Friday, August 31, 2007

daydreams

I wonder if there are any documented instances of curiosity killing a cat.

Here’s a good story, discussed on the Australia version of Mythbusters. If you touch a toad, you'll get warts. False. Warts are caused by a virus, which are usually species specific. Almost all viruses that infect frogs do not have the correct receptors to infect humans as well. That’s good. One less thing to worry about. I always worried that those lonely girls who kissed frogs in the futile attempt to find something anything better in life would get sick. I can put that concern aside, too.

I had a picture come to me. Still not sure what it means. I think it was a dream. I was awake, but I dream while awake sometimes. I was sitting on the end of a pier fishing in the ocean. I have fished or walked on several coasts in the US, and have walked the ocean’s beaches in a few different countries. One thing I always do is orient myself to understand what I am facing, albeit at great distances. This seemed to me to be the panhandle of Florida, a place I have never been. I was picturing the touristy side of Mexico in front of me.

I was reeling in my line. A youthful man was somewhere behind me. I had not paid specific attention to him, as people came and went but pretty much left me alone. I do recall nodding a wordless hello now and then – tip-of-the-hat type of thing.

As I reeled my line, this younger fresh-faced guy was becoming excited. “What do you think you have?” He was all atwitter. I said nothing but concentrated on my line. He seemed to understand my need to focus. I wasn’t focusing, I was just reeling. Didn’t much care for conversation. It was clear that he was an in-lander not used to local practice, and had for some reason been given a day pass from his custodians.

I brought my line out of the water. “Wowwee!” he said, “neato! What kind of fish is that? Must be 5 or 6 pounds, hunh?” I said nothing.

“What did you use for bait?” he asked.

I turned toward him. “I didn’t. This is the bait.”

That’s it. Still processing.

I was in Philadelphia today working with my old co-workers on an accreditation doc I wrote for them. It was nice to see them. I got some time to chat and catch up, albeit briefly. I wanted to spend some more time socializing but the environment isn’t conducive to it. There’s a palatable power structure that simply needs to be honored. I don’t mind it at all.

It was funny to watch the dynamic present itself again and it immerse in it without losing a beat. I got to see some past students. They all asked if I was coming back. It was weird to say, “no.” One girl I saw is graduating next term. I remember teaching her for her first two or three terms. Very focused on studies. Wrote well. For some reason I think she’ll be a cop. I hope she is safe. I worry about such things.

I have five trips in the next nine weeks. Illinois, New York, Connecticut, Virginia, and Florida. Going to be busy. Will be time for another trip to the women’s shelter afterward to drop off my booty of toiletries. I love collecting them. It is silly how much money is wasted in hotels.

The weather is changing so quickly. Cool nights are already here. I want to go to a cider mill this fall with my twin. I have pleasant memories as a kid of stopping at Northup’s Cider Mill in La Plume, PA. The building was still there when last I drove past a few years ago, but it is no longer in use. I remember seeing it closed and unused that fall. I stopped the car and peered into the window. It was clearly done. I recalled being in a bar somewhere years before – Scranton, Factoryville, Clarks’ Summit, I forget. One of the grandson’s was there. We talked about the mixture of apples, and how the later cider was best. He said how hard it was to get field help. I knew lots of illegals from my federal criminal work and assured him if he could lend me a truck, I could fill it with day laborers.

Some periods of time are harder than others. It is not measured by length.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

clinically speaking ...

I’ve met some rather cold people in my time. In fact, if the temperature of their soul could be measured, they would be labeled clinically dead.

To go through life well means to avoid placing your needs over the needs of others, even to your detriment. I don’t use “detriment” lightly. I am thinking of the interplay of needs and desires. If you want to live as you should, you place both your needs and your desires below those of others.

Here’s a chart to help you understand:



Notice the duality of your needs and desires being below those of the other person. Not even what you perceive to be your need rises above what you perceive to be in conflict with the other’s “mere desire.”

This applies likewise in the negative. I should do another chart to be clear, but I am hoping that the reader can get by with one visual. By the negative, I mean that your perceived or actual need cannot run afoul of the other person’s desire not to be subjected to your perceived or actual need.

There is actually a very real consequence to ignoring these very basic rules. In human interaction, it is alienation, loss of love (if it existed), and resentment. The damage to the aggrieved is even worse: feelings of powerlessness, helplessness, and trauma.

I have watched people rationalize their actions of placing their needs or desires over those of others. I have heard the argument, “it is a matter of right. I can do this because I am allowed to.” “Allowed to?” Ignoring the impact on others? “Allowed to?” Watching another suffer because you have the “right”?

I have the right to many things in this world. I have the right to practice law, but I chose not to because I find that it makes me feel dirty. Doesn’t matter how much joy I would get out of the income or the thrill of talking to a jury or wiping up the floor with some punk-ass opposing expert. It makes me feel dirty. The gratification I get is hollow. I chose to honor the profession by training others in how to do it well, but I stay out of it. I don’t like feeling dirty. I don’t making others feel dirty.

I don’t do things against another’s will, be that grounded in their needs or desires. It makes me feel dirty.

But I have watched many people live contrary to this basic precept. I have heard those same people say later in the game, with the greatest look of astonishment, “I didn’t know.” To which the rejoinder comes, “You didn’t want to.”

I often think of animals when I look at the actions of humans. Why would someone act so deliberately contrary to human norms in the name of “right” or “I didn’t know”? We are a higher-life form, after all.

