Monday, October 6, 2014

Robot Questions

Today's question:
"How would your life be different if the following people were robots: your boss, your spouse, your son?"

So many wonderful possibilities here, I love robots and am very handy with machines if they need a fixin'. So, if my Boss was a robot he would certainly be more logical and therefore would be susceptible to the "Liar's Paradox" whereby I could shut him down with an easy philosophical quandary, put my consciousness into his robot body and take over THE WORLD MUah ha ha ha ha ha!!!!!!!!

If my Son was a robot he would be so very grateful that I was kind enough to keep him in a small closet under the stairs and feed him magnetic filing scraps, so he could have enough energy to clean the house, wash my clothes and massage my bunions. (A strange word really, so close to onions, but not at all close.) Then I would instruct him to use his robot super powers to help me take over THE WORLD MUAH ha ha ha ha ha!!!!

If my spouse was a robot,.... hmmmm if my spouse were a robot I would be sad, I think. The upshot would be an indestructible and awesome unicorn robot who could answer any question and always give me a ride home from the party. The far larger downside would be me with bruised lips and metal splinters in my hands trying to make out and get to 2nd base, so instead I'd use the super powerful unicorn robot brain to help me bio-dinetically engineer an organic Michelina spouse with pink hair and a crazy good sense of humor like I'm used to and together all 3 of us would then take over THE WORLD MUAH ha ha ha ha ha!!


Fire

On it's own the literal chemical reaction has little smell, you can't touch it (well, you can't snuggle with it let's say) and it has been a fascination of mine my entire life. I melted green army men in my closet, stole my parents lighter to heat up a nail and make laser gun wounds in star wars figures, lit a mattress abandoned in the alley on fire where it smoldered for days under a gas meter, sent candles suspended by helium balloons in the air, made torches out of broom sticks and t-shirts, used any flammable aerosol to 'season' my clothes as part of making them look punk, torched countless crosswalk christmas trees tossed out on the street after the new year and performed many experiments on my siblings toys.

We use many expressions culturally based on our mutual admiration of combustion and flames, "she was on fire", "we burned them bad", "we torched the other team", "scorched earth policy" as well as "burned my bridges", "flamed me for saying that" and "I was blazed".
So, good and bad we have all had some kind of relationship with fire probably going back to primitive times.

You're probably thinking 'this is going to end in tragedy' but you'd be incorrect, I've never hurt any living thing or destroyed property (severely). I'm actually advocating the use of (controlled) fire and burning because my experience with it has been so cathartic and often exhilarating. I love a ritual, and when it came time to shred some documents (bills, hate mail, divorce decree, collection notifications, a formal reprimand and anything from the government) I scooped them all up and put them in my "Simpson's 10th anniversary" limited edition weber grill and lit those puppies up! It was so freeing to watch all those formerly important paperworks flame up and crisp to a rich black ashy color. Man!

As good as a few months in therapy and a ton cheaper.
So give it a try, find a nice safe place outdoors, pull out some of those items you've kept for no other reason than to torture yourself over your past transgressions, and burn baby burn. D'Enjoy!


Creationism Pank style

Shouldn’t there be a word for that moment – when you walk into a club or show and you’re certain it is where you are supposed to be, taste something incredible and realize how it just shaped your life or saw a massive scene unfold that you knew you would never forget. Love words! And it seems like there are a boatload of romance languages that get it and have a word or phrase for these things. Something better than ‘killer’ ‘awesome’ or ‘badass’ to lend weight to uppermost points that inform your psyche or soul.

In a science class once the Teacher made us all do an exercise where we put hands into a box that had a variety of objects plastic wrapped and sealed and we had to guess what they were. Not sure I remember how well I did at it but it was a revelation at the end for me, there was one box we hadn’t used up on the desk and as I asked “what’sinthisbox?!” I shoved my hand through the hole. My hand came out faster than it went in covered with dark red gelatinous muck, and she turned to me and smiled as she said “the heart of a pig”.

