Tuesday, September 25, 2012

On the sublimation of human need and why yardwork should be avoided

27 October, 2012, Richmond VA USA, 1550 hrs.
Yes, this still exists and there is a reason to catalog the world that is intentionally ordered, set up as something normal and predictable. I will keep going, reveling in the fall season which throws oak dust in my eyes, reddening them in the yard when the breezes passes, seeing sticky new orange or brown and crispy leaves scraping over the wood of the ragged deck. Staccato acorn sounds on the bedroom window blowing north, no reason for waking but seeing the darkness tarry in the morning, slow, patient. Fall is a great season, a time to possibly develop a beer gut without trying as indulging season looms. It is a season when you might want to experience and employ the idiom of the nature you see so much of, hating or ignoring or dealing with in some evasive way, not stopping and seeing.

I thought of this poem for the occasion, of which I'll include an excerpt:

Lay down these words
Before your mind like rocks.
               placed solid, by hands
In choice of place, set
Before the body of the mind
                in space and time:
Solidity of bark, leaf, or wall
                riprap of things:
Cobble of milky-way,
                straying planets,
These poems, people,
                lost ponies with
Dragging saddles
                and rocky sure-foot trails.

-Gary Snyder, "Riprap"


 25 September, 2012, Richmond VA USA, 2100 hrs.


It is a fight to write this, a struggle to see it mean something and to want to see this space survive: The demands of myself and the world are different now, and urgent, unrelenting and dizzying. Tonight I am here in my home office (where I got bitten by a *$^%ing mosquito, as usual) after coming home exhausted and not even knowing why, perhaps the simple idea of having stood in a classroom on a day where it felt like every sentence was a fight to be heard, where people might have learned, maybe something, and I left exhausted, and incidentally encountered every iteration of traffic possible in all the cardinal directions of Richmond. Well, the majority of them were covered, as I happened to come from my chiropractic cult in the West End at 5:00 to my house on the North Side, on 64 as usual the stupid Boulevard exit was closed for no reason so you have to pass perilously close to the Jersey barriers, over the Beirut-quality asphalt of the right lane, east of the Boulevard, passing the comely woman wearing David Yurman/Chik-Fil-A/VCU basketball trio of billboards headed towards Belvidere. Getting off at Belvidere and seeing the same homeless guy that I made eye contact with last night, this afternoon he looked sleepy and didn’t seem to remember me, just a day later. For some reason when I saw him I thought of the Halloween store that looks bigger than it needs to be, bigger than anything related to Halloween needs to be, that seemed to pop up over night near the chiropractor’s office I was in. Passing north up through the usual Chamberlayne Avenue melee of clueless pedestrians and creative U-turns- certainly a different planet than its genteel parallel neighbor, Brook Road-, seeing the world’s most criminal grocery store, “Neighborhood Market,” that could be so much more, who I would support but I have boycotted because they sell nothing but assorted junk food dust and Murray’s frozen meats, and charge criminal prices for anything real like olive oil. Pass them, pass the Popeye’s, always remembering the one time I went there with two friends after my maiden home brewing voyage, high on what was not yet our own supply and starving. 

You didn’t think I was going to post directions to my house on the Internet, did you?

The steady cadence and cyclical nature of the world of work can change, or even chip away at, what you may have thought were any grand revelations, as the dailiness piles up, over and over, and that novelty that you might have achieved before starts to become repetitive, or deadening, and eventually oppressive. It doesn’t have to be this way, as seeing the world in different ways and experiencing something new is vital to existence, even if the world of security that we have constructed here in the good old USA requires that we go to a place, most of us anyway, and do something for eight hours so that we can achieve at least an illusion of freedom and experience away from the shackles of employment and the demands of work and a job. It sounds crazy and completely contrary to most Eastern ideas of balance and the pursuit of unified opposites, because it basically is- we endure the eight hours so we can do other things away from the eight hours. In so many ways we have just achieved a different captivity than those of the other ages. When man is not enslaved by another there is usually a good chance that he can find a way to enslave himself with something. Just give him time to find it!

For most of my life I have known that I basically hate all of the jobs that people have talked about. Being in school, when the guidance counselors would talk about jobs, I found it depressing, uninteresting, and exhausting. I recall doing these interest surveys where I would put outlandish answers just to see what the result would be (I remember saying that I would highly enjoy cutting and styling hair, for instance). Rightly or wrongly, I was never motivated to have a job and the idea of sitting in a cubicle, for example, always seemed suicidal to me. (If you're reading this in a cubicle, please do not commit suicide). I have had one real job where I actually have a salary, and I am also not required to sit down, and I am unobserved and self-directed 95% of the time. (In fact, sitting down would be a bad practice at my job, a lot of the time). Most teachers know that the desk is a crucible and an albatross, something to hide behind and clutch to when you don’t really want to weather what is going on in the classroom (I refuse to just call it a storm). Yes, you can sit down and it is physically exhausting to stand up all day long, but the desk is ultimately a crutch and not the hull in a classroom. (Not sure where these comparisons are coming from, and I'm not worried that literary criticism would have the classroom be a wheelchair equipped clipper ship). 

