But how many women fully support the idea of a patriarchal system and want their men to rule the universe?

To get hit with the blinding headaches of a major sinus infection in the middle of summer (but during the coldest days in decades), hands shaking and body not able to sleep due to intake of suphedrine, Mucinex D and the usual cholesterol/blood pressure control medication is the least of my worries.

To be able to write stories, I must have a polyamorous and polysexuality thought set.

Being in love with the characterised versions of people I know whom I use as models is driving me mad at this point.

[Pardon me while I honk my nose.]

Rarely do the people match the characters I’ve created.

Rarely still do the people feel the way I do toward them as characters.

But sometimes it takes experimenting with the people and their emotions to give me better understanding of where I want to take the storyline.

Meanwhile, keeping two mapsets — one of reality and one of the science fiction fantasy mapped onto the reality — takes its toll on my sanity.

Throw in an attack on my body’s balanced health and the imbalance throws me off-kilter.

I am a rudderless boat caught in a horrendous storm.

Then, while drifting in and out of daydreams while my wife snores and the cats lickclean themselves while resting on my chest, a story emerges…

[NOTE: Amateurs plagiarise, professionals steal.]

My successful Kickstarter campaign for a 3D printer that’s connected to a computer program that creates a 3D-layered robot complete with 100-DOF motion and 3D built-in electronics which can repair/replicate itself using the 3D printer and eventually creates its own successful Kickstarter competitor for robots that create their own successful businesses, giving me residual revenue for copyright/trademark/patent purposes.

In my dreams, I find ways to build layers to protect me from my klutzy personality and its intersection with other sets of states of energy.

I admit that my polyamorous side is in love with many people right now and the only way to keep myself straight is to write myself a controlled situation in which we are all relatively happy in our cocooned thought sets as we encounter each other in fictional life.

Fortunately or unfortunately, writing these fictional tales here adds to the confusion when the plots seem to align with storylines taking place in what, for lack of a better phrase, I’ll call “real life.”

Sometimes, I hypnotise myself into believing that I can imagine a future which has almost completely aligned with real events and think I have made a prediction.

That is why I keep a calendar countdown which tells me sometime 13,410 days or revolutions of our mother planet from now, we will experience something that is related to our species establishing permanent colonies off-Earth.  It can be the Moon or Mars, preferably the latter, which followed in our species’ timeline of sending one of our electromechanical wonders outside of the solar system; I’d be happy with a human-populated space probe, too.

As they say, if you work hard enough on a goal, it becomes reality.

At the beginning of the year, when I weighed 244 pounds, I told myself that I wanted to weigh 225 pounds by the fall quarter.  Yesterday morning, on the 17th of August, I weighed 225 pounds.  Goal became reality because I believed I could reasonably reach the goal and worked diligently, slowly, with setbacks, frustrations and elations, to get there.

Which reminds me, why aren’t we working more diligently and telling our species about the ways we plan to capture/collect water on the Moon and Mars?

There aren’t enough water molecules in near-Earth orbit for us to capture but there are certainly places on the Moon and Mars for us to dig in the ground and/or “net” water from the air, if not generate water (or its equivalent (hint, hint)) using other processes.

Instead, using my “robotic” money-generating algorithms on the stock market, I am putting myself out of business by skipping Kickstarter altogether and going straight to the 3D-printer self-repair/replicate robot realised dream.

If only there was some way I could automate my polyamorous/polysexual storylines and get me out of the thought-mapping business!

But then, what would I do about my thoughts that pop up when I’m engaged in normal small-talk conversations with people whom I fear would not understand my verbalised thought maps in realtime, as they have in the past?

At 2:30 a.m. in the morning, I don’t have an answer to that question.  Best keep my tangentially-weird thoughts and ideas to myself and my closest friends, whom I fear more than most because their weird thoughts and ideas are even more amazingly complicated than mine!

Companionship and hugs

What if we offered hugs instead of bullets to resolve conflicts between the brothers and sisters of our species?

I stand here at the top of our driveway listening to a lawnmower, a clothes dryer, a chirping alarmist wren, and a cardinal but no insects or tree frogs and I wonder, thinking back…

I have worked on the logic decision trees of the U.S. Space Shuttle main engine controller, the U.S. Navy CASS, an infrared missile system for a Navy fighter jet, a sewer flow monitoring system, PC DSL home router/gateway system, digital KVM equipment, Zigbee-style wireless control systems and yet…

Here I am.

Am I better or worse, having left the world behind me in better or worse condition than I found it?

Have I been nicer or meaner than I could have to the people I’ve encountered in person and/or online?

The cardinals chasing each other in the woods can’t tell me.

The person mowing grass over in the next neighbourhood probably can’t say.

Dead people aren’t talking to me.

The bioluminescent fireflies aren’t signaling me any indication of the results of my behaviour that I can recognise – are there more or less of them because I don’t mow grass or don’t chemically treat the plants that grow in the front yard?

This weekend I spend time mentally reassessing who I was and who I want to be qualitatively, not just by the job assignments I completed for pay and medical coverage.

I want to finish the foundation of the legacy, the direction that my parents honestly intended for me as they struggled against my personality to raise me, and build with more loving companionship from my friends, family and acquaintances.

The time for the end of my midlife retirement, my six-year long meditative retreat, has arrived.

Don’t Fear The Reaper

Walking through the ditch at the front of our yard, stepping up and over vinca (what my in-laws called graveyard vine), bending over to cut unwanted tree/bush/vine seedlings — varieties of privet, hickory, cedar, sumac, ash, elm, oak, trumpet creeper, honeysuckle — a song popped into thoughts already dominated by a different song and different thoughts detailed later:

Goodbye, no use leading with our chins
This is where our story ends
Never lovers, ever friends
Goodbye, let our hearts call it a day
But before you walk away
I sincerely want to say
I wish you bluebirds in the spring
To give your heart a song to sing
And then a kiss, but more than this
I wish you love
And in July a lemonade
To cool you in some leafy glade
I wish you health
But more than wealth
I wish you love

My breaking heart and I agree
That you and I could never be
So with my best
My very best
I set you free

I wish you shelter from the storm
A cozy fire to keep you warm
But most of all when snowflakes fall
I wish you love
But most of all when snowflakes fall
I wish you love

Those lyrics played over the previous song in my thoughts, “Everything is beautiful“:

Jesus loves the little children,
All the little children of the world.
Red and yellow, black and white,
They are precious in his sight.
Jesus loves the little children of the world.

