12/18/08
12/10/08
hmm... PS to 'people'
The interesting thing is that you can also have those moments while engaged in a project - writing, for example. I know, when writing, when things 'click' - my focus becomes narrow; I forget my surroundings, and my cheeks start to burn, and I feel a bit feverish - then I know there's something real in what I'm saying. --Or when I'm sucked into sewing, or making something, or cooking - you know when you've left yourself and have become one with the process. That's God too, I think.
12/9/08
people... again
I'm going to start this post the way I started the last post titled 'people' -
People are awkward things to be around.
Not because of them - because of me. I'm always aware of the disconnect - the breakdown of communication that happens because we're not psychic; we can't 'dreamfast' and get into each others' thoughts and memories like the Gelflings in The Dark Crystal.
I'm just thinking of this because Joel and Geri and Mary and Tammy and I just got back from seeing 'Twilight' - a thoroughly enjoyable film, and one that very effectively takes you (in my opinion) back [emotionally] to a high schoolish time where love could blossom not through shared interests or fascinating conversations, but because of some minute, unspoken connection - a glance, or a touch.
In this movie, the characters risk everything for each other, and you feel that they understand each other intimately, and yet what do they know of each other, really? They're both familiar with Debussy's 'Claire de Lune' - that's about all I can figure they have in common. But we're taken in, and we trust their relationship completely.
In direct contrast is James Spader's character's statement from last night's [last :-( ] Boston Legal - "...and there's no requirement that a couple be 'in love'; in fact, given the current divorce rate, one might say the most insidious problem with marriage is that people make life-altering decisions while 'in love'. It's a drug, a toxic one at that, and scientifically proven to wear off."
But I digress - to get back to the disconnect... so much of the time I feel apart from people, even when I'm with them. I feel alien, and one-sided. There are things I want to say that I can't say, things I do say that come out wrong and are misunderstood or misconstrued, things I try to say but my tongue gets garbled; statements I make that cause everyone at the table to look at me funny, like I've got green hair or a horn sticking out of my head.
In my daydreams, in my dreams, being with people is easier - they know where I'm coming from, intrinsically, without asking, without being told. They see me as me, the me I am when I'm alone; not some them-version of me. You know, I've got at least 10,000 versions of me; one for every person I've met - never do I feel 100% me with anyone.
[as I'm writing this I'm thinking -that almost sounds kinda cool - imagine being able to be 10,000 distinct people! The possibilities!]
But then there are the moments that click - and I think that's where God comes into play. I think that's where, for a moment, we humans leave the imperfect-disconnect human plane and touch something divine in each other. And we've all had those moments - a shared gigglefest with a girlfriend; an evening sitting with friends by a campfire in the darkness; a shared smile; a hug that lasts longer than normal; an hour of magical time after the kids go to bed; standing with a friend watching trees wave in the wind before a thunderstorm; christmas breakfast; skinnydipping under the moon; and, well yes, being in love - the list goes on and on - these moments where you feel so close that things can be unspoken and yet still commonly understood; where energies mesh without effort, where (as my friend Filippo put it one evening after hanging out with me and 5 of my friends) "I knew we all felt as if each of us could have kissed the others." - and it wasn't sexual, but just a momentary, sacred melding of souls in a certain space and time. It's something you have to wait for - you can't make it happen, you can't control it, you can't repeat it. It just Is.
I know those are the moments of connection that I live for, and long for, and that keep me from going off and becoming a hermit.
People are awkward things to be around.
Not because of them - because of me. I'm always aware of the disconnect - the breakdown of communication that happens because we're not psychic; we can't 'dreamfast' and get into each others' thoughts and memories like the Gelflings in The Dark Crystal.
I'm just thinking of this because Joel and Geri and Mary and Tammy and I just got back from seeing 'Twilight' - a thoroughly enjoyable film, and one that very effectively takes you (in my opinion) back [emotionally] to a high schoolish time where love could blossom not through shared interests or fascinating conversations, but because of some minute, unspoken connection - a glance, or a touch.
In this movie, the characters risk everything for each other, and you feel that they understand each other intimately, and yet what do they know of each other, really? They're both familiar with Debussy's 'Claire de Lune' - that's about all I can figure they have in common. But we're taken in, and we trust their relationship completely.
In direct contrast is James Spader's character's statement from last night's [last :-( ] Boston Legal - "...and there's no requirement that a couple be 'in love'; in fact, given the current divorce rate, one might say the most insidious problem with marriage is that people make life-altering decisions while 'in love'. It's a drug, a toxic one at that, and scientifically proven to wear off."
But I digress - to get back to the disconnect... so much of the time I feel apart from people, even when I'm with them. I feel alien, and one-sided. There are things I want to say that I can't say, things I do say that come out wrong and are misunderstood or misconstrued, things I try to say but my tongue gets garbled; statements I make that cause everyone at the table to look at me funny, like I've got green hair or a horn sticking out of my head.
In my daydreams, in my dreams, being with people is easier - they know where I'm coming from, intrinsically, without asking, without being told. They see me as me, the me I am when I'm alone; not some them-version of me. You know, I've got at least 10,000 versions of me; one for every person I've met - never do I feel 100% me with anyone.
[as I'm writing this I'm thinking -that almost sounds kinda cool - imagine being able to be 10,000 distinct people! The possibilities!]
But then there are the moments that click - and I think that's where God comes into play. I think that's where, for a moment, we humans leave the imperfect-disconnect human plane and touch something divine in each other. And we've all had those moments - a shared gigglefest with a girlfriend; an evening sitting with friends by a campfire in the darkness; a shared smile; a hug that lasts longer than normal; an hour of magical time after the kids go to bed; standing with a friend watching trees wave in the wind before a thunderstorm; christmas breakfast; skinnydipping under the moon; and, well yes, being in love - the list goes on and on - these moments where you feel so close that things can be unspoken and yet still commonly understood; where energies mesh without effort, where (as my friend Filippo put it one evening after hanging out with me and 5 of my friends) "I knew we all felt as if each of us could have kissed the others." - and it wasn't sexual, but just a momentary, sacred melding of souls in a certain space and time. It's something you have to wait for - you can't make it happen, you can't control it, you can't repeat it. It just Is.
I know those are the moments of connection that I live for, and long for, and that keep me from going off and becoming a hermit.
Joel... again
Me: [on the way to 'Twilight', glancing at the eyeglasses on my dashboard] "Is this movie likely to have subtitles?"
Joel: "I can't believe you just asked me that. You know I've already seen this movie."
a pause...
Me: "Does this movie have subtitles?"
Joel: "That's better! No, no it doesn't."
Joel: "I can't believe you just asked me that. You know I've already seen this movie."
a pause...
Me: "Does this movie have subtitles?"
Joel: "That's better! No, no it doesn't."
11/25/08
PMS
I just cried over a generic thank you e-card from the American Red Cross.
-It was so *sniff* beautiful! And the little CG leaves fell off the tree, reminding us of the enduring cycle of life, and it talked about *sniff* how all our donations helped all the families facing disasters this year, and isn't it wonderful how we all help each other, and we're all in this together and....
Hormonal imbalance is really frickin' annoying.
-It was so *sniff* beautiful! And the little CG leaves fell off the tree, reminding us of the enduring cycle of life, and it talked about *sniff* how all our donations helped all the families facing disasters this year, and isn't it wonderful how we all help each other, and we're all in this together and....
Hormonal imbalance is really frickin' annoying.
11/24/08
lunchtime revelation [from the DraftVault 04/27/07]
Ineffective reassurance:
Me: "...so, does that make me a bad person?"
Person: "oh, no, of _course_ not; you're not a bad person at all!"
Effective reassurance:
Me: "...so, does that make me a bad person?"
Joel (smiling): "No, Kate, not that. It's all the _other_ stuff about you that makes you a bad person!"
Me: "...so, does that make me a bad person?"
Person: "oh, no, of _course_ not; you're not a bad person at all!"
Effective reassurance:
Me: "...so, does that make me a bad person?"
Joel (smiling): "No, Kate, not that. It's all the _other_ stuff about you that makes you a bad person!"
hmm.... [from the DraftVault 07/30/08] ha ha ha
I was talking with Janice on the phone last night and she commented
sports [from the DraftVault - 08/18/08]
I think it's weird that there's this whole thing out there that takes up tons of peoples' time and attention and money, and that I don't follow it. My family doesn't follow it. My friends don't follow it. There is nothing in my daily life to remind me that sports are even out there and people are playing them except for when I see occasional blurbs in online news, and when I talk with my cousin Jamie.
I mean, right now there's this incredibly popular thing going on called the Olympics. I know something about its history, I know that people made a big stink about it being in China this year, and that's about it. I don't watch it, I don't know who's won what. I don't even really know what sports they compete in. I found out yesterday, for example, that there's a division of (it seemed to be) beach volleyball. ??!!??!! Bizarre. People actually compete for gold medals in beach volleyball?
And then there's the Super Bowl which is football. At least, I think it is. That's what someone told me in college, anyway. I remember the moment: I was in Runyan Center and someone said "Oh, they're watching the Super Bowl." And I said, "Which sport is that?" And he said, "Football."
I was really happy to finally have it nailed down.
And I've triumphantly referenced that memory ever since, every time someone says "Super Bowl." For a minute, I can't think which sport it is, and then I think - but no! I have that Runyan memory! What did that person tell me?... Football! It's football! Yay!
Though I don't know why the word "bowl" is in there when it's not about bowling.
And then there's the World Series, which is only baseball teams from the US. At least, I think that's how it goes. It's all very misleading.
Oh, I just remembered! I actually watched some of the Super Bowl last year. This year. Whenever it was. I spent the whole time being fascinated by the fake line they put on the field that isn't really there. That was cool.
I do try, I really do. When people tell me stuff about sports, I think it's interesting, and I try to remember it. I even can remember it... for a few hours. But then it goes away again - it's like I've got a mental block. I have a sports-related learning disability.
It's sad.
I mean, right now there's this incredibly popular thing going on called the Olympics. I know something about its history, I know that people made a big stink about it being in China this year, and that's about it. I don't watch it, I don't know who's won what. I don't even really know what sports they compete in. I found out yesterday, for example, that there's a division of (it seemed to be) beach volleyball. ??!!??!! Bizarre. People actually compete for gold medals in beach volleyball?
And then there's the Super Bowl which is football. At least, I think it is. That's what someone told me in college, anyway. I remember the moment: I was in Runyan Center and someone said "Oh, they're watching the Super Bowl." And I said, "Which sport is that?" And he said, "Football."
I was really happy to finally have it nailed down.
And I've triumphantly referenced that memory ever since, every time someone says "Super Bowl." For a minute, I can't think which sport it is, and then I think - but no! I have that Runyan memory! What did that person tell me?... Football! It's football! Yay!
Though I don't know why the word "bowl" is in there when it's not about bowling.
And then there's the World Series, which is only baseball teams from the US. At least, I think that's how it goes. It's all very misleading.
Oh, I just remembered! I actually watched some of the Super Bowl last year. This year. Whenever it was. I spent the whole time being fascinated by the fake line they put on the field that isn't really there. That was cool.
I do try, I really do. When people tell me stuff about sports, I think it's interesting, and I try to remember it. I even can remember it... for a few hours. But then it goes away again - it's like I've got a mental block. I have a sports-related learning disability.
It's sad.
O-bam-a! [from the DraftVault]
Well, we did it! I still get all good-feely inside when I think about it, and hopeful about the future in a way that I haven't felt for years.
And I've been watching the wave of almost-religious (or, hell, just plain religious) fervor that's been sweeping the country - the world, in fact - as a result of the results of this election - and I have to admit that as wonderful and literally awe-some it is (on the one hand) to see this kind of reaction, and the positive momentum that has built, I kinda have mixed feelings about it. It scares me a little, in the way that any kind of idolatry scares me, religious or otherwise, because it's inherently false, or misplaced [from the Greek eidolon - an image, phantom, apparition] - the object of devotion cannot but fail to completely live up to expectation - and as such, it can so easily go awry - it can so easily turn negative, or even violent.
And I don't even mean non-Obama-supporters against the rest of us, or even against Obama - I mean Obama supporters against each other... I catch a whiff here and there of suspicion - am I as true an Obama-believer as the next Obama fan? Do I have real Faith, or did I just go and vote... hmm....
It's a paradox, really - my friend Kristen and I were talking about it the other night - that in order for a public figure to move the masses, he/she has to inspire. And to inspire, she/he has to [by definition] be inspirational - to reach the deepest depths of our human emotion, and get us going. And the minute the deepest depths of our human passions are reached... well, goodbye rational thinking; hello weird fanatic maniacs. It's the history of Christianity all over again. But that's the thing -you can't have the one without the other. Any figure who inspires - Jesus, Gandhi, MLK, hell, even Lennon - also inspires irrationality and insanity in some percentage of the population -the people who can't take the spiritual heat, and react in fear, or over-zealousness. The people who miss the point, and confuse the man with the message.
Maybe. My hope is that most of us can stay sane and balanced, while still pouring forth all the hope and positive energy that's been bottled up in us during 8 long winter years. And not towards a man (albeit a great man), but towards the dream of a better America.
Hmm... (she goes off on a slight tangent) - this suddenly seems like a Narnia moment - the White Witch only has a few more days to rule; soon those of us turned to stone will roar again, and the trees will dance and rejoice - the battle is won!
(after we deal with that nagging economic crisis)
And I've been watching the wave of almost-religious (or, hell, just plain religious) fervor that's been sweeping the country - the world, in fact - as a result of the results of this election - and I have to admit that as wonderful and literally awe-some it is (on the one hand) to see this kind of reaction, and the positive momentum that has built, I kinda have mixed feelings about it. It scares me a little, in the way that any kind of idolatry scares me, religious or otherwise, because it's inherently false, or misplaced [from the Greek eidolon - an image, phantom, apparition] - the object of devotion cannot but fail to completely live up to expectation - and as such, it can so easily go awry - it can so easily turn negative, or even violent.
And I don't even mean non-Obama-supporters against the rest of us, or even against Obama - I mean Obama supporters against each other... I catch a whiff here and there of suspicion - am I as true an Obama-believer as the next Obama fan? Do I have real Faith, or did I just go and vote... hmm....
It's a paradox, really - my friend Kristen and I were talking about it the other night - that in order for a public figure to move the masses, he/she has to inspire. And to inspire, she/he has to [by definition] be inspirational - to reach the deepest depths of our human emotion, and get us going. And the minute the deepest depths of our human passions are reached... well, goodbye rational thinking; hello weird fanatic maniacs. It's the history of Christianity all over again. But that's the thing -you can't have the one without the other. Any figure who inspires - Jesus, Gandhi, MLK, hell, even Lennon - also inspires irrationality and insanity in some percentage of the population -the people who can't take the spiritual heat, and react in fear, or over-zealousness. The people who miss the point, and confuse the man with the message.
Maybe. My hope is that most of us can stay sane and balanced, while still pouring forth all the hope and positive energy that's been bottled up in us during 8 long winter years. And not towards a man (albeit a great man), but towards the dream of a better America.
Hmm... (she goes off on a slight tangent) - this suddenly seems like a Narnia moment - the White Witch only has a few more days to rule; soon those of us turned to stone will roar again, and the trees will dance and rejoice - the battle is won!
(after we deal with that nagging economic crisis)
despair
In addition to the conversations I have with parents that I was complaining about on my Facebook page ["If you have 9 oranges and I take away 4, what do you have left?"] - I also get to have conversations like this one all day:
Me: Hi, this is Kate, can I help you?
