Tuesday, October 24, 2006

axiomatic

Saturdays are 2 pots of coffee, baking bacon, laundry, putting the phone book on the shelf, returning books to the case, time spent hiking at the Teepee grounds, random phone conversations, contemplative moods, uncritical reading, dishes, acknowledgment of blue skies, attraction to the present here and now, stomach rumblings, late showers, wrong number callers, early trips to the post office, devotional hours to music, driving w/o a seatbelt, trips to the Amish store to stock up on Gatorade and red beans and rice, polite exchanges with the bonneted Amish girls or the owner who has an aircast on his leg and strident Civil War facial hair, eruptive bird songs, certain hours of complacency, and a general air of solitude and above-the-fray immediacy before the week begins anew.

blast from the baptism by fire past



Standardized test day. After the first 50 minute bubble filling session, students hurry to get out into the sunshine away from the countdown of the ticking clock. They are outside for ten minutes, then twelve – I exit the stale air of the classroom, walked out to the cement courts where the boys are going up and down in sloppy mid-transition mode, looping passes picked off every other possession and the swift shift in momentum back to the other basket. They are untethered and know it, so I am unsurprised when my calls to come back inside fall on intentionally deaf ears. A student breaks away after a long rebound, loping down the court to the nearest basket. I am hot, zipped up in a sweater, impatient for the last basket so we can resume another round of drudgery. It doesn’t seem like April can end soon enough.
Two or three players are closing in on the ballhandler at acute angles, and he jumpstops and gives them a convincing headfake. Abram – 5’3”, longish hair that swings from side to side hiding his eyes – goes up for a block and moves slowly into the ballhandler, who understandably ducks a little into a compact shape to absorb the blow. Abram’s calves are near the other player’s hunched shoulders, until he tumbles over backwards and careens downward, the back of his head leading the way.
The sound, I suppose, is what I wait for. My heart is in my throat – the recognition of what is about to happen surges through me. the instant I see him tip past the fulcrum point, regular as a seesaw, I picture his head meeting the concrete – the downward angle is that severe. At the last possible moment he sticks out a skinny little arm which crumples underneath his weight. The sound arrives, not a crack really, more like the dull liquid impact of something overripe impacting a solid surface. Everything stops and comes back again in a moment: the exclamations of the other players, the cracked, terrified voice of the injured student entangled in his own words. I have been in motion for a bit, probably since before he met the concrete. It’s obvious something is broken, but I hope I will not encounter the slick protrusion of white bone that comes with a compound fracture. The others spread apart like elevator doors when I’m within five yards of the basket, and it’s obvious that the arm is no longer put together as God intended, but as far as I can tell it’s a run-of-the-mill break, which fact does little to assuage the kid experiencing it.
I take him by the right shoulder we fast walk towards the middle school entrance before doing a 90 degree right hand turn towards the high school entrance. A senior I know who’s just become a father courteously opens the door for us, and I yell to the secretary to call Abram’s mom as we move down the long corridor connecting the two schools. He’s sweating and shaking and crying, lathered up with nowhere to hide from the pain, and the 60 yard corridor takes us past classrooms where kids have gathered at the door to see from what origin the curse words and semi-coherent calls for help are coming.
“ow-we, ow-we, ow-weeeeeeeeeeeeee” is what I seem to recall most, though my memory on the matter is not gospel by any means. The docile, mousy nurse meets us in the doorway to her office and has me set the student down in a chair as she rummages for a bandage. She asks me to hold his arm as she wraps an airsplint around it, and it’s clear I have no choice in the matter. The kid has gone to some atavistic, sweat-induced state of rocking and shaking his head from side to side, which makes setting the break that much more difficult. Then I am relieved of duty by a higher up and walk back to the classroom, ready to begin the second stage of the bubble tests, wondering what self-delusive rhetorical trickery I had played on myself when I became convinced that I could enter into this without the slightest idea what I was doing.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

chigga-check, microphone-wreck.


