Friday, March 31, 2006

Dogs

I'm sure dogs burn in hell when they die. Cats too, but it's dogs I actually like to imagine.

Because they can't even stand, you know? I mean, the ground's probably magma, or something really hot at least. So the dog probably can't even really stand; the moment it puts a foot down... Flash! Whole paw catches fire! And, of course, the dog's got no choice, it has to stand, or else the whole body's going to burn.

and that's the other cool thing - the dog has no choice but life, fire, and pain. Just picture those eternal Dante style specters, except they're dogs, and on fire.

It's true that people probably burn as well, but I'm sure we handle it more gracefully than dogs. Dogs are domesticated. Those ugly fuckers spend their days smiling, eating, playing, and laughing at us. Sure, we're the chumps now, but lets see them laugh when they're rolling in burning barbs while we soak up rays next to the lake of fire. I mean, humans are built for pain.

Compare your average dishwasher and any of those big dogs. Now the dishwasher, that motherfucker's got years of work, disease, and human misery on him. He lives in fire at least 40 hours a week. Your average dog's been living the good life compared to that poor squeaky clean bastard. Hellfire's really no worse than a Calcutta heatwave to us; to a dog, that fire really is hell, or worse.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Mental Maintenance

Fuck. I'm feeling too lucid to really write anything of substance.

From my New Orleans notes:

The camp has a settled in feel, despite porta-potties lining its road. Adults are rare, and the camp is filled with youthful energy. Walking down the road between the sleeping tents and the showers; I pass drunken students just back from a Bourbon Street bar, clutching each other and wreaths of multi-colored plastic beads.

Later, as I write barefoot by stadium light, three round and beaming Baptist students stop singing about damnation to ask if I mind. I don't. None of us pay attention to the words - we hear sweet voices exalted by an even sweeter mission.


It's so strange, the role music plays in religion. I was listening to these girls sing about fire, and being saved, and terrible agony. They seemed to pour so much joy into the song that I couldn't convince myself at first of the song's actual content. Even if I could protest, what could I rightly say?

It's not like they thought of the song's lyrics when they sang. They just enjoyed singing, and I'm not even sure they heard anything except hope in those terrible lyrics.

Is it their fault for failing to question? Can they help their ignorance? It seems that a questioning mindset is a skill which doesn't occur naturally in people, and I can't blame those girls for coming from some backwoods part of Alaska.

Even if they were ready to send myself, and all other non-Baptists to hell.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Tapes n'Tapes

Fuck Yeah.

Title=Band Name, song name=insistor, more here

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Arts

There died a myriad,
And of the best, among them,
For an old bitch gone in the teeth,
For a botched civilization,

Charm, smiling at the good mouth,
Quick eyes gone under earth's lid,

For two gross of broken statues,
For a few thousand battered books.

Ezra Pound - Hugh Selwyn Mauberly, part V

Just random browsing today. If you're interested in language, check out languagehat, a really cool literature/translation blog.

From here.

Gunkajima Island



Found here and here and explanation here.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Ha HA - I am Posting at the Speed of Light


"Another existential risk that Bostrom and others have identified is that we're actually living in a simulation and the simulation will be shut down. It might appear that there's not a lot we could do to influence this. However, since we're the subject of the simulation, we do have the opportunity to shape what happens inside of it. The best way we could avoid being shut down would be to be interesting to the observers of the simulation. Assuming that someone is actually paying attention to the simulation, it's a fair assumption that it's less likely to be turned off when it's compelling that otherwise...

"Our living in such a universe (created by another civilization) can be considered a simulation scenario. Perhaps this other civilization is running an evolutionary algorithm on our universe (that is, the evolution we're witnessing) to create an explosion of knowledge from a technological Singularity. If that is true, then the civilization watching our universe might shut down the simulation if it appeared that a knowledge Singularity had gone awry and it did not look like it was going to occur."

(Ray Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near, 405)

And that's why I barbecued the neighbors dog.