Alumna: Hi - I'm calling with some questions about my loan... [questions]
Me: I can check on that for you, but it may take a few minutes - can I call you right back?
A: Sure.
Me: What's your number?
A: 555-70-20..
Me: [interrupting] ...Wait, is this your Social Security number?
A: No
Me: [confused] This is a phone number?
A: Yes
Me: OK - so 555-70-...
A: 555-70-2053.
Me: [still confused] 555-70-2053?!
A: Yes
Me: There're not enough numbers there. You said '555-70-2053'?!
A: Yes
Me: Listen, there aren't enough numbers. The area code is 555, then you have 70... there have to be 3 numbers there - what's the other number?
A: Oh! 8. 555-870-2053.
Holy [as Joel would say] Holy flaming shitballs!
Me: Hi, this is Kate, can I help you?
Alumna: Hi - I'm calling with some questions about my loan... [questions]
Me: I can check on that for you, but it may take a few minutes - can I call you right back?
A: Sure.
Me: What's your number?
A: 555-70-20..
Me: [interrupting] ...Wait, is this your Social Security number?
A: No
Me: [confused] This is a phone number?
A: Yes
Me: OK - so 555-70-...
A: 555-70-2053.
Me: [still confused] 555-70-2053?!
A: Yes
Me: There're not enough numbers there. You said '555-70-2053'?!
A: Yes
Me: Listen, there aren't enough numbers. The area code is 555, then you have 70... there have to be 3 numbers there - what's the other number?
A: Oh! 8. 555-870-2053.
Holy [as Joel would say] Holy flaming shitballs!
11/21/08
Friday
I keep starting posts and then not posting them. My post list is full of 'drafts' - I suppose I lack the motivation (or interest) to finish my thoughts.
...or maybe the focus. Yeah, I'm thinking focus seriously lacking lately.
I'm going to publish this just to spite myself.
...or maybe the focus. Yeah, I'm thinking focus seriously lacking lately.
I'm going to publish this just to spite myself.
11/16/08
Sunday am
Me: [looking through local newspaper] Oh my god, here's a photo of my third grade teacher! She looks exactly the same as she did in 1979 !
Joel: [glancing over] She looks exactly the same? Vampire!
Me: Yeah, I'll show you. I've got my third grade class picture in that album on the shelf over there... [hunting].... Here it is! ...But wait, she's not in it! What the hell?! Why isn't she in the photo?
Joel: Vampire!
Joel: [glancing over] She looks exactly the same? Vampire!
Me: Yeah, I'll show you. I've got my third grade class picture in that album on the shelf over there... [hunting].... Here it is! ...But wait, she's not in it! What the hell?! Why isn't she in the photo?
Joel: Vampire!
11/15/08
walking home with Joel thru throngs of college students
Joel: Honey, how come we don't go out and get drunk like all these cool people?
Me: I dunno.
Joel: Are we destined to be un-cool for the rest of our lives?
Me: Mm-hmm.
Joel: Damn. I'm depressed.
Me: I dunno.
Joel: Are we destined to be un-cool for the rest of our lives?
Me: Mm-hmm.
Joel: Damn. I'm depressed.
11/4/08
time crunch
5:15 - left work; walked down the hill to the car with Regina; drove home; checked the mail, grabbed a book to read at the polls; switched cars and drove to vote; had to stand in two lines cause I didn't know my ward number; voted; walked back to the car; tried to call Erin; decided to do some grocery shopping-drove towards Hannaford; at Hannaford, decided instead to get window cleaner; drove towards Wal-Mart; decided to pass Wal-Mart and drive out to Pine Lake instead; got to the lake; parked and walked down the road in the dark to the edge of the water; stood in the darkness and listened to the lake sounds; thought about the world, the election, friends, people I love, the future; stood for a long time listening to the fish flip out of the water and various animal rustlings; watched the clouds over the moon; watched the fog rise over the water; finally walked back to the car; drove back into town; parked at home; turned on the computer and checked email, Facebook and wrote a blog entry.
6:50 - left the house to drive to Mike's to watch the election.
6:50 - left the house to drive to Mike's to watch the election.
10/31/08
well
Now that I've openly declared my completely un-back-upable dislike of some of the best music on the planet... I'll try to get some work done and retain a smidgen of self-respect.
10/29/08
makeover
I need a new direction for this blog.
I've always disliked the "I did this, and then we went here, and then we did that" kinds of blogs - seems tediously like a diary of events, and who can possibly care that much if I had toast with jam for breakfast and then went jogging?
But the posting-random-thoughts-as-they-occur-to-me thing is also getting a bit dull.
I'll think about it and get back to you.
(I should work on the jogging part too.)
I've always disliked the "I did this, and then we went here, and then we did that" kinds of blogs - seems tediously like a diary of events, and who can possibly care that much if I had toast with jam for breakfast and then went jogging?
But the posting-random-thoughts-as-they-occur-to-me thing is also getting a bit dull.
I'll think about it and get back to you.
(I should work on the jogging part too.)
Billy Joel, Elton John, Queen and Neil Diamond
If anyone can get me to like _their_ music... there'll be wedding bells ringing fer sure.
one of the nice things about Oneonta
This morning:
7:30 - my alarm went off
7:55 - after lounging, I got out of bed
8:27 - I left the apartment
8:32 - I arrived at the Post Office to mail a package - there was only a short line, and I got to chat with Brian Carey's mother as she waited on me.
8:37 - I left the Post Office and headed for work.
8:44 - After battling the heavy morning traffic, I pulled into the parking lot at work.
8:47 - I turned my computer on and sat down to write some emails before the office opened at 9.
7:30 - my alarm went off
7:55 - after lounging, I got out of bed
8:27 - I left the apartment
8:32 - I arrived at the Post Office to mail a package - there was only a short line, and I got to chat with Brian Carey's mother as she waited on me.
8:37 - I left the Post Office and headed for work.
8:44 - After battling the heavy morning traffic, I pulled into the parking lot at work.
8:47 - I turned my computer on and sat down to write some emails before the office opened at 9.
10/28/08
order gender
It just struck me oddly that we say:
mom and dad
nieces and nephews
boys and girls
Mr. and Mrs.
Ladies and Gentlemen...
men and women
brothers and sisters
etc.
Funny how jarring it feels to reverse them, and strange that there's no consistency.
mom and dad
nieces and nephews
boys and girls
Mr. and Mrs.
Ladies and Gentlemen...
men and women
brothers and sisters
etc.
Funny how jarring it feels to reverse them, and strange that there's no consistency.
10/19/08
10/15/08
what's in a song OR a song by any other name
Well, I just got back from having dinner at Jodi's, and tried to watch a couple of minutes of the presidential debate. Finding that even a couple of minutes were more than my blood pressure and stomach equilibrium could take, I've now decided to post something on my sadly-neglected blog.
And now the die is cast, so it won't matter if I watch it later.
[Funny - I assume that ^ refers to dice and games, but in my mind it's always been associated with die casting.]
So on the way home from Jodi's, I was listening to a mix I'd made awhile back - the first three songs being 1) Neil Young 2) Ry Cooder (from the Paris, Texas soundtrack) and 3) Audrey Hepburn (singing Moon River from Breakfast at Tiffany's). And halfway through Ry Cooder, I suddenly wondered if I'd still like that track so much, if it weren't associated with all sorts of stuff in my head.
Like, you know how you play a song for someone - one of your favorite songs in the world - and they just don't get it at all? What if it had less to do with the song itself, and more with the fact that they were lacking the good associations you have with the song?
Cause Neil Young - would I have ever started listening to his music if I hadn't been head-over-heels for Kurt when he gave me a cracked LP of After The Gold Rush in high school? Would I like it if I didn't enter a certain mental zone every time I hear it - a zone that is full of high school memories, and also connected with the years I worked at PhotoTime, when Neil's wife would bring rolls of film in to be developed, and my friend Julie lived up on King's Mountain, just down the road from his house - Every time I hear a Neil Young song, all that goes through my head - years of memories. Would his songs seem so full to me if they didn't contain all of those things?
Or Ry Cooder's guitar - which reminds me so much of the western emptiness of that movie that I can almost smell the dirt and sagebrush, ...and of Rob, and living in Menlo Park, and how I used to always get Paris, Texas mixed up with True Stories, and how I tried to get my mom to watch True Stories, but she never did.
The more I think about it, the associations kinda take over, and the actual content of the songs seems increasingly irrelevant.
Here’s a test – the next time someone plays you a song you don’t like, imagine that the person you’re in love with has just told you that it’s their favorite song ever – and see if it improves.
And now the die is cast, so it won't matter if I watch it later.
[Funny - I assume that ^ refers to dice and games, but in my mind it's always been associated with die casting.]
So on the way home from Jodi's, I was listening to a mix I'd made awhile back - the first three songs being 1) Neil Young 2) Ry Cooder (from the Paris, Texas soundtrack) and 3) Audrey Hepburn (singing Moon River from Breakfast at Tiffany's). And halfway through Ry Cooder, I suddenly wondered if I'd still like that track so much, if it weren't associated with all sorts of stuff in my head.
Like, you know how you play a song for someone - one of your favorite songs in the world - and they just don't get it at all? What if it had less to do with the song itself, and more with the fact that they were lacking the good associations you have with the song?
Cause Neil Young - would I have ever started listening to his music if I hadn't been head-over-heels for Kurt when he gave me a cracked LP of After The Gold Rush in high school? Would I like it if I didn't enter a certain mental zone every time I hear it - a zone that is full of high school memories, and also connected with the years I worked at PhotoTime, when Neil's wife would bring rolls of film in to be developed, and my friend Julie lived up on King's Mountain, just down the road from his house - Every time I hear a Neil Young song, all that goes through my head - years of memories. Would his songs seem so full to me if they didn't contain all of those things?
Or Ry Cooder's guitar - which reminds me so much of the western emptiness of that movie that I can almost smell the dirt and sagebrush, ...and of Rob, and living in Menlo Park, and how I used to always get Paris, Texas mixed up with True Stories, and how I tried to get my mom to watch True Stories, but she never did.
The more I think about it, the associations kinda take over, and the actual content of the songs seems increasingly irrelevant.
Here’s a test – the next time someone plays you a song you don’t like, imagine that the person you’re in love with has just told you that it’s their favorite song ever – and see if it improves.
10/2/08
more from Joel
Me: "That's the problem with stuffed animals - you can hug them, and hug them, and hug them, and they never look any happier."
Joel: "I would be more worried if over time they did look happier."
Joel: "I would be more worried if over time they did look happier."
9/28/08
Joel sez:
"Bush's approval rating is the lowest of any president, ever - it's dwindled to three guys in Texas. And one of them's related to him."
9/19/08
elementary
I've found that my brain occasionally has moments where it gets confused on very basic stuff.
In addition to regularly losing track of my lefts & rights, I've twice in the past month looked down at my car's odometer and been surprised when it's flipped from 159 to 160 miles, instead of 200. I've had to think for a minute to realize it's recording miles, and not time.
My earliest recollection of such confusion was a day in 3rd grade, when we were taking a math test. We were being asked to subtract one large number from another larger number. Let's say 2637 minus 1854. Although I'd routinely done that kind of arithmetic in class, that day when I looked at the numbers, my brain suddenly decided that the way to determine the value of each number was to add up the individual digits that comprised it. In doing so, I found that both numbers resulted in the same sum, and I remember becoming very confused and finally going up to Mrs. Nielsen to ask how we were supposed to subtract one number from the other, because it was the same number.
Of course, she looked at me very strangely and explained that 2637 was the larger number, at which point the proper perspective flooded back and I felt like a complete idiot.
It's always a weird sensation to re-gain perspective and realize how out in la-la-land I've just been.
In addition to regularly losing track of my lefts & rights, I've twice in the past month looked down at my car's odometer and been surprised when it's flipped from 159 to 160 miles, instead of 200. I've had to think for a minute to realize it's recording miles, and not time.
My earliest recollection of such confusion was a day in 3rd grade, when we were taking a math test. We were being asked to subtract one large number from another larger number. Let's say 2637 minus 1854. Although I'd routinely done that kind of arithmetic in class, that day when I looked at the numbers, my brain suddenly decided that the way to determine the value of each number was to add up the individual digits that comprised it. In doing so, I found that both numbers resulted in the same sum, and I remember becoming very confused and finally going up to Mrs. Nielsen to ask how we were supposed to subtract one number from the other, because it was the same number.
Of course, she looked at me very strangely and explained that 2637 was the larger number, at which point the proper perspective flooded back and I felt like a complete idiot.
It's always a weird sensation to re-gain perspective and realize how out in la-la-land I've just been.
9/18/08
election reds
Taking my car to the shop earlier today, I drove past a bright red SUV that was parked illegally, blocking traffic, and that had (of course) a McCain sticker in the back window. A couple of blocks later, I passed a house with a McCain sign in the front yard.
And I just have to say, again (and again, and again) - who the hell are these people?! What could possibly be going through their minds, that they would consider - even for a second- that McCain and his rabid partner would be a viable choice to lead our country?! It's just really weird and disturbing.
A few days ago my cousin Laurie forwarded around an email of an editorial blog written by one Michael Seitzman, (a writer/director who wrote North Country, among other things) - that expressed how I'm feeling particularly well:
"Now, I want to be clear and speak directly to those of you who LOVED that Palin interview. You're an idiot. I mean that. This is not one of those cases where we're going to agree to disagree. This isn't one of those situations where we debate it passionately and then walk away thinking that the other guy is wrong but argued well. I'm not going to think of you as a thoughtful but misguided person with different ideas who still really cares about the country and the world. No, sorry, not this time. This time, if you watched those interview excerpts and weren't scared out of your freakin' mind, then you're mentally ill, mentally disabled, or mentally disturbed. What you are NOT is responsible, informed, curious, thoughtful, mature, educated, empathetic, or remotely serious. I mean it.
But I like to think that anyone can change.
Stop voting for people you want to have a beer with. Stop voting for folksy. Stop voting for people who remind you of your neighbor. Stop voting for the ideologically intransigent, the staggeringly ignorant, and the blazingly incompetent. Vote for someone smarter than you. Vote for someone who inspires you. Vote for someone who has not only traveled the world but who has also shown a deep understanding and compassion for it. The stakes are real and they're terrifyingly high. This election matters. It matters. It really matters. Let me say that one more time. This. Really. Matters. "
And I just have to say, again (and again, and again) - who the hell are these people?! What could possibly be going through their minds, that they would consider - even for a second- that McCain and his rabid partner would be a viable choice to lead our country?! It's just really weird and disturbing.
A few days ago my cousin Laurie forwarded around an email of an editorial blog written by one Michael Seitzman, (a writer/director who wrote North Country, among other things) - that expressed how I'm feeling particularly well:
"Now, I want to be clear and speak directly to those of you who LOVED that Palin interview. You're an idiot. I mean that. This is not one of those cases where we're going to agree to disagree. This isn't one of those situations where we debate it passionately and then walk away thinking that the other guy is wrong but argued well. I'm not going to think of you as a thoughtful but misguided person with different ideas who still really cares about the country and the world. No, sorry, not this time. This time, if you watched those interview excerpts and weren't scared out of your freakin' mind, then you're mentally ill, mentally disabled, or mentally disturbed. What you are NOT is responsible, informed, curious, thoughtful, mature, educated, empathetic, or remotely serious. I mean it.
But I like to think that anyone can change.
