Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Merry Christmas!!
For those of you who are just getting around to having Christmas today, or skipping it, I thought I would share this picture of the gift that Ellen had delivered to the house the other day. You don't get that many opportunities for such a shot, although it is perhaps more common in Invercargill than other localities.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
Ce que l'aino
Thursday, December 04, 2008
Something Else
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
What's so funny about peace, love, and understanding?
It's a massive bummer to see the places you frequent and the people you see everyday being savaged on TV by clear-eyed, baby-faced soldiers.
I'm hoping it doesn't escalate -- here or anywhere else.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Saturday, November 08, 2008
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Election Day
Monday, November 03, 2008
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Saturday, October 25, 2008
"That can't be what you really want"
Apropos, Jimmy Osterberg was in my dreams last night: one-armed and bearded.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Got tickets
Send me an email address so we can connect more easily.
peace,
jim
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Everything in its place
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Today is the day
Sunday, October 05, 2008
Monday, September 29, 2008
Monday, September 15, 2008
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Old News
Sorry to have neglected to describe much of the action at the Democratic Convention. I spent most of the week trying to avoid heatstroke in the parking lot where we kept our prop-shop. We did some marches, set up a 'Make Out, Not War' aerial photo, painted the buses, etc. The ladies were doing all kinds of stuff, but I was mostly just staying calm. I wore my new suit to our end-of-convention party.
More photos and writeups of our actions at codepinkalert.com. Liz Hourican, who interrupted John McCain's speech at the RNC is one of my closest pals, who rode out to Denver in our bus (which is not the pink one in the pictures, oddly enough).
Monday, September 08, 2008
Word of the Day
Juliana taught me that word after I mentioned a word someone sent me as a typo, iatrical, of or pertaining to a physician (iatros)
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Rhinestone Underground
Monday, August 25, 2008
Way to Sea
WAY TO SEA
or: THE UNDERWATER JOURNEY BY RAIL FROM NORTH BEACH TO CENTRAL SQUARE
When I lived in San Francisco, I used to live in North Beach, and our apartment looked down over the bay, and you could actually see Alcatraz. Lying in bed at night I could hear the foghorns. They're so pretty and tuba-like, I began to wonder if you could make music based on the foghorns. It probably wouldn't be as pretty. But what if I could write myself out of the music? Could I make something as nice as the foghorns? What if there were no me, just sound? Who'd be left to play the tuba?
I went down late one night to the ferry building, to take the bus that takes you to the train. It was dark and I could hear the foghorns and the sea lions. I didn't even have to wait, I was on the bus already, going along the harshly over-lit Embarcadero. The bus started filling with smoke, and it was getting hard to see, and I turned to Paul and said, I think we're going underwater. I wonder if the bus has been hijacked. And Paul looked back at me and smiled with mocking delight and nodded his head, yup, and pointed out the window and we were still driving down the Embarcadero but it was the streets that were underwater, somehow there was a flood or something and we were going by the same buildings, traffic lights, billboards, but it was all underwater, and beautiful glowing fish went swimming by, all different colors.
I guess I was riding the train then, but outside the night was a deep dark blue. Paul had gone to the bar car I guess, and sitting next to me was a man wearing stupid hat folded out of newspaper like kids make and across from me was a goat wearing a jacket with patches on the elbows and little half-glasses and they both made me nervous so I looked out the window and I saw giant orange jellyfish flashing, deep at the bottom of the ocean now. They were spelling out words, or signs anyway which I couldn't read or understand, but still they were beautiful to look at and I felt happy and easy looking at them the way I did listening to the foghorns.
I guess I fell asleep, but anyway when I woke up the train was going along the coast and it was just before the sun was about to come up, you could just see the streaks of light orange on the blue horizon, and the grapes in the vineyards along the coast were glowing. The train turned right off the tracks and I thought oh no, it's going to go into the water, but somehow through some sort of hydraulic miracle we went over the water, we were actually airborne. Just then a school of electric colored flying fish came out of the water, right towards the train, and plunged back in before we collided.
