Friday, December 18, 2009

la la la laaa

When I think back on the year and a half I spent here, I'll surely think about the shops in the Mission and the views from Alamo Square, and about the opera and needle exchange and of course the flatest of flats. But I count myself infinitely lucky that the first things I'll think of will be my FM and my JM. Through ups and downs, loves, likes, extreme dislikes, sickness and health, mountains of snow and mountains of granite, bound solidly together in hatred of the T and love of San Francisco and each other, even when I'm stretching their patience just a liiiitle bit thin.

Love her,


and him.


And this, forever and always, amen.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

photo, typo, lame-o, weirdo, no-go, frio

Where's my botany photo of the day? I guess I'm not supposed to expect it till 4pm, and it's only 3:40pm now. But yesterday it came at 2pm. I have only been a proud member of the listserv for two days. It's like looking at another planet, but it's my own planet. I just got an email as I write this but it was something from Mike. I'm pleased to get an email from Mike but I wanted that BPOTD.

Have you all seen Ordinary People yet? It's really excellent, my favorite movie after Moonstruck, which I barely count as a movie because it's more of an experience or a frame of mind. Recently I've been accidentally typing words that start with "f" as "ph" words instead, then looking at them squinty eyed until it dawns on me that I made the f/ph switch again and I fix it. I feel like admitting this because Google Wave is the future so you'll all find out what a horrible typo-committer I am soon anyway.

I'm attempting to come up with a way to keep this necessarily cumbersome conversation fresh and light:

Me: So, uh, I just wanted to let you know that this Friday will actually be my last day, so you'll be dealing with my replacement from Monday onwards, and she's excellent, so no worries, but just wanted to give you a heads up to avoid confusion, so, uh...yeah.
Them: Oh my goodness! Where will you be after this, if I might ask?
Me: I'm moving to AFrica [I always say it like that for some reason - AF rica - and am starting to get sick of the sound of my own voice saying AFrica].
Them: Oh My Goodness! What will you be doing?
Me: I'll be teaching actually [always with the fucking actuallies]! So yeah, I'm really excited, but sad to be leaving here.
Them: Oh wow! Well it's been a real pleasure, and be sure to [insert borderline awful comment about avoiding sickness, being wary of the natives, protecting the local flora/fauna, or not coming back pregnant/shaming my parents here]. And keep in touch, ok? Because we want to hear about all your adventures.
Me: Yeah of course, I'll keep in touch for sure [untruth]. It's been a pleasure.
Them: Ok, well if I don't talk to you before Friday, good luck and keep in touch!
Me: Alright, uh, thanks for everything! Bye!

I know everyone means well and this is exactly what I would be saying if the roles were reversed, but I don't know how to bring these conversations back to the realm of reality. Until my dying breath I will detest the perfunctory, even as I prop it up.

M.F. walks by my cubicle all the time and rubbernecks. There is NOTHING going on in here. I'm just sitting typing away, and he peers through the entrance in childlike wonderment as if I were training a cubicle full of highly functional chimps to mix bar drinks or something. Every time he's out of sight, I shake my head involuntarily and laugh, and for some reason it makes me feel good, to know that he's out there, weird as hell, doing his thing. I do weird stuff too and I wonder who thinks I'm weird.

In an email thread amongst my fellow RW09 WorldTeachers today, someone finally acknowledged that mixed in with all the excitement we've been trumpeting into each others' ears recently, he's also feeling nervous and sad. I jumped all over it with seconds and hear hears, and was quickly followed by the rest of the group. Nice to know I'm not the only one who's feeling a bit overwhelmed at the thought of spending some significant time away from loved ones and loved cities. You know it's all your fault right? You know I love you guys too much to leave, right? No no away I go but know that you've made it damn difficult and that that's a great thing.

It's COLD y'all! So, so cold. I love it because it feels like we're in Tahoe all the time now. But being outside even a little is painful. Luckily the Diller Building can't afford heat so I'm pretty much used to it. How cold will it get before none of us are expected to come to work? For some reason, and I'm ignoring the presence of snow here, as it gets colder things seem to get whiter and whiter for me. So I'm imagining it getting ten degrees colder and the whole world gets about twice as white and bright as it seems now, and as it gets colder and colder things get whiter and whiter and eventually it's all so bright that we can't see anything anymore and we just wrap up pleasant under the blankets and wait for some heat to come along and melt some color back into things.

Monday, December 7, 2009

blog, dave, morning, mum, worst, eight

Almost time for this little blog to close its doors so I return to what I never left which is signing in when my head's buzzing with no clear thoughts and writing what pops up and being equal parts surprised embarrassed pleased that you all give a look in.

Dave walks in and we have a pleasant little exchange he and I. Last week! he says is it? I say and we laugh because god knows I have been looking at this day with the shiny hopeful eyes of the nearly baptized since early June. He gets it and I wonder if Dave knows that he's the only one in this building that kept me on good terms with human kind this year. I'll tell him that before I leave, I'll write it somewhere, because I twist the spoken word too tight.

We got up early this morning and had coffee before work; there was a good amount of time to sit and talk and enjoy the coldest morning I can think of in San Francisco. The ferry and its terminal are crisp white beautiful and the seagulls prance around like they own the place. Having a morning before work is novel and lovely. Feels more like life. Man oh man we can do what we want.

My mom today: "I don't want to sound like your mother, but...". What?

Phoning Mike on our respective UCSF phones is knock-down-drag-out my favorite thing to do at work. When that phone rings and I'm expecting 49755 and I see 53987 instead, my heart does a tiny dance in its own throat and I know I'm in for a treat. I love how the conversations can be about the most significant things going on amongst our circle of friends, or about how he CANNOT FATHOM how phones operate without switchboards anymore, or about me yakking on for three to four full minutes before I realize that he's gchatting with Lees and not listening to me. I love how a 20-minute conversation can end mid-sentence with 'gottagobye' and how invariably as I reach to return the receiver to its cradle I can still hear Mike ranting about friendship and decency and calling me THE WORST. You are! The best of the worst of the best JM.

I started this around 10am today and now it's 6pm. Eight hours is a working day. Four more of these left. Number 9, number 9, number 9.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

t-give goals 2k9

Because it's still good to have goals, even goals like these:

bake bread rolls
watch eps 1, 3, 9 and 10 of BOB
do not arrive late to epic copley family t-give day hike
finish a burnt-out case
make spoon bread
make something pumpkin
sleep 9+ hours each night
put bread sauce on everything
beat each 0f my family members in 1-on-1 cribbage
write two letters
drag something down from the attic

Realistically: Last chunk of time spent at home for two years. <3 t-give 2k9.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Today is a big day for me. Day One of Year Three on the outside.

If you're reading this, there's a good chance that I'm grateful for you, that I love you, even though I probably wouldn't say it to your face more than once a year, and I'd have to be a little drunk.

I'll try to be less cynical this year. I have no real reason to be cynical anymore with mates like you around.

Here's to the terrible twos! I will raise a little hell and I won't forget how good I have it.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

things one might write after spending six hours thinking about harm reduction

Regarding Pulp Fiction and its possible influence on the decisions of someone administering Narcan, Pauli says:

Don't stab anyone in the heart ever with fucking anything.

Wise words kids! Thank you Pauli.

