Saturday, May 26, 2012

roll of thunder, smell my shoes



I heard rolling thunder for the first time today--the kind that sounds like someone is pushing a huge, empty garbage bin down the road. It just goes on and on. Completely different from the sharp claps I'm used to.

I can hardly describe how much it pleases me when I experience firsthand a natural phenomenon completely new to me. And I love that restless fascination that seems to come hand-in-hand with storms. Even if you're scared, you're still (hopefully figuratively) electrified. Even more so if there's something new and different about it, and so long as you're not in any appreciable danger for it.

"Is that really even thunder?" I wondered aloud to my Southern mate. Having lived through hurricanes, he laughed. We live directly under a bad weather alternate flight path, so sometimes we'll hear planes over the house that sound for all the world like they're going to crash. This thunder was so strange to me, at first I thought it must be a struggling plane. But it wasn't.

---

In the Other Country I saw my first monsoon rainfall. I remember exactly where I was: with friends in--of all places!--an American-themed hot dog shop. Halfway through our shriveled, mayonnaise-slathered early dinners (which tasted fricking amazing after working with our bodies all day and then walking the three kilometers to town), the rain began to pour.

Within minutes the shop was crowded with shrieking high school students in soaked uniforms, the girls folding their arms across their chests because their blouses were white. Women walking home from market pulled out umbrellas and tsked at the students for not being better prepared for what they all should have known was coming because, after all, it came this time every year.  We watched a bus float past the shop in half a foot of standing water, which impressed no one but me. Half an hour passed and nothing changed for the drier.

We could have waited under cover all afternoon until the downpour stopped, but we didn't. I think my friends could tell I wanted to be out in it, so we headed for home. And I--having no knowledge yet of the terrible things that get washed away by the monsoon rains--hiked up my pants and trudged straight into the water. It was delightful! Even though I spent half of the next afternoon trying to wash the stench of rot and sewage from my sneakers, I felt it was 100% worth it to have run through flooded alleyways sopping wet in a real monsoon.

Once we were in the outskirts of town, the muddy flooded earth was so slick that when we walked uphill we were forced to cling to whatever we could in order not to fall. Branches, boulders, the front walls of houses, the graveyard fence.

---

A few weeks after I'd arrived, a young man around my age demanded my shoes as we crouched together playing cards in front of the house his dead parents had lived in. "Those are nice," he said, poking at the material over my toes. Tan corduroy. "How about you give them to me?"

I demurred, explaining that they were my only sneakers. He offered a trade, but his own sneakers were heavy and black, clearly meant for a man. Mine were unisex. I didn't want a trade. And, truthfully, I was offended. Supposedly we were friends, but he was in the habit of saying lots of brash, intrusive things and this was the worst yet. Taking my shoes? Some friend!

He shrugged. "Let me know if you change your mind."

Much later he explained to me, smirking, that he'd found out at a young age that he could simply demand things of American foreigners. Whether by straight-up pity or some more complicated sense of hegemonic guilt, more often than not they felt compelled to comply. He showed me his collection, an expansive wardrobe of baseball caps, jackets, ties, silky polyester clubbing shirts, stopwatches, crisp designer jeans.

It took months before he really grasped that I didn't have secret barrels of money stashed away like seemingly everyone else from my country, that I wasn't lying about the circumstances under which I'd come there. And when he did understand, he started to introduce me to his other friends as "This is ______, my American friend. She is not rich." It was said in a strange tone, half boasting, half protective. I felt like a black swan or Zuckerman's famous pig--somewhat embarrassed to have been examined so closely and found to be unusual, yet fairly confident this at least meant I wasn't to be treated like a regular pig. She is not rich. That one sentence opened many hearts and doors to me that had previously been barred.

---

I was ashamed of what I was learning about my country, though I didn't know the half of it yet. Not a quarter. Not a tenth.

I'd never been proud to be an American, but only because the idea of being proud of the uncontrollable location of one's own birth seemed ludicrous to me. But these people were telling me, indirectly, that there was another reason I should not be proud. They wouldn't say it outright, but I could feel it skulking around the edges of every interaction.

I wanted them to be wrong. I kept hoping to run into another American like me, one who didn't fit their unjust stereotypes.