Other jobs I have had include a lifeguard (at pools, and the ocean in Kill Devil Hills NC), a fitness instructor (a euphemistic position which basically included changing the radio station to not bore myself to tears and cleaning equipment, and discussing attractive girls in the gym with libidinous co-workers), a Jersey Mike’s sub maker, (along with a crew of winners who used to smoke marijuana in the walk in freezer and turn off the neon “Open” sign a half hour before we closed, just to deter customers…they also bought beer for underage people), and a swim instructor (where I actually taught swimming). In Blacksburg VA I worked at a Cajun restaurant, with people who were mostly jerks, for one summer. The highlight of this was the employee parties where they closed the restaurant at midnight and allowed you to use the open bar, and you could stay till about 6AM. Needless to say these were bacchanalian massacres where people would raid the walk-in refrigerator and stuff their pockets with shrimp cocktail and the like before they went home (this actually happened, and I do remember partaking of the shrimp cocktail). There have been others, but all these jobs didn’t seem like real ones. I could continue with a lot of stories, a famous one being when I was wrongly fired from a deli because I switched shifts with another guy, and the manager said that it wasn’t allowed based on what I had written down as my availability. In other words, she knew my own schedule better than I did and thought it was etched in stone, and since my originally scheduled shift came first on the calendar, I didn't show up, and was fired. Brilliant management technique, as she naturally informed the other guy and not me. What is a real job though? Well, I don’t care about the semantics here and am going to rely on the usual assumptions: A real job has a salary, requires shoes and a shirt, and doesn’t let you come in half drunk (like the Cajun restaurant job, whose culture almost encouraged it). There was the board operator job at WXGI 950 AM in Richmond, which included listening to the Richmond Braves’ boring baseball games during the season that they won seven games during the month of June, including the night when they were playing someone who could have been the Toledo Mud Hens, and there was a rain delay, and then the game went 16 innings, which means I got home at 4AM, accounting for the other time zone starting later anyway, plus the delay. There is a level of isolation than can only be appreciated after listening to a minor league baseball game in an empty room all night for a paltry paycheck. This was a job where a woman who I had never met told me that she had drank Sloe Gin the night before and was wretchedly hungover on my first day. We had never met, and this was in an office, during a work day. One time at that job I was supposed to do some sort of menial board operations for a horse race on a Saturday morning, and I slept through it. There were no repercussions- I don’t think anyone even knew. I also translated some warning on an electrical panel into Spanish, expecting to be paid by the word in the target language, as is the norm in the translation racket*. I was paid nothing, and no one even told me thanks. But then again I slept through the horse race. Fair is fair. I wish I could recall this, but I cannot…but there was some sort of clever couplet above the toilet, advising gentlemen to hold their aim true, and I put quotation marks around it and attributed it to T.S. Eliot. No one ever mentioned this either, possibly because I did not add an Eliot-like Latin footnote.

*A common misconception is that translation work is actually free. This is not the only time I have encountered this.

Work is a strange necessity that didn’t really happen back in the hardship periods of history, when people were busy being oppressed, eating broth for dinner without salt, and writing treatises with no electricity on stoicism and ways to endure the oppression. During the Middle Ages you may have been born as a serf or born as a nobleman but that is what you were, and you just did that until you died, regardless of any sense of purpose or contentment. (Of course, minus its romantic notions of courtship and heavy mead consumption, we all know that the Middle Ages generally sucked). Likewise, you could be considered someone with the talent to regale the king or whoever with the latest etude and that is all you had to do, and you were supported, while the king had to attend your performance and attempt to stay awake and bow to people or whatever. Now we are forced to choose and that burden causes (or can cause) just as great of a sense of pain and loss as the old arrangement, since now we have the onus of “finding ourselves.” This in turn creates yet another layer of dysfunction, psychologically speaking, where each citizen in a free society has to fill his or her time and to use it “productively” (I wince at the trite term) in order to attain the material comforts that we expect to make us happy, as well as to take on the existential burden of the outcome of what we choose. The questions becomes: When do we really become happy, and which home project or possession takes us to that tipping point? How do you measure the time to stop? The answer is that you don’t, if you don't let yourself. It is necessary in our society to continue acquiring possessions and to continue improving your situation in order to have purpose outside of the workplace, to carve out a sense of autonomy and to feel fulfilled and sacrosanct as an individual. The unfortunate, or perhaps just realistic fact, is that no one is exactly immune from this groundswell. It takes a conscious resistance to really push back against the culture of material acquisition- and it isn’t automatically negative to acquire stuff (I sometimes catch myself admiring stuff that I own, and I am not materialistic: I have owned the same TV since 2001 or so). It is a cliché certainly that materialism is inherently negative, but those that do not subscribe to it, or claim not to, appropriate just as many false possessions, which are not required to be physical objects, that they prop up in place of the divine. That is the need that we are trying to replace, as we continue to work in the yard and do all of this stuff in order to reach some imaginary finish line where there is completion, contentment, and closure. The problem I have found as a homeowner is that this imaginary place is just that- not real, and unattainable. The striving continues, the ideas to improve continue, and they go on without satisfaction, year after year. In the United States this is usually just called something like ingenuity. If you watch the Home Depot commercials, which make tasks like laying insulation look tolerable, well-lit, and simple, it is hard not to catch some glimpse of the contagiousness of completing hard work. And I agree that this sense of progress and inertia toward improvement of the home and the self is not negative, per se. Really its danger is that it (to invoke the Kerouacian IT here, this isn’t that different: Purpose and calling in the world, a reason to exist, or eventual ecstasy and joy) can become negative and often replaces a search for something more daunting and urgent, the search for eternal purpose and meaning. It is a delicate equation that we face as humans, seeking to commune with a God we might even actively reject as we deny ourselves blessing through self seeking and personal goals. It gets complicated and many philosophers could easily shoot holes in this. I do not care about them and I do not need to believe them- their intellectual walls are the same principle as what I’m talking about, an appropriation of the self in place of communing and glorifying something/one external. Humans will create gods out of their own minds, in other words. Worshiping your own mind and the aggrandizement that comes with doing something like writing this paragraph (look at this clown, writing a paragraph, how vapid!) is rampant in the world we are in, and it can appear sleepily like an idea to work in the yard or menacing like a plot for something more sinister. The depravity of pleasure and our ravenous appetites are also culprits, seeking the same Medusa!