Will I ever be in a situation where I'm lying on the street, unconscious, with someone screaming in my ear "I'm taking all your dope", and will I be unresponsive, and will they see that I'm breathing fewer than nine times per minute, and will they give me a couple of rescue breaths and then shoot me in the northwest quadrant of my ass with Narcan? And if I never get to that point, is that because I was born to Pat and Kev, or because I've never been offered a drug, or because I went to college, or because my train came late one time, or because Ross asked me to remember the number 9?

Is it any weirder to imagine, given life eight years ago, that I am right now sitting in this bay window looking at this street corner, with a rumpled bed and Thao playing on these speakers, making the acquaintance of multiple people named Morgan, with varying degrees of success?

Bring your hips to me, oh bring your hips to me, oh oh. To me!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

this is why the people hate the blogs

This song is undefeated in making me cry! Well done, NMH. Something to be said for consistency, I guess.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

remember remember

Time for my now-annual Guy Fawkes posting. I love this holiday for nothing more than its general what-the-fuckery.

Remember, remember the fifth of November
The gunpowder treason and plot.
I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot.

Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes, t'was his intent
To blow up the King and the parliament.
Three-score barrels of powder below
To prove old England's overthrow.

By God's providence he was catch'd
With a dark lantern and burning match.
Holloa boys holloa boys let the bells ring
Holloa boys holloa boys God save the King!

And what should we do with him? Burn him!

(...what?)

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

chicago

I used to be big-time on the pictures but something about it clicked off and taking them now makes me feel cheap and hollow. So I pressed the capture button on my little red (pink) camera precisely three times during my Chicago trip: one of the underside of my train upon my dad's request, one of Aya and me in the bean because that is what the bean is for, and one of the most depressing eternal flame of all time surrounded by ratty crazy pigeons (Aya: "chickens") to show Lisa.

Here are my Chicago pictures:

My nest on the train. A big white blanket, two pillows, two books, countless crosswords strewn about, a journal, the pen, mangoes (Lisa) apples (Juliette) cheddar cheese and chocolate covered raisins (Morgan) crackers (Tatyana) Cliff bars (Joe) little bread rolls (Pater), both seats fully reclined, a queen-sized square of property that has become my tiny kingdom.

The stretch of the Colorado River through Ruby Canyon that makes my whole self ache for something else. Pure desire.

The absolute blackness of flat Nebraska at some deep hour of night. I already feel like I'm crawling along the ocean floor when along side the train comes a massive truck, red and white lights surrounding its edges and wheels, the most beautiful gem I've ever seen, and I'm Zissou, right at home, swallowed, at rest.

Stepping out of the Amtrak station onto Adams Street and immediately being punched in the face by Chicago. Chicago, that somber city indeed, like a slug to the stomach or an anvil on your toe, like heavy, like brick.

Facing a tall concrete building after stepping out of the bus onto a dark street in Hyde Park, turning around a couple of times, lost and confidently waiting to be found. Out of the quiet comes that familiar clip of boots on the sidewalk and my full name called out, I whirl around and there's Aya, and the full weight of how much I've missed her wells up at the back of my eyes and I'm so glad to be just where I am just then.

Looking out of a third story window surrounded by green and reddening ivy onto trees, a park, a runner wearing long black leggins, the 6 bus, brick and beauty and seriousness. Saul Bellow lived here and I feel it.

A five-foot stretch of the Michigan Avenue bridge smells like bleu cheese, intensely like bleu cheese, like you are fighting your way through a massive round of bleu cheese, and ends abruptly, inexplicably.

Catching my first sight of Lake Michigan in the daylight and realizing I'm right in the middle of Ordinary People, and that what I thought was shoddy 80's camera work was actually an incredibly accurate portrayal of that steely, magnificent, ironed flat, terror-of-God lake. Later, seeing the el stop labeled Skokie and tasting pancakes at the back of my mouth.

Slouching down low on a bar couch in a neighborhood I like but don't know the name of, Aya on my left and Jon, meeting and exceeding all hyped up expectations, on my right. They talk over my head as I look across to the angry belligerents on the bench against the wall, watching them work themselves up, until one of them pounds one fist into the other and jumps to his feet, spits on the floor in a rage, and sits again, exhausted. I snap my attention back to the local conversation but I don't participate and I've had a bit too much and I'm so so content.

A shoddily handwritten sign on the doorway into the el, blue line temporarily closed, an arrow pointing vaguely westward. I never feel danger this late. My first experience in a cab. I am proud of our all-grown-up conversation and I wonder if he listens.

The glittering dining room of the Drake in the late afternoon, a harp, a fountain, all whiteness and brightness, lap it up. Another wedding party comes to rain on our bitter quasi-single parade; for a quiet moment with our tea and our freedom we are better than they are, smarter and better. I realize that I came to Chicago not for the sights or the bricks or the popcorn but to gripe and plot and hope over various liquids with Aya, and that this is what we do and I love it.

An inadequate goodbye in a doorway, a further goodbye note left in thin red pen on a napkin. We'll see each other at Christmas we've still got Christmas there's always Christmas.

Home home home home. Sitting up high on the back of a bench so he'll spot me, yellow backpack on my left, morphing the driver of every small grey car into him until I see them clearly enough to realize that they're a Chinese woman, a blond girl, an old man. Then finally in one car the vision holds and he's here he's getting out he's here and we're two grins and he's here and he's helping with my bags he's here and hello, perfect hello.

Friday, October 16, 2009

today i play

heartbeats ... the knife
wagon wheel ... old crow medicine show
look at miss ohio ... gillian welch
copperhead road ... steve earle
frankie's gun ... the felice brothers
furr ... blitzen trapper
lady on the water ... blitzen trapper
the breeze ... dr. dog
creep ... radiohead
nice dream ... radiohead
sulk ... radiohead
disco 2000 ... pulp
common people ... pulp
long forgotten fairy tale ... the magnetic fields
kiss me like you mean it ... the magnetic fields
under pressure ... bowie + queen
ziggy stardust ... david bowie
rebel rebel ... david bowie
pale blue eyes ... velvet underground
afterhours ... velvet underground
this time tomorrow ... the kinks
strangers ... the kinks
les champs-elysees ... joe dessin

Thursday, October 15, 2009

new approach: face value.

no interpretation or extrapolation or inference. no guessing or assuming. no wondering. knowing or not knowing, asking, being told, believing, accepting, understanding. fact. happened. make sense.

Friday, October 9, 2009

7h55 - 8h00am

once every while that smell when i wake up that feel that chill that complete all encompassing comfort that reminder of ENGLAND! and i know today has legs because it started with england.

sometimes it's nice to be scary rather than scared. yesterday, as i walk apace past a kenneth brannaugh lookalike on market street near hayes valley:

jesus, you scared me.

is it the hood? should i not wear the hood?

no no, it's just, you know.

what?

the city, you know.

my map is not done, probably won't get done. i lost my ruler, see. the ruler was the heart of it, because without the ruler there are no little squares, and sans squares continents and countries and counties and towns and individual homes get squashed and reassigned, and i kill and displace millions with the stroke of my humble pencil. so i'd rather let it sit.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Today's Dream

In this world, there are two times. There is mechanical time and there is body time. The first is as rigid and metallic as a massive pendulum of iron that swings back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. The second squirms and wriggles like a bluefish in a bay. The first is unyielding, predetermined. The second makes up its mind as it goes along.