That’s when I needed a word, not the expletive I used to describe my shocking, humbling and revelatory experience that got me a week of detention. A word that would have let everyone know I wasn’t angry but just discovered a few important life lessons all at once and I knew it.

1. Don’t stick your uninvited hand into a strange box.
2. Adults may not have your best interest in mind at all times.
3. There may never be another box so you’d better stick your hand in there.
4. I could pull this stunt all over town and probably not get arrested.

So if you’ve got some suggestions send those in, let’s get some more words in the mix around here. How about shartism, or mullniferious?


Wicked Fall Thoughts

Something Wicked This Way Comes is always in my thoughts this time of year.
Even the crazy time change where we lose an hour seems to be something brought about by the dark carnival, and I imagine Ray Bradbury chuckled a little to himself in 1966 when Daylight Savings became a law for most of the 50 states. Spin around forward and you get older but spin around backwards,.... who knows what could happen.

Fall seems to be the most conflicted of seasons depending on where you're at in your life, it's a sensational time for watching nature shake herself and change, ultimately hibernating or withering away, but also to harvest and gather the bounty of summers harvest and stock up for the cold. The end of summer is finalized for many children by the start of school, so there's that, but as adults with children most of us can't friggin wait!

The beginning of the 'holiday' season is also something I dread about Fall but Halloween offsets that a bit with it's pure impulses of fright, candy and rich display creativity. Music and theater often begin new tours and opportunities to explore and participate in revelry abound in some of the most unexpected places. One of my favorite combinations of feelings are the creepy/nostalgic things, like how I feel when I read the aforementioned Bradbury book, or some Lovecraft stories on a windy night that gets dark so quickly and the sun seems to race it's way below the horizon. Light a candle and let's observe the summer's frolic and fun slip quietly into a dreamy nightshade gaze together. Because if any book ever made it clear that going back to being young, (or getting old before your time) was a mistake, it was that book for me.


Unmarvel

    You marvel at the images
    In the center of your screen
    Baking pieces of loss
    Putting them far inside
    Fortunate from folly...
    Preying on all spirits
    It brings a special broth
    It means to leave you dry

    When you hold that sickness close
    Springs of toxin flow right by
    Inching and squirming rivulets
    Parching your soul and mind
    And what it takes is so minuscule
    Where it starts is so very small
    Leaps are not needed to fly
    Just step one foot away from the hole
    Echoing some standard past
    Dropping like the frail
    Pouring into the pail
    Surprisingly seldom snapped
    All the way to the back
    Marching you into the sink
    Impossible to almost get out
    Hailing the sun back into your camp
    Oh yeah the soul sucking sound
    Step away from the soft cliff now
    Step off when you mind the gap
    We’ve all had that stumble down
    We know where it is you’re at
    Marked like prosperous damsels
    Melted like drowning the fat
    It could make lynching a savoir
    Might be a sharp quick boost is best

Sunday, October 5, 2014

What would Jim Do?


Today's question (on below youtube video): "Would Jim approve of this? Should he? Such an artist of the most analog, live action form?? But I cant stop grooving"
YEAH! and a notha HELL YEAH! I can't pretend to know Jim Henson at all but I feel like he would approve of this tribute to the great MCA and that you found it on your birthday and it made you happy. I think he would also approve of you posting from your partners FB account by accident or not and so do I. What ever you do do not stop grooving, for any reason ever.

Grooving is what keeps the birds and bees doin it, keeps the flowers and the trees movin it and gets the party from a song to a bomb. I love that it's the Chef and Animal and Beeker, seems to me those are darn good reps for the Beasties. 


Enjoy this day like crazy and then get up tomorrow and do it again, you've got mountains to move and your love can make it happen. I will testify to the power of the muppets, rock and roll and laughter with no shame whatsoever. Let's try to get that started in the most unlikely places; you at the DMV? Start a sing a long! You stuck in Jury duty? Start humming the theme to the Good the Bad and the Ugly. They can't arrest you for humming right? I love you!

