16.2.09

I Don't Have Time

This is the fifth blog I wanted to write about how I don't have enough time, but I don't really have time to explain why.

This is the second blog I wanted to write about the chaotic details of my early and current journalism life, but I don't think it will interest you.
Conflicts about talking to stuck-up celebrities and deadlines and story changes aren't the kind of stories that make the movies.

More important than grabbing your attention is that I don't even have the time to do it.
I have started writing in my journal again, but it's keeping me up an extra hour each night.
I'm getting insomnia, but it's worth it just to write for myself and just to reflect for once.
To pause.

I still don't have the time to write anything else but school, newspaper and my novel.
I got a great idea for a short story last night, when I was trying to drift off, but I can't find the time to write it.

It's about a guy named Edward Abbey. Doesn't that name ring nicely?
He's balding prematurely and he wears thick glasses and he lives at home on disability checks.
His only companion is his grey tabby cat, Clyde.
The story opens on a depressing winter morning. Edward Abbey is munching on soggy cereal and talking to Clyde.
A pistol is on the table, fully loaded and menacing-looking.
His is thinking about lonely things, like his dead mother and other sad stuff. He doesn't have any friends.
He is considering suicide.
He goes on the internet and dials-up (yeah, it's the present but he still has dial-up. Isn't that depressing?) and finds a website that allows you to tip the cops off to drug dealers. It's so very interesting because it's completely anonymous and such a ratfink thing to do.

I got the idea for this when browsing "how much is an eightball of cocaine" and how much it costs. Ironically, I stumbled upon the info on a cop website based in Michigan that actually allows you to snitch on drug users and dealers.
I looked up some Michigan politicians and sent in tips that they were sniffing coke. I'm causing chaos in a state I don't live in. It's funny.

Here is the link so you can do it yourself:
http://www.huntteam.net/AnonymousTip.htm

Anyway, Edward Abbey is so lonely and so bored and so depressed that he decides to submit his own name. He types in "Edward Abbey sells drugs to school kids" and his address and his full name and his height (5'3''), his eyecolor (grey), his weight (213 lbs. [he weighs himself to be accurate]) and finally his birthdate (Dec. 1. 1973).

The next morning, Edward Abbey notices an ivory white van sitting outside his house. He checks periodically and it's always there. It has Michigan plates, (cuz Edward Abbey lives in Michigan) and Edward Abbey realizes that he is being watched. He excitedly pours himself another bowl of soggy cereal and tells all this to Clyde. He feels like a celebrity.

The van is there for a week and then it disappears and this depresses Edward Abbey so he logs on again and rats on himself again. He says, "Edward Abbey has a drug den in his home." The next morning the van is there and Edward goes to the grocery store and the van follows him. As he shops, he notices that a shady young man is following him. This guy pushes a shopping cart and occasionally loads in random objects, but they're not things a man like him would buy. This is a clue the guy is shady because a normal man does not have tampons and saurkraut and Good Housekeeping in his cart.

Edward Abbey realizes he is being watched and he is ecstatic about the attention. He looks in his cart and realizes that he has the same old gross cereal and cat food and some hemmerhoid lotion. He decides that he needs to impress the shady character browsing the same aisles but picking up Tabasco sauce and kid-sized toothbrushes. So Edward puts the cereal back and buys a nice, big steak. He buys A1 steak sauce and a set of steak knives and potatoes and chicken stuffing and carrots. He blows half his disability check on this and the cashier flirts with him. Edward has never felt so good.

But then, in the parking lot, he realizes the shady guy and the ivory white van won't follow him much longer unless he has some real evidence against himself. So he pushes his cart of groceries past his car and down an alley and finds a homeless man.

He tells the man, got any cocaine? And the homeless guy laughs and says sure. And Edward Abbey asks how much it'll cost and the homeless guy says $200. Edward gives him the other half of his disability check and takes the eightball of cocaine and stuffs it in his pocket. Down the alley, he notices the shady guy duck back. Good. He was watched.

