Showing posts with label ramblings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ramblings. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2008

Head to Head

I’m about as excited about the candidates in the 2008 presidential race as I would be about the prospect of watching one wrestler. I’ve never picked a winner in the primaries (Wes Clark in 2004, baby . . . and I think I can say with statistical certainty that Ron Paul isn’t getting the nomination in 2008), and I’ve never voted for a winner in the general presidential election (Nader, Gore, Kerry). Regardless, what’s turning out to be entertaining is the Hillary/Obama smack-down that’s going on right now. I feel really bad for Obama in this fight, since he’s outnumbered and outgunned against the Clintons. For an interesting take on it, check out this commentary from Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal.

Here’s an apocryphal story that parallels the Clinton strategy against Obama: In 1948, Lyndon B. Johnson was running for the U.S. Senate against former Texas governor Coke Stevenson, and it was a very tight race. Johnson was conferring with his people, and he said: “I know, we’ll say ‘Coke Stevenson fucks his sow.’” One of Johnson’s advisers said, “Lyndon, we can’t call Coke Stevenson a pig fucker, you know that’s not true.” Johnson replied, “I know, but we’ll let him deny it!”

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Dancing with myself.

I've had a little writer's block lately. It's one of those periods when not all that much is going on. The world is going to shit all around us, but my life is, upon reflection, pretty good. I have good friends and I eat well, and that, really, is what it's all about. I was talking with my dad this morning, and I quoted the first line of A Tale of Two Cities to him. Then I looked it up when I got to work, and it pretty much summarized the world and my life right now:
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way—in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only.
It took me a long time to warm to Dickens, but I finally did in my early twenties, and there's some real gold in his works. He is a little verbose, though. As I read the passage above, I was further reminded of the old Chinese curse: "May you live in interesting times." Perhaps I'll bask in the boredom of my situation for a spell.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

And I wasn't even drunk last night.

I woke up at 4:00 this morning in my guest bed. I have no recollection of the thought process that led me here. I fear that I may be going senile.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Reflections upon a Bust of Mao

Back when I was still in school, my buddy Laz went on vacation to China with his family. When he came back, he brought me a little alabaster bust of Mao Zedong as a souvenir. It was a little dirty, about two inches tall, and had a real quaint “Red China” aura to it. I was still living in a dorm at the time, and I put the little stone bust on my bookshelf. I had a small menagerie of communist paraphernalia from a trip to Cuba that I had made, and the Chairman fit right in among it. I lived on the 9th floor of a high-rise dormatory, and shortly after acquiring the bust, I was at a function at the bar and grill on the second floor of the dorm. I was enjoying my drink, and I found myself talking to an attractive med student. Her name escapes me now, but I recall that she was very involved in that “doctors without borders” bringing medicine to the third-world scene. And somehow we ended up talking about communism. And I said to her: “You know, I’ve got a Bust of Mao in my room.” And she said she’d like to see it. And I said OK, and we went up to my room, and from Mao, the conversation drifted to my CD collection, and I put on some music, yada yada, and we ended up hooking up. It all happened so fast, and was so serendipitous; I thought something like that would never happen again. And then it did. A couple of more times. And it got so that the “Bust of Mao” achieved talismanic status in my head. At the time, I didn’t understand why it worked – in fact, I sort of thought it might be a lot like Dumbo’s Magic Feather, and maybe I could do the same thing without the reference to the dead Chinese Chairman. I was only partly right.

Once I got out of school, and got my own place, the “Bust of Mao” reference never helped again. I still have the little statue, but by and large women in their thirties don’t talk about communism and idealism and crap like that.

In 2001, right after September 11th, my friend Webster was visiting me from out of town, and we were at the tavern next door to my apartment complex at the time. We were drinking at the bar and we noticed two passably-cute girls at a booth eating dinner. We wanted to send them a drink, and debated doing so, made eye contact with them two or three times, and finally approached. Web is smoother than I am, I guess, because after a couple of minutes of chit-chat he tells the two girls that I have a bottle of absinthe at my place and asks would they like to try it. That night merits a whole blog entry, but both girls – complete strangers to us before that night – came back to my apartment with us.