In retrospect, the American stereotypes were not so unjust. In retrospect, I actually fit more of them than I thought I did. But when you listen good and keep your mouth shut about most things, people fill in the blanks... and when you set them off kilter with a few of your more flattering oddities, sometimes they fill in the remaining blanks with nicer stuff than you really deserve.

Once I hung back on a bus ride far past my stop, squirming apologetically past all the SRO passengers to reach a pair of white faces in the back row. A young man and an older man. "What are you doing here?" I asked the Americans, breathless and smiling, in the local language.

They shook their heads, laughing. "English, please!"

"What are you doing in _____." I repeated.

"Volunteering!"

"He's volunteering. I'm visiting," said the older one. The younger man's father.

I was pleased. "Me, too! I'm volunteering with ______."

"Yeah? I 'm with the ______." The younger one grinned. "Can't wait to get out of this dirty hellhole!"

---

The day after the first monsoon rains, my friend watched me scrubbing at my flimsy shoes. I've never seen such a rueful smile before or since.

"Now look what you've done. Those pretty shoes are ruined. You should have given them to me when you had the chance."

"Want to make a bet? They're coming clean. See?"

They were improving considerably. I'd been filling a bucket of water, scrubbing the shoes with a brush in the bucket, then emptying out the dark water and filling the bucket again. You couldn't always do such a thing. At certain points in the year, the creeks and the taps both run dry. But for now there was plenty of clear water. You could bathe and wash as much as you pleased.

"So the mud scrubs off. You'll never get the smell out."

He was right. They were fine dry, but every time they got damp, they smelled like a polluted creek. I wore them 'til the rubber soles broke through. Four years.

---



Local Natives - Wide Eyes

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

the happy medium mafia

Apologies for the extended silence. It will probably continue. I'd love to explain what happened, but it would be imprudent to go into specifics. Furthermore, I'm apparently not imaginative enough to phrase the matter in vague enough terms to satisfy my safety needs without sounding like I'm making shit up, I've gone unhinged, or I'm participating in something completely nefarious (and, uh... none of that is true, of course). Believe me, I have tried. The drafts made me laugh but they were not fit for posting.

(I like to think I'm not half bad at pouring my heart out, sparing no detail. And I'm decent at being blandly pleasant while revealing little to nothing of myself. But the happy medium eludes me....)

Not looking very happy.

Anyhow. Be assured that all is well with my family and I don't need any help or advice. My biggest immediate problem is simply that I have to keep my yap shut about precisely the things I'm most inspired to write on, which feels depressing and stifling. Angering, even. I have notes for nearly one hundred original posts that I'm not sure will ever see the light of day. On the bright side, I'm learning to garden. And maybe I can channel my thwarted blogging urges into my novel.

I'll post a bit on relatively harmless subjects as they occur to me. Along with links, quotes, and such. I've made some rather serious playlists on Youtube lately as well.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

the most dangerous gamer



One night in his apartment, with the lights of San Francisco twinkling for miles outside his windows, I warned Blow that I was about to do something that might aggravate him: I was going to tell him what I thought Braid was about, and he could do with that whatever he wanted.

“Okay,” he replied with a half smirk, leaning back in his chair.

“So obviously there’s the theme of the creation of the atomic bomb,” I began.

“I think you can make a very strong case that that is an unambiguous reference,” he replied, which I interpreted as the Blovian equivalent of Yes.

“But I think what has frustrated you about people’s interpretations of Braid is that the atom bomb itself is a metaphor for a certain kind of knowledge,” I continued. “You’ve been chasing some deep form of understanding all your life, and what I think you’ve found is that questing after that knowledge brings alienation with it. The further you’ve gone down that road, the further it’s taken you from other people. So the knowledge is ultimately destructive to your life, just like the atom bomb was—it’s a kind of truth that has a cataclysmic impact. You thought chasing that knowledge would make you happy, but like Tim, part of you eventually wished you could turn back time and do things over again.”

Blow remained silent.

“Does that make sense?,” I asked.

“Yep, yep.”

“So?”

He smiled.

“Well, I would say that I would not be frustrated at all with that interpretation.”