The Medusa reference, for me, was funny. Hopefully that plays well in the Heartland, where Medusa and other mythological lightweights are often forgotten.

In closing, I will say that we are not lost, and there is hope for us as we’re given zillions of chances at redemption and that we are pursued and sought after by one who loves us. Sorry if this is not Kantian enough but the reason there are moral codes is that we protect our own hearts and minds following them, we seek something other than ourselves and we become truly content and full of zeal and meaning. The life we choose is often one without rest and solace, where we want to create splendor out of something that is empty and vapid. The moments we can create based on pleasure or feeling or even brief and fleeting bawdy abandon are all destruction and damage, in disguise. Through ambition, the aggrandizement of the intellect, improvement of our personal worlds, we seek to propel ourselves into self- flagellation and castigation, the way of all flesh.

(Remember, the mind is but another extension of flesh).

Next time you’re at Lowe’s, think about this, and have a beer in your backyard instead. And feel free to invite me.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

The zany and lingering penumbra of repatriation


1645 hrs., Richmond VA, USA, 19 August 2012

"Danse Russe"

by William Carlos Williams (annotated with sycophantic, overwrought editor’s suggestions, for fun)

If when my wife is sleeping (GREAT IMAGE OF SLEEPING WIFE OH I LOVE IT…but are you sure you want this marriage to be heterosexual?)
and the baby and Kathleen (Bill- Is Kathleen the nanny? Perhaps include fantastic science fiction themed adultery scene? The saucy stuff is totally selling right now, stuff that makes “Story of the Eye” look G-rated!)
are sleeping  (More sleep. Good!)
and the sun is a flame-white disc  (Would you consider “the glowing rubber ball of Frisbee golf?” I spoke with the legal department and they are experimenting with product placements in poetry now)
in silken mists (I really wish you did this when we could have capitalized on the whole “Lord of the Rings” films and franchise…Hyperlink to Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song”?)
above shining trees,— (let’s put the Sierra Club plug I called you about here, more revenue and with a conscience! Great PR for the publishing house! Maybe make the line something about “trees going paperless.” So meta, right?)
if I in my north room (Style problem Bill- Is this a manor? I thought you were from New Jersey?)
dance naked, grotesquely ( So universal! Hyperlink to Bauhaus “Bela Lugosi's Dead”?)
before my mirror
waving my shirt round my head (see product placement note- We could totally pitch “The Terrible Towel” here- I know you like the Giants though)
and singing softly to myself:
“I am lonely, lonely.
I was born to be lonely,
I am best so!” (Hyperlink to Hank Williams “Lonesome Highway”?)
If I admire my arms, my face, (Ah yes, the old permissive Humani nihil a me alienum puto…perhaps add a pimple or a dose of jock itch for balance here)
my shoulders, flanks, buttocks (and in walks “Kathleen,” and we both burst out laughing, what with the buttock admiration?)
against the yellow drawn shades,—

Who shall say I am not
the happy genius of my household? (Nobody! You are brilliant Bill!)
-William Carlos Williams (Thinking we should drop the Carlos, too ethnically confusing, maybe change your pen name to Da Willizzys? A little hipper, younger? Market research shows “Da” in front of everything is selling better! (Pronounced “Will-lizzies”) Oh, and maybe make Kathleen a VAMPIRE?)

I know that this is yet something else fleeting, a momentary glimpse of some euphoric place that is circumstantial and not based on any kind of in excelsis spiritual state- still, real it is and feels and the world is still fecund, thoughts are new in old, old places, some of which would have been fine to be dead to me forever, some forgotten loves: Interstate 95 during the typical disaster of Saturday in August in Northern Virginia, a ballpark, the most standard iteration of Sierra Nevada. It is like there is fallout, from an event that no one else may have seen but one that makes me different. I have the same heart and the same patterns, but do I...not always. The patterns are new, there is something bolder and less reticent to be seen. Like everything this condition is temporary, but it feels strangely vital and significant and like I need to seize it without giving a damn how I am perceived, or who understands me or doesn't. Execute a danse russe in front of your mirror, naked- on acid- listening to Herb Albert and the Tijuana Brass- and the same could happen to you!

These days, this happy genius* of a household can stand naked (I am a nude enthusiast) by his couch, his traditional spot for folding clothes still warm from the dryer, and watch the street, seeing people not see him and feel superior, indoors, civilized, naked, and alive. Zany annotation cannot destroy the sentiment here, even if you may object to this poem’s carnal celebration and seizure of pleasure in the self and human form, and its 'tonomy,' -au or -an. The Latin phrase there, taken from Terence and then recycled by Marx, “Nothing human is alien to me,” what a convenient intellectual defense for recklessness and abandon, perversity and depravity. Still, dismissing the abject possibilities on offer, this feeling- of gleeful solitude in nakedness and the joy of existence which has an ability to take hold of anybody, physically, and can be rapturous when there is concert between the physical body and the health and ingratiating presence of the mind, accompanying the body, fortifying the experience and enriching moments of folding clothes even, or dances in front of the mirror if you like. Whoever Kathleen is need not be contended with, unless she breaks in there is no chance and there is no baby, but is there anything illicit in some form of the personal expression of solitude, without sight from anyone but God, without congress of flawed bodies or that complicated emotional calculus? Peeling sweaty clothes off of your back right into the washing machine, these words come to mind even if the household is empty and symbolic only, in its ordinary solitude, houses and even the President of the United States have to stand naked, as Dylan (Bob) reminds. I bet WCW had to sneak off in the middle of the night to frolic nude, if he even did, relishing that solitude, “I am lonely, lonely / I was born to be lonely, / I am best so!” 