Writing and More New Orleans Stuff

From the van ride:

Atlanta, a pile of skyscrapers, homeless, and identical white houses. Highways, bloated and thick as the veins which support my grandfather's legs. They stretch from Atlanta to the world.

The Appalachians, a series of thick creases in the Map.

Boston, New York, Portland. All spill and leap from the rightmost edges of those long and rinkled mountains.

Left of Atlanta the finger stumbles over oasii among Midwestern slumber. St. Louis Silver Springs. Boulder. Nestled in cracks of thought and movement.

San Francisco battles New Orleans. Both are have been will be scarred. Survivors wander their streets, gibbering and grasping government checks.

Japan lies on the other side. Japan is wildflowers grown through concrete; laughing leaping children wearing starched origami folded uniforms.

There is no ocean. Borders are thought and tremulous shaken away dreams.





Pictures were taken in New Orleans lower 9th ward. 6 months after the hurricane.

If everything works out, I should be down in New Orleans again, volunteering with an organization called Common Grounds the first month of summer. The organization is pretty cool, mainly young people doing things like gutting houses, distributing food and medical supplies, rebuilding community centers, and providing counseling and tutoring for survivors.

Sunday, March 26, 2006

heh



I almost choked.

From Least I Could Do.

Saturday, March 25, 2006

Dreams and Stumblings

I didn't write as much as I expected in New Orleans. I wrote these two pieces on the car ride back:

Katrina hit New Orleans like an earthquake. You feel the effects, entering and leaving the sunken city. The roads are cracked and bumpy, our van rocks and shudders even now, 40 minutes outside of New Orleans.

The city streets are worse, though they're being slowly repaired.

It's as if a giant boot stomped through New Orleans, kicking houses sideways and crumpling asphalt roads.


-------------------------------------------------

She asks me why I never mention her eyes in my writing. I stop writing. Turn. And quietly, speaking close between our mingled breathes explain that I never see her eyes, I only see those private peculiarities. A collar bone, white from my grasp, drowned in red as she blushes.

I can feel her smile against my cheek.

She's still smiling as I write this. A heavy contented weight, stray hairs tickling my neck, coffee cream breath swimming between my shoulder blades.


-------------------------------------------------

So, in that second piece, should I write "A heavy contented weight", or "a heavy content weight"?

Any other suggestions welcome, of course.

Suger and Gumbdrops!

I've got a date!

And she's all smiling and stuff!

And my feet are numb!

Monday, March 20, 2006

Things found in New Orleans:

A grandmother's wedding ring
A room full of soggy books about Hitler
Enough mold to choke a porn star
200,000 empty homes
Cool breeze and excellent pastries
The joy of living in a tent with at least 60 other people

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Jonesing

Mmmm... itching to get to the fun part of Gear Krieg game.

The team is currently stranded in deepest Africa, 1941. Supplies are limited, location unknown, and the jungle is swarming with nazi's. Plus, they still don't know why a respectable British officer killed their pilot and copilot at 14,000 feet.

Can't wait... malaria... headhunters... the jungle crazies... weird science... paranoia...

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

The War of Dextrous Digit Succession

Right. Fuck Livejournal.

Check this shit out:





Workin' up some writing inspiration. Imagining my blood as brimming with clots of pachinko balls close formed as they squimmer through arteries. Tracing a fascinating and obscene trail along the suicide vein and into my palm.

In other news - Creative Writing class friday + substance abuse? Stay tuned.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

I'm going to try out livejournal for a while.

Livejournal Link

Sleep, Tonight

http://www.streettech.com/bcp/BCPgraf/Manifestos/transreal.htm

A Writing Prompt

Use the phrase "craven images" in a piece.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Mask + Me


Hey.

Sky and Castle 2

This is the latest version of Sky and Castle. Added two opening paragraphs, fucked around with dialogue, removed the word "and" from somewhere in the second half. Next project - write at least a page on to the end. Now I sleep.