Stop voting for people you want to have a beer with. Stop voting for folksy. Stop voting for people who remind you of your neighbor. Stop voting for the ideologically intransigent, the staggeringly ignorant, and the blazingly incompetent. Vote for someone smarter than you. Vote for someone who inspires you. Vote for someone who has not only traveled the world but who has also shown a deep understanding and compassion for it. The stakes are real and they're terrifyingly high. This election matters. It matters. It really matters. Let me say that one more time. This. Really. Matters. "
9/17/08
meaning
We create it. In many ways it's a purely human phenomenon.
We create it, and then it destroys us.
But I'd still rather have it, and suffer at its hands, than live blissfully without it.
Although it does seem like some (though few) people can live blissfully with it.
I'm not yet that evolved.
We create it, and then it destroys us.
But I'd still rather have it, and suffer at its hands, than live blissfully without it.
Although it does seem like some (though few) people can live blissfully with it.
I'm not yet that evolved.
9/12/08
more religious venting
And what's up with the bible stuff? Is there anyone in that Presbyterian church who really, actually thinks that the bible was written by God? I doubt it.
In fact, this is how the minister started the reading last Sunday:
"Most biblical scholars agree that this passage was added later by leaders of the early church. Listen now to the Word of God."
--And ended with, "So ends our reading from God's Word. Thanks be to God."
-But... uhh... wait, like, didn't you just say the thing was written by leaders of the early church?!
And I know people would say "Well, we believe it was inspired by God." or "Well, that's just what we say 'cause it's a holy text." - but no, it matters.
Words matter. Say what you actually mean, or don't say anything; when it's something people have died for, when it's something that keeps homosexuals from being treated as equal citizens in our country, when it's something that starts wars and dissolves families, don't say "oh, well, we say it's the word of God, we say that Jesus died for our sins; we say that we're going to live forever if we follow him, we say that Jesus was the divine son of God and that he was resurrected and ascended into heaven, we say that he'll come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and that his kingdom will have no end... but we all really know that we mean something else."
In fact, this is how the minister started the reading last Sunday:
"Most biblical scholars agree that this passage was added later by leaders of the early church. Listen now to the Word of God."
--And ended with, "So ends our reading from God's Word. Thanks be to God."
-But... uhh... wait, like, didn't you just say the thing was written by leaders of the early church?!
And I know people would say "Well, we believe it was inspired by God." or "Well, that's just what we say 'cause it's a holy text." - but no, it matters.
Words matter. Say what you actually mean, or don't say anything; when it's something people have died for, when it's something that keeps homosexuals from being treated as equal citizens in our country, when it's something that starts wars and dissolves families, don't say "oh, well, we say it's the word of God, we say that Jesus died for our sins; we say that we're going to live forever if we follow him, we say that Jesus was the divine son of God and that he was resurrected and ascended into heaven, we say that he'll come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and that his kingdom will have no end... but we all really know that we mean something else."
put the sanity back in christianity
Along the same lines as the post below, I have to vent about something else- (And I'll probably offend a bunch of people in the process, but so be it.) :
What is up with Christianity?
Seems like most of us look at the history of Christianity and say -oh, well, yeah, in the past people have done some terrible things in Jesus' name. But now it's the 21st century and we're all enlightened.
Yeah, right.
In fact, I just attended a [run-of-the-mill laid-back Presbyterian] church service where they showed a bunch of 4-7 year-olds a video about Sin. "A long time ago" [the video began], "God created the Earth, and it was perfect. But then people did bad things." Yes, people started to sin. And 'Sin' was shown as two kids fighting in karate-style stance; two other kids whispering "She's so weird!" about another girl.
And what's the lesson being taught? - "The price of Sin is Death!", the narrator intoned, while the video showed these kids a photograph of a gravestone in a cemetery. "But Jesus died for all our sins, and Jesus will make us live forever."
-How the hell is a 5-year-old supposed to understand the abstract concepts in this message?! I can barely get my brain around them myself. And is watching this video going to make these children more loving? Is it going to make them feel warm and accepted? Is it going to give them a personal comfort level with the concept of "God"? Is it going to make them understand, on a practical level, why gossip and fighting might be harmful to those they love? Yah, I think not.
And how would Jesus feel about that message? Nauseous, I imagine.
The whole thing makes me incredibly uncomfortable. Made me so uncomfortable and angry that I almost got up and walked out of the service; in retrospect, I should've. How can responsible, educated parents sit back and let their kids be exposed to narrow, damaging messages like that? Or worse, endorse those messages? That's 'Sin' in my book.
It just doesn't make sense to me. It just doesn't make any freakin' sense.
What is up with Christianity?
Seems like most of us look at the history of Christianity and say -oh, well, yeah, in the past people have done some terrible things in Jesus' name. But now it's the 21st century and we're all enlightened.
Yeah, right.
In fact, I just attended a [run-of-the-mill laid-back Presbyterian] church service where they showed a bunch of 4-7 year-olds a video about Sin. "A long time ago" [the video began], "God created the Earth, and it was perfect. But then people did bad things." Yes, people started to sin. And 'Sin' was shown as two kids fighting in karate-style stance; two other kids whispering "She's so weird!" about another girl.
And what's the lesson being taught? - "The price of Sin is Death!", the narrator intoned, while the video showed these kids a photograph of a gravestone in a cemetery. "But Jesus died for all our sins, and Jesus will make us live forever."
-How the hell is a 5-year-old supposed to understand the abstract concepts in this message?! I can barely get my brain around them myself. And is watching this video going to make these children more loving? Is it going to make them feel warm and accepted? Is it going to give them a personal comfort level with the concept of "God"? Is it going to make them understand, on a practical level, why gossip and fighting might be harmful to those they love? Yah, I think not.
And how would Jesus feel about that message? Nauseous, I imagine.
The whole thing makes me incredibly uncomfortable. Made me so uncomfortable and angry that I almost got up and walked out of the service; in retrospect, I should've. How can responsible, educated parents sit back and let their kids be exposed to narrow, damaging messages like that? Or worse, endorse those messages? That's 'Sin' in my book.
It just doesn't make sense to me. It just doesn't make any freakin' sense.
9/11/08
my neighbors
Well, the folks who live next to (and below) me have now given me three different labels, and I feel it's time to display them proudly.
1) Middle-class:
A couple of years ago, during a violent lightening storm (which had already struck elsewhere in town and was now right overhead), I declined an invitation from my neighbor to leave the porch and stand with him under the tall tree in our front yard. "Oh, you're so middle-class!" he yelled at me from the street.
2) Lesbian:
I was recently informed by another neighbor that the whole neighborhood thinks I'm a lesbian. Why? One, because I live with Joel, and they all know he's a great guy so if we're not together that must be the reason and two, because I'm regularly visited by "that girl."
-Which girl? I asked him. "That girl, you know, the one who comes from Massachusetts all the time to see you." Oh yeah, my mom.
3) Someone who "doesn't talk to people"
A third neighbor approached me hesitantly the other day. "Excuse me!" she said, staying quite some distance away, but craning her head towards me, as if I were a wild animal she wanted to inspect. She said, "I know you don't talk to people, but I thought I'd introduce myself. My name is Sharon, and I'm your neighbor." "Hi, nice to meet you," I replied, "My name's Kate. But I don't know what you mean about not talking to people?" It took three times of her introducing herself again, and again mentioning that I "ignore people", and me asking her what she meant by that, before she finally told me why she had formed this opinion: One day there had been a bookseller out in front of the house looking for me, and he had had to call to me twice to get my attention, because I was at the back of the house loading some things in my car and didn't hear him the first time.
Yep. I'll be interested to see what they come up with next.
1) Middle-class:
A couple of years ago, during a violent lightening storm (which had already struck elsewhere in town and was now right overhead), I declined an invitation from my neighbor to leave the porch and stand with him under the tall tree in our front yard. "Oh, you're so middle-class!" he yelled at me from the street.
2) Lesbian:
I was recently informed by another neighbor that the whole neighborhood thinks I'm a lesbian. Why? One, because I live with Joel, and they all know he's a great guy so if we're not together that must be the reason and two, because I'm regularly visited by "that girl."
-Which girl? I asked him. "That girl, you know, the one who comes from Massachusetts all the time to see you." Oh yeah, my mom.
3) Someone who "doesn't talk to people"
A third neighbor approached me hesitantly the other day. "Excuse me!" she said, staying quite some distance away, but craning her head towards me, as if I were a wild animal she wanted to inspect. She said, "I know you don't talk to people, but I thought I'd introduce myself. My name is Sharon, and I'm your neighbor." "Hi, nice to meet you," I replied, "My name's Kate. But I don't know what you mean about not talking to people?" It took three times of her introducing herself again, and again mentioning that I "ignore people", and me asking her what she meant by that, before she finally told me why she had formed this opinion: One day there had been a bookseller out in front of the house looking for me, and he had had to call to me twice to get my attention, because I was at the back of the house loading some things in my car and didn't hear him the first time.
Yep. I'll be interested to see what they come up with next.
9/9/08
petty pet peeve
Seems like every time I get someone's voicemail box nowadays, they say the same weird thing. It's 'professional' wording, but it just doesn't make sense - like they're all parroting the phrase that people use when leaving messages, but they're using it backwards-
They say, "Please leave your name and number, and a brief message, and I'll get back to you at my earliest convenience."
At my earliest convenience - that's essentially saying, yeah, dude, you may think what you're calling about is important, but I'm going to take my own sweet little time getting back to you; gotta wait till it's nice and convenient for me.
They say, "Please leave your name and number, and a brief message, and I'll get back to you at my earliest convenience."
At my earliest convenience - that's essentially saying, yeah, dude, you may think what you're calling about is important, but I'm going to take my own sweet little time getting back to you; gotta wait till it's nice and convenient for me.
9/5/08
religions... elections... leaders... idols... cults... Mary Kay representatives....
Really – extremes creep me out. People who get too enthusiastic about anything – whether it be a good thing in my book or not - they make me nervous.
Being passionate about something, sure, that’s great. Believing in something, working towards it, fine. But more than that… it’s unbalanced. When you can’t recognize that there are some pieces of the thing (or person) (or idea) you love that aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, or when you follow someone blindly rather than doing your own thinking, you become very dangerous.
Being passionate about something, sure, that’s great. Believing in something, working towards it, fine. But more than that… it’s unbalanced. When you can’t recognize that there are some pieces of the thing (or person) (or idea) you love that aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, or when you follow someone blindly rather than doing your own thinking, you become very dangerous.
9/4/08
and boy am I glad
It wasn't till recently that I realized there's an upstate NY accent. It's all nasally, with open vowels - lots of eenh and wanh sounds. And words ending with 't' turn into a kind of grunt. 'Didn't' becomes 'dinh', 'different' comes out 'diffrenh'
I don't talk that way; the one Oneonta word I've picked up is "prolly". -I'll prolly write something even more boring tomorrow.
In fact, I picked up more pronounciation weirdness from my brief stint in the midwest - to this day I still say 'halse' instead of 'house'.
But as yet I've managed to avoid adopting the Phillean 'wudder', thank god.
I don't talk that way; the one Oneonta word I've picked up is "prolly". -I'll prolly write something even more boring tomorrow.
In fact, I picked up more pronounciation weirdness from my brief stint in the midwest - to this day I still say 'halse' instead of 'house'.
But as yet I've managed to avoid adopting the Phillean 'wudder', thank god.
9/1/08
ridicule-ous
Seems like the key to changing peoples' minds is dispassionate passion. If you get too het-up about something, nobody listens.
Or they snicker at you behind your back.
It's a shame I still haven't mastered it.
Or they snicker at you behind your back.
It's a shame I still haven't mastered it.
alignment
When my brain gets all off-track, I find that watching Harold and Maude is a good fix. It works like a magnet on metal filings; puts all the chaos in order.
8/21/08
oranga-tang
There's something about the "Alice and Wonderland" phenomenon [see below] that's reminding me of how my friend Janice used to complain (when she worked at Barnes & Noble) that people used to come in all the time and ask her to direct them to the non-fiction section of the store.
[By the way, I must take this opportunity to point out that the store's name is Barnes & Noble. Not (as is commonly said in these parts) Barnes & Nobles.]
Or how, when I worked at the photo lab, many customers would get extremely upset if an employee dropped the film they'd handed in for processing. "Look what you've done!" one customer said to me after a roll slipped through my fingers and hit the counter. "Now all my pictures will be blurry!"
[By the way, I must take this opportunity to point out that the store's name is Barnes & Noble. Not (as is commonly said in these parts) Barnes & Nobles.]
Or how, when I worked at the photo lab, many customers would get extremely upset if an employee dropped the film they'd handed in for processing. "Look what you've done!" one customer said to me after a roll slipped through my fingers and hit the counter. "Now all my pictures will be blurry!"
8/20/08
hmm...?
A rather extreme and somewhat misled young person just left a comment on one of my recent posts.
So I followed the link and looked at his blog.
And noted that he had listed "Alice and Wonderland" as one of his favorite books.
I then saw that 39 other bloggers have also listed this non-existent book as one of their favorites.
Very mysterious. Makes one seriously consider the possibility of parallel universes.
So I followed the link and looked at his blog.
And noted that he had listed "Alice and Wonderland" as one of his favorite books.
I then saw that 39 other bloggers have also listed this non-existent book as one of their favorites.
Very mysterious. Makes one seriously consider the possibility of parallel universes.
rollover
When you've been in a position long enough to help four generations of employees in an adjoining office learn the same ropes in a particular program, you've been in that position way too long.
noche noire
Although, of course, the advice below was given in response to me asking him what he thought of me sneaking back into Arnold Hall after-hours and taking a bunch of art off the walls.
(Which my dad and mom and I put up in the '70s - seems like nobody's bothering with them, and the building is coming down soon, and everything's a mess. I'm hoping that eventually someone will say "What happened to all those paintings in Arnold?" And then I'll say - here they are!)
Yes, it was a full night of crime. First I took a bunch of paintings down - came up with Joel in the dark and snuck around in the hallways and tried to pretend that we weren't walking around with a screwdriver and a bunch of picture frames.
And then went over to JC Penney's and used both of my one-per-customer coupons by going to different cash registers.
I'm surprised they haven't arrested me yet.
(Which my dad and mom and I put up in the '70s - seems like nobody's bothering with them, and the building is coming down soon, and everything's a mess. I'm hoping that eventually someone will say "What happened to all those paintings in Arnold?" And then I'll say - here they are!)
Yes, it was a full night of crime. First I took a bunch of paintings down - came up with Joel in the dark and snuck around in the hallways and tried to pretend that we weren't walking around with a screwdriver and a bunch of picture frames.
And then went over to JC Penney's and used both of my one-per-customer coupons by going to different cash registers.
I'm surprised they haven't arrested me yet.
words of wisdom
My dad just gave me great advice:
"Do what you think is right, and don't ask permission."
"Do what you think is right, and don't ask permission."
8/18/08
(another) conversation with Joel
Me: Hi.
Joel: Hi. You gonna be home for lunch?
Me: Yeah, probly.
Joel: You're stressed, you know.
Me: What?
Joel: You're stressed out.
Me: I guess. And I think I've been a bit short with you lately; I'm sorry.
Joel: And it's the first time in the history of the world that someone has been stressed out and has been a bit short with their friend. [laughing] ...This perfection that you seek, how goes it?
Joel: Hi. You gonna be home for lunch?
Me: Yeah, probly.
Joel: You're stressed, you know.
Me: What?
Joel: You're stressed out.
Me: I guess. And I think I've been a bit short with you lately; I'm sorry.
Joel: And it's the first time in the history of the world that someone has been stressed out and has been a bit short with their friend. [laughing] ...This perfection that you seek, how goes it?
