High Winds

For what, in painful moments, have felt like excruciating, unending months, I have floated on the winds of change in popular/mainstream culture, following more than leading, letting the voices of others more attracted to monetary success and mass cultural influence speak for me, all because I acted upon the belief that adjusting to the loss of my father would change me, and it did.

I quit reading books.

I stopped meditating upon the peace of my joyful existence.

I dwelled in the mental images of the running storyline in my thoughts rather than shared them here with you, the reader and fellow follower.

I let my hit list dwindle down to nothing as my public voice changed to incorporate my image of mon pere into my written voice.

All while staying true to myself.

Relatively easy — no wars to fight, no lethal weapons to avoid, no slippery corporate ladders to climb, no shaky relationships to fix.

Because of this ease with which I walked through the death of my mother in-law and father, as well as a few people not mentioned online, I arrived here, continuing the sorting process of establishing which facts of one’s existence are worth recording in a blog via scanned images or Internet links and which are loaded into boxes and bags, then carried to the thrift store or sent to the local landfill.

By putting these items online, my personality is revealed through the points of contact I made in our global socioeconomic intercourse.

I asked myself along the way if it is easier for me to do something than something else I did before, will I?

I could grow and sell woodland plants in my tiny acre of land but is it easier and more enjoyable for someone else somewhere else?

I could poison and kill the raccoons that have eaten their way into my attic, or I could trap them and release them far away from this house, either way cleaning up the tornup eaves, shredded cardboard boxes and animal droppings.

Who am I?

The proverbial question has bounced around on days when I wondered which of my written personalities is really me.

Am I naturally attracted to people like Felicia Day because I have been and always will be a geek at heart?

I can talk and/or I can act.

Talking about myself and my inaction gets boring after a while when the voices are echoing the same thought back and forth, learning nothing new.

I have a bag of old spray paint cans and a few illustrator boards I used to make handbound hardback books of a limited collection of my poems and short stories — time to combine those with a bag of sewing notions from a 1956 Singer sewing machine cabinet to create artwork for display at Lowe Mill.

There may be office days ahead of me again, compromising my politically-incorrect-insensitive personality in the moment in order to work civilly with people who want to tap the profit of their business model to feed habits, hobbies and personality traits uniquely theirs.

How will historians see this moment, the past few months and years of the growing chasm between the socioeconomically ultra rich and relatively poorer people?

We spread into the cosmos — the answer to any and every question we ask, regardless of personality traits and set of beliefs.

Holiday Confetti

Paddling upstream, against the current, giving gravity its grave moment of gravity, one wonders why the sky is blue.

Yet, one breathes oxygen, a component of the sky, so should one first question why one breathes first?

Is the sky blue because I breathe?

Do I breathe because the sky is blue?

If the sky is not blue, then do I not breathe?

I do not hold blue in my hand when I feel blue and I cannot feel the blueness of the blue I see in blues.

The muse, she is just a geeky kid, is she not?

When she feels blue, should I feel blue?

When she sees red, should I not breathe?

A long time ago, when centuries were counted in units of A.D. and B.C., a man was born.

1931 on the west side of Huntsville.

His father bought a house in 1936, the son attending every school that existed in Huntsville at the time, back when the town was less than 10K in population, long before 10K races became popular pasttime weekend sports.

Huntsville Elementary, West Clinton, East Clinton and ending with Huntsville High School, one of them where the old Masonic Lodge is, he seems to remember.

His father, a construction man, helped build Redstone Arsenal and then moved to Denver to build a military base out there, the boy attending Ebert school in fifth and sixth grade.

The boy fished where Big Spring Park now entertains lovers arm-in-arm walking down tree-lined paths, the downtown buildings elevated above blocked-off caves.

“Did you ever see the old courthouse before they built this giant block building?  It was a beaut’.  Too bad they had to tear it down.”

Sitting beside the 81-year old was “Cookie” Moore, has lived in Big Cove for 69 or 70 years.

Mr. Burritt used to drive down the mountain to get water from Cookie’s father’s well. “Best damn water God put on this planet,” Cookie’s father quoted Burritt as saying, his father reminding Cookie that must be a good thing since Burritt didn’t believe in God.

The well was capped off a couple of years ago because it was unsafe, the walls collapsing in.

“Do you remember Jerry Moore?  Well, he goes for dialysis three times a week now.”

When one’s red hair has naturally bleached white, one is ageless in a way that people from their 20s to their 100s seem to relate.

When one agrees it’s not the doctrine that dictates behaviour, it’s the way one treats others regardless of inconsistent, dogmatic interpretation which rules the airwaves that makes the difference for infinite optimistic practitioners.

Lee sorted through the memory banks, unraveling tendrils.

No longer able to say, “this is my distinct memory,” Lee turned to Guinevere.

“What have we done?”

“What haven’t we done?”

“What, not, have we done?”

“What have we done not?”

“Done what have we?”

They tossed question after question at each other, varying the tone, pitch, inflection, word count, word order, sentence structure and chemical composition of the rhetoric without question.

Geekiness is an honour bestowed upon the few.

Chomping a cigar while driving a big rig on Mars is riskier though no less taxing on the intellect.

Latter-day saints like Hiromi Uehara and Chick Corea proved that intellect was simply a matter of spent energy, not a question or answer about questions and answers.

Thought experiments repeated themselves — “if you don’t do this, your life will not be complete” — stretched beyond the limit of limits, beyond derivatives, beyond boundaries, [sub]sets, and snapped back into boundless states of energy.

