Thursday, December 3, 2009

A letter to Senator Owen Johnson

Senator Johnson-

I have to say I haven't paid much attention to this job until today, although I have always been moderately aware of the votes and issues on the floor. But your vote against allowing gays to marry has provoked me.



Mr. Johnson, tear off that pin!









First of all, I am very uncomfortable with you budding into our lives in this manner, and although I am not gay, I feel this as an intrusion into the homes and lives of every human being. That government should decide how to legislate partnership, marriage, and the ideal family smacks of great arrogance and foolishness, as well as great naiveté. For this alone, I do not want anyone working in government who believes they have the right to do this. These are people who are against human rights, and are actively trying to wound another person, who is not asking you to marry them, just to leave them to their own life.

If your argument was for the sanctity of marriage, that has no merit in a society where half of all marriages (between a man and a woman) end in divorce. There is no sanctity here, and again the state getting involved with legislation is egregious and goes against the experiment that is our great democracy.

If this is a question of party unity, then this vote only states unequivocally that the republican party is against human rights, which I hope is not true, but I only have your vote to go by. Perhaps when you or your spouse is on their deathbed, someone might deprive you the right to sit by their side and to share their last moments, due to you not having a legitimate right to even get in the room.

Unless I see a change in vote, it does not matter where you stand on any other issue, as this is a matter for which this country is based, and for which wars have been fought, the right for person to be treated as a legitimate human being, which you obviously oppose. I will work and vote against you in the next election, and encourage everyone I know to do the same.

Consider this the next time you decide to "stand together." What are you really standing against?

Sincerely,William Daniels

For a complete record of the vote go here: NY Times vote

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Parts of the Hole

Went to a deli today, and the "Sandwich Wizards" behind the counter were wearing blue tie dye shirts that had the name across the breast, and the swirls emanating out from a dark blue circle. I offered that the color suggested a black hole, and that they were absorbing all the available light within the deli and the surrounding cosmos.




A dramatic reenactment with
dramatic sideburns and
a dramatic collar.





The Wizard(ess?) laughed not politely, but genuinely, yet with an eyebrow raised in a familiar manner. I wouldn't have mentioned it to her if I hadn't already been aware that she had a good sense of humor. My comment didn't offer up any great laughter, but I escaped without dead silence haunting me.

I did well enough, by my calculation. as I had pointed out something to a strange woman that was displayed across her front, without drawing creepy attention to the breasts (They're always there, we men are aware, even when obscured by fabric or other drapery). This allowed me to at least direct her toward my impression without intruding too far into her world. And I moved on when the moment was over, intuitively, so I didn't feel a rising embarrassment at having manufactured myself the fool. Still, probably not worth doing, but for some reason, I believe my insights are worth sharing, like this blog. Highly illogical, notes my inner Spock.

Incidentally, I called her a "Wizard" out of a kind of respect that her job is of value to me, and also that I think terms like "diva" and "pornstar" are overused. She did not look like Gandalf the White or Grey, nor did she have signs of an Adam's apple. I wonder if Bill Gates owns that word.

At the Apple Store, they have sales people roaming around that are titled "geniuses." This annoys the crap out of me, so I find it useful to peruse the latest I-phones and Macbooks when I am feeling blocked up. I guess it's more likely than Apple "Worms" or "Fungi." Oh, come on, "Worms" would have been awesome! I'd quit my job for their pittance in order to have a job title "Worm." Wussies!

I once heard it said, by someone I thought of as brilliant, that the word "Genius" was overused, and that this "Genius" had only met one true "Genius" in his life. I thought this over, and I have to agree that at least the superlative has lost some power. But I also love to discover intelligences in people that are often ignored. To make a sandwich well is a skill, and requires a discipline that I do not possess. I worked in a Subway-type establishment in college and could never remember the sandwich orders, or keep my mind on what I was doing, and I can say I have a fairly good memory, and a good ability to concentrate on detail. This was just something outside of my grasp.