Everything is beautiful in it’s own way.
Like the starry summer night, or a snow-covered winter’s day.
And everybody’s beautiful in their own way.
Under God’s heaven, the world’s gonna find the way.

There is none so blind as he who will not see.
We must not close our minds; we must let our thoughts be free.
For every hour that passes by, we know the world gets a little bit older.
It’s time to realize that beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.

And everything is beautiful in it’s own way.
Like the starry summer night, or a snow-covered winter’s day.
Oh, sing it children!
Everybody’s beautiful in their own way.
Under God’s heaven, the world’s gonna find the way.

We shouldn’t care about the length of his hair, or the color of his skin.
Don’t worry about what shows from without, but the love that lives within.
And we’re gonna get it all together now; everything gonna work out fine.
Just take a little time to look on the good side my friend,
And straighten it out in your mind.

And everything is beautiful in it’s own way.
Like the starry summer night, or a snow-covered winter’s day.
Ah, sing it children!
Everybody’s beautiful in their own way,
Under God’s heaven the world’s gonna find a way.
One more time!
Everything is beautiful in it’s own way.
Like the starry summer night, or a snow-covered winter’s day…

While I bent over and stood up, bent over and stood up, weeding the ditch step-by-step so that the major/minor/variegated vinca would be the plant(s) of choice, I remembered a story Mom told me.

My mother’s parents kept a large garden in the back part of their small farm.

As any gardener knows, weeding a garden is a regular part of growing your own food — you can see it as a chore or as a delight.

One summer, my grandparents took Mom out west in the late 1940s, traveling parts of Highway 66 and getting all the way to California from Tennessee.  The trip took a month to complete.

Well, as much fun as they had in a car before air conditioning was an affordable option, four weeks away from the farm meant one thing — LOTS of weeding and farm work when they got back.

Mom and her father spent long hours weeding out the beds of potatoes, corn, strawberries, grapes and other crops, a “deal” my grandfather cut with my mother for letting her have fun with them on their special, dream vacation to see this great country of ours.

Because I haven’t been able to sleep for a long time, I tried a product called Zzzquil last night.  I still didn’t fall asleep until after midnight (it couldn’t be the five cups of coffee earlier in the afternoon, could it?) but I had five hours of uninterrupted sleep afterward, not even noticing our cats curling up with my on the sofa in the sunroom.

I don’t even recall my dreams.

Except for one small thought that lingered as I dressed in jeans and a short-sleeved blue shirt to work in the yard this morning, imagining myself in my grandfather’s place, actually older now than he was then working with my mother on the farm, looking forward to getting to know the soil, insects, seedlings and personal meditative thought patterns as I worked.

Do I, do you, respond more to the words of a message or its emotional context/content? [What exactly do I mean by “emotional”?]

And, by extension, when we lay dying, do we quietly look for a signal that says when it’s all right to die?  How possible is it for us to work our friends/acquaintances/workmates network to find the signal we’re looking for?  How possible is it for us to feel/sense/hear the signal-seekers in our regular pattern-matching daily lives?

In other words, are we pattern-matching from womb to tomb?

Flat-footed

During my morning walk, passing through a wooded lane and out into former cotton/soybean/corn fields where I used to fly remote-controlled airplanes in winter, down the country road not far from old horse and emu farms turned into suburban tracts, the concrete slabs of sidewalk held bird droppings, algae, hardened footprints of a small dog and the label for a Sears brand lawnmower.

At six in the morning, cars and trucks rolled past, their occupants hidden from view.

Low clouds hung in the air as if to say, “We could have been fog if the air had been colder and more humid.”

Walking for 35 minutes, I met no other person walking or running.  I saw one jogger off in the distance.

I was left to my thoughts, the early morning haze of dim dreams and leftover conversational thought trails.

Have you ever been overcome by smoke?  Perhaps a campfire, a house on fire or chemical fogging?

Lack of sleep for months and years have turned me into a murky-minded zombie of sorts.

While people are dying while playing out their version of the Boston Massacre in Egyptian cities, I have the luxury of complaining about the lack of sleep.

Not a complaint, really.

Merely an observation about a snoring wife and cats who like to play musical chairs with beds and sofas at night.

After the walk, I returned home, kissed my wife on her way to work and showered, sitting down at my work desk, thinking about a friend who counseled my family during my father’s last days and penned the following note:

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ:
After faith in Jesus Christ and loyalty to family and to church, I hold two other things dear — my memory and my integrity. Recent events have made me question the first, but I hope my integrity remains intact. Therefore I feel I must tell you what is going on with me.
Recently I have had several occasions where I have forgotten a meeting or forgotten to do something very important in the context of my ministry. Because of those two episodes, during my annual physical, I ask my physician to perform a mental acuity test. For the most part I passed with flying colors, but there was one glitch which “might” indicate something else is going on. My doctor is taking a “wait and see” attitude for this one.
Also as a part of the physical I was given several tests to measure depression and it was determined that I was “mildly clinically depressed.” My physician has elected for now to treat the depression without drugs; however, he feels, and I concur, that probably both my forgetfulness and my depression is the result of stress.
One bout of extreme stress when I was first called to Colonial Heights resulted in a series of physical events which could have been quite serious and still require medication. I hope this helps you understand why this current battle with stress must be taken very seriously.
My physician has written to Session with a prescription that I take a mandatory three weeks away from ministry; no worship preparation, no sermons, no classes, no visitation, no funerals, no phone calls, etc.  Quite honestly admitting to you and to myself that I have “hit the wall” with my stress levels at first produced even more stress than before; however one must “name the demon” if one is to get well. So here I am naming my demon and his/her/their name is stress. Now that I have actually named it “out loud” I feel a good bit better.
After talking with Session and staff I will be “away” and unavailable from July 29 through August 18. The only exceptions are two promised events one on July 30 and another on August 2. In the past I have never taken all my vacation/study leave/sabbatical time which may be why I am having this problem now. I still have vacation and study leave time as well as having never taken more than 4-5 days of sick leave in almost 10 years, so time away is not an issue.
Please, please do NOT allow my problem to cause any of you worry or consternation. While this can be serious, it is not life threatening, and with God’s help I will recover. I plan to be fully functioning in a few weeks and God willing, plan to continue to serve Colonial Heights Presbyterian Church for several years to come. Your prayers are always appreciated.
Yours in Christ, Tom

Tom had given his time unselfishly both while my father lay dying and after my father’s death so naturally there is a permanent bond between us just as there is a permanent bond to the man who married me to my wife.