The King is dead


Elvis Presley died on my birthday and we've been locked in mortal combat ever since, I never fail to give a nod to the king however he is not my king. Madonna and I share a birthday, and I think that's just peachy. When I was in Wales I got mistaken for one of the locals more than a few times, but I couldn't understand a word and they knew their mistake as soon as I uttered a syllable. The view from the back porch is of a huge retirement apartment complex, the only time all the curtains are pulled back from the windows is when the apartment is vacant. My bones feel a bit more flexible today for no apparent reason. My permanent adult quandary is that I'm not a fan of shaving but a beard is too itchy. The only time I adore driving through the suburbs is late at night. Fires are burning a couple hundred miles north and when the wind blows the right way you can definitely smell smoke. The first time I drank to get drunk it was jim beam and I still can't stand the smell of that stuff. Something about a red sparkly drum set makes me feel like I'm falling in love, butterflies and squishy brain kind of stuff. If you need to exercise some angst take a trip to the ocean and yell at the incoming tide, works for me every time. Night night.

Paperbacks

A few years ago before the internet there used to be shelves and shelves of cheap paperback books everywhere. I would spend hours (really) just picking through them and looking at the covers. The Sci-Fi and mystery ones were my favorites for sure because of the fantastical images on the jackets. Both my parents plowed through these kinds of books once and there'd be a stack on the basement steps and on any horizontal surface out of sight in the garage or attic. I learned a lot about how men and women thought of each other and what being an adult might mean. I got to think about all kinds of strange issues and worlds from ridiculous and amazing imaginations.

Animal Languages

Animal Languages! I believe! We've had a dee-oh-gee for a couple years now and it's been a wonderment. If you had asked me a few years back "do animals have anything resembling language?" I would've recited what I've read and heard from scientific types who operate in mostly literal worlds of measurement, which is 'no, animals don't have the ability to communicate complex or abstract ideas or feelings; therefore they do not have what humans call language.' At this point it's really tough to qualify what language is but I can tell you that when I come home or into a room and Lou is sitting in the sun he gives me a lazy 'what's up' nod, I'm positive.

If you watch enough of those animals clips on you tube you can also see a pattern emerge especially among mama and baby animals where it's obvious they are not only communicating but transferring authentic and relatively complicated feelings or thoughts. Just the other day Michelina taught a young pup how to get down some stairs and it worked despite the fact that the little fuzz ball couldn't even see beyond the horizon of the step she was on. It gives me courage and hope that this kind of conveyance between animals is not completely measurable in terms we can plot and chart to the millionth decimal, these are some of the natural connections that exist because they can.

My Internet Phone

The internet on a mobile phone is like a bar of soap used for so long that it has become thin and pliable, almost translucent in places. I got confused and tried to wash myself with my phone the other day but instead of feeling clean it left me feeling overexposed and giddy. I held them both up and compared, analyzed the purpose and intent and realized that the soap was much more valuable in a specific way. The immense wonder of being able to absorb millions of bits of data through a lens the size of a bar of soap stands as an achievement of epic proportions but the shape, the shape was the thing that struck me.

A sponge, tin of mints, a cassette, a wallet, a deck of cards, and the aforementioned soap and phone share a shape that lends itself to a personalized interaction. Everything but the phone has specific expected results, a use that can be measured by ability or effect. That phone has bridged the gap though; it’s brought a new and immense range of information, instruction and distraction. Although mostly benign there is potential for conveyance of terrible or wonderful information, questions answered and directions given as well as a dark harvest of so many voices that demand attention, especially in the dreary undertow of the comments sections.

I guess if I had to choose it would probably be the soap or the deck of cards, and really if I needed to convey some information the soap can be used to make words or pictures and the cards can create the same kinds of magical illusions and deliberate trickery that the internet brings you on the phone. Maybe they’re not that dissimilar after all.
  
