The influence of gaslight or electric light on the growth of paraheliotropic trees

bonebrushing the edges of the res interna (upper transcend)

Raskolnikov’s Room

“[He] gazed round his little room with loathing. It was a tiny little cubby-hole of a place, no more than six paces long, and so low that anybody of even a little more than average height felt uncomfortable in it, fearful that at any moment he might bump his head against the ceiling. The yellowish dusty wall-paper peeling off the walls gave it a wretchedly shabby appearance, and the furniture was in keeping; there were three rickety chairs and a stained deal table in a corner, holding a few books and papers so covered with dust that it was plain that they had not been touched for a long time; and lastly there was a large and clumsy sofa, taking up almost the whole of one wall and half the width of the room, and with a print cover now old and worn into holes. This served Raskolnikov as a bed. He often slept on it just as he was, without undressing, without sheets, covered with his old worn-out student’s overcoat, his head resting on a little cushion with his whole stock of linen, clean and dirty, bundled together under it for a bolster. Before this sofa stood a small table.

A more slovenly and degraded manner of life could hardly have been imagined, but it suited Raskolnikov’s present mood.”

Crime and Punishment, Dostoevskii

In love again with America

Happiest day of my life. Faith is the substance of things hoped for. Optimism. Hope. History. We have done these things. We have done these things. We have done them together.

The pathologization of poverty

http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:7MNus5wLF40J:home.sc.rr.com/nmhportfolio/beans/Word_Docs/Class%2520Values.doc+Beans+of+Egypt,+Maine+incest&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=13&gl=us

> Middle class repulsion to the poor; the poor are weak, lazy, addicted;

> I feel it myself — the great discomfort and fear I feel when faced with those less privileged than I am. Do they want what I want? Do they dislike me out of jealousy? Deeper questions too — such as why I’ve gotten the privileges I’ve gotten, how many backs have I tread on and climbed upon to get to where I am — a great discomfort and anxiety — it’s a true one — and the only answer may be to look back, to return to the masses, not out of guilt, but out of solidarity, to accept the responsibility that the only justification for my gifts are that they be returned to the good of the community. Helping in some way the common weal.

Trainride to Philadelphia

At 2:50 PM, I put down my guitar, picked up my backpack, and walked out the door. Late again. Somehow, whenever I am in a place I call home, surrounded by the fetish-objects I’ve invested pieces of myself in, time slips away, distractions multiply, and I can never get out of the house. I have lost whole months of my life in this way, distracted by toys. I wonder if I will miss those months one day? How can I miss what I never had?

Still, it’s the day before election day, and since my absentee ballot never came, I have to make my way south to Philadelphia and go vote at the Old Original Polling Place one last time, exercising the lucky franchise of a swing-stater (a dubious privilege since it means I must share my home state with loyal oppositioners; still, fellow-travelers make me nervous as well–surrounded by the like-minded, I fear I’m not getting the whole story and can’t accurately guage the national mood).

So I hop on the subway, slipping through the revolving metal barred turnstile just as the 1 pulls up. I walk down, hoping to get in a less crowded car, but stand anyway, glancing helpless at the three attractive girls my age sitting a few feet from me. They speak in Spanish and are handing back and forth medium-sized handdrawn posters that look like blown-up greeting cards by way of an indie rock album’s cover art. I look away and I look back–drawn by either some residue left over from my bachelor days or alternatively by some still lingering question about that whole “one and only” business I’ve got going with my girlfriend, the girlfriend I love and have just left this morning.

I get off at 32nd St, Penn station, fall in line behind a mother and her young four-year-old daughter–I walk slowly, a secret protector, letting them go before me. I turn around, walk up some stairs and then I’m right in the deep dark middle of the great station, Penn Station

The Times They Are A-Changin’

Come gather round people wherever you roam
And admit that the waters around you have grown
And accept it that soon you’ll be drenched to the bone
If you’re time to you is worth is savin’
Then you better start swimming or you’ll sink like a stone
For the times, they are a-changin’

Come writers and critics who prophesize with your pens
And keep your eyes wide the chance won’t come again
And don’t speak too soon for the wheel’s still in spin
And there’s no tellin’ who that it’s namin’.
For the loser now will be later to win
For the times they are a-changin’.

