Sunday, May 31, 2009

Disparity

My dad is in china, my mom is in Massachusetts, my big sister is in San Francisco, my little sister is in Italy...

Could we please get farther apart?  That would be awesome...  Thanks.

Disparity.  Lack of similarity or equality.  Probably not typically used to describe an aproximal relationship but fuck if I'm going to figure out what the term for distal is.  

Anyway, I digress.  I found out my father was on a flight to China about 2 hours before he hopped his connection in NYC and took off for the north pole to spatially warp seven thousand miles in a 13 hour hiatus from internets.  And I was sad.  I don't want my father to be 13 hours and seven thousand miles away! 

It makes me appreciate the distance from Brooklyn to the Lower East Side.  It makes me wonder if Queens is too far away.  If 34th street is a bonus or a burden.  It makes me wonder how people stay connected when they can't video chat san francisco to ask, honestly, and just yesterday, "should I get a haircut?"  And your ex girlfriend who you love to pieces, who is actually at a wedding in Indiana, says, "Yes.  It's too long.  Get it cut.  Gotta go, goodbye."  

So you walk down the street to your brooklyn hair stylist who has half a head of hair and a full on cross-hatched shaved half-head of non-hair, and she takes you right to the back and washes your head and cuts your hair and sends you on your way within 30 minutes.  You walk back home and video chat your aforementioned ex and she picks up and say, "Looks great.  I'd do you." And then she hangs up.  Because she's busy.  You haven't seen this girl in over a year but video chat makes it just that easy to stay visibly shaken when her blue eyes pierce your full-screen and her Midwestern accent shadows all the time she's spent on the coast-lands.  She's totally just joking about doing you, but you hold on to it like you haven't dated an available woman in over a baker's dozen of 67 hour increments.  

And you set up a gmail account for your mom so she can weigh in the next time your hair gets shaggy.  And you mapquest the distance to china and find out it's only 6,800 miles so you decide to take up triathlons.  Because triathletes are fucking hot.  And that's only 68 iron mans.  Rock on, rockstars, it's all uphill from Sunday.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Lines Lines Everywhere...

I was re-reading my last blog post as I sit on my fire escape in the dappled light of a five 'o clock rise (from a 3pm nap), trying to shake the last of my fuzzy dreams from my introverted head amidst an afternoon hum punctuated by ice cream trucks and explosions of laughter from the myriad backyard barbecues surrounding me, when it occurred to me that the extremes I've reached in the course of 2 Saturdays warrants a explanation for why the last one was so memorable.  

When was the last time you crossed a line?  When was the last time you sat down to think about what it means to cross a line?  And why a LINE in the first place?  

I want to picture us all in some three dimensional space moving collectively in a fourth dimension, like a cloud shifting shape across the flat of the sky.  But instead, it appears that we're towering over a plane crossed egregiously by proprieties, trapping us within some n-sided figure we can call a territory.  Perhaps these territories overlap.  Perhaps every edge is a different color, or a different degree of transparent, and our shapes are uniquely our own with this added dimension of opaqueness.  Maybe some shapes are fairly circular and you can move far in any direction before you get to a line that forces you into a quandary.  Perhaps some shapes are hatched, winding, pocked, or spiraled and you're forced to reach an edge at a far more frequent rate than your circular neighbors.  

Maybe it isn't a series of two-dimensional boundaries trapping us like pong between a wall and a paddle.  Maybe it's like a laser show and the lines don't make a shape at all but instead force us to weave through our lives imperceptibly shifting our course but never letting us into the space directly behind the line without some transgression.  Though, even in my most subdued post-nap state, it's obvious that a two-dimensional line defense can be breached by even the least forceful of hops or, in the case of three-dimensional laser shows, a minimally flexible limbo.

So what makes this 'line in the sand' idiom so meaningful?  Shouldn't we be talking about busting through an infinite plane?  A real wall without doors to knock against?   Real boundaries to bounce back from?  Real decisions to weigh and make weighty?  Why a line in the first place?  Because boundaries are contrived?

