Night has descended here at the library, the windows now might as well have thick sheets hung over them, and night is pretty close to what I'm feeling, too. I've come up for a one-year performance evaluation at NEA, and I should have seen it coming. I "need improvement" nearly all down the line. No surprise, as I spend most of my days reading blogs or news and, every so often, clenching my fist with rage at having to answer the phone.
The things that my evaluation list me as needing improvement in are things that I just don't want to be good at: having a tidy work area, having a polite and courteous voice when I answer the phone, asking for more work when I'm not busy, making sure the doors around the building are locked every night. Fuck it!
I understand why they want a tidy work area, since I'm at the front desk. I'll try to improve it, even, but I would rather it be a non-issue.
On the phone, I listen at length to everyone who calls and I try to help everybody as best I can. If the callers actually take the time and energy to think that my voice isn't warm enough and then tell this to my supervisor, though, they can stick live alligators up their ass.
As for asking for more work, well, that just strikes me as perverse.
Anyway, I don't want to get fired at the end of the month, so I'm going to try to improve. I was already planning to leave around year's end, though, and this only improves the chances that I'll actually take the necessary steps. It's even kind of useful to receive such an evaluation, because at the heart of the matter is the fact that I took a job with responsibilities that I didn't care for, and then I didn't live up to those responsibilities. I guess even at age 25 I still need other people to drive home the point that it shows.
Tuesday, August 05, 2008
Monday, August 04, 2008
I like this piece well enough, but I'm linking to it because the comments are really spectacular. The piece is by Steven A. Smith, the editor of The Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington. It looks like he wrote it around 10 pm, and who knows what brought it out. He wrote it as a paen to "newspapermen," a term which he obviously has a lot of affection for and which he uses to define himself. Personally I find the word a little ridiculous; it makes me think of mute members of a cult who creep around at night writing lines of copy all over the sidewalks and tree trunks and car doors, trying to communicate their weird creed to confused suburbanites. Or maybe they roll up feathers and mud and string and other childlike objects into newspapers to make a burnt offering on their converted-printing-press alter to William Randolph Hearst. Or moleman creatures who live in newspaper-encrusted cave lairs that they've patched together with their own spit, hiding out in the crawl space under your house or in the abanadoned parking lot where a factory burned down.
It means something different to him, something I find a little uncomfortable:
"A newspaperman wore black slacks, a bit worn. A short-sleeved white shirt and a thin black necktie. A newspaperman owned one pair of black wingtips for his entire career.
"A newspaperman had nicknames, raunchy, rude and unashamedly affectionate nicknames, for all of the linotype operators in the basement. A newspaperman reveled in the composing room heat, the smells of melted lead and oily black ink."
The writing's hammy, but engaging, with the rhythem of a pulp detective novel. And the content . . . isn't it just plain weird? As one commenter pointed out, "This seems to offer the view that the figure of the public truthseeker in the USian social spectacle modeled himself on figures from a bygone, noir-ish subgenre of fiction. Worth a bit of reflection. What's being protected, what's being pretended, and why?"
There is one paragraph, though, that I find myself drawn to, even though I never subscribed to a local newspaper: "No instrument will ever serve the public interest so relentlessly as the daily newspaper. New media will successfully distribute data and information. 'Communities of interest' will develop around niche products. And while print newspapers will survive to serve a small, elite audience, they never again will serve the larger geographic communities that gave them life and purpose. Democracy will have to find a new public square."
I tend to believe that newspapers could in fact serve the public interest really well--better than anything else--even though my main source of reference is the skimpy, sad, broken little things we now call local papers. I find something appealing about the model of a newspaper: a single place for local [and perhaps also national and international] news, community notices, classified ads, opinions, writeups about concerts or festivals or movies, profiles of artists and community figures, and all of it subsidizing investigations of local politicians and businesses. If more people in a community read the local paper, no doubt it would serve to tie people together, provide a common source of information that they could discuss and a common place where they could communicate with others in their vicinity who they otherwise wouldn't meet. I don't know if this is merely an idealized picture of the local paper, but I think even the ones at St. John's were close to being capable of carrying out this function of tying a community together around words and pictures, and if those two-bit operations could sometimes achieve it, surely a bigger and more professional entity would be able to.
Really, what could replace such a thing?
It means something different to him, something I find a little uncomfortable:
"A newspaperman wore black slacks, a bit worn. A short-sleeved white shirt and a thin black necktie. A newspaperman owned one pair of black wingtips for his entire career.
"A newspaperman had nicknames, raunchy, rude and unashamedly affectionate nicknames, for all of the linotype operators in the basement. A newspaperman reveled in the composing room heat, the smells of melted lead and oily black ink."
The writing's hammy, but engaging, with the rhythem of a pulp detective novel. And the content . . . isn't it just plain weird? As one commenter pointed out, "This seems to offer the view that the figure of the public truthseeker in the USian social spectacle modeled himself on figures from a bygone, noir-ish subgenre of fiction. Worth a bit of reflection. What's being protected, what's being pretended, and why?"
There is one paragraph, though, that I find myself drawn to, even though I never subscribed to a local newspaper: "No instrument will ever serve the public interest so relentlessly as the daily newspaper. New media will successfully distribute data and information. 'Communities of interest' will develop around niche products. And while print newspapers will survive to serve a small, elite audience, they never again will serve the larger geographic communities that gave them life and purpose. Democracy will have to find a new public square."
I tend to believe that newspapers could in fact serve the public interest really well--better than anything else--even though my main source of reference is the skimpy, sad, broken little things we now call local papers. I find something appealing about the model of a newspaper: a single place for local [and perhaps also national and international] news, community notices, classified ads, opinions, writeups about concerts or festivals or movies, profiles of artists and community figures, and all of it subsidizing investigations of local politicians and businesses. If more people in a community read the local paper, no doubt it would serve to tie people together, provide a common source of information that they could discuss and a common place where they could communicate with others in their vicinity who they otherwise wouldn't meet. I don't know if this is merely an idealized picture of the local paper, but I think even the ones at St. John's were close to being capable of carrying out this function of tying a community together around words and pictures, and if those two-bit operations could sometimes achieve it, surely a bigger and more professional entity would be able to.
Really, what could replace such a thing?
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
A recent Democracy Now! segment featured an excellent discussion of the fall of daily newspapers. The first half of the discussion was about new business models that don't rely on advertisements, perhaps sponsered by grants or public funds. There weren't many details, but I found the discussion interesting. It would probably be good if media conglomerates start selling off their holdings, and perhaps those fired journalists and editors will start their own, less compromised projects.
Near the end came a discussion about the difference between newspapers and the internet, and why the internet cannot replace print. "The average reader of the paper copy of the New York Times spends forty-five minutes reading the paper. The average viewer of the New York Times website spends about seven minutes." That was Chris Hedges, senior fellow at the Nation Institute and a former correspondent for the New York Times.
And thenLinda Jue, director of New Voices in Independent Journalism: "... what I’m slowly coming around to is understanding that, yes, the internet does not—is not a good medium for delivering long-form, in-depth reporting. And I don’t think that we should try to, you know, plug a square peg into a round hole that way. But I think that, realistically, we have to look at ways to generate attention, to use the internet to drive attention to longer-form reporting that can be found elsewhere, including print."
The whole discussion took the issues a little further than I've seen it anywhere else, and I've been looking at the issue pretty closely for months now.
Near the end came a discussion about the difference between newspapers and the internet, and why the internet cannot replace print. "The average reader of the paper copy of the New York Times spends forty-five minutes reading the paper. The average viewer of the New York Times website spends about seven minutes." That was Chris Hedges, senior fellow at the Nation Institute and a former correspondent for the New York Times.
And thenLinda Jue, director of New Voices in Independent Journalism: "... what I’m slowly coming around to is understanding that, yes, the internet does not—is not a good medium for delivering long-form, in-depth reporting. And I don’t think that we should try to, you know, plug a square peg into a round hole that way. But I think that, realistically, we have to look at ways to generate attention, to use the internet to drive attention to longer-form reporting that can be found elsewhere, including print."
The whole discussion took the issues a little further than I've seen it anywhere else, and I've been looking at the issue pretty closely for months now.
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
What would I be doing if I wasn't at work right now? I don't even know any more. Periodically it occurs to me how strange it is that I'm "at work", doing nothing. It strikes me differently each time. Today, I realize how totally it affects my life, how I can't say what would be different if I didn't have to work. Would I have greater ambitions? Would I be content to sleep until early afternoon, and then read the newspaper or novels, like I was during summers and on my year off, before I graduated from college?
And what if I not only didn't have to work, but also had enough money to live anywhere I chose, and do anything I wanted? Where would I be? Hell, what would I be wearing?
That's not quite my concern, though, I realize. I guess I should be asking, what do I want to be doing? I still don't know, if it doesn't involve school or idleness. I don't necessarily want to be idle, but it's out of a moral conception of idleness. Generally, it seems okay to me to do nothing but laze about and read, hang out with frends, play music, make sprawling lists of movies I'd like to watch. Sometimes, I feel like doing more, and usually for me that means writing. Other times, I feel like I should want to do more, and that usually doesn't lead to anything other than feeling bad about myself for a while.
These issues can't help but present themselves through the lens of living in a capitalist society. I have no idea of the way I'd be thinking about them if I wasn't raised in late-20th century America; this was inherent in the way I first presented the question, "what would I be doing right now if I wasn't at work." The only reason I'm asking this question is because I'm in a society where people sign over portions of their time in order to make money. Perhaps this is better than a society where I would have to work all day, and work in a less abstract way than currently. Right now the only "work" I'm doing is being restricted to this particular place right now, answering the phone every so often, occasionally doing something for my boss.
If I had never been in a position to need a job in the first place, what would I be doing? I would not be the person I am. Well, if I suddenly learned that I'd receive my salary all year long without having any responsibilities whatsover, what then? I still don't know who I am, I guess. Do my readers know who they are?
And what if I not only didn't have to work, but also had enough money to live anywhere I chose, and do anything I wanted? Where would I be? Hell, what would I be wearing?
That's not quite my concern, though, I realize. I guess I should be asking, what do I want to be doing? I still don't know, if it doesn't involve school or idleness. I don't necessarily want to be idle, but it's out of a moral conception of idleness. Generally, it seems okay to me to do nothing but laze about and read, hang out with frends, play music, make sprawling lists of movies I'd like to watch. Sometimes, I feel like doing more, and usually for me that means writing. Other times, I feel like I should want to do more, and that usually doesn't lead to anything other than feeling bad about myself for a while.
These issues can't help but present themselves through the lens of living in a capitalist society. I have no idea of the way I'd be thinking about them if I wasn't raised in late-20th century America; this was inherent in the way I first presented the question, "what would I be doing right now if I wasn't at work." The only reason I'm asking this question is because I'm in a society where people sign over portions of their time in order to make money. Perhaps this is better than a society where I would have to work all day, and work in a less abstract way than currently. Right now the only "work" I'm doing is being restricted to this particular place right now, answering the phone every so often, occasionally doing something for my boss.
If I had never been in a position to need a job in the first place, what would I be doing? I would not be the person I am. Well, if I suddenly learned that I'd receive my salary all year long without having any responsibilities whatsover, what then? I still don't know who I am, I guess. Do my readers know who they are?
Saturday, July 26, 2008
I'm starting work at the library again, starting today. I came in at 10 a.m. or, well, actually more like 10:02. There was a light drizzle, and the radio spoke of New Mexico getting precipitation from Hurricane Dolly in Texas. The sky was and still is clear and white, like a gigantic projector screen with a blank slide.
