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Wednesday,
31 October 2001
So, tell me, should I be depressed? Worried? Grateful? Angry?
In denial? Suspicious? Preoccupied? There seem to be a thousand
things happening at once, many of them quite unrelated, and I'm
having some trouble processing all of it; I don't know how I should
feel or react. It's normally much simpler: yellow and blue make
green, red and blue make purple, yellow and red make orange. But
what do all the colors combined at once make? That's right: brown.
And if you add another color on top of that? More brown. Well,
that's where I am right nowthe good, bad, and mediocre have
been stirred into a giant stew together, and I can hardly make
out the original ingredients, let alone figure out what that strange
flavor is.
It's Halloween (my favorite holiday), and I can expect a full
moon. I can also (potentially) expect another terrorist attack,
and, according to Herrn Rumsfeld, there's rumor
it might happen in the South (well, in the southern part of somewhere).
My birthday's coming up (am I happy or sad about that?), this
morning my boss gave me Halloween candy in a paper bag meant for
"nap sacks" (a relatively new term for me and a refreshingly
unconventional "trick"), and I feel good after having
had eight hours of uninterrupted sleep last night, (something
that hasn't happened since the last time I got sick). There's
speculation
that the anthrax attacks are being executed by American neo-Nazi
extremists (which would, in some backward way, be a good thing,
because then we'd be forced to deal with culprits in the court
system, rather than with bombs). And, well, there are civilians
dying and hospitals being bombed, in my name, and there are people
who paint their SUVs like red, white, and blue clowns who cut
me off in traffic and neglect to vote. There is so much going
on that I don't know aboutthat I probably don't want
to know aboutand it makes me uneasy. The sky is blue, Richard
just sent me a cool haiku,
and I am the new owner of this painting.
So?
***
Ha! This
made me laugh.
...Happy
Halloween! [link courtesy of Tracy]
Monday,
29 October 2001
Yesterday I bought my first cookbook. Well, that's not exactly
true. My mom gave me a couple my freshman year in college, but
then somehow cooking oil got all over them and they were too sticky
to hold comfortably and too illegible to be useful, the pages
tanned and spottily transparent, words from opposite pages shining
through and merging to form a new language. (Though I never had
much chance to use them, I still have those cookbooks, because
I am oddly compelled to keep things.) I also didn't buy the cookbook
myself originallyMartin bought it, upon my suggestion, and
it wasn't until later we determined that it suited my freakish
tastes better than his, and he sold it to me. Anyway, I'm really
excited about it, mainly because it makes me want to cook and
experiment and try new foods and pay attention to presentation,
none of which I've ever cared about before. Tonight I made a meal
that looked complicated and attractive and it was healthy
and good. I wonder how long I can keep this up.
As promised, I've put up some pictures from October/Halloween
and from the farmers'
market.
Sunday,
28 October 2001
The campfire smell is out of my hair but deep in my pillow.
The party last night was primarily outside in 35-degree weather,
but there were sticks cooking in giant barrels to provide warmth
and I huddled near them, collecting heat and smoke. Lots of good
costumes underneath big, concealing coats, creatures speaking
with visible breath while clustered around the glowing barrels,
wringing hands, clutching cups of cold beer with gloves and paws
and bloody fingers. Despite the weather, the party was really
fun. I'll post some pictures tomorrow.
Friday,
26 October 2001
I don't really try to use every ounce of gasoline in
my car before I refuel. It's just that putting petrol in my car
is such a pain in the ass that I usually wait until the gauge
is deep in the red, and the yellow glow of the gas light has been
burning for days before I bother to do it. Of course when I notice
that I desperately
need gas, it's always morning, the time of day that I have
zero expendable time for things like errands, so I usually decide
to try and make the twenty-five mile drive to work on generous
fumes. Then, at lunch, I roll to the gas station and leisurely
fill my car, watching the numbers as they approach fifteen, the
number of gallons my gas tank holds. For some silly reason, I'm
always satisfied when I see that I was particularly close to being
stranded; I don't know if it's relief that I feel, or if I'm just
pleased with my own judgment of the gas gauge. When the numbers
stop scrolling, sometimes I try to figure out how much further
I could've gone before I would've had to make an embarrassing
phone call (which has only happened once).
Today at lunch I put 14.852 gallons in my tank, which, if I'm
figuring correctly, means I could've gone a mere 5.25 miles before
grinding to a halt. Ah, life on the edge.
***
Just now, a strange altercation at the I Love New York pizza place
near my house, while I was picking up my dinner: lots of threats,
some pushing, talk of shooting and knives and even terrorism,
some ice thrown in the face and a call to the cops. Me, wedged
in a corner blankly watching, uncomfortable and taking no one's
side.