I cracked open the Bible (Revised Standard Version) given to me by the Colonial Heights Presbyterian Church on September 26th, 1971, signed by the church pastor at the time, H. Reid Montgomery — nothing like having a real Scotsman for your Presbyterian minister to impress you as a child growing up in the church.

I immediately turned to the 23rd Psalm:

1 A Psalm of David. The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not want; 2 he makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters; 3 he restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. 4 Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me. 5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of my enemies; thou anointest my head with oil, my cup overflows. 6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD for ever.

With that in my conscious thoughts, I wrote a letter of sympathy to Tom, asking him to let his stress-based depression be a gift rather than a burden.

During my walk and while writing, in my thoughts were remnants of a conversation last night between my wife, Guin and myself and a subsequent conversation between my wife and me about the previous conversation with Guin.

From an early age, I knew I was a socially-dependent person.

Even though my sister was a rival for my parents’ love, she was also a good companion to have because she followed me around and would do anything her big brother would.

She was a litmus test for my curiosity and courage.

When I was a teenager, I intercepted a note between a boy and girl in band class.  The boy said I was in love with her and the girl wrote back that it was no big deal because I would fall in love with anything and anyone, even a piece of shit.

I knew what she meant.  I have no filter for my love, accepting people for whomever they say they are or want to be, willing to overcome my subcultural conditioning and ignorance to determine their needs, helping to the best of my limited abilities.

As a person by myself, I have no needs, wants or expensive hobbies.  I have been happy for many years now spending most of the day at home without human contact, writing books, coining journal/blog entries (often in response to online news/comments) and piddling around in the yard/garage.

However, should a person come to the door, I’m like an eager dog wagging his tail, desirous of conversation and face-to-face body language communication.

My codependent tendencies, my desire to please others, has not been completely detrimental to my health but it has caused problems, such as when, through rewards and encouragement from coworkers and upper management, I would give my all to a company objective only to miss the fact that the company no longer needed my department, laying off my employees but keeping me, giving me headache-inducing survivor’s guilt.

My hearing loss and blinding headaches in the last few years have, according to my wife, affected my memory, just like Tom.

For me, the question of whether being a virtual caged animal in a marriage of diminishing returns (i.e., if marriage is a protective nest for procreation, what happens when the chances for offspring approach nil?) is par for the course for my personality traits and/or not healthy/normal has not been answered despite marriage counseling and psychologist/psychiatrist sessions back in the 1990s.

My wife told me it has not gone unnoticed that when she, Guin and I are in conversation, Guin and I tend to mimic each other’s movements, as if Guin and I are two codependent personalities feeding off each other.

Guin is about the same height as my sister, with very similar body features — brown hair and medium athletic build.

She is athletic like my sister, like I thought my wife was when we got married, who went camping and hiking with me for several years before she admitted she’d rather stay at a hotel or B&B in the mountains than hike to a mountaintop and sleep in a bag on hard ground, her clothes and hair smelling badly like campfire smoke on the way back to our house late Sunday evenings, requiring a late-night shower instead of much-needed sleep.  I admit that I hike less than I used to, replacing hikes with suburban walks/jogs, like substituting cotton candy for nutritious fruits and veggies.

Because my memory loss has increased, I have fully adopted the writer’s slogan, “Never let the truth get in the way of a good story.”

Or better yet, maybe a fake quote by Mark Twain would apply better here: “During my recent European excursion, I spoke to a man named Freud who was convinced that all of man’s thoughts and actions are based on sex. He’s obviously never met Mrs. Twain.”

In any case, my wife says that I have gotten into the habit of making up what she said to me, wishing she had access to a voice recorder that could play back what she really said in a conversation versus what I twisted and reworked into a personally-entertaining blog entry or short story.

So, what is the truth?  Why do I enjoy dancing with Guin in ways unimaginable with my wife?  In Mars’ gravity, for instance.

Is it simply the recognition of a similar thought set in another person, eager to let thoughts and ideas take off exponentially/logarithmically as if there is no tomorrow because after you’ve been in a life-threatening automobile smashup and seen Death, shaking his cold hand and smelling his bad breath, you embrace life because you know there is no promise for a tomorrow on this planet?

Is that why I have a burning desire to see myself in writing at least once day, virtually screaming to the world “I’m not dead yet!”

Would I dance every night until they turn off the lights if I had the chance?

Would dancing for hours completely flatten out my feet like marathon training/running used to do?

If there is no tomorrow, hadn’t I better answer these questions today?

Reference Library

How many discharges to rock a solar-powered hula dancer does a capacitor have before its intended useful life has been depleted? How many heartbeats do you have left?

Let us imagine.

Let us put ourselves in the boots of a young, not fully-hardened, 21-year old military leader.

Further, let us put him in charge of French peacekeeper troops, part of KFOR, guarding a bridge over the Ibar River in Kosovska Mitrovica.

Racial tensions are hard to erase but familiarity with those whom you have been brainwashed to call the enemy can open one’s eyes to the fact that we are usually about the same.

In normal, peaceful military exercises, conflicting orders challenge many a field officer’s goals and objectives, often involving politics outside the officer’s circle of influence.