I parked in Security's parking space in front of the library (ha ha), because all the other spots were taken. Come to think of it, I should check if another spot's cleared up by now so I can move my car to safety. I have been given a temporary parking permit instead of a staff sticker, because the Human Resources office decided that the positions they've incorrectly labeled "temporary" are the employment equivalent of flight risks, and god forbid they should take a job just to get a staff sticker.
So I parked and jogged inside, ready with my key to let in the summer worker, Charlotte. To my surprise, the doors were already unlocked. Jennifer had opened the library early for a meeting of the Board of Prison Guards and Dubliners. So early that the sun was just a hope. She did this so that the prancing morons (currently occupied in making the library as loud as possible, with a few high achievers reaching the decibel levels of an airplane cockpit) could be fed their special breakfasts with their special dribble bibs. Did I mention that I hate these people? I wonder if the reason they're being so loud is because they actually don't recognize the shelves and studying people as a library. Perhaps they think it's an elegant set that the college prepared for their amusement, so that they would have the little thrill of schmoozing at the top of their lungs in an authentic, Grade A Academic Setting.
Anyway, Jennifer was waiting behind the desk, all the lights were on, the computers were active, and all the library was already humming. She introduced me to a project I could do to start out, and then she went home to take a nap.
I logged on to my library desktop for the first time in a year, and opened my email just to see if I had any messages from Laura. I found that IT had simply never closed my email account. I had messages dating back to last October, when I left Switchboard. The system had even saved three messages that I'd never deleted from 2007.
So I scrolled down to the bottom, the earliest emails in the box, which was a little like an archaeological dig. I uncovered all the meaningless little notes that the St. John's offices had sent to each other to let themselves know that time was passing (reminders about birthdays, tips for winter car maintenance, a message about ergonomic work stations). I picked away at the dirt covering each weekly emailed Ephemera, the college newsletter. I marveled at Mr. Pesic's ancient purple prose describing his concerts and lectures of days gone by. As I went through, deleting a page's worth of messages each time after making sure there wasn't anything important in them, I found one of the big things I'd been missing since I left here: tradition. In those trivial emails I rediscovered the jovial, lumbering form of St. John's traditions. I remembered how charming it was to be forever exchanging one season for another, one week for another, one day for another, and to pass from newly arrived freshmen to cider in the coffee shop, from lit fireplaces over winter break to the self-aware somberness of senior writing period, from students lounging outside as the days started getting longer again to the riotous stupidity of the party season; and through it all, at least in my own mind, to be fixed on the unchanging project I thought I took up when I first signed the roster, the project of self-improvement through study of great works. Perhaps I never really had that as a goal in the first place, but if it was a delusion, at least it was a cheery delusion. Just being here, I feel better than I have in a long time in the grey world of office work, where I had nothing to look forward to, no stimulus, no people all around me having new ideas, no challenge, and no people sharing my cheery delusion.
Now here I am again, the roar of the fiends in business suits has finally subsided, and in front of me is a list of subject headings that the Library of Congress has declared canceled, with an accompanying list of their replacements. I have a lot of fine nonsense to get to in the endless renewal of the library's minutiae. It's time to get to work.
I parked in Security's parking space in front of the library (ha ha), because all the other spots were taken. Come to think of it, I should check if another spot's cleared up by now so I can move my car to safety. I have been given a temporary parking permit instead of a staff sticker, because the Human Resources office decided that the positions they've incorrectly labeled "temporary" are the employment equivalent of flight risks, and god forbid they should take a job just to get a staff sticker.
So I parked and jogged inside, ready with my key to let in the summer worker, Charlotte. To my surprise, the doors were already unlocked. Jennifer had opened the library early for a meeting of the Board of Prison Guards and Dubliners. So early that the sun was just a hope. She did this so that the prancing morons (currently occupied in making the library as loud as possible, with a few high achievers reaching the decibel levels of an airplane cockpit) could be fed their special breakfasts with their special dribble bibs. Did I mention that I hate these people? I wonder if the reason they're being so loud is because they actually don't recognize the shelves and studying people as a library. Perhaps they think it's an elegant set that the college prepared for their amusement, so that they would have the little thrill of schmoozing at the top of their lungs in an authentic, Grade A Academic Setting.
Anyway, Jennifer was waiting behind the desk, all the lights were on, the computers were active, and all the library was already humming. She introduced me to a project I could do to start out, and then she went home to take a nap.
I logged on to my library desktop for the first time in a year, and opened my email just to see if I had any messages from Laura. I found that IT had simply never closed my email account. I had messages dating back to last October, when I left Switchboard. The system had even saved three messages that I'd never deleted from 2007.
So I scrolled down to the bottom, the earliest emails in the box, which was a little like an archaeological dig. I uncovered all the meaningless little notes that the St. John's offices had sent to each other to let themselves know that time was passing (reminders about birthdays, tips for winter car maintenance, a message about ergonomic work stations). I picked away at the dirt covering each weekly emailed Ephemera, the college newsletter. I marveled at Mr. Pesic's ancient purple prose describing his concerts and lectures of days gone by. As I went through, deleting a page's worth of messages each time after making sure there wasn't anything important in them, I found one of the big things I'd been missing since I left here: tradition. In those trivial emails I rediscovered the jovial, lumbering form of St. John's traditions. I remembered how charming it was to be forever exchanging one season for another, one week for another, one day for another, and to pass from newly arrived freshmen to cider in the coffee shop, from lit fireplaces over winter break to the self-aware somberness of senior writing period, from students lounging outside as the days started getting longer again to the riotous stupidity of the party season; and through it all, at least in my own mind, to be fixed on the unchanging project I thought I took up when I first signed the roster, the project of self-improvement through study of great works. Perhaps I never really had that as a goal in the first place, but if it was a delusion, at least it was a cheery delusion. Just being here, I feel better than I have in a long time in the grey world of office work, where I had nothing to look forward to, no stimulus, no people all around me having new ideas, no challenge, and no people sharing my cheery delusion.
Now here I am again, the roar of the fiends in business suits has finally subsided, and in front of me is a list of subject headings that the Library of Congress has declared canceled, with an accompanying list of their replacements. I have a lot of fine nonsense to get to in the endless renewal of the library's minutiae. It's time to get to work.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
"'From what rich soil does creativity bloom?' OK, I know that one. Self-hatred and a creepy hunger for approval." Bing! That was from an interview with a guy named Tom Peyer, who writes comic books and also humor pieces for Slate and the New York Times, and blogs.
And yes, that's probably the best description of why I want to write that I've ever seen. Weird, isn't it? But yes, for some reason I have a huge respect for good writers, and it looks from my cramped perspective as though writers must necessarily have overcome something, have conquered themselves. All creative people, really. They're in touch with themselves and the world, and they are able to craft something in whatever medium they use and put it forward as a new creation, and oh, how sublime! Really, that's how it seems to me.
And if I could finish things I write, I'd be able to give something that feels like a piece of me and have people's comments on it, hopefully approving comments, and perhaps people would respect me and be in awe of me the way I currently am of writers.
But of course I don't actually have these insights, and haven't made anything that I can show to people for my creepy need for validation. Better make them up! And that's where creativity comes from.
I'm just amazed by this quotation Tom Peyer slung off at the end of an interview. I've never seen this idea put so well and succinctly.
And yes, that's probably the best description of why I want to write that I've ever seen. Weird, isn't it? But yes, for some reason I have a huge respect for good writers, and it looks from my cramped perspective as though writers must necessarily have overcome something, have conquered themselves. All creative people, really. They're in touch with themselves and the world, and they are able to craft something in whatever medium they use and put it forward as a new creation, and oh, how sublime! Really, that's how it seems to me.
And if I could finish things I write, I'd be able to give something that feels like a piece of me and have people's comments on it, hopefully approving comments, and perhaps people would respect me and be in awe of me the way I currently am of writers.
But of course I don't actually have these insights, and haven't made anything that I can show to people for my creepy need for validation. Better make them up! And that's where creativity comes from.
I'm just amazed by this quotation Tom Peyer slung off at the end of an interview. I've never seen this idea put so well and succinctly.
Monday, July 14, 2008
The sky looks like I've never seen it before: deep gray descending through a scale to bright white on the horizon. Rain is pouring down in a density that is rare for this part of the country. We've been getting rain just about every day, toward evening. I didn't pay enough attention last year to know when it fell then, but it's normal for it to rain here every day for an hour or two during the summer, mostly July and August. There's some nice thunder every so often. I feel a little nostalgic for Maryland when it's raining. I would often sit in the screened-in porch during a rainstorm on a hot and humid night, the wood of the porch chair swollen and damp on my hands, taking in the smell of the wet world, the sound of beaded rain endlessly tapping on the roof, my heart always picking up speed when the sound of the rain gained a mysterious intensity for a half a second before dropping back to its normal level, as though it was trying to punch a hole through to me. I don't know if it's the wind or just a randomly high water density in the rain clouds just above the roof that causes that sudden increase, but it still gets my heart going now.
Below the sound of the roof I hear a steady rushing sound, like a waterfall, of what I guess is rain pouring onto the ground beneath the gutters. It makes me think of billowing foam spray when a wave hits the shore. It's a hypnotic sound. When I focus on it, my eyes pan slowly toward the edge of my head, and I feel a little dizzy. And above it is the rapping on the roof.
We get flash floods here. Maybe one of these days it will lift me up to a different state of mind.
Below the sound of the roof I hear a steady rushing sound, like a waterfall, of what I guess is rain pouring onto the ground beneath the gutters. It makes me think of billowing foam spray when a wave hits the shore. It's a hypnotic sound. When I focus on it, my eyes pan slowly toward the edge of my head, and I feel a little dizzy. And above it is the rapping on the roof.
We get flash floods here. Maybe one of these days it will lift me up to a different state of mind.
Monday, June 23, 2008
I had an idea last night, after watching The Happening for the second time: I'd like to create a metric that I could use to measure the badness of bad movies, so that I could not only figure out what the worst major-studio movies are, but also say in what way they're bad. At the very least, my metric would include acting, dialogue, story conception, story execution, and suspension of disbelief. Each of these categories seem like they could also be broken down further; for example, acting can be bad because there's no sense of a mind in the character, because emotions are poorly expressed, because a particular actor doesn't suit a character, etc. Dialogue can be overly dramatic, or can overstate the obvious, can fail to distinguish between characters, etc.
I'm not a student of films, and I don't have an abundent interest in discussing them (which is why I'll probably never do anything with this), but the idea came to me, as I said, after watching The Happening for the second time last night. Anne and I went to see it on Friday, after I saw that the movie had at that point earned a 12% positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and that even the positive reviews said things like, "this is not as unmitigated a disaster as Shyamalan's last movie, Lady in the Water" (and frankly I'm surprised that it's possible to get worse than The Happening, so now I want to see it that one too) and "neither great nor a total waste of time and money." (It's also not excellent, good, decent, or tolerable. It's just not a total waste of time and money. By the way, I disagree.) Oh hey, it's now up to 19% positive, woot!
So knowing fully what we were getting into, Anne and I went to see the matinee showing a week after the movie opened. I don't have a television, and I don't read articles on culture, so I was barely aware that this movie existed. I think I'd seen posters in the theater. I'd tired to skip the bits of plot summary in the reviews that I read, but I hadn't really managed because I already knew what the movie was about. So we sat through the opening credits, which played over a rapid shot of clouds as mournful violin music played. The opening scene: Central Park, jogger with dog, densely packed athletic people running very close to one another. Then we saw two women on a park bench reading what appeared to be two hardcover copies of the same book, and the first line of dialogue in unloaded: "Where am I again?" At first the viewer thinks she's asking where she is physically, but then the other woman explains, "You're at the part where [scene from a spy thriller novel]." "Oh."