When two people communicate through the aether, either Eiger or the eigenvalue and the eigenvector value vectors on the inflective, jazz standards falling ‘way to speakeasy swing bands playing on the third floor of a cotton mill turned art factory factoring facts or rings or stings or dings or ING, that thing you do when you don’t know the influence of adverts from your father’s advice to remember two things, the first you forgot and the second hidden in the wisdom of old coaches’ wisecracks, having a craic of a good time back on the Cliffs of Moher.

Lee danced like a marionette, a feedback loop giving his partner the answer the performance art asked in realtime on the dance floor, too much information lost in eye contact, conversations whizzing by in the literal blink, the link, sink, the edge of the skating rink, riffing on the wordplay unspoken in bodies bounding between the imaginary ends of an invisible rubber band holding a planet together with its strange relationship of physics and chemistry, a giant toothpaste tube forming sparkling lines of thoughts in electronic ink.

Happy Saint Patrick’s Day!

Top o’ the morning to ye!

Erin go bragh!

It be midnight.

Sweet dreams!

Do your neuronal connections have labels?

Do you know what your neuronal connections look like?

I think I know mine:

SCAN0024 SCAN0025 SCAN0026 SCAN0027 SCAN0028 SCAN0029 SCAN0030 SCAN0031 SCAN0032 SCAN0033 SCAN0034 SCAN0035 SCAN0036 SCAN0037 SCAN0038 SCAN0039 SCAN0040 SCAN0041 SCAN0042 SCAN0043 SCAN0044 SCAN0045 SCAN0046 SCAN0047 SCAN0048 SCAN0049 SCAN0050 SCAN0051 SCAN0052 SCAN0053 SCAN0054 SCAN0055 SCAN0056 SCAN0057 SCAN0058 SCAN0059 SCAN0060 SCAN0061 SCAN0062 SCAN0063 SCAN0064 SCAN0065 SCAN0066 SCAN0067 SCAN0068 SCAN0069 SCAN0070 SCAN0071 SCAN0072 SCAN0073 SCAN0074 SCAN0075 SCAN0076 SCAN0077 SCAN0078 SCAN0079 SCAN0080 SCAN0081 SCAN0082 SCAN0083 SCAN0084 SCAN0085 SCAN0086 SCAN0087 SCAN0088 SCAN0089 SCAN0090 SCAN0091 SCAN0092 SCAN0093 SCAN0094 SCAN0095 SCAN0096 SCAN0097 SCAN0098 SCAN0099 SCAN0100 SCAN0101 SCAN0102 SCAN0103 SCAN0104 SCAN0105 SCAN0106 SCAN0107 SCAN0108 SCAN0110 SCAN0111 SCAN0112 SCAN0113 SCAN0114 SCAN0115 SCAN0116 SCAN0117 SCAN0118 SCAN0119 SCAN0120 SCAN0121 SCAN0122 SCAN0123 SCAN0124 SCAN0125 SCAN0127 SCAN0128 SCAN0129 SCAN0130 SCAN0131 SCAN0132 SCAN0133 SCAN0134 SCAN0135 SCAN0136 SCAN0137 SCAN0138 SCAN0139 SCAN0140 SCAN0141 SCAN0142 SCAN0143 SCAN0144 SCAN0145 SCAN0146 SCAN0147 SCAN0148 SCAN0149 SCAN0150 SCAN0151 SCAN0152 SCAN0153 SCAN0154 SCAN0155 SCAN0156 SCAN0158 SCAN0159 SCAN0160 SCAN0161 SCAN0162 SCAN0163 SCAN0164 SCAN0165 SCAN0166 SCAN0167 SCAN0168 SCAN0169 SCAN0170 SCAN0171 SCAN0172 SCAN0173 SCAN0174 SCAN0175 SCAN0176 SCAN0177 SCAN0178 SCAN0179 SCAN0180 SCAN0181 SCAN0182 SCAN0183 SCAN0184 SCAN0185 SCAN0186 SCAN0187 SCAN0188 SCAN0189 SCAN0190 SCAN0191 SCAN0192 SCAN0193 SCAN0194 SCAN0195 SCAN0196 SCAN0197 SCAN0198 SCAN0199 SCAN0200 SCAN0201 SCAN0202 SCAN0203 SCAN0204 SCAN0205 SCAN0206 SCAN0207 SCAN0208 SCAN0209 SCAN0210 SCAN0211 SCAN0212 SCAN0213 SCAN0214 SCAN0215 SCAN0216 SCAN0217 SCAN0218 SCAN0219 SCAN0221 SCAN0222 SCAN0223 SCAN0224 SCAN0225 SCAN0226 SCAN0227 SCAN0228 SCAN0229 SCAN0230 SCAN0109 SCAN0126

Survival kit for today’s world of business, technology, politics and space exploration, all rolled into one, of course!

Ever wondered how to survive on the road from new employee on the bottom of the totem pole to top dog leading the sled?

Well, these book titles may point you in the right direction:

University-days-0000a University-days-0000b University-days-0000c University-days-0000d University-days-0033 University-days-0052 University-days-0053 University-days-0054 University-days-0055 University-school-books-0000 University-school-books-0002 University-school-books-0008 University-school-books-0012 University-school-books-0015 University-school-books-0018 University-school-books-0020 University-school-books-0021 University-school-books-0022 University-school-books-0023 University-school-books-0026 University-school-books-0029 University-school-books-0030 University-school-books-0034 University-school-books-0035 University-school-books-0036 University-school-books-0037 University-school-books-0037a University-school-books-0038 University-school-books-0039 University-school-books-0040 University-school-books-0041

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.