Choices: 1. Monsters; 2. Zombies; 3. Something else

What does “family friendly” mean to you?

Out the fifth floor window of this hotel room, birds fly in the air or search a patch of grass for food.

Hundreds of motor vehicles, parked or moving, transport the sets of states of energy I accept as members of my species.

Rows of businesses take up 30 percent of my view which is accented by a nearly-full supermoon.

The sun sets behind me, having joined me from sunrise onward during this day of summer solstice.

I will soon return to Mars.

What about family-friendly, though?

Rupert Murdoch and Vladimir Putin divorce their wives. I remain married to mine.

What is this family that is so friendly?

As people flock from one business to another — grocery store, cinema, restaurant, mobile phone sales, general merchandise shopping centre, etc. — what average, what mean, what hump under the bell curve would best describe a typical parent/child/spouse unit we would call a family?

And what is friendly to them?

A night out at the movies?

An evening of video games?

Watching/playing ball at the local sports park?

Bailing someone out of jail?

Sitting at the bedside of an ailing family member in hospital?

Is a single person — a party of one — a family?

What about pets or extended social media connections — are they family?

The moon and the stars? The birds?

How about the friendly faces behind the counter in the hotel lobby? Aren’t they my family now, too?

I drink a bottle of Jones cream soda flavored water, produced by the Jones family, independent since ’96.

Is death family-friendly?

Birth seems to be. So does the tradition of marriage.

To secure my household, I killed a rat, three mice, dozens of insects and several amphibians. I chased away a mother raccoon and her three babies. I attempted to scare off the ubiquitous squirrels. I also saved two newts and a box turtle, not to mention the tree seedlings I didn’t cut to the ground or the vines I removed from the side of the house. I cleared uncounted privet bushes and poison ivy that clogged part of our front yard, to open up a sunny spot for our Rose of Sharon bushes and forsythia canes.

So killing can be family-friendly in the right measure.

However, a family that commits murder-suicide is not friendly, is it? What if everyone was dying of extreme radiation poisoning? Would a humane death be friendly, in that case?

What about a family that had lived on the same plot of land for centuries but died protesting their recent or soon-to-be forced displacement? Is that family-friendly, dying for a shared cause?

Watching the cars, minivans and trucks cycle in and out of the shopping district across the street, which triggers my thoughts to fill in the required infrastructure that supports the luxury of internal combustion engines, cup holders, powered seats and large carparks, prelabeled clothing sizes, preapproved dinner menus, landscape lighting and traffic signals…well, I’m easily distracted, aren’t I, by GPS satellites, shopping centre architecture, local building codes and “green” technology implementation schemes.

Since tattooed ladies have walked out from under the circus tents and into suburbia, what is family-friendly?

Is family-friendly an arbitrary label for changing tastes in community standards?

Hmm… All the chain restaurants lighting up their logos for my attention.

Think I’ll go to the local Irish pub for a beer and a bite to eat for dinner tonight, family-friendly enough for my tastes.

Still no conclusive proof

Despite my attempts to the contrary, I can find no conclusive proof that these blog entries have any effect other than rearranging bits in what must be, probably is, computer servers out there somewhere.

Therefore, I am, as I imagined in my first thoughts as an infant, truly alone.

I walk, I breathe, I speak, I listen — those activities have greater impact upon the world than these bits and bytes.

Nothing I do here influences or impacts the [American] football coaches of the Southeastern Conference college teams so nothing I write in this space would cause them to want to make comments about the level of competition that the University of Tennessee coaches, trainers, staff, stadium/field, training facilities and players bring to the SEC.

They alone have to defend their job perks/pay scales and physical abuse of young men in order to instill teamwork and self-sacrifice into “student-athletes” aligned with the much-maligned NCAA just so universities can virtually destroy a few student-athletes in the name of commerce, yet claim it’s all about educational opportunities.

My habits are the result of my place in a tiny subculture in this great galaxy of ours — I do not qualify them with labels like “good” or “bad.”