As my weekend, yet again, started out with a series of strobe lights and endless dancing and inter-party txting coordination, I realized that I have, of late, crossed lines that make lines seem too easy to cross.  I miss the lines of yesteryear, fraught with consequence and ramifications.  Real barbed wire, real edges bordering chasms.  These days, as I cross line after line, and I cease hitting the weighty decision-makers of youth, the rate at which my shape is opening up is alarming; the transparency clause overtakes the color-schema and I've begun to lose track of where my dead-ends are, how to back out of pockets, how to embrace structure, how to navigate my shape without shifting my shape.  

I think this happens to everyone.  You know where your wall-lines are and you realize your visible lines aren't the impenetrable infinite planes you thought they were.  You realize your shape is flexible, that it's not all of us but ONE of us in a cloud tracking across the sky, dispersing, converging, shifting density and altitude like we control the physicality of our worlds.  But what seems pressing in knowing this is I don't quite know whether to electrify my softer edges, build titanium walls, avoid lines altogether or just accept the responsibility for the shape of my life.    

So if progress comes at the expense of growth, growth comes at the expense of experience, and experience means tacking your way through the laser show regardless of how much you get burned, why start out in shapes in the first place?  Training wheels with which to respect neighborly relations without territorial border-wars?  Don't even get me started on the interconnectedness of all these lines; where the pushing against or snapping of one line shifts every other line into a new alignment, like an alternate universe, prime for sequels ad infinitum...  

Summarily, I don't think I regret any of the lines I've limboed in my life (or slashed or hopped or been burned by).  I do sincerely hope that none of the new lines I hop across border a chasm but I also think I'll make it my mission to obliterate the concept of perceptible shape as quickly as possible.  I don't want to be attached to a territory.  Blind me and make me jog through the lay of the land by muscle memory.  I mean, really, how else can we know how far we can run in a lifetime if we're not running as fast as we can across an infinite plane, serpentine and free?  

I guess what I'm saying is that, in the end, know your bounds but, more importantly, live your open spaces.  And if you come across a line you think you may want to cross, trust your gut, chances are, it'll open you up to a track of sky that's endless and blue.  And then run run run your socks off.  It's the only way to get there. 

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Quantifying the Qualitative. I heart my life.

It has occurred to me that I have yet to blog-ument my weekend.  I could tell this in story format but I would probably miss all the really good parts.  Like the freshly scrubbed hulls bobbing in the water, sparkling in the sunsets, guarding the wind-swept beaches rife with endangered birds nesting in the dunes...  But those things…  We’ve all seen those things before.

 

So instead:  My Memorial Day weekend started at 5:30 pm on Thursday as I housed a frosty brew at the Clam Shack across from the Fire Island ferry.  It didn’t end until Monday at 10pm when I downed my last Budweiser on a rooftop deck in the Lower East Side.  All with the people I love.

 

Everything in between can be summed up in bullets.

 

  • 10 cases of beer
  • 2 cases of liquor
  • 1 case of wine
  • 17 beds in a single house (1 on the roof)
  • 2 tennis balls fished out of the ocean
  • 3.5 miles to Cherry Grove via water taxi
  • 17 hours of dancing
  • 1 actual run-for-exercise (countless collective runs-for-exercise)
  • 5 unofficial noise complaints from the cantankerous neighbors (1 visit approximately 2 hours into the weekend)
  • 0 official noise complaints
  • 1 well-loved beer pong/flip cup table
  • 13 MILFs spotted in town
  • 1.5 gas grills (18 packs of burgers, 16 hotdogs, 4 sausages, 3 jars of salsa, 2 tubs of pretzels, 1 jar of nutella, 18 limes, ½ a spatula)
  • 2 trips to aforementioned cherry grove ( = 1 billion million gays)
  • 5 old women, 3 gay boys, 2 straight girls, and a stripper
  • 30 minutes of tanning on the beach
  • 1 endless sci-fi walk with my favorite person
  • 5 new facebook friends, 3 new friend-friends
  • 1 investment banker (who mostly works out); 1 crazy-eyed girlfriend
  • 357 guidos
  • 5 family dinners
  • 1 half-family…  ‘nap’
  • 7 minutes under the house (getting a volleyball)
  • 2 adorable dogs
  • 23 body-shots
  • 5 bottles of vodka, 2 bottles of jack, 1.5 bottles of tequila and 1 bottle of jager’s worth of shot-shots
  • 15 people with 14 closer friends and 5040 minutes worth of new memories to smirk about
  • 522720 minutes until Memorial Day 2010.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Everyone i know is drinking or drunk...