We arrive at the station on track three and I switch trains. Opposite the station is a beautiful cathedral, looking like something from a Monet painting. James gets on and sits next to me and I'm happy to see him. He wants to kiss me on the mouth, and I don't mind, but he's obviously been up all night and his beard is scratchy and he smells like cigarettes.
The train starts going down the tram tracks, faster and faster, and we go over the bridge where the ions are supposed to cure depression. It's finally starting to get light, and I think we can go to the University and meet Tracy there. She's been there taking classes all night and we can take her home.
I hear the scream of the break shoe and feel the train stop and that wakes me up; it's my stop, Central Square. As I hurry to get off I realize, in a flash, two things: I realize that all the time I've been on this train doesn't count against the time I have to live, because the train is somehow outside of time; and I realize that every good band has a train song.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Today's Verse: 20 August 2008
Life will lose continuity
Disintegrate into many parts, episodes
"Today I walked the hall ...
I vaguely remember a book I lent
Someone I thought would be a friend."
Never saw them again. What was that book?
I'll be sick and weak like the others
Wondering at the waste
Yearning for bygone pleasure
Re-imagining the world in my cell
Increasingly self-reliant
While decreasingly able
To excite, amuse, please
Staring at the wall or the glass in the window pane
What will I have learned then?
To love you would suffice.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Friday, August 08, 2008
Today's Verse: 8 August 2008
(Neither true or false)
Whose people search the padding
Of the guilt and justice trap
For an escape hatch
Squeezing wriggling writhing through little cracks
Deeper ever deeper in a dark pocket
Binding themselves tighter
With each effort
To the sickening ends
- Transfixed, impotent, immobile -
They struggle to avoid
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Kosmos: World as Adornment
One day last spring, when Cosmo was still fairly spherical, he was lying on the bed and I started thinking about what it would be like if the Kosmos were like our Cosmo. I didn't get very far, but I'll probably never finish this, so I offer it as a tribute to our sorely missed friend:
Cosmo never answers any questions. Cosmo doesn't like to answer questions. Cosmo doesn't need to answer any questions because the answers are all on the surface. They are all on the outside where they can be seen so there is no need to answer any questions.
Someone wanted to spell it with a k and a z. She said otherwise it would be too heavy. Cosmo is a little heavy but that’s no reason why not to spell his name correctly.
Cosmo is very watchful, but he includes all things in himself. You just have to calculate the distance from the center and you realize that it’s all there.
Cosmo’s unity delights us. Cosmo cannot be divided, even in perception, without sorrow.
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Farewell to Cosmo Lemurstein
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Holiday in Berlin: Full Blown (Reprise)
Friday, July 18, 2008
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Weekending
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Family travels
Since Jimmy regaled us with the globe-trotting exploits of his crew, I thought I would tell you a little news of my own. Ellen and the girls are headed off to Invercargill, New Zealand (see map) for a year in September. Ellen has always wanted to take advantage of some of the international opportunities that exist for medical professionals, and now that the girls can take care of themselves, they are all going to go for it. For Jessie, it is a unique opportunity to get two summer vacations in one year, and for Annie, it is chance to stay out of college and do some backpacking and stuff for a year. I will probably go down for a visit in January, and I hope to turn it into an around-the-world adventure through Mumbai and Europe. I am planning a career change myself, since I have lost interest in computer programming (I was never really that interested in it), so I hope to spend most of the year at one of our local universities, meeting new people and ideas. On the other hand, I could just hide in my office and sink more deeply into depression. What do you think?
BTW: When you've had your car break in half in Zell am Ziller, Rot am Rot is entirely believable. Other folks, however, have been known to refuse to acknowledge the truth about both Rolla Costa and Regula Pickel. I try to forgive them, and I pity them.
peace,
jim
Monday, June 30, 2008
Hey, Bartender
Bartender, I'll have another.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Wish I Was There
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Friday, June 06, 2008
Seven Rooms You Never Imagined In Your House
1. The Instrument Room is dominated by an ominous moaning, growling sound coming from a large metallic cone, shaped like a flower bell. Discarded instruments litter the floor and shelves. Some are rusty and bent, some new and brazen. It’s dark, dusky in here. The whole room kind of vibrates dully. Your palms get sweaty, but you’re smiling like an idiot as you seat yourself at the drum kit and start swinging. The windows are covered by a uniform coat of grime through which you can barely make out a red cardinal in a yew tree.
