Pugito, ergo amo.

March 29th, 2009

Some people consider themselves to be “lovers” and not “fighters”. Some people are just downright aggressive and seem to lack the capacity to be calm and caring at all. As for me, I think that because I’m a lover, I’m also a fighter, and vice versa. Although loving and fighting might appear to be a world apart from each other, they’re actually more like different points of interest along the same meridian. If you head due-north from Anger, you’d see how the climate would change on your way to Love. Maybe things would mellow out as you get closer to the Equator (indifference, perhaps? Contentment?), but as you closed in on your second destination, things would have spiced back up again. Probably because they both involve a good deal of passion.

And they both take up a lot of energy. I typically save up my urge to debate, argue, and occasionally erupt for people I also enjoy talking, cuddling, partying, or relaxing with. Why? Because I can’t be bothered to grow a whole field of flowers and I’d rather just nurture the few kinds that I really like to look at. It’s laziness transformed into efficiency. Odds are good that if I like having you around, I’m going to find something to debate about at some point. It’s just because I think you’re interesting (most of the time) and I’m curious to see where the conversation is going to end up. It’s like dragging a child along in a sled when she is more than capable of moving herself; she just wants you to bring her someplace fun. Don’t begrudge a kid her adventure.

One of the people I watch from my Livejournal page said something that more or less kicked my brain into gear for this subject. He said:

“You’re family,” I said. “I might get pissed at you, but I’m never going to stop loving you.”(http://theferrett.livejournal.com).

And that certainly rang true with me, especially when it comes to people I consider my best friends. In fact, I usually don’t bother to get pissed with people I don’t care about. That’s not to say I don’t hate those assholes on the road who cut me off or go really slow, but that anger is more of a stationary angry cloud that dissipates rather quickly, not unlike a lingering fart smell that you walk through, crinkle your nose at, and then keep on moving. But being pissed at someone often means that they (the offender, possibly a friend) did something that hurt you (something you care about) and you feel strongly enough to be affected by it. I wouldn’t really be bothered if some random jerk online called me a foul name, but coming from a friend that would hurt. I’d pro’y call them on it and work it out, and we could continue being friends after repairing our relationship.

But just because I love someone doesn’t mean I’m gonna pick fights with them all the time. I have a few friends I’d probably never really get into it with, but that’s only because I know them well enough to realize they’re pretty submissive or sensitive and wouldn’t do well with me pokin’ at them. My general rule is to know I’m gonna get hit back before I put my gloves on. Even if it’s just one of those hit-and-hide things, as long as I’m sure I’ll get swiped at in return I’m comfortable stepping into the ring. I’m not trying to clobber our differences to death, I’m just getting them riled up a bit so I can enjoy them (most of the time. Sometimes I’ll lay into someone for being an ass, and that’s something I’m trying to smack out of ‘em). I don’t think there’s a person out there who would have the same opinions and ideals as me, but if there was, I wouldn’t be friends with them. It’d be boring as all hell! If I had this conversation: “Man I really hate it when those weird guys on the street ask me for money. I don’t give them a dime.” “Totally! I mean, get a job!”  “Right… Exactly.” I’d probably swap to an opposing opinion just to have some fun. If I just chatted with another Me all day long, it would be like getting locked into a sensory deprivation chamber. I love when my friends have other views, even if they (the views) annoy the crap out of me.

On second thougt, one advantage to having another Me to hang out with would be that she would get all the obscure references I make that go unnoticed by other people (and usually wind up making me look like an ass when I was, in reality, being hilarious. Bummer). For instance, I could pronounce Coup de Grâce like “coupe de gracie” and have her laugh at my impression of the grandpa from Rugrats. Yeah… that would be nice.

Hunger for knowledge and the gluttony of the mind

March 16th, 2009

When you’re first getting to know someone, it’s common to ask your new acquaintance what interests them. This is a chance to either realize you’re dealing with a vapid nitwit (I’m only using that word because I learned its etymology today and I got excited about it) or some superdeep well of information. Whenever I’m asked the question of what sort of things interest me, I’m likely to pause, reflect, and respond brilliantly with “Uh, I dunno… Stuff?”, which runs the risk of turning me into a former prospective intellectual peer of  the asker. The most readily available excuse for my brain constipation is that all my thoughts are bottlenecking and can’t get out in an orderly fashion and causes me to act a fool, which happens regularly, I’m loath to admit.