8/16/08
muse-ings
Tonight I decided not to watch TV. At all.
Instead, I went out to Pine Lake and took a canoe across the lake and swam, all by myself, just before the sun went down. The air was moist and all the smells were green and brown and growing. I paddled out into the middle of the lake and sat for a long time, just thinking, just letting the canoe drift.
And then I came home and watered my plants and made some tea.
And darned some slippers and cleaned the living room and trimmed the cactus in the kitchen window, and moved the avocado tree into my bedroom, and went through some photographs, and weeded some DVDs out of my collection and put them in the box to go to the Salvation Army.
And then I hooked up the record player that my friend Mark gave me a couple of weeks ago, and I listened to a bunch of music. The Barn Dance record, and Peer Gynt.
I ended with Bach’s Air from Suite No. 3 in D (for orchestra), which is one of my all-time favorite pieces.
And here’s the point of this whole ramble – I’d really like to paint that music. I know that anything I’d attempt, for real, would be far inferior to how I imagine it in my head. But the [Bach] piece is so visual – so many different strands of tone, all winding around each other, intertwining like the branches of a vine; a perfect vine. A vine that’s been filmed by National Geographic and is being played back at a high speed so you can see it stretching and unfurling as if it were some strange animal. And then sometimes one strand, that’s been growing and turning with the rest, suddenly reaches for the sunlight and outruns its companions. For a minute it stands alone, brilliant, and then the others find it again and it falls behind and lets another run forward.
I still don’t understand how something so mathematical – just these frequencies of sound, scheduled specifically to meet or miss each other over the span of a period of time – can be at the same time so organic, completely uncontrolled, passionate, and able to touch us so deeply.
Music is kick-ass.
[But I suppose all of life is that way – it’s simultaneously art and chemistry, molecules and beauty, math and passion – all made up of the same stuff. Which is one reason I’ve never understood why they separate the different disciplines in school. Biology is Painting is Literature is Music.]
Instead, I went out to Pine Lake and took a canoe across the lake and swam, all by myself, just before the sun went down. The air was moist and all the smells were green and brown and growing. I paddled out into the middle of the lake and sat for a long time, just thinking, just letting the canoe drift.
And then I came home and watered my plants and made some tea.
And darned some slippers and cleaned the living room and trimmed the cactus in the kitchen window, and moved the avocado tree into my bedroom, and went through some photographs, and weeded some DVDs out of my collection and put them in the box to go to the Salvation Army.
And then I hooked up the record player that my friend Mark gave me a couple of weeks ago, and I listened to a bunch of music. The Barn Dance record, and Peer Gynt.
I ended with Bach’s Air from Suite No. 3 in D (for orchestra), which is one of my all-time favorite pieces.
And here’s the point of this whole ramble – I’d really like to paint that music. I know that anything I’d attempt, for real, would be far inferior to how I imagine it in my head. But the [Bach] piece is so visual – so many different strands of tone, all winding around each other, intertwining like the branches of a vine; a perfect vine. A vine that’s been filmed by National Geographic and is being played back at a high speed so you can see it stretching and unfurling as if it were some strange animal. And then sometimes one strand, that’s been growing and turning with the rest, suddenly reaches for the sunlight and outruns its companions. For a minute it stands alone, brilliant, and then the others find it again and it falls behind and lets another run forward.
I still don’t understand how something so mathematical – just these frequencies of sound, scheduled specifically to meet or miss each other over the span of a period of time – can be at the same time so organic, completely uncontrolled, passionate, and able to touch us so deeply.
Music is kick-ass.
[But I suppose all of life is that way – it’s simultaneously art and chemistry, molecules and beauty, math and passion – all made up of the same stuff. Which is one reason I’ve never understood why they separate the different disciplines in school. Biology is Painting is Literature is Music.]
8/14/08
relationship rant
What is it with men liking to get bossed around by their wives/girlfriends? It makes no sense to me at all. If my husband organized my social life for me and insisted on me changing my clothes when I didn’t want to, and packed my suitcase for me and told me to change the message on my answering machine and made me go to the dentist more often, it would drive me insane. It even drives me insane to have to watch it happen with other couples - seeing the poor guy go all flabby and watching his wife on some weird power trip. What is up with that dynamic?! I think it's disrespectful. If I ever marry, it's gonna be to someone who can make his own decisions and take care of his own life and his own frickin' suitcase and isn't hanging around waiting for me to tell him what to do.
[which probably means I'll never marry]
-----
PS - after reading Osvaldo's comment, I was trying to figure out a way to more clearly pinpoint what I mean, and I remembered a passage in a book by Dorothy Sayers that sorta better illustrates it:
“Oh, my dear – don’t upset yourself like this. Say the word, and we’ll go right away. We’ll leave this miserable business and never meddle again.”
“Do you really mean that?” she said, incredulously.
“Of course I mean it. I have said it.”
His voice was the voice of a beaten man. She was appalled, seeing what she had done.
“Peter, you’re mad. Never dare to suggest such a thing. Whatever marriage is, it isn’t that.”
“Isn’t what, Harriet?”
“Letting your affection corrupt your judgment. What kind of life could we have if I knew that you had become less than yourself by marrying me?”
He turned away again, and when he spoke, it was in a queerly shaken tone:
“My dear girl, most women would consider it a triumph.”
“I know, I’ve heard them.” Her own scorn lashed herself – the self she had only just seen. “They boast of it – ‘My husband would do anything for me….’ It’s degrading. No human being ought to have such power over another.”
“It’s a very real power, Harriet.”
“Then,” she flung back passionately, “we won’t use it. If we disagree, we’ll fight it out like gentlemen. We won’t stand for matrimonial blackmail.”
[which probably means I'll never marry]
-----
PS - after reading Osvaldo's comment, I was trying to figure out a way to more clearly pinpoint what I mean, and I remembered a passage in a book by Dorothy Sayers that sorta better illustrates it:
“Oh, my dear – don’t upset yourself like this. Say the word, and we’ll go right away. We’ll leave this miserable business and never meddle again.”
“Do you really mean that?” she said, incredulously.
“Of course I mean it. I have said it.”
His voice was the voice of a beaten man. She was appalled, seeing what she had done.
“Peter, you’re mad. Never dare to suggest such a thing. Whatever marriage is, it isn’t that.”
“Isn’t what, Harriet?”
“Letting your affection corrupt your judgment. What kind of life could we have if I knew that you had become less than yourself by marrying me?”
He turned away again, and when he spoke, it was in a queerly shaken tone:
“My dear girl, most women would consider it a triumph.”
“I know, I’ve heard them.” Her own scorn lashed herself – the self she had only just seen. “They boast of it – ‘My husband would do anything for me….’ It’s degrading. No human being ought to have such power over another.”
“It’s a very real power, Harriet.”
“Then,” she flung back passionately, “we won’t use it. If we disagree, we’ll fight it out like gentlemen. We won’t stand for matrimonial blackmail.”
backwards
There is one advantage to the increase in child obesity - I can now buy most of my clothes in the juniors section.
8/13/08
California
Things I love:
dry heat
prickly landscape
spiny plants
sage
rosemary bushes
lavender
flowers everywhere
eucalyptus trees
ocean
the strong white sunlight
cool mornings
lawn sprinklers
the smell of wet pavement
geraniums
Peet's coffee
dry grass
moody San Francisco fog
the dark scent of bay laurel trees
good mexican food
live oaks
winter rains
the irish-green spring hills
rainbows
walking at the Dish
Jamba Juice
clear skies at night
the darkness
the distance of the mountains
wild pigs
wild parrots
dim sum
curvy roads
the quiet earthiness of redwood forests
crazy thunderstorms
wisteria
coyotes
innovative thinking
Chinatown
fruit trees along the street
fresh avocados
the Stanford Theatre
organic produce
recycling everything
walking at the baylands
Things I can live without:
commuter traffic
smog
earthquakes
shopping centers
high prices
apartment complexes
mudslides
rotating blackouts
dry heat
prickly landscape
spiny plants
sage
rosemary bushes
lavender
flowers everywhere
eucalyptus trees
ocean
the strong white sunlight
cool mornings
lawn sprinklers
the smell of wet pavement
geraniums
Peet's coffee
dry grass
moody San Francisco fog
the dark scent of bay laurel trees
good mexican food
live oaks
winter rains
the irish-green spring hills
rainbows
walking at the Dish
Jamba Juice
clear skies at night
the darkness
the distance of the mountains
wild pigs
wild parrots
dim sum
curvy roads
the quiet earthiness of redwood forests
crazy thunderstorms
wisteria
coyotes
innovative thinking
Chinatown
fruit trees along the street
fresh avocados
the Stanford Theatre
organic produce
recycling everything
walking at the baylands
Things I can live without:
commuter traffic
smog
earthquakes
shopping centers
high prices
apartment complexes
mudslides
rotating blackouts
7/27/08
sadness...and other stuff
I was going to comment on how glad I am to not be a sickeningly 100% happy person. I always think that people who are too happy are missing out somehow; disregarding things in themselves, ignoring life tugging at their sleeves in their excitement at rushing ahead... yep, I was going to make a good case for moodiness.
But I've been distracted-- there's a particularly heavy freight train coming through Oneonta right now. I can tell it's extra heavy because the house is moving more than usual; my chair is shaking, the plants are swaying. If I were in CA, I'd be wondering how long to wait before heading under the table to avoid falling objects.
(Which prompts me to comment on the strange fact that, until last year [when I was in CA and we had a 5.6], the strongest earthquakes I'd ever experienced were in Oneonta; one in 1983, and one in 2002 [both were 5.1] - but none of which were at all startling to me, cause it's such a familiar rhythm; I grew up being rocked to sleep by freight trains. )
But I've been distracted-- there's a particularly heavy freight train coming through Oneonta right now. I can tell it's extra heavy because the house is moving more than usual; my chair is shaking, the plants are swaying. If I were in CA, I'd be wondering how long to wait before heading under the table to avoid falling objects.
(Which prompts me to comment on the strange fact that, until last year [when I was in CA and we had a 5.6], the strongest earthquakes I'd ever experienced were in Oneonta; one in 1983, and one in 2002 [both were 5.1] - but none of which were at all startling to me, cause it's such a familiar rhythm; I grew up being rocked to sleep by freight trains. )
I miss T-Max.
Tomorrow, when I have a faster connection, I will post my favorite photo of her. I miss her so much.
never again. ever.
I was just going through some of Rob's old VHS tapes, and I found one mysteriously labeled '02.26.02'.
So I watched it.
It turned out to be a video letter I sent to Rob at that time; 8 months after moving back to Oneonta.
Based on how this new evidence supports my memory of that event, I have now officially labeled 2001 the worst year (to date) of my entire life. By 'worst', I mean: unbearably painful, emotionally damaging, and just generally horrible on a daily basis. Add to that the fact that my income that year was $11,000.
Yep, in the immortal words of Joel, "It sucked shit through a straw."
So I watched it.
It turned out to be a video letter I sent to Rob at that time; 8 months after moving back to Oneonta.
Based on how this new evidence supports my memory of that event, I have now officially labeled 2001 the worst year (to date) of my entire life. By 'worst', I mean: unbearably painful, emotionally damaging, and just generally horrible on a daily basis. Add to that the fact that my income that year was $11,000.
Yep, in the immortal words of Joel, "It sucked shit through a straw."
7/25/08
my blood runs cold, my memory has just been sold....
OK, I was in a really shitty mood when I wrote 'Jobs'. Sorry.
So, last night when I was leaving work, that J. Giles band song - Centerfold - came on the radio.
That was the first radio song I ever paid attention to. I would have been...10 or 11... when did it come out? 1982. 11, then. I was in that phase where I was spending tons of time in the basement, cleaning stuff; washing things by hand and hanging them over the hot water pipes to dry. (You know, like how most 11-year-olds spend their time.) And while I washed and cleaned, I listened to the radio, which was something I'd never done before.
And I remember that song; I remember particularly noticing the second time I heard it. Not the first; then it was just one of a run of songs I didn't know. But the second time, I thought - wow, I know this song! And I sang along, and felt like I was being given the key to a secret club. A secret club of people who were in the know. It was cool.
So, last night when I was leaving work, that J. Giles band song - Centerfold - came on the radio.
That was the first radio song I ever paid attention to. I would have been...10 or 11... when did it come out? 1982. 11, then. I was in that phase where I was spending tons of time in the basement, cleaning stuff; washing things by hand and hanging them over the hot water pipes to dry. (You know, like how most 11-year-olds spend their time.) And while I washed and cleaned, I listened to the radio, which was something I'd never done before.
And I remember that song; I remember particularly noticing the second time I heard it. Not the first; then it was just one of a run of songs I didn't know. But the second time, I thought - wow, I know this song! And I sang along, and felt like I was being given the key to a secret club. A secret club of people who were in the know. It was cool.
7/23/08
Jobs
If I can just
force
myself
into this shape
one more time
one more day
there is no other choice
Adulthood means
bills to be paid
insurance premiums
No space to breathe, move, stretch
to let it happen
because the rent is due
Our society
works
on five days six days forty hours
away from life, home, children
Self
forced to fit
a rhythm so unnatural
I don’t see how
I could ever be
working happy
force
myself
into this shape
one more time
one more day
there is no other choice
Adulthood means
bills to be paid
insurance premiums
No space to breathe, move, stretch
to let it happen
because the rent is due
Our society
works
on five days six days forty hours
away from life, home, children
Self
forced to fit
a rhythm so unnatural
I don’t see how
I could ever be
working happy
7/21/08
I couldn't'a put it better myself
There are faces, there are smiles, so many teeth, too many arms and legs and eyes and flashing buttons all around me
I'm a-watching, I'm a-breathing, I'm a-pushing, I'm a-wishing
That these walls would not be talking quite so loudly
I have lost it once before I've pulled myself up from the floor
And I am looking for a reason to stay standing
But sometimes it's just too much or not enough or something else
It's so much bigger than my head, it's too demanding
Sometimes the fastest way to get there is to go slow
And sometimes if you wanna hold on you got to let go
I'm gonna close my eyes
And count to ten
I'm gonna close my eyes
And when I open them again
Everything will make sense to me then
(from Count to Ten - Tina Dico)
I'm a-watching, I'm a-breathing, I'm a-pushing, I'm a-wishing
That these walls would not be talking quite so loudly
I have lost it once before I've pulled myself up from the floor
And I am looking for a reason to stay standing
But sometimes it's just too much or not enough or something else
It's so much bigger than my head, it's too demanding
Sometimes the fastest way to get there is to go slow
And sometimes if you wanna hold on you got to let go
I'm gonna close my eyes
And count to ten
I'm gonna close my eyes
And when I open them again
Everything will make sense to me then
(from Count to Ten - Tina Dico)
7/15/08
procrastination
Procrastination is not about wasting time. No, procrastination is about being busy. It's about being incredibly busy doing something that you would never have bothered to do if there weren't something else that you are trying to find an excuse not to do.
In my case, today's procrastination involved going through the entire list of contacts in my cell phone, detailing on each of the numbers, and taking out the extraneous 1- preceding each area code.
This was very important to do, because now I can look at each contact and see the full phone number, including area code. I used to be able to only see the last 7 digits of the number, because the extra 1- in there made the number too long to display all at once.
Now that this crucial project is complete, I will proceed to email my cousin about animatronic dolls.
In my case, today's procrastination involved going through the entire list of contacts in my cell phone, detailing on each of the numbers, and taking out the extraneous 1- preceding each area code.