Consider personalities.

Markings on animals do not alter over time. Personalities embodied therein do not morph into something inapposite of where they began. Changes that do occur are gradual, can be traced to their previous state, and rarely wander far from their origins.

If an animal is mean-spirited or passive, self-serving or supportive, takes flight at danger or stands ground, either because it always was or because of some formative event early its life, it will remain that way its entire existence. The only change is not a change at all, but an evolution: the animal will experience decreasing energy as life extracts its pennyweight or there will be an increase in guile. Both lead to the same place: the animal will choose its timing with more circumspection.

Any material change will be only by the greatest force of will, and will dissipate rapidly over time. It matters not how important or deeply held the impetus. Change is foreign and uncomfortable. Animals always return to their origins. Always.

Consider an animal that stalks to achieve comfort, compelling others to do its will only after it has cornered them. If the stalked revolt, the stalker will change tactics. But therein lies the first lesson: the tactic changed, not the strategy or the goal. The goal remains the same, which is achieving comfort. The goal never altered to be the one giving comfort. That is foreign. That is not within the stalker’s ability.

If the stalker does change to giving comfort, it will soon grow weary without its own needs being tended. It will wonder why it is not at least treated equally, that is, why its needs aren’t being tended. Therein lies the second lesson: see how quickly the changed role becomes uncomfortable, how quickly change again is sought?

Animals do not change. They are cast in a mold. They exhibit changes only as a shift in tactics. They will always seek that which they have always sought.

Humans, in these ways, are no different than animals.

I suggest that to be a human is of a higher order than being an animal, yet most of us blow past the distinction when it comes to satisfying our needs or desires. We follow our own personality, room temperature or lower.

The difference between humans and animals is supposed to be our capacity to reflect. Reflection requires understanding someone else’s needs and desires, and changing our behavior based upon those things.

Oh well.

Monday, August 27, 2007

I’m impotent!

I was visiting with my twin the other day and was feeling useless for various reasons. She held my right hand, lifted my face with her other hand so that I our eyes met, and said so tenderly, “You’re impotent.”

So now I have pledged to myself that every time I visit her, I will get a shave and haircut, and will wear a suit. If I’m impotent, I gotsta look impotent!

And I am impotent for another reason. I am a big-time Beatles fan. Lots of links on the right side under the Apple logo (all rights reserved!). My twin was looking at some art on-line and sent to me a link showing a limited ed. litho of a Stuart Sutcliffe painting.

The gallery link is here, and the litho link is (or was) here. A good picture of the original painting is here.

The Beatles Store has packaged the litho with some letter and wants about US$500 for it. Yuk! So I did some research and found the Stuart Sutcliffe site which is where the painting is available (and the good pic link above is found).

I wrote to the estate using their on-site cgi, so I don’t have a copy of it. I wrote something like: I love what you have done with this site and the memory of Stuart Sutcliffe. You have done very well. Thank you. / I could never afford anything original, just a different economic class than me. However, I noticed that The Beatles Store is selling a limited edition lithograph of this painting. They have packaged it with some letter and the pricing is therefore too much for me. / I am wondering, since you have licensed the image for reproduction, if you would kindly direct me to a source so that I could buy just the litho. / Thank you, Clyde.

Whoops! Talk about opening a can of worms! “Objection, your honor, assuming a fact not in evidence!”

I did not get a direct response. It was instead directed to The Beatles Store and the attorney for the Estate of Stuart Sutcliffe. The e is reproduced below exactly as I received it. I am laughing my ass off! Seems that both the litho and the letter are violating the copyrights of The Estate of Stuart Sutcliffe and the National Museums and Galleries of Liverpool, respectively. I be’s impotent!

Dear Sirs,

It has been brought to our attention that you have for sale the following:

“The Art of Stuart Sutcliffe.
Limited edition 96/1000.

Reproduction of one of Stuart's last paintings with letter from his tutor Edward Paolozzi
W71 x H54cm”

You need to know that there are two separate breaches of copyright;

1) The Stuart Sutcliffe Art image is the property of the Stuart Sutcliffe Estate along with the copyright.

No authorization has been given to reproduce this image or to sell it as a limited edition and therefore this is a serious breach of copyright.

2) The letter from Eduardo Paolozzi was purchased with copyright from the Stuart Sutcliffe Estate by the National Museums and Galleries of Liverpool. You are therefore in breach of their copyright as well.

Where do they come from?
Who authorized them?
How many were sold?
How many are left? Etc.

We expect to hear from you straight away - before we put this in the hands of our solicitors and before we inform the National Museum and Galleries of Liverpool.

Yours sincerely,
Diane Vitale
Director
The Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

PS: Who ever boot legged this should have at least ensured that Eduardo Paolozzi’s name was spelt correctly.


I wrote back and thanked them for contacting me, and wished them luck in resolving their issue.

I received this e in return:

Dear Clyde,

Thank you Clyde for bringing this very serious matter to our attention.

There is an official limited edition Stuart Sutcliffe print (entitled, The Beatals) available through the Rock Art Show and Celebrity Art.

Here is the link: www.rockartshow.com

Best wishes,

Diane Vitale for Pauline Sutcliffe


I am now a small yet official part of Beatles history, as is my twin. Impotency is cool!