Tiny droplets of water swelled and bloated upon the window's surface, and I followed them with tired eyes, watching as they converged and became crushed rivers, eventually swept off the tiny unblinking window and left in the plane's invisible but powerful wake, floating, buffeted by weightless and mighty hands. The tray resting dully on my knees was scattered with crumbs, hand written notes, tiny books of poetry, and at least one empty cup. I looked out the window again, feeling myself shifting, becoming disconnected as I boomeranged back across the Atlantic, returning to the family I still called home.

Looking around, I tried to focus, but my eyes danced over the seated mob, and I saw only strangers, empty cardboard figures, and a thick haze of artificial light. We were separated by more than nationality or accent, and I soon turned away, towards the slumbering light of false dawn. My eyelids brushed heavily against the window, a voice whispered from darkness, and I felt myself sinking into space, sky, and dream. I dreamed of poetry, perfect passages engraved in what had once been an architect's mind, images replacing equations and angles, and an image which still haunts me.

A blue sky, streaked with broad swaths of aquamarine, as if a painter's watery brush had strayed, blending the spheres of sea and air. A pale gray dot hangs within this cloudless sky, an improbable apparition. The dot is solidly defined, but distant; it hangs upon the skyline like an unplayed note, a ready dept; a rock floating still in quiet wind.

Features leap into distinction as I move closer, and my eyes dance over parapets, crenellations, sharp towers, and a central keep. All inverted, reaching for the sea below. The parapets hang lowest, a gap toothed half frown. I remember my life, remember my father, remember

“parapets?” My feet swung beneath my grandfather's old tall chair; fingers pried and searched the chair's painted back. The test was tomorrow, Monday; the calender had become a menacing, looming figure. One small hand beat the seconds against my seat, minute shivers against solid stained wood. A palm fell, fingers tapped, and I strained against time. That moment grew closer and I didn't have time and my father spoke.

“P-A-R-A-P-E-T-S” He speaks slowly, distinctly, the same way we speak on the phone, now.

“Uh...” I stall, of course. He knows. I can see it as I rewatch the scene. I've remembered that pause many times, remembered the stacato of young hands and my father's bright waiting eyes. I will always remember my father's eyes, remember watching him. Speaking, knowing a slow burning pride which has never faded even when speak, later.

“It's like, something in a castle...” That's what we were studying - what I was studying.

He doesn't smile, but his eyes are larger, and I feel small, like I'm about to watch an actor perform. His arms bow, index finger extend, and he's suddenly a monkey, hands raised, pointing at his underarms. He's started to laugh now, and I laugh too, watching him hop around the ground.

Of course, that was a long time ago, and now I can identify the castle's features as it moves closer.

Bird droppings speckle the castle's numberless roofs. The dark shingled roofs seem somehow older, greyer and more weathered than the stone which supports them. The stone itself is painted with moss, thickest on the ground, thinner as the towers and walls rise. I find weak spots in the north tower roof, spots along the wall where water has leaked through the roof and given rise to independent colonies of moss.

I don't need to see the roof from inside the tower to identify the problem. It's common in buildings from that time period, a major problem for the societies which restore old English estates and castles. My father and I discussed the flaw when I was still studying architecture, when we had something in common besides a love for bad jokes and worse food, and we never agreed. It was a disagreement we cherished, one which led to boisterous laughter and complaints about new techniques and textbooks.

He built mainly residential then, and the work had become a part of the household, since he started working out of an unused upstairs room. He liked skylights, clever corners, French doors, and open winding staircases. Now, I look for these features as I pass through houses, and can only completely approve when each is present.

The castle sits on a ball of mud and rock, like a strange and inturned growth, slumbering as it hangs in the sky.

My feet touch the ground with that weightless, one small step quality I never feel in life. It is hard to tell the difference between earth and stone. The ground has been broken into itself by hundreds of feet, hundreds of years, and nothing soft remains.