The internet on a mobile phone is like a bar of soap used for so long that it has become thin and pliable, almost translucent in places. I got confused and tried to wash myself with my phone the other day but instead of feeling clean it left me feeling overexposed and giddy. I held them both up and compared, analyzed the purpose and intent and realized that the soap was much more valuable in a specific way. The immense wonder of being able to absorb millions of bits of data through a lens the size of a bar of soap stands as an achievement of epic proportions but the shape, the shape was the thing that struck me.

A sponge, tin of mints, a cassette, a wallet, a deck of cards, and the aforementioned soap and phone share a shape that lends itself to a personalized interaction. Everything but the phone has specific expected results, a use that can be measured by ability or effect. That phone has bridged the gap though; it’s brought a new and immense range of information, instruction and distraction. Although mostly benign there is potential for conveyance of terrible or wonderful information, questions answered and directions given as well as a dark harvest of so many voices that demand attention, especially in the dreary undertow of the comments sections.

I guess if I had to choose it would probably be the soap or the deck of cards, and really if I needed to convey some information the soap can be used to make words or pictures and the cards can create the same kinds of magical illusions and deliberate trickery that the internet brings you on the phone. Maybe they’re not that dissimilar after all.

Love


Hi! You're important and valuable! You've got things to do and say and think! It's not too late. Love and magic are real. I'm paraphrasing the incredible Matthew Silver here but his words match my own thoughts. Sometimes you see or hear or feel something so inspiring that explanations are unnecessary.

Time not mine

Even a broken clock is right twice a day, unless you remember time is a social construct of human design, given importance so to mask our fear of the perpetual unknown and one of many authoritative boundaries that reinforces our desire to be harnessed. Or - it makes it easier to meet up for coffee.

I managed to escape the dependance of needing a watch or time and alarms, not sure why, but even though I've almost always worked from early mornings to late afternoon if I tell myself to wake up at 6am I always wake up within a few minutes without a problem. When I had an alarm in High School I'd always wake up about 12 minutes before the alarm went off, then curse myself because I could have had more sleep. I also routinely forget how old I am, not as in "oh I'm turning 25 again.." but more like I think I'm over 40 now,.... and I have to count on my fingers to figure it out. 

The reaction I get from most folks after I tell them this usually breaks two ways: one is that I get a lecture about not taking life seriously and that's why you... (insert some description of what isn't considered successful here) - the other is: Yeah I wish I could be a free spirit like that, but I've got to.... (insert some martyr-ish claptrap about how demands of others/work/life have them trapped). No biggie, it is what it is and I was raised by hippie wolves so I can howl and dance around the fire as well as have a perfect attendance record no matter how late I stayed up watching Blade Runner for the thousandth time. You learn, you live.

The Home Stretch.

A single black spot of india ink on a crisp white page could be seen as many things: sometimes I see a slightly anachronistic test developed by a guy who thought spots looked like stuff and so should you, it might also be a deep portal to somewhere else but too small for you to fit through, and sometimes a spot of the darkest black ink on a crisp white page can really only be appreciated if you are very very small.

I have learned that if there are too many black spots, it's just a mess. That's what I've been doing for the last 45 days in a row usually between 1 - 5 PM PST for 48 minutes at a time; making a big big mess. I haven't been posting any links, no politics or topical missives, and trying my best to stay away from controversy. I've clicked the 'like' button over 1200 times now (you can find out if you want) and found out a little more about some of the people who are posting things that I have known/know/virtually stalk. 

I made a foolish proclamation on August 16th, a sort of dare to myself, that I would post for 48 straight days in a row, each day remaining on FB for no more or less than 48 minutes. Thoughtlessly I started dropping black ink spots all over the internets, at first is was kind of neat, they looked all interesting and arty when there was just a few. Now looking back it's a big mess of black dots all over a virtual page. Lucky for me I have the attention span and memory capacity of a hummingbird. Every day is a new beginning, and I feel blessed by my....., um,... oh well.
Cheers!