I'll begin by noting that what these two characters just did is ridiculous. Never in my life have I seen someone forget where they are in a book, ask someone else, and get an answer. First, why would the asker think that the other person knows? Second, why would the other person know? Was she looking over her friend's shoulder while continuing to read herself? Third, this exchange doesn't make any more sense in retrospect; once I saw the rest of the movie, this scene is still offensively bad: even though we soon see that people who are affected by the happening of the movie's title sometimes engage in disorderly speech, these first lines of dialogue still don't make any sense, because the first speaker, when told where she was in the book, said "Oh," which indicates that she wasn't being affected, she was actually asking the extremely improbable question.
Now I'll move on to the acting: the woman who asks where she is in the book she's reading has an altogether innapropraite dreamy tone of voice. She sounds more like she's feigning ignorance to pull one over on her friend, as though she can reliably expect her to belive that she doesn't know where she is in the book. The scene would make a lot more sense if she then laughed and said, "You really fall for it every time, don't you!" Indeed, she spoke with a big, dumb smile on her face, which apparently wasn't feigned innocence; my only other interpretation was that she's retarted and also autistic, and thus unable to properly express emotions with her face, and her sister has taken her to the park to get her outdoors. But if that were the case, wouldn't her sister be reading to her? No, the scene really appears to be intended as straight-forward, exactly what it is.
"You can do both: you can make it meaningful on a personal level. Also, enchant the world with the writing. I do both." -M. Night Shyamalan
Now, I would assume that Shyamalan put a lot of work into this first dialogue exchange, seeing as he's a writer director with pretensions to Hitchcock, and it's the introduction to his themes and concept. Why did he write these lines? Was he indicating that we the viewers ought to ask where we are in this world, or ought to think metaphorically about where the characters are? Was he setting the audience on edge, so that the didn't interpret everything to be the way it first appears? Was he riffing off of Hamlet's "Who's there?" If any of these were the case, then he should have made a movie that followed up on these ideas, but he didn't. He made a meaningless piece of trash.
As the movie went on, I very quickly felt a sense of awe while watching it. It failed on so many levels that it could be used in film school as an example of bad direction, bad acting, bad script writing, bad premise, bad execution. It truly felt like I was watching something so awful that it was significant, a straightforward offering that was so devoid of merit that people should take note. I was watching a happening, all right. I was watching what ought to be a career-ender for everyone involved. The studio that produced this movie should have reason to question the purpose of their lives, if this was the culmination of a year of their time. Everybody who sees it should feel a little more free, because they know that if they were to produce a movie of their own, it couldn't possibly be this bad.
I'm not a student of films, and I don't have an abundent interest in discussing them (which is why I'll probably never do anything with this), but the idea came to me, as I said, after watching The Happening for the second time last night. Anne and I went to see it on Friday, after I saw that the movie had at that point earned a 12% positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and that even the positive reviews said things like, "this is not as unmitigated a disaster as Shyamalan's last movie, Lady in the Water" (and frankly I'm surprised that it's possible to get worse than The Happening, so now I want to see it that one too) and "neither great nor a total waste of time and money." (It's also not excellent, good, decent, or tolerable. It's just not a total waste of time and money. By the way, I disagree.) Oh hey, it's now up to 19% positive, woot!
So knowing fully what we were getting into, Anne and I went to see the matinee showing a week after the movie opened. I don't have a television, and I don't read articles on culture, so I was barely aware that this movie existed. I think I'd seen posters in the theater. I'd tired to skip the bits of plot summary in the reviews that I read, but I hadn't really managed because I already knew what the movie was about. So we sat through the opening credits, which played over a rapid shot of clouds as mournful violin music played. The opening scene: Central Park, jogger with dog, densely packed athletic people running very close to one another. Then we saw two women on a park bench reading what appeared to be two hardcover copies of the same book, and the first line of dialogue in unloaded: "Where am I again?" At first the viewer thinks she's asking where she is physically, but then the other woman explains, "You're at the part where [scene from a spy thriller novel]." "Oh."
I'll begin by noting that what these two characters just did is ridiculous. Never in my life have I seen someone forget where they are in a book, ask someone else, and get an answer. First, why would the asker think that the other person knows? Second, why would the other person know? Was she looking over her friend's shoulder while continuing to read herself? Third, this exchange doesn't make any more sense in retrospect; once I saw the rest of the movie, this scene is still offensively bad: even though we soon see that people who are affected by the happening of the movie's title sometimes engage in disorderly speech, these first lines of dialogue still don't make any sense, because the first speaker, when told where she was in the book, said "Oh," which indicates that she wasn't being affected, she was actually asking the extremely improbable question.
Now I'll move on to the acting: the woman who asks where she is in the book she's reading has an altogether innapropraite dreamy tone of voice. She sounds more like she's feigning ignorance to pull one over on her friend, as though she can reliably expect her to belive that she doesn't know where she is in the book. The scene would make a lot more sense if she then laughed and said, "You really fall for it every time, don't you!" Indeed, she spoke with a big, dumb smile on her face, which apparently wasn't feigned innocence; my only other interpretation was that she's retarted and also autistic, and thus unable to properly express emotions with her face, and her sister has taken her to the park to get her outdoors. But if that were the case, wouldn't her sister be reading to her? No, the scene really appears to be intended as straight-forward, exactly what it is.
"You can do both: you can make it meaningful on a personal level. Also, enchant the world with the writing. I do both." -M. Night Shyamalan
Now, I would assume that Shyamalan put a lot of work into this first dialogue exchange, seeing as he's a writer director with pretensions to Hitchcock, and it's the introduction to his themes and concept. Why did he write these lines? Was he indicating that we the viewers ought to ask where we are in this world, or ought to think metaphorically about where the characters are? Was he setting the audience on edge, so that the didn't interpret everything to be the way it first appears? Was he riffing off of Hamlet's "Who's there?" If any of these were the case, then he should have made a movie that followed up on these ideas, but he didn't. He made a meaningless piece of trash.
As the movie went on, I very quickly felt a sense of awe while watching it. It failed on so many levels that it could be used in film school as an example of bad direction, bad acting, bad script writing, bad premise, bad execution. It truly felt like I was watching something so awful that it was significant, a straightforward offering that was so devoid of merit that people should take note. I was watching a happening, all right. I was watching what ought to be a career-ender for everyone involved. The studio that produced this movie should have reason to question the purpose of their lives, if this was the culmination of a year of their time. Everybody who sees it should feel a little more free, because they know that if they were to produce a movie of their own, it couldn't possibly be this bad.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Let's suppose there's a Ministry of Complaints where people can go to declare what they aren't happy with and would like redressed. I've been drinking a lot of coffee and I took tomorrow off work to make a four day weekend, so actually I'm feeling pretty good right now, but generally if I was called to the Ministry (perhaps by a telepathigram sent directly to my consciousness, "Dear Mr. Green, please report to the Ministry of Complaints to unload your grievances"), I would come in and sit down in their fancy padded wooden chair, look into the eyes of the universal entity who was serving in the Ministry that day, and say, "I don't feel like this is the right life for me."
The entity would clear its throat and say, "How do you mean? You wish to be another person, or to live in another time period?"
"No, not like that. This existence, it isn't pleasing to me. Why am I trapped in a forward-moving timeline on a three-dimensional physical plane, bound by gravity, forced to breath air, pump blood, eat and sleep in order to live? Why do I have a body? Why is it loosing its hair? I don't like that. Why do I not know what to do with my time, and why is it that when I think I know what I want to do, I don't do it?"
"That is quite a complaint, sir," the entity would say. "Are you sure you wouldn't be satisfied if we simply issued you another human identity? You could have another body made to your specifications, and we could place you in any situation you wanted. You could have whatever kind of family you wished, live wherever and whenever you wished, possess whatever talents and abilities you choose. We could provide you with a written profile of this new person, which you could edit to your specifications, and then we could form this new life for you to inhabit. Would that suffice?"
"I think I could come around to that, but couldn't you do anything about the universe? Couldn't I, say, not exist for a certain period of time, and then pick it back up again later? Or, how about I can pick a nighttime dream that I'm having and make that my actual life?"
"These requests are outside the boundaries of our power. We control existence, but it is still this existence. However, there are many variations available to you within the world that you already know. Would you be able to content yourself with this sort of change?"
If I decided that I would like a new life, I would then be sent to the Ministry of Redress where, if I had done enough good to earn a replacement life, I could work with the Redress entity assigned to me and design my new self. I could choose to live in a big city and have enough money to use it as my playground. I could choose to be able to play saxophone as well as John Coltrane. I could even choose to be John Coltrane, and maybe not die so young.
I'm pretty sure, though, that I could use the life I already have in better ways. This is my current (and perennial) dream.
The entity would clear its throat and say, "How do you mean? You wish to be another person, or to live in another time period?"
"No, not like that. This existence, it isn't pleasing to me. Why am I trapped in a forward-moving timeline on a three-dimensional physical plane, bound by gravity, forced to breath air, pump blood, eat and sleep in order to live? Why do I have a body? Why is it loosing its hair? I don't like that. Why do I not know what to do with my time, and why is it that when I think I know what I want to do, I don't do it?"
"That is quite a complaint, sir," the entity would say. "Are you sure you wouldn't be satisfied if we simply issued you another human identity? You could have another body made to your specifications, and we could place you in any situation you wanted. You could have whatever kind of family you wished, live wherever and whenever you wished, possess whatever talents and abilities you choose. We could provide you with a written profile of this new person, which you could edit to your specifications, and then we could form this new life for you to inhabit. Would that suffice?"
"I think I could come around to that, but couldn't you do anything about the universe? Couldn't I, say, not exist for a certain period of time, and then pick it back up again later? Or, how about I can pick a nighttime dream that I'm having and make that my actual life?"
"These requests are outside the boundaries of our power. We control existence, but it is still this existence. However, there are many variations available to you within the world that you already know. Would you be able to content yourself with this sort of change?"
If I decided that I would like a new life, I would then be sent to the Ministry of Redress where, if I had done enough good to earn a replacement life, I could work with the Redress entity assigned to me and design my new self. I could choose to live in a big city and have enough money to use it as my playground. I could choose to be able to play saxophone as well as John Coltrane. I could even choose to be John Coltrane, and maybe not die so young.
I'm pretty sure, though, that I could use the life I already have in better ways. This is my current (and perennial) dream.
Friday, May 09, 2008
I'm still surprised when I remember I'm a secretary. I must have had a powerful subconsious horror at this fact, because I knew it in October when I first got the job, and then I pretty much forgot it until Spring came and my mind woke up like it does every year. It really feels like my self-reflection was looking the other way for about five months, overwhelmed with disgust when it saw that I was a secretary. I imagine it in a dark chamber, with a nice easy chair, a bathrobe and fuzzy slippers (my self-reflection is chill), sitting in front of a stone fireplace all day reading ewspapers about Greg. It reads the newspaper about Greg's relationship with his friends, The Bantering Tribune. "Hmm, Greg seems to be kind of an asshole to the few friends he manages to keep in touch with . . . I'll let him know about this sometime in April." It flips through the Housing Journal, which disusses Greg's sense of his environment, and shakes it's head. "Tsk, tsk, still bumbling around; will that Greg ever learn?" Then it turns to the Occupational Times, about Greg's working life; a few paragraphs in to the first article, it goes white. "My God, Greg's a . . . no, this is too horrible. I can't look any more! Why is he doing this to himself?" It doesn't read that one for several months, until it has steeled itself, and has a warm cup of chai and some painkillers ready. And here's what it sees:
It's my duty to prepare the outgoing mail every week (to the Board of Directors, the Regional Chairs, and our staff in regional offices), to answer the main office phone and direct the calls to the right people, to track dues payments in the Northeast Region locals, and to do general office work--stuffing envelopes, proofreading or writing letters, preparing agendas for the professional staff's meetings, that sort of thing. I sit at the desk where I'm writing this for about seven hours a day, with breaks for the drive to the post office and my lunch hour (actually hour and fifteen minutes, because my office has its own union and we have really cozy benefits). I use most of my energy thinking about my latest obsession. Anthropology? No, that was this time last year. World history? Sort of ended before it began, but maybe some other time. Writing? No such luck. No, my current obsession is comic books. For two months I've been doing almost nothing else with my time than reading comic books, comic books reviews, comic books histories, and so on. Why? Fucked if I know. It's fun.