In September 2003, I flew to Vegas for Frankie’s birthday party. On the flight I sat next to a pretty girl, and we ended up exchanging numbers. About three weeks later, we met up at an Applebee’s for drinks on a Monday night. In passing I mentioned that the day before I had made a candle out of an old stone inkpot and some liquid paraffin. She said that sounded interesting, and I said I lived less than half a mile away if she wanted to see it, and she came over, and literally, within 15 minutes of walking into my place she was topless on my couch. Life is good sometimes.

It wasn’t until I was nearly thirty years old that it dawned on me how the Bust of Mao principle worked, and I realized that my Bust of Mao was no more magical than a bottle of exotic liquor or a homemade candle. The magic in all three was in what wasn’t said during the discussion about them.

In March of 2006, I was in Puerto Vallarta for a conference at the Westin resort there. The last night of the conference, I found myself drinking and talking with a pretty young lady from Chicago who was there to check folks in and oversee logistics, etc. We were drinking mai tai after mai tai, and were both drunk enough to make some bad decisions when the bar closed. There was definitely a spark, and sufficient nonverbal communication to signal the green light. But when they announced last call, and it was clearly the end of the night, I wished I had brought my Bust of Mao with me. Asking her straight to my room seemed so gauche, and we bade each other an awkward good night, as our rooms were in different directions from the bar. As I lay awake in my bed that night alone in such a romantic locale, with the sound of the ocean in the background, I kicked myself for being such a fumbling fool. On the flight back, I had one of those “What I should have said” moments, and it all made sense to me.

The magic of the Bust of Mao is that it gives an excuse for cutting away from the herd, so to speak. I’ve never met a woman who would respond positively to “Hey, do you want to go back to my place and fuck?” I’m sure she exists out there, but even if she does, she is definitely in a very small minority of women. Society just frowns too much on that sort of openness and honesty. Likewise, pretty much anybody, male or female, would follow you home if you said: “Hey, I’ve got two lottery tickets at my place, and one is guaranteed to win a million dollars; I’ll let you have your choice of the two if you want.” The Bust of Mao passes the “laugh out loud” test for why you’d be coming back to someone’s place, but is just banal enough to convey the message that “I’ve got a bit more than a stupid little statue there.” I remember my friend Jacob asking a girl in our dorm (now his wife) “do you want to come listen to me play my harmonica?” In reality, nobody wants to hear a dude play a harmonica, and a homemade candle is interesting for like one minute, maybe.

That night in Puerto Vallarta, I didn’t need the Bust of Mao; I needed a Bust of Mao: “the night view out my window is spectacular; you’ve got to come see it,” or something like that. I live and learn.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Shuffle

You know what always makes me laugh? When you finally read the lyrics to a song that you’ve heard for a long-ass time, and sometimes particularly liked, and the subject matter of the song is not at all what you thought it was about – and sometimes it is quite sinister. I remember that happened to me with the Kinks’ “Lola.” Most recently, I had it happen to me with Beck’s “Girl.” I know I’m not the only one. It makes me laugh even harder when a band covers a song without knowing what the original was about. Like when lame Christian rockers Sixpence None the Richer covered the Las’ “There She Goes,” evidently without knowing that it was a song about heroin.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Best of luck, y'all!

It's kind of interesting to me how many people make it to this blog by googling "prusik handcuffs" or some variation thereof. The out-click is invariably wikipedia.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Faith versus Reason

As of late, I’ve been thinking about something that Meno e-mailed me a while back. It was after I complained to him about things that the ex did that drove me crazy, and yet, I couldn’t bring myself to cut her loose. He said:

In love, we are afraid to be rational. For when we are rational, we lie in the tumultuous domain of logic. And logic is a terrible thing, for if we were logical with our love, at one time or another, we would most certainly walk away.

It was only via rational thought that I was able to make it through the break-up, but in the end, sometimes I feel like a lesser person for having put my faith in reason.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.

Crap, where has the week gone . . . tomorrow's already Thursday, and I am looking down the barrel of a couple of deadlines. I forgot my iPod at home today and that just sucked . . . what the hell did I do before I had an iPod? This isn't a plug for Apple, by the way, it's an honest question.

