Tapping all reserves

Sometimes love is not enough to keep me going so I nurture and let loose my self-loathing to break down barriers built up by old habits.  For 27 years, in fact, I have nurtured a large reserve of self-hate-filled thoughts that I was able to let loose last night.

I dare not go back and read them because, having lived with them, I know how ugly they are — the grotesque, macabre, hurtful creatures in my thoughts that lurk in the background, looking for weaknesses, waiting for the day to turn me into the Ogre of Ogres, proving that I am a fraud rather than an empty vessel, hoping I will pick up their banner and march in their name rather than meditate on the beauty of the universe.

I figured out this morning why pop songs have been playing in my thoughts lately and it’s because I have been sleeping in the bedroom with my wife as the alarm goes off in the morning, the alarm being a local radio station that plays “oldies.”

The song playing this morning was another doozy, quickly influencing my dreams as I woke up to jar my wife’s shoulder and wake her up:

I can’t seem to face up to the facts
I’m tense and nervous and I
Can’t relax
I can’t sleep ’cause my bed’s on fire
Don’t touch me I’m a real live wire

Psycho Killer
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away
Psycho Killer
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away

You start a conversation you can’t even finish it.
You’re talkin’ a lot, but you’re not sayin’ anything.
When I have nothing to say, my lips are sealed.
Say something once, why say it again?

Psycho Killer,
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away
Psycho Killer
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away

Ce que j’ai fais, ce soir la
Ce qu’elle a dit, ce soir la
Realisant mon espoir
Je me lance, vers la gloire … OK
We are vain and we are blind
I hate people when they’re not polite

Psycho Killer,
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away
Psycho Killer,
Qu’est Que C’est
Fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa far better
Run run run run run run run away

Oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh….

[Songwriters: BYRNE, DAVID/FRANTZ, CHRISTOPHER/WEYMOUTH, TINA]
As I said to my wife this morning, I’m at that point in my dance training that you see the celebrities go through on Dancing With The Stars, where they’re beating the wall, screaming and calling each other names.
My wife said it’s because I think I’m inadequate, unworthy of being a dancer in a showcase.
Maybe so.  I don’t know.
I don’t drink alcohol habitually but today is one of those days I want to numb my brain with something so I don’t have to live with my thoughts but I have too much to do.
Damn the torpedo!  Full speed ahead!

Death would be too kind OR: opposite pep talks work, too, when you work through the emotions of the moment.

The silence of purgatory suffices ce soir.  Being tonight what amounts to the feeling of only the empty shell of an action that one imagines is the definition of a gentleman leaves me sans espoir, the brass ring lost in my desire to be kind to a childhood friend and confidante who also happens to be my wife who is supportive of traditional heterosexual monogamy only.  To that suffocating circumstance I knowingly submitted myself, death is the only exit?  Tell me it is not so!  Yet, I spent precious funds on a portrait of said lady to give her for our 27th wedding anniversary on Friday, in remembrance of good moments I’ve recently remembered were sugar-coated over time.

I once promised myself to keep escapades to a minimum in our town, should opportunities present themselves, even in imaginary/magical terms on the dance floor, an extension of self-love.

I have fallen out of love with myself and thus the dance, nothing inside me to offer a dance partner because the boy who just followed his wife to have some casual fun on the dance floor died Monday night, unable to convince himself he’ll ever give his wife a partner (or partners) with whom she can enjoy the same extramarital flirtatious fun he enjoys.  Burdened by kindness toward his wife who tends to sit lonely at the dance club, no one asking her to dance, he can no longer find the energy to share himself with others in a dance.  The magic vanished.

If I can’t feed the wild man from Borneo inside me, then why bother caring about my life, let alone the species?

Let others stick to whatever works.  I already accepted my unhappiness being locked in the institute of marriage a long time ago, fulfilling my gentlemanly duties.

Is there anything else left for me?  Maybe. They tell me people talk, some who even read this blog, which I write as if it is a hidden diary, not tied to real life except accidentally/coincidentally, my literal literary escape mechanism.  If nothing else, there may be a life story of theirs I can write about and take my thoughts off of my hopelessness.

Let the silence begin — I never was good at the subtle/obvious signals of the dating game which some have mistaken as true love for my wife but actually is my fallback “safety from personal harm” mode — I can return to my contemplative misery that is my long wait to die, childless and lonely, returning to the states of energy to their lower inertial conditions.