2. The Mourning Room alternates black and white tiles. The walls are bare. The cupboards closed. There’s a phone but no one calls. There’s a slat for memories in the floor. You put them in there and they leave you alone. The window opens on the sea, dark and still. You see a very long way to the horizon.
3. The Show Room has always a little more air being sucked out of it than comes in. They do it carefully so you don’t suffocate right away. You expect to meet your friends here and sometimes you do. This is where you try not to talk about what you really want. And fail. You want to be here until you get here.
4. The Fast Fun Room – talk about a good time! There’s food and smoke and beer and music and everyone’s talking loud and laughing hard. Your pulse is racing and there are some wild ideas in back of your eyes. Everything’s accelerating until you pass out. When you wake up it’s empty, you smell bad and hurt. You struggle to remember what you told whom. You vaguely remember something you promised or threatened. One by one your friends awake and drag themselves out from under the furniture. They look much better than you feel but still pretty bad. Can’t stand seeing each other.
5. The Temple Room is where you worship temptation. Here you gravely measure and confine the full extent of your desires. It’s a small room without a ceiling. There’s no door but you find it difficult to enter, which you do with breath held and an obsequious tilt to your body. Start here by thinking about everything you can’t have, can’t do, don’t want until your spirit rises above and beyond the limits of the room to encompass the vast reaches of the unknowable.
6. The Room of Dregs is where you’ll find everything you've thrown away and discarded. They collect it at the recycling center and make installation art of it. When they've got enough they bring it home to you and put it right here.
7. The Cameroum is like a foreign country. Everybody’s talking but what are they saying? Everything’s familiar but slightly different. Everybody seems friendly, but what are they laughing at? You’d like something to eat but are afraid you’ll get sick. It’s frustrating but nice – nobody knows you here.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Witchenbye: Hotel
This is Room 100. It’s bare except or the television screaming in white. It never goes off, just gets bigger and smaller.
You may get the Tower Room. It’s exceeding long with high ceiling. Children make their noise en masse outside in the schoolyard. It comes with a fever. Not many choose it or can find it. It may no longer be there.
Room 612 has a view of the parking lot. It’s very reassuring.
On the fourth floor, all the rooms are one. Desks and beds are laid out for efficient work and rest.Please keep the lavatories clean. Or else.
Some choose to stay in the elevator. Saves choosing. They’re pleasant! And they work.
The north staircase is the most used. It doesn’t clean easily and still carries the smells of smokers past. Cockroaches can occasionally be seen. Some food trays may not have been cleared. It can get hot.
Room 202 has vast curtained windows. All the furniture is large. The carpet is thick. There’s a table for the Board of Directors. They’re not here; they rarely come. It’s very clean. You feel someone might walk in at any moment. With a request for you, or to take your request, or maybe with an order. Whatever it is you know you’ll accept it or maybe they’ll accept it. Whatever it is, it will be acceptable.
The central landing on the fourth floor is simply appointed with a couple of desks, chairs and framed pictures from old magazines. The window ledges are rather high. You have to stand almost on tiptoe and lean over to see the busy students and professors hurrying in the courtyard below. It’s a perfect place to consider suicide. Never been done, though.
The terrace is a good place to meet and talk. There’s a flow of people and there are spaces for little groups to form and dissolve naturally. Most people are happiest here, in between where they’re coming from and where they’re going to.
Here’s the first floor reception area. Remember: waiting is not the same as striving.
The men and women who work at the reception desk see you as an object to be processed by screening. Just do what they say. Don’t be affronted if they appear to regard you with curiosity or without curiosity, with or without interest, in a friendly or unfriendly way. They don’t care about you at all. You’re just passing through. Do so quietly.
In Room 100, you’re trying to figure out what the TV’s screaming about. Actually, it’s you screaming.
The power plant is very impressive. Nobody works there, they just oversee it. It works by itself, making power and moving it, heating and cooling. Always turned on and pumping--for your benefit and mine
You can get there by train. Who are all those people, heads nodding? Are they waking or falling asleep? Some are fresh and some are wilted. They all seem to have been riding for a long time.