This was very important to do, because now I can look at each contact and see the full phone number, including area code. I used to be able to only see the last 7 digits of the number, because the extra 1- in there made the number too long to display all at once.
Now that this crucial project is complete, I will proceed to email my cousin about animatronic dolls.
7/11/08
po-stiiing
I have been very not-postingish lately.
There have been times that I've thought of things I wanted to write about, but I was usually in the car.
I did, however, want to comment on the sad lack of financial-planning education in our public schools. It's an issue that came to my attention a number of years ago, when I was working at the Catskill Regional Teacher Center. There was a group trying to get some grant funds to start a program locally... I remember applauding their efforts, and simultaneously wishing that they weren't needed.
Somebody higher up should see that it's in our country's best interest to teach kids how to save, how to balance a checking account, how to invest money, how to keep credit card bills low, how to contribute to retirement accounts, etc.
For example, most of the students I interact with have absolutely no idea how to write or endorse a check. Seems very odd that it should fall to me to teach them. They've read Shakespeare, they've written research papers, they've studied world history and economics, they've learned foreign languages and mastered musical instruments. -And then they had someone open a bank account for them, and they're wandering around with ATM cards and checkbooks, completely at a loss as to what to do with them.
The more I think about it, the more it seems like some huge governmental conspiracy to keep the rich kids on top (cause their families will pass down the required financial knowledge), and the kids from poor families clueless and left behind.
Or maybe that's too cynical of me.
There have been times that I've thought of things I wanted to write about, but I was usually in the car.
I did, however, want to comment on the sad lack of financial-planning education in our public schools. It's an issue that came to my attention a number of years ago, when I was working at the Catskill Regional Teacher Center. There was a group trying to get some grant funds to start a program locally... I remember applauding their efforts, and simultaneously wishing that they weren't needed.
Somebody higher up should see that it's in our country's best interest to teach kids how to save, how to balance a checking account, how to invest money, how to keep credit card bills low, how to contribute to retirement accounts, etc.
For example, most of the students I interact with have absolutely no idea how to write or endorse a check. Seems very odd that it should fall to me to teach them. They've read Shakespeare, they've written research papers, they've studied world history and economics, they've learned foreign languages and mastered musical instruments. -And then they had someone open a bank account for them, and they're wandering around with ATM cards and checkbooks, completely at a loss as to what to do with them.
The more I think about it, the more it seems like some huge governmental conspiracy to keep the rich kids on top (cause their families will pass down the required financial knowledge), and the kids from poor families clueless and left behind.
Or maybe that's too cynical of me.
6/17/08
I hate death
They've put up a new building next to the one I work in. They've been building for a long time now. And it's finally finished, and it smells like paint and new carpet and any number of other noxious-fume-producing things.
They're going to take down the building I work in. By the end of August, the room I'm sitting in won't exist anymore. The walls I've looked at every day will be gone, taken out or filled in.
And today, right now, in preparation, they're killing the tree outside my window. They started sawing about half an hour ago, and then it went down, the branches scraping my window with a last desperate scrabbling as it went by and hit the ground. What was tall and alive and beautiful and green just minutes ago has been violently torn down.
And now, as if that weren't bad enough, they're going at it with the chainsaws, hacking it to bits like homicidal maniacs, putting it through the wood chipper with no honor or ceremony, nothing to acknowledge its years of life, no effort to remember all the summer days it shaded us from scorching sun, all the winter mornings that the shadows of its branches showed dark and beautiful on our walls.
I quite literally cannot bear this. I hate it. I hate everything about the way this is being done. I don't care what you say, I just can't get with this thing, this bullshit thing that everyone says, about how new things can't come unless old things go. I like the old things better. I don't want the new things.
And if you absolutely have to kill something, for godsake, at least honor it first.
They're going to take down the building I work in. By the end of August, the room I'm sitting in won't exist anymore. The walls I've looked at every day will be gone, taken out or filled in.
And today, right now, in preparation, they're killing the tree outside my window. They started sawing about half an hour ago, and then it went down, the branches scraping my window with a last desperate scrabbling as it went by and hit the ground. What was tall and alive and beautiful and green just minutes ago has been violently torn down.
And now, as if that weren't bad enough, they're going at it with the chainsaws, hacking it to bits like homicidal maniacs, putting it through the wood chipper with no honor or ceremony, nothing to acknowledge its years of life, no effort to remember all the summer days it shaded us from scorching sun, all the winter mornings that the shadows of its branches showed dark and beautiful on our walls.
I quite literally cannot bear this. I hate it. I hate everything about the way this is being done. I don't care what you say, I just can't get with this thing, this bullshit thing that everyone says, about how new things can't come unless old things go. I like the old things better. I don't want the new things.
And if you absolutely have to kill something, for godsake, at least honor it first.
5/6/08
ahhhhhhhh
Today I have sinned. I have given in. I have given way.
I have left my high-fiber low-fat diet and plunged to the depths of depravity.
Yes, I ate a Texas Hot for lunch.
Tuesdays and Thursdays I have class, so I don't take a lunch.
Since I am notoriously and self-admittedly unable to make lunches for myself and bring them to work, on Tuesdays and Thursdays I often go without.
But not today. Today my boss said she would be lunching at a local ice-cream joint with her husband. She offered to get me something; said the Texas Hots were really good.
What is a Texas Hot, you ask? As I found out today, it is a thoroughly fatty beef frank in a bun, covered with rivers of gorgeous chili, mounds of chopped fresh onion, and mustard.
A mess of a meal, in fact.
But absolute heaven - the hotdog, glorious with grease, drowned in spicy beans and ground beef, and swirled with bright yellow mustard, little chunks of tasty onion hidden underneath, dyed red and yellow from the mingling sauces.... Yep, I don't think I've ever tasted anything so wonderful.
I have left my high-fiber low-fat diet and plunged to the depths of depravity.
Yes, I ate a Texas Hot for lunch.
Tuesdays and Thursdays I have class, so I don't take a lunch.
Since I am notoriously and self-admittedly unable to make lunches for myself and bring them to work, on Tuesdays and Thursdays I often go without.
But not today. Today my boss said she would be lunching at a local ice-cream joint with her husband. She offered to get me something; said the Texas Hots were really good.
What is a Texas Hot, you ask? As I found out today, it is a thoroughly fatty beef frank in a bun, covered with rivers of gorgeous chili, mounds of chopped fresh onion, and mustard.
A mess of a meal, in fact.
But absolute heaven - the hotdog, glorious with grease, drowned in spicy beans and ground beef, and swirled with bright yellow mustard, little chunks of tasty onion hidden underneath, dyed red and yellow from the mingling sauces.... Yep, I don't think I've ever tasted anything so wonderful.
4/11/08
Hmmm???
What is happiness, anyway?
Is it the giddy excitement, the rattling energy in your bones you feel when everything is going just right, and you have so much to look forward to?
Is it the heartbreaking feeling that beauty leaves in your chest when you sit and watch the sun going down, golden, past layer after increasingly-blue layer of rolling hills, and you hear the peeper frogs start to sing, and the air blows warm and soft through your hair?
Is it the quiet contentment when you're home on a rainy afternoon and you have uncommitted hours stretching out in front of you, and you can sit at the kitchen table with a steaming mug of tea, a good book, and a plate of freshly-baked chocolate cookies?
Is it the deep trust that things will come 'round right in your life, that the world will keep turning, that birth and death are all one and the same, and that even when you're by yourself, you're not alone?
Is it all these things, or none? Or perhaps just a fleeting, ineffable moment, impossible to capture, impossible to pin down?
It's always confused me when people have said that they are "happy"- I've never understood how that could be characterized as a constant state. Like sadness, it seems inevitably something that comes and goes.
05/06/08: New information received today - happiness is a Texas Hot. ;-)
Is it the giddy excitement, the rattling energy in your bones you feel when everything is going just right, and you have so much to look forward to?
Is it the heartbreaking feeling that beauty leaves in your chest when you sit and watch the sun going down, golden, past layer after increasingly-blue layer of rolling hills, and you hear the peeper frogs start to sing, and the air blows warm and soft through your hair?
Is it the quiet contentment when you're home on a rainy afternoon and you have uncommitted hours stretching out in front of you, and you can sit at the kitchen table with a steaming mug of tea, a good book, and a plate of freshly-baked chocolate cookies?
Is it the deep trust that things will come 'round right in your life, that the world will keep turning, that birth and death are all one and the same, and that even when you're by yourself, you're not alone?
Is it all these things, or none? Or perhaps just a fleeting, ineffable moment, impossible to capture, impossible to pin down?
It's always confused me when people have said that they are "happy"- I've never understood how that could be characterized as a constant state. Like sadness, it seems inevitably something that comes and goes.
05/06/08: New information received today - happiness is a Texas Hot. ;-)
4/9/08
4/8/08
Heart o' Glass
In 1978, my friend Mary had a K-Tel LP called High Energy. The first song was Blondie's Heart of Glass, which is a kick-ass song.
I recently downloaded it from somewhere, and was listening to it in the car the other night, realizing that in the 30-some-odd years I've been listening to that song, I've never really understood the lyrics. Or really needed to understand the lyrics.
I'm going to write them down now as I've always heard and sung them, because after I write them, I'm going to google the lyrics and find out what they really are, and the song will never be the same after that.
So here they are as I hear them: (followed by the actual lyrics, per Osvaldo's request ;-))
Whatcha'a'love it is a gas,
Sir time now, that heart o' glass
Seemed like the real thing wanitablahhm,
Whachamistrust, losta behind.
----
[Once I had a love and it was a gas]
[Soon turned out had a heart of glass]
[Seemed like the real thing, only to find]
[Mucho mistrust, love's gone behind]
Whatcha'a'love, it is divine-
Sir found out what tis my mind
Seemed like the real thing, but I was so blind,
Whachamistrust, losta behind.
----
[Once I had a love and it was divine]
[Soon found out I was losing my mind]
[It seemed like the real thing but I was so blind]
[Mucho mistrust, love's gone behind]
In between, what I find is pleasing
And I'm feeling fine; love is so amusing
There's no peace of mind-
If I fear I'm losing you, it's just no good,
You're cheesing like a dead girl.
----
[In between]
[What I find is pleasing and I'm feeling fine]
[Love is so confusing there's no peace of mind]
[If I fear I'm losing you it's just no good]
[You teasing like you do]
Lost inside a terrible illusion
And I cannot hide; I'm the one you're using
Please don't push me a-
-using, yeah
[the LP had a skip there and wiped out the line]
----
[Lost inside]
[Adorable illusion and I cannot hide]
[I'm the one you're using, please don't push me aside]
[We could've made it cruising, yeah]
Oh aah you're riding high, on ahm into the blue sky-
Ooooo-oooh, whoa-ohhh
Ooooo-oooh, whoa-ohh
----
[Yeah, riding high on love's true bluish light]
I recently downloaded it from somewhere, and was listening to it in the car the other night, realizing that in the 30-some-odd years I've been listening to that song, I've never really understood the lyrics. Or really needed to understand the lyrics.
I'm going to write them down now as I've always heard and sung them, because after I write them, I'm going to google the lyrics and find out what they really are, and the song will never be the same after that.
So here they are as I hear them: (followed by the actual lyrics, per Osvaldo's request ;-))
Whatcha'a'love it is a gas,
Sir time now, that heart o' glass
Seemed like the real thing wanitablahhm,
Whachamistrust, losta behind.
----
[Once I had a love and it was a gas]
[Soon turned out had a heart of glass]
[Seemed like the real thing, only to find]
[Mucho mistrust, love's gone behind]
Whatcha'a'love, it is divine-
Sir found out what tis my mind
Seemed like the real thing, but I was so blind,
Whachamistrust, losta behind.
----
[Once I had a love and it was divine]
[Soon found out I was losing my mind]
[It seemed like the real thing but I was so blind]
[Mucho mistrust, love's gone behind]
In between, what I find is pleasing
And I'm feeling fine; love is so amusing
There's no peace of mind-
If I fear I'm losing you, it's just no good,
You're cheesing like a dead girl.
----
[In between]
[What I find is pleasing and I'm feeling fine]
[Love is so confusing there's no peace of mind]
[If I fear I'm losing you it's just no good]
[You teasing like you do]
Lost inside a terrible illusion
And I cannot hide; I'm the one you're using
Please don't push me a-
-using, yeah
[the LP had a skip there and wiped out the line]
----
[Lost inside]
[Adorable illusion and I cannot hide]
[I'm the one you're using, please don't push me aside]
[We could've made it cruising, yeah]
Oh aah you're riding high, on ahm into the blue sky-
Ooooo-oooh, whoa-ohhh
Ooooo-oooh, whoa-ohh
----
[Yeah, riding high on love's true bluish light]
3/28/08
"I know something about being a government. And you've got a good one." (George W. Bush)
In high school I went through and hand-sewed little tags on all our bath towels and labeled them with each of our names, so that everyone in my family would have our own.
Well, because people kept stealing mine, and it was gross and annoying!
But my plan didn't work. I should have learned then that you can't organize people who don't want to be organized.
3/27/08
"I know how hard it is to put food on your family" (George W. Bush)
The news? Well, Penn has gotten kicked off Dancing With The Stars, and Obama is related to Brad Pitt, and the NFL is concerned about hairdos.
Oh yeah, and I think I saw some brief mention that part of some ice shelf in Antarctica broke away yesterday as a result of global warming, leaving its remaining 5,571 square miles "hanging by a thread". But I sure had to hunt to find articles about it.
And why bother? I mean hell, what's an ice shelf when the NFL players' hair is on the line?!
Oh yeah, and I think I saw some brief mention that part of some ice shelf in Antarctica broke away yesterday as a result of global warming, leaving its remaining 5,571 square miles "hanging by a thread". But I sure had to hunt to find articles about it.
And why bother? I mean hell, what's an ice shelf when the NFL players' hair is on the line?!
3/25/08
Miss Hickmott
While I was driving the backroads around Oneonta tonight, I passed Miss Hickmott’s house. She was my pre-k teacher, and she died just a couple of weeks ago.
As I was passing her house, I had a vivid memory of the time she took my class there. She lived near the lower reservoir dam on upper East Street, and she took us all out to look at the dam, explaining to us why it was there and how it worked. She didn’t let us get very close to it, which I thought was stupid, because it looked like just the sort of thing that would be fun to walk across. I was mad that she wouldn’t let me. I also recall that she had an apple – a large, red, plastic apple – in the room to the left at the top of the stairs, and if you put a penny in the right spot on the apple, a little motor inside would make a grinding noise (a grinding noise very like the machines at the circulation desk in the SUCO library made; the machines that would stamp the date on the return card in your book) - a nasal kind of mwaa-mwaa sound - and a little plastic worm would come out and grab the penny and pull it inside the apple. Maybe it was a sort of piggy bank; I don’t know. I just remember being fascinated by this apple, and concerned that there didn't seem to be any way to get the money back out once the worm took it.
Miss Hickmott was a wonderful teacher. I’m sure she was, though I don’t specifically remember how she taught. I just remember the atmosphere in the classroom. Very free, very informal; sort of like Malibu Crowd Days. Lots going on all over, and you could do whatever you wanted. Within reason. The only time I remember Miss Hickmott being upset with me was the time I spit in the sandbox to show my friends how the sand would ball up around the spit, like magic. She wasn’t happy with me that day.
She had funny hair; I remember it was a warm honey-brown, sort of flat on top, and then curled around her head in a pageboy style. I guess it wasn’t that odd really; just strangely flattened on top, like the grass underneath where you sat on your picnic blanket. And I remember her always in canvas tennis shoes and a cotton, button-down shirt, with a light cardigan over top. All pastels. I may be wrong about the shoes. In fact, I may be wrong about everything. Maybe she dressed up and wore heels. But I don’t think so.