You needn’t stretch your imagination to comprehend the conflicts that crop up in the fog of war, when spot decisions while you and your troops in the line of fire are made under duress as you interpret the implied meaning of the only two orders you’ve received that directly contradict each other.

For instance, one order tells you to protect and defend your troops by maintaining peace while guarding a bridge that acts as a de facto border between two ethnic groups. The second order tells you to protect and defend the civilians against violence in your peacekeeping jurisdiction while maintaining peace and guarding the bridge.

The bridge itself is a nonpeaceful symbol to the locals — one group wants to prevent another group from using or crossing the bridge.

Let’s say two of your troops are injured — could be by rocks/bricks or by a sniper’s bullets, doesn’t matter because you simply know it violates your first order, which motivates you to take action.

Unfortunately, the action you initiate violates the second order because protecting and defending your troops from further injury requires attacking the civilians, many of them armed with rocks, bricks and in a few cases, armaments.

What if you had to order your troops to open fire on a sniper in a civilian’s business/residence?

How do you keep the peace when you’re required to protect everyone in your jurisdiction, including ethnic groups willing to die killing each other to regain old territory, causing chaos through roadblocks and random violence, your troops stuck in the middle by international/NATO/KFOR decree?

Ultimately, politics prevail.

Your orders are always going to conflict at some point in your career, military or private.

However, fail the newspaper test, especially on a world scale, and someone in the chain of command wants heads to roll, even if guillotines are no longer legal or effective.

Enter the court-martial.

Integrity is a curious behavioral trait.

If, in the course of your duties, you have acted not only to the best of your abilities but also followed the best course of actions based on limited information in the fog of war, have you not provided an unassailable defense of your character?

Unfortunately, life is not always about the fairness of your highest ethical actions, let alone your thoughts.

Fortunately, politics and the court of public opinion do not always prevail.

Years pass after you were found not guilty at the court-martial.

Life goes on, your military career having moved into noncombat situations, another civil military servant performing the duties that keep your government’s military units technologically proficient and up-to-date.

One small issue, though. You have to live with the decision you made that led to an mentally excruciating court-martial.

The casualties, the maiming and mental injuries that pile up during wartime can be justified for moral purposes.

What about the same during a peacekeeping mission?

And what if your morals and ethics are based on the viewpoint of a Bright — a humanist, naturalist or existentialist atheist?

In other words, as a Frenchman marching down a path heavily trodden by Sartre, should you concern yourself at all about your previous momentary selves that exist only in the perpetual fantasy of a storyline you keep repeating because you imagine that time exists because people want to know who you are and where you came from?

Do you develop complex computer algorithms based on the previous work of others or can you create genius out of nothingness?

History, as the saying goes, is a fable agreed upon, subject to interpretation as to tragedy, travesty or triumph.

Some races and ethnic groups will perpetuate their subcultural superiourity to the detriment of others, fully entrenched to protect their historic fables against outside influences.

If you are ordered to put yourself in harm’s way between two strongly opposed racial/ethnic groups, don’t expect to find an easy-to-obtain win-win situation.

The fallacy of history and politics may have been set up to trip you at every step.

All you can do is get back up, on your feet if you can, in a wheelchair if you have to, don’t look back and set your sights on your personally-satisfying longterm goals, influenced by a long line of momentary selves, temporary confluences of states of energy that constitute what you’ve been trained to see as self and others.

The universe is benign. The set of states of energy that imagines itself as you has a limited lifetime.

Take comfort in your impermanence.

Decanter handle: the truth

Intimacy has more than one definition.

Intimate details.

Intimate relationship.

A polyamorous person intimates intimacy in public and in privacy.

In the span of a few hours, one watches the intimacy of actors pretending to live intimately over 19+ months on a trip to Europa, becomes intimate with the details of one person’s life followed by another and another.

Back to the dance — following and leading.

Opposites attract.

A young man loses his girlfriend, then within two weeks, his grandmother (like a mother to him) has triple-bypass surgery, and a week later, he tears his meniscus.  He, a man half Brazilian, half American, blacker than black, but nearly hairless thanks to his Brazilian half, no need for a Brazilian wax.  Depression is easy to give in to but one must move one, mustn’t one, especially when one is so far away from his grandmother he has to fax his love and hugs to her?

And the depths of the stories of another — dear, sweet Bai — the daughter of a Baptist preacher, related to others in her family of Anabaptist faith, almost married a charismatic Pentecostal follower; she played piano, led the choir, organized/arranged church music leadership, her mother looked like Audrey Hepburn who has an inheritance of seven figures’ worth of jewelery to pass on; moved in with her boyfriend before marrying, got pregnant, her father telling her that if you’re going to sin, do so willingly and with gusto before God’s hand sweeps down [in punishment?], willing to face the consequences of your actions; got tattoos in her early 30s; more stories to tell than I can remember to write down…

And our resident Frenchman, who is unique in his own way outside of the fact he is from France.  Likes firm mattresses, no need for a boxsprings; bought a room full of furniture for $100 (was asked $80 but offered $20 more to get help moving the stuff) from an expat returning home overseas; his best time of the day is from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m.

A pretty young woman who seems so familiar, got into nursing school a semester ago, and along with her ROTC program must keep her grades up to complete her nursing degree.

A revolving door of stories.

The waitress/server who looks 21 but says she is 32.

The young man who spent all day playing his drum set and is looking for a fulltime gig with a band full of players who are serious about having fun practicing/performing music all the time.

Trying to understand where life is going to take us next as faces move in and out of the fog/noise of what we do to make ends meet.

On the way to the outpost, the happy place, the rest stop, the relaxation, the meditation point where friends, workers, companions, and lovers get together at the end of the day of setting up shop on Mars, where there is little in the way of the “fat of the land” to aid us when we’re unable to make ends meet.

That’s where the stories and the creativity begin.

Where endings are written.

The conflicts, the drama, the clash and mesh of personalities.

One day you’re sharing rent for a flat and the next day you’re out on your own paying full price.

If you can’t handle authority, you become your own boss.