The thing is, I have so many interests that it slows me down on a regular basis. It does literally slow down my web browsing, since I have at least three different tabs at all times. Right now I have fifteen. Fifteen separate and important tabs. The highlights are Wowhead (for quick and easy reference for WoW), a YouTube video showing some kid performing Debussy’s Claire de Lune, my school online class page, two tabs on people mentioned in a book I’m reading, the store for the Human Rights Campaign, the Wiki articles on handfasting and empiricism, an informative guide to the biliteral cipher, and the one I’m using to write this. My internet all but gives up from the strain if I try to surf when I’m playing World of Warcraft. But I’m an information packrat, and I’d be lost if my tab bar was unpopulated by things to help me efficiently procrastinate and learn.

It’s clogging up my family’s DVR as well. My ravenous feeding frenzy fills up the recording device almost to capacity, with varied shows like America’s Next Top Model, History Channel documentaries on Nazi and Aryan culture and Armageddon, Logo channel shows like Ru Paul’s Drag Race and a documentary on transgenderism, movies like Grindhouse or  Shawshank Redemption or Showgirls, and numerous episodes of nostalgic sitcoms. I went from hardly watching TV at all for over a year to recording multiple shows a day on a successful channel-surf session. And it doesn’t help that I have to be in a special mood to watch most of what I’ve recorded, so it’s very easy for it to pile up and cause issues. Just today I had to erase all my Fresh Prince episodes because the DVR was at 90% capacity. Such a shame.

And I’m going to need my own library when I settle into my future home, because a small, finite space like my single bookshelf does little to contain my ever-growing collection of fiction and nonfiction books. I’m such a fatty when it comes to buying new books, I really am. I’m busting out of my jeans, yet I tell the server to keep the cheesecake coming. I was out of space (again) before Christmas, but I filled my wishlist with all sorts of things and got many of them. New additions to my nonfiction collection were Collapse, Guns, Germs, and Steel, The Salem Witch Trials, An Easy Out: America’s Addiction to Outsourcing, Othello’s Children in the “New World” about moors, and The Spanish Civil War. I also got four new novels, I think. And I’m currently reading five books to varying degrees. I’m actively reading Why I Became an Atheist as my primary, the collected works of Jorge Borges when I need a short story here and there, Wolves of the Calla for bathroom reading (working through the Dark Tower series again), Legacy of the Drow (five books in one, I believe, so I read one in between other books I finish), and The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama to a lesser degree since I often forget I’m in the middle of it (I will start it fresh to give it a fair go sometime in the future). My Amazon.com wishlist calls to mind that quintessential “I Love Lucy” episode with the candies on the conveyor belt due to the rate at which I add to it versus the rate at which I buy off it. Pandemonium.

And it would be terrible to neglect to mention all of my other brain babies like how to start a micronation, the virtues of an egalitarian society as embodied by communes, Norse mythology, Maya culture (I can thank my love for the use of a textbook to make it easier to research), the influence of pagan practices and beliefs on Christianity, how to make various kinds of alcohol, advantages and disadvantages of holistic medicine, the Dictionary.com words of the day (“brobdingnagian” is my favorite discovery so far), etymology, and how to work the stock market.

I’m so glad I’m relatively unbound in my life so I can do nothing but read or research for hours on end. I have no idea what I’d do with myself if I actually had a job to get in the way of my desire to compulsively Google anything and everything. But with freedom comes much responsibility, I suppose. I have to rein in my urge to one-click order books online and live at Borders since I don’t have much money flowing into my account. But I’m currently pondering the efficacy of using the stock market (and my not-yet gained ability to make money from it) to give me the financial fuel to accomplish my life goal of being a constant student. And my breadth of knowledge in many different areas would lend itself well to trying my hand at being a freelance writer, too.

The secret to lifelong wealth could possibly be held in any one of my many interests, so I like to use that to rationalize my insatiable hunger for an ever-growing collection of books and browsing tabs. I wonder if there’s a market for a “gister”, that is, someone who can give you the gist of something real quick like. I’d have no problem whoring my brain out in that manner.

So if anybody wants anything neatly encased in a nutshell for them, don’t hesitate to come a-callin’. I could really use the cash.

Vernal recreation: a retrospective

February 18th, 2009

As I’ve mentioned in previous posts, this year a veritable deluge of frozen precipitation has been graciously given to us New Englanders by the mighty meteorological powers that be. This generous gift has been received with welcoming, salted driveways, and our shovels runneth over. Though we trudge and toil, plow, blow, and scrape, I have rediscovered the necessity of enjoying the show once in a while, lest I forget the joys of whitewashing.

Last weekend, I gave the most precious gift I had to offer to an eager, snow-shocked Texan: her first sledding adventure.