And Edward pushes his cart back down the alley and gets into his car and goes home. The white van follows him. Edward cooks his meal and talks to Clyde and Clyde purrs. Edward burns half the meal, but sets it on the table anyway. He removes the pistol, which is still sitting there and he looks at it and feels foolish that he ever felt suicidal. This is the best day of his life. It's like he has guests. He replaces the pistol with the eightball.

Then he sits down and eats and watches TV. When he turns to the six o clock news, he notices his mug on TV. He beams! He's famous! Maybe like Andy Warhol once said, he's only famous for fifteen minutes, but that's still something. He turns up the volume and listens to the anchor talk and talk and talk about . . . HIM! Edward is crying tears of joy. He eats his steak and his stuffing and his mashed potatoes and they're mostly burned, but it's the best meal he's ever had.

Then he hears a million sirens and the cops pull up and the police copters and the news copters are buzzing overhead, louder than a hurricane and he hears a cop scream through a megaphone, "Edward Abbey, come out with your hands on your head!"

This is Edward's big moment. He doesn't know what to do, so instead of panicking, he packs up the leftovers from his meal and puts them in Tupperware and labels them and puts them in the freezer. Clyde is freaking out and clawing up furniture. Edward is crying again, but not tears of joy.

The cops yell at him again. "We know you're in their!" Edward realizes his mistake. He realizes this is the end. That he can't go to prison. He was already living in a jailcell his entire life. He's already had his last meal. He's already on death row.

So Edward takes Clyde into the bedroom and he brings the pistol. I know, this is horrifying, I thought, but it has to happen. It just HAS to. It makes the story anti-climatic if poor, depressing Edward doesn't destroy some outside part of himself. So he does. He points the barrel at Clyde and pulls the trigger.

The cops hear the shot and start firing. Edward is safe, however. He goes to the front door and he opens it and he shoots and that's the end. The scene ends with only the silohette of Edward passing through the door and the extreme brightness of all the spotlights trained on him. Trained on HIM. And we watch Edward crumple to his knees.

And that's the whole story I thought of last night. I know it starts out depressing and ends depressing, but maybe that's okay because our main character learns something, he grows and he steps outside himself a little bit. Only he did it the wrong way, and maybe this serves as a moral for you; don't blame yourself. Instead, free yourself.

And maybe you think it's an excellent storyline despite many of the obvious faults. Maybe it's just like one of those movies. Maybe it's perfect idea. Maybe you're telling me, "why don't you have time to write that? You have to!" Well, maybe I just did.


15.2.09

Finger Crossed (A Depressing Look at the End)


I hope the economy collapses. Flatlines. Nothing left.
I think we could use it. We can rebuild from the rubble.
A new start? A new dawn? Sure.

Let's hope those 2012 predictions pan out as well.
The sun scorches the earth and earthquakes split the ground, eat us alive. California launches into the ocean and the magnetic poles turn upside down.

And I don't care for them, but those environmental scare tactics about climate change? Mine as well pray for mass extinction and melting ice caps. The new El Niño.A new ice age. A new dawn.

Remember that Russian professor who predicted the downfall of America by the end of this year?
He forecasted inevitable civil war and even estimated how the states would be divided. I wrote a New Year's blog about how to make this next year, 2009, the best ever because it could be America's last.

Wonder if we'd still be killing random Arabs then. Wonder if we'd still torture. Wonder if.

But back to that prof. -- I don't feel I've really made my life all that much better by now. It's only been a month and a half, and January always blows. I'm not exactly behind am I?
But now I'm worried. So worried that I just want my worries to come true.
I still haven't found a way to deal with any of this. I don't have a World War Z plan. I don't have a metaphorical bomb shelter. Nothing.
All I have is my camera, my pen and a package of cigarettes to protect me.

Oh, and today I learned that Wal-Mart and Walgreens are completely becoming dry labs by March. Target will likely follow suit. No more film developing, except for send-out, but that's a little more expensive, I believe. I don't have the money, but that's OK; I have the debt.

