Staring at a crossroads from an overlook on a switchback

Today, my father, who died last May, would have been 78.

I couldn’t get to sleep until five o’clock this morning, wondering if there was something I’m supposed to be feeling but I’m not.

I finished mourning the loss of Dad a month or so ago.

I no longer walk through my house, sit in my car or visit my mother and find sadness where once there was a moment I had shared or might have shared an insight with Dad.

The memories are still intact, the emotional wounds less so.

The burden of being the son of a living father was lifted when Dad died.

I don’t worry whether what I’m doing will impress or disappoint him.

I am me, free to pursue ideas that jived with or veered away from Dad’s general philosophical views.

Dad taught me how to catch fish because his grandfather had taught him but Dad was never an avid fisherman.

Dad taught me how to identify features of automobiles that distinguished one brand and one model year from another.  He owned a foreign convertible in his early adulthood and so did I, but we both grew practical in our car ownership as we grew older.

Dad was an enthusiastic gun owner, a former member of a U.S. Army infantry division and political conservative, belonging to more than one secret organization that espoused centuries-old socioeconomic principles he taught in university courses for a couple of decades.

Dad was no liberal college professor.

This morning, I saw a headline that the U.S. President’s wife inserted herself into the U.S. film industry by announcing the winner of a peer-selected prize.

I can imagine Dad’s response — men, usually bosses or politicians, are often accused of acting like dogs and marking their territory by inserting comments into documents/emails or forming political committees that are more hot air than substance — he would have commented that the U.S. President’s wife was trying to accomplish the same thing, leaving a yellow trail on newly-fallen snow.

I would have laughed and Dad would have thought I was laughing at him rather than laughing at the juxtaposition of images he presented or the way he could say something without using the word that was on his mind (“bitch” for the recent one or “bastard” for Bill Clinton).

I tried to get Dad to understand that if he didn’t like someone, then put that person out of his thoughts so that he doesn’t feed that person’s love of being hated.

Some people thrive on being challenged.

Some people love to compete.

For some reason, I never have.

I chose to play baritone horn in junior high school because no one else did and I didn’t have to compete for a “chair” or position; thus, I didn’t have to spend time practicing.

Whatever came to me naturally, with little or no effort, was the activity toward which I gravitated.  I could read faster than a lot of kids in my elementary and junior high school classes, which gave me a natural advantage for completing homework assignments during class time while simultaneously being able to answer the teacher’s questions, drawing the favour of school authority figures and the dislike of kids who weren’t favoured.

Dad recognized these traits and encouraged my growth in similar activities like Boy Scouts, where studying merit badge requirements was a key component to advancement in the ranks.

Unfortunately, Dad interpreted my interest in Scouting as an interest in other military-like organizations, an interpretation I did not discourage because, being a good boy for the most part, I felt compelled to make my father happy in that he rewarded me for obedient son-like behaviour.

Therefore, when I accepted the four-year Navy ROTC scholarship program at Georgia Tech, I was ill-prepared for the rigorous competition in both the classroom and ROTC ranks because it required a level of concentration I had not developed and was not interested in nourishing within myself as a young man taken out of the relatively-sheltered life of a small town in east Tennessee and thrust into the metropolitan life of Atlanta, Georgia, and its many fun distractions.

Simply put, one of the big fish in a small pond thrown into an ocean of much bigger, faster fish.

The habits of my early childhood of either finishing schoolwork and letting my thoughts wander or letting my thoughts wander and not finishing my schoolwork were incongruous with life at university.

I am, at heart, a dreamer — reality is often much too complicated and disappointing compared to my mental fantasies.

My father was not so much a dreamer because harsh reality entered his life at opportune moments, especially one — getting drafted into the U.S. Army.

From what I gather, Dad’s mental state changed during his stint as a soldier.  He became more disciplined and focused on his future.

In other words, the military training took a boy and turned him into a man.

I avoided that step, declining many opportunities along the road of life to become a man rather than continue to be a grownup boy.

I didn’t father a child, I didn’t accept the invitation to become a deacon at my church, I reluctantly climbed the corporate ladder, I delayed finishing a bachelor’s degree for 19 years.

And yet my father’s love for me remained.

He saw me for who I was — a dreamer who likes to write — rather than who he thought I’d become, an evolution of his military/corporate self.

Thank goodness, he and I had the time to adjust to the new reality years before he died.

However, in the last couple of years, as Dad’s brain changed, we assume due to ALS-bulbar option, he became grumpier and more demonstrative in his conservative views.