Thursday,
25 October 2001
Go outside at lunch. Read 1984. Spend more time alone.
(It doesn't always have to be legitimized by a companion for it
to be good.) Do some form of exercise semi-regularly. Play
that dusty instrument in the corner. Keep the empty Diet Coke
can collection in check. (Today at work two older women came up
to me together and asked, giggling, what happened to
the Diet Coke cans?, referring to the fact I'd recycled them
a few hours before.) Call the friends you never see. Spend less
time with the computer. For once, do nothing.
Wednesday,
24 October 2001
While on my way home from work today, I saw a girl picking
purple flowers in an exit median on the Durham Freeway. I saw
her hunched-over body before I saw her car, and it took me a moment
to realize what she was doing and how she'd gotten there. I'd
been eyeing those flowers myself lately, but I hadn't thought
of doing that.
Tonight Martin discovered his bike
has been stolen; the chain that attached both of our bikes to
a large printing press of sorts in the garage had been cut, and
for some reason, my bike was left standing there, unguarded and
defenseless. I guess its biggest defense is that it came from
KMart.
An hour ago I walked to the video store and rented Jesus'
Son, a movie recommended to me by my late friend Rasheid.
My days are strings of unrelated events squished into seven-hour
segments of free-time. Are anyone else's days any different?
***
Of course the pictures
are too dark. On my laptop at home they are on the line between
too dark and light enough, but on my desktop at work I need a
flashlight to see them. My affinity for slides is dwindling with
each bad scan... Anyway, I've taken a couple pictures down (only
the ones that can't be rescued), and I've lightened up a few of
the others, and, hopefully, now they're a little more viewer-friendly.
Tuesday,
23 October 2001
I've finally had a chance to put up some pictures from my
trip to Portland. If you'd like to see them, go here,
and if you'd like a description and fries with your order, go
via the photos page.
Monday,
22 October 2001
Ever since I moved from my fourth floor office to my second
floor office, I have lost the privilege of heating my lunch in
a microwave so close that I don't actually have to leave my chair.
These days I have to carry my lunch into the main dining area
(which isn't all that far away), walk back to my desk to entertain
myself for 4.5 minutes, and then run back to retrieve my lunch
before a pouting, foot-tapping coworker snatches it out. Carrying
a steaming plastic tray of squared-off portions of meat and vegetables
down the hall is rather a humbling experience, not unlike wandering
around the doctor's office with a specimen. I'm convinced no one
can look cool doing it.
Yesterday I saw part of the Dark
Crystal, the part where the Pod People get their "essence"
sucked out by the Skeksis. Today my office is playing the part
of the Skeksis, draining me of my essence to the hum of florescent
lights. In retaliation, I've been pouring Diet Coke down my throat,
but what I really think I need is sunlight.
Sunday,
21 October 2001
"I dreamt that a gang of evil men with super-human powers
had kidnapped my daughters. I ran for help, but no one believed
me; they looked at me as if I were crazy. Then I started thinking,
Maybe I really am crazy. I woke up feeling shaken. I realized
that this is what so often happens when we come face to face with
some unimaginable horror: we run for help, but no one believes
us. No one believes how many species are disappearing, how many
prisoners are being tortured, how many women are being broken
by self-important men. Everything stops making sense. The weight
of the world sits on our bony shoulders, and our bones snap."
Sy Safransky, in the October issue of The
Sun Magazine
Saturday,
20 October 2001
Lack-of-sleep delirious energy is far superior to a nap hangover;
somehow I let myself forget that fact yesterday evening when I
crawled into bed at 8:30 and asked my alarm to wake me up an hour
later. At 9:30 and again at every hour after that until 2:30,
I told myself to get up and go to the party, or at least go take
my contacts out and put on something more comfortable. At 2:30
I finally peeled my dry contacts from my eyes and washed my face
and brushed my teeth and felt so much better until I realized
I wasn't tired any more. For the next half hour or so, newly freed
of guilt, I lay on my back and thought about the evening I didn't
have until eventually I drifted off again. Somehow I'm tired again
today.
Tonight I'm going to something called The Barrister's Ball, an
annual event at which everyone's required to dress as a cop, a
robber, a pimp, a prostitute, or a Catholic school girl. Last
year I went as a Catholic school girl; I'm still rifling through
my closet to determine what I can become tonight. I don't feel
much like any of those people at the moment.