There are only a few feet of cold naked ground between the edge and castle. One step, an outstretched arm, and I stand rooted between earth and stone walls. My fingers pry the wide cracks between immense blocks, and I reach higher, look higher, and see

the blue above me, gray castle walls my horizon, the distant ocean reflects a quiet sun. I should feel vertigo at this point, and I concentrate, probing with perverse curiosity for that slow and deliberate full pendulum swing as a weight travels around my stomach and my ears rebel while eyes water and tears betray my body's struggle with the impossible sight. This is a dream. I feel nothing.

My feet echo silently as I step back, gain perspective. The gates have opened to the left; perhaps they were open when I arrived. These things happen, and I ignore them as I must ignore so many other minor inconsistencies, both in life and dream. I walk towards the waiting void with an eagerness that isn’t reflected in my slow steps.

Stepping through the open gates under ordered rows of eternally empty holes, I feel the silent moist watchfulness of the mold which now grows throughout the castle’s portcullisse. Narrow iron grates line the floor, unstained by blood. In older times, in other worlds, this chamber was the castle’s last defense. Boiling tar was poured through “murder holes” in the high ceiling while broad headed crossbow bolts tore through any surviving invaders. It is a design infrequently seen in modern homes, a room designed for efficient killing.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Bored? In Atlanta?

Of Montreal is playing April 7th at the Drunken Unicorn, only $7, all ages.

I've been meaning to see the Drunken Unicorn, and Of Montreal, so it should be cool.



Also, I keep hearing about the laptop battle thing. Info here.

Finally, Atlanta Underground has info about cool local stuff. Seems a'ight.

I Think This Writing Thing is Working

I was reading The Art of the Novel, by Milan Kundera, and he mentioned this cool Dante quote:

"In any act, the primary intention of the one who acts is to reveal his own image"

Spiffy, eh?

That gave me a few ideas for Sky and Castle, which I've copied from the scrap paper I grabbed and scribbled on:

The dreamer dreams intentionally, castle is purposeful construct.

Elements outside dream are unintentional? Father?

A slight reworking of intro, maybe description of falling asleep, hands grasp...

Because the castle is intentional, it does not necessarily symbolize interaction between father and son.

Write more! Central keep! Furnishings? Well?


Itching for comments, even from dirty silent Russians/tall people/Ooki motherfuckers.

Updated Sky and Castle

Changes to opening paragraph, and additional paragraphs at the end.

A blue sky, streaked with broad swaths of aquamarine, as if a painter's watery brush had strayed, blending the spheres of sea and air. A pale gray dot hangs within this cloudless sky, an improbable apparition. The dot is solidly defined, but distant; it hangs upon the skyline like an unplayed note, a ready dept; a rock floating still in quiet wind.

Features leap into distinction as I move closer, and my eyes dance over parapets, crenellations, sharp towers, and a central keep. I remember my life, remember my father, remember

“parapets?” My feet swung beneath my grandfather's old tall chair; fingers pried and searched the chair's painted back. The test was tomorrow, Monday; my young hands spelt their anxiety on the ancient chair.

“P-A-R-A-P-E-T-S” He speaks slowly, distinctly, the same way we speak on the phone, now.

“Uh...” I stall, of course. I can tell he knows I'm stuck, now, but I didn't realize it all those years ago. “It's like, something in a castle...” That's what we were studying - what I was studying.

He doesn't smile, but his eyes are suddenly larger, and I feel small, like I'm about to watch an actor perform. His arms bow, index finger extend, and he's suddenly a monkey, hands raised, pointing at his underarms. He's started to laugh now, and I laugh too, watching him hop around the ground.

Of course, that was a long time ago, and now I can identify the castle's features as it moves closer.

Bird droppings speckle the castle's numberless roofs. The dark shingled roofs seem somehow older, greyer and more weathered than the stone which supports them. The stone itself is painted with moss, thickest on the ground, thinner as the towers and walls rise. I find weak spots in the north tower roof, spots along the wall where water has leaked through the roof and given rise to independent colonies of moss.