So my self-reflection is starting to send me some memos every so often now, in re: employment and interests. They're very respectful memos, and the language can be a little dense and obscure at times (my self-reflection is in a phase where it writes in the language of the eighteenth century), but the message is clear enough: I'm going to die at some point, and I might want to do something with my time first.
It's my duty to prepare the outgoing mail every week (to the Board of Directors, the Regional Chairs, and our staff in regional offices), to answer the main office phone and direct the calls to the right people, to track dues payments in the Northeast Region locals, and to do general office work--stuffing envelopes, proofreading or writing letters, preparing agendas for the professional staff's meetings, that sort of thing. I sit at the desk where I'm writing this for about seven hours a day, with breaks for the drive to the post office and my lunch hour (actually hour and fifteen minutes, because my office has its own union and we have really cozy benefits). I use most of my energy thinking about my latest obsession. Anthropology? No, that was this time last year. World history? Sort of ended before it began, but maybe some other time. Writing? No such luck. No, my current obsession is comic books. For two months I've been doing almost nothing else with my time than reading comic books, comic books reviews, comic books histories, and so on. Why? Fucked if I know. It's fun.
So my self-reflection is starting to send me some memos every so often now, in re: employment and interests. They're very respectful memos, and the language can be a little dense and obscure at times (my self-reflection is in a phase where it writes in the language of the eighteenth century), but the message is clear enough: I'm going to die at some point, and I might want to do something with my time first.
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
I've come in to work today after celebrating the twenty-first birthday of one of Scott's friends from Trader Joe's. We had an absinthe, car bomb and girl drink bout at the Tin Star, while the bartender played concerts by the Pixies, Prince and the Revolution, and Roy Orbison on their gorgeous, large digital television. When I see images like a purple guitar being swung rhythmically to "When You Were Mine," I can understand a little better why people like digital televisions so well.
There were two TJ's friends, and the older of the two is a crazy man named Zeke. He's a fount of energy, waving in place and narrating odd tales even when he's not drunk. The bar stools were perhaps to restrictive for him, because he nearly fell off his several times, expressing only a moment's amazement that he didn't crack his head before jumping into another engagement with whoever's next to him. The bartender's jeep now knows the feel of Zeke's vomit--and to be clear, that's not something I give the check-plus to or anything, but there are some people who can somehow pull that off as fun, and Zeke's one of them. When the bartender came out for a smoke and saw the tire, Zeke burst at him and playfully threatened to do worse, whcih again could go either way (leaning toward shamefulness), but from the bartender's reaction, Zeke obviously has built up enough good will to pull it off as boisterousness. His body and mind leaps from one thing to the next, and though he doesn't quite shout at phantoms, he comes close.
The younger guy, Milljen, is a more laid-back affair, although without Zeke showing him up he'd hold his own. He's a slim, curly haired metal/prog guitar player and recording student at College of Santa Fe, planning to leave before he gets his degree to go full-time with a recording studio in town. His nose is a solid block of bone protruding from the middle of his eyes in a chunk, like a beak, and he can also launch into excited and jumbled stories, but unlike Zeke those stories are a little more predictable; when listening to them, you don't suddenly run into Amelia Stickney, or a gun barrel in Zeke's mouth, or an attempted discussion about Kierkegaard with a pompous Annapolis Johnny.
Eventually, after a quick stop at the Matador (which last year was pitched quite accurately as "Santa Fe's newest dive bar") we made our way to the Atomic Grill for nachos. The Atomic is the only restaurant downtown that's open past, I don't know, nine o'clock. Indeed, they're usually open past two, probably to make sure they get the entire after-bar rush, because somebody has to. There's this one waiter who's almost always there, and even though no one knows otherwise, no one thinks he's the owner. It's a tiny Brit in his thirties or forties, with constantly changing hair color and an endless string of post-punk t-shirts. He's polite, efficient, and hopelessly broken. I wish I knew what happened to him, and why he's always either working at the Atomic or wondering the liquor aisles in grocery stores. (Anne and I have both seen him in a couple of liquor aisles.) He'll listen when customers speak, and smile his broken, reserved smile, but very rarely will he reveal anything about himself. Whether it's busy or not, he mostly stays behind the counter, or quickly circling the tables (always there just when you need more water), breaking down the outdoor set-up, or pacing with a cigarette.
But I've come in to work, and now it's not last night any more. Now it's the cemented sinus, droopy eyed morning after, and I've come in to work even though I could have easily called out sick. Is that sunlight really the gray of a dusty old raincoat, or is it just me?
There were two TJ's friends, and the older of the two is a crazy man named Zeke. He's a fount of energy, waving in place and narrating odd tales even when he's not drunk. The bar stools were perhaps to restrictive for him, because he nearly fell off his several times, expressing only a moment's amazement that he didn't crack his head before jumping into another engagement with whoever's next to him. The bartender's jeep now knows the feel of Zeke's vomit--and to be clear, that's not something I give the check-plus to or anything, but there are some people who can somehow pull that off as fun, and Zeke's one of them. When the bartender came out for a smoke and saw the tire, Zeke burst at him and playfully threatened to do worse, whcih again could go either way (leaning toward shamefulness), but from the bartender's reaction, Zeke obviously has built up enough good will to pull it off as boisterousness. His body and mind leaps from one thing to the next, and though he doesn't quite shout at phantoms, he comes close.
The younger guy, Milljen, is a more laid-back affair, although without Zeke showing him up he'd hold his own. He's a slim, curly haired metal/prog guitar player and recording student at College of Santa Fe, planning to leave before he gets his degree to go full-time with a recording studio in town. His nose is a solid block of bone protruding from the middle of his eyes in a chunk, like a beak, and he can also launch into excited and jumbled stories, but unlike Zeke those stories are a little more predictable; when listening to them, you don't suddenly run into Amelia Stickney, or a gun barrel in Zeke's mouth, or an attempted discussion about Kierkegaard with a pompous Annapolis Johnny.
Eventually, after a quick stop at the Matador (which last year was pitched quite accurately as "Santa Fe's newest dive bar") we made our way to the Atomic Grill for nachos. The Atomic is the only restaurant downtown that's open past, I don't know, nine o'clock. Indeed, they're usually open past two, probably to make sure they get the entire after-bar rush, because somebody has to. There's this one waiter who's almost always there, and even though no one knows otherwise, no one thinks he's the owner. It's a tiny Brit in his thirties or forties, with constantly changing hair color and an endless string of post-punk t-shirts. He's polite, efficient, and hopelessly broken. I wish I knew what happened to him, and why he's always either working at the Atomic or wondering the liquor aisles in grocery stores. (Anne and I have both seen him in a couple of liquor aisles.) He'll listen when customers speak, and smile his broken, reserved smile, but very rarely will he reveal anything about himself. Whether it's busy or not, he mostly stays behind the counter, or quickly circling the tables (always there just when you need more water), breaking down the outdoor set-up, or pacing with a cigarette.
But I've come in to work, and now it's not last night any more. Now it's the cemented sinus, droopy eyed morning after, and I've come in to work even though I could have easily called out sick. Is that sunlight really the gray of a dusty old raincoat, or is it just me?
Monday, April 28, 2008
The discussion in this article, an opinion piece in The L.A. Times by Susan Jacoby, initially struck a chord with me (I think a ringing open G, but I don't have perfect pitch). When I read it a second time, I was somewhat less impressed, but I still think it's an important subject. It's about a growing tendency among Americans to ignore opposing points of view. The article pretty much relies on recognition to make its point, since it doesn't provide any evidence. It also comes from the mindset that everything was better in the past, and hey, isn't it a shame that it isn't so good now? Whether things were better in the past or not, I can't deny that there is a problem now. I was particularly struck by the statement that "[the] spirit of inquiry, which demands firsthand evidence and does not trivialize opposing points of view, is essential to a society's intellectual and political health." I don't see much in the media, from people in my office, or from conversations I hear around me that I would describe as the spirit of inquiry.
I find it unfortuate that Jacoby blames "[a] vast public laziness" for the shoddy reporting, the kind that at best cites the statements of opposing figures in a political argument and calls it a day, without any analysis or discussion. Of course, she's writing in a publication owned by the massive media conglomerate, the Tribune Company, so it's not surprising that she wouldn't find more fault with media entities themselves. Then again, she really does seem to believe that things were different a genearation ago. She pines for the public interest in the Watergate hearings: "I remember those weeks as a period when everyday preoccupations faded into the background and we found time, as a people, to perform our civic duty." Certainly that atmosphere of public inquiry sounds nice, and I don't ultimately doubt that more public interest could lead to a rejuvination of political discussion and better political news, but the presentation here seems to be missing the root of the problem--although I'm not sure what that is myself.
In another article, longer but better and quite worth the time, Steve Fraser writing for tomdispatch describes a different aspect of the widespread lack of interest in significant events. His focus is a second Gilded Age with our huge and growing income inequality and the cronyism seen in every cabinet department (really, every cabinet department, including Labor, HUD, and Treasury--see the first paragraph of the tomdispatcharticle) and all over Congress.
And yet, he points out, despite a similar income disparity and corrupt government, there isn't a cultural and political response anywhere near as deep or loud as there was last time around.
I find it unfortuate that Jacoby blames "[a] vast public laziness" for the shoddy reporting, the kind that at best cites the statements of opposing figures in a political argument and calls it a day, without any analysis or discussion. Of course, she's writing in a publication owned by the massive media conglomerate, the Tribune Company, so it's not surprising that she wouldn't find more fault with media entities themselves. Then again, she really does seem to believe that things were different a genearation ago. She pines for the public interest in the Watergate hearings: "I remember those weeks as a period when everyday preoccupations faded into the background and we found time, as a people, to perform our civic duty." Certainly that atmosphere of public inquiry sounds nice, and I don't ultimately doubt that more public interest could lead to a rejuvination of political discussion and better political news, but the presentation here seems to be missing the root of the problem--although I'm not sure what that is myself.
In another article, longer but better and quite worth the time, Steve Fraser writing for tomdispatch describes a different aspect of the widespread lack of interest in significant events. His focus is a second Gilded Age with our huge and growing income inequality and the cronyism seen in every cabinet department (really, every cabinet department, including Labor, HUD, and Treasury--see the first paragraph of the tomdispatcharticle) and all over Congress.
And yet, he points out, despite a similar income disparity and corrupt government, there isn't a cultural and political response anywhere near as deep or loud as there was last time around.
"Fast-forward to our second Gilded Age and the stage seems bare indeed. No great fears, no great expectations, no looming social apocalypses, no utopias or dystopias -- just a kind of flat-line sense of the end of history. Where are all the roiling insurgencies, the break-away political parties, the waves of strikes and boycotts, the infectious communal upheavals, the chronic sense of enough is enough? Where are the earnest efforts to invoke a new order which, no matter how sketchy and full of unanswered questions, now seem as minutely detailed as the blueprints for a Boeing 747 compared to 'yes we can?'"