Either that or say, “Damn it!  Long live the dance!  This merry-go-round carousel makes revolutions.  Screw the negative emotions and try for the brass ring again!”

Yeah, that’s the ticket.  Thanks for the contrarian’s pep talk, Rick.  🙂

watterson_advice_large

 

 

What is a hug worth?

I almost started this blog entry with an apology to readers for delving too much into thoughts and not enough into actions lately but only because I’m looking at a set of stamps entitled “MUSCLE CARS: AMERICA ON THE MOVE,” which invites me to jump behind the steering wheel and burn rubber.

A song jumped into my thoughts this afternoon: “I Heard It On The Grapevine.”  What a doozy!

I have a business plan to complete tomorrow and a video to record later this week as my Kickstarter campaign nears its launch date.  Not sure which parts to include as part of a robot construction package.  Also, should I have a combined campaign or launch a separate project on PledgeMusic?

My mechatronic children are going to miss their new playmates, I can tell you — a desktop lamp has its shade pulled down in sadness, for instance.

But that’s okay.  Change is good.

With only 13401 days to go, I’ve got some significant fundraising to promote.

I can no longer sit on the fence and watch the world rush past me at this crossroads of life.

I admit that sitting here is scarier than taking action, action which takes up my energy and reduces me idle thoughts.

That’s okay, too.  Variety is good.

I can slip in and out of the colloquial without noticing.

What I’ll discover is the difference between a person who hugs politely, a person who hugs for comfort and a person who doesn’t hug at all.

Just like the fact that land wars are declared in order to test new technology and deplete the stock of old technology.

For whom are the lyrics of a song written?  What undertones and undercurrents are designed into the melody?

I know if I want the brass ring, it’s not going to jump into my hand, no matter how far outstretched it may be, then I better make the grab while I can.

The person who can jump in and tell the story with me the quickest — that’s what I’m talking about.

A true model citizen.

What are you looking for in the long run — a single person to be your one and only or a plethora, a cornucopia of tastes?

I hope to make everyone I meet a better person than before, whatever better may mean in the moment.

How many of us can keep putting ourselves out there and give and give and give without end?  How do we recycle energy to keep recharged?

What defines us?  Our vocation?  Our social network?  Our possessions?  Our family?

When you’re talking alone with someone, is your conversation any different than when someone else is in the room?

The years of chronic pain in the tensed muscles of my shoulders hunched over in anticipation of being beaten by my father are slowly dissipating.  I no longer have to fear his passive-aggressive love, never sure if a hug was coming or a smack in the face, physical and/or verbal.

Hugging someone without fear is a tremendous feeling.  So is dancing with someone without fear while letting my emotional state and set of thoughts rest in my fingertips, palms, forearm, biceps, shoulders, neck and back.

The passive-aggressive relationship with my father is partially tied into the relationship between my wife and me and it is damn hard work to overcome old habits tied to responding to passive-aggressive people as a chameleon personality.

Maybe I should summarise this blog in a single phrase: dancing is mental AND physical therapy.

Abi, as our dance instructor, is like my father — I’m never sure from moment to moment if she’s going to praise or criticize me.  Last night, when I saw a deep-seated fear briefly flash in Jenn’s eyes, I realised that the old fears of my father were showing on my face and in my reactions to Abi, and wanted to run as fast and as far away from the dance studio as my legs and lungs could take me but I was attached to Jenn, who herself seemed to have withdrawn a little.

It was a revealing moment for me, if not for her, showing me why dancing with her was so much different when only my wife was watching us than when Abi and my wife were watching.

Enough of thought set reconfiguration, although it is fun to write about what goes through my thoughts in these personally enlightening moments to complete the circle of the mental/physical therapy.

Time for action, assisting my wife, Abi and Jenn get whatever it is out of me, this humble set of states of energy, that makes them better than they were before, maybe even happier — some of our goals are aligned but not every single one of them, as it should be.  Hopefully, I’ll be better and happier, too.  I sure plan to be!

How the house burned down

“What story, Mom?”

“Well, Amish pirates are not known for subtlety.  They’d rather kill you and turn you into fertiliser than negotiate with you.”

“But we’re not like that, are we?”

“Shadowgrass, let me tell you the quick version of what happened when one of your great-great-uncle’s cousin’s boy’s father’s cousin’s nephew’s cousin’s uncle’s father’s boy’s cousin’s uncle burned the house down.  It started one day when the two of them were clearing a field…”

003 007 018 019 020 022 057 072  136 154 175

“How big was the wasp?”