Many are convinced that mechanical time does not exist. When the pass the giant clock on the Kramgasse they do not see it; nor do they hear its chimes while sending packages on Postgasse or strolling between flowers in the Rosengarten. They wear watches on their wrists, but only as ornaments or as courtesies to those who would give timepieces as gifts. They do not keep clocks in their houses. Instead, they listen to their heartbeats. They feel the rhythms of their moods and desires. Such people eat when they are hungry, go to their jobs at the millinery or the chemist's whenever they wake from their sleep, make love all hours of the day. Such people laugh at the thought of mechanical time. They know that time moves in fits and starts. They know that time struggles forward with a weight on its back when they are rushing an injured child to the hospital or bearing the gaze of a neighbor wronged. And they know too that time darts across the field of vision when they are eating well with friends or receiving praise or lying in the arms of a secret lover.

Then there are those who think their bodies don't exist. The live by mechanical time. They rise at seven o'clock in the morning. They eat their lunch at noon and their supper at six. They arrive at their appointments on time, precisely by the clock. They make love between eight and ten at night. They work forty hours a week, read the Sunday paper on Sunday, play chess on Tuesday nights. When their stomach growls, they look at their watch to see if it is time to eat. When they begin to lose themselves in a concert, they look at the clock above the stage to see when it will be time to go home. They know that the body is not a thing of wild magic, but a collection of chemicals, tissues, and nerve impulses. Thoughts are no more than electrical surges in the brain. Sexual arousal is no more than a flow of chemicals to certain nerve endings. Sadness no more than a bit of acid transfixed in the cerebellum. In short, the body is a machine, subject to the same laws of electricity and mechanics as an electron or clock. As such, the body must be addressed in the language of physics. And if the body speaks, it is the speaking only of so many levers and forces. The body is a thing to be ordered, not obeyed.

Taking the night air along the river Aare, one sees evidence for two worlds in one. A boatman gauges his position in the dark by counting seconds drifted in the water's current. "One, three meters. Two, six meters. Three, nine meters." His voice cuts through the black in clean and certain syllables. Beneath a lamppost on the Nydegg Bridge, two brothers who have not seen each other for a year stand and drink and laugh. The bell of St. Vincent's Cathedral sings ten times. In seconds, lights in the apartments lining Schifflaube wink out, in a perfect mechanized response, like the deductions of Euclid's geometry. Lying on the riverbank, two lovers look up lazily, awakened from a timeless sleep by the distant church bells, surprised to find that night has come.

Where the two times meet, desperation. Where the two times go their seperate ways, contentment. For, miraculously, a barrister, a nurse, a baker can make a world in either time, but not in both times. Each time is true, but the truth is not the same.
Requiem for a Dream, I failed you. You were too rich and too real. I'll see you later.

Hello, Roughing It! What a little romp you are.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

chop chop

I've killed my world and I've killed my time. Thank you, Kinks, for you articulate better than anyone the feeling of becoming a stranger.

I don't have anything to say I'm just bloggingabloggingablogging.

Sat on the balcony for 45 minutes today straining to spy a helicopter. The day was perfectly clear but you'd be surprised how much concentration it takes to look for a helicopter. I thought maybe I could read my book while I watched, but no, you have to keep scanning, left to right to left to right, so you don't miss it. It's surprising what hijinks your brain decides to get up to when left taskless for 45 minutes. First of all, it turns every sound, and I mean every sound, into the sound of a helicopter. When people opened the door behind me, that was a helicopter, and when they came out and sat on the balcony and chatted away, jabberjabberjabber became chop chop chopchopchopchopchop and their voices were helicopters. The T outbound was a helicopter, and the pelicans mucking about were helicopters, and the helicopter that flew behind me, in the wrong position, which was not the helicopter I was looking for, was absolutely a helicopter.

But my brain can wander in two directions at once so while it was busying itself dressing up the sounds of the city in helicopter clothes it was also just leaning on the generate random memory button. Remember when Ross called you on that payphone at school yes I do. Remember when you were driving along Grizzly Peak and you heard At the Bottom of Everything for the first time yes I do. Incidentally remember all the lyrics to At the Bottom of Everything yes I apparently do. Want to sing them right now under your breath on the balcony yes I do. Don't forget about the time you thought your parents forgot about your eighteenth birthday and then they surprised you and it made you cry, don't you forget that. Don't forget that the name of the kid that broke your arm in fifth grade was Brandon Fein. Go ahead and forget which of the Tamayo brothers you had a crush on, but remember that it was either James or Justin but definitely not Jeremy. Remember that they served shrimp at the department Christmas party last year and that the first time you hung out with Aya was at Cafe Claude. Remember that you went to England in the winter of 1995 and that someone surprised you with the plane ticket in an envelope at the bottom of the driveway on a warm day and that you yelled out. Remember Bear. Remember when you found out that Morgan Wagner is the one who makes all the Christmas candy and not Susan. Remember Simon March. Remember Sick Boy. Remember auditioning for county honor jazz band and feeling pretty good about yourself. Remember that your audition number was five. Remember remember the fifth of November the gunpowder treason and plot. Remember, that is to say never forget, that when you were standing by the fridge as a youngster and your brother was taller than you due to his age, not just his genes, he told you to remember the number nine, and remember that it was this fact that surfaced as you read the last words of Cat's Cradle.

Number nine, number nine, number nine.

Friday, September 25, 2009

goals for the weekend

because it's good to have goals.

going home for the weekend because i love my family and because i ran out of rhino. oh you don't know that rhino is slang for money? my my aren't you behind the times.

run five miles
write to andy and richard and two more
make a fresh fruit pie
make something with pumpkin in it
get a <4 basket in disc golf
finish galapagos and einstein's dreams
start
the power and the glory
own at cribbage on both sides of the bay

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

SF Library Big Book Sale

A really good haul from the friends of the San Francisco Library preview to the BIG BOOK SALE:

A Brief History of Time ... Stephen Hawking
On the Road ... Jack Kerouac
Einstein's Dreams ... Alan Lightman
Requiem For a Dream ... Hubert Selby, Jr.
The Double, Notes from the Underground, and The Eternal Husband ... Fyodor Dostoevsky
Mr. Norris Changes Trains ... Christopher Isherwood
Cakes and Ale ... W. Somerset Maugham
Kim ... Rudyard Kipling
Burr ... Gore Vidal
The Poorhouse Fair ... John Updike
Marabou Stork Nightmares ... Irvine Welsh
Don Quixote ... Cervantes
Economics of the Public Sector ... Joseph Stiglitz

...and three cool (if expensive at $1 apiece) maps: one of the UK, one of colonial Africa, and one of the world to use in my classroom.

Also, inexplicably free/good meatballs, cheesy rosemary bread, and wine.

Thanks to the FM for the ticket! You make standing in line for an hour feel like standing in line for 30 minutes tops.