Come senators, congressman, please heed the call
Don’t stand in the doorway, don’t block up the hall
For he that gets hurt will be he who has stalled
There’s a battle outside and it is ragin’.
It’ll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls
For the times they are a-changin’.

Come mothers and fathers throughout the land
And don’t criticize what you can’t understand
Your sons and yoru daughters are beyond your command
Your old road is rapidly agin’.
Please get out of the new one if you can’t lend your hand
For the times they are a-changin’.

The line it is drawn, the curse it is cast
The slow one now will later be fast
As the present now will later be past
The order is rapidly fadin’.
And the first one now will later be last
For the times they are a-changin’.

Copyright ©1963, Bob Dylan

Internet of Things

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/11/02/digitalbiz.rfid/

so onwards and overwards and upside down and inside out

Here it is–it goes, the world, the with, the harbinger–this is a change election–pitbulls scream “lipstick”–the great unwashed mass in high school gyms and utter epithets–somewhere, rich white gentlemen and ladies wash their hands twice after walking in the door, and count their guineas, once, twice–here’s to the brave ones, the poor ones, the true Americans, the real Americans, Jefferson’s Americans, the union worker working eighty hours a week without health insurance–the nurse–the teacher–the small businessowner with his shop and two employees–this election is for them–this election is about choosing, about choosing a new path, a new structure, favoring the little over the big, recognizing that the Exxon Mobils and the George Bushes of the world don’t need any help, because they’re doing fine, but Americans, real Americans, the Great Middle Class, that great class that has risen as if from a Marxist dream to be the last great hope of the world–they need help, and they need to become something better, the greatest source of innovation and happiness in the world–John McCain won’t do it–maybe Obama will–maybe he will–but he’s our only hope. Only hope.

Contemporary Art in Tel Aviv

NEXT STOP
Is Tel Aviv Ready to Crash the Global Arts Party? (from the New York Times)

http://travel.nytimes.com/2008/11/02/travel/02next.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

November – 1.1

If one were to write a novel in the month of November, what would it be about? The loves you’ve left behind? The love sitting next to you right now that you never thought would come? The bodies of loves laying in the ground where you put them? God, the Devil, and the Expanding Continuing Big Bang? String Theory? Efficient Markets? The law and its discontents which forbids rich and poor alike from sleeping under bridges? Barack Obama and John McCain? George Bush and Al Gore? Bill Clinton and Bob Dole? White marbled Washington D.C., alone with its wide empty boulevards? Japanese cars? Black ipods and white ipods, and people on the subways with buds in their ears, here but not here, present but not present, each listening to his or her own particular song? This is the world in 2008. When I was born, no one knew what killed the dinosaurs. Now, twenty six years later, deep deep in the future, we know it was a meteor that landed in Cancun sixty-five million years ago, a meteor the size of Mount Everest, hurtling through the sky, and then BOOM BOOM BOOM, there it went, there it goes, that’s the way the cookie crumbles.

If you were to write a novel in the month of November, what would it be about? Would it be about Phish breaking up, or getting back together? Radiohead and free albums? Yo La Tengo, and falling in love? The places you have been, and the places you will go, and the sad dark waiting place on page 16 of “The Places You’ll Go” by Dr. Seuss? Would it be about that time you were mean to a dumb child, or the time you were made fun of for not understanding, or the time you wet your bed, or threw up on yourself, or got so sick lying in bed you thought a thousand years would pass before your mother came to check on you?

Would you talk about the cold depressions of the wide awake midnight soul? Of the nights spent up at 4 AM with the entire world sleeping except for you? Of the contracting of the soul that came with the cold winter winds of an uncle dying of cancer? Who would you write to? Yourself or to others?

If you could play guitar, what song would you play?
If you could sing, what song would you sing? And who would you sing to?

If you could do anything in the world,  what would you do? Where would you go? Who would you visit? Dead uncles? Dead fathers? Dead mothers? Dead brothers? The places we can’t go to? The halcyon days of days already dawned? The world has turned, it turns even now, rolling along through the great big empty nothing, sun is before us, and now its gone, Great Big Sun—once called God—now, great big fire, keeping time for all the darling monkeys.