Work at Apple, or Subway? Maybe for a million dollars!

I worked as a carpenter's helper for a short time in my early twenties. The master carpenter needed me to keep the beams and planks ready for when he was fixing them in place. He wanted each piece handed to him "bow out." He told me every piece of wood has an arc to it, that the wood will naturally bend like this even after it is cut, as it is in the living structure of the wood. The carpenter would deftly build things with adjoining or layered pieces of wood bowing the same direction, to provide a more uniform swelling and shrinking with age and seasons.

I had trouble seeing this bend unless it was pretty exaggerated, in which case he might not be able to use it. After awhile of him affirming my correct guesses at the direction of the bow, I started to get better and better at it, to the point where I was always correct. I noticed I could guess correctly sooner than I could consciously see the bend, and trusted that there was a feel to it. Eventually, I learned to see it as plainly as I could identify colors, but this learning fascinated me. These craftsmen were relying on a sense that most of us simply ignored, and didn't talk about it after I had learned it again. How many more things were they sensing?








These Carpenters gave me a reason to saw wood. Unless you consider these poses to be defensive in nature. Who would attack these nymph-like creatures?



So, I have to assume the sandwich wizards have some insights I don't. Thoughts about black holes are apparently not incorporated into the wizard world view at this deli. And why not? (The Suffolk Life, a recently defunct local weekly, used to end all of their editorials with this, whether it made sense or not. I believe it mirrored the mission statement of the paper, but it's not nice to speak ill of the dead). Anyway back to the black hole and the ladies who wear them.






Commonalities:
Who says nature abhors a vacuum?





My son Evan (who is autistic) is oblivious to the stereotypes ascribed to Autists (the British use this term, and I like it's proximity to Artist). He does have trouble filtering out some of the things he senses, and has alerted me to many things in my surrounding world that I had previously dismissed or simply missed. I feel privileged to be able to witness the senses he will cultivate in the future, as he is clearly not fettered by the social limitations most of the rest of us experience. I already hear him at the piano mining the C & E notes for some tonalities I'm sure I had missed before, and even miss now at 6 AM. Things can draw him in like cleavage, or black holes, and he doesn't mind. He doesn't have my value judgements about tastes and flavors, which I find fascinating and disgusting, depending on how much sleep I've gotten.

Artist rendition of what Evan sees when family comes to visit.

Evan seems to experience a synethsesia when it comes to many things, when he experiences something with one sense through another. There are quite a few artists who are reported to have been synesthetes, among them Rilke (he felt words as a very kinesthetic experience, and his writing clearly reflects this). I have heard interviews with a pianist who has discreet visual experiences with each note, and so has been verified to have a visual perfect pitch. It's said we are all synesthetes as infants and we seem to lose the ability, or perhaps learn to ignore it. I think that's more likely, the way a toddler might respond to a jet flying overhead that we have long ago pressed the mute button on. Ah, yes, I hear it now.

Can you hear/see me now?

Evan will see something and need to taste the object in order to know it. It does not seem to me like a compulsion, rather than an fascination to the possible taste of something with a specific appearance.We can relate possibly in the confusion we experienced as children, when things like play-do and glue did not taste the way they smelled. He is unswerved by this disparity, and continues to seek out the scent in the eating of these things (and shaving cream, and soaps, and some things I will omit). He does not make a face of disgust over almost anything, and if he is not pleased by something, he hands it to me, or uses my shirt to wipe it from his tongue. When he hands me the thing, he looks me in the eye as if to observe me like the alien I must be (See above rendition).

It seems that one aspect of autism that I have noted was a difficulty with classing objects, at least in my son's case. Perhaps it is not a difficulty but a difference. Perhaps the classifications are not related in ways that are typical to most of us, or anyone who might read this. But I don't think these classifications or associations should necessarily be discounted. I refer to Einstein's seemingly intuitive leap toward a cohesive theory on Relativity, or Hawking's thoughts on black holes. My son may sense things seemingly more mundane than great theories, but he pays attention to sounds and sights I don't in a way that seem very profound and important to him. Considering our myopia concerning global warming and other resources, including the resourcefulness of humans, perhaps alien experience is a necessary component of the species as a whole.