I guess the other time she was angry with me was the day Jason Brown and I decided to run away. We hid in some bushes not too far from the playground. We didn’t really go very far. It was thrilling to know that nobody could find us; we listened to them calling, and kept very quiet. I’m not sure Miss Hickmott enjoyed the experience as much as Jason and I did.
One day she combined the morning class and the afternoon class, so I got to see my friend Carrie Stevens (who, appropriately, was the one who sent me the notice about her death). Carrie was in the other group, and so I was excited to finally share a class with her! We watched a filmstrip about dinosaurs, and had some sort of celebration; we all brought food and cake. Maybe it was Miss Hickmott's birthday; I don’t know.
Best of all, I loved driving around in the little pedal car they had there. Sometimes she let me take it up and down the hallway outside the room. See? I’ve always loved driving. The only frustrating thing I remember was that the outdoor sandbox (not the one I spit in; that was indoors) didn’t go very far down. You’d get a good depth going with your hoe, and then you’d hit the bottom and that was it. Irritating. And I got blisters from the wooden handle on that hoe. I’m surprised they let 4-year-olds use hoes. Maybe they didn’t. But that’s how I remember it.
As I was passing her house, I had a vivid memory of the time she took my class there. She lived near the lower reservoir dam on upper East Street, and she took us all out to look at the dam, explaining to us why it was there and how it worked. She didn’t let us get very close to it, which I thought was stupid, because it looked like just the sort of thing that would be fun to walk across. I was mad that she wouldn’t let me. I also recall that she had an apple – a large, red, plastic apple – in the room to the left at the top of the stairs, and if you put a penny in the right spot on the apple, a little motor inside would make a grinding noise (a grinding noise very like the machines at the circulation desk in the SUCO library made; the machines that would stamp the date on the return card in your book) - a nasal kind of mwaa-mwaa sound - and a little plastic worm would come out and grab the penny and pull it inside the apple. Maybe it was a sort of piggy bank; I don’t know. I just remember being fascinated by this apple, and concerned that there didn't seem to be any way to get the money back out once the worm took it.
Miss Hickmott was a wonderful teacher. I’m sure she was, though I don’t specifically remember how she taught. I just remember the atmosphere in the classroom. Very free, very informal; sort of like Malibu Crowd Days. Lots going on all over, and you could do whatever you wanted. Within reason. The only time I remember Miss Hickmott being upset with me was the time I spit in the sandbox to show my friends how the sand would ball up around the spit, like magic. She wasn’t happy with me that day.
She had funny hair; I remember it was a warm honey-brown, sort of flat on top, and then curled around her head in a pageboy style. I guess it wasn’t that odd really; just strangely flattened on top, like the grass underneath where you sat on your picnic blanket. And I remember her always in canvas tennis shoes and a cotton, button-down shirt, with a light cardigan over top. All pastels. I may be wrong about the shoes. In fact, I may be wrong about everything. Maybe she dressed up and wore heels. But I don’t think so.
I guess the other time she was angry with me was the day Jason Brown and I decided to run away. We hid in some bushes not too far from the playground. We didn’t really go very far. It was thrilling to know that nobody could find us; we listened to them calling, and kept very quiet. I’m not sure Miss Hickmott enjoyed the experience as much as Jason and I did.
One day she combined the morning class and the afternoon class, so I got to see my friend Carrie Stevens (who, appropriately, was the one who sent me the notice about her death). Carrie was in the other group, and so I was excited to finally share a class with her! We watched a filmstrip about dinosaurs, and had some sort of celebration; we all brought food and cake. Maybe it was Miss Hickmott's birthday; I don’t know.
Best of all, I loved driving around in the little pedal car they had there. Sometimes she let me take it up and down the hallway outside the room. See? I’ve always loved driving. The only frustrating thing I remember was that the outdoor sandbox (not the one I spit in; that was indoors) didn’t go very far down. You’d get a good depth going with your hoe, and then you’d hit the bottom and that was it. Irritating. And I got blisters from the wooden handle on that hoe. I’m surprised they let 4-year-olds use hoes. Maybe they didn’t. But that’s how I remember it.
I-earn-y
It occurred to me this afternoon that much of my workday is spent assisting people or tracking down people who would not need to be tracked down or assisted had they spent any time reading information already sent to them, or taken care of their obligations in a timely manner.
So I guess if people were less lazy and oblivious, I’d be out of a job.
Which then leads me to wonder how much of our economy is dependent on general human inefficiency.
Which is a disturbing thing to wonder, so I’ll stop wondering about it and go back to tracking down this bunch of students – I’ve been waiting 8 months for their paperwork. The longer they wait, the more letters I get to write; more time is spent, more paper is used, and the USPS gets more business, our departmental budget soaks up the postage, the college charges the students higher rates to cover the need, their parents work longer hours to break even, and so the world turns.
Go Laziness! Work your magic! Get our country back on its feet!
So I guess if people were less lazy and oblivious, I’d be out of a job.
Which then leads me to wonder how much of our economy is dependent on general human inefficiency.
Which is a disturbing thing to wonder, so I’ll stop wondering about it and go back to tracking down this bunch of students – I’ve been waiting 8 months for their paperwork. The longer they wait, the more letters I get to write; more time is spent, more paper is used, and the USPS gets more business, our departmental budget soaks up the postage, the college charges the students higher rates to cover the need, their parents work longer hours to break even, and so the world turns.
Go Laziness! Work your magic! Get our country back on its feet!
3/17/08
recording
When I was younger, I would tape-record sounds. It was an attempt to counteract loss. Knowing that my parakeet, Cottentail, would not live forever, I recorded the sound of her chirping. Knowing we might someday sell our house, I recorded the creaks of our basement stairs as I went down them, and the growl of our old furnace igniting. The particular slapping sound made by the wooden venetian blinds on our front door; the flub-flub of our swinging kitchen door as it came to rest against its frame. I didn't want to forget.
I was going through some of these old tapes last night, and found one on which I had recorded some stuff from when we lived in Spain in 1985-86.
It was interesting. I had captured the sound of the town's one lone church bell tolling solemnly. I'd gone into a bar and recorded the carnival-like song playing on a slot machine that we'd heard every day while walking past or stopping for a soda. But later I had done something that I didn't often do - I left the tape recorder running on the dining room table in our rented house, and recorded the last 15 minutes that we lived there.
It was weird; almost disturbing to listen to. It's the usual last-minute hustle and bustle of a family scrambling to get ready for a long journey - mom asking whose was the bag of nuts on the table, me stressing over how to pack a sweater in an already-overpacked suitcase, our landlady stopping by and my parents arranging with her in broken Spanish to leave the house keys at the neighbor's. At the end of that 15 minutes, we would be on our way to England, taking a bus through France to Calais, the ferry to Dover. Later that day, my mother's purse would be robbed by two guys on a motorbike, as we stood on a streetcorner in Malaga, waiting for the bus. We would lose our passports and have a difficult time entering France.
But that was all to come. As the tape recorder ran on that day, none of that had happened yet. The walls of the house still echoed with our voices and footsteps; the taxi hadn't yet arrived to finally carry us away from that period in our lives.
Try as I may (and believe me, I've tried), I find myself completely unable to comprehend the passing of time, and our inability to re-construct or re-connect to what once was. And I know now that the tape recording doesn't help; in fact, I think that it makes it all harder to understand.
I was going through some of these old tapes last night, and found one on which I had recorded some stuff from when we lived in Spain in 1985-86.
It was interesting. I had captured the sound of the town's one lone church bell tolling solemnly. I'd gone into a bar and recorded the carnival-like song playing on a slot machine that we'd heard every day while walking past or stopping for a soda. But later I had done something that I didn't often do - I left the tape recorder running on the dining room table in our rented house, and recorded the last 15 minutes that we lived there.
It was weird; almost disturbing to listen to. It's the usual last-minute hustle and bustle of a family scrambling to get ready for a long journey - mom asking whose was the bag of nuts on the table, me stressing over how to pack a sweater in an already-overpacked suitcase, our landlady stopping by and my parents arranging with her in broken Spanish to leave the house keys at the neighbor's. At the end of that 15 minutes, we would be on our way to England, taking a bus through France to Calais, the ferry to Dover. Later that day, my mother's purse would be robbed by two guys on a motorbike, as we stood on a streetcorner in Malaga, waiting for the bus. We would lose our passports and have a difficult time entering France.
But that was all to come. As the tape recorder ran on that day, none of that had happened yet. The walls of the house still echoed with our voices and footsteps; the taxi hadn't yet arrived to finally carry us away from that period in our lives.
Try as I may (and believe me, I've tried), I find myself completely unable to comprehend the passing of time, and our inability to re-construct or re-connect to what once was. And I know now that the tape recording doesn't help; in fact, I think that it makes it all harder to understand.
little grey cells
It has occurred to me to wonder how much smarter I'd be if my brain didn't (by default, it seems) decide to fill itself with useless song lyrics and retain them for decades, even when not regularly accessed. It's a waste of space. Holmes and Poirot would be disgusted.
3/3/08
nuts&bolts
Sunday.
I was having a lovely day; it was sunny, warm enough to start the snow melting. I was driving around in my old car, listening to Cat Stevens, and running errands. A perfectly perfect afternoon.
But what made it extra perfect (if such a thing is possible) was the kind of errands I was running.
I had to get a spring to repair my electric shaver (yes, it broke again), and a washer and nut for the faucet in the bathroom sink. So I went to Home Depot.
I don't often go to Home Depot anymore. When I lived in California, I went to Home Depot (or, preferably, Orchard Hardware) at least 2-3 times a week. Well, I had to! There were things that needed doing! There were tools and stuff that needed to be bought to do them!
But that was when I lived in a house, with a garage and a yard. Now I live in an apartment, and keep my tools in the pantry, next to the sugar. Well, I only have one closet, and that's full of my camping equipment. What would you do? It's a sad state of affairs.
So I hadn't been to Home Depot in a long time. And after meandering around for awhile, picking up some drywall anchors and a clamp and some fuses for my car, I fell to admiring the copper pipes in the plumbing section and the little cotter pins in the grey pull-out drawer in aisle 10... yes, with all the imagining of the cool projects that could be accomplished with all the things they were selling, it took me quite awhile to finally get around to looking for what I'd actually gone there to get.
And on the way home it came to me that someday I will have to face the blasphemous fact that I have much more fun in hardware stores than I ever do in bookstores or libraries.
May God have mercy on my soul.
I was having a lovely day; it was sunny, warm enough to start the snow melting. I was driving around in my old car, listening to Cat Stevens, and running errands. A perfectly perfect afternoon.
But what made it extra perfect (if such a thing is possible) was the kind of errands I was running.
I had to get a spring to repair my electric shaver (yes, it broke again), and a washer and nut for the faucet in the bathroom sink. So I went to Home Depot.
I don't often go to Home Depot anymore. When I lived in California, I went to Home Depot (or, preferably, Orchard Hardware) at least 2-3 times a week. Well, I had to! There were things that needed doing! There were tools and stuff that needed to be bought to do them!
But that was when I lived in a house, with a garage and a yard. Now I live in an apartment, and keep my tools in the pantry, next to the sugar. Well, I only have one closet, and that's full of my camping equipment. What would you do? It's a sad state of affairs.
So I hadn't been to Home Depot in a long time. And after meandering around for awhile, picking up some drywall anchors and a clamp and some fuses for my car, I fell to admiring the copper pipes in the plumbing section and the little cotter pins in the grey pull-out drawer in aisle 10... yes, with all the imagining of the cool projects that could be accomplished with all the things they were selling, it took me quite awhile to finally get around to looking for what I'd actually gone there to get.
And on the way home it came to me that someday I will have to face the blasphemous fact that I have much more fun in hardware stores than I ever do in bookstores or libraries.
May God have mercy on my soul.
3/1/08
U2
On the way back from taking Joel to the Albany airport the other morning, I was listening to U2's Running to Stand Still.
It's on the Joshua Tree album, which is one of my favoritest albums ever; both because it's great (particularly side 1), and because it reminds me of the summer of 1987.
-Mom and I took the train cross-country to LA that summer. To Malibu, really. I had just gotten my first (and last) Walkman cassette player, and I had one tape. That tape. Joshua Tree. Which our family friends, the Kerns, had copied onto tape for me from the LP I'd just gotten for my birthday. (They copied it because my family didn't have enough newfangled stereo equipment to effect such a transfer.)
That album is perfect for a cross-country train ride, because you can hear that train-y track-y clackity-clackity rhythm through pretty much every song. Yeah, every song. It's a train album. It's a western album. It's a sage brush dry dirt baking sun cactus open sky California album.
I packed minimally for that trip. I had some black Hanes t-shirts and some Fruit of the Loom men's boxer shorts. And one black button-down cotton skirt. My mom and I had purchased that skirt specially the previous winter, so I would have something formal to wear while I was serving rice pilaf to members of my church during some sit-down pledge-drive dinner we set up on folding tables in the sanctuary. By the summer, I had washed it enough times that it was starting to lose its crisp black, and was looking a bit grey around the edges. My plan was to wear the skirt during the day, as we sat and traveled in the train, and then at night (as we continued to sit and travel in the train) I would unbutton it (revealing my perfectly legitimate public-wear boxer shorts) and straighten the skirt out full-length to use as a throw-blanket to cover me as I slept. I thought this was a very clever plan. It meant that I didn't have to lug around an extra blanket, and that I could feel like I was changing into nighttime sleepwear without really having to change into nighttime sleepwear.
I was 16. It was one of the best summers ever.
It's on the Joshua Tree album, which is one of my favoritest albums ever; both because it's great (particularly side 1), and because it reminds me of the summer of 1987.
-Mom and I took the train cross-country to LA that summer. To Malibu, really. I had just gotten my first (and last) Walkman cassette player, and I had one tape. That tape. Joshua Tree. Which our family friends, the Kerns, had copied onto tape for me from the LP I'd just gotten for my birthday. (They copied it because my family didn't have enough newfangled stereo equipment to effect such a transfer.)
That album is perfect for a cross-country train ride, because you can hear that train-y track-y clackity-clackity rhythm through pretty much every song. Yeah, every song. It's a train album. It's a western album. It's a sage brush dry dirt baking sun cactus open sky California album.
I packed minimally for that trip. I had some black Hanes t-shirts and some Fruit of the Loom men's boxer shorts. And one black button-down cotton skirt. My mom and I had purchased that skirt specially the previous winter, so I would have something formal to wear while I was serving rice pilaf to members of my church during some sit-down pledge-drive dinner we set up on folding tables in the sanctuary. By the summer, I had washed it enough times that it was starting to lose its crisp black, and was looking a bit grey around the edges. My plan was to wear the skirt during the day, as we sat and traveled in the train, and then at night (as we continued to sit and travel in the train) I would unbutton it (revealing my perfectly legitimate public-wear boxer shorts) and straighten the skirt out full-length to use as a throw-blanket to cover me as I slept. I thought this was a very clever plan. It meant that I didn't have to lug around an extra blanket, and that I could feel like I was changing into nighttime sleepwear without really having to change into nighttime sleepwear.
I was 16. It was one of the best summers ever.
2/27/08
connections, conclusions
Things I've been thinking about lately:
- the relationship between stress and high blood pressure/high cholesterol/thinning hair/caffeine intake/over-eating.
- the fact that obesity in the US is on the rise; despite an increased emphasis and awareness of the importance of exercise and eating organic, whole grains, local produce, free-range eggs, hormone-free milk....