Everything is going digital much faster now because it's cheaper. In this economy, no one can afford to spend $10 just for 24 pictures. Soon CDs and Vinyl records will be gone too. I hope print newspapers and books will last another decade, or at least that, but I don't have my fingers crossed.

Here I am, shivering with my soon-to-be-obsolete technology. It's comfortable, isn't it?

Maybe the solution is to curl up in a ball and listen to sad songs.
I recommend The Bad Plus' cover of Wilco's "Radio Cure".
Arcade Fire's "Windowsill".
Elbow's "Grace Under Pressure".
Radiohead's "No Surprises" or "Lucky" or maybe just all of OK Computer.
Maybe I should just make an apocalypse playlist and then I'll sit on a mountain and play it while writing what I see, those atom bombs blossoming in the sunset, and the whole event will mean something.

As Bright Eyes said once, "I just can't work it out, but for memory and clarity, I had better write it down."

When I was a kid, I used to read those Bailey School Kids books, about the four friends who always assumed their teachers were vampires, werewolves or leprechauns. Sometimes they were close to right, sometimes they were dead wrong, but it usually had this open-ended, cop-out finish. That one girl, Liza, whenever she freaked out and worried her teacher was a goblin, her nose would start bleeding. This fascinated me, and sometimes I wished it happened to me. I like bloody noses. They make me feel important.

I got sick of the Kids and started reading Goosebumps. Both series of books had terrible cookie-cutter plots with cliché bullshit endings. They were supposed to be scary, but never really disturbed me. Except the aliens. I was never afraid of ghosts or witches cause I knew for certain they didn't exist. But aliens? No one could disprove that. The aliens books gave me nightmares of having the life sucked out of me, of being dissected, of being kidnapped.

I also read those worse than terrible Left Behind books, but the whole "the sky is falling" storyline scared the hell out of me. I musta been ten and I cried and cried that The End was Nigh. That I would die at age 11 and never live a full life and I would never experience all the wonderful life promised me once I reached 21. Or at least once my balls dropped.

I was never, not really, worried about Y2K. As grocery store shelves emptied of water and canned goods, I just went to school and drew comic strips. I played Nintendo and used AOL. When the big night finally came, when the ball dropped, I was sitting in the living room, playing Donkey Kong 64 with my brother. My alarm went off and that meant it was my turn to play. The power didn't even flicker.
I heard the next day some casinos lost memory, but the rest of the world was safe. Airplanes didn't nosedive out of the sky, gas tanks didn't explode. In the morning, the pacemakers and credit cards still worked and the rest of the planet was still on life support.

Those things, those worries, seem silly now. Adorable, if you think neurotic children are adorable. There's got to be a way to face these current problems differently.

I could ram a truck into a gas tanker like this woman, only do it the right way.
http://www.azdailysun.com/articles/2009/02/14/news/20090214_front_190872.txt?rating=true

I could listen to the advice of Interpol: "Pace is the Trick / and to all the destruction in man. . .and to all the corruption in my hand."

What I'm most likely to do is keep worrying, petty and stupid and helpless. But like I said, I'm so worried I jus
t want my worries to come true.

But perhaps this is the best advice of all from
Robert Anton Wilson:
"All of us should treasure (John Dillinger's) Oriental wisdom and his preaching of a Zen-like detachment, as exemplified by his constant reminder to clerks, tellers, or others who grew excited by his presence in their banks: "Just lie down on the floor and keep calm.""

11.2.09

Right and Left (On Mt. View)


JAN 10 2009
Tomorrow I leave for Flagstaff again. It's time I reflect on what this month had to offer. What I did.
No, scratch that.
I mean, I had a few major goals and I only scrambled to accomplish a couple in the last week. They don't even seem to matter now.
I don't really remember what happened anyway since I stopped keeping a personal journal. It's a hard habit to keep and I don't really spend any time alone anymore, just pondering. I wish I could, I miss it, but I don't have the time.
No, scratch that.
That should have been my new year's resolution. To make time for myself.
Ok, scratch that, let's start over.