Source

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

best quote from sunshine week

From the AP:

[T]he White House organized a conference call with two senior administration officials to preview an announcement by President Barack Obama about an important China trade issue but told reporters that no one could be quoted by name. The officials were U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and the deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs, Michael Froman.
-source

More of this, please.

Friday, March 9, 2012

prevention of injury


I want to share a film inspired by the case of Bradley Manning. Someone linked to it this week in the Greenwald comment section.

http://www.preventionofinjury.com/

I'll be interested to see whether the mention of Manning's name skyrockets the views on this post. Lately my other post with his name in it has consistently garnered over twice as many views as the next runner up (the post in second place contains the word "sex", of course), in spite of having very little unique content. One calling card in particular made me raise a brow*. Hopefully the numbers are just an indication of growing popular interest in the subject at hand.

I don't want to be paranoid, but--given the long list of keywords flagged and monitored by one arm of the Department of Homeland Security in 2011--I have to wonder if I might have been paid a few visits. By those bizarre standards, I've been seriously cranking out the IOIs since my parents got a modem in '95. More or less like everybody else.

Also... is this kind of talk considered "aggressive counter-surveillance"? =/

Speaking of videos, there's a rather popular one going around right now. I present three more items of interest without further comment:

1) http://pulitzercenter.org/sites/default/files/WhiteHouseLRAStrategy_opt.pdf

2) http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2011-10-17-us-troops-hunt-al-qaeda-in-africa-not-the-lra

3) http://imgur.com/K3mgn

---

*I gather I'm supposed to have seen it, since it would have been really, really easy to avoid leaving that trace. The implications of that drive-by greeting are kind of disquieting to me. Which may very well be the idea. So let's pretend it was just someone from this particular agency on their lunch break browsing the internet and happening to take an intense non-work-related interest in digging around on my wee little blog, shall we?

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

v-day


"HAPPY VD!" as they say on Cake Wrecks.

There are three camps, as we know. Which are you? Like, dislike, or don't give a rip? We're talking about Valentine's Day, not STDs now.

As for me... gosh darn it, I like it. I've always liked it. Even on years when I haven't had a particular someone, I still liked exchanging token gifts with friends and seeing happy couples around (PDA rocks, I don't care what people say. MOAR MAKING OUT PLEASE.). And I think it's important for people's mental health that we have a few shared cultural traditions. It's not a bad idea to put on a smile and celebrate a little, now and then--even when things mostly suck, even if at first it feels forced.

I don't believe in love.

I mean, I do and I don't. As The Vile Scribbler wrote earlier today, "Step back far enough, and absolutely nothing matters because it's all just supernovas and black holes."

Interiorly, I am often way out there with the black holes, as you may have noticed. Not necessarily feeling nihilistic per se... just observing, holding within me knowledge that isn't quite compatible with full immersion in the day-to-day goings on of my animal half nor with the fairy tales of our milieu. Yet, other than those fairy tales--by that I mean our morals, our values, our sense of wonder and inspiration, our decisions, our idealistic visions, our connections with other people and the sometimes-not-precisely-accurate constructs we create to describe various types of interpersonal phenomena, and possibly the so-called user illusion itself--what else is there to make life meaningful? God is dead and we are meat.

(God is dead, I know... but I am not.)

So we're big on "I love you" around here, in spite of being a family headed by a pair of brooding-eyed unbelievers. All of us are forever gazing at each other adoringly and saying those words. Not really forever. But 20 times a day. We smile and laugh a lot, and we play. Some would find us nauseating.



And I cannot guess what we'll discover
When we turn the dirt with our palms cupped like shovels
But I know our filthy hands can wash one another’s
And not one speck will remain

Optimistic and realistic at once. This was our song for a while. I still like it.

Pairing off long-term is hard work. Or it was for us. Especially the first couple of years. In the beginning (I mean after the pure magic bit) it was difficult to parse everything. My inner noise and someone else's, mixed together, and so much stimulation to muddy the signals. Perhaps it isn't this way for everybody, but for me it was a puzzle figuring out where it all originated--what is going on here? who is bringing which aspects of it? and does it even matter? Am I ill at ease because of the other, or because of what's inside of me already? (Spoiler: it's always the way your edges and the other person's meet, never just one or the other.) Will I ever feel comfortable bringing my other foot inside the door or will I always need to be crouched down and ready to bolt?