“Which room is mine?” Which would you like? Choose one you can have and make it your own.
Room 617 has a small kitchen and dining room. A couple of plants here and there could make it quite cheery. Put a home entertainment system with cameras, speakers, phones and screens. Watch yourself or allow someone else to watch you. It’s like picking at a scab or eating potato chips though; you can’t always stop when you want to.
Some prefer the dormitories. They make it easy to be oneself by resembling someone else. Deserted throughout the day, by night they’re saturated with the warm, heavy smell of communal somnolence. What a thrill to escape from the severe rows of identical cots and lockers into wild, turbulent dreams. And how satisfactory the relief at returning, your departure not noticed or remarked upon.
Sometimes you don’t get enough privacy. The sound of someone else shitting, or trying to come, or sobbing may disturb or arouse you. Pretend you’re not aware.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Another project wrapping up
Just wanted to pass on the into that we have basically finished the building at our local swimming pool club. I got involved a few years ago with flipping burgers at swim team fundraisers and just kept getting more involved as the old building deteriorated and we had all kinds of hassles keeping the place afloat. Eventually, we had a reasonably good group of "Board of Directors" and I decided that we needed to replace the building. After a long battle over costs, planning, etc "Why should we get a new building when Jim can duct-tape the old together each Spring (for free)?" etc, etc. we went for it, and it has been a long, stressful Winter and Spring. We passed our final inspection the morning that we were supposed to open and everybody brave enough jumped into the freezing water. Like so many things, it was a huge hassle, but it is done enough that other people can take care of it now, and I can move on to other things. I never did make that exploding meat puppet, but I think that I want to do more appealing art. No clear idea yet.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Witchenbye: Hotel
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
As long as we're talking golf...
I had originally given this program a cool, jazzy soundtrack. But the client didn't like it. So now the music is more than reminiscent of an old Marlboro commercial. Palmer was quite the smoker in his day, but I think he smoked L&Ms and I don't know if they had a song.
Thursday, May 01, 2008
Flying Lady
“Flying lady’s in the rough
Didn’t know love could be so tough…”
Saturday, April 26, 2008
I'm back
I was out in Pennsylvania and New Jersey last week, visiting my family for Passover. I also saw Professor Gilbert, who had returned from DC where he welcomed the Pope to our United States. He tells the story here.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Physics anyone?
On Friday, we took the Peace Bus around town for some adventures and kicked off a new campaign to promote the resignation of Sec. of State Condoleeza Rice. We walked around the State Department some and then went over to the Einstein memorial for a photo shoot. I thought it would look nice since we all have such big heads. Albert's was the biggest.
Today it's rainier, but we're planning on going out to the big Earth Day concert with some of our magical machines and serving Pink Lemonade to the kids. I thought it would be nice to serve cucumber sandwiches as well, but have not generated great interest in that idea so far. A little nosh goes a long way, I always say, when I'm not saying something else. Indeed that is Johny's neighbor and Trinity college professor Brenda in the center of the picture. She lives up the hill from Johny, a block or two from the house I grew up in. I look forward to visiting California again soon.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Tiny Giants
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Today's Verse: 11 April 2008
A thousand miles offshore
Where currents meet
Chase in a circle
Then flow on
Girdling the globe
Eventually to return
With more trash
Nothing's lost or forgotten
It's displaced beyond our ken
Pity the souls who lived there
Suffocated on the remains
Of somebody else's good time
Wash away my guilt and care
Wash away, wash away shame
I never wanted to hurt or kill
(Since school)
Come sweet redeemer and purify
Relieve me of desire for plastics,
Polymers, petroleum products
Wash away
Let my bath water cleanse and sanctify
Bring forth everlasting life
There's a fountain, fed by a spring
Flowing since birth
Last year it gushed a flood
Now it's drying up
Exhausted
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Today's Verse: 10 April 2008
You brought
Distracts me from my game
Can't not imagine
Its lifeless gaze
Of displacement
I know it's not human
Anymore
But animation souvenirs
May linger over the immobile
Clump of its "features"
When I serve
Its dissembled presence
Intercedes between the toss
And contact
And looms up in my mind's eye
In the brief interlude
That the ball hangs over my head
No longer rising
Not falling yet
What prompted you to bring it here?