For, you see, I have my own personal secret to success that prevents me from S everyday — I am waiting to die and every day until I die is a bonus I didn’t have when I contemplated S the day before — the only friend of mine when considering the big S is procrastination — there will always be time tomorrow to say hello to S and goodbye to the rest.

I never have been a very good team player.  I blame my parents, who brought a rival for their affection into this world — my sister — and I’ve been in a personal war against the world ever since.

From then on, it’s been a mental struggle to tell myself that the opposite sex is one part of two-gender trait of our species (to be honest, I’m still uncomfortable including LGBTXYZ in my universal view), that we should work together to make this planet a better place to live, etc.

I am an uptight dude, who never has felt comfortable relaxing in front of others, constantly switching personality masks to accommodate and please people around me so I can wall/fence them off from the parallel universe inside my thoughts, where I truly live, happy in my private misery and/or miserable in my private happiness.

Men are not my rivals — everything about them is some part of me, and they are what they are in their hairy, testosterone-driven imperfections.

Women are my rivals and always will be — there will never be a time when I can get back to those happy moments with my parents before my sister was conceived — whatever women do, I will compete against them; when they’re better than me at some task/skill, I will feel an immense jealousy/envy with which I will either find strength and choose to compete or feel deflated and concede defeat.

Before my wife and I followed in my parents’ footsteps and bought season tickets for Univ. of TN football home games in 1991, we enjoyed weekend getaways to B&Bs around the country.

If the exploitative college football system didn’t exist, my wife and I would probably be traveling the world.

Instead, I have driven us six or seven times in the autumn of the year back to our parents’ places in order to schedule family time around trips to Neyland Stadium.

A week ago, my wife and I decided to change seats in the stadium, giving up our South End Zone, upper deck spots in Section LL, Row 9, Seats 14-15, that we have held since 1991, in order to move to the North End Zone upper deck, our “Annual Fund” (formerly the Volunteer Athletic Scholarship Fund) donation level staying the same.

We also took advantage of buying four tickets to the “away” game in Tuscaloosa for this year’s UT-Bama game, traditionally held on the third Saturday in October.

I have no idea who the players are or will be for either team but I’m pretty sure that they’ll be in the 17-23 year old age range, the youngest players being a third my age, remembered for decades by kids who’ll attend the games and cheer for their favourite players just like when I was a kid and cheered for the likes of Condredge Holloway, a young man from Huntsville, Alabama, who ended up playing quarterback for University of Tennessee because the University of Alabama head football coach, Paul “Bear” Bryant, told Condredge that he’d never be a quarterback for Bama because his skin was the wrong colour for the times.   Probably still is in the heart of Dixie.

Doesn’t matter to me how many national championship trophies that the University of Alabama football team claims to have because I’ll always remember a fellow male, George Wallace, standing on the university campus barring people with dark skin from attending classes.

How many national championship caliber quarterbacks for Bama have not been white?

When will the first national championship college football team have a woman on the first team, let alone at quarterback?

These are questions I can wait until the day I die to see answered outside of this blog because I’ve already seen them played out in the parallel universe of my thoughts.

In a few months, I’ll watch traditional male-dominated football teams hold a controlled fight/wrestling match while women and men cheer on the sideline, knowing, despite increased ticket prices and major stadium seating capacity upgrades, nothing has changed in 50 years:

I’m still a set of states of energy alone in my thoughts, committed to my marriage and my family, but otherwise not much of a team player when I don’t want to be, never that happy-but-apprehensive-of-the-big-wide-world one-year old ever again.

Thirteen, four, eighty-seven

“Heaven’s Gate!”

“What?”

“Look, honey. It’s them, circling that asteroid!  They made it after all!”

“What on Earth are you talking about?”

“Nothing.  Nothing. On. Earth.”

“Sometimes even YOUR strangeness amazes me.”

= = = = =

“How can you keep a hermit in suspense?”

“How?”

“Give him sixty dollars and promise you’ll stop by four days later, after church on Sunday, to buy two vehicles from him…but don’t show up.”