Sunday, August 26, 2007

gardens and benches

Vegetable gardens are deeply meaningful to me. I am amazed at how my thoughts run as I recall gardens of my grandfather, father, and me. A peace and comfort settles within as if I have abstractly found some place safe from intruders.

We lived in Scranton when I was young. My dad grew up in the country, and we eventually moved there. Every Sunday we would visit his parents. My grandfather owned about 17 acres divided into three fields. His home was in the first field, a moderately sized yard off the road. The backyard ran deep. On the upper left was the chicken coop and, behind it, the barn; on the right, rest his garden. It still seems to me impossibly large for personal use, although he did sell sweet corn.

During each summer, I would spend several days there on more than one occasion. On Sundays, beginning in mid-July, people would come to buy corn. Whatever grandkids were present were sent off to pick 13 ears for each dozen requested. He charged one dollar. Years later, as I lived in the general area again, having made the mistake of leaving my adopted home that was chosen almost solely to be as far away from everyone with shared DNA as possible, people would tell me how they would go to my grandfather’s home with their parents to buy Harry Middleton’s corn. They marveled all those decades later that it was still the best corn they ever ate. They told me stories about their Saturday and Sunday dinners. I told them that on some of those weekends, they ate corn that I had picked.

Saturdays and Sundays from about 2:00 P.M. until 5:00 P.M. were always busy. The latest arrivers always spoke with a New York or New Jersey accent. During those busy times, I would sit on a bench and wait for folks to come up the drive. The bench was always there ever since I could remember. It was painted green, well-worn to show grey underneath. It was obviously hand-made, with two planks on top, a skirt, and one plank with a “V” in the bottom to serve as the leg. On the right side of the bench, if you were coming up the drive, it was attached to a maple tree. That tree and bench was the “free zone” or “home base” when the some of us 15 grandkids played games on Sunday afternoons. I recall many times when it was time to leave and return to coal town, I would sneak outside and climb the tree to hide. My dad would feign looking for me, talk to his dad, then shine the flashlight on me. I never sat on the bench with another person even once. I got up plenty of times when others presumed to sit. I can still feel the loss of turning into the drive years later and seeing both the tree and bench gone. I cut myself oftentimes thinking of the ignoble death that wonderful bench endured: discarded as if it was no more than old wood.

My grandmother and her daughters would work for what seemed weeks to can the harvest. They made pies from the apples in the orchard, which was in the lower right corner of the second field. Throughout the winter, when all the kids and grandkids came for dinner each Sunday, the table always had stewed tomatoes, creamed corn, and potatoes – all from the garden. We usually ate a chicken or two that a few hours previous to that dinner wondered why it was being carried out of the coop by its neck and hung by its feet on the clothesline. I’m pretty sure its wondering ended soon thereafter.

During the summers I would fish for hours at the lake. I knew the friendly people that would let me use their row boat. The lake was shaped like a dog bone caricature, with the “lower lake,” where I went, joined to the “big lake” by a long narrow canal. The canal was probably manmade. I was always reluctant to go from one lake to the other because the occasional motor boat would make the same journey. Being 12 was not an age absent of fear or present with false immortality for me. Being tossed by the wake in my wooden row boat was a risk easily managed – just don’t go there – so I usually avoided the risk altogether.

I remember catching a lot of fish, but rarely bringing any to the house. I would hold the bass, perch, sunny, or bluegill that gobbled up the worm I had dug up before I walked to the lake, and always look into its eyes. I tried to understand what it was thinking as it was instinctively sucking the air for oxygen that never came. I always returned it to the waters. I thought of families and of young fish wondering where mama or daddy got the gall or the strength to swim away from them so quickly and why they seemed angry at the time they left. I returned them in the direction where I caught them, assuming they would find their family again. I had one exception, which to my shock was more common than I could rationalize. If I caught the same fish twice, I presumed it was retarded, so I would throw it as far as I could in the opposite direction from where I caught it. I figured that fish families would benefit from not having to care for a retard in their midst. I eventually developed a system of putting the retards on the stringer and taking them close to the overflow dam. My logic was that they would either leave the lake altogether or be too stupid to leave that general area. I was comfortable with the process because I chose a place with an overhanging willow. Willows always meant sustenance to me. For fish, the shade and abundant food falling from its leaves meant that my retards would live a content life, but would no longer be a burden on their families.

I was 14 when we moved to the country. My dad bought 30 acres about five miles from his parents’ home. It was the last section of a field that is about 100 acres. No other homes were in that field. As the first two years wore on, my dad remarked that he had a false memory from long ago: he said that he remembered from his younger years that this opening was planted with field corn every season, but it was clear to him now that the crop was actually rocks. Every day, I picked rocks, filling my bucket and carrying them to the spring run-off area. I haven’t seen that spot for several years, but it never felt good to look at it anyway. I don’t miss it.

My dad had a deep layer of happiness to him that enveloped a complicated core. I think he was largely tormented by his lot in life. He worked hard and was incredibly successful financially for the last 18 years of his life, but he was in a marriage that systematically destroyed him like a cancer. In some measure, I think he accepted his lot because he came from Eastern European blood on one side and coal miner blood on the other: you aren’t supposed to enjoy life, just endure it. I am in the process of a divorce, in part, to avoid a similar fate. I will not do to myself nor to my estranged spouse what I saw occur to my father and his wife. I plan on living much longer than age 71, and will not smoke and drink myself into the grave; I do not want my estranged spouse to become bitter and hardened beyond a comeback.