He seemed alone in our family in his views, neither his wife, son, daughter nor grandchildren exactly agreeing with his opinions, which turned into angry outbursts as his loneliness showed, no one to sympathize with him, no father, mother or siblings to hear him out unconditionally.

In his last two days of life, Dad found peace within himself as he let go of his mortality and felt the love of family more interested in him as a living being slipping comfortably into death than in continuing discordant political philosophies with no resolution.

We gave each other a few hours of happiness the day before he died that stay with me now as I’m glad to say I am my father’s son, who continued some of Dad’s boyhood dreams — writing poetry and stories about muses while working in the corporate office world — dreams he gave me the luxury to pursue, a luxury that his father took away when he abandoned his wife and son, my father, as a child.

Dad, I have no regrets, only dreams unfulfilled, because of your firm but loving kindness.

Thank goodness the birthdays we shared with you were fun so I can feel joyful rather than sad that you aren’t here today for us to wish you another happy birthday.

Do Sikhs eat meat?

How many of us do something against our wishes because it’s our “job”?

How many of us go against the wishes of others because it’s our destiny?

Yesterday evening, my wife and I drove to a food store chain called “Cheeburger Cheeburger” because a day or so before we had listened to “50s on 5,” a satellite radio station dedicated to the popular American rock’n’roll music of the 1950s, which put me in the mood for a ’50s style eatery.

Delayed gratification had us sitting at a two-topper, recently cleaned off by Russell.

Courtney took our food order and Mayra brought us our food.

As we were close to finishing our delicious ground-up cow meat patties on buns and basket of frings (sliced/fried onions/potato), a large group of teenagers entered all cheery, bright-eyed and photo-happy, obviously not having eaten at this particular fine dining establishment before.

Of the group of 27, four young lads sat next to us, one wearing a T-shirt with the words “KEEP CALM I’M THE DOCTOR” emblazoned below the emblem of a old telephone booth, affectionately known as the time machine called the Tardis to fans of an internationally-popular show on the tellie called “Doctor Who.”

The young gentlemen were quite polite, informing my wife, upon her inquiries, that they haled from across the Big Pond in a small burgh called Birmingham (pronounced BIRM’ing-hum as opposed to our local town we call Birmin-HAM’).

They and their pals had enjoyed a good time at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center before being whisked off to the local shopping extravaganza known as the Madison Square Mall.

In like fashion to my wife’s curiosity, satisfying us that they were interested in a future career of engineering when they entered university (one favouring mechanical engineering and the other civil engineering), they pressed us for our favourite fast food joint.

As we hemmed and hawed, they informed us that they had the international fast food chains such as McDonald’s in Great Britain but not ones like Wendy’s.

I told them I believed my favourite place is Steak ‘n Shake, similar to Cheeburger Cheeburger but without the one-pound special, closer in style to my alltime favourite, Pal’s, which was too small for them to know about.  My wife believed her favourite is In-N-Out Burgers, which is concentrated on the West Coast.

The young men told us they were still in secondary school and that one of their chaperones, a woman with pink stripes in her hair, was their physics teacher whose specialty is astrophysics.

We wished them well and told them we hoped to meet them on the International Space Station one day, imagining these guys and their friends the future of space exploration and settlement.

After all, the enthusiastic pursuits of our youth often encourage us to expand our horizons.

These young men, some of them wearing what I believe to be the head gear of the Sikh religion, are part of our future, going on into fields of science and engineering along with their colleagues of many races, religions, genders and backgrounds, inventing new ways of observing our universe that we hardly imagine possible today.

I am happy that our ancestors put us on the path for Americans and Brits to meet at a small restaurant tucked into a shopping centre in the south part of Huntsville, Alabama, USA, Earth.

Even as early as 25 years ago, I would not have thought it possible for us to meet like that.

Fifty years ago, not long after I was born, it was practically impossible.

Can you see how much progress we’ve made, how much farther we’ll go in 25 and 50 years from now?

Can you see why I don’t believe in secret societies and never chose to belong to one, even though I know they still exist and contribute in part to my being here today?

Keep The Dream Alive…

A thinker with a drinking problem…

…or the other way around?

This is one of the hardest blog entries to write, a passel/gaggle of beer, Unobtanium style, wallowing in my stomach juices, leading the way.

