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June 29, 2005

Naught's Landing

There's a point at which an ugly on-going, ever-going present stops. The flow of time is stanched, the trailing end annealed and you call it an era. An era has ended and a new one has yet to begin. In-between times, I've called it, and in those previous times it has been a source of headache, heartache and lack of direction, as if Time Itself went into too steep a climb and Its Engine stalled out. I'm at that tipping point where acceleration up and down match and there's a net zero gravity.

But that net-zero is just a moment, if I am to be completely candid. And moments pass into the past, pass into other moments, forming into threads into strings into ropes into cables into immutability.

This time I have decided for myself to pause time itself, extending the moment into something else. We all have such trickery and power in our fingertips...to stop time, to start it again, to accelerate it and to install torpor. We all have it, but often we are able to affect others' Time more than our own. Causing anguish in another, for example, can make the passage of time interminable for her or him. Love can stop time and often does. Conviviality, joy, wonderment can speed time to the point of dissatisfaction.

So I pause, and in pausing, I do. And do nothing. It's quite a lot of effort in doing nothing about what it's all about: the heart still beats and metaphorically bleeds, but I remain standing outside the House of Time peering in the front window, a window kept clean and open in the finest of Dutch traditions.

I see and hear what moves, feel and sense what doesn't move and soon I will stop standing beside Time and jump back in. I'm eager for it, in fact!

And friends are always there, and for all the passed past, I am hoping he and I will be there in the same rooms of the heart and home once again.

Caution never felt so invigorating.

June 28, 2005

Respect, Esteem, Image

As many of you know, I possess a capacity for positivity that may sometimes be mistaken for something unhealthy. But that would imply that I do not possess in equal measure a capacity to immerse myself in negativity as well, to live in and with it. But with negativity, I do my thing while in there and I get the hell out of dodge after I've learned the thing(s) I needed to learn.

There is a trick, of course, to recognizing those things which are lessons, and also to recognizing that point of diminishing returns. End-game is all important when dealing with negativity, and for me, positivity requires an infinite-play strategy.

It's strange to invoke game theory in the matters that matter in my life right now, but here I am anyway. Tit for tat can be a good strategy. Hawks and doves populations vary wildly and unpredictably. Spannungsbogen is selfish behavior, but the delayed gratification can give birth to altruism.

And sometimes a dip into the arcane can be freeing in the more mundane world and that's the lesson and so I'll stop.

Bottom line is that it's often the most selfish thing in the world to be selfless, optimizing for general good will instead of personal payoff and trusting in the future.

June 27, 2005

Blame, Responsibility, Consequence

There are so few unnuanced days, at least those that don't come with a body count. I think it was Aaron Sorkin who wrote that. So too, there are very few unnuanced situations, or those that aren't best described by the apportionment of responsibility to all parties at least in part.

There are very few virginal pollyannas in the world, and most certainly I don't even come close to one.

That said, sometimes the responsibility is so clear cut as to point the finger of blame not with rancor but with simple truth. Sometimes one of the actors in a given drama is so over-the-top that sometimes the antagonist becomes The Antagonist, and “Pure Evil” isn't such a difficult, distant concept at least for a little while.

I don't mean to be abstract, much less abstruse, obtuse or any other -use, but there are things I must keep to myself even if right now all I want to do is shout the name of the Antagonist at the top of my lungs if for no other reason that to warn the rest of San Francisco's pup-ulation that there's a predator in the doghouse.

Everyone takes the blame for primary and secondary things when the world goes pear-shaped—everyone involved. Be sure of that. Comeuppance is a bitch and the universe finds ways of setting things aright.

June 26, 2005

Mornings Are the Worst

At home, in one's own bed and bedroom, there are those few waking moments when the world is as it always was. A dependable cadence of days imbues balance and security and constancy to life, so much more than the boring rigor most describe.

The body awakes before the head; the eyes open before the mind opens up and shares its marvelous memory: the gift and the curse.