Because I hadn’t had a good slide down a hill in maybe nine years, this excursion to the local golf course for some wintry wiping-out was atypical from the start. First off, I was driving; artfully maneuvering my snow-pantsed legs and booted feet to their correct clutch-and-gas positions proved about as difficult as I’d imagined, but luckily I stalled nary a time. Another major change from my tobogganing days of yore was that there were no parents to supervise me! Woohoo! If I wanted to try the side of the hill with lots of bumps and ramps, damnit I was going to try it. With a renewed sense of youthful freedom, my love and I grabbed our plastic disk sleds and began our ascent, gloved hand in gloved hand, to the first plateaued area of the course.

Being the veteran sledder between the two of us, it was decided that I be the first to go down the hill to illustrate the safety and the enjoyment of the experience. I was a bit hesitant to get started, since I had gained years of wisdom and experience since my last encounter with a slicked hill and recognized the potential dangers that only a preening preteen could pretend to ignore. Setting myself into place at the top of the slope, I dug the heels of my boots into the packed snow and stabilized myself enough to secure my path of motion. Once I felt relatively safe, I tucked my feet up onto the sled to sit cross-legged as I had already begun to creep forward. I careened full-speed down the hill, coming to rest a considerable distance from the starting point. In a response to my beckoning, my adorable novice came rushing toward me, her face nearly cleaved in two by her ebullient, toothy grin. After a brief, snowy snuggle, we marched back up the hill for another ride.

She set her path, grabbed her sled, and let herself be yanked down by the momentum. Once she was safely sitting still, I placed myself at the ready and gave myself over to gravity. Already, I started to see the treacherous frozen phantoms nudging me into the course where a rowdy bunch of teenagers had gleefully dug bumps and ramps into the formerly smooth slope. At that moment, I was torn between two possible courses of action, each with its own perils attached. With my body beginning to wobble and my sense of balance wrecked more by each rotation of the sled, I pictured (vividly and quickly) how redistributing my body weight could adversely affect the day’s fun and …my life.

Option one: I fall backward, causing the back of my sled to gouge its lip into the hard-packed surface of the snow and effectively catapulting myself ass-over-elbows and breaking my neck, the light in my eyes dimming before my lifeless body comes to a slushy stop half an acre from the base of the hill, widowing the once bright-eyed Texan and leaving her only two sleds, my corpse, and no fortitude to relearn the finer points of driving a car with a manual transmission. Option one wasn’t bringing me a lot of optimism.

Option two: I flop forward, slamming face-first into the rushing, wet, frozen ice-ground and crushing the bridge of my nose, transanguinating the breadth of the fairway, and frightening the on-looking children and setting into motion a series of events that would send them running into the arms of a therapist when they, in their mid-thirties, can’t even think of bringing their own kids sledding without succumbing to panic attacks and spontaneously assuming the fetal position. That wasn’t looking so bad for me, but with so many innocent victims, it would certainly be a tragedy fit for Oprah.

I didn’t exactly choose my next crucial movement so much as I slipped into it, but I felt myself tipping backward. Upon connecting with the sun-glazed tundra, I managed to instinctively curl my head in toward my chest as I made contact with the sandpapery snow and proceeded to scoop up several handfuls of the gritty stuff into the collar of my jacket, my sled having long-since jettisoned from underneath me to skip merrily along the path in a whizzing blue blur. After my disorientation dissipated and I was able to crane my neck enough to glance backward, I noticed my animated amiga was gaily laughing in my general direction. I waved, flopped back into my haphazard snow angel mess, and exhaled deeply before picking myself up and tracking down my runaway sled. We climbed the hill again, and again, and again, taking the snowy spray like champs until we couldn’t bear the thought of walking back one more time. Sated (and sweaty), we threw the sleds into my trunk and drove back home.

Unless each one of you is a crusty old adult, I whole-heartedly and most emphatically insist that you take even a scant few minutes to enjoy what’s good about winter. You’ve got a couple months to make your peace yet, since spring probably won’t begin to bud on the bare trees until April at least, but at all costs you’ve got to try to make winter into something other than a nuisance. Hell, about half the year is consumed by it, so you’re pretty much fucked if you don’t. So don’t be a weenie.

Beth Dylan and the case of the curious catalyst.

February 3rd, 2009

I don’t think I’ve ever been a person to have the most healthy or normal reactions to significant changes in my life. I shied from the responsibility of being 4 years old by requesting to have an un-birthday, I vandalized bits of my new house after moving out of the apartment my family had lived in for a few years, I’ve repeatedly punched the tile floor in my bedroom when I was angry, pawned or destroyed items that were given to me by an ex-boyfriend when things went really sour between us, and just been harmful to myself in general on several occasions.

My uncle just called my dad about 10 minutes ago, and after he hung up he told us “Mom’s dead.” My grandmother, Mimi, maybe the only person in my family I was ever truly honest with, just passed away. And the first thing I did after we all gave each other hugs was log into WordPress and start writing this. It’s a vast improvement considering what I sometimes do, but it’s unusual nonetheless. And even more unusual, I feel totally unaffected by it. And don’t start with the psychobabble about expressing grief and stuff, cuz I know it all and also know it’s wrong.