Lies. Everyone I know is at work right now. And i'm 3 hours from the city that holds my heart. And my propensity to filter absolute trite bullshit.

Why do we love the crushing population of new York? Why do we adore walking into bars where nobody knows our names? The cheers of this world is niagra bar in the east village. 100% accessible by drunk with a photo booth to capture the revelr and a different bartender every night so you don't have anyone keeping tabs on you.

I'm too old for this. I want the girl I miss to be the girl i'm with.

I want the beer cooler to fill itself. I want to nap and wake up younger. How long does it take to grow happy? I'm beginning to think it takes a quadratic and a regression and nothing will ever be perfect.

My line of best fit will be made out of microns and cinnamon and Ralph Lauren polo sport. And it'll be awesome. I'll figure it out when I sober up. Oh how blogging is far more interesting when I can blog remotely. Drunk. On fire island. While the rest of the suits toil away in the concrete cubicles.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Monday, May 18, 2009

Done and done.

I just figured out...

How to post via email via blackberry from loft bed. Amazing. Coming soon to a blog near you: posting via txt via blackberry from said loft bed.

Other things I thought about tonight: without an idiot president, politics are so purely about political things... This is mildly upsetting because it's hard to stay truly informed these days when you actually have to make an effort to know more than the president.

Also: I think gay sex is the only thing humans do entirely without an underlying "survival"/prepare for the apocalypse driver... Selfish bastards. And yet, how evolved!

Things that may or may not have led me to these musings: discovering remote blogging, dwelling on the evolution of my blog, deciding it may have regressed, wondering how Bristol's baby is faring in the wilds of Alaska, lions (i'm a geo-tard), tabby kittens, cute biracial babies, obama, biracial adults, gay sex.

Huh.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Corn rows and graduation caps... gun shot means go.

This weekend was...  momentous.   For starters, my childhood best friend managed to accomplish something I've only seen infrequently and usually by people without the slightest bit of infused personability (I can say this because my close friends are still going through it and the 1, maybe, that's already done is definitely not reading my blog right now).  She graduated from medical school.  She's officially in charge of all sorts of life-like things.  Namely:  people.  

As momentous as this was for her and her family, and, well, me and my family by proxy of love, it's generally a momentous occasion not because of the technicalities, but because her journey through the technicalities displays a degree of dedication that blows me away.

My childhood cohort has wanted this since forever.  She wanted to be an emergency medicine doctor, potentially specializing in pediatrics, and now I'm in a position to actually consider moving to her city to have children so when they break things they'll be fine.  

I guess I'm still in a bit of shock that I've watched this girl hold on to her dreams through all sorts of adversity and yet I'm stumbling to be able to even express how important it is to me that she made it.  She is a testament to will power and fortitude and kindness and sacrifice and all those things whose absence make your dreams seem unattainable and far far far away.  

At the same time, I have to wonder how much of this feeling of awe rests in the fact that she's unequivocally committed now.  Like.  Committed.  Like, she's doing a residency in Boston in emergency medicine and she has the debt to prove it.  She's starting something that she'll be doing for a long long long long time.  (Hopefully long enough to treat my aforementioned accident-prone children.)  She is and will forever be a doctor.  As of 2pm yesterday it was official and it will be official until the day she can't tap out a script for her infirmed long-time friends who, at 80 something years old, just want to drift off into oblivion - legally.  