Those moments can vary from mere flashes up to many seconds, where he's still here and the bed is not empty just because I've left it, where all those horrible, horrible things never happened and life is still companionable and the days along which I trundle are not borrowed from anywhere but his heart, his love. My heart, my love.

Half the house it used to be, and none of the Home. Splendor is a luxury unattainable.

The universe is inverted, tilted, half-empty. Which is the same thing as absolutely not full.

Alone is something comforting in the way that Givens are; it's the way that one arrives and leaves this world. Lonely is quite another: the world has left you.

•••

Baby, where's that place where time stands still?

I remember like a lover can,

I forget it like a leaver will.

It's no place you can get to by yourself:

You've got to love someone and they love you,

Time will stop for nothing else.



And memory plays tricks on us, the more we cling, the less we trust,

And the less we trust the more we hurt,

And as time goes on it just gets worse.

So, baby, where's that place where time stood still?

It is under glass inside a frame?

Was it over when you had your fill?


Here we are with nothing,

But this emptiness inside of us.

Your smile a fitting, final gesture:

Wish I could have loved you better.


Baby where's that place where time stands still?

I remember like a lover can.

I forget it like a leaver will.

It's the first time that you held my hand;

It's the smell and the taste and the fear and the thrill.

It's everything I understand,

And all the things I never will.

Where Time Stands Still, Words & music by Mary Chapin Carpenter

June 24, 2005

Family and Friends

I love my family.

I love my friends.

If I believed in a Blesser, I'd say I was blessed. Since I don't, really, I'll just say how spectacular it is that the world is peopled with folks like my family and my friends.

June 23, 2005

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June 22, 2005

Redlining

Too much activity in my life right now, and too much of that is not good at all.

I have no doubt at this point that it all will fly apart. I have no reason to believe that anyone will be there to help sift through the wreckage.

June 18, 2005

Living in Interesting Times

I had every intention of sitting down at the Starbucks in the Castro to do some work. Core Image, a new technology in Mac OS X Tiger was the topic at hand. By “intending”, I mean to say that on the way to the Castro with Sam, Justin and Nathan I fully expected to work while Sam and Justin got haircuts at Joe's Barbershop. By the time we got out of the car to head to The Welcome Home for breakfast, as we walked past the Sit n Spin Laundromat & Coffeehouse, as we sat down at The Welcome Home and were served by a waiter who once gave Allen and me a meal discount because he noticed that Allen had “a touch of the flu”—The Welcome Home gave discounts to all Persons With AIDS if you asked for it, and, obviously, even when you didn't—I knew it was one of those mornings where my head would be filled with my own history and tradition. I knew I'd be lost in the memories of home turf.

I thought of Michael, specifically, when we passed the laundromat: he and I had spent the better part of an afternoon there one day last summer, not long before he headed off to New York. I wondered how he was doing, but then again, except for the day or two after I hear from him, that's always true. I don't worry about him, but at times I'm reminded of his being positive and I send good thoughts his way. I'll never stop caring about those people with HIV, about their health, just about them in general. Maybe that's just trauma from Allen dying almost ten years ago. Maybe it's just a sensitivity borne out of my biogeekness and having been surrounded by the spectre of HIV for so long. Who cares, though, really, about why? The thoughts are there, a part of me as much as any thing else is.

I thought of Allen, as I said, when we walked into The Welcome Home. He and I would go there often. He was a man of simple tastes in food and so that place suited him.

By the time that the Posse had headed up the street to Joe's and I made a left down 18th Street to “go work”, I knew already I would be writing instead of learning how to fake a motion blur in Core Image. I had hoped to flesh out a scene from a longer fictional work that I've been neglecting for far, far too long. And it was in this place where I wrote the original 550 pages of my first novel.

As I sat at a cafe table at the front windows, I looked outside and noticed the man pushing another man in a wheelchair, the ones I'd walked around in order to get down the sidewalk faster.