Now I can't get rid of it.
Tiny Giants
Today's Verse: 9 April 2008
On the way back home
All the way back home
I received your vision
Of a better future
Of maps and charts
Too late I saw
The lines that connect
Near and far
Ease stress
And improve the quality of life
Although some misfits
May bemoan perceived aesthetic defects
(The median of gray, concrete phalli bound by wire?)
How could I but applaud your enthusiasm
Selfless devotion to engineering
Global approach and ambition?
It all comes too late
I'm returning to the past
Where problems don't require resolution
In fact there are no problems
It just is
Was
At the same time
I'm happy here there
Good luck and keep in touch
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
I am Cured!
So, we had these meet and greet passes, and got to spend 15 minutes alone with the band before the show. Last I remember Robert Smith, he was standing in a child's wading pool wearing too much makeup and singing about Japanese babies. He still wears too much makeup. But he and the band were so hospitable, I had to give them high marks for fan relations. And they played for over three hours, showing an admirable level of dedication for a band that's been around since we were living in Morges.
Anyway, just another entry for the "Who would have thunk it?" file.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Today's Verse: 27 March 2008
Rescued
From an Italian circus
Tortured for the public
By fish and reptile
Their fellow freaks
Regret
Their good fortune
A sad affair
It reflects poorly on us all
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Monday, March 17, 2008
The Blushing Groom
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Thursday, March 13, 2008
We said goodbye to Tim the Cat last night. She was known variously as: Timsy, Stim, Smitty, Mitts, Skibbitty, the Kid, The Boo, The Boodle, the Bandit of Love, Mean Little Kitty, MLK and the Baby Nurse Shark. She was rescued from under the Grand Teton Music Festival Hall, where I was working when Juliana were first living together in 1992. I was cleaning up at the end of the season and kept hearing a loud meow. An intrepid electrician named Tim Jacobsen crawled on his belly and rescued her from a hole beneath the Festival Hall. She was so small she fit in his pocket. She was black and white and matched our other cat Random, so we kept her. We named her for her rescuer though she was, of course, a girl. She had blue eyes, a little pointy tail and a mask on her face. She was only a few days old and had to be bottle-fed, but still had the loud meow that had first brought her to my attention.
When she was only a few months old, she took a stereo speaker to the head, which was nearly fatal. It left her dizzy, cross-eyed, averse to being touched or petted and frequently bad tempered. She once held Juliana’s mother at bay when the latter was in our kitchen baking a birthday cake. She gave my mother the kitty come-on and my mom, despite having been warned, reached in to pet her and was rewarded with a bloody scratch.
Though she wasn't too partial to me, or the other cats or the dog, she was somewhat overfond of Juliana. She liked to lie curled up in her armpit at night, growling if she dared roll over or shift her weight. She always had a favorite warm place: under the table by the heater in our first house, in the patch of sunlight that moved along the floor throughout the day at the Linn ranch and in front of the floor-to-ceiling radiator that we called The Wall of Fire in our place in North Beach. She would lie there contentedly with her eyes closed, growling slightly as I walked past and occasionally taking a swipe at my bare feet. She spent most of our time in Woodland under the daybed upstairs in her so-called Norma Desmond phase. Like the rest of us, she seemed to prefer Berkeley, and found new favorite perches and slept on the bed again.
Juliana had told me a while ago that Tim was undergoing kidney failure, though she seemed as cheerily ill-humored as ever. In the last week she stopped eating, not even tuna or scrambled eggs. She still could jump in the shower to lick up the water, an old favorite activity, and had taken up yowling in the middle of the night, the same famous meow that saved her life fifteen years ago. Last night was the end. It’s tough to lose a friend and we miss her.
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Friday, February 22, 2008
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Monday, February 11, 2008
Today's Verse: 11 February 2008
The Mystery Channel
Occultish devotee of
Transcendence
Transformation
Grub
The void's hungry
Makes the animal
Locomote
Makes the engine
Makes the vehicle
Move
Can't stop making
Swallowing
Quicksand
Can be slow
Torture