Friday afternoon, the sun was not a silver disk or a flying saucer or any kind of intergalactic image, but full on almost overhead, a Friday afternoon and the familiar promise of free time and the kind of cultivation of thoughts that the weekdays can’t always offer; the weekend is when germination can take hold unfettered. After cycling a familiar route, up towards Ashland, but not all of the way since I am nursing the same geriatric pelvis, and a wobbly ramshackle machination results over my left foot’s cadence, most evident when climbing and when the thighs start to sing, this scene unfolded, wonderful blessing in what has been given to me, and what I am a steward of, in its most simplistic, mundane terms. Feeling the body respond again to physical activity after too much lethargy and Iberian ham feels exhilarating, and with nude laundromat activity inside afterward as a reward, not even some mad genius but just average and extremely comfortable, in the lap of luxury that is so routine and commonplace here; I am struck that our daily American comfort is just perpetual. I have not been in Africa or somewhere undeveloped either. This is a new life here now in this same place, seeing the older experiences afresh through strange, slow and sometimes surreal adjustment. 

As this verbal universe and space is going to continue to have new, familiar life I must first just say that I am forging on without a theme or a set purpose, but that I have discovered that writing is vital to me and that I should have been doing this for a long time, whether or not anyone reads it. As usual the personal becomes (or can become) a bit wince-inducing, when either the corporal, the sexual, and/or the Biblical wants to assert itself but I am alive and I will use the Pablo Neruda quote, and another humanist cop out, even though I would not classify myself as a humanist per se**: “I confess that I have lived.” (Happy Humanist Cop Out Day, aka everyday). So now that the particulars have been established allow me to sing the days of work and routine that people complain about all of the time, even when it affords us such comfort and such splendor that we don’t even realize it. I’m talking to you, probably.

*Genius credentials still awaiting arrival, for now consider me a genius in the Wile E. Coyote sense of the word:


**Per quod as well, as humans are fallible and occasionally flatulent or otherwise odoriferous creatures

This weekend I experienced a wealth of social activity, despite time made for poetic allusion during the wash cycle. After my return to the sport of cycling, which had emotional impact as I remembered the day seeing the riders come down the circuit of the Avenue des Élysées in Paris, seeing the elites of the sport in the world who have lived in the saddle since they could walk, and feeling on some astral level that as a humans with the same interests and passions, there is a kinship, even if they could smoke me with one leg. I was wearing my jersey that I bought in Paris as well, near the Louvre Museum of all places, where they were mainly selling yellow jerseys (this may be redundant) and I found a different, simple French cycling federation jersey (and talked the lady’s price down significantly). I told her that no real cyclist just slaps on a yellow jersey for a casual ride in the neighborhood- people tend not to sport gold medals either. It is sort of like wearing Patton’s helmet when you’re a private in the infantry. It just isn’t done. So, there I was, non yellow-jerseyed and feeling like I had the legendary mystical wings of the maillot jaune anyway. The day included some very basic unrated climbs, as I am just trying to get back in the saddle, pun completely intended. I did 20 miles, which for my condition and the trick knee, I consider an accomplishment. This week’s two yoga classes were also both a bit brutal 90 minute affairs in which I left drenched, humbled, and satisfied. To quote George Costanza, upon recovering from impotence at the taste of a mango, “I’m back, baby!” I felt so grateful for youth (although fleeting, yeah yeah yeah, Old Time or somebody is still a flyin’ / This same flower or convenient beautiful plant metaphor that smiles today / Tomorrow may be dying) and the body’s resilience, and how fast I am blessed to be, and feeling in shape again. If anyone out there wants to get on the fitness wagon, or off the wagon, whichever the good one is, I will add that it was not always that way, even as I am lucky to have the metabolism of a hummingbird, I still must work (like everyone) at maintaining muscle memory (like aging Evander Holyfield against Lennox Lewis in 1999) and cardiovascular fortitude, which can wane very fast. The attrition of time is not to be underestimated, which works both ways. For example, during the upward curve of gaining fitness, persistence will be rewarded, and the body will respond and results will appear, sometime. The common Sisyphean analogy applies because so many people abandon their goals, and their consistency suffers, and they have to get back on the horse again and start fresh. My experience is that once you have established a certain core level of fitness, it degenerates much slower- although it still degenerates as mortality still applies- than when you are just establishing your body’s fitness patterns. In the beginning the body is aghast and confused, wondering what is going on that you are working so hard, rebelling against the notion of an accelerated heart rate. Later, the body will chide you for your inactivity, craving exercise and rewarding you with better sleep and a sharper mind because of it. In addition to that, your tastes will reflect the needs of your body, which means that you will crave healthier food.

To prove this, today I was craving bacon and I ate some. Quite healthy!

Leaving the metaphysical there for the practical, not a grotesque happy genius but Richard Simmons aficionado, sweating to the oldies, back here in the type A world that is insidious and contagious, but probably overall “good for you.” I do not know what other countries, including Spain, really do for fitness and maybe I was just blind to it there, but it seemed like people were fit but the idea of fitness, the Platonic form, was not nearly as praised in the culture, as it is here through glorification of athletes, advertising, and massive budgets and revenues for the sports and entertainment industries. Actually, that’s false. I’m sure it’s the same. Rafael Nadal was on Iberia’s in-flight magazine (boring to read) and Alberto Contador was inexplicably (or his cardboard cutout) in a mattress store in San Sebastian, even as he is currently banned from cycling for doping.