My heart sank, my jaw dropped, and I was right back there in that place that Allen's death had created. The man in the wheelchair was gaunt and not well. He was wearing shorts that I knew he'd worn even when his legs were enormous—the biggest thighs I think I'll ever see. Only now the shorts drooped like a sheet around thighs not even as big as my arms. I would not have recognized the man in the chair except for the man pushing him: his partner.

So many men have disappeared slowly and not slowly enough, quickly and not quickly enough. And here was another who was trapped by a pathology out of control. Here was a another whom HIV- people look at and think “That could be me” and whom HIV+ people look at and think “That will be me”.

For my part, I looked at his partner, someone with whom I have a very passing acquaintance, but with whom I suddenly felt a horrifying kinship. You want to protect him, you want to entertain him, you want to distract him. You want others to not look at him in that way even though you look at him that way all the time at home when you think he doesn't notice. You want to believe that he looks good today. You wish that today was all the time there ever was and ever will be. You are desperate and tentative, like chasing after an infant whose motor skills and capacity don't even increase and in fact diminish before your eyes.

I don't ever want to be in that place ever again, but there's nowhere else I'd be if I ended up there. I don't want anyone else to be in that place either, but I'm glad they stick around to see life through.

I deny no one frippery and shallowness since everyone should be so blessed and fortunate to be able to afford those luxuries.

I can see why people turn back to god, even though I didn't. I can see why people curse god or even the universe, but I only cursed those whose dogma and politics overrode their compassion.

I can see all the people whose sense of gravitas and respect for the seriousness of HIV remain compassionate and strong, those people, like me, who learned that strength sometimes requires a complete and utter emotional breakdown in order to dispatch grief far enough away and for long enough a time so that you can get to the business at hand: keeping yourself and others alive for as long as possible.

I could see all the people I've known and still know whose lives were inhabited by HIV in first person singular, second person singular or third person plural. I could see all of those whose chosen form of prevention of and protection against HIV is braggadocio or bluster.

Not that I'm criticizing the power of the mind. In fact, the subjective universe shows up far more often in San Francisco than anywhere else I know. I have written many times about the seeming ability for so many of us to conjure up the material from the ethereal. And today, in the bright sunny noon trying its contrarian best to dispense with my personal gloom-doom, it happened again: I picked up my head from my new little dream-catcher and there was Michael! I beamed, then wavered. He seemed to know what was going on with me.

It's not easy to live in these interesting times. It's not easy to live outside the consuming comfort of a smothering theology. It's not easy to live and see death. It's not easy to live with the dying. It's not easy to chart one's own path through the universe.

Not easy at all, but so worth it.

June 17, 2005

Let Her Die Already!

I fucking hate dogmatists.

Absolutism carries the burden—no, the requirement!—of Being Right all the time. Every time. No exceptions. That's the rule.

And when you actually are Wrong, what do you do? You hedge, you change the nature of truth, and you claim Truth Once Again.

Bill Frist is on record and on tape as having watched a video of Terri Schiavo and concluding that there was no evidence that she was in a persistent vegetative state. Yesterday, after this,

An autopsy released Wednesday concluded that she had been in a persistent vegetative state and revealed no evidence that she was strangled or otherwise abused before she collapsed.

Bill Frist now says he never made any determination one way or another as to her persistent vegetative state.

He and he and they held on, held tight to the notion that she was not in a persistent vegetative state, that she clearly was alive and on the mend, and that everyone else was Wrong Wrong Wrong. All this, despite their being a martinet, an apologist and a bunch of Calvinist Catholic teens, respectively, with no evidence—much less authority—to claim truth.

They, like most of the rest of the Right Wing Machinery, came down on the side of literal life instead of quality of life. Let's call them Quantity of Life advocates, shall we? When Science failed them—as it usually does in their more strident campaigns—they turned to blame. Blame the husband. Blame his “lifestyle”. Call him names. Call him immoral. Those are easy to do, because it's all subject to interpretation, even as they call every last thing as black or white. Black or White.