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Greenest of Grahams

Got to work this morning in a dark state of grump to find three Graham Greene novels on my desk! My day is turned. Since The Heart of the Matter is so excellent already, I'm just going to make this a full-on Graham Greene month. Deadlines:

by 23 September: The Heart of the Matter
by 30 September: The Power and the Glory
by 7 October: The Lawless Roads
by 14 October: A Burnt-Out Case

Last one in bold because I've been looking forward to it for months. Join in any of those if you'd like.

My favorite co-worker and fellow burnt-out case (and loaner of these books) has nothing at all on the wall in front of his desk but a lone cookie fortune taped without fanfare right in the middle, telling him that he is destined to do great humanitarian works. I don't really ever get a feeling about people but I get a feeling about him. Can't wait to see where he ends up.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

diddums

Weird that I could have written this post, from another random SF resident, nearly verbatim:

Ramona's By The Numbers

What a comforting warm sink it is to feel average.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay...

...is BORING. There. Thank you Lisa and Noam for staring evenly at that gold circle Pulitzer Prize, wrinkling your noses, and saying meh.

I stopped in to Adobe Books today because I was five minutes early for dinner, and as usual I couldn't get past the yet-to-be-shelved boxes right in the entryway.

Great Short Works of Jack London
St. Mawr and The Man Who Died by D.H. Lawrence
The Heart of the Matter by Graham Greene
A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

Stepped up to the counter ready to pay $22 for the above, and got charged just $15. They'll be worth well over $50 to me. Calculate the consumer surplus kids! Still two minutes to kill before dinner.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

That is something I should definitely start on tonight or in a couple weeks.

It's confusing how with some people you have to work so hard to stay in touch, constantly forcing plans and getting together for coffee and dinners and emailing and always it's the same, what's going on with you, how are things now, what's new, and you're just collecting these facts and filing them away, why, for what? Because you're Friends. They meant something to you once and they mean something to you now, that's what Friends are, they are the people you like to keep in touch with. But it's work, and it starts to smack of emptiness and irk when you realize that the thing you have in common is that you keep in touch. Keep in touch!

And then there are people like you. I couldn't stamp you out of my life if I tried, but I would never try, because that would be like trying to stamp my seventh grade math teacher out of my life: I just don't care. I don't mean that harshly. You don't care about me either. We're not supposed to care. We are pleasant to each other, I'd never dodge you on the street, but we don't click that well, I think you're pretty funny, you think I'm doing ok, that's it. But you're still here.

I wander into T's living room during my first semester at Berkeley. You're on the couch bent over a text book, looking like you just woke up in pajama pants and a white shirt. This is my neighbor from across the hall, she says, and you look up and you smile. Nice eyes, I think you're cute but I think everybody's cute. You sound really stuffed up, do you have a cold? You sort of have a cold. You're majoring in physics. I'm impressed, ok?

I slouch down low in my creaky chair in Wheeler Hall, and you slouch down next to me. No I'm not in this class, just auditing. How are you liking it? You're failing. What's your major now? You're majoring in journalism. I wasn't actually aware that journalism was offered at an undergrad major at Berkeley. You tell me it's kind of complicated and I start taking notes.

You burst into the party and see me right away, it's just a coincidence that I'm right near the door when you come in. You stagger up to me and I see that you're on the far side of drunk, and you pull me hard towards you and try to kiss me on the lips. I jerk my head to the side and you get my neck. Ok ok ok I say, you're fine, just sit down. I get you a glass of water and then I get distracted, I don't see you any more that night.

Sitting out on the street with our sushi and sake and you're being funny, damn funny, and it might concern me that the only thing I find funny anymore is a fellow burnt out case. Congratulations, I say, what was your degree in the end? Biology, you say, and I laugh, well done you. I encourage you to get a job at Bakesale Betty's, but that's just because it's what I want to do. You try to make a plan for all of us to hang out again, but T is reluctant to commit, she's got a busy month. Ok, we'll work it out later. See you around, probably.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Green light.

You waltz out of the tavern. Yeah, you waltz, please note that you do not stumble. Aya looks at you with a face that's strange, and you realize she thinks it's the last time you'll see each other for a while. No no no you say, I'm seeing you Friday, it's not over yet, not yet. Now you stumble, but you're just giddy.

Red light. Green light.

You're seven and you're sitting on the patio with your feet in a bucket of soapy water, and Caitlin Walt has her feet in there too. You're wearing a shirt that says Earth Day and the a's are shared, you made it yourself, you don't realize how great you are but you'll understand when you're older and not so great anymore. Caitlin Walt goes by Sarah in high school, you can't help feeling like she's not worth so much when she goes tossing away her name. You'd like to go by Joanna Turner but let's be honest that would be stupid.

Red light. Green light.

You walk up to a pile of clothes on the street and are about to kick them high up into the air in your glee but you check yourself because you're not wearing proper shoes. You dodge right just in time and see that huddled amongst the clothes is a person, lying right in the middle of the sidewalk on top of a drain vent to keep warm. You shudder and hope they're alive but that's all you do.

Red light. Green light.

You're fifteen and you're perched right up on top of the fence, one leg on the cemetery side, the other leg almost over, when your pants snag on the chain link and tear clear through the pocket. You say fuck and you're a little shocked because it's the first time you've said That Word out loud. You see Travis and the others a little ahead of you and you're aware of a broad search light creeping slowly towards your back; you drop down and sit behind a stone with one leg stretched out, breathing harder that seems necessary, and you're feeling quite old, and you're grinning.

Red light. Green light.

You're twenty and you're sitting on the cold stone tiles in the hallway in the DR, and Julia and Kathy have gone to bed, and you and Natalie are wearing shorts and long sleeved tee shirts and planning the future. You've never been happier.

Red light. Green light.

You're heading up Market and you get to the beginning of the slight hill. You see the sign that says Awesome Hot Cakes and note like you always note that the first E is just a W turned sideways. You wonder if you'll ever be able to see that with your eyes without noting it with your brain, and you calculate roughly that you'll probably only see that sign 26 more times. You decide to count and after 20 times you'll try the hot cakes. You promise.

Red light. Green light.

You're twenty and you're sitting on the cold stone cement on the driveway in Pleasant Hill, and Mum and Dad are inside, and you and Natalie are wearing skirts and tee shirts and you're crushing the future, you alone. Natalie is crying and you feel terribly powerful because you are the one wreaking all this havoc, responsible for all these tears, but with this power you feel cold and alone.

Red light. Green light.

You're twenty-two and you're in a shabby lovely hotel room in Paris. The windows reach from the ceiling to the floor and they have them flung wide open, even though it's past midnight and freezing. You finish the hand of cribbage and you frantically search for something more, one other thing you have to do, a last task or question or triviality that keeps you there just a couple more mintues, but the time has come to say goodbye, to hug as tight as you can with hopes that it'll last longer that way, to smile and convey meaning with your eyes, you should be good at that by now. You do all that and make your way down the crooked stairs, blind and weak with crying, onto the street, and now you're really stumbling on the uneven cobblestones, and through the haze and the blur at the very back of your head you're mildly annoyed that you're not dressed nearly as well as the people smoking outside the cafe on the corner.

Red light. Green light.