I was able to attend my first Major League Baseball game since about 1996, when I saw the Detroit Tigers and the Baltimore Orioles play at Camden Yards. Cecil Fielder hit a home run to left field and slowly ambled around the bases to the boos of the home team’s crowd. This was during Cal Ripken, Jr.’s campaign to break Lou Gehrig’s record for most consecutive games played. At that time the Orioles were decent, and managed by fellow VA Tech alumnus Johnny Oates, who is no longer living. There were three Ripkens in the organization: Billy, who probably felt ignored and played second base, and Cal, Sr., who was some sort of manager and usually was found at 3rd base coach. They actually had a shot each season at dethroning the Red Sox or the Yankees in the American League East. The Toronto Blue Jays were also good at the time- a meaner and less vocally inclined bird (Think of the sound of the doo wop group the Orioles, then imagine a blue jay at a birdfeeder, where they always act like jackasses). My favorite MLB team is the “Birds” but I would be lying if I said I knew anything about baseball anymore. Still, I was reminiscing there in the ballpark thinking of how much I loved the Orioles in those days, and how I would stay up too late watching them on HTS, an extinct regional sports network that carried them. Once I was in Camden Yards and they were playing the Seattle Mariners, and Ken Griffey, Jr. hit a home run into right field (I can’t recall any Orioles home runs for some reason) that cleared the fence by so much that it hit the old railroad warehouse that the stadium’s designers were wise enough to leave in place. Yesterday evening in fact, I saw the National League East’s first place team, the Washington Nationals, play the New York Mets. There weren’t many hits in the game, maybe 9, and the final score was 2-0 as a result of somebody on the Mets hitting a home run with one guy on. I clearly followed it very closely. After so much time away from baseball, on top of two months away from the States, It was fascinating to see what “American culture” is like inside that oft-heralded symbol of our national inclusiveness and the spirit of ’76, the ballpark (Benjamin Franklin is said to have invented the dugout, based on a dream about his French mistress and a squirrel***). What follows are some obvious observations, perhaps. So what. For one, the volume of food is incredible, and everyone seemed to be eating (the game started at 7 so what choice do you really have). Everything was gigantic and of course the prices were absolutely criminal- beers ran $8-$9 depending on where you got them, one single hot dog was $5, anything resembling a meal would be $12-$18. More baffling was the fact that entire families, like the one in the row in front of me, where the father who was a large, slightly obese man whose elbow seemed to be magnetized to whatever drink was in my cup holder at any given time, would be eating. All of them would have something, which means that you’d have to spend $100 inside the ballpark just to feed everyone if you brought 3 children, or man or maid servants of your choosing. I bought one round of beers (2 beers) and a Polish sausage (they were out of Italian) and it was $25. Simply put, I noticed the sheer, famous and unbridled American excess. As I said all of the portions were monstrous, but on top of that, I just felt a sense of a general heavy consumption level- people going back for popcorn, ice cream, those Dipping Dots that are everywhere, you name it. Not to mention the sauce- which of course was flowing freely, $9 beers or not.  As the game ended, Third Eye Blind, of all bands, were invited to perform, and the concessionaires opened the beer sales again.  This meant there was all of a 30 minute gap where beer was not sold. (It is customary for ball parks to cease beer sales after the 7th inning). I’ll admit it, as a creature of habit, feeling the inertia of the place, I too went back and paid $8 for another 12 oz. of Sierra Nevada. (At least the better beer was basically the same price as the Coors Light/Miller Lite varieties). I guess “when in Rome” would apply here, and I am in no way above gorging myself on processed meat products and overpriced beer. See what I mean by your body craving healthy food? Beer and sausages=healthiest combination ever.

In comparison with my memories of Baltimore, the DC crowd was much better behaved, quieter, and not very vociferous at all. During the 9th inning the scoreboard did its pep talk thing- overdid it, really- with automated sound bites culled from inspirational speeches in movies, and the crowd came to life. Once the inning started, it was quiet again, which wasn’t helped but the fact that the Nationals hitters all got behind in the count and popped out, struck out, or ground out respectively. The crowd knew the Nationals were comfortably in first place in the NL East, and the vibe for the younger set was almost like “bring on the concert/let’s go to Georgetown/Adams Morgan,” while the vibe for the older set was “let’s go home and sleep.” In Baltimore I remember seeing the usual example of the incensed man screaming obscenities at the umpire within earshot of children, like me at the time. Perhaps it was because I was in the outfield seats- there is a bar called the Red Porch in center field, and the people there looked like they didn’t even care if they saw a pitch- but it was a stoic, well-behaved crowd. DC is a place with a highly educated populace, where people seem to talk about where they went to school more often than other cities, and as a city it projects a certain gentility- on Capitol Hill everyone seems to dress like they're going to the Kentucky Derby this time of year, all pastels and seersucker. (I blend well with this, as my complexion is fair). It doesn’t have the competitive feeling of New York where everyone is constantly trying to be the smartest in the room, although it can have that vibe at times. I haven’t spent as much time in Baltimore, but I don’t see it being like that. I spent a rainy weekend there last spring and it was softer, quiet, humbled, with rust, visible and striking poverty, and decrepit and crumbling buildings. Every city has something crumbling, and I guess it is all crumbling, everywhere, in some way, although some cities have a talent for showing it more. You don’t need to brandish your C.V. as much, if at all. Baltimore is a lot scrappier, and known as a maniacal sports town still bitter over the loss of the Colts. 