= = = = =

Conceived by them and being near them for 50 years, I amazingly have only a few samples of my parents’ voices.

= = = = =

If I perform manual, physical activities such as cutting back the vinca vine that constitutes our front lawn, washing/cleaning the 1962 Dodge Lancer and 1992 Chevy S10 4×2 pickup, repairing the door to the crawlspace to eliminate entry points for critters, and cleaning flower beds along the front sidewalk, I reduce the energy readily available for mental calculations.

= = = = =

Who owns the businesses around me?

= = = = =

What pebbles and crumbs am I scattering here in preparation for future blog entries?

= = = = =

Are any parts of a money-based/barter economy evil to atheists?  How do people with a system of faith-based beliefs respond to inequity?  If condemning those who treat us unfairly/dishonestly to eternal damnation/hell is not enough while we’re alive here together on this planet, how do we create a distribution network that’s less unfair/dishonest?

How do those who hold true belief in a no-holds-barred competition for resources compete against and cooperate with those who hold true belief in sharing everything as if we’re one big family/community of quasi-equals?

= = = = =

I dropped my habit of checking a social media site at the same time its employees admitted that the site uses various methods to censor free speech.

If everyone shares the public square and no one owns it, is free speech protected when the square is surrounded by adverts and CCTV?

What of one’s views and perceptions that are shaped before one enters the public square?

= = = = =

When is an uprising the twist of a pressure relief valve and when is an uprising the start of large-scale social change?

= = = = =

Can technological change travel backwards in imaginary time?  What is the new formula for entropy/complexity intersections?

= = = =

There is a chilling sensation in the back of my thoughts, as if I’ve remembered and forgotten something I wanted to say to you tonight.

Too many interruptions lately, distracting my thoughts.  I want to be alone but I am a social creature, a people pleaser, who doesn’t like being alone for very long.

Time to relax and fall back into my dreams, let the -ology of choice find me when I least require its presence.

= = =

The carrier of a million-year message can afford to be patient.

==

Repetition.  Repetition.

Repetition.

.

A boy’s life, revisited

For those who are interested, here are the original pictures from the May 1962 copy of Boys’ Life:

Boys-Life-cover-Nov-1962-001 Boys-Life-contents-Nov-1962-001 Boys-Life-advert-Nov-1962-001 Boys-Life-cover-Nov-1962-002

 

For me, the latest news is still an uneasy thought to accept.  Knowing now what I didn’t know then, that there were gay boys in my school, one who knew he was gay at 12…he used to tickle me and giggle because tickling caused me to get an erection.  He never touched my erection but he did admit getting a thrill tickling me, which I avoided getting tickled by him even more after his admission.

He was in Boy Scouts with me.  We earned more than one merit badge together, both of us interested in nature, studying birds and wildlife habitats, taking notes and sharing with other Boy Scouts.

I admit I was attracted to his intellect but I was not sexually attracted to him.

He went on to earn academic honours at CalTech as well as achieved business accolades.

 

I sit here and look at my Boy Scout achievements, including the milestone of Eagle Scout:

SCAN1008

 

I guess the Boy Scouts of America have adjusted to a changing United States of America.

What will the troop leaders face now that openly-gay Scouts are officially accepted?

Will they have to worry not only about boys getting knife cuts while whittling and third-degree burns from roasting marshmallows but also listen carefully at night to make sure a curious gay boy will not make a pass at a fellow tentmate?

Will a tickler of the 1970s attempt a kiss, instead, in the 2010s?

My wife and I have briefly discussed this issue — when we did, my scalp felt on fire, which told me this is important for me to consider further.

How do I separate the code of honour I upheld as a Boy Scout — reconciling that the fact that homosexuality is a physical/mental wiring issue rather than a[n] [im]moral act against the fact that boys become sexually active in their early teens, some more active than others — from the genetic code that children are born with?

It is not a simple matter that I can easily and simply dismiss.

Are all openly-gay boys effeminate?