The Confession

Your life is your own, it fits you like your skin! So for any of you keeping score out there you might've noticed a few redundancies in these posts. A few words that were intentionally dropped in for no real reason but it was deliberate:
Bunions
Teabags
Humming (bird)
Irish Whiskey
Robots 


The pictures I've used are obviously not ones I've taken or drawn (mostly) and have been harvested by me over the last 10 years or so back when I saw the internet and all the content in it's gaping maw as a giant pile of "free". Those viewpoints have changed for sure, and if I could credit the pictures to people I would. I used to take music all the time from other peoples digital libraries, those who would foolishly share their music folder on the corporate or home network would unknowingly give me a digital copy of all of it. Not only did I realize this was creepy and wrong, but I wound up with some staggeringly bad rap and pop music.

Nerd.

Now I'm of a different kind of mind - even digital data (despite having no physical presence or value) deserves the respect that stuff I can lick and touch and smell does because someone did something to make it. I feel the same way about a strangers random smile or being given the bird, or a whiff of jasmine or 2 stroke exhaust on my walk to work. These are all things I can't hold or touch or probably even remember next week but mean something and have value.

Fun.

I like to hug, hugging is good and I've been teased and made fun of for it by many.
Once I was on a date years ago and after a great night of dinner and conversation we were about to go our separate ways and I tried to hug her. She blocked me and said "Oh you're one of those,..." and I laughed nervously and said "you don't know what you're missing" which totally creeped her out and we never spoke again. But I wasn't being weirdly boastful about my manhood, I was just trying to let her know that a good solid hug is so valuable at the right time. It felt like the right time to me.

Dumb.

Thanks for everything, I can say for sure that any of you who have been encouraging or commenting or supportive of this weird and silly experiment have definitely played a part in my life. A life that is all the better for your part.

The Conclusion

48 consecutive posts that I spun from the thick web of my noodle, marking the completion of this project. I'm so excited I actually finished! Let's face it there was a pretty high probability that I was going to get distracted by other projects, food, music, making out, hijinks or any (SQUIRREL!) number of things. I'm really honored that you might have stopped by to check out the ramblings, which I admit never had a clear direction but somehow wound around to some funny and, maybe, interesting glimpses into connections we can have just being authentic dorks on the internet.

Listen, if you ever want to stop by and visit I'm game, I'll cook up some Panky's Pride and we can listen to the windows rattle as the Muni bus whines and chugs on up the McAllister hill. I have a cat and a dog too, so you know, Allergy Alert! Or write me a letter or postcard, I promise I'll send something back. 1032 steiner APt F sf CA 94115. Getting mail is fun, just don't send me anything that requires postage, my buzzer is broken and the SF USPS is a bit sketchy these days.

The best thing of all is that I've come full circle in a way, I used to curate a few secret lives, nothing too dangerous or illegal, but things I did on my own because I wanted to experience them or just have the world and all it's spontaneous, random and thrilling possibilities as my canvas. Climbing into buildings and spray painting stencils and setting up the drums on the edge of a cliff so I could play for the gulls kind of stuff. It wasn't that I was embarrassed or intentionally excluding anyone, it was more about feeling a moment unclouded by words, unfettered by viewpoints except my own.

Now I've just finished a Facebook residency where I've curated my thoughts and without much of a plan or purpose decided to throw them out there to see where they would take me. Being a huge skeptic of social media made this all the more of a challenge but you all have shown me something I never expected, that sharing is also unique, that the interaction even in this format is unpredictable; that words are important and we are connected if we want to be.