I will close this epistle: two very different places, two ages of selfhood, two memories of the great American pastime, still alive and kicking even when you let your interest lay fallow for half your life. Again, when I look at the details of the character of life here and at the wealth of blessing, everywhere, in common places, there is something reassuring about being home, the happy baseball ignorant genius of my household.

***100% invented fact

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Mosquito bites on native soil, chair'd in the adamant of Time

14 August, 2012, 2130 hrs., Richmond VA, USA

As I write this my life has resumed some level of normalcy, as I experienced that great American archetypical tradition of cursing your way through mowing your grass and dealing with weeds and washing your car. I am officially 100% fed up with the condition of my yard and its billions of mosquito inhabitants but that may be the least interesting subject known to man, so I will table it.

What follows are the few passages written in Andorra and beyond, which I can't remember since I don't religiously title the posts with locations and times. At any rate you will notice a certain tone that says, "readjusting to home country, conflicting emotions result." Indeed. I also think that Jim Morrison may have just been talking about Los Angeles and is using L'america as some sort of sly pun. But what is written remains. In the words of Yul Bryner as Ramses, "So let it be written, so let it be done."

It appears that this blog still exists. Interesting.


2 August 2012, La Massana, Principality of Andorra, 1235 hrs.
To begin with the usual corrections: I know nothing about Holland and have nothing against it, Beckenbauer is a German anyway, and who cares about that. That last post was so extensive that I barely edited it at all, and it was late, and I was in the lobby of the hotel I’m not really staying in as you’ll see.

Andorra is actually a co-principality since there is a French prince involved (he hasn’t been showing himself much) and there is an Andorran prince, or something. Yawn. A guy at the nature center who was also a ski instructor with minor halitosis gave us an impromptu lesson on Andorran history. Yesterday we did a hike in the El Serrat area to a lovely 15 degree Celcius lake called Estany Blau. It was pretty interesting because Andorra is small enough that we inadvertently hiked into France, which was evident as people on the trail greeted us in Castilian, Catalan, and then French. All within a few hours, and the languages were changing. We went to the lake with packed bocadillos, the usual chorizo, olive oil, good bread, and some cheese that comprises the typical Spanish sandwich. Both of us got in the lake, which was deep and clear, although I lasted about one minute since I am cold natured. The flies were everywhere since they had not seen a human in some time, but I managed to fall asleep on a rock, this time with my pants as a pillow instead of American literature, which was one hundred times better than the Forum (and there were no people in sight, much less Peruvian festivals or screaming children). Coming back we heard lots of cowbells and wondered where they were, only to see a herd appear right on the path. Luckily they didn’t get spooked and try to charge us and we passed through without incident. It was nice and just what we came for, no sign of urban blight or Pakistanis selling mojitos. (The beaches in Barceloneta, while flush with naked women, are swarmed with mostly Pakistani guys hawking “cervezabeer” or “icecoldmojitooo,” which got old). It was even cold, which is unbelievable compared to the rest of the summer. I managed to get sunburn again even though I wore my 50 SPF clown makeup sunscreen that has the consistency of shoe polish. It is painful to rub in, or impossible.

Since we are marooned at the Hotel Font, a hotel that has fought very, very hard to earn its two stars- I think they just gave it two stars because the rooms have two beds- (although a lady in a restaurant told us it should really be one star), we have to hang out in the lobby of the Magic Massana, which is not a fortune teller but the sister hotel up the street. It is always funny whenever we ask for anything since there is no reception, telephone, WiFi, or anything here at the Font. The Font residents are treated as second class citizens. Last night we mentioned that we have only paid for three nights of parking and we are staying for four, and the concierge mentioned that we could just settle when we checked out, until he found out that we were actually guests at the Font. “Ohhh. Well. If you’re at the Font…” 

Once that was known, it was time to pay right then or else. Also, the so called free swimming pool costs 6 Euros and you have to wear a swim cap and goggles. It is always open anyway so we plan to just sneak in. They can’t kill us. There is also a sauna and steam that I plan to surreptitiously use for free. I mean, we are paying all of $25 a night. We are entitled to free use of the other hotel that we have to check with to do anything, right?

Last night in the Magic lobby, while using their WiFi and in the glow of the better version of the Font, we happened upon a group of Dutch geezers who were all merrymaking and singing and carrying on in Dutch. There is an Irish bar in the lobby, even though they play bad DJ tracks that seem to be overly prevalent here (and in Spain). I have heard the same songs everywhere I go, whether it is in a café, bank, grocery store, or a bar/restaurant. Everyone seems to have the same playlist. That is also getting old- I guess there is only so much distribution to Europe from American pop factories and they get a very small, terrible sample. So many of the songs have the exact same techno beat, which sounds like Jamaican dancehall in its dominant feel, except with quarter notes pounding on the bass drum, with the typical upbeat feel on the high hat. In other words, the cookie cutter electronic beat that you have heard a thousand times, from Trent Reznor on down. They also don’t say techno anymore, they say electro. To me electronica would be the more interesting version, like Aphex Twin or something, and techno is something that is just the bass drum quarter note thing that I just described, like you hear in an aerobics class (no one uses that word anymore either, I assume). Once upon a time there was a distinction between “house,” which had basic quarter notes pounding like Daft Punk (not playing at my house) and “jungle” which was busier and more drug influenced, I would say. I can’t think of an artist in the jungle category since the only electronica I ever liked was DJ Shadow, but maybe Spooky D or the Chemical Brothers would count at times.