There is, in this moment after watching “seeking a friend for the end of the world,” another moment within a moment, when cold medicine leads the way toward a tunnel vision where honesty meets the highway, the Internet highway (Al Gore not included with the likes of Vincent Cerf or others of cyber-hyper byways), that is, Celtic flutes warning me of moments stepping off the road, where in this silent moment of movie soundtracks I find myself leaning against a notebook PC writing words that’ll haunt me forever and a day afterward.

There is a muse, a dancing muse, by the name of Guinevere, who follows Thrush and Monica and Karen (a/k/a Janeil) along with Sarah/Sara and names that’ve paved a highway, pre-Internet (or post, depending on date of invention of the snippet of an idea of an inventor in someone’s womb), where sounds make no difference except in a language, or a discipline of savings, where neither Mandarin or any other makes any difference when one is focused on making, rather than spending, one’s labour/investment credits in a single species’ definition of survival traits on an indifferent planet in an unsensing solar system in a galaxy of possibilities of fermented improbabilities that Edgar Allan Poe would declare a likely story of insensibilities about lost loves and pickled livers.

There is, if memory serves, also Monasha, Sheree, Stacey and others at a diner in the burgh of Huntsville, Alabama, USA, who serve their customers with kindness without reserve.

Deeper still, there is this moment of silent contemplation, where a niece, Jana, and her deacon-ordained husband, Brian, celebrate the discovery of a gender we assign to newborne babes climbing out of wombs and into the worldwide web of the solar system beset by asteroids, solar flares, and traffic incidents recorded by friends such as Nathan who sees perps in every person who displays abnormal behaviour attributed to personality quirks unassigned to basic training in police procedures on policies approved by popularly-elected politicians.

All written in the fog of war.

Or sequestration.

Let me set the record straight.  I see the repetition of a species in competition with itself, in companies vying for limited government resources, who shall get the post-reductorio oratoria of the fat lady singing the swan song of uncompetitive companies incapable of getting the last brass ring of a merry-go-round and round and round of diminishing returns on the global scale of middle-class salesmenpeople telling you what’s best for your family as government coffers compete with private companies for your undivided attention.

As spinning/talking heads babble on unceasingly — baubles, bangles and beads [you know the melody] — one more time we’ll give you the mondo-rhythm, the hidden beat in the religious upbeat of a Bible/Bhagavad Gita/Islam oldtime religion (ignoring the new religion of Darwinism/global “One World Order” business) — let us divert ourselves one more time from our prime directives and tell it like it is.

A muse.

Amusing.

A Spanish dancer, a rocket guidance system expert, a missile thrust enthusiast, an Appalachian Trail hiker, a food lover (if not a liver player), a flautist, a Singapore Sling, a duck pond inhabitant, a person of independent means…

The list goes on and on.

We return to the story once again for the very first time, neither handwriting nor typewriting nor electronic interface getting in the way…

The cave stains leaving a mark immemorial…

Silence adds a break in the musical score for emphasis.

PDQ Bach, specifically.

Turning bad dancing into satire for fun’s sake.

In the light of the sun.

On a pretzel bun.

With mustard.

And extra salt.

Wax paper not included.

Rinse and repeat.

If you can follow the words, you’ve arrived here.

If not, avast virus database has been updated.

You are now back at the beginning.

AOL email and Amazon Kindle Singularity subscriptions not included.

Return to your dream, uninterrupted.

Good night!

Southern Living, rediscovered

While excavating further into the bowels of the hoards of our house well-furnished with modern antiquities (sounds better than junk or trash), we found a box of Southern Living magazines from around the turn of the century.  Here are a few scanned samples for storing in our electronic pile of “historical documents”:

Southern-Living-001 Southern-Living-002 Southern-Living-003 Southern-Living-004 Southern-Living-005 Southern-Living-006 Southern-Living-007 Southern-Living-008 Southern-Living-009 Southern-Living-010 Southern-Living-011 Southern-Living-012 Southern-Living-013a Southern-Living-013b Southern-Living-013c Southern-Living-013d Southern-Living-014a Southern-Living-014b Southern-Living-014c Southern-Living-015 Southern-Living-022a Southern-Living-022b Southern-Living-023 Southern-Living-024 Southern-Living-025 Southern-Living-026 Southern-Living-027 Southern-Living-028

 

Bound and determined

Growing up in the ‘burbs, I knew from friends whose parents were pill poppers.

Birth control, antidepressants, antipsychotics, tranquilizers, you name it, kids would search their homes looking for all sorts of things including Christmas presents but also nefarious objects like cigarettes and yes…gasp! condoms.