This weekend’s habitat: the hospital’s radiology department. This weekend’s buzzword: malignancy. This year’s overriding theme: alternate possibilities are figments. Also:
Cooking can be enjoyable. Challenging yourself, facing long odds, eating atrocious meals made by people who either like or want to have like you, taking vitamins, washing your hands, abstaining from voicing your unpopular opinions – I’m not really concerned with any of these right now. Two more periods.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Chew on this gristle








<--------------------- Word on the street is, he knew not to what love of a woman amounted. Interesting eyes, though.








As someone with an almost pathological need to read words, digest stories, etc., i am intrigued by a conversation going on right now over at slate between two men who make stories out of words.

the one, walter kirn, lives somewhere within five to eight hours of me. i once read a personal essay he wrote on meritocracy (large topic) and entering an Ivy League school with a very common, small-town middle class background and an autodidact's penchant for being insecure about origins (pathway to large topic). i could, as the kids these days say, Identify.

The other one, Gary Shteyngart, wrote a book called Absurdistan, part of which was excerpted in the New Yorker and read by this guy here. It was a story worth taking a second look at.

I don't know much more than this about either gentlemen, but their early remarks have plumbed questions that nag me on occasion, when I lie in bed staring at the ceiling and listen to the kids outside my window roleplay scenes from Boyz N the Hood with distinctly Indian accents. They are (the gentlemen's remarks) intelligently rendered, which is why I gave you the link above.



So. It seems to me that they are talking about stuff that matters to people who have an almost pathological need to read words, digest stories, etc. and/or people who try to write little collections of words that amount to fictive worlds that, to break into the idiom, "afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted." Stuff like how technology and the first person narrator-friendly world it has engendered may cataclysmically cripple fiction, what stories do and why the matter, why email makes it easier to break up with someone (Holla! Been there, had that done to me), and other sundry topics. Plus there's little feel-good nuggets of an autobiographical
nature that may resonate with Core Audience in gratifying ways.

Here is something from Gary:

Before I became a novelist, I attended the Oberlin Institute for Special People out in the American Midwest, a school brimming with ambitious musicians; clever sculptors; sexy, muscular dancers; and other hard-core lovers of the arts. When I graduated in the mid-'90s, I moved to New York, where I met all kinds of people, some from the Institute, some not. We were a motley group to be sure, hardly a writers' collective, and, in fact, only I ended up pursuing writing. The rest followed their lifestyle choices to become a lawyer for an investment bank, a film student, a professor of American history, an economist, an inmate of a Florida penitentiary, and so forth.
We weren't walking "spectacles of expression," to borrow your words, but we were curious, and our curiosity was rooted in literature. We talked about books casually. We didn't strain to find meaning in them. Our lives were a complex weave of love and wonder, desire and melancholy, alcohol and drug use, friendship and romance, fear of death and fear of life, work and more work. But our lives were also peopled by fictional characters who sauntered through our waking days and lingered in our dreams. We saw the dot-com boom through the gargantuan appetites of John "Slick" Self, the protagonist of Martin Amis' Money (set in the Thatcher era, but close enough). We saw our crappy paralegal jobs through the prism of Bartleby and wondered when we, too, would "prefer not to."
When our hearts were broken, we cried into our Pilseners while referencing Kundera's hapless lovers. We walked through New York, as literary a city as the world has ever seen, with everyone from Wharton's Newland Archer to Ellison's Invisible Man by our side. This wasn't about education or self-expression or our lights shining brightly after we were gone. We weren't out to learn anything about ourselves. We were out to have fun while assuaging our miseries, and any moron back then could have told you that without books, the good life simply wasn't possible.