“Bigger than the farmhouse.”

“Bigger than our Martian habitat module?!”

“Yes.”

“What did they do?”

Bai popped into their thought trail.  “Hey, guys!  I’m back!”

“Hi, Bai.  How did it go?”

“Great.  But boy, am I mentally wrung out.  Alek advanced me to the next level of dancing.  I’ll tell you something funny.  He said, ‘You know the way a guy keeps pestering you to dance with him and you aren’t interested?  He keeps asking and asking until you are giving him the look that says ‘Get away from me!'”  I told him, yeah, I’ve made that look.  ‘Well,’ he said, ‘stop giving me that look.  Act like you want to dance with me.  Flirt with me!’  Me!  As if I don’t know how to flirt.”

Guin and Shadowgrass laughed with Bai.

“Hey, can you believe Stephane only drank water last week?  And he’s accusing me of finally growing up!”

“When are you coming over to our colony?”

“I don’t know, Guin.  Depends on my schedule.  I’m booked for the next two marsweeks.

“Okay, I’ll see you when you get here.”

“Sure thing.”

Guin turned to Shadowgrass.  “Where was I?”

“Jersey and the Frenchman were about to battle the great, big, gigantanormasaurus Wasp.”

“That’s right.  But it’ll have to wait until tomorrow.  You’ve got work to do.”

“Ah, Mom.  I thought you said that you and Dad brought your electromechanical design wizardry to Mars so no one would have to work again.”

“We did.  But then we found that we liked to share time with our creations.  Nothing like getting your hands into the soil yourself.”

“Must be the Amish pirate in you, eh, Mom?”

“Well… I don’t know…”

“Stabbing giant worms with your sabre!  Slashing through deadly grass blades!”

“That’s right, son.  You can imagine what all we faced on Earth and why we wanted to start over here.  Just make sure you get plenty of nightmares letting your imagination run too wild.  And remember to tell us about them tomorrow.”

“Mom, you’re being facetious, aren’t you?”

“Am I?”  She smiled at her little genius and scrunched her nose.  “Maybe just a little bit.”

The Amish Pirate Clan

Shadowgrass scratched the middle of his back using one of his new appendages.

“Mom, tell me about our family.”

“Well, son, we’re descended from a secret branch of the Amish — the Amish Pirate Clan.”

“Really?  That’s sounds cool.”

“Let me tell you a story about them…”

Archie and Veronica Mars, where’s Betty?

What is the consensual consensus about the perceived and perpetuated personality of the public popular culture in your area?

For me, it is a mix of science, technology, and military development supported by agriculture, arts, retail sales and financial backing that sets the Heart of Dixie, Deep South progressive religious moral persuasion of headline news.

In one day, the satirical talk of a singer’s performance on a single TV channel, repeated ad repeatum across the virtual news/gossip system known as the Internet, accented by related “news” stories about infidelity shows the level of normal behaviour we tolerate in the local/national psyche.

We are not independent from our bodies even if cave drawings and ebooks give us that sensation.

Why do our bodies’ cycles influence us individually and collectively?

How well do we see that our chemical composition ratios redirect our thought patterns and thus the flow of our society into the future?

On Mars, we have a word for this nostalgic look at your antiquated society: Scheißcorn.

Meaning that the Zeitgeist is a wind never seen and quickly forgotten, just like the flow of cholesterol through your veins that used to kill so many of you with a scary word, Atherosclerosis!

Controversy is a measurement of a type of mob mentality.

Our talk about what is controversial to us is a measurement of our set of states of energy in transition.

It tells us what we consider important in the perceived past, present and future for ourselves and our children.

Is your life tragic? Macabre? Grotesque? Victorian? Bland? Grand? Your best life now?

What in your life is clogging your thoughts like cholesterol clogs veins?

What is a healthy thought set that unites you to your body to your friends/family/colleagues and the rest of the natural environment of the universe?

One answer is here on Mars. It was once in orbit around Earth, on the Moon. It will be somewhere else one day.

See you there soon!

Machine fun fodder

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Saw this Ford work truck at the home show yesterday.  A young man walked up to me and said it would make the perfect gangster/drug cartel “enforcement” vehicle — just mount a few machine guns and grenade launchers in place of storage boxes and you could mow down whole neighbourhoods in a fast driveby.  Maybe he’s has a heavy dose of Grand Theft Auto and Jason Statham films in his life?

Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart meet the Mad Hatter in the Victorian era

Historians have never paid attention to one fact: our history was written by our parents before we were born.

Their actions, just like ours for our children, set the stage for their direct descendants.

You must have a clear understanding of that solid principle, that unwritten immutable law of the universe, before going on with this story.

For you see, before they were born, two famous aviators met Lewis Carroll’s inspiration for a memorable fictional character whilst Queen Victoria reigned.

While the middle-class prudes proved their noble worth, the threesome of Earhart, Lindbergh and the Mad Hatter went off on an adventure.

Ever had a three-wheeled vehicle in which all three wheels steered independently?  Most likely not.  Either one wheel turns and the other two point permanently in one direction, or two wheels turn in synch with each other and the third wheel points permanently in one direction.

So it was with our flyers and their eccentric co-conspirator who set out on an unpublished expedition.

Unpublished until now, that is.

Ground into a pulp and turned into a felt hat were the notes, diaries and maps used by the explorers.  It wasn’t until a new computer deciphering program was invented by a retired secret agent to ferret out the hidden codes in the city maps of foreign countries that the threads and fibers of the felt hat were pulled apart and reassembled in their original form.

The hat sat in a hat box as hats are wont to do, taking up space in the attic of one Hegrapevinucus Forvell, the famous daguerreotypist who had documented the lives of both the famous and notorious across two centuries.

M. H. Forvell died and left his fortune to a geographic feature named Pilot Knob in middle Tennessee, not far from Readyville, where his belongings were carted and stored in caves carved out of the rock.

Using an aeroplane-engined dirigible, Earhart navigated her two companions over the knob, spotting the secret caves one early dawn morning.

They tethered their lighter-than-air craft to an old pine tree and descended a rope ladder to the caves.

Stored in giant clay jars sealed with impenetrable tar and humongous glass jars sealed with water-resistant wax were the life’s work of Forvell.

Much of the information was repetitious — farm harvest records and stock market buys/sales/trades, for instance.

But one container held a series of inventions, some patented and some stamped “For My Eyes Only,” including one for converting printed paper or paper covered with handwriting into articles of clothing, wallpaper glue or, to the interest of M. Hatter, a felt top hat.

From then on, when one of the three had finished a logbook or diary, the Hatter would use Forvell’s secret formula to reconstitute the water-dissolved and shredded logbook or diary pages, forming hat shapes.

None of them was a more prolific writer than the other.  However, multiplying their output by three meant quite a few journals were filling up on a weekly basis, driving the Hatter mad with desire to create as many new styles of hats as he could — tall, skinny, fat, short, see-through, invisible, and everything in-between.

Eventually the Hatter ran out of ideas for new hats and the two pilots realised they needed to return to public life.

Before they did, their records show they had more fun in a short period of time than should be legal (and some of it wasn’t!).

While they were tethered to Pilot Knob, they overheard some old-timey mountain music, the good stuff, hypnotic, said to turn you inside out, stop the motion of the planets and move you and the world around you over to the parallel train track of alternate universes.

Little did they know that they had changed their timeline.

They also had inadvertently invented a new social period called Steampunk.

The song they heard that changed history?  Well, you already know what it is: “Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy,” written so far back up in the hills, no one had heard of sheet music or sound recording devices, so no one knows exactly when the song was first created or by whom.

And by changing history, Lindbergh, Earhart and the Hatter changed everything, including the style of dancing the local people performed to their mountain music.

No longer did they buck or clog dance.  They started a new craze, a dance sensation called the Lindy Hop and their clothing style became the name of the new era — Steampunk.

To get back to that time, Guin and Lee adopted the Steampunk clothing style and started learning a Lindy Hop dance routine that would induce a hypnotic trance and send them out of one spacetime continuum into another.

They had also found some of Forvell’s writings and wanted to create their own electromechanical wonders based on Forvell’s notes scribbled on incomplete inventions.

But which would you rather read about — how Guin and Lee invented a new form of space travel or what Earhart, Lindbergh and the Mad Hatter discovered but had told no one because it was so earth-shakingly stupendous?

Don’t answer flippantly.

The answer you receive will shift history again, maybe by only the slightest change but also maybe by large changes all jumbled up together.

Be willing to accept the changes your answer causes.

Alice may never return from Wonderland and you don’t want that, I can tell you!