Thanks. Hopefully we will randomly, spontaneously meet up somewhere soon and laugh it off. Be well - XOXO

Monday, August 18, 2014

SUpportist SerVices

Tech Support


Does this phrase cause you dread? Are you nearing an apoplexia just seeing it in print? Maybe you equate it to something less dramatic, mais nous faisons; taking a flight, getting cable or city services, filing taxes,… all necessary evils and the epitome of expected crap customer service. These subjects are perfect fodder for hack comedians and MC’s because of a basic devaluation for experience and longevity in customer contact services. When there are so few options for charismatic people who excel at and enjoy working with others but are lazy bastards (by that I mean outside the ultra-ambitious 8%) that hold an important personal stake in their work. Mostly there is little incentive or recognition for their contribution, but without question are worthy of better than the larger pool of mostly amateurs and the entry level drudges.

Respect of the specialized logistics or performance that some professional service companies had has become lost in the modern economic job pool, and companies structured so that those who feel excited to work hard or initiate positive systems changes are often unrecognized or not valued enough to generate continued interest for a high performer. In the case of the airlines humans and animals are treated little better than cargo, and yet somehow humans are complicit in and expect poor treatment from this provider they not only pay money, but collectively shrug at shabby treatment which perpetuates the cycle like vicious lizards in a mating ritual.

There is no tier, no middle position to incentivize or aspire to, so that employees who have been working for 2 or 10 years are often doing the same job and it becomes a rote call. Exceptions are those who keep finding an impossible ability to reconnect with the potential they hold for experience, or those who can move through the very limited channels of advancement. Most companies eliminated the idea that any middle layer of knowledge, opportunity or leadership based on reports from hideously accurate business strategists, would result in larger overall profits and company health.

Not building in an incentive for achievers creates a system that resembles the symbiotic cannibalism of Morlok and Eloi, where a necessity exists for those to devour and other to be consumed as dependents. On occasion there exists a nuanced respect for engaging the opposition, the next adversarial contact holding some promise for greater competitive results, letting those who had uncategorized ability a place to shine and receive rewards.

Celebrate the times when encountering someone that authentically and enthusiastically gets you on your way, fed or leaves your room crispy clean. Especially if those involved are obviously working off script from the standard business strategy. If you get that guy who shows up at the perfect time, who gets your crap working and lets you slide on parts with a smile and relaxed attitude; give feedback and let them know you got Service. It makes a difference and it might just be enough to inspire others to follow you.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Meeting your makerbot

Singularity is a term I’ve got rolling around in my mind these days. In a general sense it applies to a melding of circumstance or situations, in creative circles it applies to a moment or endeavor that results in an achievement. In technological terms it is used to describe that moment when artificial intelligence exceeds the maximum limits of the human brain, or in more definite terms: “the singularity, is the hypothesis that accelerating progress in technologies such as artificial intelligence will cause non-human intelligence to exceed human intelligence for the first time in history”.

I live in both the creative and technological worlds at the moment, being able to observe the patterns that both reflect as well as encumber those immersed in either leads me to believe that the idea of a perceptual shift, as postulated by the academics who have studied the probable idea of ‘the singularity’, is not very likely. That there will be this tremendous leap or sociological awareness when a non-human intelligence surpasses human intellect is a fallacy, not because it won’t be something dramatic but rather that it will not make an impact on most of those we know whose life and direction aren’t closely tied to the instance of artificial awakening and sentience. Based on some very recent issues involving violence and racism, religious dogma perpetuating border wars and ideological justification that keeps the majority of humans in a limited world-view, this kind of event can and possibly could be happening already and many of us would be too distracted by social media interactions, parochial investment or a position that rejects any information or involvement with technology.

Undoubtedly the children of today will find themselves in a world that was at least partially shaped by the popular culture of today, much like the tech in popular TV and movies that I was exposed to have come to fruition. Hand held communications devices that ‘flip’ open are already passé, and medical devices that ‘scan’ and record data on health and fitness have moved into the realm of marketing for the fitness industry. Will a movie like “Her” have any influence on the future and will those who design software that is increasingly more interactive borrow from fiction to promote it, much like ‘Star Trek’ and ‘Star Wars’ have already?