This is a specific story.
At the beginning of this adventure, I badly wanted a picture of a decaying billboard four miles from my house, turn Right on Mountain View Rd.
I waited until the day before I left when I drove down there with Dave. He went a little past it and we discovered some stencils on a dumpster outside a tattoo parlor. I got out and took a few pictures. Many of the stencils were old and amazing, such as one of a distorted baby face. And then the manager came out and asked what I was doing.
"Taking pictures."
"Of what?" He was tattooed from head to toe with piercings to match. His hair, unkempt, beatnik style, someone way into a decade 60 years ago.
"Stencils." I said. "I like stencils."
"I thought it was a little strange that someone was taking pictures of my garbage, so I came out here."
"Hope you don't mind."
"Nah, it's cool, just ask permission next time, so I know what's up."
Yeah. Like I'm going to ask if I can take pictures of your dumpster.
I got my shots, including the one of the billboard that I loved. It was beautiful.

Later, Dave generously drove my sister's boyfriend, Daniel, home and I went with them so I could lend Dave gas money. We stopped at QT, just as a cop pulled someone over. The gas station was packed and busy, even at midnight.
While waiting, I met an old man.
He was a babbler, talk talk talk, but worse than that, he was an incoherent babbler.
Couldn't understand a damn word he said.
He was dressed well enough that I didn't think he was homeless, even when he told me a sob story about how he was locked out of his car and needed to get to Glendale.
"I feel like a horses' posterior. Could you lend me enough money to get some gas?"
I didn't question the inherent contradiction. I just gave. He needed gas to get into a locked car? And he's gonna borrow the money, like he's ever gonna pay me back? Sure.
The old guy told me his name, but I couldn't hear it. He told me how he is a professor at Luke Airforce Base. He asked me if I was going to get my masters. Told me to retake the SAT. A lot of random shit.
Suddenly, I noticed the gas station was completely empty. Footsteps echoed. A kind of peace filled me.
Then the old guy asked for money again. This time, he needed it to buy a snack inside the QT to raise his bloodsugar, since he has diabetes. I told him, I gave him everything. But he was being nice about it.
"I'll even open my wallet for you to prove it."
"No, no." He said. "Your heart is bigger than your head."
I'm not sure if that was an insult or not, but it felt wrong. I felt stingy. I truly didn't want to give him anything.
"Um, I have this quarter I found. . ."
Suddenly, Dave appeared, and the guy started his sob story all over again. Dave, poor Dave, gave him enough to buy some coffee, even when I know he has less than 47 cents in his checking account.
Then this guy asked me if I could give him a ride. Just to 17th Ave, down Mountain View, not even out of our way.
"Dave's the driver," I said.
Dave shrugged. "Ok."
We waited for the old guy to buy his coffee and filled up. The old guy took his time, told me, "I never do anything fast." Laughed.
He said a funny thing, that he may not be around next Christmas. "I'm 63 and I don't want to be pessimistic. . ."
Somehow, that made it so that the money didn't matter anymore.

"Don't ask me how I know, I just know." He said. "But you're a night person."
"Yeah."
"You know how I could tell?"
"It's night?"
Old Guy was being incoherent again, but I could make out clips and phrases.
"I don't want to be such a presumptuous bastard, but I'll just say this quick, but the Man upstairs is your ticket." He thrusted upward with his index finger.
"You a Christian? You don't have to be, but it helps."
"Yeah, I am."
He started mumbling something Hebrew and then translating it into English. It may have been a blessing, but I couldn't follow him. Then:
"I know this is gonna sound harsh, but I used to be a football coach and you don't get someone to be all they can be by patting them on the back." He said. "You get them to be all they can be by kicking them in the ass."
Dave laughed. "OK. . ."
"So, get off your ass!"
I looked him straight in the eyes.
"God gave you some special gifts. You have no idea. You have gifts in areas that you have never dreamed of. Don't ask me how I know, I just know. Of all the times you've failed, I've failed ten times more. And any success you've had, I've had. So get off your ass. Use them gifts."
I smiled. I've been feeling shitty about my life accomplishments lately and that's what I needed to hear.
We drove the guy to his place, Left on Mountain View and he said, "I don't mean to be such a presumptuous bastard, but could I ask for one more favor?" He begged us to take him to a church near a hospital. Or maybe it was a hospital near a church. He was so hard to understand.
Old Guy asked us to drop him off at his apartment complex and then come pick him up in 40 minutes. I don't know why, but Dave agreed.
But as soon as we pulled into the parking lot, three people surrounded the van and started looking inside at us. Looking for drugs. The one woman looked like a meth addict and they didn't get what was going on.
The situation totally upset Dave and he drove off.
"The whole situation threw me off." He said. "And then I just abandoned the situation."
"The old man inspired me," I said.
"He said some interesting things."
". . . That's about it."
"I realized that he said exactly what he needed to say to keep me interested long enough to give him a dollar and a car ride. And I realized he was just using me. I didn't feel comfortable in the situation and I knew he was using me so I went back on my word."
"Oh well," I said. "He'll live. Let's hope."
"Yeah," Dave said. "And if he doesn't, then it's not my fault, because he's a grown man and it's his responsibility to take care of himself."