- what all that might have to do with the sagging economy; and the fact that my roommate's co-worker took a second job just to pay for the gas she uses to commute to her first job.
- and vacation, by god - apparently, (as Charles Gibson reported on ABC news the other night) - "It is estimated Americans give back 438 million vacation days a year. ... America is the only major country in the world that has no government-mandated time off. 75 percent of Americans do get paid vacation, 14 days the average. But then the average worker gives back three of those days. ...And when Americans do take time off, 60 percent of us are checking office e-mails. So you might consider moving to France. There, the government requires 31 vacation days plus holidays."
Add to that the internet, text-messaging, illiteracy, the war in Iraq, drugs, and the popularity of Thomas Kinkade (‘Painter of Light’) and you’ve got… the portrait of a blinking idiot.
- the relationship between stress and high blood pressure/high cholesterol/thinning hair/caffeine intake/over-eating.
- the fact that obesity in the US is on the rise; despite an increased emphasis and awareness of the importance of exercise and eating organic, whole grains, local produce, free-range eggs, hormone-free milk....
- what all that might have to do with the sagging economy; and the fact that my roommate's co-worker took a second job just to pay for the gas she uses to commute to her first job.
- and vacation, by god - apparently, (as Charles Gibson reported on ABC news the other night) - "It is estimated Americans give back 438 million vacation days a year. ... America is the only major country in the world that has no government-mandated time off. 75 percent of Americans do get paid vacation, 14 days the average. But then the average worker gives back three of those days. ...And when Americans do take time off, 60 percent of us are checking office e-mails. So you might consider moving to France. There, the government requires 31 vacation days plus holidays."
Add to that the internet, text-messaging, illiteracy, the war in Iraq, drugs, and the popularity of Thomas Kinkade (‘Painter of Light’) and you’ve got… the portrait of a blinking idiot.
2/15/08
accent grave
I was poking around in the blogger help section, trying to see if there's some way to add accents so my foreign words don't look so silly, when I found this post on the 'known issues' page:
"A bug that made it trivially easy to accidentally set your blog's language to Albanian has been fixed. If you notice that your blog's archives and other text appears to be in Albanian (and you don't want it to be), use Settings > Formatting to change your blog's language. — latest update on Monday, July 02, 2007 "
... if, on the other hand, your blog posts have been set to Albanian and you _don't_ notice, umm... yep... hopefully your friend will notice for you, and then make sure you get prompt medical attention.
[I particularly love the addition of the "(and you don't want it to be)"....]
"A bug that made it trivially easy to accidentally set your blog's language to Albanian has been fixed. If you notice that your blog's archives and other text appears to be in Albanian (and you don't want it to be), use Settings > Formatting to change your blog's language. — latest update on Monday, July 02, 2007 "
... if, on the other hand, your blog posts have been set to Albanian and you _don't_ notice, umm... yep... hopefully your friend will notice for you, and then make sure you get prompt medical attention.
[I particularly love the addition of the "(and you don't want it to be)"....]
a consomme of consumption
In the midst of making cookies, doing dishes, listening to a CD, cleaning off the kitchen table, repairing my backpack, while I'd left an episode of Buffy paused halfway-through in the living-room, I felt compelled to turn on the computer and check my email. As if I don't get enough multi-tasking at work.
This led me to reflect on the nature of online life... and the fact that, as much as it's a boon, it's also something that, well, can take you over.
Not an original thought, of course - I'm sure books have been written about it.
But, for the same reason that I resist doing too much of anything for any length of time - watching tv, reading, writing, being alone, being with friends - for the same reason that falling in love sorta bugs me out on some level, and [probably] that I've not yet allowed myself to pursue a career in something meaningful to me, or to settle in one place and commit to a community - in the last few weeks, I have definitely felt myself resisting the all-consuming nature of the internet.
There is something both wonderful and terrible about being consumed by something. To lose yourself in something, or someone, is the most amazing feeling... until that moment when you suddenly realize that you've lost yourself, and then it's absolutely terrifying.
Wasn't it Aristotle who was going on and on about moderation in all things?
Although, that said, I'm going to contradict myself and say that perhaps I need to consider doing moderation in moderation.
Because I truly belive that only by allowing oneself to be consumed can one reach...uhh... consummation.
This led me to reflect on the nature of online life... and the fact that, as much as it's a boon, it's also something that, well, can take you over.
Not an original thought, of course - I'm sure books have been written about it.
But, for the same reason that I resist doing too much of anything for any length of time - watching tv, reading, writing, being alone, being with friends - for the same reason that falling in love sorta bugs me out on some level, and [probably] that I've not yet allowed myself to pursue a career in something meaningful to me, or to settle in one place and commit to a community - in the last few weeks, I have definitely felt myself resisting the all-consuming nature of the internet.
There is something both wonderful and terrible about being consumed by something. To lose yourself in something, or someone, is the most amazing feeling... until that moment when you suddenly realize that you've lost yourself, and then it's absolutely terrifying.
Wasn't it Aristotle who was going on and on about moderation in all things?
Although, that said, I'm going to contradict myself and say that perhaps I need to consider doing moderation in moderation.
Because I truly belive that only by allowing oneself to be consumed can one reach...uhh... consummation.
2/11/08
Springsteen
I was just poking around on my home computer, and saw a WordPad document labeled "Springsteen" over in the corner of my desktop.
I didn't have any idea what it was, so I opened it and found this.
I remember writing it, but I don't remember which song or which album I was referring to, nor why I felt compelled to write about it. So it's sorta random, and deserves to take its place in my pile of [other] random comments about random things.
__________
...I have always really liked the song, and I was listening to it again last night in the car. It sticks out among the other songs on that album - it's got a sort of simple, empty, lonely sound. Makes me think of walking around on sultry summer nights, alone; passing dark used-car dealerships and bright-lit street corners; hearing the humming transformers on telephone poles and the occasional car passing in the distance. The kind of hot-weather night that makes sex extra fun because you're already so drenched and drunk with the heat that every part of you is wet, and so you give up any attempt at control and go totally sleepily nuts with it.
I didn't have any idea what it was, so I opened it and found this.
I remember writing it, but I don't remember which song or which album I was referring to, nor why I felt compelled to write about it. So it's sorta random, and deserves to take its place in my pile of [other] random comments about random things.
__________
...I have always really liked the song, and I was listening to it again last night in the car. It sticks out among the other songs on that album - it's got a sort of simple, empty, lonely sound. Makes me think of walking around on sultry summer nights, alone; passing dark used-car dealerships and bright-lit street corners; hearing the humming transformers on telephone poles and the occasional car passing in the distance. The kind of hot-weather night that makes sex extra fun because you're already so drenched and drunk with the heat that every part of you is wet, and so you give up any attempt at control and go totally sleepily nuts with it.
Doomsday
It's Monday, February 11th, 5:34pm.
The First Day of Spring Semester.
One of our most relaxing and not-filled-with-120-students-trying-to-see-us-about-restrictions-on-their-accounts days as ever was. (if you catch my drift) (as in, NOT)
Since I'm at work, and I have on my desk 22 little pink message slips from parents who are all waiting for me to call them back before a half hour ago, this seems like a good time to write a blog post.
To give you a Very Important Update - my co-worker has switched from Dove (R) to Nestle (R) (with an accent on the latter e that this interface won't let me put there).
The Nestle people seem to be a bit more down-to-earth than the Dove people. Their chocolate heart wrappers say things like this:
"How many times have Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith been divorced from each other?"
It seems like an odd thing to put on a chocolate heart. Chocolate hearts are supposed to remind us of love and romance, happy endings, things working out.
Maybe.
Or maybe by reminding us of things not working out, they work their addictive magic and make our bodies cry out for happy chocolate chemicals. Maybe Nestle has in fact figured out the best marketing strategy!
Ok; that was a good break. Now I'll go call some parents. Wahoo.
(PS - They're not all called Wahoo. I was just using that as an example, you understand.)
The First Day of Spring Semester.
One of our most relaxing and not-filled-with-120-students-trying-to-see-us-about-restrictions-on-their-accounts days as ever was. (if you catch my drift) (as in, NOT)
Since I'm at work, and I have on my desk 22 little pink message slips from parents who are all waiting for me to call them back before a half hour ago, this seems like a good time to write a blog post.
To give you a Very Important Update - my co-worker has switched from Dove (R) to Nestle (R) (with an accent on the latter e that this interface won't let me put there).
The Nestle people seem to be a bit more down-to-earth than the Dove people. Their chocolate heart wrappers say things like this:
"How many times have Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith been divorced from each other?"
It seems like an odd thing to put on a chocolate heart. Chocolate hearts are supposed to remind us of love and romance, happy endings, things working out.
Maybe.
Or maybe by reminding us of things not working out, they work their addictive magic and make our bodies cry out for happy chocolate chemicals. Maybe Nestle has in fact figured out the best marketing strategy!
Ok; that was a good break. Now I'll go call some parents. Wahoo.
(PS - They're not all called Wahoo. I was just using that as an example, you understand.)
2/8/08
aaaahhhhh
There are a few things in life that I just can't get my brain around.
Concepts that seem stranger and more elusive the harder I think about them....
-The size and scope of the Universe
-Death
-God
-The existence (and online availability) of David Lynch Signature Cup coffee beans http://ecomm.davidlynch.com/catalog/coffee_house.php
Concepts that seem stranger and more elusive the harder I think about them....
-The size and scope of the Universe
-Death
-God
-The existence (and online availability) of David Lynch Signature Cup coffee beans http://ecomm.davidlynch.com/catalog/coffee_house.php
labels
Some people use labels to organize their blog posts.
I don't.
Because I figure everything I write falls under one of two categories (or sometimes both together):
a) Chocolate
2) Statements that will inevitably lead people to decide that I'm completely insane.
But perhaps some variation would be good - after all, that guy did point out the thing about foolish consistency.
I'll work on it.
I don't.
Because I figure everything I write falls under one of two categories (or sometimes both together):
a) Chocolate
2) Statements that will inevitably lead people to decide that I'm completely insane.
But perhaps some variation would be good - after all, that guy did point out the thing about foolish consistency.
I'll work on it.
2/7/08
Dove (R) shirks the sweet and goes for the gusto
My co-worker (bless her generous soul) keeps a jar on her desk filled with chocolates. Usually Dove dark chocolates - you know - the little Promises (R).
Each little wrapper has a soft, goopy saying written inside:
"Love is always the perfect gift." (Awwww!)
"The best holiday decoration is a smile." (Oh yes, how true!)
"Joy is contagious." (And gosh, I just can't wait to catch it from you!)
But apparently the Dove copywriters have had it with the mush, and are finally taking a stand.
Today's wrapper?
"GET YOUR FEET MASSAGED."
Each little wrapper has a soft, goopy saying written inside:
"Love is always the perfect gift." (Awwww!)
"The best holiday decoration is a smile." (Oh yes, how true!)
"Joy is contagious." (And gosh, I just can't wait to catch it from you!)
But apparently the Dove copywriters have had it with the mush, and are finally taking a stand.
Today's wrapper?
"GET YOUR FEET MASSAGED."
2/5/08
TMI
Ok, it's official-- I finally figured it out!
It's the dairy!
--See, I can pretty much get away with not using deodorant... unless I drink milk. If I drink milk, the next day my armpits smell like... well, like armpits generally smell if you exercise and don't use deodorant.
It's weird. I guess it's also a good thing that I very seldom drink milk!
It makes me wonder if other people are affected the same way, and don't realize it, cause they just assume armpits are supposed to smell.
And if they are [affected the same way], and people were to stop drinking milk, and stop using deodorant, how would it affect the US economy?!
Fascinating to think about. (The economy part, I mean; not the stinky pits part, of course.)
It's the dairy!
--See, I can pretty much get away with not using deodorant... unless I drink milk. If I drink milk, the next day my armpits smell like... well, like armpits generally smell if you exercise and don't use deodorant.
It's weird. I guess it's also a good thing that I very seldom drink milk!
It makes me wonder if other people are affected the same way, and don't realize it, cause they just assume armpits are supposed to smell.
And if they are [affected the same way], and people were to stop drinking milk, and stop using deodorant, how would it affect the US economy?!
Fascinating to think about. (The economy part, I mean; not the stinky pits part, of course.)
it's raining again...
(saying that always makes me start singing that Supertramp song)
YES, we had a THUNDERSTORM this morning, of all things. ??!!
On an un-related note (or perhaps not...), I've started re-watching Buffy in my spare time, starting from the first episode.
Two observations:
1) It is a hellishly good show. _Damn_ is it a good show!!
b) It's kinda crazy how far technology has come in the last ten years. -And kinda disturbing how fast we forget where we came from, and when we came from it.
I mean, she calls Giles from a _payphone_ for chrissake! And they speak of the Internet as though it's something reserved for brainy tech junkies.
And here's something else - in Twin Peaks, they were still using rotary-dial phones!
I'm not sure why I find all that so surprising. But it is.
YES, we had a THUNDERSTORM this morning, of all things. ??!!
On an un-related note (or perhaps not...), I've started re-watching Buffy in my spare time, starting from the first episode.
Two observations:
1) It is a hellishly good show. _Damn_ is it a good show!!
b) It's kinda crazy how far technology has come in the last ten years. -And kinda disturbing how fast we forget where we came from, and when we came from it.
I mean, she calls Giles from a _payphone_ for chrissake! And they speak of the Internet as though it's something reserved for brainy tech junkies.
And here's something else - in Twin Peaks, they were still using rotary-dial phones!
I'm not sure why I find all that so surprising. But it is.
1/31/08
things
I felt chilly this morning, so I turned on the little space heater that I keep under my desk.
Usually when I turn it on, I'm in a hurry, or distracted. In the middle of a conversation with a parent, phone in one hand, I'll reach down and flip the switch to 'heat' without thinking much about it.
This morning I stopped for a minute and looked at the little heater. It's really cute; a tiny black cube that manages to blast enough heat to keep my toes toasty in this cold basement office. It has a sensor that turns it off if it falls over, a little hidden handle so you can pick it up easily, an auto/manual setting, temperature control, and a fan option, in case all you want is a little air movement.
But mostly what makes me like it is the associations it has - my friends and roommates Jodi and Angela purchased this little gem for me in 1995 with 'house funds' (which funds these were, or how we came up with them, I now don't recall). I had just moved to a huge group house (there were 6 of us, unrelated professionals, and one bathroom. Wahoo!) in Los Altos, California, and my bedroom was the back porch. Had been the back porch. I had to put up thick drapes so that people in the living room wouldn't be able to see through the huge plate-glass windows, right into my bed. The floor was concrete, covered with a hideously-fluorescent green shag rug. When it rained, everything got a bit damp. When it was cold (which happens quite often in northern California), the room was freezing. Of course, being the back porch, the furnace's heating ducts didn't reach me there. It was COLD, I tell you! (Hence the heater.)
But from my bed, I could see the two enormous live oaks in the backyard, stretching their branches up over our house. I could see the moon every night. I could hear peeper frogs and crickets. It was one of my favorite bedrooms ever.
I love it that things have that power of association. That this morning in the year 2008, I can glance down at the little black plastic square at my feet, in my basement office in Oneonta, and be instantly transported back 13 years, to recall the details of faces and spaces and times that I haven't thought about for many a moon.
Usually when I turn it on, I'm in a hurry, or distracted. In the middle of a conversation with a parent, phone in one hand, I'll reach down and flip the switch to 'heat' without thinking much about it.