Never mind that Schiavo rearranged his life to care for his wife. Never mind that he turned down $1M so that he could stay with her and make the decisions. Never mind all of that. He dared move on with his life after it was clear that his wife was gone in all but carcass. That's unforgiveable, right?

As someone who has had a partner die, as someone who never wanted to move on and yet one day, admitted defeat and finally did move on, I think I have at least some personal authority to speak on the matter. Do these people?

Regardless, they speak. And speak and speak and speak.

They were drop-dead wrong about Terri Schiavo, so what do you do when you Must Be Right And Never Wrong? Easy, you go after the husband. Ol' Jeb is investigating the husband, claiming that he waited too long before calling 911.

What total bastards!

They're going to continue to ruin this guy. Why? Because they were made fools of. Because they were wrong and they lack the humility, candor and honesty to admit that they were wrong.

You were wrong, folks. Move on. And leave that poor bastard alone.

June 16, 2005

Where Went Wednesday?

Wow.

When I get sick, I feel capital-C Crappy. Sam started to get sick on Tuesday morning. It kicked in for me Tuesday afternoon while I was at work.

Bleah.

I ended up sleeping all day. Well, most of it. Having slept at least 6 hours overnight, I woke up and found Sam out watching TV. I laid down on the sofa there and fell asleep for another five hours. Yikes. Then awake for two hours, then asleep again for another two or three. Off and on. On and off. And last night I got a full night's sleep. Yikes again.

Still sick today. Low-grade fever. Headache. Body aches. Head's a bit clearer, however. It's good that I have the kind of job where I can work at home.

I'm watching:

“The Witches of Eastwick” (George Miller (II))

It's an almost-forgotten favorite of mine, and not because it's my friend Dave's hand that crashes through the kitchen window near the end of the movie. It was way ahead of its time. New England, as time goes on, reminds me more and more of Europe. And Magic. And Dark and Unscientific Things the world has Almost-Forgotten.

Ahh, the Things you Remember when you're sick, when your schedule is off-kilter and your brain and body gets what sleep they need.

June 13, 2005

And My Name's not Chester...

Michael Jackson is innocent of all charges.

Not a surprise to me, because it seemed like all the evidence was circumstantial. Plus, I'm not a dad (well, not a parent...rrrrrrrr), but I know that even if someone was suspected of child molestation, I would not let my kids be alone with that someone. I wouldn't deny him or her work, or human rights, or even friendship, but I wouldn't take that kind of chance with my own kids in leaving them alone and overnight with the guy.

Those parents are all fucks. Why didn't they just name their kids “Paycheck” and get it over with?

Congratulations to Michael Jackson on his acquittal.

Now, how long before foxnews and the other crazies start talking about 'activist judges' and start making blanket statements about how liberals must all be child molestors?

Those crazies are all fucks, too.

June 12, 2005

82K+

So apparently it took me six days to add a counter to my blog when it first started two years ago.

Yes, I started counting on June 12, 2003 and as of today, June 12, 2005, my lil ol' blog has logged 82,312 as of right now (14:19).

That number, insofar as its magnitude, is something graspable only in terms of, say, annual-salary-in-1999-dollars or even very-nice-sportscar-in-2005-dollars, but nothing else that I can think of. It's too high for any-car-I-might-buy-in-any-year-dollars and too low for any-home-in-San-Francisco-dollars. Too low by six-fold the number of days I've been alive so far. Too high, following logically, for the number of days I might expect to live.

Too low for the number of years planet earth has been around. Too high the number of same years for the Fundies (they estimate we've been around about 6,000-8,000 years).

The average number of visitors per day works out to about 112, ranging from the early days (10-30 per day) to these days (130-180 per day). Maybe I'll live to 112. $112 gets me a 1GB iPod shuffle with my discount. 112 days is a summertime. 112 miles is a round trip to San Jose. 112 is 100 more than the number of years I've lived in this beautiful place. 112 minutes (times 2) is time of my life watching the latest Star Wars movie that I'll never get back.