You wait for the green hand and look up 18th Street towards the park as you cross. You think for the hundredth time that you wouldn't really have to leave that block if you didn't want to, and you wonder for the two hundredth time whether you could support yourself working at Faye's. An old man, face inhuman, stops you in your tracks and asks if you can help him out with a single penny. Your bag is lousy with pennies. You tell him no and the worst part of you makes you reach down into your bag and rattle your pennies with your fingertips as you brush past him. You take out your keys and spread out the two square ones on your palm. You can tell which one is cleaner even though the difference is now virtually imperceptible; you use that one to open the iron gate. A bill and a postcard. What day was this? Oh yeah, Wednesday.

Red light.

Friday, September 4, 2009

freewrite on freewriting

Yes freewriting, you remember it, from your middle school days, where you got to class and perhaps teacher didn't have her lesson quite solidified yet so she set a timer for ten minutes, threw out a topic and told you not to erase.

I always associate freewriting with one Kimberly Simmons, my seventh grade core teacher, because she was the genesis of my biggest freewriting disaster. We had to freewrite in her class every day, just to practice penmanship or something, and she would write some question up on the board to get your juices flowing (does a more horrifying phrase exist?), but she promised, on her honor as a teacher and as a child of God, that she wouldn't read a word of what we wrote unless we drew a little peace sign up in the corner of the first page, which was like a little permission stamp from us. Because we had to store these journals in the classroom you see, so good old Simmons could check off that we had done the work, but she said she wouldn't read them without permission. Me, little Jo, mortified at the prospect of criticism from peers and teachers alike, never, ever drew the peace sign, and wrote quite contentedly about the various and sundry topics assigned, but as the days and weeks and months wore on I began to doubt the divine inspiration of Simmons's topic choices, and freewriting frankly got tedious. So one day, Alex, Peter and I agreed that we would all use that day's freewrite to spew the most bitter vitriol we possibly could against the institution itself. We were protected by the absence of the peace sign, so we really let ourselves go. I used the opportunity to spin off into a diatribe against Simmons's methods in general, and even as I wrote I was surprised at the amount of pent up tween rage that made its way onto the page. Freewriting was pretty great when you let yourself get into it. Alex and Peter agreed. Good freewrite.

That bitch read every word. We all had detention for a week, and not the nice kind of detention where you show up and she tells you to go home, but the kind where she actually makes you do heavy lifting.

Do you see a peace sign, Simmons? My ten minutes is up.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

wicked smart

Ben nags me all day to clean up my room. I get frustrated, I don't know why he should care so much. I clean it just to get him off my case. A brand new longboard is hidden for me underneath all my clutter, the one I've been wanting for months. Mum Dad and Ross find similar-caliber presents, bought with Ben's recent bonus.

We're playing disc golf and his driver winds up in a monster tree. There are four other discs up there already; this tree is so huge and unclimbable that everyone just leaves their captured discs for dead. Ben sizes up the tree and has all five discs within 20 mintues. The best two are for me.

We're walking down the street and Ben makes a game out of forcing himself between couples walking towards him. Old couple is more points. Holding hands is the most points. Never gets old.

Ben's going to my favorite pizza place for dinner. I jokingly tell him that I want leftovers. I get home late to find two slices boxed up on my landing, inside my locked iron gate.

Things that other people find difficult to climb, Ben climbs with no hands.

There are four people I'm bound to for life, no escaping them, no time or distance could possibly erode our connections. I'm glad he's one of them.

Monday, August 31, 2009

collegial hour

Queasy and out of sorts, starving and can't stomach anything, not even sure how to spell stomach(e), that's the caliber of the day. Boss cordially insists that he will treat the lab to happy hour at 5:45pm and the thought of sitting on one of those tiny metal chairs on that barren concrete wasteland of a quad sipping a tepid beer with some of the more passive-aggressive and burned-out of my workmates is making me repeat the word rage, calmly and coolly, under my breath, over and over. All I want to do is go to the fifth floor balcony and hash out some Friday night feelings, or go to my flat and have an ice cream with my FM, but some sort of weird social decency scale, some level OF HUMAN BONDAGE, is sucking me into that limbo of a concrete quad for an anti-purgatory of a happy hour, and I can't do anything about it, because all my efforts to point out that if we felt like spending time with each other outside of work then happy hour wouldn't have to be mandated are somehow gently deflected or squashily consumed like shooting arrows into a poolful of pudding. I'm left feeling sick and hoarse and dazed and small.

Why are things being demanded of me? They're lucky I'm even here.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

oh, hello august. didn't see you there.

oh, you're leaving? bye bye then.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

of human bondage

I can't remember the last time I read a book that left me with such an ache for more. I feel like I lost someone close, now that Philip Carey is no longer a part of my day-to-day, and I can't believe that my time with him is over. It fits, it's designed that way; this sense of loss, which turns to meaninglessness if you think too long on it, assaults Philip throughout the book, and Maugham's last hurrah seems to be to inject his pain into your heart. But I'll take it. For me, the reason this book was worth reading is the reason life is worth living: To see a life, like a pattern in a persian rug, and to be happier for having known it. Happier as defined by you and you alone.

I'm in slack-jawed awe of anyone who write a book for the purpose of following one life. Of Human Bondage is added to the ranks of David Copperfield and The Adventures of Augie March in this regard. To be able to take someone from basic infancy through to settled,
top-of-the-hill adulthood, and to do that justice without a hint of tedium, wow! Maybe I tend to like this genre because the Davids and the Augies and the Philips go through everything I've known so far and then get just a little farther, and even though none of these endings are endings at all, there at least seems to be some sort of contentment reached that signifies the end of the struggling period I've found myself stewing in for the last five years. Or maybe it's just the best writers that are able to tackle these epic life works, so reading them necessarily means reading the best books you've read in a while.

I want more of this but I have to stumble into it. I didn't seek any of these out. OHB sat on my desk for four months before Ian's recommendation made me read the first chapter during lunch one day. Now I want more more more Maugham but I don't want Philip to fade into the background. Now I'm in book limbo where the first page of everything I pick up will be scrutinized against the memory of the last page I just read, and nothing could possibly measure up. Sure sure recommendations are welcome but if you say anything by Michael Pollan it's over yeah?

Thursday, August 20, 2009

So you feel the need to write.

Yes, yes I do.

Why?

Why do I feel the need to write, or why do I write?

Those are the same thing, don't waste my time.

Fine, ok. Because I see things and I think of them in terms of how they would sound written down, and I tolerate things much better when I narrate them in my head. If I can't put words to it then I can't grasp it and I feel the need to grasp things, more now than ever.

But you can't finish anything.

Don't you think I know?

You write out little scenes and then you give up.

Yes.

Because those are the only things you can grasp.

Hm. Yes.

Do you write for other people to read?

I told you, I put things down in writing to give them the gravity they deserve in my own head. That's all I can do, I'm not going to fake an understanding of things that are out of my reach for the benefit of other people.

But you read what other people write, you respect that, you respect it above all else.

Only when they're writing what they understand.

But you don't understand it.

I'm not trying to, I just like the way the words stack when someone knows what they're talking about.

Sometimes you understand it.

Yes, sometimes I do.

What's that?

Heaven.

Do you think your life would be a failure if no one ever understood you that way?

A bit, yes.

Do you think your life will be a failure?

A bit, yes.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

private lives

A Wednesday that feels like a Friday and I'm hun n n n gry.

Many roads I wish I had never started down.