After several seasons, my dad found the best place for his garden. The early attempts had respectable crops, but lacked the right feel. My dad was incredibly cynical about anything liberal – from politics to liberal-arts studies. But his shifting garden space spoke to me of feng shui. If I ever said that to him, which I did not, he would have scoffed. If he ever listened to a description of it, and was honest about his feelings as to why he moved the garden, I think he would have agreed with me. It would have been, however, an unspoken agreement. Outwardly, he would have told me about water runoff during storms, depth of top soil, and how he didn’t like not being able to see the garden from his window.

The end result was that I picked more rock to clear more garden space here, there, and seemingly everywhere until he settled on the spot in the lower backyard.

Dad would start looking at seed catalogues during Christmas Week. His orders were timed to arrive in March. Some time shortly thereafter, the germination plats would come out. We lived with seedlings for several weeks. “A garden needs to be fully in the ground by Memorial Day. Only lazy people do not take the time to understand that, and then they wonder why the yield is always supplemented at the farmers’ market. If you’re going to do something,” he would say, “do it right or not at all.”

His biggest challenge each late spring was crows. They would dig up the corn seed and eat the young plants. It was a battle each year, but one I think he relished and even looked forward to fighting. He found that coating the seed in tar won the first phase. A scarecrow with pie tins on strings dangling from the arms won the second phase, but just for a while. Crows are smart. They began to ignore the noise. A plastic owl on a perch was the next battle tactic. He admitted that nothing would stop it completely. One of the truly happy times for him would come when he would stay quiet behind a nearby tree until the crows gathered in numbers too bothersome to count. Around the corner of the tree, so slight in its advance that the crows would not notice, would come the long barrels of a double-barrel shotgun. Blam! Blam! Both rounds at once shot a few feet over their heads. Sheer panic would ensue. “That’ll keep them away for a week or so,” he would say with this incredible look of victory dominating his face.

One memory that makes me wince oftentimes is the last garden of his life. The crows toasted his first planting. I did the second planting as he sat in a lawn chair and told me how, even though I was 42 and fully versed. That planting did not come up. He didn’t bother with a third try. It was the first time I recall that he gave up. He said to me several times that summer, “You planted it too deep.” I said, “I’m sorry.” I knew he was wrong but I never defended myself. I used an old corn-seed planter that I recall buying for him twenty years earlier. I loved that it was still his mainstay. It is not possible to plant seed too deep using a planter. He knew that. I’m not sure why he put the burden on me rather than the crows, but I took it like a son is supposed to.

From June until early September, there was rarely any need to ask where he was. If he was home from work, he was sitting in the garden. Always rock to pick; always weeds to clear; always plants to honor. It was a replacement love for where it lacked elsewhere in his life. His words on picking the first generation of tomato blossoms, pollinating corn by hand, and growing a cucumber inside a bottle each year as a gift still resonate.

I have had gardens over the years, but only twice have I allowed myself to love them as they deserve. I have decided that until I can allow myself to feel as I should, that I will not dishonor a garden by merely putting seeds or seedlings into the ground.

That growing season lays out there somewhere, around a bend I cannot yet see.

Friday, August 24, 2007

words

Just writing. No structure; no purpsoe. Ambience – over on the right column under Beatles is “beatlegs podcasts.” I have Podcast #101 playing. It is labeled as if it is the August 19, 1965, Houston concert, but it is actually a splicing of a bunch of things that eventually leads to the start of the concert. All bootleg. The guy does a nice job. The Help! LP was released just two weeks before. The Beatles were in Atlanta the day before and Chicago the day after: What doofus planned their itinerary?

I was wandering through some blogs I haven’t read for a while. I like Totally Unauthorized for the blogroll on the right side. She’s fun to read, too, but the links can be a treasure trove. Except today.

I selected one (theresa duncan), curious to read another’s words; instead, I was presented with an obit. She was 40, some kind of actress. Seemed to have a whirlwind life. I googled her name and learned that on July 20 of this year she took her life. Then a week later, her boyfriend followed her. I went back to the blog and read several of her entries.

I returned to TU and tried a few more links, but just couldn’t get my wind back.

There was a time when I knew a lot of the daily activities of other people. I could close my eyes and see other places and other faces. I knew moods and expectations. What I perceived as interactions was supplemented later with actual tales. No more.

Be-Bop-A-Lula, she’s my baby / Be-Bop-A-Lula, I don’t mean maybe. Great song.

The other side of the road is a difficult place to be. Watching events from afar, catching partial conversations, and never knowing anything fully but the depth of the jagged cut of exclusion. Lest one forget, however, the “other side of the road” may not be the other side at all; it is all a matter of perspective.

I am now listening to portions of the Garden Fest / St. Peter’s Parish Church in Woolton tape of John Lennon from July 6, 1957 – the earliest recording of him performing. It was the same day he met Paul. It’s funny that such a tape even exists, but it sure is his voice. He would have been 16? Think so. Just switched to Pink Floyd – Animals and Wish You Were Here.