Nice evocation, right? Except it's kind of discomfitting to be reminded of the celerity with which you are succumbing to a gradual letting go of the social configuration that is your tribe, or have already let go of it, and in the process your book-lens superpowers gradually diminish through lack of practice. I liked that life (cue nostalgia flute, Willy). I chose to leave it, not realizing quite what the leaving would do to the book-lensing, but acquiring in the process the means to also leave behind some of the technological detritus that this conversation takes as one of its animating poles. I wouldn't deign to call this a tie, as it consists of two things that do not interact except in that from which they originate: the Urban to Country migration. [Insert transition to autobiographical conundrum-tackling about the future present tense]

And I'm at that bridge, or I guess I'm at that Frostian two-pathed fork, where I must consider taking semi-Ludditism and Montana hideawaying to a more advanced evolutionary condition, or abandoning it as my personal early to mid-twenties escapade that served a purpose of delaying my ascendancy into a respectable, professional life. This life is sort of what you would expect (coherent, stable, with future cash outlays and probable ring-exchanging) with a few early twenty-first century updates (hummus, 401K, solar panels? who knows?). The other life consists of growing a much larger beard, taking away all screens from life, finding a cabin, buying a chainsaw, and scrounging out a semi-impoverished, but relatively unentangled existence.

Being somewhat NeoAristotelian, I suppose I will cut a middle path, and cheers to that. I have no desire to dissipate the ebb and flow conflict of the desire to satiate consumptive desire and the desire to satiate the desire for ascetic purity. But I'm edging towards incomprhensiability. The backdrop of my personal conundrum is the larger question of how one ought to stand in relation to modernity, which encompasses a lot I know but I couldn't bear to parse it out as how one stands in relation to modernity's offal, "progress."
Now it doesn't seem that "one" (you or me, I guess, is what I should say) has to have done the required reading for this term to notice that there's no reason to feel obliged to even ask this question, much less be catalyzed into searching for an answer. Why not just drink, eat, talk, watch, sweat, shit, fuck, scratch, and periodically reflect on the sum effect of these activities until it comes time to die? Books, in my experience, are why not. They, or the change they catalyze in me, won't allow for not giving into curiosity, which means they won't allow you to not wrestle with the pangs of uncertainty that come on curiosity's platter.

Now I am required to exit the building before the alarm goes off (I type this from the classroom in which I teach, housed in a school that has a security system, the existence of which system requires that I call a 1800 number and inform someone - usually Amanda or Alexis - that I am venturing into the classroom for X amount of time. They ask that X be both very specific and rigorously hewed to. Is why i go now).

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

7 Seconds had this one song that went duh-nuh-na, nuh-ni-ni-na-na

The kids are going to be OK if your expectations involve uniforms that list first names and credit reports that resemble late Rothko paintings.

The kids are going to be OK if you have no faith in the idea that making it in society involves knowing how to spell society.

The kids are going to be OK if we roll back rolling back welfare rolls and tax the top 1% at double their current 35% (so you make $100 million, you get to keep $30 million of it: This simple fact makes me wary of anyone who is literally a redistributionist. That seems utterly crazy to me. Maybe elitism is my wont in the near future, says the guy who just recently crawled out of the lowest tax bracket, and not by much).

The kids are going to be OK if we could just get back to all those things that we all believe in and none of them actually experience: strong families, functional relationships, missionary-style sex, non-acquisitive morally grounded role models who stick it out more than two years (ZING!), and so on.

The kids are going to be OK if you leave em alone and let em figure it out, yo. Fo Real.

The kids are going to be OK if drugs were legalized and pauper graves became the rage.

The kids are going to be OK compared to the rest of us, based on econometric data and the sound of the Zeitgeist doing a header into the screen we all can't help but stare at.

We made it, right?

Monday, October 09, 2006

Stringer Bell is dead and gone. You feel me? + a dose of paranoia


Dreary fall morning, with maize-yellow leaves whipping around in concentric circles – a good kind of morning, where you get done with a walk and your sweatshirt smells like weather and you reach the perfect equilibrium between outside temperatures and the increase in body heat you work up over two miles.