Did I want to have my teenaged ideal squashed like the moldy orange that he apparently is all over my once-twinkling eyes today? I'm sure you're as swell a person as I am but who can possibly look appealing under the harsh glare of the all-revealing limelight? It's not desinged to make you look nice it's designed to make you look filleted. I remember sitting in the van eating chocolate ice cream with peanut butter in it. Can I have that memory back please? Can I put that one on top? Can I make that memory your profile picture and leave the rest hidden? Let's be de-friends so I can only see that ice cream. Please.

I'm out of control of everything. Do other people feel this out of control? Control is a tough nut.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Do you know the story of Cybelline? There were nine books that contained all the history of the world, and he wanted to buy them. She named the price, and it was too high, so he wouldn't pay. So she destroyed half the books and doubled the price, and he still wouldn't pay. This kept going on until there was just one book left, and he realized he'd better buy it or else there would be nothing left. So he paid a lot more than he originally would have.

Do you understand the point I'm making here?

Seriously? No.

Right, well, look it up on the internet or something.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

People grow on me, almost invariably; my first impression is negative, you're too loud, you're too pretty, you walk like you left the hanger in, you're a HIPSTER, you probably talk about Japan a lot, you should stop being such a fucking weirdo. Give it time, stew with me a little, send me a Christmas card, use the word impresario when I'm not expecting it, grow on me, let me grow on you, don't give it up for free right away, don't think about it, don't force it, if you don't have the time then I don't want your condensed soup just let's pick it up later ok?

Talk to me about the right book when I thought all you knew was parasites and pipettes and you'll grow on me a little faster, but you don't know what the right book is, and you could have picked any one of those books, but you picked that one, so well done you.

When you know someone's read a book you know 300-700 pages of what is in their head. You know that no matter what they think of Larry, they've spent time with him, they know him like you do, or as well as you do in their own way, you have a Mutual Friend. You may be on opposite sides of the office and your lives may be heading in opposite directions but you've both spent a week in 1944 and you care to reminisce.

Surprise me won't you?

Monday, August 3, 2009

Words, words, but they hold the horror of the world.


For us lads of eighteen they ought to have been mediators and guides to the world of maturity, the world of work, of duty, of culture, of progress - to the future. We often made fun of them and played jokes on them, but in our hearts we trusted them. The idea of authority, which they represented, was associated in our minds with a greater insight and a more humane wisdom. But the first death we saw shattered this belief. We had to recognize that our generation was more to be trusted than theirs. They surpassed us only in phrases and in cleverness. The first bombardment showed us our mistake, and under it the world as they had taught it to us broke in pieces.

Kantorek would say that we stood on the threshold of life. And so it would seem. We had as yet taken no root. The war swept us away. For the others, the older men, it is but an interruption. They are able to think beyond it. We, however, have been gripped by it and do not know what the end may be. We know only that in some strange and melancholy way we have become a waste land. All the same, we are not often sad.

The whole world ought to pass by this bed and say: "That is Franz Kemmerich, nineteen and a half years old, he doesn't want to die. Let him not die!"

Kropp on the other hand is a thinker. He proposes that a declaration of war should be a kind of popular festival with entrance-tickets and bands, like a bull fight. Then in the arena the ministers and generals of the two countries, dressed in bathing-drawers and armed with clubs, can have it out among themselves. Whoever survives, his country wins. That would be much simpler and more just than this arrangement, where the wrong people do the fighting.

He is right. We are not youth any longer. We don't want to take the world by storm. We are fleeing. We fly from ourselves. From our life. We were eighteen and had befun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces. The first bomb, the first explosion, burst in our hearts. We are cut off from activity, from striving, from progress. We believe in such things no longer, we believe in the war.

Their pale turnip faces, their pitiful clenched hands, the fine courage of these poor devils, the desperate charges and attacks made by the poor brave wretches, who are so terrified that they dare not cry out loudly, but with battered chests, with torn bellies, arms and legs only whimper softly for their mothers and cease as soon as one looks at them.

Bombardment, barrage, curtain-fire, mines, gas, tanks, machine-guns, hand-grenades - words, words, but they hold the horror of the world.


Just as we turn into animals when we go up to the line, because that is the only thing which brings us through safely, so we turn into wags and loafers when we are resting. We can do nothing else, it is a sheer necessity. We want to live at any price; so we cannot burden ourselves with feelings which, though they might be ornamental enough in peacetime, would be out of place here. Kemmerich is dead, Haie Westhus is dying, they will have a job with Hans Kramer's body at the Judgment Day, piecing it together after a direct hit; Martens has no legs anymore, Meyer is dead, Max is dead, Beyer is dead, Hammerling is dead, there are a hundred and twenty wounded men lying somewhere or other; it is a damnable business, but what has it to do with us now - we live. If it were possible for us to save them, then it would be seen how much we cared - we would have a shot at it though we went under ourselves; for we can be damned quixotic when we like; fear we do not know much about - terror of death, yes; but that is a different matter, that is physical.

I would do it willingly, but it is too dangerous for me to put these things into words. I am afraid they might then become gigantic and I be no longer able to master them. What would become of us if everything that happens out there were quite clear to us?

They talk too much for me. They have worries, aims, desires, that I cannot comprehend. I often sit with one of them in the little beer garden and try to explain to him that this is really the only thing: just to sit quietly, like this. They understand of course, they agree, they may even feel it so too, but only with words, only with words, yes, that is it - they feel it, but always with only half of themselves, the rest of their being is taken up with other things, they are so divided in themselves that none feels it with his whole essence; I cannot even say myself exactly what I mean.

A word of command has made these silent figures our enemies; a word of command might transform them into our friends. At some table a document is signed by some persons whom none of us knows, and then for years together that very crime on which formerly the world's condemnation and severest penalty fall, becomes our highest aim. But who can draw sucha distinction when he looks at these quiet men with their childlike faces and and apostles' beards. Any non-commissioned officer is more of an enemy to a recruit, any schoolmaster to a pupil, than they are to us. And yet we would shoot at them again and they at us if they were free.

At once a new warmth flows through me. These voices, these quiet words, these footsteps in the trench behind me recall me at a bound from the terrible loneliness and fear of death by which I had been almost destroyed. They are more to me than life, these voices, they are more than motherliness and more than fear; they are the strongest, most comforting thing there is anywhere: they are the voices of my comrades. I am no longer a shuddering spec of existence, alone in the darkness; - I belong to them and they to me; we all share the same fear and the same life, we are nearer than lovers, in a simpler, a harder way; I could bury my face in them, in these voices, these words that have saved me and will stand by me.

"Comrade, I did not want to kill you. If you jumped in here again, I would not do it, if you would be sensible too. But you were only an idea to me before, an abstraction that lived in my mind and called forth its appropriate response. It was that abstraction I stabbed. But now, for the first time, I see you are a man like me. I thought of your hand-grenades, of your bayonet, of your rifle; now I see your wife and your face and our fellowship. Forgive me, comrade. We always see it too late. Why do they never tell us that you are poor devils like us, that your mothers are just as anxious as ours, and that we have the same fear of death, and the same dying and the same agony - Forgive me, comrade; how could you be my enemy? If we threw away these rifles and this uniform you could be my brother just like Kat and Albert. Take twenty years of my life, comrade, and stand up - take more, for I do now know what I can even attempt to do with it now."