I have more than enough hope but lack the ability to see how so many millions of humans who already live in a willingly sheltered and shuttered existence would recognize or be open to the changes that will happen when the singularity occurs? When examining the challenges we have been faced with as a species and are still unable to overcome; racism, inequality for gender and life choices, resource distribution and the destruction of our very heritage and history by radical religious factions I am hard put to see how we would rise collectively to the threat or promise of sentient technology and harness it’s potential for a collective benefit. My desire is to see some indication that we can use any of the potential we now possess for collective enhancement for all rather than profiteering by a few.
Another perspective focusing on the Ray Kurzweil thesis (and where I lifted this comic from) is here.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

The Break



A friend had a severe chemical imbalance that resulted in a psychotic break and ended in schizophrenia. The internet, counseling and time have given me the information I need to properly understand and process what happened not only to my friend, but to me as well. At that time there was no internet and I had no idea what was happening, I naively thought I could help or fix what was wrong and guide this person through hard times and back to ‘normalcy’. It ended with her being hog-tied by her parents, literally bound hands-to-feet in front of me, then driven across 2 states back home. I have no clear account of how many months this all lasted, I certainly became delusional myself and had no idea how to reach out, or who to ask for help. My memories of those months are very gauzy; ripped apart and spread out like messy clumps of cotton pulled across perfectly manicured hedges in the ‘burbs around Halloween. 

Her decent into total dislocation from reality turned out to have classic symptoms, naked walks in public, auditory and visual hallucinations, divestment of all material possessions and intense bouts of paranoia. There were possibly hundreds of hours she stood in the hallway at my place, a 5 bedroom San Francisco flat I shared with several friends, in an apparent somnambulant state; unresponsive, unaware of her surroundings and unable to make any contact. Convinced she was in a state of ‘hibernation’ I kept trying to get through, leading her by the hand to vistas and landmarks we both knew and loved, putting items in her hands that might get a response or playing music I knew was meaningful. Having no idea what it was that was happening to her mind I chose to believe that her actions and attitude were self-imposed, something that needed to be worked through before coming out the other side in a hopefully better place. The Park Rangers brought her to my house a half dozen times after finding her walking naked through the groves near the ocean, she would disappear while I was at work. She emptied out her bank account and gave thousands of saved dollars to homeless on the street, boxed up her cassettes and records and gave them to a garbage collector she had become friendly with before the break. Lost her apartment, her job and all context that separated what was happening inside her head from outside.

The beaten cotton clumps of memory I have since recovered lead me to believe that I tried and maybe succeeded in helping her kick her drug habit, she chose needles as the weapon of delivery and anything she could cook as the poison, and one of the few memories I have never lost was standing near the Golden Gate bridge and watching her throw her works over a cliff; sharps bent and melted, all tied up in the rubber strap usually found cinched to her bicep or calf.
On some of the excursions we went on I would fantasize that friends past or present would randomly appear and provide me with guidance, saving me with some way out of the trap I was deeply immersed in and pulling me out of the weeks and weeks of despair I was in over the situation. On one occasion I remember feeling sure I saw an old friend from high school as we were walking the beach at Aquatic Park, I waved and moved to get a closer look but my addled friend took that same moment to break for the ocean. I lost sight of this person in the crowd near the concrete seats as I wrestled my ward to the sand and kept her from plunging into the surf. I was so certain that this person had seen and recognized me too and that experience is also one I never lost, it somehow gave me hope that ‘normal’ life still existed outside of my darkness. 