I don't need to see the roof from inside the tower to identify the problem. It's common in buildings from that time period, a major problem for the societies which restore old English estates and castles. My father and I discussed the flaw when I was still studying architecture, when we had something in common besides a love for bad jokes and worse food, and we never agreed. It was a disagreement we cherished, one which led to boisterous laughter and complaints about new techniques and textbooks.

He built mainly residential then, and the work had become a part of the household, since he started working out of an unused upstairs room. He liked skylights, clever corners, French doors, and open winding staircases. Now, I look for these features as I pass through houses, and can only completely approve when each is present.

The castle sits on a ball of mud and rock, like a strange and inturned growth, slumbering as it hangs in the sky.

My feet touch the ground with that weightless, one small step quality I never feel in life. It is hard to tell the difference between earth and stone. The ground has been broken into itself by hundreds of feet, hundreds of years, and nothing soft remains.

There are only a few feet of cold naked ground between the edge and castle. One step, an outstretched arm, and I stand rooted between earth and stone walls. My fingers pry the wide cracks between immense blocks, and I reach higher, look higher, and see

the blue above me, gray castle walls my horizon, and the distant ocean reflects a quiet sun. I should feel vertigo at this point, and I concentrate, probing with perverse curiosity for that slow and deliberate full pendulum swing as a weight travels around my stomach and my ears rebel while eyes water and tears betray my body's struggle with the impossible sight. This is a dream. I feel nothing.

My feet echo silently as I step back, gain perspective. The gates have opened to the left; perhaps they were open when I arrived. These things happen, and I ignore them as I must ignore so many other minor inconsistencies, both in life and dream. I walk towards the waiting void with an eagerness that isn’t reflected in my slow steps.

Stepping through the open gates under ordered rows of eternally empty holes, I feel the silent moist watchfulness of the mold which now grows throughout the castle’s portcullisse. Narrow iron grates line the floor, unstained by blood. In older times, in other worlds, this chamber was the castle’s last defense. Boiling tar was poured through “murder holes” in the high ceiling while broad headed crossbow bolts tore through any surviving invaders. It is a design infrequently seen in modern homes, a room designed for efficient killing.

Monday, March 06, 2006

Possible Titles

I Will Stab You In Your Eyes

Love Is Just Another Way of Saying I'm Really Drunk Right Now

An Argument For Stupidity

This Title Has No Book

Your Mom Sucks Off One-legged Sailors

Also, the soundtrack for Henry V is fucking awesome.

I Spend More Time Avoiding This Paper Than Writing It

Fill this out yo.

I am surprised how many people describe me as witty. Haven't you heard my "how do you confuse a blond" joke?

From the paper:

Smith explains how the individual'’s desire for sympathy prompts adherence to three virtues, "“Concern for our own happiness recommends to us the virtue of prudence, concern for that of other people, the virtues of justice and beneficence; of which, the one restrains us from hurting, the other prompts us to promote that happiness" (Sentiments, 145). While the person principally concerned may choose and attempt to follow these virtues, their actions will be based upon an imperfect understanding of the impartial spectator. This behavior can be seen in the actions of a judge or jury, who (ideally) attempt to rule justly, but frequently rule against an innocent party.

Pirate Porn! (Trailer, probably nudity)

Shits. I got three pages so far. I may not be coherent tomorrow.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Seriously, Girl Must Remain Anonymous

A great day, eh? Woke up next to naked girl, read a Kundera book about writing. That was cool. Sex happens every once and a while, but how often do you get to read next to a naked girl? I mean, in some ways, the experience was comparable if not better than the enjoyment gained from sex. Not that sex isn't cool, but picture the scene: tiny apartment lined with open windows, sunny morning, birds twittering like brainless fuckers, a new book, and a naked girl to occasional poke and be like "hey - toss an arm over me and complement my sexual prowess".

I mean, if that's not the start to an excellent day, what is?