This morning I stopped for a minute and looked at the little heater. It's really cute; a tiny black cube that manages to blast enough heat to keep my toes toasty in this cold basement office. It has a sensor that turns it off if it falls over, a little hidden handle so you can pick it up easily, an auto/manual setting, temperature control, and a fan option, in case all you want is a little air movement.
But mostly what makes me like it is the associations it has - my friends and roommates Jodi and Angela purchased this little gem for me in 1995 with 'house funds' (which funds these were, or how we came up with them, I now don't recall). I had just moved to a huge group house (there were 6 of us, unrelated professionals, and one bathroom. Wahoo!) in Los Altos, California, and my bedroom was the back porch. Had been the back porch. I had to put up thick drapes so that people in the living room wouldn't be able to see through the huge plate-glass windows, right into my bed. The floor was concrete, covered with a hideously-fluorescent green shag rug. When it rained, everything got a bit damp. When it was cold (which happens quite often in northern California), the room was freezing. Of course, being the back porch, the furnace's heating ducts didn't reach me there. It was COLD, I tell you! (Hence the heater.)
But from my bed, I could see the two enormous live oaks in the backyard, stretching their branches up over our house. I could see the moon every night. I could hear peeper frogs and crickets. It was one of my favorite bedrooms ever.
I love it that things have that power of association. That this morning in the year 2008, I can glance down at the little black plastic square at my feet, in my basement office in Oneonta, and be instantly transported back 13 years, to recall the details of faces and spaces and times that I haven't thought about for many a moon.
1/28/08
yes, it's true...
...I'm a language conservative from hell.
Except for when it's intelligent play, like on Buffy.
Except for when it's intelligent play, like on Buffy.
zen and the art of roadtrips
I love driving, especially alone.
There's something wonderful that can happen in your brain when your conscious mind is absorbed with negotiating turns, flipping to low-beam for oncoming traffic, watching for deer and stopped cars... while all that is going on, your subconscious is able to hum along by itself and get all sorts of work done.
...sometimes this process is aided by music; oftentimes the repetition of a particular song.
Thank god for CD players; for years I was stuck with re-winding the cassette tape over and over - now I can just put the thing on 'repeat' and enjoy my uninterrupted reverie.
There are drawbacks, however. Without having to re-wind anything, the uninterrupted reverie can sometimes go on uninterrupted for many hours... like, the whole length of the trip.
For example, there was one instance when I was listening to Kermit the Frog sing about how "It's not easy bein' green... having to spend each day the color of the leaves..." - I put it on repeat and didn't realize till I reached Oneonta over four hours later that it was still going.
The song being 2 minutes and 14 seconds long, that means I listened to it at least 108 times, without a break.
I wonder if that's worthy of a World Record?
Or maybe someone will arrive soon to cart me away.
There's something wonderful that can happen in your brain when your conscious mind is absorbed with negotiating turns, flipping to low-beam for oncoming traffic, watching for deer and stopped cars... while all that is going on, your subconscious is able to hum along by itself and get all sorts of work done.
...sometimes this process is aided by music; oftentimes the repetition of a particular song.
Thank god for CD players; for years I was stuck with re-winding the cassette tape over and over - now I can just put the thing on 'repeat' and enjoy my uninterrupted reverie.
There are drawbacks, however. Without having to re-wind anything, the uninterrupted reverie can sometimes go on uninterrupted for many hours... like, the whole length of the trip.
For example, there was one instance when I was listening to Kermit the Frog sing about how "It's not easy bein' green... having to spend each day the color of the leaves..." - I put it on repeat and didn't realize till I reached Oneonta over four hours later that it was still going.
The song being 2 minutes and 14 seconds long, that means I listened to it at least 108 times, without a break.
I wonder if that's worthy of a World Record?
Or maybe someone will arrive soon to cart me away.
1/23/08
the antidote to your anecdote
Have you noticed everyone saying "anticdote" lately?
"Let me tell you an amusing anticdote about our vacation to Kansas...."
Yeah, sure. I'd love to hear it.
-Although I suppose it is true that many an anecdote does involve antics of one kind or another.
The other thing that's spreading rampantly is 'safety deposit box'. I even heard William Hurt say it twice in the movie Mr. Brooks.
[Actually, four times, since I've seen the movie twice. ;-)]
"Let me tell you an amusing anticdote about our vacation to Kansas...."
Yeah, sure. I'd love to hear it.
-Although I suppose it is true that many an anecdote does involve antics of one kind or another.
The other thing that's spreading rampantly is 'safety deposit box'. I even heard William Hurt say it twice in the movie Mr. Brooks.
[Actually, four times, since I've seen the movie twice. ;-)]
1/22/08
profound thought of the day
Fruit is like purple. You can have all different shades and flavors, and they all work nicely together.
Chocolate is like black. Different shades of black conflict; the flavors of different chocolates conflict.
You can taste one kind of chocolate and think "oh yes, this is a very deep, rich chocolate. Yum."
And then immediately bite into a different kind of chocolate, and suddenly the first one seems very strangely-flavored, like a distant copy of the original.
The whole thing plays with your mind in a very mean and sneaky sort of way.
And leads me to ask - is there, then, a True Chocolate? Or is it all just layers of illusion?
And might lead you to ask - why is she eating so much chocolate in such rapid succession that she is able to have contrasting chocolate flavors on her tongue?! I thought she told me she was eating healthy and going to the gym!
Chocolate is like black. Different shades of black conflict; the flavors of different chocolates conflict.
You can taste one kind of chocolate and think "oh yes, this is a very deep, rich chocolate. Yum."
And then immediately bite into a different kind of chocolate, and suddenly the first one seems very strangely-flavored, like a distant copy of the original.
The whole thing plays with your mind in a very mean and sneaky sort of way.
And leads me to ask - is there, then, a True Chocolate? Or is it all just layers of illusion?
And might lead you to ask - why is she eating so much chocolate in such rapid succession that she is able to have contrasting chocolate flavors on her tongue?! I thought she told me she was eating healthy and going to the gym!
'round and 'round and 'round it goes; where it stops...
I was just poking around in the SAL system that we use to maintain all our loan files, cause I was trying to figure out how to delete a pop-up memo in a borrower's account.
I wasn't having much luck, so I clicked on the "HELP" tab.
I seldom click on "HELP" tabs, because they are so seldom helpful.
But this time I did; I clicked on it. And it brought up a number of items that a user of such a system might need help with.
Except... wait. The top two items are-
1) How to Login to SAL (which I would've had to have done in order to see this page)
[yeah, just try translating _that_ into Spanish, I dare ya!] [que yo hubiera... habria...tendria... umm... hubiera tenido que hacer... no... Que yo hubiera tenido que haber hecho para ver esta pagina.... Yeah, that sounds like a mess, but that's as close as I can get it - Osvaldo where the hell are ya?!]
and...
2) How to Get Help [I kid you not!]
So I clicked on that 'How to Get Help' link, just for kix, and it explained to me how to do what I'd just done in order to get to that link, and then it had its own links, which brought me back around to the page where I could click on a link to get more help doing what I'd just done.... Fascinating! I could do this all day!
Hence my reluctance to ever click the "Help" tab.
I wasn't having much luck, so I clicked on the "HELP" tab.
I seldom click on "HELP" tabs, because they are so seldom helpful.
But this time I did; I clicked on it. And it brought up a number of items that a user of such a system might need help with.
Except... wait. The top two items are-
1) How to Login to SAL (which I would've had to have done in order to see this page)
[yeah, just try translating _that_ into Spanish, I dare ya!] [que yo hubiera... habria...tendria... umm... hubiera tenido que hacer... no... Que yo hubiera tenido que haber hecho para ver esta pagina.... Yeah, that sounds like a mess, but that's as close as I can get it - Osvaldo where the hell are ya?!]
and...
2) How to Get Help [I kid you not!]
So I clicked on that 'How to Get Help' link, just for kix, and it explained to me how to do what I'd just done in order to get to that link, and then it had its own links, which brought me back around to the page where I could click on a link to get more help doing what I'd just done.... Fascinating! I could do this all day!
Hence my reluctance to ever click the "Help" tab.
1/14/08
I am pro-choice word choice
From: NARAL Pro-Choice New York
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 2:01 PM
To: Kate
Subject: What a guy.
Please thank Governor Spitzer for once again supporting New York women's right to make their own personal medical decisons. Let him know what a guy - and governor - he really is.
___________
Dear Governor Spitzer,
Thank you for supporting our right to choose.
You are such a guy.
What? Umm... yeah, they told me to say that.
Sincerely,
Kate
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 2:01 PM
To: Kate
Subject: What a guy.
Please thank Governor Spitzer for once again supporting New York women's right to make their own personal medical decisons. Let him know what a guy - and governor - he really is.
___________
Dear Governor Spitzer,
Thank you for supporting our right to choose.
You are such a guy.
What? Umm... yeah, they told me to say that.
Sincerely,
Kate
the table goes round and round
I've been reading... (as the second of my non-mystery before-new-years books) (the first having been The Book of Illusions by Paul Auster, which I highly recommend, but only if you're not already suffering from depression.)...umm... right... so, I've been reading Le Morte D'Arthur [by] Sir Thomas Malory. Maleore. Malorye. Malleorre.
It's a good read. And after living in that 1400s language for awhile, your brain starts saying things to itself like "and he was wonderly wrothe."
But anyway.
Thomas Malory reportedly compiled and translated these Arthurian tales out of the French Vulgate romances and some Middle English sources. (as per Elizabeth Bryan's Introduction)
And here's my whole point for bringing this up... in the original Preface, William Caxton wrote:
"I haue...enprysed to enprynte a book of the noble hystoryes of the sayed kynge Arthur and of certeyn of his knyghtes after a copye vnto me delyuerd whyche copye Syr Thomas Malorye dyd take oute of certeyn bookes of frensshe and reduced it in to Englysshe."
I love that - "reduced into English". I love it love it love it. It's so much more accurate than saying "translated", which gives you the misleading idea that the text has merely been moved from one place to another, laterally, without losing anything in the process.
I often get the feeling that people reading a translation think they're getting the whole story. That they're not missing out. But anything translated is only an approximation. Sometimes the translator gets close... taking months or years (I imagine, anyway) to find just the right word combo to preserve both the literal idea, and any cultural humor or added connotation, syntax and rhythm... but it's a futile task. Compelling, but futile.
Because language is so culture-specific. So experience-specific.
Like, hearing the word 'arbol' gives me an entirely different mental image than when I hear the word 'tree'. Sure, they sorta mean the same thing, but not really.
It's kinda like going to see The Golden Compass. (she said, making a leap and not bothering to fill in the gaps.)
It's a good read. And after living in that 1400s language for awhile, your brain starts saying things to itself like "and he was wonderly wrothe."
But anyway.
Thomas Malory reportedly compiled and translated these Arthurian tales out of the French Vulgate romances and some Middle English sources. (as per Elizabeth Bryan's Introduction)
And here's my whole point for bringing this up... in the original Preface, William Caxton wrote:
"I haue...enprysed to enprynte a book of the noble hystoryes of the sayed kynge Arthur and of certeyn of his knyghtes after a copye vnto me delyuerd whyche copye Syr Thomas Malorye dyd take oute of certeyn bookes of frensshe and reduced it in to Englysshe."
I love that - "reduced into English". I love it love it love it. It's so much more accurate than saying "translated", which gives you the misleading idea that the text has merely been moved from one place to another, laterally, without losing anything in the process.
I often get the feeling that people reading a translation think they're getting the whole story. That they're not missing out. But anything translated is only an approximation. Sometimes the translator gets close... taking months or years (I imagine, anyway) to find just the right word combo to preserve both the literal idea, and any cultural humor or added connotation, syntax and rhythm... but it's a futile task. Compelling, but futile.
Because language is so culture-specific. So experience-specific.
Like, hearing the word 'arbol' gives me an entirely different mental image than when I hear the word 'tree'. Sure, they sorta mean the same thing, but not really.
It's kinda like going to see The Golden Compass. (she said, making a leap and not bothering to fill in the gaps.)
1/13/08
guts
I was just reading the last entry on Osvaldo's blog, where he was speaking about a woman he met briefly; and how he realized in the space of a second, from one comment she made, that she would not be a good dating candidate for him. (O - if I'm summing up badly, I apologize.)
I, too, have had this experience, and it's still an odd one, when it happens, but I'm grateful for it. -You can be going along getting to know someone, and feeling impressed, intrigued, interested. And then - boom - they say or do something; and it can be a minor thing, as minor as slightly misinterpreting something you say - but suddenly you know, as well as you know anything in life, that they're just not on the same page, and that a relationship with them just wouldn't work. At all.
Because that slight misunderstanding could only have happened if about ten other extremely important things were off-kilter between you.
And it's often somewhat of a bummer to get this fateful internal telegram, cause he was so cool... damn.
But there's nothing to be done. It just is. It just isn't. It's over.
And, really, the mechanism itself is pretty darn amazing. Guts are great!
I, too, have had this experience, and it's still an odd one, when it happens, but I'm grateful for it. -You can be going along getting to know someone, and feeling impressed, intrigued, interested. And then - boom - they say or do something; and it can be a minor thing, as minor as slightly misinterpreting something you say - but suddenly you know, as well as you know anything in life, that they're just not on the same page, and that a relationship with them just wouldn't work. At all.
Because that slight misunderstanding could only have happened if about ten other extremely important things were off-kilter between you.
And it's often somewhat of a bummer to get this fateful internal telegram, cause he was so cool... damn.
But there's nothing to be done. It just is. It just isn't. It's over.
And, really, the mechanism itself is pretty darn amazing. Guts are great!
1/6/08
43 Cliff Street
I was awakened at 2:45am last night by irregular, clomping footsteps on the back stairs, and a hammering at the door. Then there was muffled shouting and more pounding, and I opened my eyes and saw my roommate walking through my bedroom, heading for the back door with a grim look on his face. He opened the door and I heard him say loudly, "You've got the wrong house, buddy. You have the wrong house!" I could smell stale alcohol on the air that was coming in through the doorway.
By this point, I was fully awake, and the police had arrived. I stood at my bedroom window and watched the scene below as the two police officers questioned this very drunk college student. He belligerently shouted "43 Cliff Street!" over and over again in response to everything they asked. "What's your name, sir?" "43 Cliff Street!"
The whole thing seemed almost amusingly surreal. I think I've been watching too many episodes of Twin Peaks.
By this point, I was fully awake, and the police had arrived. I stood at my bedroom window and watched the scene below as the two police officers questioned this very drunk college student. He belligerently shouted "43 Cliff Street!" over and over again in response to everything they asked. "What's your name, sir?" "43 Cliff Street!"
The whole thing seemed almost amusingly surreal. I think I've been watching too many episodes of Twin Peaks.
Sunday night again
It's been a weird day. Somewhat depressing and unproductive.
On a whim, I completed an email questionnaire my 12-year-old niece sent me.
According to whomever produced this thing, I am:
hot, romantic, cute, determined, preppy, I like to be around people, I'm "pale and original" (?! sounds like a beer ad), happy, and crazy...
...and fated to have a shitty love life because I failed to forward the email to 20 people within one hour.
Oh well.
I guess I'll go make dinner.
On a whim, I completed an email questionnaire my 12-year-old niece sent me.
According to whomever produced this thing, I am:
hot, romantic, cute, determined, preppy, I like to be around people, I'm "pale and original" (?! sounds like a beer ad), happy, and crazy...
...and fated to have a shitty love life because I failed to forward the email to 20 people within one hour.
Oh well.
I guess I'll go make dinner.
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