But I saw her today and she was all dehydrated and unresponsive and hopped up on morphine and all I could do was talk to her. I know that she’s been ready to go for a long time, so today, after everyone that was visiting had left, she went too. My dad left our house to pick up our uncle that lives the next neighborhood over and they’re going to be with the body until hospice does its thing. And I’m here, writin’ for The Tit.

She was a deeply religious woman since I’ve known her, so I know what she was waiting to happen and I have no worry for her. And I know the family knows she’s been waiting outside the gates of heaven and St. Peter’s just been like “I’m sorry, but you’re not on the list” for several months now. So she’s in the club gettin’ jiggy with Jesus and I’m pretty happy for her. And I know this sounds weird, but I was thinking–not 10 seconds before my dad got the call (no exaggeration whatsoever, I was in the kitchen making tea and walking back with it at the time)–that I hope she goes soon. We had all said our goodbyes, so why not? And sure enough… I don’t want to sound all insensitive or anything, but I’m glad it’s over. Waiting is the worst part of that sort of stuff, and I think that everyone was ready to let her go. I’m not sure where she is, but she’s not lingering in her earthly husk of a body any more.

I’m both sad and glad for my brother who opted to not see her today, because instead of seeing her all limp and doped up, he saw her all happy and smiling last Tuesday when we scraped together a flag ceremony to celebrate her time in the Army.

I doubt I’ll cry much or at all, and that if I do cry it’ll be during the services we have for her since there will be other criers around. She was a wonderful woman who served me as a fountain of advice and knowledge, who treated me and talked to me as an independant person and never as a child, and without whom I might possibly be a vastly different individual.

Nobody lives forever, so it doesn’t make sense for me to mourn the loss of someone who was ready and prepared to go. I know I’ll mourn more for the survivors, since not all of them will be as capable of rationalizing and coping as I believe I am. The burden of death is borne by the living, and when each of us dies it’s finally our turn to be free from the obligations. We just gotta buck up and keep plodding along.

I think I’m going to get back to playing WoW and not watching the rest of Ocean’s Eleven since neither of the others up here feel much like laughing at the moment. I don’t think there’s ever a time where it wouldn’t be advantageous to be in a good mood, so I’ll probably occupy myself with something cheery while I wait for them to cope. Grieving is a marathon, not a sprint.

I promise to write again soon. I’ve felt woefully bereft of my muse, so writing isn’t as easy as it was last semester. Maybe I ought to start taking weekly bus rides to get a periodic dose of crazy so I can start being productive again.

Until next time, folks.

It’s like the old Klingon proverb says…

January 14th, 2009

In my previous placeholder post, I mentioned that we had made a snowman. It was a sweet pirate snowman which we toiled over for quite some time. The next morning we looked forward to viewing our masterpiece in the glow of the morning sun, but instead of welling with pride, we were filled with rage.

Some asshole brutally wrecked our snowman. And while we had no hard proof leading to the identities of the culprits, circumstantial evidence threw heavy suspicion upon our neighbors’ teenage son. A 16 year-old and his friend got their rocks off kicking over a snowman. This kid’s been a little bastard since birth, and my brother and I have been around to see him grow into a superbly malicious young man. Even our mother– a typically forgiving woman– has on several occasions referred to him as the “devil’s son”. Back in the day I would just grab him, throw him into the shrubs separating our houses, and call it good. But we’re adults now. Revenge won’t be as simple as a whitewash or wedgie this time.

This means war.

And while I realize that by choosing to retaliate I will be sinking to his level, but I’m ok with that. I’m going to one-up that turd. It’ll be so deliciously ironic. He’s going to help me build a new snowman. At least that’s going to be the premise for a story I’m working on.

For anybody who isn’t familiar with Edgar Allen Poe or his story “The Cask of Amontillado”, I’ll summarize it for you. Narrator was fucked over by victim one too many times and the narrator decides to build a brick-and-mortar wall closing the victim inside a seldom-visited hall as his revenge. I’m going to get medieval on this kid’s ass and build a snowman around him. I’ll be binding his ankles together once I force him to sit cross-legged and tying his wrists together behind his back.  I’m not sure what method I’ll employ to make sure he doesn’t wiggle around while I’m hard at work, but rest assured it’ll keep that punk scared into submission. The whole creative process will be very cathartic for me. I’ll be a better person once he’s frozen solid and lost until spring when the snow melts.

Although I can’t promise I won’t shoot out his window with my BB gun or abduct him and leave him naked in Quebec with a French-English dictionary.