FEB 11 2009
I got my pictures, I'm not sure anything said matters, but I got my pictures.

5.2.09

You Could Have It So Much Better / Lucid Dreams

When I was 16, the four most important bands in my life were Muse, Radiohead, Interpol and Franz Ferdinand. I can't decide which band the most, but least likely is, surprisingly, Muse. Perhaps most likely is Franz Ferdinand.

I got their first two albums, Franz Ferdinand and You Could Have It So Much Better at the same time. I liked them so much that they introduced me into my favorite genre of music, Post-Punk, which encompasses the White Stripes, the Warlocks, Interpol, the Killers, She Wants Revenge and thousands of others. So in a way, they got me into music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_9GR9kdZ3o



Their first album was ok, not bad, but disorganized. Still, their music videos and album art really grabbed me because it introduced me into Dadaism, Surrealism, Russian Avant-Garde. Also, in "Outsiders", the lyrics "In seventeen years will you still be Camille, Lee Miller, Gala or whatever" are a reference to the lovers of the artists Auguste Rodin, Man Ray and Salvador Dalí. So in a way, the band got me "back" into art.

I say "back" because when I was very young I wanted to be an artist, then a cartoonist and then I had a terrible middle-school experience where a teacher told me I was worthless and so I gave up those dreams. Years later, I decided I wanted to be a writer, which, to me is the best decision of the three. Listening to Franz Ferdinand made me want to pick up art again, and so I did, but only as a hobby. I don't take my artwork very seriously (which explains why it isn't very good).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ken2Tz3h0Zs



On a side note, I've always wanted to be a photographer but I thought it would be complicated and boring. I still dreamed of National Geogrpahic quality prints. At times it is tedious, but I became an amatuer photographer anyway after taking a terrible college course in darkroom developing. So, you could say, I have become everything I ever dreamed of becoming, except a published novelist.

Franz Ferdinand's second album is better than their first, by far. Several of the songs, "The Fallen" and "Outsiders" had even religious influence on me, because their lyrics gave me a very liberal way of looking at faith.

The videos for You Could Have It So Much Better "Walk Away" and "Do You Want To" made me want to live this life of complete artistic expression and wild exuberance. They made me want to be cool, cool like Alex Kapronos.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_T14vUcH8o&feature=related



Franz had a new album that was released this last month. It's spectacular. But I had to wait three years for it. In the meantime, I looked up their b-sides, which they weirdly made videos for.

"Jeremy Fraser" made me look differently at how I viewed my life and my eventual death. "L. Wells", "Eleanor Put Your Boots On", "Fade Together" and "Wine in the Afternoon" were these songs that had such incredibly beautiful, sexy, artistic women in them. In a way, they defined what I looked for in a significant other, altho on a personal note, I didn't date anyone like the girls in the videos until I met Gean.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJM2iCH_XR8&feature=related



Now, their newest album, which I bought the day it dropped (AND GOT A FREE LP!) is amazing. "Ulysses" and the rest of the album make me want to party all night long. Only, the video for "Ulysses" takes the band to a new level of cool, of suave. Dancing and doing drugs in a dull laundromat? MY NEWEST DREAM. I want to be THAT fuckin' amazing.