I love where we're at now but I don't think either one of us misses the journey.

I think we all wonder sometimes if the pain of coming together with jagged edges is even worth enduring. I won't say that it is. It turned out to be worthwhile for me in this particular time and space, with this particular person. So what? Sometimes it isn't.


Sunday, February 12, 2012

NaNoWriMo update #5

Something about this last NaNoWriMo update twists my stomach. I've always found it hard to talk about work in progress. Do I tell you about the plot? No... I hate summaries. Do I tell you my objectives? How gauche. Do I tell you how pretty I think my book will turn out? My arrogance will jinx me; I'll burn the cake for sure.

I didn't win. There's that. That's easy to say.

But what from there? I wrote this entry twice already and didn't like it the first time or the second. Both attempts were dull and analytical. And defensive. And I kept talking up my work up and then catching myself talking it up and not wanting to, and doing it again. I erased them. Truthfully, I can't care right now about NaNoWriMo 2012 or what I could do better the next hypothetical time I attempt the contest. I can't make myself care even a tiny bit. And I want to keep my half-done project clutched close to my chest. So I will ramble rather than deconstruct my experience in any methodical way.

At one point, early in November, I read an article by a famous author who says that he just sits down and writes manuscripts from beginning to end, without visualizing or writing down any ideas, outlines, or characters beforehand. He just goes. Like a rabbit down a race track. Straight as an arrow, all in chronological order. That killed me.

Wouldn't I like to be the kind of genius who just wakes up one day, walks the dogs (I have no dogs), and sits down to write a completely coherent novel?

I thought so. I spent the first week and a half of November finding out that I am not that guy.

Naw, I lied again. I probably kind of knew already. But I was not okay with it. Maybe still not. It's inconvenient.

How it works for me is this: I imagine up some people, one by one. I study them until I know them better than I know anybody. I set them a stage and invite them on board. Then I draw back the curtain and wait to hear the whispers of their goings on. If what happens doesn't move me, I fiddle with some elements and let it go again. I write nothing. I dream, think, play, work with my hands, listen to music, live life with my family, wait for the fire. And then I record whatever demands to be recorded.

It's not something I ever want to try to squeeze into a month's time again. Or any timeline at all. It cost me a lot to do so.

But... it was good for me. I cannot touch it again yet, but I have a strong feeling that I will finish this novel in the not-too-distant future and that I will be sickeningly proud of it when I am done.

Around the end of the month I was reading some Philip K. Dick:

I want to write about people I love, and put them into a fictional world spun out of my own mind. Not the world we actually have, because the world we actually have does not meet my standards. Okay, so I should revise my standards; I'm out of step. I should yield to reality. I have never yielded to reality.

I think I'll yield to reality a little more than he did. But, still. Yes. I want to write about people I love. Hopefully people you love, too. There is too damn much in this world of everything else.

Friday, February 10, 2012

back and such

I'm back.

I've been gone so long, I had time to break my toe, heal it up, and get back to daily running again. Guess who pranced--most dorkfully and barefooted and completely oblivious--straight into a 20 lb kettlebell left lying around in the hallway? Oh, guess...

Let's talk some more about this boring subject for a moment. It was my first genuine broken bone, after all. At first I felt really stupid. Then I felt like a badass muthafucka because I got to tape myself up. I don't know. I get a kick out of this stuff. I mean, I now know the nauseating pain of bone breakage and I got to fix it all by myself. And, as a further boon, I will probably never be kidnapped by foot fetishists. I would rate the experience a 7 on a scale of 1-10.

Ok. Thank you for indulging me. Now I can depart Planet Alienfjords-is-having-a-vainglorious-butch-fantasy and get back to Earth.

First thing, I owe a past-due NaNoWriMo update. I'm not too keen on writing it because I burnt myself out on the whole business. But I'll do it, just because 1) I don't like letting loose ends hang out forever and 2) I already broke my word on the timeline and would prefer not to be even more undependable than I already have been. So that will be upcoming.