This is the last full day in Andorra, and I plan to see some more ancient churches and whatnot, even though I have been in so many old, old buildings here in Europe, and I am a little exhausted of filling time with cultural activities. Sometimes I just want to go see a movie or do very little, or do something like exercise. Here it is a major shame that I am without a bike, as there are serious (too serious for me right now) Coll d’Ordino, El Serrat, etc. which look killer and brutal. We have driven these in the Mini and you often have to downshift to 2nd and even 1st gear at times, so imagine doing them on a bike. You see people doing those climbs, some composed and with a sincere, consistent cadence, and some flailing, out of the saddle in pain. Either way, if you trained here you’d be a beast pretty fast. Or you would give up and stop cycling. The Tour de France has dipped into Andorra a few times in its history- in the lobby of the Magic Massana- not here since remember our lobby is a hallway with automatic lights and a phone for show- they have signs from a previous tour on the wall.

The Olympics are underway and I have seen basically nothing save the opening ceremonies in a bar in Barcelona where people were cheering/booing each country as it came out. France was heavily booed. An English guy booed the USA without knowing I was right behind him so I was forced to pull the Saturday Night Live sarcastic clapping family move in his direction. Last night I did turn it on in time for synchronized diving (whatever), and China vs. China female table tennis (a curiosity from an alien world). Then there was about ten minutes of gymnastics with Chinese 10 year olds against Romanians and Americans and whoever else. Today France-Lithuania basketball was on. There seems to be a badminton controversy that is shaking the very foundations of the badminton community, according to the BBC World Service here. Naturally, the Font TV looks like it was put in around 1987 and has maybe 12” to it. The channel showing the Olympics is in French so it takes a little away from the spectacle.

All right, time to get out of here since clearly I love this hotel room so much!

August 10, 2012, 1800 hrs., Richmond VA, USA

I am back here in the same office where this started, although it isn’t as hot somehow even though I can’t imagine how anyone lived through this summer here since it seems unbearable. I feel like I am swimming through the humidity and my body still doesn’t know what time it is after two days.
The future is unwritten as Joe Strummer reminded us but I may even continue this in some undetermined capacity as life observations can still exist in your home country. So far it feels very slow and quiet here, and people are not awake late. I was in Kroger last night around 9:30 and the place was deserted, whereas in Spain it would be full of people and activity. The cars look gigantic, yes I see more fat people suddenly, and all of the rooms in my house seem capacious all of a sudden, most noticeably the shower. It is nice not banging into the sides of the shower or having lights cut off randomly or the water turn cold, all of which were common occurrences there. I DO miss already the custom of sitting down and enjoying yourself in the evening, time that is probably taken up in the US by being in a car, going to the gym, or running errands. I do miss the language, strangely, as I enjoyed not necessarily hearing everything that was said around me before. The world is quite mundane a lot of the time, when you understand everything. It feels strangely alienating to go from place to place in a car and not even have the chance to see someone else and speak to them.

All of that said I have not yet readjusted and I still feel kind of like a stranger in my own country. It is normal when you’re away for so long, and I don’t plan to disown the US, but it is very different and of course not always for the better. I will say that writing this has lost some of its luster as I suddenly feel a greater proximity to whoever might read it, like why tell them here when I can speak to them in person. That, and I can be seen immediately, and am not masked on a different continent. The mundane necessities (not the bear ones…best joke ever) have rejoined me full force as I was met with a voluminous pile of mail and remembered commitments and responsibilities that are too boring to list. There is cosmetic damage to the house since monsoon season happened while I was away, and the yard resembles a feral jungle. I can’t find my IPod. I have no idea where it is and there is a good chance I’ll have to replace that along with the cell phone. 

Suddenly, this is not interesting…I am in my house talking about chores and to-do lists, not experiencing the world anew and learning. What happened? I guess I have to find a way to do that here, as I do but why share it, you are probably nearby and you know what I can see and do here.

With that I leave you uncertain of the future of the Peaches en Regalia. I appreciate that so many people have actually read this. I know it is hard for me, at least, to devote time to reading on the Internet, but maybe I’m old fashioned and like the tactile sensation and the smell of dust that a book affords. 

Dust and literature have always gone together, as dust is the dead skin off of your own face perhaps. Is it? I don’t know, not going to look it up but think about it, the remnants of what comes off of you when you’re molting or wilting physically on one level and maybe another if you feel like it, that’s in the books in your library, the labyrinth of desires, fears, and atrocities that all civilizations build in one way or another. Tolstoy wrote in a study containing the couch that his mother, of course dead, gave birth to him on. I can end sentences with prepositions when they contain such gravitas- Tolstoy’s study contained the very weight of mortality and a physical presence reminding him of the omnipresence of death within life. Death is not unreal as it is the most real and obvious thing that can happen and it will happen to you! We have removed it to morgues and hospitals but it is still here.

Death metal, however, it is not natural and should be abolished.

VOTE ANDES…He’ll abolish parole and death metal! (Found on the Draconian Party ticket)

Now for a change of tack…
TACT

STARBOARD TACK READY ABOUT

Whatever it is. Not looking it up.

Upon returning to the USA I also realized that my IPod had mysteriously vanished, which I already said, and allow me to include that American music matters and that trivial pop music and rock and roll from the United States have substance and meaning and qualify as culture. It is fashionable, inexplicably, as this happens even within our own borders, to decry the lack of civilization or culture in the United States and denounce all of our institutions as vapid and poorly conceived imitations of others. This may be true in some arenas of life, whatever they are, like maybe in Las Vegas, which of course is a plastic city with examples of things that actually exist somewhere else. 