And if you can’t handle that?  Well, that’s where the next story picks up.

How to generate magic, mesmerising, hypnotising, convincing you that what I have to give you you are willing to exchange labour/investment credits to have for yourself — goods, services, imaginary images, memories that last a lifetime.

When the government foments minirevolutions to keep the majority in its pocket, you know that there is nothing that can’t be done, given the right resources and enough time, or even if there is not enough time and too few resources.

All about adaptation.

You want the truth?

There is no truth.  There is only illusion.

A set of states of energy is not even a set, or states, or energy.

Understand that, you understand nothing.  And everything.

The story is king.  The plot the queen.  The subplots are children plotting to overthrow.

20,790 spam messages in queue

The best way to see where unintended circumstances will lead you is to take a cynical approach to your serious disposition.

Then, the future is the moment you’ve been waiting for, planning, biding your time and biting your nails about.

You needn’t worry that nothing will happen.

I was once famous on a local scale.  In junior high school, I actually had a fan club.  Sure, the club members were mostly gay guys and socially awkward girls but there were club buttons and other regalia to celebrate my celebrity status.

In high/secondary school, I was somewhat popular but I didn’t know it.  As the president of the school’s drama club for two straight years, along with appearances on stage as an actor and singer, I attracted a small following that I didn’t even know existed until I got on Facebook a few years ago and a few women my age wanted to start fantasy relationships that I saw had started in their thoughts many, many years ago.

I knew there were some people who looked up to me when I won the four-year U.S. Navy ROTC scholarship to Georgia Tech.

It was as if I had led a charmed life the first 18 years of my existence and didn’t appreciate the relative ease with which I breezed through my public school days until I left the small town and its suburban tracts for the big city.

I look back at all that, two-thirds of my life ago, and understand why I believe I am comfortable dying at any time.

I have always been happy to be alive, accepting whatever comes my way, but at the same time wanting to stay ahead of my ennui, the situational depression that dogs me like a hungry animal scenting my fear and chasing after me.

I see news headlines pop up about one subject or another that concerns populations of people out of eye and earshot and I wonder what’s going on.

Why do religious people fear nonreligious people, for instance, or vice versa?  I am perfectly comfortable in my belief that the universe both was and was not created by a supernatural being (God, in my subculture’s parlance, who miraculously created a son on Earth named Jesus (pronounced “Hey, Zeus!” of course)).  The labels we choose to describe a series of events that took place long before any of us or our ancestors could read or write is whatever we want them to be.  Our behaviour toward each other is still as important whether our origin story is called “God created the heaven and earth” or the “Big Bang.”

It is the noise or clutter that jams the airwaves with whatever people deem important enough to promote themselves and their ideas for a better life.

For others of us, one’s set of beliefs takes a second seat in the second row to hard facts like how gravity is variable across the surface of large celestial bodies but averages out sufficiently so that mathematical equations can be converted to algorithms to guide spacecraft around and land them upon distant planets, moons and other satellites.

We can fill our spare time with noise and clutter — the chattering class’ favourite topics du jour.

However, let us keep our longterm goals clearly, distinctly and loudest in our thoughts and actions.

The Mars mission continues!  Every idea counts, such as Ad Astra.

And entertaining diversions such as Europa Report.

Bobby socks sock Bobby; sobby bobby, sacked, bobs sockless in bock

Do you think the lizard brain, the reptilian ancestral central nervous system, the amygdala, looks for patterns?

The manager of the department where I had my first real desk job, Raleigh Bates, liked to wear white T-shirts with the sleeves rolled up, blue jeans with the cuffs rolled up, white socks and black leather shoes.

A new friend who takes dance lessons, Kirk, and somewhat resembles Clark Kent, the fictitious nom de la paix of Superman, also likes to wear white T-shirts with the sleeves rolled up, blue jeans with the cuffs rolled up, white socks and black leather shoes.

Raleigh grew up in the 1950s when his favorite clothing style was fashionable in pop culture.

Kirk lives in a time when 1950s clothing styles are fashionable in retro subculture.

Pretty much any clothing style you can imagine is available for wear in this day and age.

What fashion trends will drive our subcultural trends on Mars?

Will form follow function?

Do the driest, most introverted, anti/nonsocial people you know, including ones with Asperger syndrome or autism, care about the clothes they wear?

How will the offspring react to tomorrow’s resource allocation issues when cotton, polymers, dye, metal and other components of clothing are priced proportionally higher than the food they need to eat?

And when the converse is true, even for Converse shoes?

= = = = =

Time to give my tiny brain a rest.  I can tell by the way I am struggling to compose sentences in semicorrect grammatical forms that I am reaching the end of a trail of happy thoughts.  Self-monitoring is key.  I’ll leave you with these words from Ashleigh Brilliant, received via email:

ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT

Notes for Compassionate Connections, (Santa Barbara Channel 17 TV) July 30 2013

Ladies and Gentlemen, good evening –­ or good whatever time of day it happens to be where you are. This is a rare opportunity for me, and our hostess has been kind enough to tell me that for the next hour I am free to say whatever I like to whomever is watching. I must say this is an opportunity I did not seek — and before tonight I had never even met this remarkable lady. But now that she has brought you and me here together, we must try to make the most of it.

But what would that mean? Quite honestly, the first thing that comes to my mind is that this is a glorious chance for me to tell you about all my problems and ask for your help. That would satisfy me tremendously –­ but it wouldn’t be fair to you. You have enough problems of your own. Still I can’t resist just giving you an inkling of some of mine.

On December 9, I’ll be 80 years old, and that’s a problem in itself. It’s supposed to be a milestone, but I feel it more like a mill stone, hanging about my neck. I have one outstanding talent — doing clever things with words –­ particularly writing very short sayings, which I am also good at illustrating. And I actually managed to make a whole career out of selling and licensing these little creations in various forms. But that was so easy for me, and I was so prolific, that I finally had to stop doing new ones because I had glutted my own market.

This has left me looking for a new career, or at least for new ways to spend my time ­ and that is actually my major current problem.