But then, today, I realized that real life isn't like artsy fartsy music videos. It isn't like Glasgow rock ballads.

I built the person I am today, it was a lot of work on my part, but a lot, (no, a shit ton) of outside influence. If I'm any bit unique it's because I found many, many unique people to admire (Franz Ferdinand is just an extreme example. See also: Franz Kafka, Chuck Palahniuk, Hunter S. Thompson and Banksy). These heroes showed me the way and any idea that's completely my own (almost) is because I was given the eyes.

So, yeah, now I sadly realize my life can't be like a glamorous, drug-addled rock star surrounded by art and music and cheap wine. I can be cool, but not THAT cool. But that doesn't mean I'm not going to try.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdGGqScwe4w

4.2.09

etch

etch
One day I will be a particle of light, searing through the air, lured by your brilliant gaze, your beauty, sucked in like an insect, to land on the film of your cornea and forever etch my image.

3.2.09

Cardinals in the Super Time Warp Continium Thingy

Normally, I hate football, but I wanted to celebrate the Cardinals in a somewhat unique way. I got baked. Therefore, I'm not serious about an ounce of this, but so what? Enjoy it.

First of all, I hoped the Cardinals lost. They came all this way, through thick and thin, and they still lose it? Amazing ironic drama that would make.
But really, it just ended up being kind of sad. I still laugh, tho.

Personally, I sometimes believe that all games are determined already. It's a performance and it really happens but the one team decides to lose on purpose. They have more to gain that way.

But the Superbowl has to be super interesting so no one suspects, except paranoid weirdos like me. So what happens? An interception at the endzone that is run to the other side. TWICE. Yes, it was quite a coincidence, don't you think? My girlfriend predicted it. She also predicted some of the fights and few other things. Coincidence? I think not.

And why would the game for the Cardinals be fixed? They just had a stadium built and they want a way to justify it, and if they win the Superbowl, what better way? What will they justify next? Maybe they'll pay for anything they want.

ANYWAY


Football is amazing. Amazing.
The way those little men coordinate and move.
Their attacks are precise and brilliant and painful. They lift each other off the ground in mid-air and slam to the earth and it's just incredible. IN-CRED-I-BLE. I've never watched a game so closely before.
It's greased machinery. So sci-fi.
STARE.

Humanity has never been so great nor so terrible.
The Superbowl is proof of this peak, but global war is proof of this valley.

DID YOU KNOW?

John Madden will be assassinated. He may not seem like much, but he is one of the most important political figureheads in the world. Of course you know that already, subconsciously. When Madden dies, chaos will break forth over the earth.

But everything is planned anyway. There is no chaos. Everything is so amazingly orchestrated. Nothing happens by accident. It may have merely been an explosion but the creation of the universe was a chain reaction that started a chain reaction that is so intricate and perfect. Who cares if it's controlled by strings or something else, the point is it's so tightly knit, it's unbreakable.

Everyone does what they're supposed to. How can anyone act surprised, ever? Terrorist attacks? Bound to happen. Earthquakes? Just a matter of time. The end, the end, the VERY end? Just wait.

Time is a circle, the creation and the destruction of the universe are the same explosion on different ends. The end is going in, and the creation is going out. A mobius strip. President Bush steals his election, always has and always will. The Cardinals lost, they have always lost and always will lose. In a couple billion trillion years, the cycle will repeat and they will lose again.

In that case, you are a reincarnation. You are you, but you are always you and you never were not you. (You weren't anything else, not a beatle or a sloth or whatever. You are a reincarnation of yourself). When you learn, you are simply remembering something you've known all along. Hard to explain that feeling, isn't it?

But most important to realize is that an animal that lays eggs has it's uterus inside that shell, technically. It's not called that, but whatever. So therefore, pregnant women have the shell of the egg inside them. Pregnant women are therefore giant eggs.

I think I will write a Star Wars blog next.