I’m trying to remember the name of bottled water that is common in convenience stores. Not Avian. I’ll come up with it. I read something a while back and then happened to have a bottle recently. Bottled-water companies have to disclose the source of their water. I have a Poland Spring bottle with me now, and it lists five or so springs. This other company listed their source as “Public Water Supply.” WTF? The tap. The bottle spends all this label space on filtering, purifying, filtering, purifying, filtering, and finally purifying one last time. Well, of course! It’s from the tap! I can’t come up with the name. Just be sure to look at the label for the source. Filtered tap water. Unbelievable. OK, was driving me nuts. Had to google it. Pepsi admits Aquafina comes from tap water. They had to admit it? The article states that Aquafina is the best-selling bottled water. What a shame. Great racket though. Gotta hand it to Pepsi. Do they produce any naturally healthy products?

From whence I came
I ventured out
No longer watching
Now participating
I felt alive
I felt brand new

But then I bled
Became a stranger
Struggled to hold on
Failing grasp
I found comfort again
From whence I came

Thursday, August 23, 2007

eating roots

Logic games. 2 + 2 = 5, for particularly high values of 2. Is that logic or merely understanding the difference beginning truncating and formatting, or perhaps that engineers abhor truncation? If you are scared half to death two times without opportunity for recovery in between, do you die? Logic or assuming a fact not in evidence, ergo, one cannot literally be scared half to death.

What passes for logic in this world is oftentimes specious. Did you know that “oftentimes” is a word? Why shouldn’t it be, eh? “Sometimes” is ok; “anytime” is fine. I think oftentimes will become my new favorite word. I will use it in sentences oftentimes.

Come to think of it, “often” is pretty cool. Sounds soft, like a pussy cat. This is from the Online Etymology Dictionary: c.1300, extended form of oft (q.v.), originally before vowels and h-, probably by infl. of M.E. selden "seldom." In common use from 16c., replacing oft. Extended form oftentimes is attested from c.1430.

I used a word that is coming up on 600 years old. I am so proud of myself.

I knew it! I was having a conversation with my twin last night and the topic of the etymology of “snot” arose – or rather, shot out. I suspected that it was shortened from another word (you reading this?). Ta da! But before I stand too tall, I did believe that perhaps it was rooted in the expulsion of an object, and was shortened and applied to that which was expelled. But I was partially right! O.E. gesnot "nasal mucus," from P.Gmc. *snuttan (cf. O.Fris. snotta, M.L.G., M.Du. snotte, M.L.G. snute), from the same base as snout. O.E. also had a verb snite "wipe or pick one's nose." Meaning "despicable person" is from 1809. Snotty "impudent, curt, conceited" first recorded 1870; snotnose "upstart" is from 1941.

Funny how language lingers. Old English, “gesnot.” And today, “What’s that?!” “Oh, jus’ snot.” Remarkable.

I love the word, “cellar”: c.1225, from O.Fr. celer, from L. cellarium "pantry, storeroom," lit. "group of cells," from L. cella. I read a long, long time ago that “cellar door” is the most melodic phrase in the English language. I don’t know if that is true, but I have adopted it. Beautiful phrase.

I remember being at work when I in my mid-20s. This girl who worked with me – nice enough, probably a good person, but we just annoyed each other terribly – her last name was Moreno. I remember a VP had her name in a doc and spellchecked it. He laughed a little too loudly and said, “Hey, the closest word to ‘Moreno’ is ‘moron’!” I really don’t think anyone else heard it, and he was a very nice guy just finding humor in it. I laughed at the symmetry. Yeah, I was young and northern.

Moron: 1910, from Gk. (Attic) moron, neut. of moros "foolish, dull" (probably cognate with Skt. murah "idiotic;" L. morus "foolish" is a loan-word from Gk.). Adopted by the American Association for the Study of the Feeble-minded with a technical definition "adult with a mental age between 8 and 12;" used as an insult since 1922 and subsequently dropped from technical use. Linnæus had introduced morisis "idiocy."

Boy, coin the word one year, and twelve years later the northerners get their hands on it. I never realized how fundamental the Mason-Dixon Line was to a well-lived life until recently.

Speaking of being from the north, I learned the other day that you’re not supposed to say “butt” in front of strangers. Go figure! I mean, it was a nurse in a proctologist’s office. It wasn’t like I said, “Would you stick that in my butt?” Or, “Does my butt look fat in these jeans?” Nothing like that. Well, come to think of it, it was a variant of the first one. OK. Some things I just have to accept. I’m learning.

Been drifting back to Marc Bolan lately. Thirty years ago next month he ate a tree at some nasty-fast speed. Glam rock. What a great period in my life. I really enjoy the videos on you tube – search on t rex.

Got things to do. Later.

little willie john is noy-vous

Nights can often be a time for filling hours. I’ve written for most of it tonight. Such incredibly redundant questions in an accreditation document. It is as if they expect you to give incompetent answers, so they ask for another variant of the previous question, then repeat the process eight or nine times. Painful. Finally hit the wall.

I’ve been listening to blues lately. Muddy Water’s Champagne and Reefer has a line in it that I have always missed a few words. Somehow, as I was putting gas in the car the other day, it clicked – “there oughta be a law against arresting people cuz they smoke a little dope.” Rather ironic, eh?

Got Buddy Guy singing Black Cat Blues now. I kept on blowing past Buddy Guy as I was stealing mp3’s online because I confused him with that drummer that used to show up on shows like Johnny Carson in the 1970s. Buddy Rich? Talk about a dying breed. And when was the last time you saw some guy come on stage with all the hardware and whistles from Aisle 5 at Home Depot strapped to every possible body part and call himself a “one-man band”? You had to love the small cymbals attached to the inside of his knees. I think the main instrument was always an accordion. You have to love accordions, such happy sounds.