Just to fill in the picture a little, I’m originally from England, but have been here in Santa Barbara since 1973. I have lots of college degrees, but no children. I also have a great lack of close friends, and very little remaining family except my wife Dorothy, whose physical condition, unfortunately, is not as good as mine, leaving her largely housebound, depending on various caregivers, of whom of course I am one – although happily she has managed to make it here tonight.

OK, that’s enough about my problems, and probably more than you even wanted to hear.

Let’s take our next cue from the title of this program series “Compassionate Connections.” I have no idea what that means, but my Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th edition, gives an uncharacteristically beautiful definition of the word “Compassion”: It says “Sorrow for the sufferings or trouble of another or others, accompanied by an urge to help; deep sympathy; pity.” If that’s what this program is about, maybe it wasn’t such a mistake after all for me to start by telling you about some of my own sufferings and trouble ­ especially if anybody out there actually does have an urge to help.

But how can you help me? There is one person I know in this town who claims, repeatedly and emphatically that he really does want to help me. He’s my psychiatrist. The trouble is, he has only one answer for any problem I might have. That answer can be expressed in one word: PILLS. Sometimes some of his pills really do seem to help to some extent. But if they don’t, his answer is always MORE PILLS.

There’s another person who I’m sure wants to help me. She’s my counselor. Unlike the psychiatrist, she has no power to prescribe medicines. So her help takes the form of TALK ­ and I must say that talking about my problems with a kind, conscientious person who really seems interested and concerned about me often seems more valuable than just taking pills. Incidentally her last words of advice to me before coming on this program tonight were “HAVE FUN!”

But neither of these professional types of helpers (and of course I have others, including many different varieties of medical specialists) can take the place of what I really feel I need most, and that is good old-fashioned FRIENDS. I have hundreds of the new-fashioned modern kind, that is, my email friends out there in the electronic universe. And I am only on the tip of the iceberg of so-called social media. My attempts to get involved with Twitter and Facebook have so far been so discouraging that I have more or less withdrawn from them.

But this is where FRIENDS could help –­ especially friends with more computer knowledge and skills than I have. Once or twice, I have been lucky in this regard. A year or two ago, I actually had a next-door neighbor who was not only a highly skilled telephone engineer, but was very willing and happy to help me with the problems I kept having with my iPhone. And he and I had some other pleasant things in common, including the fact that we were both British. But unfortunately, despite all his skills, he wasn’t able to get a job adequate to his talents in Santa Barbara, and had to move away to Silicon Valley.

And speaking of Santa Barbara, which has been my home since 1973, everybody knows what a great place this is to live,­ if you can afford it: the beautiful natural setting between mountains and ocean, the virtually ideal weather, the wonderful cultural facilities, the parks, the beaches, and so much more. But what people don’t know about are the many ways in which this is not such a paradise ­ and is in fact steadily becoming worse. For one thing, the traffic is a nightmare, which fortunately I don’t usually have to endure, since I do most of my travel on foot or by bicycle. But I myself was still a victim of this horror, being hit by a car while in a marked street-crossing. This happened 2 ½ years ago. I got a broken leg and other injuries, and am still suffering some of the effects.

At the same time, our public transport is visibly deteriorating. And you wouldn’t believe how difficult and unpleasant it has become, and how much longer it now takes than it used to, just to drive to our nearest big city of Los Angeles, which is only 100 miles away. Also that same freeway, which is our main artery both south to L.A., and north to San Francisco, cuts our town in two making it much harder just to go from the East to the West side of the city.

Of course before that, there were the railway tracks, which still more or less parallel the freeway, but at least you could go across the tracks on practically any street when a train wasn’t coming. Now the freeway, much more than the tracks, also forms a sort of social barrier, and when I go from our East to the West side of town I often feel that I am entering what we used to call the Third World. Anyway, there are buses and trains – and of course bicycles – but the whole transportation system is a real mess, and often, the best way to get around is by walking, which, despite my accident, I still do a lot of.

Another grim fact about Santa Barbara is the ghastly number of human derelicts to be seen upon our streets –­ otherwise known as our “homeless” population. Nobody is doing very much about this because, as with many other social problems, this is “the land of the free” and people have a right to be idle, dirty, and unsightly in public places if they want to be.

In other ways too, things are getting bigger, but not better. Our airport, the hospital, the University all seem under the compulsion to “expand or die.”

And some of my own worst bugaboos are scarcely even noticed, let alone discussed, by the public at large. One of these is the utility poles and wires which still deface some of our finest neighborhoods, like the one in which I live, up near the old Spanish Mission.

Another one is NOISE which includes the right to use all kinds of offensive machines at virtually all times of the day. Some of the worst of these are the carpet-cleaning monsters, which park in the street, and make all their noise not inside the house where they’re working but outside where they disturb the whole neighborhood. Another atrocity are the shredding machines which eat up vegetation thrown into them, at the price of a hellish racket which can last for hours. Then there are the gardening devices, which make a mockery of the idea that gardening is a pleasant peaceful pursuit.

More than a decade ago, I led a local campaign to ban one of the worst of these machines, the gasoline-powered leaf-blowers, which do nothing to make anything cleaner, but just blast the dirt around. It took 3 months of my life to gather a required 9000 signatures, and we were actually successful in getting the issue on the ballot and getting it passed by a majority of voters. But if you think that solved the problem, you haven’t walked much about this lovely town lately and heard the air still being shattered by those obnoxious devices, even though they are now illegal. Of course the law is hardly enforced by our overworked and underpaid police department.