If so, will they and their parents push for sewing/fashion and home decorating Boy Scout merit badges?

Regardless of gender preference/attraction, Boy Scouts is about learning new skills, including wilderness survival but also skills in the civilised world, such as computers and citizenship.

I have always been willing to hold discordant views in my thoughts and these definitely clash: I accept gays and lesbians as friends even though a part of me sees anything but a heterosexual relationship as unnatural, a sign that nature has a way of putting the brakes on overpopulation.

However, building rockets and exploring the cosmos is an unnatural act of sorts in my thoughts yet I want our species to create networks of beings/technology that branch out from the solar system and into the neighbouring sections of our galaxy.

Unnatural is a word to describe a condition of one or more sets of states of energy in flux.

I will think more about this and hope to record here my thoughts on the matter.

Until next time, my wife and I will continue to share our lives together, including a tour of Air Force One a couple of years ago.

Au revoir!

Rick-Janeil-Air-Force-One-Feb-12-2011 SCAN1009

Cork board

The ting of water drops splattering at the bottom of a downspout.

The faint glow of a firefly gliding under a forest canopy.

The chirp of a bird at night.

A bat?

No more firefly?

The points of light on distant peaks — mobile phone towers, street lamps, headlights pointing this way and that.

Standing in the doorway of a mountain cabin, a screen door barring mosquitoes and moths, stretching sore muscles tightened by hours of holding and turning a steering wheel, by moments in public view of others, anticipating their reluctant smiles, looking for laughter to ease the tension of one’s daily high-wire act…

At 3:35 in the morning, alone in one’s thoughts, is this happiness, time spent rewriting personal history, rewiring social connections at the neuronal level on an electronic slate?

How often does autocorrect redirect one’s thoughts?

If I’m willing to feel the pain of others in my easy life, so can you, when the time is right, when we get too comfortable to see that short-sighted happiness creates historical misery.

I am a caged animal at times, enraged, barred by artifices like social/moral boundaries that make no sense to me yet I, in my inadequacy, maintain for the sake of appearances.

Walking on hot coals for no reason, tiptoeing on eggshells spread across thin ice, wearing a life preserver shaped like a large yellow rubber duck.

This is my universe and I am learning to deal with it, a bull in a china shop one moment, a whisper of wind passing through seven billion social/moral/ethical animals the next.

We truly do not see our fragile place in the universe, trapped as we are by our hypnotic illusions, comfortably deluded.

Will we, as a small percentage of the mass of one planet, wake up in our sleep before we die?

Your video comparison of the day

During my morning rituals — wake up in wee hours, see stars, dream — I had a vision of two songs that merged — amazing similarity:

But comparing these two is more fun:

 

Thanks to the group in Birmingham for the announced move to Ricket City so they can prove that the moniker “Fools, Buffoons and Idiots” is not earned.

Humbled

A shoutout to Reverend Tom today for a good message.

The pastor at my hometown church, the man who dropped everything at all hours of the day and night to be with my family a year ago as my father lay dying, had a few good words to say during Mother’s Day, the last day of the Easter season in the Christian religion tradition.

In reference to the Bible passage that Tom called the “high priest” prayer by Jesus, the 17th section of the book of John, a set of tales told in sequence by a good storyteller, a personal witness of the events, per tradition, Tom said that we should commit to prayer before taking action, just like a Sunday service is itself a continuous prayer — children’s choir, hymnal songs, sermons, prayers, etc. —  in preparation for the rest of the week ahead.

And, as Jesus said, our goal, he prayed, is that we might be one, a species in unity like Jesus was united to God, his father.

Despite our differences.

Unity in Christ is bigger than our differences, in other words.

Unity, not uniform behaviour/looks, in seeking the love of Jesus and our expressi0n of unity through charity.

Ultimately, the question is not that or how we disagree in our forms of prayers and understanding of the words given to us, but on what unity in Christ we agree to share with others.

We are tiny specks, children of the universe, who rarely grasp the intricacies of life, from the interaction of sets of states of energy at subsubsubatomic levels, to daily social problems and solutions, to connections at time scales of galactic levels.