Secondly, I have only checked emails and PMs so far and have a lot of catching up to do with blog reading. And I'm looking forward to it. =)

Third, as you've likely noticed, we are rapidly entering into now clearly living in a dystopian surveillance state that is analogous to many evil empires (fictional and otherwise) that I could name and--aside from a few incoherent and/or violent outbursts on the part of people who did not fill their Haldol prescriptions on time--we appear to be mostly taking it like good Germans. (With an extra helping of circus to replace that serving of bread that went missing in 2008.)

The general situation has been going on for a long time, but the urgency of the problem seems to have been kicked up quite a lot in recent months. Perhaps it's due to the bewildering speed with which the last few vestiges of our privacy are departing. Or the rate at which we are making advances in the field of flying killer robots. Or the fact that the people foisting these changes on us seem drunker than ever on power and advancement. Or maybe it's just me, still tumbling down the rabbit hole after three years, having lost my very last scant pocketful of naivete.

This is a matter that rarely leaves my mind. I'd like to write more on it. I'd also like not to be escorted away to the little white room for further questioning before my next plane flight. But we cannot have everything we want, can we?

Saturday, November 26, 2011

NaNoWriMo update #4

Just a brief note!

I don't think I'm going to win NaNoWriMo this year, but I'm still going to give it my best shot with a feverish procrastinator mega-sprint over the next four and a half days.

I'll be almost totally offline until December 1. In the meanwhile, I won't be checking email, comments, or feeds. (Please, o brutal daemons of the deepwebs, do not slashdot and flame me to pieces in my absence.)

The project has been fun and instructive, no matter how it ends. I would definitely give it another go. Next update, I'll talk about how the last phase went, what I took away from it, and what I'd do differently next time around.

Just because. Give the source if you know it, because I do not.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

thanks america for not killing us yet

We finally had our first "Whoops! Nobody checked the bird last night to see if it was properly thawed" Thanksgiving at chateau Fjords. There was also exploding bread and broken sauce. Somehow all of our improvisational quick fixes worked out beautifully and everything was fine in the end. The broken sauce went back together. The giant bread was airy and golden. The turkey was dead and did not care. There was family and fun and a walk in the rain. Huzzah!

I had a great day. I even briefly entertained the idea of thinking up things I am thankful for.

But, no. I will spare you. I did take a look around to see everyone else's lists, though. Apparently lots of people are thankful for:

1) Luck, God, nature, and other real or imaginary forces of apparent ambivalence. 

2) Not being terminally ill or dead. 

3) Not being a starving African child or a victim of white colonialism (uh... maybe rethink that last one, really--I'm pretty sure we all bit it regarding this part, in one way or another).

4) People who have formed positive relationships with them. 

5) People/forces who have abused or mistreated them. "They made me so much stronger!"

6) Stuff.

7) AMURRICA. (see numbers 3, 5, 6)

8) Sports teams.

9) Personal accomplishments or talents. (???)

I don't know.... Aside from #4 and possibly #5, it all seems a bit contrived to me. Does randomly not dying this year actually make most Americans feel fuzzy waves of gratefulness? Together? On schedule? Somehow I doubt it. And who are you feeling thankful toward for your having taught yourself to paint better? 

Maybe most of us just take "thankfulness" to mean "happiness". Or "preference" or "relief". Or maybe even just "being aware of a benefit," as one newer online dictionary limply proffers as an alternative meaning for "thankful". As in, I would prefer to be alive instead of obliterated at the moment and Grunt McMustache is happy the Piggers are winning. We are relieved our would-be murderers did not crush our resolve or our capacity for growth. We prefer not to have leukemia (k thx) and we are aware it is a benefit to feast and not starve. 

I feel a bit too grinchy deconstructing people's Thanksgiving lists. It's probably not a bad thing for us to reflect on what we've got, even if we don't always describe it well or understand the full significance of it. I'd rather see proof that people are interested in getting our asses in gear to rectify a lot of our joint problems.... but... maybe I am actually seeing a bit of that, too. I'm still being sarcastic in this post title, though. Take that, Pollyanna.

Anyhow, I love my family. I kind of liked reading people's lists after all, even though at first I mind-gagged. I'm warm and full and probably safe for the moment.

Also, spotted on the news today: an Immortal Technique The Martyr poster in a tent at Occupy DC. :-)

Good, impotent wishes to all! And a merry Buy Nothing Day! Let's expand on the notion and crash this burning dirigible, eh?