Perhaps I became a lighthouse for imbalanced minds at that time because not long after this episode ended another similar one began, a young woman that slid into delusion naming me her savior, her jesus and although more responsive and lucid than the first her grasp of reality had become fragmented and without rational context. I was not as kind in this case and my emotional faculties completely shut down, I have no tenable memories of this time and emotionally was more hollow than the discarded snake skin. I learned from brief and painful conversations later that she was also collected by her family and shipped back to where she came from. Pieces of information that floated my way about these 2 women would occasionally reach me in the following years, and perhaps my friends understood how much these conversations would crush my spirit because often the tone of the telling was delivered in overly positive spin. More than a decade later I am not quite willing to recover most of what I experienced and rather would let those years from the late 90’s remain buried in purposeful psychic landfill, a thick layer of protective mental concrete smoothing it all out to a monochrome strata.

 Not surprisingly all the relationships I had dissolved, not that I was very good at maintaining those under the best circumstances anyway; the flat I shared with my friends was abandoned, the projects I was part of crumbled and if it hadn’t been for one of my former flat mates generosity and kindness I would have undoubtedly ended up on the street or worse. I started working 2 jobs, somewhere around 16 hours a day doing daily double shifts. I lost 40 pounds and instead of sleeping found myself lying in bed with endless streams running from the corners of my eyes and into my ears. I remember the feeling of being unnerved by the tears in part because there was no recognizable or predictable emotion to accompany them, but also because I knew I should be feeling something and most of all I should be exhausted and asleep.

I packed up the all my memories, literally, into boxes. Everything I had ever grown fond of from middle school into my 20’s went into tightly packed cardboard cubes, pictures, journals, mementos and emotions. I put them all in my pickup truck and drove them to Canada, leaving them with my Mom for 16 years.


Monday, April 22, 2013

Magnifique

Letters. VHS tapes, records, books and cassettes, zine's - ones I made and hundreds more others made, decal logos from cars that burned to the ground or were abandoned in a lot, keys from who knows where. Cheese stickers, wall posters and hangy things, slogans and buttons (you know, pins!) that go on your punk rock jacket. Middle school notebooks, journals and more journals, spirals books full of poetry and prose, collage papers big enough to have been folded dozens of times. My Dads letterman jacket from college, so many obscure pieces of debris neatly organized. I could tell that there was a method by the way the piles were organized in the boxes but I couldn't read it and had no idea what I was trying to tell me. pictures and sayings and references some badly burned from a fire that someone once set. The stories are that it was some other person who somehow did me wrong, the stories are from my Mom, the stories are suspiciously light in details and although I have no strict recollection I'm positive I set fire to my stuff sometime in the late nineties. Sometime during a month long drive from San Francisco to Chicago in the fall of '97, a pickup bed straining under dozens of cardboard cubes, many hurled into dumpsters at truck stops along I-80 while trying to fight my way over the Rockies. I drove 36 hours and then pulled over somewhere in the Dakotas and drove a distance off the freeway and sobbed until I passed out. All of the items were made and used and left in a barn for 15 years, since before widespread cell phones and internet. Since before Google and Facebook. I'm stuck now because I have had some very scary and powerful experiences with items that do bring back some intense feelings and emotions, like a deja vu thing but add in the stress dream about being naked in a crowd of friends. Sudden strong reflections I haven't had in many years. I'd like to think i have a personality disorder or some kind of specialized amnesiatic trauma but the reality is that I just lost it I think. I've had a few sweeping off my feet moments remembering people and places from when I had an easier time finding hope, granting myself an optimistic outlook. Less frenetic and more open to possibilities.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Hustling boxes in the west

I left San Francisco in 1997 just after thanksgiving. I packed up 9 boxes of everything I was and drove to Canada and left them there. Moving to Chicago in December and embarking on a year of loss and benefit, I moved back to San Francisco in 1999. 15 years later I drove to Denver with my 13 year old son and dog to retrieve them all and search the contents. We all bonded and became comfortable in the deep love we felt for each other. After I got back to SF I opened each box, mowing through the contents and sorting between trash, keep and unknown. On the 3rd box I laughed so hard I almost wet myself, by the 7th box I was crying.