So long as I do not know his name perhaps I may still forget him, time will obliterate it, this picture. But his name, it is a nail that will be hammered into me and never come out again. It has the power to recall this for ever, it will always come back and stand before me.

A man cannot realize that above such shattered bodies there are still human faces in which life goes in its daily round. And this is only one hospital, one single station; there are hundreds of thousands in Germany, hundreds of thousands in France, hundreds of thousands in Russia. How senseless is everything that can ever be written, done, or thought, when such things are possible. It must be all lies and of no account when the culture of a thousand years could not prevent this stream of blood being poured out, these torture-chambers in their hundreds of thousands. A hospital alone shows what war is.

And at night, waking out of a dream, overwhelmed and bewitched by the crowding apparitions, a man perceives with alarm how slight is the support, how thin the boundary that divides him from the darkness. We are little flames poorly sheltered by frail walls against the storm of dissolution and madness, in which we flicker and sometimes almost go out. They the muffled roar of the battle becomes a ring that encircles us, we creep in upon ourselves, and with big eyes stare into the night. Our only comfort is the steady breathing of our comrades asleep, and thus we wait for the morning.

He fell in October 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still on the whole front, that the army report confined itself to the single sentence: All quiet on the Western Front.


Friday, July 31, 2009

Required reading for all Californians. If you have any hankering for a literary/historical whirlwind romance or any desire for some of that solid gold perspective, read this book. You can have my copy. It reminded me of the end of Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, where they get on stage at San Dimas High and romp you through history with the the figures they gathered.

Required reading for all human beings. It only takes 45 minutes! This was my first taste of Mark Twain, and I guess I'm on the bandwagon now.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

the daring young man on the flying trapeze

I first heard it quietly while we were making salad more than two years ago, Nicki singing, mumbling really, under her breath.

He flies through the air with the greatest of ease; the daring young man on the flying trapeze.

Like the time Peter said sit down Jo or the time my Dad said which would you rather be or a wasp, the words cemented in my memory and in spite of their blandness they have never faded. And then this Saroyan inserts himself into the situation; he liked those words too, and he woke up each day in San Francisco too, and hey hey hey:

He (the living) dressed and shaved, grinning at himself in the mirror. Very unhandsome, he said; where is my tie? (He had but one.) Coffee and a gray sky, Pacific Ocean fog, the drone of a passing streetcar, people going to the city, time again, the day, prose and poetry. He moved swiftly down the stairs to the street and began to walk, thinking suddenly, It is only in sleep that we may know that we live. There only, in that living death, do we meet ourselves and the far earth, God and the saints, the names of our fathers, the substance of remote moments; it is there that the centuries merge in the moment, that the vast becomes the tiny, tangible atom of eternity.

He walked into the day as alertly as might be, making a definite noise with his heels, perceiving with his eyes the superficial truth of streets and structures, the trivial truth of reality. Helplessly his mind sang, He flies through the air with the greatest of ease; the daring young man on the flying trapeze; then laughed with all the might of his being. It was really a splendid morning; gray, cold, and cheerless, a morning for inward vigor; ah, Edgar Guest, he said, how I long for your music.

And then:

If the truth were known, he was half starved, and yet there was still no end of books he ought to read before he died. He remembered the young Italian in a Brooklyn hospital, a small sick clerk named Mollica, who had said desperately, I would like to see California once before I die. And he thought earnestly, I ought at least to read Hamlet once again, or perhaps Huckleberry Finn.

I wonder what his final count was when he died, and whether he was anywhere near satisfied with it, and whether that's possible.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

what dreams may come

To be, or not to be - that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles
And by opposing end them. To die, to sleep
No more, and by a sleep to say we end
The heartache, and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to. 'Tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wished. To die, to sleep,
To sleep - perchance to dream - ay, there's the rub,
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil
Must give us pause. There's the respect
That makes calamity of so long life.
For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
Th' oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely,
The pangs of despised love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office, and the spurns
That patient merit of th' unworthy takes,
When he himself might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin? Who would fardels bear,
To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscovered country, from whose bourn
No traveler returns, puzzles the will,
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all,
And thus the native hue of resolution
Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought,
And enterprises of great pitch and moment
With this regard their currents turn awry
And lose the name of action.

A new dimension to the pill. What worse reality might the placid life hold?

Nat

Sometimes I think she'd look at me today and be sick with disappointment.


Fair enough, I'd say, but you try living in this head.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sox

Rest in peace old boy!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

E P I C

Today: Rewarded for being a tennis fan. As heartbreaking as those last five minutes were, I can't help but be pleased with this, with blowing scores of records out of the water, with an old hack emerging as a formidable, respectable, and lovable tennis force, with McEnroe rabbiting on an on to fill the blessed silence with his largely useless commentary, with family constantly placing and breaking bet upon bet, with Benny echoing my joy and my disgust from afar, with 138mph second serves, with nerves ground down to their bitter nubs after a THIRTY-GAME LONG fifth set, and finally, with this rare, beautiful, unbridled enthusiasm for nothing but tennis.


Federer (2) def Roddick (6) 5-7 7-6(8-6) 7-6(7-5) 3-6 16-14

love fifteen :)

Thursday, July 2, 2009

And Another

I started up a Rwanda blog because I do not want the internet to forget that I was here. Visit please! These blogs will be existing in tandem like icily civil stepsisters for the next six months, after which In Rwanda will take over full time and Big Beautiful Tasteless will be gently euthanized.

Monday, June 22, 2009

inhibit

verb to hold in check; to discourage from free or spontaneous activity especially through the operation of inner psychological or external social constraints

oh how these inner phsychological and external social constraints are discouraging me from free and spontaneous activity! my tongue equals the weight of 1,000 squids. it's too easy to say the wrong thing.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

What. A. Day.

The most serene of moments. Mark tells me I'm all on my own, that if I can take the boat out 200 yards, capsize it, right it, get the hell back in, and sail it back to a perfect docking then I've passed. It's completely dark now; all the other boats are long put away and everyone else in my class is up in the yard celebrating, exept one, he stays to watch.

Just me and the boat in the blackness. After whooping and hollering and yelling out commands and arguing and laughing for three hours, the calm is surreal. Taking my time, I sheet everything in, I fall off, and sure as Sunday the boat bows to physics and start to tip. I love the feel of the mast finally coming to rest on the water. I jump in, I split my eyes half in and half out of the water for that cool effect, I shore up some strength, and then with two strong kicks I propell myself up into the now-vertical cockpit, over the center grip, and in one relatively smooth motion I'm on the side of the boat, ten feet above the water, and I raise a little victory fist to Mark on the skiff. Completing my circle I hop down on the center board and right the boat easily, but then I manage to clamber into the low side and capsize the damned thing again. I pop up to show Mark I'm alright and repeat. Now the boat is up and I'm in the water, holding onto the high back side, and my energy is gone. I kick and I flail and I try every combination of feet-first-arms-first-head-first-whatever-else-I've-got-first but my sodden carcass will not go in, and now I've lost what little energy I had. Mark pulls up close on the skiff and tells me calmly and quietly that if I can just get myself back into the goddamned boat then the rating is mine to have, but if not, I fail. I'm on the verge of tears. I gather my thoughts. I hoist myself a quarter of the way in, cursing the harness with every inch. I pause, I think about which specific muscles I need to contract next to push on. I contract them. I push on. I'm half way in. I can tell if I just get one more centimeter of torso over the back side then my weight will shift and I'll be home free, but I'm so tired, so tired, and the muscles are not contracting. And even as I realize how cheesily epic I am making this moment, I think about running, and about editing, and about planning symposia, and about hanging shelves, and finding jobs, and being a sister and a daughter, and I think about Doug standing back there on the dock, and I think about Rwanda, and I realize that this beast that I'm fighting in every aspect of my life that I love, this effort, is the key, and that if I don't show myself right this second that I am capable of making an effort, then I will have officially given up, and I will literally and metaphorically sink to a level of mediocrity that will color the rest of my life.

