My pal Heather of the fantastic Fuel Friends blog tagged me on Facebook today to pick three songs that most accurately speak to who I am. This was a way, way harder assignment than I would have imagined. And if you ask me tomorrow the songs will be all different. But it was really fun. Here are my three songs.
Fast Car-Tracy Chapman
There is a photo in my baby book of me sitting on the floor,
enough of a baby that sitting is probably all I knew how to do yet, listening
intently to my dad play the guitar. Music was on all the time in our house and
I had parents who made sure we got a good variety of it in our little diets.
There are a lot of artists that I loved as a kid and then discarded but one of
the few who made it through to my adult life is Tracy Chapman. Even today, when
I hear the first few bars of “Fast Car” I can instantly put myself back onto my
white wicker day bed in my bedroom wallpapered with pink striped and a ballet
slipper border. Even though the theme of the song was probably more adult than
I understood, the song was wistful, and wistful is what you are looking for
when you are 12 and you want to feel things and dream things. I didn’t really listen to her again until
college when I bought her album and it’s feminist and racial storylines started
to make more sense to me. Her next few albums were far less political but she
writes intense, deeply emotional songs and she seemed to release one during all
the major eras of my young adult life. For someone who has often been described
as both intense and deeply emotional, I suppose it makes sense that she is one
of my favorite soundtracks. I finally
got to see her play after my mission and it’s still one of my favorite shows,
nothing flashy, just Tracy playing song after song I knew by heart.
Fake Plastic Trees-Radiohead
I moved to California for a job when I was 25. I arrived
full of the naïve expectations of anyone whose sole experience “moving away”
consists of the relatively safe perimeters of college and an LDS mission. Which
is not to say I didn’t know what it meant to feel crushing homesickness or
loneliness, or “what they hell have I done-ness”. But both missions and college
share the safety net of being surrounded by people also going through crushing
homesickness and loneliness, friend-making, distraction-providing structure and
a firm expiration date. Showing up in LA with a car full of everything I owned
there was no Welcome Week to attend, no cafeteria full of fellow nervous
missionaries. No one knew I was coming and no one would have cared if I turned
my little Honda around and drove straight back to Utah. A friend who had made a
similar move a few years earlier told me it was a good opportunity to figure
out “what you are like when no one is telling you what you should be like”.
I was miserable for months. But he was right, with no one
around to influence me, I figured out what kinds of movies I wanted to go to
when I was the only one deciding, discovered what kind of friends I would make
when there was no way to tell who was “cool”. I formed a relationship with my
faith that wasn’t based on everyone around me being Mormon too. I was 25, a
college graduate, a returned missionary, and had just worked on an Olympic
Games and yet it felt like I was just starting to settle into my adult self.
One of the defining factors of that little era was a huge
shift in my musical tastes. I made some friends who had varied ears and liked
making mixes so I was constantly listening to new things. I was training for a
marathon and in those days pre-iPod that meant hours and hours of the same 12
songs on a Discman. Someone put “Fake Plastic Trees” on a mix and although I
feel like the ultimate cliché even writing this, it was on those long runs
along the beach that I fell wildly, deeply, hopelessly in love with Radiohead.
I wasn’t cool at all though, I bought “The Bends” instead of Kid A and listened
to “Bulletproof…I Wish I Was” and cried about boys like it was my job.
I am not the first girl to move from Utah to California and
fall in love with Radiohead. Probably not even the first one to do it while training
for a marathon. But I can’t look back on time of my life without nearly passing
out from the weight of all the nostalgia.
Islands in the Stream-Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton
When I was a little girl and I would think about God, which
was a lot because I was a little Mormon girl, I thought He looked like Kenny
Rogers. Truthfully, as an adult when I try to picture God, He still kind of
looks like Kenny Rogers. My dad liked Kenny Rogers and I had every word to the
The Gambler memorized at a younger age than I probably should have. And then there is Dolly Parton. Some day I will get around to writing my piece
on my “Board of Lady Directors” about all the women I would seat on my Board of
Life and you will see all the many and varied reasons she would be the Chairman
of this Board. But for the purposes of songs that describe me, Dolly gets a nod
for being a smart, talented, unapologetically ambitious woman but also managing
to be funny, generous and positive. There is some trickiness to being a woman
in the world of sports and I’ve never wanted career success to come at the
expense of remaining the nice person I hope is the real me. You might be surprised to know how often I think "hmmm, what would Dolly do?".
Also I chose this song because although I’ve never been one
of those girls who daydreams about her wedding, I’ve already asked my friends
Jed and Rebecca to sing this at the reception should that occasion ever
arise. So there.