I never liked clowns, circus or otherwise. Very low clown tolerance. I wonder if there is therapy for that. I guess it would have to be classified as a syndrome first so insurance would pay. For someone who liked clowns too much it would be Clown Aversion Therapy (CAT). Clown Anon. Meetings. Bunch of Steps. Calling clowns you got stalked to make amends. But what if you wanted to get closer to clowns? They are (gag) people, too!

It would be like over-coming any other phobia, I guess. They have fake airplanes that you can sit in to overcome that fear. Which I think is so stupid – it ain’t 30,000 feet up propelling like a tossed rock at 500 MPH. And when it is, then I am going ballistic and the federal marshall guy is going to have to subdue me with a stun gun. Anyway, clowns. Do they start with blow-up doll clowns? Would they be anatomically correct? The fallacy in that approach would be instantly known by any clown hater – the problem is the make-up. Grease paint on greasy skin. Makes my skin crawl just typing it. No clowns. No therapy. No, “Hi, my name is Clyde, I haven’t hated a clown for 23 days.” I will always hate clowns, circus and otherwise. Rehab is for quitters.

My twin disappeared for the night and it is really stressing me out.

I wrote a few weeks back, maybe a month, that I quit reading the news. Talk about jonesing! I spent at least two hours every day reading the news. At least. Would use a news site to clear my mind. Talk about irony. I found myself not able to delete my news-related favorites. Instead, I hide them out of sight on the list. Literally, I honestly told myself, “just in case.” Just in case of what? I had it bad. I was going to science sites and looking for news updates. Then I got angry with myself. I stopped watching ESPN because since ABC bought them, there is news at the bottom of the screen often. However long it has been, I haven’t visited a single site in I cannot remember how long. I am a news survivor! Just to test my resolve, when I was driving home from Rhode island last week, I let the sports radio station go into the news cycle. I learned nothing. It was great. What a complete waste of time the news is. Want proof? I heard all this doom and gloom about the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Doom and gloom? It was trading at 12,500! Get over it! That’s a lot of wealth creation over the last several years. Relax. Geez, news – done.

Jerry Lee Lewis, Great Balls of Fire. The movie of the same name is worth getting just for the scene where Jerry lee thought he was being dissed by not getting the last stage time, so he played this song and lit the piano on fire. Gotta love Jerry Lee. Unfortunately, you better write your fan letters soon. I have him in a Dead Celebrities Pool for 2007. Time’s running out, Jerry Lee, you have a little bit over four months before you have to expire. Sorry, pal. Saw you play in Scranton in 1971. Good show.

I think family is funny. So much drama and intrigue. No wonder cheap television does so well. It reflects the lives of so many people.

Little Willie John is so cool. I’m Shakin’ (1959).

When ya touch my hand
An' talk sweet talk
I got a knockin' in my knees
And a wobble in my walk

I'm tremblin'
And I'm shakin'

A-when ya take me in your arms
To talk romance
My heart starts doin' the St. Vitas dance

An' I'm pantin'
An' I'm shakin'

Early in the mornin' time
Late in the middle of the night
Whenever this chill comes over me
I wanna hug you with all-a my might, ay-ay

An' I'm sweatin'
An' I'm shakin'

A chill an a fever
So I've been told
Makes your head spin around
An' your feet run cold

I got fever
An' I'm shakin'

Feel like I been run through the mill
I can't move around an' I can't stand still

I'm so jittery
An' I'm shakin'

Samson was a mighty good man
Strongest in his day
Then along came Delilah an' clipped his wig
An' it looks like you took me
The same old way

So, I'm 'noy-vous'
An' I'm shakin'

Well, a storm rocks a ship on a sea
The wind shakes the leaves on a tree
I'm like a nervous wreck
I'm all shook up
And that's what you are doin' to me

'Cause I'm jumpin'
An' I'm shakin'
An' I'm jumpin'
An' I'm shakin'

Sha-aaaa-kin'
Shakin', shakin', shakin'
Shakin', um-mmm-mmm
I'm shakin'

FADES-
Shakin'
Shakin'
I'm shakin'


So incredibly cool. Night.

Monday, August 20, 2007

the arc resolves

times come when communication is beyond the capabilities at hand. no matter how much you actually want to say something, no matter how much you toss and turn the thoughts beforehand, nothing comprehensible comes out. to compound it all, it becomes deeply frustrating when the ridicule kicks in, even more so when the ridicule is third party.

i am often amazed, in a general sense, at how one-sided people can be. so wrapped in their own prism, they fail to even care to look at emotion and try to discern what lies beneath.

it is the strength of the prism, i suppose, that aids in ignoring things outside it. strength can come from moving on, finding the respite beyond the present. that forecast allows a person to constantly compare present difficulties with perceived future simplicity. such comparisons allow detachment; they allow disdain.

ironically, there is much comfort in knowing that another perceives future comfort for themselves, even if it comes at a present expense to the observer.

all things must pass, and now is that time.

being finally beyond any residual thoughts of any form or nature or origin or attribution brings a pervasive peace that has been a long time coming. i am glad to be here.

i remember wondering over the years how it would feel to wear this day. it frightened me sometimes, many times actually. other times, i thought it would be happy or exhilarating. i recall sadness, the form of sadness that takes me to the beach. the arc of emotions was deep and wide. i did not, however, even once anticipate what it actually is: peaceful. i feel the lifting of a great weight that has burdened me for too long.