And thank you to my ladies in Texas for turning me on to this so that I could rant a little. By and large the cops I've ever dealt with have been straight forward, and I've made it through three decades without a moving violation despite being pulled over at various times for various reasons -- sometimes flagrant (like running right through a red light, or going the wrong way down a one-way street). But there's something about the folks that go into law enforcement, along with the power that the badge and uniform confers that just SCREAMS for accountability. I admit that we need the cops . . . but we also need them to know that if they act like this there will be consequences. So I'll be following this story closely now.

In the mean time, let's take a moment to review what we should have learned in civics class, but if you were like me you didn't:

No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

Friday, September 7, 2007

Microcosm

Today's Wikipedia featured picture: two flower chafers fucking on a carrot flower head. If you
stop to think about it, life's really about two things at the very core: eating and fucking. Those two fundamental urges drive all life from these insects to the Nobel Laurates. I can't help but wonder how the concept of "romance" applies to the little freaks above. I mean, as humans, we have emotions and we find the need to explain all the things that drive us, but ultimately, if our belly is full and we have a little "piece" and quiet, we tend to be happy.

A little more jabbing into the repository of all human knowledge yields the photo to the right. What's the life expectancy on these guys? Two days? Maybe a week? In that time, they eat, they fuck, and they leave behind offspring to do it all over again. They don't grind away at a job, or stress about their mortgage. Life is fleeting . . . don't deny your most base instincts . . . now go out there and make it happen!

Monday, September 3, 2007

Somewhere I took a turn on the road of life . . .

. . . that led me away from normalcy and into the surreal. Sometimes I look back and try to find that place.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Thoughts on the nature of time

People say that time is money, but that's simply not true -- there's a lot more time than money.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Because sometimes solitude's a chinga

File under dysfunctional: I still get dinner with my ex on a quasi-regular basis. It's just that I really don't like eating in restaurants alone. For example, tonight I was really craving a pizza, but didn't get the urge until around 7:30. Went to a brick-oven place, but it was filled mostly with couples, and I didn't feel like eating there alone, so I asked for the pizza to go. Good pizza, but brought it back home to eat. It's re-run season, so there's nothing good on the TV that I want to watch. I need a hobby besides drinking to fill these evenings.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Inspiration

On the plains of Hesitation lie the blackened bones of countless millions who at the dawn of Victory sat down to rest and resting died.

Over fifteen years ago, I read that quote on a poster at a gun show and committed it to memory. Since then, I've tried to find the source of it, but haven't been able to find the true source. Lots of attributions -- and the closest I've come is Omar Khayyam, but I've never actually found a credible source that proves it. A buddy in college thought the quote a bit pretentious and summarized it as follows: "He who hesitates, masturbates."

Monday, July 16, 2007

Didn't get fired today. . .

Tomorrow will be the most beautiful day of Raymond K. Hessle's life. His breakfast will taste better than any meal you and I have ever had.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Top of the world

It's been a while for me, but one of the greatest feelings known to man is the one he gets while he get his shoes shined in Vegas by a professional shoeshiner (preferably mad) while the chick he flew out with him stands by waiting, dressed to the nines for a night on the town. If you haven't done this, well, then you're letting the best in life pass you by. It's right up there with the hot-towel shave at the barber's.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Sic transit gloria

I've always liked this photo. So many words come to mind every time I see it. The Cold War seems like ancient history anymore. I was out with a chick the other day, and she had no real memory of it -- pretty much to anyone born after 198o, the Cold War and WWII are both something they just read about in history books or saw in movies.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Thank God for good swimmers

I like to watch the little army of Mexicans (or Guatemalans, or Ecuadoreans, or whatever third-world country they're from) that do my yard every month. It's like watching a bunch of ants or something. They're all like 4 feet tall, and each one of them has a unique role. It's awesome. And cheap. I hope none of them ever gets deported. If I dedicated an entire day to doing my yard, even if I had the right tools (which I don't), my yard wouldn't look half as good as it does when this crew gets done with it.

Same at the car wash.

I don't buy the bullshitty argument that these folks are taking American jobs. Name me an American that wants to do either of the above mentioned jobs in July for what I'm willing to pay them. If you succeed in naming someone, pass this message on to them: If your job is endangered by illiterate peasants who are here illegally and don't speak English, perhaps you should reconsider your choice of job markets.