I don't want the time back that I've spent on writing this blog, however. I also don't want the time back I spent writing that novel. Or being with Sam. Or having been with Allen. Or time spent living in San Francisco.

Maybe I should have been a numerologist. Naaah, not enough time for that.

June 09, 2005

Life is Good Because I Say So

Someone stop me from taking quizzes! Actually I hate these things, usually, but there were two interesting ones in a row. Here's the second one.




You scored as Postmodernist. Postmodernism is the belief in complete open interpretation. You see the universe as a collection of information with varying ways of putting it together. There is no absolute truth for you; even the most hardened facts are open to interpretation. Meaning relies on context and even the language you use to describe things should be subject to analysis.

Postmodernist

94%

Existentialist

88%

Cultural Creative

75%

Idealist

69%

Modernist

50%

Fundamentalist

25%

Materialist

25%

Romanticist

25%

What is Your World View? (updated)
created with QuizFarm.com

This time, nods to Messenger Puppet.

June 08, 2005

Sojourners & the God of the Biscuits

Jim Wallis is a pastor who has run The Sojourners, a deeply Christian organization that is involved in politics.

While they're considered a “progressive” group, Jim Wallis was one of the people George W. Bush, back in 2000 as President-elect, brought in with lots of other evangelicals to talk about how he might address the “soul of the nation”. As I said, they are progressives, I can honestly say there's not much I have in common with their motives for doing what they do.

That said, Rev. Wallis has a lot of interesting things to say, in an already interesting article from the New York Times and truthout.org. It's an article written before the last election, but strangely—and unfortunately—it rings that much truer because what was prediction and trend in October 2004 is merely, spookily, reality today.

Rev. Wallis was asked by our faith-based-president, “I've never lived around poor people. I don't know what they think. I really don't know what they think. I'm a white Republican guy who doesn't get it. How do I get it?” That's a shockingly (today) humble admission. How did Rev. Wallis reply? “You need to listen to the poor and those who live and work with poor people.”

Later, after the inauguration, Bush told Wallis and other pastors that America needed their leadership. Rev. Wallis replied, “No, Mr. President, we need your leadership on this question, and all of us will then commit to support you. Unless we drain the swamp of injustice in which the mosquitoes of terrorism breed, we'll never defeat the threat of terrorism.”

Wow. That's powerful imagery for a powerful concept that many of us have believed for a long time.

But that's not the only thing in which I find fellowship with the good Reverend. From the selfsame article:

 Can the unfinished American experiment in self-governance - sputtering on the watery fuel of illusion and assertion - deal with something as nuanced as the subtleties of one man's faith? What, after all, is the nature of the particular conversation the president feels he has with God - a colloquy upon which the world now precariously turns?

That very issue is what Jim Wallis wishes he could sit and talk about with George W. Bush. That's impossible now, he says. He is no longer invited to the White House.

“Faith can cut in so many ways,” he said. “If you're penitent and not triumphal, it can move us to repentance and accountability and help us reach for something higher than ourselves. That can be a powerful thing, a thing that moves us beyond politics as usual, like Martin Luther King did. But when it's designed to certify our righteousness - that can be a dangerous thing. Then it pushes self-criticism aside. There's no reflection.

”Where people often get lost is on this very point,“ he said after a moment of thought. ”Real faith, you see, leads us to deeper reflection and not - not ever - to the thing we as humans so very much want.“

And what is that?

”Easy certainty.“

I am not a person of long-throw, Capital-F Faith. There are a bazillion more concrete, more localized things that I have a lower-case faith in—friends, family, my brain, the compassion of others, the family of humanity, eventual equal rights for all, the natural trend in the world towards Better. Not Good, not Evil. Just Better Than It Used To Be.

If I were certain of that last thing, it wouldn't require faith—or Faith. I'd just be certain. It's faith that carries one over doubts to get to the good stuff.

And, Ever Optimistic God of the Chocky Biscuits always has faith—not Faith—that there's always Good Stuff ahead.