daylight is good at arriving at the right time.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

asshat



i am really maxed out today. maybe 4:00AM i awoke with a bad stirring in my chest. one of those emotional stirrings, ugly and deep. i took as full a breath as i could and was pleased that my side didn't hurt. i moved towards my right and, slice, the pain was there. i had to breath shallowly to keep it at bay. every breath added to my building cranky mood.

i found a position and was able to sleep again. i don't remember the times or frequency, but i awoke a handful of instances, finally giving up at about 7:00AM. i didn't exactly "give up"; i allowed the anger to hold me, and that prevented any more sleep.

i tried friendly ground to quell its tightening grip. i wrote a few e's to my twin and felt better as i wrote, wonderful as i hit send, then right back down as the seconds ticked by.

i did some physical work, and was amazed that i was asked to help, then wound up doing it alone. that just added. so then i found my trigger. i had asked for something in an e several days ago and that e was ignored. so i went in search of the recipient, and found myself being questioned. so i informed said recipient the actions i would take to achieve my end if it was not done as i had asked. still, resistence. so i proceeded to complete my promise. not even a third of the way into ripping apart a room, i escalated the promise to a specific asset. i finally got what i had asked for in the beginning. "will you clean up this mess?" i was asked. "of course not. i told you what i wanted and what would happen if i did not get it. so you made an informed decision and this is the aftermath. not my problem."

i had to leave the house before i got more angry. i do not cotton rebellion in the ranks.

upon my return, i informed said rebelling party of my desire for future non-communication. the prestinely preserved historical response came of sheer wonderment enveloping a complete lack of understanding why i would be as cranky as i am. i refused to play. sheer wonderful, part two. refusal, part deux. finally, i gave just enough information to ensure that notice could be had if it was desired.

i will not be the other end of a candle burning at twice the normal speed ever again. i am quite angry that such a presumption was even made. there shall be no empathy accepted in any form. that has been stated clearly enough for me, and in sufficiently clear words (with response) that no intention to begin or continue that process is at hand.

i have spent almost 20 years of my life in a train wreck. my only hope is to get out alive.

sometimes you have to wear an asshat to get your point across.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

stupid is as stupid does

I had a transient ischemic attack about a month ago. The prognosis for something bigger hitting for me is termed "moderate." There are only three categories for future big ones as predicted by a TIA and its aftermath: Naw; Probably; and Brace Yourself. I'm in that middle one.

It is interesting to me to watch myself now. I am in a period of aftermath declination as I write. It comes and goes. Ordinarily, I am focused and ready for whatever life feels like kicking me with today. Then comes the wave. I feel it settle over me like a wool blanket. My typing just sucks - missed letters, slowly typed, reversing letters constantly. I am forever going back on the post and correcting stuff.

I also can't seem to type without speaking the words. That is really annoying. My physical movements right now are greatly slowed. My balance isn't good.

I think of the next thing that I want to type, and by the time I start, I remember only the first two or three words. Sometimes that is enough to spark the thought back to life. Other times, I have to bail.

What I observe most in these times is my inability to recall virtually anything. It is profound in its scope. If I want to remember something that happened this morning, yesterday, or, God forbid longer ago, I have to stop all of my physical activity and let pictures come. If I concentrate, I get nowhere. If I think around a memory, then a picture comes. I stare at the picture, and then a second more comes or that first one goes 3D for me. Then I get the time and place of the memory, but still, few specifics.

What I have learned is that when this hits, I need to just sit and push away as much stimuli as I can. I have been dealing with this - do you call it an episode? - for about two hours now. My daughter has a friend over and we were watching the Yankees. I couldn't handle the low level of conversation between them without getting frustrated. I had to block as best I could the announcers, too. What happens is I have to think to interpret the words, and that thinking precludes further listening, so I fall behind. I just got up several times to be alone, to blank my slate, then I was able to go back ... for a little bit!

I have to move my hands and arms slowly as I sit here. That was not so much a lesson, but merely a limitation. I can't seem to move them quickly, and something inside says that it would not be a good idea anyway.

It is all rather peculiar to me. It is much more fun watching myself like this, and following my brain around, than it wouldbbe to watch a loved one go through it. At least this way, I have a good measure of intellectual curiosity that I can satisfy. It is just no fun watching someone else when they can't tell you in any detail what is happening.

They termed it a TIA, but most of those resolve completely. Mine has not. This period I am having right now occurs a few times a week. It was two or three as often before, so maybe there is some measure of resolution occurring.

I am out of words.

Monday, August 13, 2007

train wrecks to observe

Been an interesting couple of days. Have watched old, familiar train wrecks in continued slow motion. Have watched continued bonding among others occur behind closed doors and at long distances. Have gravitated back to The Beatles in my music, just now mixed with the blues, melancholy, and Johnny Cash.

Speaking of music, my current mix: BB King, The Thrill is Gone; Johnny Cash, If You Could Read My Mind; U2, One; Neil Young, Philadelphia; The Band, I Shall Be Released; The Beatles, Yer Blues (2d take from the Rolling Stones Circus, with Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, John Lennon, and Mitch Mitchel (Jimi Hendrix Experience), Ballad of John and Yoko, You Never Give Me Your Money, and Two of Us; George Harrison, All Things Must Pass (Demo version from the White Album sessions, so actually it is The Beatles); John Lennon, Old Dirt Road, Real Love (Demo take 7), and Free as a Bird (John on piano, late demo); Ringo Starr, La De Da; and Creedence Clearwater Revival, Who’ll Stop the Rain, Have you Ever Seen the Rain?, Lodi, and Someday Never Comes. 72 minutes, fits on a CD. Send me an e me if you want one.