Focus, People!

Friday, January 2, 2009

We want the Holly Dolly!

In most diners around Long Island and the rest of the New York suburbs, the waiting areas are filled with various arcade games, including astrological predictions and the love-o-meter.  Typically there is a game with a claw and a bunch of sub-par stuffed animals, all tucked in just enough to suck quarters out of the pockets of parents and late night drunken clientele.  They’ve recently added a vacuum attachment that sucks in paper currency.  The claw reaches down and only half-heartedly takes a swipe at the prizes is weak in its grip as it is in its resolve.  I sometimes simply reach into my pocket and deposit the contents into the garbage bin nearby to get the same results that machine gives me in order to spare a few minutes more to my miserable existence.


 



Who needs innuendo when two bits can bring

you a deeper truth?







There is a children’s show on the Noggin channel named "Wa Wa Wubbzy", and the title character’s was unable to win a prize in this arcade machine, a Hammering Holly Dolly that he/she (not sure if the gender is even relevant) was trying to win for his mechanically inclined friend Widget. 




Wa Wa Chubbzy

 





My son Kieran was reminded of this when he saw a machine in a local diner, and my wife was able to win a prize for him on the first or second try.  I knew this would not bode well for me, and it’s turned out to be the case.  This kind of beginner’s success would distort Kieran’s perception of odd’s to bring about bitter disappointment for the rest of his life, I fear.

Can't touch this.

I have never won a thing from those “Holly Dolly Machines,” and I did not expect to get better at it in the future.  I have a friend who has frequent success with them, to the point where his wife is bored with his prize-winning ability, as well as his prize-winning smile.  My son was fixated by these games, and it was not setting up well for me in my role as the hero I was aspiring to be (at least in Kieran’s eyes.) 

I have managed avoiding breaking my son’s heart to some extent so far, finding a game that offers the contestant to “play till you win”  (this is typically jawbreakers, hard candy, small bottles of bleach, kid safety items that belong in these child friendly environments we frequent of late).  I am also able to distract him somewhat, to my relief.  But sometimes we are confronted with the Holly Dolly that offers no easy out. I have not even come close with any of these evil machines, watching lesser men, women, and even children walking off with small basketballs, stuffed animals, and laptops, while I dig futilely in my pockets for more quarters or similarly shaped and textured pocket lint.  I’ve heard whispers among the toothpicks and breath mints that when this machine talks to the Lov-O-meter, it refers to me as “my bitch.” 

Years from now, when Kieran is in therapy, if that still exists when he’s ready to heal his inner trouble maker, perhaps he might explore the disappointment that I never won him anything, and this machine would sit in the middle of his discourse, filled to the brim with toys I could not win him. 

I had always assumed it was nude

In the early nineties I spent a good bit of time exploring the concepts of “toxic shame” and “inner healing.”  I bought into this so thoroughly that I sought out only shampoos and conditioners that were willing to heal my “damaged and overworked hair.”   I assumed that since I was wounded that would apply to my scalp and follicles as well, even though I wasn’t sure what work my hair was performing.  It’s not like I ever saw any W2 forms.






The Good Ol’ Days: Hair before the invention of an interior life. Sometimes a split end is just a split end.

 




Between all the extensive spiritual and mental healing, I had to pay the bills (my freeloading hair was not kicking in a red cent).   I worked on a construction survey crew for my family’s business. To pass the time on our travel between job site, I would talk quite openly with a skeptical co-worker named Paul.  Paul had a way of being understatedly funny and subversive in a single stroke of his sarcastic brush. I loved the economy of it and enjoyed laughing and being shocked in the same moment.