Fraser plausibly blames the erosion of the industrial working class and the weak labor movement for the lack of fiery rhetoric, passion, and the political muscle that comes with a unified demographic. There is much more to this article, but man, reading it makes me wish I had a more significant job. How ludicrous is it that I work for a labor union, but I have no role in anything interesting like political action or even arguments with management? Instead I answer phones and process membership forms, call the payroll departments in school districts around the state when I notice that dues payments aren't totaling properly, and mostly, read blogs and news articles, or play freerice, because I don't even have much work most of the time.
Last week, I was given a bouquet on Administrative Professionals Day, and it really hit home: I'm an administrative assistant. I knew this already, but it's safe to say that the bouquet, and the statements of my office's leadership team ("we really appreciate your work, everything you do, great job guys") had the oppposite of their intended effect. What kind of Greg am I?
Fraser plausibly blames the erosion of the industrial working class and the weak labor movement for the lack of fiery rhetoric, passion, and the political muscle that comes with a unified demographic. There is much more to this article, but man, reading it makes me wish I had a more significant job. How ludicrous is it that I work for a labor union, but I have no role in anything interesting like political action or even arguments with management? Instead I answer phones and process membership forms, call the payroll departments in school districts around the state when I notice that dues payments aren't totaling properly, and mostly, read blogs and news articles, or play freerice, because I don't even have much work most of the time.
Last week, I was given a bouquet on Administrative Professionals Day, and it really hit home: I'm an administrative assistant. I knew this already, but it's safe to say that the bouquet, and the statements of my office's leadership team ("we really appreciate your work, everything you do, great job guys") had the oppposite of their intended effect. What kind of Greg am I?
Monday, March 31, 2008
Scott, Anne and I spent the weekend cleaning house. We split the duties, and collectively we swept cobwebs out of corners, removed dead weeds from the yard, mopped or vacuumed the floors, scrubbed the walls, and put away the detritus that collected in the living room over the last several months. Then we started looking ahead, planning things like where we should put mail or important papers, and finding a place for the pile of CDs that's been on the floor since we moved in. We got a new little case of shelves for the living room, and reorganized things throughout the house.
We moved on then to repositioning the furniture in the living room and the bedrooms; Scott had gotten a wall mount for the television he uses as a computer monitor, which he's been planning to do since he first moved in, and we were looking for a place to install it. We considered shifting all the furniture in the living room so that the couch could be closer to the screen, but only one set-up is possible with our house's orientation of walls, windows and electrical sockets. On the other hand, we would have to rearrange everything in the master bedroom in order to get my computer desk in there instead of the living room. We shifted everything in the bedroom (bed, chest of drawers, night table, bookshelf, and plastic drawer tower) to make space. Now it looks like a room in somebody else's house, or a new room altogether.
While I moved my computer into our bedroom, Scott used his new stud-finder to find him a stud, and a good one this time, not some wimp who was afraid of committment and was only going to stay with him for a couple of months. Scott got a position on his stud, and drilled into the wall for an anxious fifteen minutes in search of it. It turns out that in our wall, there's a lot more dry-wall than stud in the hole where the wall-mount screw had to go. There was a chance that putting the television up would cause a chunk of the wall to rip right out and crumble down onto the floor. Each of us took a flashlight and looked into the hole he'd drilled, trying in vain to make sure that the stud was reliable enough. It seemed that the only way to know if the mount would hold was to test it, and so Scott put it in and pulled down hard. Everything seemed okay, so he set the television onto the mount, ready to remove it at the smallest sign of trouble. He let it go to see if the wall could hold the full weight--and it stayed! So now we have two new-looking rooms, suddenly, after months of slowly accumulating furniture.
I've recently been aching for something to help me break the tedium of my lazy job and slow life, something that would let me feel just a bit of the excitement or wonder that I felt at times while in college, and at least occasionally after I graduated. For the better part of a year, with the exception of our visit to Maryland and New York over the winter break, I've felt dull-witted and sedentary, stuck not only in time and place but also in thought. I didn't have much that made me feel anticipation, enchantment, ambition, or really any deep emotion at all. In talking to Anne about it, she identified what I was missing: a sense of novelty. I felt pretty foolish when it was revealed to be such a trivial thing. Since I have no intention of leaving my job or house, and I can't start graduate school until Anne has gotten her undergraduate degree, I thought that I had better find something else to help me feel a passion for living.
It's a small change, the rearrangement of furniture in our bedroom, but it seems like even that is enough, at least for a while, to make me feel the wonder of being around something new. Now when I turn out the lights in bed, or first walk into the room, I feel like I'm staying in someone else's house for a while and moving on soon. I wonder if it's childish of me to cherish this feeling, but I don't really care. For now, I feel more energy to write and think creatively, just by looking up from my bed and seeing a computer where there was no computer before, or by having to recall that the bookshelf is across the room. Once the novelty is gone again, I hope I can find something more lasting and deeper to sustain me.
We moved on then to repositioning the furniture in the living room and the bedrooms; Scott had gotten a wall mount for the television he uses as a computer monitor, which he's been planning to do since he first moved in, and we were looking for a place to install it. We considered shifting all the furniture in the living room so that the couch could be closer to the screen, but only one set-up is possible with our house's orientation of walls, windows and electrical sockets. On the other hand, we would have to rearrange everything in the master bedroom in order to get my computer desk in there instead of the living room. We shifted everything in the bedroom (bed, chest of drawers, night table, bookshelf, and plastic drawer tower) to make space. Now it looks like a room in somebody else's house, or a new room altogether.
While I moved my computer into our bedroom, Scott used his new stud-finder to find him a stud, and a good one this time, not some wimp who was afraid of committment and was only going to stay with him for a couple of months. Scott got a position on his stud, and drilled into the wall for an anxious fifteen minutes in search of it. It turns out that in our wall, there's a lot more dry-wall than stud in the hole where the wall-mount screw had to go. There was a chance that putting the television up would cause a chunk of the wall to rip right out and crumble down onto the floor. Each of us took a flashlight and looked into the hole he'd drilled, trying in vain to make sure that the stud was reliable enough. It seemed that the only way to know if the mount would hold was to test it, and so Scott put it in and pulled down hard. Everything seemed okay, so he set the television onto the mount, ready to remove it at the smallest sign of trouble. He let it go to see if the wall could hold the full weight--and it stayed! So now we have two new-looking rooms, suddenly, after months of slowly accumulating furniture.
I've recently been aching for something to help me break the tedium of my lazy job and slow life, something that would let me feel just a bit of the excitement or wonder that I felt at times while in college, and at least occasionally after I graduated. For the better part of a year, with the exception of our visit to Maryland and New York over the winter break, I've felt dull-witted and sedentary, stuck not only in time and place but also in thought. I didn't have much that made me feel anticipation, enchantment, ambition, or really any deep emotion at all. In talking to Anne about it, she identified what I was missing: a sense of novelty. I felt pretty foolish when it was revealed to be such a trivial thing. Since I have no intention of leaving my job or house, and I can't start graduate school until Anne has gotten her undergraduate degree, I thought that I had better find something else to help me feel a passion for living.
It's a small change, the rearrangement of furniture in our bedroom, but it seems like even that is enough, at least for a while, to make me feel the wonder of being around something new. Now when I turn out the lights in bed, or first walk into the room, I feel like I'm staying in someone else's house for a while and moving on soon. I wonder if it's childish of me to cherish this feeling, but I don't really care. For now, I feel more energy to write and think creatively, just by looking up from my bed and seeing a computer where there was no computer before, or by having to recall that the bookshelf is across the room. Once the novelty is gone again, I hope I can find something more lasting and deeper to sustain me.
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Lately I switched my reading habits from blogs to a news aggregator called truthout. I'm a bit conflicted about this site and others like it, since they don't give any revenue to the providers of the content (usually mainstream news sources, with a healthy dose of smaller journals like Mother Jones and In These Times). I've been thinking recently about the things discussed in articles like this one by Eric Alterman; namely that the internet is a really good source for independent political commentary, but its chances of picking up the slack from newspapers is slim. Most likely the news sources of the new century will be inward-looking and local, and broken in disparate pieces which would lack the power the last century's newspapers had to put focus on particular issues.
Anyway, it's late and I don't have the energy to write much more, but I'm going to try to keep up this blog again from now on and I thought I might as well start now.
Anyway, it's late and I don't have the energy to write much more, but I'm going to try to keep up this blog again from now on and I thought I might as well start now.
Monday, March 03, 2008
I finally drove Hoffman home today, and he is a very good car indeed. The Washington Post, however, is very, very bad. They are the opposite of Hoffman. The editor of their Outlook section, John Pomfret, needs to go, as Bob Somerby says in today's Daily Howler. Yesterday Pomfret put into print two of the most execrable opinion pieces I've ever seen, side by side under the banner "Women vs. Women" (I ask that you not click on the links to these two articles just yet). The first, by Charlotte Allen, dredges up a catalog of ugly stereotypes about women, going all the way back to the Victorian era to reference women's supposedly frequent fainting spells (and cast doubt on the theory that it was because of their tight bodices), following up with pseudo-science by linking proportional brain size directly with intelligence, and then fatuously referencing the results of a recent study to trash women's driving skills. The second piece, by Linda Hirshman, absurdly claims that the split in the female voting bloc between Clinton and Obama in the primaries is a result of women being too flighty to band together and take power. This strange conclusion relies on the impossibly disingenuous premise that the goal of feminism is to seize power rather than to achieve equality between women and men in decision making and rights.
These two articles are astoundingly disgusting (although Allen's piece has gotten the majority of criticism), and they would not have been allowed into print if they were written about any other group of people. The Post knows that it could not get away with publishing such nasty slandor if it were of blacks, Jews, Arabs, or other such groups, because the backlash against the paper would lose them both readers and respect. It is a sad commentary on the state of the mainstream media today that they can still publish pieces that call women stupid and flighty, and not make any more substantive response to their numerous A-list blogger critics (and a flood of negative reader response) than to call Allen's piece "tongue in cheek". Firedoglake shows how phony this defense is with a description of Allen's previous work, and her obvious long-term agenda of dismantling feminism.
It seems likely, instead, that Pomfret published these articles for two reasons: pushing the Overton window, and creating a controversy to get lots of links and clicks to the pieces online to shore up their dwindling income. This is why I requested above that you not click on the links to the articles themselves. You can see long block quotes from both articles at many of the other blogs I linked to, so you can see what they're like, but I don't want to reward the Post by directing even one more reader to their page. A commenter at Feministing suggests going after their advertisers, which sounds like an excellent idea to me. Regardless of what to do about these two articles, the bullshit that they exemplify are by no means limited to the Post. You can see similar assaults against women in The New York Times style section just about every weekend; the L.A. Times published an equally insulting piece about women last Friday; big pundits like Chris Matthews, Andrew Sullivan, and Tucker Carlson all have deplorable records when discussing (or, in Matthews' case, even talking to) women. And I probably have no need to link to anything to reference the sexism on display in all facets of the mainstream media in the coverage of the Clinton campaign, which will probably become legendary.
As Somerby says in the post I linked to above (about a related but slightly different issue), "at various times, reformations of institutions are needed—reformations which may include widespread purges." I've been thinking today about how to help bring about such a reformation of the media, and really of society (although with respect to society generally the term purge has a rather different connotation that I wouldn't wish to apply). Why is this disgusting and damaging behavior still so common in 2008, and what can be done about it?