Curiosity killed the cat. It also supplied kids with free supplies of goodies, turning whole neighborhoods into collective pharmacies.

The “dark side” of modern civilisation?

Perhaps.

So it is we are brought forward into the world of cinema, the latest flick, Side Effects, questioning the definition of reality, whether due to drug side effects or mental gymnastics.

You can see for yourself, or read this prereview that reveals a little.

A contemporaneous event ties together the suspension of reality in film and the suspended colloidalism of reality — the continuing saga of Ashleigh Brilliant, chronicled by the man himself:

Wits End
Dear Friends,

February 1, 2013. Greetings from the Loony Bin (or, if you prefer, the Booby Hatch.) You may remember my telling you that I was once (at the age of 20) a (voluntary) patient in a mental hospital for several weeks. Since then I’ve been happily able to stay clear of such resorts — until today, when I find myself, at the age of 79, once again (and I must emphasize, again voluntarily) a guest in one. The big, and to me very interesting, difference is that the first time, back in 1954, my problem was feeling too good — what the psychiatrists call being “manic.” I was in such an elated state that I couldn’t go on with my normal life as a college student, but wanted to talk all the time, in a way that was very unusual for me. This and other bizarre behaviors and feelings eventually made me realize that I needed help.

Now, however, the shoe is on the other psychiatric foot. Instead of being too happy, I have been abysmally depressed, and anxious, to the embarrassing point of really not wanting to go on living. As before, I know this is not normal, even for someone of my age, especially for a person in good physical shape, as I have kept myself, after making a good recovery from a serious accident two years ago.

But what’s REALLY interesting is that, despite the lapse of time, and despite the fact that I have never had even a second “manic” episode in my whole life, (though I have had many experiences of depression) that one single manic episode qualifies me as being “BI-POLAR” (and hence a victim of “bi-polar disorder”) with all the rights and privileges pertaiining thereto. I am still finding out just what these are, because it was only last night that I accepted the label, although my psychiatrist had been trying to pin it on me for months.

What made the difference was my following his suggestion to look it up for myself. And sure enough, if you type in “single manic episode,” you get a whole raft of references to bi-polar disorder, even if the single episode was years and years ago.

So this is all very new stuff to me, and so is the facility in which I now find myself — a sort of semi-secret closely-secured section of our main Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital. The unit itself, obviously not wishing to carry the stigma of a “Psycho Ward” is generally referred to simply as “5-E.”

I am still learning the ropes here — to say which, in this context, is an unforgivable faux pas, because ropes of any kind, together with a whole long list of other possibly helpful items to a would-be suicide, are strictly taboo in these precincts–and even the rooms are designed to provide minimal leverage or support for such attempts. For example, there are no hooks, towel-racks, or exposed piping.

But apart from making it harder to kill yourself while they have you here, what can they actually do for you? In my case, the main hope seems to be to find the pill or pills which will give me good sleep in the night, and a less miserable day to follow.

February 5, 2013. It’s now 4 days later, and I’m glad to say I’ve already been discharged from the Hospital. The answer in my case seems to have been a combination of 2 drugs, a “tranquillizer” called ATIVAN and a “mood-stabilizer” called LAMICTAL. They’ve been working fine so far — much better than any of my pre-5-E meds, and with any luck, I hope they will keep me from making any further forays into the Polar zones — though I still hate to admit that mere chemicals can have such crucial effects on how we think and feel.

In any case, we are all now happily out of January, which for me (and perhaps for many of you) has always been the most difficult month of the year.

All the best,
Ashleigh Brilliant

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ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT, 117 W. Valerio St. Santa Barbara CA 93101 USA. Phone (805) 682-0531 Orders:(800) 952-3879, Code #77. Creator of POT-SHOTS, syndicated author of I MAY NOT BE TOTALLY PERFECT, BUT PARTS OF ME ARE EXCELLENT. 10,000 copyrighted BRILLIANT THOUGHTS available as cards, books etc.World’s highest-paid writer (per word). Most-quoted author (per Reader’s Digest.) Free daily Pot-Shot cartoon: http://www.ashleighbrilliant.com CATALOGS:[h&m included]. Starter $2. Complete Printed Text version: $75. Electronic Text-Only (emailed $25, on CD $30). Electronic Illustrated Catalog/Database (CD only) $105 (includes shipping anywhere). Details: http://www.ashleighbrilliant.com/IllustratedCatalog.html