a suggestion that prompted wailing. “But what’ll I tell my parents?” she said. “I want a cool job I’m passionate about!”
Those expectations encapsulate the millennial rearing project, in which students internalize the need to find employment that reflects well on their parents (steady, decently paying, recognizable as a “good job”) that’s also impressive to their peers (at a “cool” company) and fulfills what they’ve been told has been the end goal of all of this childhood optimization: doing work that you’re passionate about. Whether that job is as a professional sports player, a Patagonia social media manager, a programmer at a startup, or a partner at a law firm seems to matter less than checking all of those boxes.
"anon i think you should raise the bar a bit, but still, thank you i rly appreciate the compliment
“Desire builds me a rotten church to lay down in.”
— Duncan Slagle, from “Ghazal for the Loneliness that Must Have Killed Lilith,” FATHER HUNT


hi


meg sucks

清晨4:00醒来
望着你美丽的身体发呆
心想
到我老了,会记住这样青春美丽的你
感谢你
给我这两天的欢乐,够了
多了怕是无法承受,走了
我回家不再去剧院工作,再见
Rough translation:
Woke up at 4 in the morning. Stunned by the beauty of your body as I watched you sleep. And I thought, when I grow old I’ll forever remember this youthful beauty of yours. I want to thank you for these two days of joy–they’ve been enough. I’m afraid it’s all I can bear–so I must leave. I won’t be coming in to work anymore. Goodbye.
Retro phone booths transformed into goldfish aquariums by Kingyobu
Osaka, Japan
2011

kid from animation class

open question, jonny bolduc