Thursday,
18 October 2001
At 4:30 this afternoon a local TV crew filmed my office, interviewing
people about a September 11th-related charity bonus and taking
shots of people sitting at their desks shuffling papers and sitting
behind rectangular pieces of oak, moving around mice and pecking
at keyboards, or whatever office people do in their individual
scooped out spaces. At one point the camera was set up directly
in front of my cubicle, at which time I was talking on the phone
to Todd about an assignment while the other line was ringing and
Steve was begging me to urgently print something out that couldn't
be printed. I tried to sit so that my monitor was safely positioned
between my head and the TV camera, trying to listen to Todd and
Steve and mouth an explanation and perform one-handed charades,
but I'm not sure I was entirely successful. The news comes on
in 10 minutes; I plan to watch and find out whether I was effectively
covert and made it to the cutting room floor.
Tuesday,
16 October 2001
Since I took this picture, two
things have happened: (1) One of the creatures pictured has entirely
disappeared, apart from a tail and the lower part of two back
legs. (2) I bought a loud bell and attached it to the other creature.
Tonight at Stef and Matt's a few of us got together to work on
Halloween costumesto brainstorm, to sew and build, to bounce
ideas off each other, to exchange material, to try things on,
etc., etc. Both Stef and Matt always have incredible costumes,
and they have baskets full of scraps of fabric and foam and piles
of idea books, so they've instituted a sort-of costume workshop
at their place this year. I've only just decided what it is I
want to be, and now I have to figure out how the hell I'm going
to transform myself into the image I have in my head. I'm gonna
need an ocean of hair gel.
Monday,
15 October 2001
There's a restaurant I like and whenever I go I always order
the same dish but sometimes, only rarely, that dish doesn't taste
good on that particular day and I have no idea why, because there's
nothing obviously wrong with it. Today was like that. Nothing
particularly bad happened; I've heard worse news, I've driven
through thicker traffic, I've had busier days, I've seen cloudier
weather, I've gotten myself into more uncomfortable situations.
But for some reason today felt bad around all the edges, and that
cancerous feeling contaminated the things that on any other day
would have been merely average, without any explanation whatsoever,
besides the fact that it's Monday and I'm rather exhausted. At
least with the absence of reason I can draw the conclusion that
tomorrow will likely be better.
Apparently butterfly
bushes are planted in the median of a highway in Eastern North
Carolina. Yes, bushes that attract butterflies are planted in
the median of a highway.
Sunday,
14 October 2001
On my way back from hearing Richard's band play on Thursday,
I drove the usual route past Central Prison, a red brick behemoth
located half a mile from my house. Despite the building's size,
it easily fades into background if you drive past it frequently
enough. This time, though, the building caught my attention. First
I saw a few police cars clustered together, then I saw candlelight,
and then a sign sprouting through a group of people that confirmed
my suspicions: Execution is Not the Solution. It was 1:30
a.m. as I drove by, thirty minutes
to go. I purposely didn't look at the clock when it struck
2. I still don't know the details, but I feel like I should.
Friday night Suran
Song in Stag, disguised as an Indian and two cowboys, played
and danced and strummed and banged on a stage that became a canvas
for five simultaneous slide shows. When the show was over, we
went to Richard's so that Suran could wash the fake blood off
before going to a party we never actually went to. Instead, they
drove on to West Virginia, and I went home and slept ten hours.
Today I have Three Days stuck in my head after seeing Jane's
Addiction play last night, a show that, unlike Friday's show,
drowned in its own theatrics. Too produced, too many Apollo dancers,
too much exploitation, too much gibberish coming from Perry Farrell's
mic in between songs, too many advertisements everywhere you looked,
out of every cup you drank, in every seat you sat. It felt like
watching a (formerly?) subversive band in Corporation Disneyland.
The tickets were free, and I'm glad I went, but I didn't stay
for the whole thing. Instead, Martin and I rented Blue Velvet
and ate some strange, sugary crap that made my teeth hurt.
Thursday,
11 October 2001
Wow, if you thought other cultures were silly and hard to
comprehend before, take a look at this.
Funny. There must be some funky breed of owl in Britain.
I have a feeling statements from last night's dinner are going
to creep up on me all week. Here's one I thought of today: "I'm
claustrophobic, and therefore I don't like things without windows,
you know, like planes and trains."
Today, rather than let crumbs drop into my computer keyboard during
lunch (bite > chew & read > scroll > click > bite),
I sat alone in Duke Gardens on a bench next to a tree that smelled
better than my bagel sandwich. The tree I parked underneath was
suspiciously yellow...somehow I missed the gradual change this
year.
***
For your pleasure, here are two articles worth reading regarding
truth and the media:
(1) Media
Analysis: Questioning U.S. Media's Coverage of War
(2) Wartime
Lies: A Consumer's Guide to the Bombing
We
can assume only this: Right or wrong, the government is lying
to us. And the media is repeating and magnifying those lies
in order to convince us to put our brains on hold and yell for
blood behind a waving pennant of the stars and stripes.