This woman started something when she was a CHILD, made it through the process without veering in any appreciable direction that would compromise the vector of her mission, and then flat out committed to a lifetime of emergencies.  Empirical proof that the picking of a direction isn't an epilleptic event or that committing to a profession doesn't have to be at the goading of a hand grenade...  I would call and ask her how she's holding up today (in the aftermath of this momentous committment), but I'm afraid she'll still be that effusive, brilliant, committed, driven, focused woman I was drunk with on Saturday.  And then what?  

Then what excuses will I have?  

Let's just say I'm stalking my career right now.  And someday soon I'll pounce and slay my chosen vegetable patch with gusto and I'll bring the bits and pieces up to Boston for emergency medical attention and I'll tell my ER doctor just how much of an inspiration she's been in my life.  This doctor, who as a girl of 12 once asked her priest if I was going to Hell for not believing in God.  He said yes.  I'm pretty sure she stuck around all these years to convince me that there is a God so that I don't go to hell.  (She's really that great, she'd totally do it.)  But it backfired.  1) Now I'm toying with the idea of starting a new religion convincing the world that SHE'S a God and 2) I thoroughly believe her priest was merely a stout, omniscient vegetarian.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Facebook is the new wink.

A:  "So should I ask out that girl from Proposition?"

Me:  "YES!  Do it!!"

A:  "Just txt her?"

Me:  "Wait, are you FB friends yet?  You should be FB friends for a few days before you switch to txting."

A:  "Yeah.  I put a msg in the friend request.  She wrote on my wall.  I wrote on her wall."

Me:  "Ok, that's fine then.  Switch to txt."

A:  "But I don't even know if I'm going to Eden on Wednesday."

Me:  "Okayy... ask her if she wants to go to Cubby on Thursday.  Or back to Prop on Friday?"

A:  "If I ask her out it won't be to a lesbian bar."

Me:  "So this is a hang-out, not an ask-out."

A:  "I'll ask her out to dinner or something."

Me:  "You really are the boy."

A:  "Yeah yeah, help me.  What should I txt her?  When?"

Me:  "You realize this is turning into my next blog, right?"

A:  "Yes."

Me:  "Ok, then txt her now and ask if she's 'around' on Thursday and wants to grab dinner at the place across from Cubbyhole.  This way if it turns platonic, you've got a backup plan."

A:  "I mean, she made out with me and asked for my number.  I hope she knows it's a date."

Me:  "I might have actual work to do.  If you can't hit a beach ball with a canoe paddle from 3 feet away, I can't help you."

Monday, May 11, 2009

Excuse me sir, do you believe in jesus?

For lunch today, I tripped out to my chiropractor for some bone-cracking, muscle probing fun.  Her dedication to distract me as her thumbs gauged my erector spinae and internal/external abdominal obliques was admirable.  If not useless.  Because DAMN, woman, fuck if I'm coming back next week!!!!

On the way home I was stopped by a dapper gent in a navy suit with a pink striped shirt.  A short guy with a fade and some shadow-stubble around his jawline.  I assumed he was gay and he looked lost.  So when he indicated that he had a question for me I quickly oriented myself to my geography and was prepared to point out an avenue, a neighborhood, a subway entrance or the nearest Starbucks.  

Alas.  He stumbled through an as yet unrehearsed preamble about his organization and a survey of sorts and then he went in for the kill, "Do you know of the bible?  Do you believe in the bible?"

I wanted to say yes to the first and no to the second but then I, too, was afflicted by a case of the stumbles - he tricked me!!!  Pseudo-gay bastard was converting from WITHIN!!!   So before I could defend myself I got a follow-up, "Do you believe in the biblical mother?  The heavenly female form?"  

Heh. 

What an easy way out.  

Sucker.    