If you were to write a novel in the month of November, one hundred and sixty two pages of thoughts, of actions real and unreal, of conversations overheard and recorded, of all the different lives running around and trying to make sense of these strange days and warm nights and winters and springs and summers going and coming, of crowded subways and Grand Central trains going up to New Haven, and coming back from New Haven, and going back to New Haven, and dinners, and lunches, and breakfasts, and insomnia, and pills and powders and movies, what would it be about? If you were to write a novel in the month of November, would it be true or would it be false? Could you do it? Could you reach down into the painful center of a heart that once was whole but now is broken and turn those swirling feelings into something true and lasting, an abstract painting of words, a poem, a Kandinsky, a Rothko of thought and feeling, rhythm, poem, tone, writing, true writing, free verse, poetry without the net, standing on the shoulders of giants who came before, transforming the world, your world through nervous activity, anxiety, no day without a sentence, no week without a chapter, no month without a book, shelves and shelves of books, like Proust, searching for lost time, always searching, always searching for lost time, murdering your darlings, trying to get it out, trying to get it right, trying to get something, some recognition, some love, some something—

If you were to write a novel in the month of November, what would it be about, how it would it start, how would it end, what strange dreams would come into it, jumping into a broken car in a morning-lit dream, playing different parts, now I’m an investigator for the mob, going to scenes of the crime and destroying evidence, a naked girl, a naked girl is in my dream, fleshy and full—would that go in it, would that be there, how does it connect, how does it advance the plot, how does it serve the story, if I were to write a novel in the month of November would it make me happy, would it make me whole, would it push back the dying, the real dying and the metaphorical dying, would it heal this broken world, this broken heart, the needle punctures the flesh, I press a button and get a random number, and multiply it by nine, and by nine again, and add up the digits and they add up to nine and multiply that by nine and get eighty-one, and multiply it by a random number and then take the baby home and watch it grow into a man like me. Would that make me happy? To have a little me to stand by my hospital bed and throw some dirt on my body’s grave? Maybe it would. In the month of November? In November? Sweet November, Sad October. Maybe maybe maybe not maybe.

My father

My father lost his job today. That’s real. No bullshit, no purple prose, no literary circumlocutions. In 2008, October 30, my father lost his job. Just bought a new house too.

You think I have problems? Or I think I have problems?

He’s fifty-one. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. Was it his fault? Is he not a team player? Or decided to ‘rent’ instead of ‘buy’ when it came to his career? No one is as good as my father — but being good — maybe that doesn’t matter — execution is for low-level plebes, no, if you want to get ahead in this world you got to be a greaser, greasing every squeaky wheel you can find.

Killed two mice today. Maybe kill another two tomorrow.

This is the end. This is the end my friend. The end. 3:23 AM in the morning, da da dada dada da dadadada. That’s the Smurf theme song; Lollapalooza. Crazy Halloween party tomorrow on the roof. I won’t be there. Visiting my girlfriend.

Once, I never thought I’d have a girlfriend. Back then I was full of endless longing, endless yearning, I was all potential, no actuality; now — I don’t even know what I want anymore.

I realize this post, this diary entry into nothingness, with no audience, no love, falls on empty ears, is more pessimistic, and without that rosy bluesy romantic fog that usually makes sadness so lovely; I guess cause this ain’t sadness, this is something else, anger and disappointment. The big 100 law firms of America, now being crucified, didn’t want me, had no desire for me, maybe it was something I said, and now I have to scrape and beg to be their lapdog, their hound, I don’t want that, fuck that, I’m 26, it wasn’t supposed to be like this, fuck you, world, I’m not paying back my student loans — take that and suck it, assholes — $50,000 a year tuition to be a fucking bottomfeeder leech. I don’t want it anymore. If it were all the same, I’d go back to Elsewhere, and smoke weed every evening and certain afternoons.

The Rastafari don’t like it being called a weed. To them it’s a sacrament. If I ever get a moment, remind me to tell you about Jamaica, and how the Market Orthodox at the I.M.Fucking.F. fucked that one up from here to China. When exactly was it that Americans sold their democracy for a couple of magic beans at the market? 1968, when they thought better of their decision 8 years earlier and decided to go with the Dickie Nixon’s shifty smile? Or twelve years later when history decided to repeat itself as farce on the strong shoulders of Ron Reagan?

These fucking Republicans.