Read and listen to the alternative press! But don't necessarily
just believe us, either.
from: Wartime Lies: A Consumer's Guide to the Bombing
Wednesday,
10 October 2001
I think there was a point, probably during late childhood,
when we began to branch, when we became selective and critical
and started to cluster in like-minded groups, divided by brand-names
and neighborhoods, and, eventually, by pop culture and social
politics. It's easy to forget about the others when you don't
interact with them. It's easy for them to forget about me.
Tonight I ate dinner with an unlikely group of people, most of
whom I'd never met before. All of them were very friendly, and
we got along fine. But one of us stayed quiet. A few of the things
that I overheard: I'm a country boy. I would have a deer-head
on the wall, if she'd let me. I love Bush! Did you hear Rosie
O'Donnell say she's sorry that she ever said anything bad about
him? That made me cry. I was lying in the tanning bed when the
World Trade Center was struck. Yeah, we have to do these tedious
EPA regulation things that really shouldn't be bothered with...
The meal was good but laughably expensive, and I felt out-of-place
among the wealthy and frivolous. I was worried about the fork
issue, and I couldn't help translating the cost of my meal into
CDs and gasoline.
Monday,
08 October 2001
I don't have cable, but tonight I ate out and sat directly
in front of a TV tuned to CNN. It's incredible, the amount of
information that is squeezed into such a small space, one screen
with a hundred little partitions, divided into neat red, white,
and blue rectangles. The space at the bottom of the screen seems
to be reserved for scrolling text, text that generally sums up
the situation, if you can focus on it long enough to comprehend
what it's telling you. The rest of the screen competes for your
attention, screaming look at me! look at me!, flashing
and morphing into weather reports and sports scores, historical
facts, quotes without speakers, retaliation approval statistics,
and, somewhere on the screen, a prominent "America Fights
Back" logo. The largest portion of the screen devotes itself
to blurry Afghanistan footagedark sky and green lights reminiscent
of early '80s video gamesinterlaced with crisp shots of
aircraft carriers and sturdy missiles that have "NYPD"
scratched on them. I found all of it ridiculously overwhelming;
in fact, I can't process any of itSeptember 11th, my country's
foreign policy, yesterday's attack, potential terrorist revenge,
biological warfare, the perversion of the American flag, cheap
slogans, and an onslaught of filtered news.
Still, that's not everything. Yesterday I learned how to make
my own spring rolls and today I learned how to grease the suspension
on my car. I also borrowed Martin's macro lens and took close-up
pictures while he held a light bulb beside my head, I learned
a new skill at work, corresponded with friends, and I listened
(really listened) to some good music.
Sunday,
07 October 2001
I set up my clock-radio next to the sink so I could listen
to NPR while washing dishes, so I could listen to what's been
prepared for me. I still don't feel like I know much of anything,
even though the radio and TV were on all day. All day I drifted
in and out, sometimes listening closely, sometimes just letting
it wash over me as I thought about other things, allowing the
information to seep in my head osmotically. At one pointI
think it was when Donald Rumsfeld was speakingboth the radio
and TV were broadcasting the same words by the same voice but
with a split-second delay between them. Standing in between the
two felt like being caught in an echo, making everything feel
more surreal than it already did, making me feel like I had woken
up in the world depicted in Bladerunner. I don't know what to
think. I feel like the hope that welled up in me as a teenager
has been filed down into an ugly, imperfect bead of cynicism.
I'm afraid of losing the little bit of hope I have left.
Tomorrow I expect to get a flood of tacky inter-office e-mails,
the kind with airbrushed eagles whose talons are clutching shredded
turbans, or something of the sort. They're always worse than I
imagine, not unlike the titles for the "operations."
Such a sterile word for death.
On a related note, Ingo told me that "God Bless America"
was stamped into the ground beef he bought at the grocery store.
I laughed when he told me that, but it's worn off by now.
Saturday,
06 October 2001
Last night on my way to the Stingray, making my way through
the post-Rocky Horror Picture Show crowd that dotted the sidewalk,
a guy stopped me to ask "Purple or blue?" "What?"
I asked. "Purple or blue?" he repeated. "Uh...blue,"
I answered, and he handed me a blue rubber bracelet, one that
is still hanging from my wrist. I've been eyeing it all day, putting
my thumb under it and stretching, holding it under the light to
see it sparkle. I wonder how many people got bracelets from that
guy last night. Nicer than New Orleans' beads, because the jewelry
comes for free.