Ringo is there so I don’t blow my brains out. Ripped the stream from Beatles Radio, so there is radio talk after the song. Just haven’t gotten around to clipping it yet.

I have been having fun watching trips up and down the stairs tonight. Wasn’t counting, just watching. I am such an asshole – nothing slips by me. That’s why I need to live alone. No one to observe. Safer that way.

I sat outside tonight and saw a shooting star. Same thought as always came to mind, always for another. Last night was my favorite night of the year – the Perseid meteor shower. Just didn’t have the heart to watch it this year. Shame, too. I was looking forward to it. No moon, clear night. But I was blessed with a leftover tonight, so that was very cool.

Gotta snap outta the funk. Just fucking grabbing me by the intestines and refuses to loosen. Anger came and went. Tears tried to rise, won for a while, and then gallantly lost to fight another day. Anger again? No, now it is fantasy. I can feel the detachment welling, however. That has always been my best friend. Complete detachment resulting in viewing the world in bright-eyed wonder. I love detachment. I can float above everything for weeks or months, even years at a time. Nothing registers. Every body blow is painful but evokes no response or even emotion. I’m inviting it. Oh, how I have missed it! It has been years since my friend came to stay. Please come now, I have longed for your arrival. Tell me you love me still.

There is real skill in keeping this friend from the view of others. I got through my late childhood and teenage years, the mid-1980s, and about 1996 until 2004 with it holding me in its loving caress and barely a notice by anyone. Then I let it go almost three years ago. Let my guard down. Exposed myself.

But as I write I am beginning to smile, because I feel the rust leaving my bones. I feel my old friend settling in, telling me that I am still loved by it, it will keep me safe. Wow. What a great feeling it is. Just amazing. I had forgotten, really, forgotten what it actually felt like. Funny how memories can seem so real but are just two dimensions.

No more exposure. I have my circle drawn. Within it are fellow protectors.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

la fille avec yeux de kaléidoscope

I am fighting writing so much. A thought struck me, a picture came with it, so I grabbed someone else’s words that ran with it and tossed them into the post below. It felt good, but as I sit thought after thought after thought races in, each with its own picture, each running somewhere in my head. I opened Word, wrote two lines, and bailed. Now I find myself with fingers to keyboard again.

The past 72 hours have been redefining in a very core way. I dislike such changes. I dislike passages. I dislike the lonely side of being alone. I dislike what it portends for the future.

The path I walk has narrowed. The forest is closer to my sides now, and that is unsettling. There’s always an issue within me of safety. I’m perfectly fine for long stretches, but then a moment arises and I need – need – reassurance. The path I walk now isn’t wide enough for anyone else.

What is interesting, purely from an observational sense, is the unknown length of the journey. Does the path end around the next bend? Is there a resting place? Did you ever get to a stage in your life where it really doesn’t matter? The commitment was made to walk, so I walk. What is there is there; my conjecture won’t change it.

LES AUTRES parce que vous n'avez pas gardé
Ce voeu profond-juré a été des amis du mien;
Pourtant toujours quand je regarde la mort dans la visage,
Quand je grimpe aux hauteurs de sommeil,
Ou quand je grandis excité avec le vin,
Soudain je rencontre votre visage.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

The girl with kaleidoscope eyes

Picture yourself in a boat on a river,
With tangerine trees and marmalade skies
Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly,
A girl with kaleidoscope eyes.

Cellophane flowers of yellow and green,
Towering over your head.
Look for the girl with the sun in her eyes,
And she's gone.

Lucy in the sky with diamonds
Lucy in the sky with diamonds
Lucy in the sky with diamonds
Ah... Ah...

Follow her down to a bridge by a fountain
Where rocking horse people eat marshmallow pies,
Everyone smiles as you drift past the flowers,
That grow so incredibly high.
Newspaper taxis appear on the shore,
Waiting to take you away.
Climb in the back with your head in the clouds,
And you're gone.

Picture yourself on a train in a station,
With plasticine porters with looking glass ties,
Suddenly someone is there at the turnstile,
The girl with kaleidoscope eyes.

Lucy in the sky with diamonds
{Repeat and fade}

11:11

the time seems to find me at the most difficult times. i see it on bank clocks, in the car, on my computer. it always startles me when i see it.

the first time it registered on me i was at a funeral, a tragic unexpected death, maybe 24 or so years ago. i stood behind the widow graveside. i looked at her hands on her lap. she wore a digital watch, "11:11 AM." i wasn't even wondering the time. i just saw it there. the picture is still with me.

everytime i see 11:11 i quickly try to change whatever i am doing. it isn't as conscious as those words suggest. sometimes me hand jerks. if seated, i find myself standing to leave the room. i cannot co-exist with that time. i just don't know why it has such a profound impact on me.

lately, perhaps the last two months, i have seen that time in countless number. it's been unsettling.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

a man's dying wish

I want nine men going to the graveyard.
I want eight men coming back.

Blind Willie McTell
Dyin' Crapshooters Blues
1932