This is a little project I collaborated with Emily Wang, who's been my photographer since 2020. I had been reading Garden of Eden by Hemingway the summer of 2022, in NYC, and thought that summer was best for reading novels: the days are longer, more time to mull over a book. I had this narrative in my head, where in the summer I imagined a woman, but I didn’t know what she looked like. So I asked Emily, my long-time photographer, because she'd know how to visualize what goes on in my head. Therefore, we had a photographer, behind her lens, capturing me and the woman I imagined. I realized that, published posthumously, GoE might contain Hemingway's reluctant truths. After all, he wrote,
"There is nothing you can do except try to write it the way that it was. So you must write each day better than you possibly can and use the sorrow that you have now to make you know how the early sorrow came. And you must always remember the things you believed because if you know them they will be there in the writing and you won’t betray them. The writing is the only progress you make."
Seemed like he was losing memories. What I also once again saw was that writing was like cutting an onion. The writer must peel themself layer after layer, but only ending up infecting (affecting) themself. A perfect circle must be broken to become (a) more interesting shape(s). There's nothing I can do but write.
Thank you Em, for looking at my face for so long and still knowing me. I only wanted to see how you see as well.
Photographer: Emily Wang Inspiration: Garden of Eden by Ernest Hemingway
Garden of Eden: Summer 2022
Lately I've been sleeping a lot. My friends used to know where to find me because I never slept. But lately no one knows where to find me. The more I sleep the less I time I have alive. It's like that I've been slipping into another world. I had a dream the other day. I asked a lover for his hand. He said that he could give it to me, so I handed him a knife. He sat on the edge of his bed and chopped his left hand off. However, when he handed it to me, I suddenly didn't want it anymore. The hand had become a blob of meat, deflating in the palm of my hand. I looked at him, and didn't know what to say. But he looked like he was about to faint.
I've been losing memory. Forgetting what has happened the night before, who I've met. The more I sleep, the more I forget. Each time I wake up, it feels like someone has just punched my brain, like overcoming a jet lag, and it goes on for a few more hours. Sleep has become my enemy. It seems that I've left my memory somewhere else, at another place, and I'm waking up into someone else's body in an unfamiliar apartment where I've forgotten where the water is or how to turn the shower on. However, I know that someone has been writing my stories.
During August, a woman arose from my body one night. She looked at me from mid air and slowly bent over me. She then came on top of me, her long hair brushing against my neck, and I could feel her hair wet, like she'd just come out of the shower. She told me to quiet. "You won't be waking up in a long time." Before I drifted off into sleep again, I saw her face clear: she looked exactly like me. When I woke up two days later, I saw a half smoked cigarette left in my ash tray, with dark red lipstick stain on it. It wasn't mine. I realized that I might have been exchanging bodies with her.