These two articles are astoundingly disgusting (although Allen's piece has gotten the majority of criticism), and they would not have been allowed into print if they were written about any other group of people. The Post knows that it could not get away with publishing such nasty slandor if it were of blacks, Jews, Arabs, or other such groups, because the backlash against the paper would lose them both readers and respect. It is a sad commentary on the state of the mainstream media today that they can still publish pieces that call women stupid and flighty, and not make any more substantive response to their numerous A-list blogger critics (and a flood of negative reader response) than to call Allen's piece "tongue in cheek". Firedoglake shows how phony this defense is with a description of Allen's previous work, and her obvious long-term agenda of dismantling feminism.
It seems likely, instead, that Pomfret published these articles for two reasons: pushing the Overton window, and creating a controversy to get lots of links and clicks to the pieces online to shore up their dwindling income. This is why I requested above that you not click on the links to the articles themselves. You can see long block quotes from both articles at many of the other blogs I linked to, so you can see what they're like, but I don't want to reward the Post by directing even one more reader to their page. A commenter at Feministing suggests going after their advertisers, which sounds like an excellent idea to me. Regardless of what to do about these two articles, the bullshit that they exemplify are by no means limited to the Post. You can see similar assaults against women in The New York Times style section just about every weekend; the L.A. Times published an equally insulting piece about women last Friday; big pundits like Chris Matthews, Andrew Sullivan, and Tucker Carlson all have deplorable records when discussing (or, in Matthews' case, even talking to) women. And I probably have no need to link to anything to reference the sexism on display in all facets of the mainstream media in the coverage of the Clinton campaign, which will probably become legendary.
As Somerby says in the post I linked to above (about a related but slightly different issue), "at various times, reformations of institutions are needed—reformations which may include widespread purges." I've been thinking today about how to help bring about such a reformation of the media, and really of society (although with respect to society generally the term purge has a rather different connotation that I wouldn't wish to apply). Why is this disgusting and damaging behavior still so common in 2008, and what can be done about it?
Friday, February 29, 2008
For the last two days I've been driving around in a behemoth of a vehicle, a Jeep Commander. It looks like a miniature hummer of death. I'd never driven an SUV before; it feels compromising. I keep wondering what other drivers think of me, and I don't usually think that way. Do they think I should drive more aggressively because I'm in such a big vehicle? Are they apprehensive of me, or do they respect me more than they did when I was driving my little Corolla? Do the pedestrians get that sinking sensation I always get when I'm walking an SUV passes me?
And Jesus, it's called a Commander. Did I mention that already? As the name says, I'm not doing the commanding; I'm just following orders.
I guess you're wondering why I'm being commanded. When I went on Wednesday night to get my new Corolla, I took it for a test drive and found that the light on the instrument panel that normally turns on with the headlights was dark. I couldn't adjust it with the dial to the left of the steering wheel, which seemed instead to be linked to the overhead light. The Carmax agent Anne and I had (a very nice, affable and funny young UNM student named Andrew) said that they would fix it for us, free of cost, but they needed to send it to a Toyota dealer to do the work. In the meantime, they would give me a loaner. As I was signing paperwork, a service employee told me that the loaner they were giving us "is a bit bigger than the car you got." Yes indeed.
It's also a bit bigger than African elephants, cruise ships, major rock formations, and I'm pretty sure the moon. I'll have it until Monday, apparently, because that's when Carmax expects the necessary part to come in. Until then, I feel like a pretty big jerk, driving myself around in my ocean liner.
And Jesus, it's called a Commander. Did I mention that already? As the name says, I'm not doing the commanding; I'm just following orders.
I guess you're wondering why I'm being commanded. When I went on Wednesday night to get my new Corolla, I took it for a test drive and found that the light on the instrument panel that normally turns on with the headlights was dark. I couldn't adjust it with the dial to the left of the steering wheel, which seemed instead to be linked to the overhead light. The Carmax agent Anne and I had (a very nice, affable and funny young UNM student named Andrew) said that they would fix it for us, free of cost, but they needed to send it to a Toyota dealer to do the work. In the meantime, they would give me a loaner. As I was signing paperwork, a service employee told me that the loaner they were giving us "is a bit bigger than the car you got." Yes indeed.
It's also a bit bigger than African elephants, cruise ships, major rock formations, and I'm pretty sure the moon. I'll have it until Monday, apparently, because that's when Carmax expects the necessary part to come in. Until then, I feel like a pretty big jerk, driving myself around in my ocean liner.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
I got my car in November of 2004 from a private seller after being told by Geoff Hoffman that it's always possible to get a car (or a place to live), within a week if you have to, as long as you don't care about price or quality. It wasn't so long ago, but when I look back I see myself as younger in some more crucial way than age. I needed advice like that. I'd never made any purchases more significant than getting dozens of CDs at Soundgarden in a single visit. I felt like I didn't have authorization to buy a car, that only more qualified people with more authority than me could buy cars. I didn't see this simply as an issue of age, because I knew younger people who bought cars (and did other authoritative or autonomous actions, like live on their own without going to college or get non-retail jobs). I have always self-consciously identified symbols of authority or autonomy, everything from a person's bearing to the ease with which someone considers performing acts I associated with maturity (and since at times that included performing in a rock band or organizing parties, I might have had an idiosyncratic understanding of maturity).
I was awed at the prospect of buying a car. I didn't know where to begin, and even once I started looking at listings in the newspaper I couldn't take it seriously. It didn't feel like I could actually make an offer on a car, negotiate a deal, pay, take the car away with me, and own it, so looking at listings seemed like play-acting. Geoff's advice was pretty important to me, then, because I had identified him as someone with the autonomy I lacked. I perhaps took other suggestions of his more seriously than he intended, because I also looked for a car with manual transmission and no automatic features after he said that's what he looked for. He's one of those people who have had experience with worst-case scenarios, so it didn't seem so ridiculous to him to think of what would happen if power windows broke during a rain storm, when the windows were all the way down.
I started out looking for Hondas, because at the time I had more experience with Hondas than with any other type of car, but Geoff steered me toward a Toyota. He said that if I was going to get a Japanese car, guys drove Toyotas and girls drove Hondas. I knew at the time how absurd such a statement was, but I was a little more willing to go along with it than I might otherwise have been because my ex-girlfriend had two Hondas and made a rather big deal about her affection for them. Nevertheless, the first car I test-drove ended up being a Subaru Outback. It belonged to a professor of music at the College of Santa Fe, where it was parked until he could get rid of it. I hadn't ever gone onto their campus, and I still felt very insecure about following directions to unfamiliar locations. I also had no idea how to assess the value of the car, and it had been several years since I'd driven a stick-shift, so I asked Geoff to go with me. I think he found it amusing that I thought of him sometimes like an older brother, and so he came along. He even drove when we took the car onto the street to see how it ran, and afterwards he said in a jokingly firm voice that I should buy the car. I thought it would be odd for me to drive a Subaru Outback, but thought I'd probably get it. I asked the owner if I could have some time to decide.
I eventually lost that car to bad cell phone reception on campus; the next time I was able to receive one of the owner's calls, he had sold the car to someone else because he hadn't heard from me in several days. The next one I found that was within my price range was a 1997 Corolla; the owner said I could come by and look at it at his house west of the Paseo, an area I had also never been. I'm pretty sure Geoff drove me to see it again; if so, he may have proven himself to be less assertive than I would have thought, because I never did find out why the Corolla had a hood that was a different color from the rest of the car. It was also probably worth less than the $2500 it was being offered for (and which I eventually paid, with money generously provided by my parents). When I went to pick up and buy the car later I got a ride with Febbie Steve, who came in with me to the guy's kitchen and started leafing through his New Mexican, asked for a glass of water, and asked a few questions about the guy's daughter, who had been the driver of the car.
I reacquainted myself with a manual transmission when driving home from the house, stalling frequently at stop signs and red lights; Febbie Steve was long gone by the time I even got out of the community. For weeks afterward, I stalled epicly. When Geoff and I were headed downtown one night, I stalled in front of a police car and Geoff joked, "well, that's not suspicious." I only really picked up the skill of getting into first gear after the first snowfall that year, because it just so happened that the mixture of caution and skittishness I felt moving around on the snowy streets produced just the right ratio of pushing down on the gas and letting up on the clutch. After that, I just imagined that I was driving on snow and I started getting better at getting into gear.
It would be difficult to number the memories I have associated with that car. I sat in the driver's seat the morning after Senior Prank, having slept on a bed vacated by a friend who was chasing a girl, because I was drunk and sleepy; I sat quietly in the nurse's lot, my hands on my eyes, waiting for an unaccountable burning to stop (for whatever reason it was the first time I got allergies in New Mexico). I was again in the driver's seat when I made a prank call to the radio show of Cobalt Blue, the St. John's College Events Director. I pretended to be Jorge, a huge fan who just wanted to tell him to keep on doing what he was doing, while Geoff held back laughter next to me. A few weeks later, as I was getting ready to leave Santa Fe, I took the car in for a diagnostic and found out that I needed to replace some critical elements before I could drive it across the country, and so my brother Jeff (who had flown out to drive with me) and I got a hotel room and waited for the car to be fixed. When it was ready, I loaded it with everything I had brought to Santa Fe, and we drove it across desert and nothingness to Dallas and then up through the muddy plains to the now unfamiliar green of Maryland, back pretty much only because I'd fallen in love with Anne.
I had to convince my father that returning with the car, rather than selling it and taking a plane, made more sense. I had wanted to make the drive, and also knew that having a car in Maryland would be necessary to see Anne as frequently as I wanted to. Having my own car certainly made it quite a bit easier to drive the 35 miles from Ellicott City to Severna Park. Once I got there, we frequently had no place else to go after Barnes and Noble closed and we'd already sat in the Double T for as long as we could tolerate, so we just stayed in the car into the night, which had the added bonus of getting to know several officers from the Severna Park Police Department, wondering if we were both consenting adults.
The year after I'd gone back to Maryland, Anne moved in with me in my parents house and we saved up enough money to move . . . somewhere. We were commuting every day to Lanham just north of D.C., 45 minutes both ways, and on Saturday mornings we opened the synagogue that my mother worked at and served as Shabbas Goyim. At first I thought we were going to Berlin, where my brother Eric could help me find work teaching English. Then one night, sitting on a wooden bench on the fake dock at the fake harbor of the Annapolis Harbor Center Mall, I got a call from Kay, a friend and my old supervisor at the library, asking me if I'd be interested in taking her position when she left at the end of the summer.
Anne hadn't driven in several years, but she decided to relearn how in order to help me with the driving. She had stopped driving back then out of what sounded like terror. It took about half an hour to persuade her to drive past the stop sign at the end of my parent's street, and even after that she attributed a lot more importance to stalling out than was reasonable, but amazingly, after a week of lessons, she had gotten a couple hours of experience on the harried highways of Baltimore, and she felt ready to do some of the driving on the trip.
And so we loaded up the car again, which had by this point been christened Bukowski because the engine sounded so angry and bitter about everything. We drove through northern Maryland forests into the overgrown highways of Virginia, through Tennessee and over the pot holes of Arkansas, then down into dusty Oklahoma, where we hung out with Wes of St. John's Annapolis fame and St. John's Santa Fe obscurity. Then we spent a day and a night and another day and another night and then a week and then some more nights getting through Texas, and finally arrived here in Santa Fe. Somewhere in all of this, Buchowski lost half of his hubcaps, which had huge, warlike spirally grooves; the other two fell off in Santa Fe.