We are, however, members of the same species, regardless of subcultures, belief sets, clothing choices or musical preferences.

Let us treat each other as if we live on the same planet.

I, for one, seek out the best ideas and practices within our species to move us out of the doldrums — away from the tautological chaos (making fun of our seriousness when misplaced), toward the application of useful chaos (where theory meets practicality) — and into the later decades of this century with one word on our lips — success.

Actions speak louder than words.

Thanks, Tom.  Your words today have moved me to action, humbling me out of my selfish, temporary depression, realising even the tiniest speck, me, has a place with all the others to make a worthwhile difference, especially when we work together as one in pursuit of unified motives, allowing subcultures to contribute at their own pace and own voice.

Driving the Home Digital

During this morning’s nap, I dreamt I was inside a giant lawnmower, the blades of the lawnmower swirling around me.

I awoke as the sounds of the lawnmower receded (a helicopter flying past?).

In the leftover grass clippings of the dream, I heard the last bit of a talk show host and his guest discussing a pet theory of the guest — the prevalence of tattoo/ink reality TV shows was to increase a desire in the public for tattoos and thus hide the real tattooed criminal gangs from the police, gangs who had funneled money to film production studios for the express purpose of making the reality TV shows.

I enjoy my dreams for, without them, what goofy ideas in reality would I find to entertain me any better?

In the post-dream silence, the hum of an aquarium filter and the snoring of cats/raccoons serenade me.

The bright reflection of water droplets evaporating from tree leaves leaves me happy, content that blue skies fill the frame of my visions of a planet that bears me no ill will, knowing my existence is but one miniscule drop of life on this orb.

For that is all I am, all I need.

Planetary exploration is for the rest of you, if you desire your species a chance of surviving the random clanging of metal spheres hanging from a mobile attached to the ceiling of a museum containing meaningless money-laundered investments “works of art.”

Humour me.

Give me comedies and tragedies in your haste to go nowhere fast on the same planet that thousands of generations of your species have crawled and walked upon.

I will look for patterns that do not exist, patterns given to me by my grandfather and others before him who knew that repetition is frequent and originality a trick of the eye.

Alakazam!  Alakazoom!  إفتح يا سمسم!  Let the mischievous spirits walk the earth and provide me seeds for the next serialised tall tale!

Survival of the fittest…

…or the most economically viable, whichever is most interesting.

A young man in his mid-30s told me that getting tattoos is addictive.  Yes, it hurts but that’s part of the attraction.

A bus driver who takes a bus down a neighbourhood lane at 45-50 MPH in a posted 25 MPH zone is attracted to keeping a job and delivering students on time.

Both are risk takers.

Sitting here and typing sentences is risk-free.  How the words and sentences are arranged, then posted onto the Internet for reading on the World Wide Web of interfaces has a higher risk.

Hypertext transfer protocol.

How many of us pay attention to our methods of communication?

Are they pain-free? Risk-free?

  • Shouting across the street to a neighbour.
  • Tapping a code on a downspout to a friend in a flat three floors up.
  • Spray-painting a message on a freeway bridge.
  • Sending a letter in the mail.
  • Satellite signals.
  • Words “carved” in the foam of a head of beer.
  • Written in ink on the back of a bus seat.
  • Missiles launched across geopolitical borders.

Should the risks you take cost you more to participate in a society with low risk takers?

Fast/bad bus drivers, for instance — how many buses have recording devices that monitor not only the behaviour of the students but also the driving habits of the person behind the wheel, matching GPS data to posted speed limits to the speed of the bus at the time, stopping distance/slowing speed to intersections, how many times the driver has to take eyes off the road, etc.?

Do people with tattoos have a higher rate of communicable disease infection than non-tattooed people?  Higher rate of addiction to destructive behaviour?

Do bloggers take more or less risk than people who do not blog?

Is there a correlation between being a team player and survival of the fittest?

Can you be one and not the other, yet the most economically viable person on the planet?