And a third disgrace which I seem to be almost the only inhabitant to notice or want to do anything about is LITTER, which seems to be everywhere, sometimes just in annoying bits and pieces, sometimes in clumps and clusters, often spread over vast areas. People driving by in their cars hardly notice these blots on the landscape, but that miserable minority of us who pass by on foot are constantly offended by discarded food-wrappers, cigarette detritus, bottles, cans, papers, plastic bags, and all manner of other rubbish, much of which is probably thrown out of those same cars by ignorant drivers. I myself of course pick up stuff which I find particularly offensive. But lately I have discovered a device which I want to tell you about because if more of us carried one – which is easy to do, because it folds up – there might be a little less of a problem. It’s a picker-upper or “reacher” sold under the trade name of “Gopher” that’s G-O-P-H-E-R. It’s quite cheap – only about $10 – and if you carry one of these and something to put your collection in, before you dump it in some appropriate container, you can soon become an excellent litter-collector, and a good citizen for which unfortunately there are few rewards, and in fact many people will look at you with disdain because they consider such an occupation just about as low as you can go on the social scale. In fact judges often impose such work as a penalty. But I now have a dream of forming a whole contingent of people who will join me in this honorable pursuit. I already have a name for my band of people fighting blight: the Santa Barbara LITTERATI.

But speaking of plastic bags, as I did a moment ago, I now have to tell you that in the minds of many of you environmentally minded people I am on the wrong side of this issue. Because I actually LOVE plastic bags, especially the kind which are given freely by supermarkets to carry home our purchases, and I would hate to think of them no longer being available.. I can think of no invention which has so many good qualities. It is light, strong, compressible, reusable. It can be transparent or opaque. It’s so cheap that it can be given away, extremely durable and resistant to corrosion, capable of being made in all type of shapes and sizes – a masterpiece of human ingenuity. Yet there is now a strong movement to ban them, largely because they form such a big part of the litter which I hate, not only on land, but also at sea, and constitute a great danger to wildlife. I am well aware of all these arguments, but I say it is not the plastic bags which cause these problems, it’s the people who mis-use them

But I’d better not get too far into that kind of reasoning, because it puts me in the same camp – where I certainly don’t want to be – of the people in this gun-loving country who say “GUNS DON’T KILL PEOPLE – PEOPLE DO.”

Instead, let me get into another equally controversial issue – that of racism. In this part of America there is just as much of it as anywhere else, but here the people mainly in question are not the so-called Blacks, whose problems stem from being transported across the ocean against their will, but the so-called Hispanics, who took this land from the Indians, and then in turn had it taken from them by the Yankee Americans. Today they form a huge underclass – maybe by now a majority, and they still do most of the labor which would otherwise have been performed by slaves. For example, there are the so-called caregivers, who are mostly Hispanic, who tend to the patients, who are mostly white, in nursing homes or in their own homes. I have had personal contact with this situation lately, because of the hired caregivers who come for several days to tend to my wife at home. They are of course all Hispanic, and they work for wages probably less than non-Hispanic caregivers would get, if any could be found. Recently I said to my wife, almost as a joke, “Why aren’t there any white Jewish caregivers?” — and then I realized that we do actually have one – white, and Jewish – but he is the boss of the others – and when he himself works as a caregiver, he charges considerably more.

And, while I am being such a curmudgeon, let me complain on a more personal note that there is another class of citizens, besides pedestrians and plastic-bag lovers, who are being discriminated against locally – and these are the epigrammatists – of whom admittedly I may be the only one. I’ll give you just two examples: One is the Arts and Crafts Show which is held along our beach front every Sunday. Believe it or not, when I applied to exhibit and sell my own work there, they passed a special regulation which was specially designed to keep me out. It says “When the use of words is the principal feature of the permit holder’s art, the work is prohibited.”

But then, on the other side of this two-edged sword, when applications were opened for the position of Santa Barbara’s Poet Laureate, I made a big effort to get selected – not for the money, which I think was $1000 for the two-year term, but for the prestige, and for the recognition that my work, although very short, never exceeding seventeen words, really was poetry – although I also submitted many example of other types of poems I had written, and many supporting letters from people well-qualified to judge literary merit. Of course I was turned down by the selecting committee, whose members all represented what I might call our local poetry establishment.

Indeed, the only relatively secure place my work seems to have found in our community, apart from the postcards on racks in local stores, which I mostly service myself, has been our local daily newspaper, where it appears six days a week – and for this I remain sincerely grateful.

Oh yes, there is one other place where I get a little respect — a small white house with a green roof and a white picket fence, at 117 West Valerio St., which has been my business headquarters ever since we moved here from San Francisco in 1973, and where we still have one faithful assistant, Peggy Sue, who has been with us for well over 30 years. This is the only place in the world where you can get instantly (or as fast as Peggy Sue can pull them out) postcard copies of any one or all of my 10,000 published messages, in addition to all my books, which include a series of 9 volumes of what we proudly call my Brilliant Thoughts.

Some of you who are watching may have little or no idea of just what these creations are, so I will take the liberty of giving you the titles of a few of my books, which at least are examples of what they contain:

I MAY NOT BE TOTALLY PERFECT, BUT PARTS OF ME ARE EXCELLENT.

ALL I WANT IS A WARM BED AND A KIND WORD, AND UNLIMITED POWER.

WE’VE BEEN THROUGH SO MUCH TOGETHER – AND MOST OF IT WAS YOUR FAULT.

I FEEL MUCH BETTER, NOW THAT I’VE GIVEN UP HOPE.

I’M JUST MOVING CLOUDS TODAY – TOMORROW I’LL TRY MOUNTAINS.

All 10,000 of these messages together with their illustrations — many of which I did by hand, others I adapted from a wide variety of copyright-free sources– are available on a single CD which I sell for $105, and which is actually, apart from Social Security, my principal source of income.

But, speaking of copyright, I must tell you that this has been one of my chief concerns ever since I began this strange career. Until I came along, the sort of things I wrote were usually just dismissed as Graffiti, and it wasn’t thought or believed that anybody could claim to own them as a form of intellectual property. But I changed all that, especially with a Federal Court case in 1979 which decided in my favor against a company that was without permission, and against my strong objection, using my words on a series of Tshirt transfers.

So now that I own all these fabulous creations, the question is what to do with them. The truth is, I’ve never really known what to do with property in general. Dorothy and I once went to Western Australia with the idea of buying some land there, which we actually did, and which we still own. But we’ve never done anything with it. I used to joke that the main reason I wanted to own some property was just so that I could have occasion to utter that famous line I’d often heard in the movies: “Stranger, get off my land!”