I write all this because now, after three and a half years, I've traded Bukowski in for a newer Corolla. I spent the last several days cleaning him out, thinking about the things I wrote about here, and focusing on the view while driving. I'm surprised by how difficult it is to let go of a car, how attached I feel to it/him (and I really have thought of it as having a personality, as is probably not surprising to anyone who's named a car). He's gone now, sold to Carmax and soon to be replaced by a 2003 Corolla that just happened to lack power locks, mirrors and windows. Its name will be Hoffman, in honor of Geoff.
I was awed at the prospect of buying a car. I didn't know where to begin, and even once I started looking at listings in the newspaper I couldn't take it seriously. It didn't feel like I could actually make an offer on a car, negotiate a deal, pay, take the car away with me, and own it, so looking at listings seemed like play-acting. Geoff's advice was pretty important to me, then, because I had identified him as someone with the autonomy I lacked. I perhaps took other suggestions of his more seriously than he intended, because I also looked for a car with manual transmission and no automatic features after he said that's what he looked for. He's one of those people who have had experience with worst-case scenarios, so it didn't seem so ridiculous to him to think of what would happen if power windows broke during a rain storm, when the windows were all the way down.
I started out looking for Hondas, because at the time I had more experience with Hondas than with any other type of car, but Geoff steered me toward a Toyota. He said that if I was going to get a Japanese car, guys drove Toyotas and girls drove Hondas. I knew at the time how absurd such a statement was, but I was a little more willing to go along with it than I might otherwise have been because my ex-girlfriend had two Hondas and made a rather big deal about her affection for them. Nevertheless, the first car I test-drove ended up being a Subaru Outback. It belonged to a professor of music at the College of Santa Fe, where it was parked until he could get rid of it. I hadn't ever gone onto their campus, and I still felt very insecure about following directions to unfamiliar locations. I also had no idea how to assess the value of the car, and it had been several years since I'd driven a stick-shift, so I asked Geoff to go with me. I think he found it amusing that I thought of him sometimes like an older brother, and so he came along. He even drove when we took the car onto the street to see how it ran, and afterwards he said in a jokingly firm voice that I should buy the car. I thought it would be odd for me to drive a Subaru Outback, but thought I'd probably get it. I asked the owner if I could have some time to decide.
I eventually lost that car to bad cell phone reception on campus; the next time I was able to receive one of the owner's calls, he had sold the car to someone else because he hadn't heard from me in several days. The next one I found that was within my price range was a 1997 Corolla; the owner said I could come by and look at it at his house west of the Paseo, an area I had also never been. I'm pretty sure Geoff drove me to see it again; if so, he may have proven himself to be less assertive than I would have thought, because I never did find out why the Corolla had a hood that was a different color from the rest of the car. It was also probably worth less than the $2500 it was being offered for (and which I eventually paid, with money generously provided by my parents). When I went to pick up and buy the car later I got a ride with Febbie Steve, who came in with me to the guy's kitchen and started leafing through his New Mexican, asked for a glass of water, and asked a few questions about the guy's daughter, who had been the driver of the car.
I reacquainted myself with a manual transmission when driving home from the house, stalling frequently at stop signs and red lights; Febbie Steve was long gone by the time I even got out of the community. For weeks afterward, I stalled epicly. When Geoff and I were headed downtown one night, I stalled in front of a police car and Geoff joked, "well, that's not suspicious." I only really picked up the skill of getting into first gear after the first snowfall that year, because it just so happened that the mixture of caution and skittishness I felt moving around on the snowy streets produced just the right ratio of pushing down on the gas and letting up on the clutch. After that, I just imagined that I was driving on snow and I started getting better at getting into gear.
It would be difficult to number the memories I have associated with that car. I sat in the driver's seat the morning after Senior Prank, having slept on a bed vacated by a friend who was chasing a girl, because I was drunk and sleepy; I sat quietly in the nurse's lot, my hands on my eyes, waiting for an unaccountable burning to stop (for whatever reason it was the first time I got allergies in New Mexico). I was again in the driver's seat when I made a prank call to the radio show of Cobalt Blue, the St. John's College Events Director. I pretended to be Jorge, a huge fan who just wanted to tell him to keep on doing what he was doing, while Geoff held back laughter next to me. A few weeks later, as I was getting ready to leave Santa Fe, I took the car in for a diagnostic and found out that I needed to replace some critical elements before I could drive it across the country, and so my brother Jeff (who had flown out to drive with me) and I got a hotel room and waited for the car to be fixed. When it was ready, I loaded it with everything I had brought to Santa Fe, and we drove it across desert and nothingness to Dallas and then up through the muddy plains to the now unfamiliar green of Maryland, back pretty much only because I'd fallen in love with Anne.
I had to convince my father that returning with the car, rather than selling it and taking a plane, made more sense. I had wanted to make the drive, and also knew that having a car in Maryland would be necessary to see Anne as frequently as I wanted to. Having my own car certainly made it quite a bit easier to drive the 35 miles from Ellicott City to Severna Park. Once I got there, we frequently had no place else to go after Barnes and Noble closed and we'd already sat in the Double T for as long as we could tolerate, so we just stayed in the car into the night, which had the added bonus of getting to know several officers from the Severna Park Police Department, wondering if we were both consenting adults.
The year after I'd gone back to Maryland, Anne moved in with me in my parents house and we saved up enough money to move . . . somewhere. We were commuting every day to Lanham just north of D.C., 45 minutes both ways, and on Saturday mornings we opened the synagogue that my mother worked at and served as Shabbas Goyim. At first I thought we were going to Berlin, where my brother Eric could help me find work teaching English. Then one night, sitting on a wooden bench on the fake dock at the fake harbor of the Annapolis Harbor Center Mall, I got a call from Kay, a friend and my old supervisor at the library, asking me if I'd be interested in taking her position when she left at the end of the summer.
Anne hadn't driven in several years, but she decided to relearn how in order to help me with the driving. She had stopped driving back then out of what sounded like terror. It took about half an hour to persuade her to drive past the stop sign at the end of my parent's street, and even after that she attributed a lot more importance to stalling out than was reasonable, but amazingly, after a week of lessons, she had gotten a couple hours of experience on the harried highways of Baltimore, and she felt ready to do some of the driving on the trip.
And so we loaded up the car again, which had by this point been christened Bukowski because the engine sounded so angry and bitter about everything. We drove through northern Maryland forests into the overgrown highways of Virginia, through Tennessee and over the pot holes of Arkansas, then down into dusty Oklahoma, where we hung out with Wes of St. John's Annapolis fame and St. John's Santa Fe obscurity. Then we spent a day and a night and another day and another night and then a week and then some more nights getting through Texas, and finally arrived here in Santa Fe. Somewhere in all of this, Buchowski lost half of his hubcaps, which had huge, warlike spirally grooves; the other two fell off in Santa Fe.
I write all this because now, after three and a half years, I've traded Bukowski in for a newer Corolla. I spent the last several days cleaning him out, thinking about the things I wrote about here, and focusing on the view while driving. I'm surprised by how difficult it is to let go of a car, how attached I feel to it/him (and I really have thought of it as having a personality, as is probably not surprising to anyone who's named a car). He's gone now, sold to Carmax and soon to be replaced by a 2003 Corolla that just happened to lack power locks, mirrors and windows. Its name will be Hoffman, in honor of Geoff.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
When I drive to the post office everyday for my office mail-run, I listen to NPR; I'm usually driving when Fresh Air is on. Today Terry Gross was interviewing Martha Weinman Lear, the author of Where Did I Leave My Glasses, which is about normal memory problems that come with middle age. She recounted how she went to a neurologist because she was afraid her memory loss was an early sign of Alzheimer's. The doctor said it was a normal type of memory loss, that of episodic memory (based on events in one's life) rather than semantic memory (established facts about the world learned in youth). When she asked how to improve her memory, the doctor said that the biggest hindrance to remembering things is not paying attention in the first place. You aren't going to remember the name of a person you're introduced to, or the title of a movie, if you weren't paying enough attention when it was mentioned to you.
This is my predicament nearly all the time, with just about everything. I find that I am almost always attending to nothing in particular. My mind is usually focused inward, but I generally feel unsatisfied with my thoughts; they're more like the drifting that happens just before falling asleep than anything else. I'm not solving problems, or composing stories, or thinking poetically or intellectually. Instead I'm going over the few things from the recent past that I happened to be paying attention to, or (if I'm at work) thinking of how I'd rather be at home reading. I might re-imagine my part in a recent conversation, and while I'm doing it I'll picture myself talking face-to-face with a person who I was actually talking to on the phone or in email. Or maybe I'll call to mind a distant friend who I haven't contacted in a while. Sometimes my thoughts are based on things in my view, like bumper stickers or the fact that the weather predicted snow yesterday but instead it's sunny; so I must notice some things, but I don't know why it is that I notice these things and not others.
Invariably, when it occurs to me to judge my thoughts, they seem banal and uninteresting. In their place I'd probably like most of all to think of stories that I could write, but that doesn't happen naturally and I generally can't when I try. It seems to me that this is probably related to my inattentiveness, since writers very often talk about how they retain details. But then again, some writers are also described as seeming disconnected and fanciful. I tell myself there are simply different sorts of fiction writers, and that maybe I just wouldn't be the type who has an eye for detail.
Because of my inattentiveness, I'm constantly seeing things in my daily drives which I know I've seen before, but wouldn't have recalled if someone had tried to remind me of them. Things like the placement of trees, or the locations of stores; a broken trash can, a bus stop advertisement, the shape of a building. I don't notice big things, too; for example, every time I went to Fell's Point in Baltimore I would not notice the fact that there was a visible body of water unless Anne would point it out to me. If I were to make a model of the scene from memory, the harbor wouldn't be part of it; all of the buildings would be homogeneous, without distinguishing details and likely in the wrong places or just not there. The same is true of the street on which I live, and really every place I've encountered. I'm afraid that it also extends to things I read, conversations I have, pictures or movies I've seen. I have very poor recall for almost everything I've done in my life, because I just don't pay attention.
There have been many times in the past where I've lamented the fact that my attention to my immediate surroundings is so low. I often try to keep my mind focused on noticing things, but I never do it very well and whatever progress I make fades quickly, simply because I forget to try. I find it extremely difficult to keep my mind directed outward, even though when I succeed, I feel more energy from the endeavor rather than less.
The whole thing makes me wonder how other people attend to the world, since it seems like most other people have a higher level of attention than mine. I am always curious about the workings of other people's minds, although I have no idea if I'm any good at imagining them. I'm interested in how other people process the world, what thoughts they have, how their perspectives affect their intelligence, and how to imagine different levels of intelligence. I wish I could have an internal account of why people say or do certain things, one that would describe from their own perspective what the reasoning process was, or their emotional state, and even the mental structures they carry around with them which indicate what certain words or actions mean. I think my interest in these things improves my chances of someday habitually writing stories.
I wonder what capacity I, or anyone else, has for changing these basic elements of personality. More than will I ever be attentive, I wonder, can I ever be attentive?
This is my predicament nearly all the time, with just about everything. I find that I am almost always attending to nothing in particular. My mind is usually focused inward, but I generally feel unsatisfied with my thoughts; they're more like the drifting that happens just before falling asleep than anything else. I'm not solving problems, or composing stories, or thinking poetically or intellectually. Instead I'm going over the few things from the recent past that I happened to be paying attention to, or (if I'm at work) thinking of how I'd rather be at home reading. I might re-imagine my part in a recent conversation, and while I'm doing it I'll picture myself talking face-to-face with a person who I was actually talking to on the phone or in email. Or maybe I'll call to mind a distant friend who I haven't contacted in a while. Sometimes my thoughts are based on things in my view, like bumper stickers or the fact that the weather predicted snow yesterday but instead it's sunny; so I must notice some things, but I don't know why it is that I notice these things and not others.