We drove to work one morning during this time and it was typically quiet between us on the early morning commute.  About a half hour into the heavy traffic, Paul broke the silence with what sounded like an observation and a confession. 

‘I undressed my inner child last night,” he quietly offered.

 I spent the rest of the commute laughing to myself, and thinking of how many people in my healing “community would be shocked and newly rewounded by such a comment.

There is an assumption in all of this, I realize, and this realization comes to me often enough for my wife to disagree with my understanding of it.  Watching my son shift through his various burgeoning interests, this Holly Dolly fervor will probably pass the way of the seasons or his moods, and perhaps people will not care about that inner child joke, although I doubt that.  Inner child work is fragile and serious, like an unexpected bowel movement.  There is an urgency to it that is best addressed in a protected environment. 




Paul and his inner Carmen Electra.  It makes the undressing so much more palatable, don’t you think? Philosophy example- Tautology:  Paul is bearded, this fellow is bearded, therefore Carmen Electra could arouse this fellow out of his lobotomized stupor.  He is, after all, covering up the truth telling genitalia.

 








My Inner Kirk may have Shatnered, but I doubt he was circling Uranus.

I did some soul-searching as a child and had an unpleasant discovery.   What surprised me almost as much as this dramatization was that my inner old man wore sunglasses.  

I think I busted my inner hip on this contraption.



What?  I wasn’t paying attention.

People, I believe, are not thinking that much about one another.  I was involved with a weekly discussion group years ago that explored specific topics each week, and the following week we were to offer our thoughts on who or what had impressed us the most specifically.  Initially, I was hoping my ideas and thoughts would always impress people to the point that we would forgo a new topic and explore my compelling insights.  But after we went several weeks without my input being mentioned by a single person, I found myself strangely relieved.  So people were not only not thinking about me all the time, they didn’t even notice me.  I felt as if I was off the hook.  I’m not even sure for what.  I am more invisible than I think, and consequently, more free.

My wife suggests that I am wrong on this point, and it is particularly for acts or comments we may have forgotten that may be living lives independent to ourselves.  At her mother’s funeral a few years back, a woman came up to my wife and mentioned that she remembers vividly a time that my wife’s mother had scolded her sharply to do her own laundry (My mother-in-law had been washing this woman’s laundry for years and had enjoyed it and the woman’s company for many years, until she could no longer do it because of aging and her health.).  Although the scolding was years in the past, and despite the fact that her mother spoke fondly of this woman, it was this scolding and not the companionship the women mentioned to offer her memories to my wife in comfort. 

My wife’s mother had found it increasingly difficult to do as she got older, and really was struggling with how to tell her friend this.  It simply was held in too long, and when she made her sharp comments, it left a permanent mark on the other woman.   I can’t help but think that even after these many years that the proper telling of the inner workings of my mother-in-law could have melted away this version of history.  If this woman knew the fondness my mother-in-law had for this woman, that she liked her enough to wash her clothes in order to enjoy her company more fully, that surely might have washed away like the water under the bridge.  Both the bitterness and a healed memory contradict my original belief about how we don’t even notice one another sometimes, but perhaps there is a better point to make.

The second guessing and self-recrimination are not very useful or enjoyable.  To obsess on the effect we are having causes an echolalia in our experience, that confuses us and takes us out of the moment more than we admit. To double think everything in order to protect our image is wasted energy that more often or not is not even necessary.  Even if we tried to control our effect on the world around us, we can’t guarantee the outcome.  To be stuttering through our existence is no way to use the grace that comes with trusting and acting with clearer purpose. The trick is to put this theory into practice.  You’re on your own with that key component.

Two Monks Walk into a Bar…

There is a traditional fable I have heard about two Buddhist monks walking along a road until they come to a river they must cross.  There is a man there also wanting to cross, but who claims he is unable to because he doesn’t not know how to swim.  One of the monks carries him across and deposits him on the opposite bank. The two continue on without the man, walking in silence (much like my coworker and I in our commute, except we were in a Kharmic minivan). Some time passes, and the second monk voices his displeasure about the man who his companion carried across, when swimming turned out unnecessary.  The river could be waded across with little trouble.  He suspected the man simply did not want to get wet, and this was infuriating to the second monk.  The first monk looked at his friend and said, “I have put that man down a mile back, why do you still need to carry him?”