June 07, 2005

I'm “Freedom”!

France Modern (trois fleurs-de-lis)
You are 'French'. In the nineteenth century, it
was the international language of diplomacy.
It is a 'beautiful' language, meaning that it
is really just a low-fidelity copy of Latin.

You know the importance of communicating
'diplomatically', which for you means both
being polite and friendly when necessary and
using sophisticated, vicious sarcasm when
appropriate. Your life is guided by either
existentialism or nihilism, depending on the
weather. You have a certain appreciation for
the finer things in life, which is a diplomatic
way of saying that you are a disgusting
hedonist. Your problem is that French has been
obsolete for a long time.

What obsolete skill are you?
brought to you by Quizilla

Nods to Mzouiser for the quiz.

June 06, 2005

Happy Blog-iversary to Me!

It was two years ago today that I started this little blog o' mine. It feels like it, too. By that I mean that my internal tick-tock seems to agree with the calendar on the wall, for a change.

However, it doesn't seem like a year since the last anniversary, if that makes any sense. Having Sam here with me instead of down in Arizona. Being employed at Apple Computer as a Software Architect after so many years as a Mac user and a Mac developer. Losing some friends and gaining quite a few others. Moving closer to the kept friends, moving closer to myself. Watching Sam become what he must and what he will, in order to be himself, after being freed from the soul-deadening strictures of the military.

I know that my timesense often bears the stamp of strangeness, of non-linearity. It makes no sense and I'm usually reduced to acknowledging that I Am Who Am and little more, that Time Happens and Time Is When Is, but just today in the car on the drive home I was listening to Mary Chapin Carpenter. Love is “That Place Where Time Stands Still”, she tells me in her sweet and accessible voice.

It's no place you can get to by yourself
You've got to love someone and they love you
Time will stop for nothing else

Though so much has happened, good and bad, in the last year and in my life, I am still surprised occasionally by being forty-one years old, still surprised by the silver in the beard and the gray on the head. Still surprised that I love this City so dearly, so much, so constantly. Still surprised that I can be surprised.

My ability to be surprised is perhaps my most cherished trait. One might think it would be the ability to love, given how spectacularly fulfilled I am with Sam, but I think that being surprisable keeps you open to being lovable, to being able to love.

So here's to me, to us and to the future. To the unknown. May all our futures continue to be full of possibility.

It's the first time that you held my hand
It's the smell and the taste and the fear and the thrill
It's everything I understand
And all the things I never will




Blasts from the Past:
June 6, 2004 • Year++
June 6, 2003 • Latter-day Me

June 03, 2005

ap•pog•gia•tu•ra

This year's spelling-bee champ spelled the word appoggiatura as the winning word. The word is a music term, denoting a grace note that appears before a melodic note, usually at half the time value of the melodic note it “leans on”.

Most of the world no longer places any value on grace notes. Grab at the hard, spare melody, quarter notes in quarter tones and don't deviate. C Major is the only acceptable scale. White hands on white keys, anything else are 'accidentals'. Never have to even call a note a 'natural' because nothing is sharp, nothing is flat.

Poetic and literary licenses have been revoked; literalism and the least common denominator—and the most common denomination, turns out—are the only approved forms; grammar trumps style; even simple declaratives give way to peremptory imperatives.

Stick to primary colors—red, blue, yellow–mix to secondaries if you must—yellow + red = orange; blue + yellow = green; blue + red = purple—but don't dare go further! Keep the pigments separate on the palette! Medium brushes and thin it out with turpentine or kerosene: texture is not allowed! Stay inside the lines! Draw the turkey with your hand!

No interpretation, only faithful reproduction—and reproductivity of the Faithful. Every sperm is sacred; every ovum hallowed. Every reconstituted nucleus more important that the vessel who carries it.

Soul isn't music, it's the Coin of the New Realm! Spirituality is dead; rite is Right; doubt is sin.

Music dies.
Words don't escape.
Art fails.