Invariably, when it occurs to me to judge my thoughts, they seem banal and uninteresting. In their place I'd probably like most of all to think of stories that I could write, but that doesn't happen naturally and I generally can't when I try. It seems to me that this is probably related to my inattentiveness, since writers very often talk about how they retain details. But then again, some writers are also described as seeming disconnected and fanciful. I tell myself there are simply different sorts of fiction writers, and that maybe I just wouldn't be the type who has an eye for detail.
Because of my inattentiveness, I'm constantly seeing things in my daily drives which I know I've seen before, but wouldn't have recalled if someone had tried to remind me of them. Things like the placement of trees, or the locations of stores; a broken trash can, a bus stop advertisement, the shape of a building. I don't notice big things, too; for example, every time I went to Fell's Point in Baltimore I would not notice the fact that there was a visible body of water unless Anne would point it out to me. If I were to make a model of the scene from memory, the harbor wouldn't be part of it; all of the buildings would be homogeneous, without distinguishing details and likely in the wrong places or just not there. The same is true of the street on which I live, and really every place I've encountered. I'm afraid that it also extends to things I read, conversations I have, pictures or movies I've seen. I have very poor recall for almost everything I've done in my life, because I just don't pay attention.
There have been many times in the past where I've lamented the fact that my attention to my immediate surroundings is so low. I often try to keep my mind focused on noticing things, but I never do it very well and whatever progress I make fades quickly, simply because I forget to try. I find it extremely difficult to keep my mind directed outward, even though when I succeed, I feel more energy from the endeavor rather than less.
The whole thing makes me wonder how other people attend to the world, since it seems like most other people have a higher level of attention than mine. I am always curious about the workings of other people's minds, although I have no idea if I'm any good at imagining them. I'm interested in how other people process the world, what thoughts they have, how their perspectives affect their intelligence, and how to imagine different levels of intelligence. I wish I could have an internal account of why people say or do certain things, one that would describe from their own perspective what the reasoning process was, or their emotional state, and even the mental structures they carry around with them which indicate what certain words or actions mean. I think my interest in these things improves my chances of someday habitually writing stories.
I wonder what capacity I, or anyone else, has for changing these basic elements of personality. More than will I ever be attentive, I wonder, can I ever be attentive?
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Just now I was driving back to the office after lunch. I was living in my head, like I always do, listening to jazz on the radio and thinking about what other cars were doing so I didn't hit anything. A black pickup truck turned onto St. Michael's just before me, pulling into the left lane, while I pulled into the right. I saw cars stopped at a red light in front of me; rather than pulling up to them quickly, I kept the speed with which I'd turned so that I wouldn't have to come to a stop before the light changed. Then the black pickup switched lanes and pulled in front of me. I cursed him a little for blocking my acceleration room, ascribing a petty motive to the driver: maybe he did it because it felt like he was going faster, like passing someone on the highway. Just as I was registering his move, though, he disappeared, taking a right-hand exit to get onto St. Francis.
The cars started moving then, and I had successfully kept my speed, just driving now along the road back to work, no new thoughts. Then suddenly, it was as though the lens of my eyes expanded, and I saw the view around me. I looked at the horizon and saw that it was bordered by gorgeous blue mountains, forever in the distance. I leaned over so I could see more of the sky and saw that it was gigantic, an uninterrupted blue landscape all around me. I saw that the view around my car was long and low and had no buildings in it, almost like civilization hasn't quite taken hold here quite yet, even now after ten thousand years of city dwellers throwing up buildings and monuments and other manmade forms that chip away at the landscape. For just a few minutes, I felt once again the thrill of being in New Mexico, a land where it's possible to connect to life beyond modern confines and the day-to-day world of sleeping and eating, bills, national entertainment culture, presidential election year news, renting a cheaply designed house in a dull suburb of a dull city. For just a few minutes, I felt spiritual and imaginitive, the wonder of life, the possibilities of a free mind.
I've been trying to recapture that feeling for the last few years. I haven't had it much; New Mexico first gave it to me when I visited here during two spring vacations from Annapolis. Since then, more often than not, my mind has fallen into avoidance: I avoid remembering that I'm at work for the eight hours that I'm there, and then I avoid doing anything difficult (writing, studying an academic subject, reading German) until I go to sleep. This minor epiphany on St. Michael's, and a few other glimmers of light in the past months, have given me hope that my frozen mind might thaw soon.
The cars started moving then, and I had successfully kept my speed, just driving now along the road back to work, no new thoughts. Then suddenly, it was as though the lens of my eyes expanded, and I saw the view around me. I looked at the horizon and saw that it was bordered by gorgeous blue mountains, forever in the distance. I leaned over so I could see more of the sky and saw that it was gigantic, an uninterrupted blue landscape all around me. I saw that the view around my car was long and low and had no buildings in it, almost like civilization hasn't quite taken hold here quite yet, even now after ten thousand years of city dwellers throwing up buildings and monuments and other manmade forms that chip away at the landscape. For just a few minutes, I felt once again the thrill of being in New Mexico, a land where it's possible to connect to life beyond modern confines and the day-to-day world of sleeping and eating, bills, national entertainment culture, presidential election year news, renting a cheaply designed house in a dull suburb of a dull city. For just a few minutes, I felt spiritual and imaginitive, the wonder of life, the possibilities of a free mind.
I've been trying to recapture that feeling for the last few years. I haven't had it much; New Mexico first gave it to me when I visited here during two spring vacations from Annapolis. Since then, more often than not, my mind has fallen into avoidance: I avoid remembering that I'm at work for the eight hours that I'm there, and then I avoid doing anything difficult (writing, studying an academic subject, reading German) until I go to sleep. This minor epiphany on St. Michael's, and a few other glimmers of light in the past months, have given me hope that my frozen mind might thaw soon.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
It was four degrees outside this morning, colder than the walk-in freezer I remember from working at Main Street Ice Cream in Annapolis in 2002. Nevertheless, there was no moisture on the streets to freeze, despite a reported possibility of snow overnight. I think I'm going to start praying to Bob Dylan to give me snow days. He failed to give me one today, although it was less important than it might be because the office is even more quiet than normal today.
Last night they hosted a Legislative Reception, which they do every year during the single, puny New Mexico legislative session. The length of the legislative session rotates every year between thirty and sixty days. The rest of the year, the legislature meets only if called to a special session by the Governor. I can't imagine how the state government hopes to keep up with changes or impact New Mexico with sessions the length of an aphid's lifespan, but anyway, that's how they do it here.
Everybody in the office was shouting about how much stress they were under organizing everything, reserving hotel rooms, ordering food, training members in lobbying, and coordinating meetings of various organization committees, since all the board members would be in town. We invite all the members of the legislature, as well as the governor and his cabinet, the lieutenant governor, all the public education commissioners, and New Mexico's congressional representatives. I think only legislators and commissioners showed up. Everybody stood chatting in what we call the training room, eating finger food and watching the all-female mariachi band who I first saw in Tomasita's. It was about the same as a St. John's party, except without the altered states, hook-ups, aggressive dance music, indoor smoking, shouting, decorations, and senior residents watching over everything. Oh, also, the lights were brighter.
People kept telling me that I was welcome to come to the reception, as all the staff was invited as well; "You should come tonight, and bring you wife!" No one took the further step of telling me why I should go, but after I picked up Anne from school (where she was working), we stopped in and ate some barbecue sandwiches, chicken kabobs, and cookies. Everybody stood in a semicircle and slowly stopped chatting for first song by the mariachi band, who were all dressed in the same blue dress, with little guitars or violins and shifting singing duties. Then Anne and I left, without even seeing Bill Richardson, as I'd been half hoping.
We went home, and were soon joined by Adam Wilson, who I guess decided to drop by to visit Steven. Scott made pancakes, and then Adam and Steven bought a case of Tecate and made cheese hot dogs covered in bacon. I've quit smoking again, so I didn't join Adam on the porch in the solidifying cold. Adam's been coming over often since Steven moved in, and staying long after Anne and I go to bed. Having Steven live with us is, in general, like living in a part-time college dorm. We never know when we're going to be woken in the early morning by what could be either fearful shrieking or an Allanis Morrissette video on youtube, and sometimes the table is covered with empty beer cans in the morning. I hope that when Steven starts his job at Whole Foods next week, we move back to a quieter existence.
I still feel like a hostage to the seeming necessity of holding a full-time job. Maybe if Bob Dylan proves capable of providing me with snow days every so often, I can set up a sort of religious calendar around him so that I feel less monotony. May 24 would become the new Christmas, but beyond that I don't know what else to put on the calendar.
Today in the office, at least, the monotony is tempered by the feeling of relief from last night. In fact, only five people are here today, and if I were more rigorous about keeping up with my work, I'd legitimately have nothing to do. As it is, there are a few phone calls to make, and a few databases to update. I should also probably clean my desk. I'd just rather be home.
Last night they hosted a Legislative Reception, which they do every year during the single, puny New Mexico legislative session. The length of the legislative session rotates every year between thirty and sixty days. The rest of the year, the legislature meets only if called to a special session by the Governor. I can't imagine how the state government hopes to keep up with changes or impact New Mexico with sessions the length of an aphid's lifespan, but anyway, that's how they do it here.
Everybody in the office was shouting about how much stress they were under organizing everything, reserving hotel rooms, ordering food, training members in lobbying, and coordinating meetings of various organization committees, since all the board members would be in town. We invite all the members of the legislature, as well as the governor and his cabinet, the lieutenant governor, all the public education commissioners, and New Mexico's congressional representatives. I think only legislators and commissioners showed up. Everybody stood chatting in what we call the training room, eating finger food and watching the all-female mariachi band who I first saw in Tomasita's. It was about the same as a St. John's party, except without the altered states, hook-ups, aggressive dance music, indoor smoking, shouting, decorations, and senior residents watching over everything. Oh, also, the lights were brighter.
People kept telling me that I was welcome to come to the reception, as all the staff was invited as well; "You should come tonight, and bring you wife!" No one took the further step of telling me why I should go, but after I picked up Anne from school (where she was working), we stopped in and ate some barbecue sandwiches, chicken kabobs, and cookies. Everybody stood in a semicircle and slowly stopped chatting for first song by the mariachi band, who were all dressed in the same blue dress, with little guitars or violins and shifting singing duties. Then Anne and I left, without even seeing Bill Richardson, as I'd been half hoping.
We went home, and were soon joined by Adam Wilson, who I guess decided to drop by to visit Steven. Scott made pancakes, and then Adam and Steven bought a case of Tecate and made cheese hot dogs covered in bacon. I've quit smoking again, so I didn't join Adam on the porch in the solidifying cold. Adam's been coming over often since Steven moved in, and staying long after Anne and I go to bed. Having Steven live with us is, in general, like living in a part-time college dorm. We never know when we're going to be woken in the early morning by what could be either fearful shrieking or an Allanis Morrissette video on youtube, and sometimes the table is covered with empty beer cans in the morning. I hope that when Steven starts his job at Whole Foods next week, we move back to a quieter existence.
I still feel like a hostage to the seeming necessity of holding a full-time job. Maybe if Bob Dylan proves capable of providing me with snow days every so often, I can set up a sort of religious calendar around him so that I feel less monotony. May 24 would become the new Christmas, but beyond that I don't know what else to put on the calendar.
Today in the office, at least, the monotony is tempered by the feeling of relief from last night. In fact, only five people are here today, and if I were more rigorous about keeping up with my work, I'd legitimately have nothing to do. As it is, there are a few phone calls to make, and a few databases to update. I should also probably clean my desk. I'd just rather be home.