OHMYGOD! NORTH KOREA HAS NUKES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

A quiet weekend – trip to Miles City for October’s share of debauchery, football + muscle relaxers on Saturday, and a bit of homework yesterday, plus the Wire. Strange pervasive ambivalence that may be related to seasonal shift – plus we lose an hour sometime soon, right?

KUNG YUM KIM IS A MEGALOMANIAC DICTATOR WITH WORLD HISTORICAL/COSMOLOGICAL ASPIRATIONS, AND NOW THAT THEY HAVE NUKES WE’RE GOING TO GO AFTER THEM IN TYPICALLY NON-MULTINATIONAL FASHION (WHO ELSE EVEN has TROOPS ANYMORE?) AND THIS WILL NOT GO WELL. WE’RE GOING TO ALL DIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Friday, October 06, 2006

ninety nine.

Tone deaf and bone weary, these days have seemed. Let’s say the Democrats get a majority in the House, and then they meet in a large cavernous board room with oak walls and luxurious 19th century portraits of people who fought for the People to decide whether to pursue impeachment against Monsieur Bush. Would you cheer them on?

Honestly, I’m too worn out for all that. I don’t want to see another circus, even though I know that to cavil against the uproarious and unwashed in our culture is to battle against historical precedent. Andrew Jackson on down, and probably prior to that as well – we like spectacles and the public downfalls of the picaresque. We like loud talkers, fast spenders, loose women, strong whiskey, and so on, even if our liking is confined to an exfoliating mythology that digs deeper, rather than spreads westerly, now that the frontier is gone.

What does this have to do with Mr. Foley and old frumpy Hastert? I have always had Hastert, DeLay, and Cheney coupled in my mind as the most unlikely overachievers that we could possible disgorge from the middling maw of the late baby boom generation. DeLay was a god damn exterminator, and if I recall correctly Hastert coached football for some odd years before making his unlikely ascent. What is this planet?

“Only connect.” Of course the man who said that was British. Connect with what, exactly? Across space? I don’t know about that one. Space seems to mediate any interaction to a degree that renders uncertainty necessary. Or at least conscious acceptance of the possibility that you are operating under very different principles than other people. But disconnect – been there done that. It has its fructifying rewards, but they are unbecoming of anyone who wants no truck with narcissism. Anyway. As I was saying.

Thursday, October 05, 2006

yea

The anorexic liked to visit the farmers’ market to palpate the produce and test herself in a public place.

The young man with a winestain crescent moon birth mark sat in the meadow reading Annie Dillard and tried to channel the recondite streams of thought that gurgled through his head. Then a four wheeling enthusiast ran over him.

The puke on the wall was there before the party started. The kids don’t party like they used to.

Dyslexic seeks dog to take the odium out of sodium.


Give me the coarse and rank stuff that is headed down a crack that leads to nowhere. Give me the illiterate and the FAS-addled, the stutterers and the twitchers, those who couldn't bring their minds to do what their hearts cry out for. Give me the lippy little bastards who puff out their chests and engage in the staredowns, who hate school but at least it's safe and you get two free meals, right? Give me the ones who stare through the priest when he attempts to make a correction and has to skip to the catechism because he gets no response. I wish I could make clear how badly I would like them to know I approve of the effort, if not always the result, approve of the writhing discontent and insurrectionary apathy, if not the ultimate sad end it achieves.

Give me the Old Testament prophets and the dithyrambic ramblings of long lines, the deep breath muse fuckings and voice raisings of an Isaiah or a Walt. Prophecy not being powerful because it tells us what the future will look like but because it oh so artfully explicates how destitute the present appears.

Grant me the the wisdom to let erosion do its thing and so on, or whatever.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Goosebumps

"All but left for dead, they finished the season a stunning 71-33 to come into the final weekend all square with Detroit. Both teams lost the first two games of their respective series, and more than 45,000 in attendance at the Metrodome were hoping the Royals could help their club just one more time.
They certainly did."