This is not true with music, at least popular music- obviously Rigoletto the tragic clown opera is not the category I am discussing here. Jazz, blues, soul, R and B, funk, rock and rock and all of its iterations- all of that has its genesis in the very American continent, not to mention Cajun, gospel, bluegrass, and countless other subgenres. I had this realization when I was in Madrid listening a lot to the Doors album “L.A. Woman” which has the Whitmanesque and hence bearded and beer-gutted Morrisonian rumination on his native country, “L'america,” a song basically about reaping the pleasures of excess on a virgin continent, rendering the freedom cliché into a ravenous feast of consumption and delight in wealth and carnal abandon. In its own way this was the musical equivalent of enjoying a hamburger (which are typically worse in Spain) or a Coca-Cola (which is actually better). It is a pirate fantasy of the land representing limitless possibility and self discovery, a literal celebration of gold and beads. Being the Doors, it really is more evocative as music, and despite Morrison’s gift for lyricism, this song is more about the sounds and impulses than the denotation of its lyrics. I cannot prove this. No one is verifying this.

On a different, more wholesome score, here back in the USA when I have been without the schizophrenic IPod, always shuffling away from a coherent theme and bastardizing any album you care to name just by the shuffle function, I have been forced to listen to albums. I have listened to several of course, but for some reason I have had the Best of the Beach Boys on a lot in my car, an original album that came out on vinyl when the Beach Boys existed and is probably about 35 minutes long. It contains a lot of their pre- “Pets Sounds” hits from before the Brian Wilson genius period then breakdown, which praise a different America that will probably never exist again. Being born in 1980 I am led to believe that young people sang about cars or motorbikes (“Little Deuce Coupe,” “Little Honda”), surfing* , broken hearts (the sublime “The Warmth of the Sun,” elegiac enough for a funeral), puppy love (“You’re So Good to Me”) and even included their families and honoring their parents. If you look past the roller coaster harmonies on the choruses of “Fun Fun Fun,” after daddy has definitively taken the T-Bird away and the speaker or singer of the song’s character realizes that this gives him a better chance of seeing the lady in question, the song’s protagonist- she now has no car, so what choice does she have- there is a backing vocal that sneakily says “you shouldn’t have lied now.” NEVER in a million years would a song today that was about some sort of modern equivalent of getting the T-Bird and lying about it type of rebellion have some sort of concession or admonition like that, along with going to the hamburger stand instead of the library like she told her old man. Similarly, on the gorgeous “Kiss Me, Baby,” the singer tells us that he felt a tear driving away from the monumental break up scene, then sugarcoated his feelings to his “folks” before going to bed and tossing and turning, wondering if she was still awake like him. Such a sentiment does not exist in our popular music anymore, I’m sorry. Lastly, “The Warmth of the Sun,” another gossamer ballad sung by Brian Wilson, contains some touching moments about the consolation in nature and beauty of the world, the warmth of the sun that lingers after a sunset, even in isolation and with a broken heart.  The songs dare to contain the freedom and ecstasy of tears, the ability for unabashed roaring.

That is rare.

“In My Room” perhaps deserves special mention as it is one of the most honest songs ever written about the isolation of adolescence, the temple that is created in the bedroom when sudden individuality is necessary and urgent, at the age when yearning is most acute and new. Maybe if you go to a mental institution this feeling comes back- but at no other time in life is the bedroom such a sanctuary.

*The legend goes that the only Beach Boy that surfed was Mike Love, and perhaps this is evident as a line on “Surfin’ USA” says “we can’t wait for June.” Surfing is a year round sport, and in California the water isn’t really warm in the summertime anyway. Here on the East Coast, the best surf of the year is typically in the later fall and winter. Waiting for June…and it will likely be flat. Then again, the Beach Boys were from California, where they don't have to rely on beach breaks as much.

Returning or perhaps arriving at what I had intend to say: American music, in its best examples (there are plenty of wretched examples too) should give you some sort of pride, as it contains multitudes of feeling and captures a world that is unique and can be celebrated without irony or apologetic doubling over. There have to be more modern examples, and examples from many genres- most notably jazz- even as I have chosen some rock and roll archetypes here since that has been what I've had on lately. Another non-modern example would be the Grateful Dead- never a band I adored, but clearly American and nothing else. Their only influences are from roots and folk music of the USA. I listened to a 45:00 medley on YouTube of “Estimated Prophet,” “St. Stephen,” “Eyes of the World” that was performed at Winterland in San Francisco in 1977, and even though Donna what’s her name is sort of out of tune and Bob Weir’s vocals sound occasionally horrible, it made me glad to be home. It is ours and it is genuine, a bit sloppy, maybe derivative, but real nonetheless. It has been said many ways but the potpourri of American culture is what makes it dynamic, exciting, and unique. It is what makes us paragons for ridicule and celebration in the world. And we shouldn’t be too timid to allow ourselves to be proud, and even revel in its riches:
         
Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
All, all alike endear’d, grown, ungrown, young or old,
Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
Chair’d in the adamant of Time.
-Walt Whitman, "America"

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Barcelona pictures


Me in the kitchen at the Sunshine Hostal

Kisses on the wall, for some reason

Aboard the Titanic










Parc Guell







View of Barcelona from Parc Guell

























Los frauleins y yo




And again, in the Metro


Titus and a bad movie poster

Frauleins

La Sagrada Familia

























Piloting the Mini