Yes.  No.  No.  Yes.  *insert walking away thinking about the beauty of pallindromes*

Friday, May 8, 2009

Death by Taxes

I woke up this morning to a few really great bits of communication.  The first one was a txt from a girl I've been chasing for months:  "I'm sorry, I was out of line, I'm really busy today but let's talk later."  Dun Dun Dun...   The second one was from my tax-people.  They sent me an email about "tips for surviving unemployment"...  

What?!?              ...                        They think I'm unemployed?  

Now, a speed bump in the road of a relationship seems like a standard growing pain but my tax people think I'm unemployed??!?  

Let me reiterate.  

The people who do my taxes have no idea that I get paid.  By anyone.  And I'm not really sure how to feel about that.  A little sad, a little ignored, a little unimportant...  Like my $29 per return isn't an admirable fraction of their business - And I worked in 5 states last year!!   ...  Frankly, I'm disappointed that such a bright, personable, intimate company with the friendliest virtual support desk has no idea who I am and/or has mis-fired their segmentation emails so egregiously that I feel alienated and insignificant.   oh H&R block, how could you?!

But I guess it's a good thing I have selective reading.  Because if one of these bits of communication had come without the other, I'd have either totally missed the absurdity of the second as I'd typically ignore H&R block for another 8 months anyway (seasonal affection disorder), or I'd have nothing with which to deflect the seriousness of the first.  Which is, after all, the point of this blog.  Deflecting seriousness with objectivity and befuddlement.  

I mean...  Really?  Don't you know me?  Don't you know how much this hurts??  How personally I'm going to take this?!                  You did my TAXES!!!!!   

Monday, May 4, 2009

Swearing It In

I think I'm due for a revelation/revolution mashup (reevaluation*?).

I haven't decided what this will entail yet. And is this something you can just decide? Or does it have to be something you stumble into like divine intervention? (read: dumb luck)

If it's the former, here are the options I've toyed with tonight:

1) Discover gluten allergy, give up gluten products, shop at the organics store, pick up crunchie chick, live sustainably.
2) Discover newest fitness craze, drag my ass out of bed at 6am every morning to participate in said craze, don't drink booze to maximize fitness impact, pick up sober chick, live forever.
3) Discover new job, work fewer hours, revel in hobbies, pick up crafty chick, live everything.
4) Discover gluten allergy extends to alcohol in general, go to the gym more because I'm not hung over (ever), start a new company, draw/write/play the piano, become well balanced, pick up wifey chick, live happily.
5) Discover blogging, blog incessantly about revelation/revolution from couch with mild buzz and no girlfriend... live.

Or I could just make light of the fact that I'm antsy and want to either change jobs, apartments or significant others and it's a recession, I signed a lease and I'm single. And it's been raining for DAYS.

Forced introspection. Not a fan... but so so necessary.

*Jenny D, Dinner, approx 9:17pm, May 4th, Heartland Brewery, NY, NY, US <3

Friday, May 1, 2009

A rebuttal to the deleted drunk ramblings of last night...

Everything We Want

 

waves crashing at

wind weaving sparks through a gap in the crowd--

it carries away the drum thump

from the cleft of a jacket

burrowed deep as a pulse

rocking static through poly-blend

 

after the fire

a fortunate fever shivers

sand-lined shoulders washed over by

sweaty hands groping the tepid steam

 

of bitter romantic ideal, the vagary of deflection,

a midnight ship spent cruising the barbed piers

to find sex-in-the-morning musk on your sheets.

 

like a three-sided thrum

spilling wine speckled sand

gives way to the sunrise.

clothes pinned to the carpet

spread smoke-scents and curled tufts of blonde,

sparks on the skin

slipping bravely through

 

fingers

 

palmed neatly in pairs

attempt to de-robe the naked

pale sinews,

a diesel engine

sleeping and chaffed,    

as continents keep the oceans from eddies.

 

a lull in bloodless beats,

double-tap maddening clicks of death,

torches still scald the black

slapping of muscled walls.

 

bleating hearts

from afar.