And indeed that’s how it has been with my copyrighted material. The chief benefit it has brought me, at least financially, has been from suing or threatening to sue other people who were using it without my permission. Not a very edifying form of livelihood – but I do also have, or have had over the years, many legitimate users of my work – technically called “Licensees,” including the man who published all my books, a wonderful friend named Howard Weeks, to whom I would like to give credit tonight, although it won’t do him much good, since he died earlier this year. That unfortunately is also the case with many other people who have helped me achieve whatever it is that has got me to this high eminence of being a guest on Compassionate Connections.

So let me honor a few of those who happily are still living – and first and foremost I would put my wife Dorothy who, despite the tremendous differences between us, which would jump out at even the most casual observer, has always believed in my talent as a creative artist – and in fact at the very beginning of our relationship she expressed her faith in me by buying a number of my paintings – which I was only able to regain possession of by marrying her.

But more, much more than this (as Frank Sinatra sings) she always did things HER WAY – and that included the way our business was run. It was always very important to her that we pay all our taxes – in fact, she admitted (and this is just one of the many strange things about her) that she actually liked paying taxes. So I had to let her manage that part of the business – and eventually she managed practically all our financial affairs This rendered me free of all financial concerns, which was wonderful, except that I never had any idea what was going on in that area, because Dorothy had no training in book-keeping or accounting, and all our affairs were really just between her and God and the Internal Revenue Service – and I frankly think that at some point God gave up in despair.

So now, in honor of Dorothy, I would like to sing what I know is her favorite song of mine, and may be her very favorite of all songs. [Sing CAN-CAN.]

There are so many others to whom I owe so much – but let me modestly give at least a smidgen of credit to myself, Ashleigh Brilliant (yes, that is my real name.) It was I, for example, who thought of limiting my works to a maximum of seventeen words. Why seventeen? Yes, I knew about the Japanese haiku, but a haiku has to have exactly seventeen – and that was seventeen syllables, not words. Anyway, to me the important thing was not the specific number, but the idea that I was creating a new form of literature, and that it must be defined by certain rules, including a limit on length. I actually chose seventeen by counting the words in the ones I’d already been writing. I found that none was longer than 16 words – so I thought “I’ll just give myself one more word, for emergencies.”

But while we are talking about haiku, let me share with you one of the very few I myself have ever written, and have never before performed. The occasion was some kind of a haiku-writing contest when I was a faculty-member on board the so-called “Floating University” of what was then Chapman College back in the 1960’s. In those days, I must explain, I had no beard, and I used a rather noisy electric shaver. To understand the poem, you also have to know that we used to be summoned to our meals by a gong, which of course it was very important to hear, even if you were shaving at the time. So here is my Electric Shaver Haiku.

Hair-eating shaver:

I too have appetite!

(Your buzz drowned dinner-gong.)

So choosing a limit of 17 words, was how my career as an epigrammatist got started. But I didn’t even know I was an epigrammatist until I’d been one for several years. I actually didn’t know what to call my little works, which I liked to think of as each being a separate poem. That gave me the idea of calling them “Unpoemed Titles,” – which I did at first, and if you’re a collector, you’ll find that some rare specimens of my very early postcards still bear that designation. But “Unpoemed Titles” didn’t seem commercial enough – and I think it must have been the success of Charles Schulz’s “Peanuts” which gave me the idea of calling them Pot-Shots – although as a matter of fact, Schulz always hated the name “Peanuts,” which had been forced on him by his publishers. He himself always preferred his own original name for the strip, which was “Li’l Folks.”

My first postcards came out in 1967, but it wasn’t until 1979, when my first book was published, that I found out what I’d been writing. It seems that every new book, for the benefit of librarians and catalogers, has to be classified as to its contents by the Library of Congress – and this is part of the information that you see on the reverse side of the title page. In my case, my book “I May Not Be Totally Perfect, But Parts of Me Are Excellent” was given the primary classification of “EPIGRAMS” – a word so unfamiliar to me at that time that I had to look it up. Good old Webster’s defines Epigram as “a short poem with a witty or satirical point…Any terse, witty, pointed statement, often with a clever twist in thought.” What I liked about this definition was that it was also very complimentary. I was glad to know that I was officially “clever” and “witty.” It went well with my surname of Brilliant, which is also, luckily for me, very complimentary.

But I also discovered that there is a word for the people who write epigrams – and that’s how I found out that I was, and had been for a long time, an EPIGRAMMATIST. I felt like the character in one of Moliere’s plays who says “Good heavens! For more than forty years I have been speaking prose without knowing it .”

Lest you think, however, that my whole life has been given over to this one pursuit, I want to assure you that I have a Ph.D. in American History from the University of California at Berkeley – and I have a song to prove it. As you saw with the CAN-CAN, I like to take melodies that have never had words put to them before, and try to write appropriate lyrics. One challenge I set myself was to take John Philip Sousa’s rousing march “The Stars and Stripes Forever” and try to condense into it the entire history of America from Columbus to the Space Age, leaving out none of the important names, dates, and facts. This of course was impossible – but now, for my finale, here indeed it is: [sing STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER.] ##

Memphis step children

image

Tonite at the Flying Monkey, the Side Street Steppers.

Back story: one’s a data analyst and his wife, Vera, works at the Univ of Memphis bookstore (and older daughter of some of fellow dance studio students).

Interesting comparison to Rita Burkholder aka Helen Keller’s Ukelele.

image

Two children get into the music, too, boogeying to “C.C. Rider.” The boy heard ’em sing at the Fret Shop the last time the band was in town and wanted to hear them again. Smart kid.

On a meditative side note, this set of states of energy tries to figure how it fits into coincidental conjunctions of Zeitgeistian Zarathustrian zoological zaniness.

Today, I meditate upon the inside of my eyelids after creating for myself a meditative theme song for the day using the Animoog app, later throwing meat and vegetables into a crock pot to simmer a few hours before dinnertime.

I have no other goals, having accomplished a blog entry for the day.

Sometimes, happiness is a minimalist lifestyle.