So I saw art and a million people, all in different social groups
gathering here or there, but always migrating. I wonder how many
of those people moved out of those groups and into others last
night, like I did. Tonight the move between groups will be more
distinct.
I wonder about other people.
Friday,
05 October 2001
Some days lists feel more appropriate.
a) I finally got the Doubletake
Film Festival brochure in yesterday's mail and I was happy
to see that some of the pictures I took last
May were included; one even made it to the cover. I also received
an unexpected mixed CD from a friend
in California.
b) An old best friend sent me an e-mail that turned yesterday
into a warm day September 1995the day I met himand
made me want to relive, to go to class again, to ride around in
his car aimlessly while listening to Crass, take pictures of power
lines, share a PBR, get coffee somewhere, talk, laugh, talk. We
see each other sometimes and make promises neither of us believes
anymore. This weekend, however, we're going out. I can't wait.
c) First Friday, downtown, which means there's art everywhere
and people crawling around like ants rather than driving around
like bees. It's refreshing, having plans, because that means I
can look forward, rather than scrambling to figure out what I'm
going to do. I generally don't like planning ahead, probably because
I hate waiting.
d) It was a lie, the weather forecast. It's hot and pretty.
e) I reread this story, called Things
I Like About America, which is nothing like it probably sounds.
Unfortunately the online version is only an excerpt, which is
just one more reason to subscribe to the tangible version of The
Sun Magazine.
All good things.
Thursday,
04 October 2001
I had almost exactly one hour to spend in the dwindling summer
warmth before the sun disappeared; tomorrow we're promised colder
weather. I walked around in a nearby forest, one that is progressively
getting narrowed by yellow clawed machines that scoop and displace
and make room for pavement. I saw a still brown water snake and
a hissing beetle, a spider web but it was too late, and a few
barrel-shaped cows. The air felt perfect, soft and warm, and the
sky was striped with pink. It was the first time I'd been in a
forest since I was in the Hoh
Rain Forest in Washington a few weeks ago; it wasn't until
today I appreciated the enormity of the rain forest.
Wednesday,
03 October 2001
I haven't seen the Man Under the House for a couple days now,
so I'm wondering if he's packed up and moved on. He did say hi
to me the other day, just before closing the door to his space,
so at least he's a friendly neighbor. I'm not all that comfortable
with him there, though, so (any day now) I'm going to buy a lock
and reclaim my house. I guess while I'm at it, I could also reclaim
my driveway, the garage, and the stretch of road outside my house,
but those won't be as easy as purchasing a lock. That's because
legitimate neighbors take those things.
The driveway and the garage are supposed
to be shared between my house and the house behind mine. That
wouldn't be a problem, except that the people who live in that
house and almost every other person who visits those people park
either perpendicular to the entrance of the driveway directly
in front of it, or parks with the front tires in the driveway
and the back tires on the street, so that no one can get in or
out of the driveway. I don't know if that's their mission exactly,
but I can't figure out why else they would try to park there.
The worst part is that this usually happens when there's a car
parked in the driveway (mine, for example), and when there's plenty
of room to park on the street. (Once Ingo witnessed a guy block
the driveway horizontally, have a conversation with a cop, and
then move his car so that he was blocking it vertically.)
The neighbors to my left take care of the street. Collectively,
they own probably thirteen Volkswagens, all of which are parked
in their front yard and on the street in front and beside my house
(except for one they stealthily keep in my garage). Every morning
at 7:30 the souped-up Karmann-Ghia gets its accelerator flattened
as it sits motionless, bubbly purrs spitting out of its flared
exhaust pipe. And those are the good neighbors. Just beyond the
Volkswagens are two frat houses that have bi-weekly parties with
microphones, lots of whooooo! whooooo! and they own large
trucks that can be driven in tight circles in the Y parking lot.
Underneath my place the neighbors pump bass and shoot off fireworks
and make my floor throb. (During one downstairs party, everything
sitting on top of Martin's [silent] speakers gradually vibrated
to the floor.) Across the street the neighbors regularly set their
large speakers in the windows of their house, facing out, so that
everyone within a square mile can enjoy Danzig. Their cat, Hobbes,
an orange fellow, spends a lot of time on my back porch making
my cats hiss and growl.
I guess the man down under is the least offensive of all. Think
I should let him stay? (I expect only my parents to respond to
that question.)
Monday,
01 October 2001
It's a good thing we have names for months and days; otherwise,
how would we notice how ridiculously fast things go? I don't think
I need to say anything, because you're probably aware of what
month it is, and you've probably seen the skeletons and plastic
pumpkins and witch hats in your local drug store, so I won't bother.
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