Then bagels, Y Tu Mama Tambien, Pirate porn, inevitable results of Pirate porn, and a shower.

Got ride with now clothed girl, listened to Postal Service and Lion King in warm car, walked around Oglethorpe, wrote everything except my paper.

Night finished with pizza at Fellini's, Brittany not dead, Stu describing his desire for robot arms, willingness to rip arms off of Nazi Stormtrooper and sew to torso.

And I might even finish the paper!

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Blah Blah Blah, Music Geekery

The Books, at The Earl, March 31st!

If you are 21 and up, enjoy beeps and violins, have a car - contact me.

I am Hungry

I could use the help of a barber. Just to shave around my mohawk, make it more aerodynamic.

I really should read more Anna Karenina.

So hungry.

A Surrealist Morning:

The alarm didn't sound so I woke at 4:15. One eye couldn't open, but that was better than 10 minutes ago when both eyes refused to open. The spiked stairs were soft beneath my feet as I climbed the ladder to the sink, but I had developed calluses on my frontal lobe so it was Squeeee!. And then I ate cheerios out of a cat's anus.

Testing

Please, fill this personality survey out.

Look here for results.

I Ate Cactus and Oyaka-don Tonight

People are strange.

I've been spending the night around people intoxicated in various ways: adrenaline, booze, self-deception, indecisiveness, random drugs, happiness...

More when my brain reforms.

[Oh, and I'll be writing a paper all weekend, scouting out the Hyatt Saturday night, possibly at school on Sunday, sleeping a lot, staying relatively sober, lending money to various unsavory types, writing "creative" stuff, etc...]

I should learn how to sketch some time.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Animal Collective

But spring break starts March 18th! Motherfucker. So angry.

Animal Collective

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Blame My Brother, and His Booze

Creative Writing... Well, the first problem is in the name. See, the class should be called Writing 101. You can tell by listening to the teacher's method. The teacher's kinda emphasizing a very basic meat and potatoes approach to writing. She wants every single person in the class to reach a certain level, and doesn't let the rest of the class advance until the last person can write a competent paragraph.

I understand her rational - it is important to learn the basics of writing.

However, at some point we need to get past things like endless repetitions of the phrase "show not tell".

Perhaps we could discuss techniques, developing a style, subtler points of the whole writing business.

Also, what's with her critique of our writing? I got a mediocre little four paragraph essay back from her a few weeks ago. The only commentary was the word "good" written next to the first, second, and third paragraphs. I'm not sure why the fourth paragraph isn't good - perhaps she just got tired of writing?

I'm not saying I'm a great writer. I think of myself as a basically competent hobbyist. Sometimes, I get an interesting turn of word or phrase. Despite my mediocre writing, I'm pretty damn sure I can tell when a teacher is teaching well. As a college student, it's a subject I'm particularly attuned to.

A teacher's job is to inspire her students. I don't feel inspired. I feel disgusted, bored, and apathetic.

Katana and Drugs

This is a conversation between my brother Adam and I about a friend of his also named Ben.

Adam: So, Adam has drug problem - surprise. Ben thinks that he can control my drug problem. He owes me 80 dollars, and instead of giving me the 80, he's going to put it in a savings account under his name.

Me: Why?

Adam: Because I have a drug problem! He's like, oh, you're gonna spend it all on drugs!

[silence]

Adam: It's like, you motherfucker! I don't wanna argue with him, 'cuz if I don't come up with all the money for court, I'm gonna need to borrow it from him. Course, when it's time to pay him back, I gonna put it in a savings account for his own fucking good. Bastard.


Then we started discussing spies.

Adam: Well, I don't know he's a special ops guy, but he lives in this huge apartment. Plus, he has a katana.

If I Put Two Paragraphs Together, They Are Probably Related

I was going to complain about creative writing.

Instead of a boring rant, look at this kitten:

Begin Operation Where the Fuck Did I Put My Boxers/Socks

Is 50 degrees Farenheit teeshirt weather?