Monks: No Passengers

Great story I think, ignoring the fact that I will never be the monk to let this kind of thing go.  I not only carry that man well past the river, he had to climb on top of the other hundred resentments I forgot to put down.  Where’s the chiropractor in this old yarn, anyway? 

My own version of this Fable is one involving my younger brother Terry.  We were working together in Nassau County, Long Island.  They were raising the roads and sidewalks in this low-land working class community near the shore.  The lots were so small that one could walk on the sidewalk and hear the television, arguments, and surprisingly, the chirping of a pet squirrel.  The front door of that tiny house had an embroidered potholder hung on it, with the words, “I love squirrels” hand sewn on it and the silhouette of boxy looking squirrel to boot.  It was mid summer, and every day a heavy, untidy old woman would lumber up to any of the work crews and begin a conversation warning us about the dangers of sunburn.  Despite telling her repeatedly that we wore plenty of sunscreen, the woman would protest with “I’m just saying…” and add some detail or other about putting on lotion.  She didn’t seem to heed this advice herself, wearing a soiled lookings torn sweatshirt styled in manner of Jennifer Beals in the 80’s film “Flashdance”   This not only completely exposed her shoulders, but the garment too readily offered up a courtside view of pendulous breasts that needed as much washing as her hair and skewed remaining teeth.   I was too busy trying not to screw up my calculations about the roadwork to listen to her for very long, and usually I walked away from the woman almost before she was done talking.  The odor was challenging, to say the least.    The other crews took to actively ridiculing her, calling her a “Swamp Thing” which seemed a bit harsh to me, even if it was not entirely inaccurate.

My brother Terry came to work with me for a couple weeks, in between projects, and while I was preparing for our field work, I looked up a couple times to see him talking to this woman, interestedly.  When one day she sauntered off back to her squirrel house, I realized that Terry was the first person I had seen that had actually outlasted this woman in a conversation.  I imagined that she might be plotting to find a way to beat my brother at this game, and that she was scheming even as she lumbered away from us.  

My brother felt this was too complicated a scheme. “Her, she’s probably just thinking about her soup right now.”  I didn’t know it at the time, but I often catch myself concocting conspiracy theories, only to remember this woman and Terry’s opinion about her thoughts.  I would have to agree with him that more often than not, people seemed to have lost interest in the dramas I observe, and are now just thinking about their soup.

 To be fair, this squirrel was quite talented.  

Waterskis are so passé.

Post Script-The Foul-mouthed Space Invaders

I’m reminded of one more story about the machines in diners, and this involves a diner just outside of Kennedy Airport.  Our family business would provide survey work for the Port Authority, and we were always working on one part of Kennedy Airport or another.  When they paved the runways, we were required to stay nearby when they worked to be ready the moment they finished a pass with the paving machine.  This work was often done at night, and there were long stretches when we would go to the diner to juice up on caffeine and wait for our next bit of work. Before he found his calling as a teacher,  my youngest brother worked with us, and he was particularly wild in his late teens and early twenties. Tim joined us during his summers to make a little more money than he might earn flipping burgers.  He spent a lot of this down time playing the video game they had in the diner, and did not hold back from exclaiming his frustration every time he did poorly issuing forth loud bouquets of colorful obscenities.  After he ran out of quarters, Tim joined us at the booth, and the waitress came over to refill our coffee. 

“I never realized how foul the language in these games had become.  I’m going to mention it to the manager.  These machines really gotten out of hand these days.”

The waitress said this earnestly and without a trace of irony.  Tim did not miss a beat.

“I know,” he agreed solemnly and turning his gaze,  “I was getting embarrassed.”