So I say fuckall to my tiredness and to every time I've ever lobbed myself a softball when I should have accepted a challenge and I get back in the boat, and lie on my back and have a little cry.

Then I dock "perfectly" (ha) and get my rating and have a few celebratory beers and a celebratory hamburger and a celebratory deep conversation with Mark and do some celebratory dancing in the yard and take a celebratory hour long stroll to the BART station and get a celebratory walk back to my apartment, complete with celebratory nerves and celebratory excitement.

I've said it tongue in cheek so many times but now I believe it wholeheartedly: Sailing is a metaphor for life. I wasn't sure until last night that I'm going to be ok.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Friday afternoon and this place is wrapping me in a blanket of achy nostalgia. Toczyski lab is playing their typical Friday afternoon melancholy rap music, and all of third floor north is passively subjected to it, there's no complaining when it's not up for discussion. It makes me laugh how casual Fridays are so roguely observed here, how it's never mentioned, there is no beer:30 here, but people tentatively and furtively let their collective hair down on Friday afternoons, their thin veneer of relaxedness covering an extra tension. Friday is the day where when we mess up, it gets to grow for three full days, rather than being nipped in the bud tomorrow morning.

The wine glass from open house three weeks ago is still on my desk. They said please return them to the kitchen but the kitchen is
so far .

My stomach is all tied up in knots like it used feel just before a jazz band concert in middle school. What are these nerves for? I'm all keyed up with nowhere to put it. Jesus, clammy hands and everything! How odd, and how crippling.

I have two staplers on my desk, one of which works, and the other of which does not and is plagued with a litany of issues. It has GENOME written on the back in white-out. It kind of sort of staples things, but it does these weird inside-out jobs, and everything ends up in a bungle. I think I've kept it for this long because it reminds me of when Tim drops Garreth's stapler out of the window. It says GARRET on it in Tipp-Ex because GARRETH wouldn't quite fit.

JP is not wearing his glasses today and it reminds me of Urkel turning all suave in that one string of episodes of Family Matters. I swear I have never seen an episode of Family Matters but I somehow know both the general outline and various subthemes of the show in some detail. Like the knowledge just leaked into my brain any time I passed a TV that had recently been showing Family Matters.

While we're on the subject of TV shows, which "we" are apparently, Dexter is a m a z i n g. Why am I paying for cable? Why is a show that is about revenge killing, and only revenge killing, so good? It's that theme song I tell you the theme song. If I could choose a life that felt like any television show theme song in all of television history then I would choose the life that feels most like Dexter's.

Dum, da dum, da duuummmmm.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

my desktop is my new religion


it was basically a disaster before, with things scattered everywhere, vitals next to meaninglesses, and a massive, pixellated green monstrosity in the background. now though, ah.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

I miss them so much today that it stings. Why today?

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Friday, May 29, 2009

trainspotting

this book is messing me up and i feel it slowly taking over my brain like the confident virus that it is. i see the ridiculousness as i filter my own life through the book, referring to dime bags of parmesan cheese and arranging my granola in lines on the desk, and as i type this out it comes through my head in a scottish accent. how many times now have i decided to stop reading and to return it to the shelf, decided that there cant be any good in knowing, that some things should be kept under a bucket in the corner. why do i pick it up again and again, whaen ah ken thit it doesnae help us but jist brings us doon. who gets to decide the difference between books and heroin.

Friday, May 22, 2009

can't get enough of this isherwood

If it weren't so tedious, I would retype every word of his that I read here in this blog, if only to make these slightly-hard-to-find books a little more available to whoever. I stopped dogging the bottom corners of the pages because it was useless, made the book twice as thick.

And now before I slip back into the convention of calling this young man "I," let me consider him as a seperate being, a stranger almost, setting out on this adventure in a taxi to the docks. For, of course, he is almost a stranger to me. I have revised his opinions, changed his accent and his mannerisms, unlearned or exaggerated his prejudices and his habits. We still share the same skeleton, but its outer covering has altered so much that I doubt if he would recognize me on the street. We have in common the label of our name, and a continuity of consciousness; there has been no break in the sequence of daily statements that I am I. But what I am has refashioned itself throughout the days and years, until now almost all that remains constant is the mere awareness of being conscious. And that awareness belongs to everybody; it isn't a particular person.

The Christopher who sat in that taxi is, practically speaking, dead; he only remains reflected in the fading memories of us who knew him. I can't revitalize him now. I can only reconstruct him from his remembered acts and words and from the writings he has left us. He embarrasses me often, and so I'm tempted to sneer at him; but I will try not to. I'll try not to apologize for him, either. After all, I owe him some respect. In a sense he is my father, and in another sense my son.

How alone he seems!

Sunday, May 17, 2009

CSC

What a little gem Cal Sailing Club has turned out to be!

As Alex's first student, I managed to handily capsize our little craft, chucking all three of us into the disgusting, dead-crabby bay water, inside of 30 minutes. Alex in backup glasses, me with all-borrowed clothes, and Tanya rocking nothing but an overcoat:


And then we windsurfed. I will officially be quitting my dayjob, volunteer positions, half-read books, friendships, and all future ambitions, effective immediately. I will only windsurf. Until I die from the STD I definitely got from this communal wetsuit:


Also, this:


I'll miss flat'.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Eichengreen Gets Steinbeck

I really liked this:

Steinbeck on the Crisis

I started reading because the Steinbeck quote was so good, and was then surprised and pleased to find that the voice of economic reason in the middle and end of the post is good old Eichengreen, who presided over my toughest and arguably best class at Cal.

Monday, May 4, 2009

The Up Series

I think I've now endorsed this verbally to everyone I've ever met, so I figured it finally merited a post. Plus I am watching 28 Up right now at my parents' house, and needed a reason to practice taking screenshots of Nicholas Hitchon (below).

The Up Series is an effort by documentarian Michael Apted in which he films a slew of seven-year-old British schoolchildren in 1964, and then subsequently films them every seven years (i.e. at ages 14, 21 28, etc.) until the present. He talks with them about their views on family, education, sex, politics, social responsibility, class, and various and sundry other things, ostensibly without slant or judgment. The results are, in my opinion, fascinating, especially since we are now able to watch Seven Up! through 49 Up in rapid succession, rather than waiting in real time for the episodes to air. 56 Up comes out in 2012; catch up while you can!


Show me the man

at seven

and I will show you

the man.

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