What would the world be, once bereft of wet and wildness?
Let them be left, O let them be left, wildness and wet;
Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.
-- Gerard Manley Hopkins
Tuesday, February 25, 2003
Monday, February 24, 2003
And indeed it was. There was much silliness around the campfire, must singing and dancing. Mark's fiddle sparked the fire in our bones, and we howled at the moon hidden behind the rainclouds moving over us. Though the rain fell in sporadic drifts, we were undampened. Awoooo.
However, let me stress to those of you who have long been considering taking only a light fleece blanket with you when you are camping in 37 degree weather: DON'T DO IT. Don't even think about it, in fact. Though we made it to Cheaha Falls Shelter before the rain started, and though we had a fire, and though George Dickel made his presence known, it got downright cold. Cold, cold. The moment I lay down in that miserable excuse for a blanket I knew it was going to be a long night. I could feel the wind reaching my armpits, for chrissakes. Needless to say, I was glad when rosy-fingered dawn finally showed the hell up.
On the way home, Mark and I shunned the interstate. Drove on backroads the whole way, occasional handwaves from pickup trucks going in the opposite direction. Saw pieces of land I'd love to purchase and spend a lifetime on.
One must always return to the core of the land.
Thursday, February 20, 2003
Wednesday, February 19, 2003
Indeed. Let us praise Milan Kundera.
Tuesday, February 18, 2003
But I thought about this a little while ago after the day had fallen into night and Debbie and I talked for an hour and I wanted a beer to accompany my continued reading of Mr. Miller. I drove on down to the store and was perusing the beer selection, wondering what on earth would inspire anyone to buy Michelob Ultra, when I heard a deep “Yo, what about some of this?” sound out next to me. It was a towering UAB basketball player, obviously, his obligatory ballcap almost scraping the ceiling tiles. He and his buddy were looking for wine coolers, of all things, their heads continuously knocking against the advertisements for hot-dogs and beer hanging from the ceiling. They were laughing, dressed in full Blazer uniforms. So I turned, and as if from some scene in Sixteen Candles, I saw two cute girls in the aisle next to them who were smiling at each other as the two players began carrying out an open dialogue about how many wine coolers the evening might require. The girls were in college (you can tell - don’t ask me how) but they were both wearing that smile that goes years beyond the mere undergraduate experience.
They had been watching the tall guys ever since they walked into the store. It was almost surreal, these two junior/senior girls staring at each other in grins, obviously in heat. Sure enough, one of them cast her eyes toward one of the basketball players, and the whole scene slowed down, laden with time. I was watching Eve’s primal glance. Venus parting the clouds to view Adonis in play.
There I was, Scout sleeping in the front seat of my car, trying to figure if I had enough money to buy a six pack, when there goes the entire history of lust and sexuality right before me. Men walk in. Cute, single girls are smitten. The cycle starts up again. It lit up the aisles of the 7-11.
I don’t know; maybe I’ve been reading too much (or just enough) Joseph Campbell and Henry Miller, but it was beautiful. Maybe, thanks to Debbie, I’m just slap out in love with life. But whatever the origins of my interpretation of the event, it was fun to watch the first reaches of love. Not anything remotely suited to televise but real and embarrassingly honest. Hell, the girls were surrounded by chitlins and corn nuts.
Upon reflection, I wish I’d stayed and watched how things panned out; whether the gal stayed and let her gaze linger until it mattered, or whether they merely tittered into oblivion. Or the guys might have ceased being oafs and looked around themselves gently.
But it was enough in my break from Henry Miller and his onslaught of the sensual which I had been objecting to in my mind, that the earth embraced itself and made me laugh in the flow of things. And it reminded me that the streets will always pulse with the deep mathematics of attraction. A natural geometry of angled flesh.
Sunday, February 16, 2003
Friday, February 14, 2003
It’s very late/early, probably 1:00 in the morning, and the rain has just started. What I wondered was wind kept steady and didn’t rise, so I pushed up the window and molten moist blankets of air began folding themselves inside my room. Rain. Slow, quiet, deep rain. Just enough to coat the earth. Just enough to forget it happened.
But in the morning I will stir and slam my hand somewhere near Steve Chiatacus' voice as it exits my radio, in snooze, listening again to his steady gentle enunciations of the news, my temples playing a slight cacophany on the inside membrane of my skull. It will occur to me how Steve, with his clear, modest Midwest hyper-murmur could make the most horrific genocide sound like a peaceful soundbyte of culture. I wish my alarm clock were a piece of thin, round glass I could shatter every morning on my wall.
But I will stir and I will remember how the earth around me outside has been washed. And that my place is clean, too.
It will be Valentine's day. And I will smile to Debbie's emergence somewhere across town, her birth into this day. She'll wake and sleepily look around the room for a moment, her hair a study in microcosms, chaos. Her eyes pooled in the dark comprehension of waking.
Ten bucks says I had the best dreams of all.
Tuesday, February 11, 2003
--Goering at Nuremberg
But another factor contributes to my appreciation of bootlegs, and that is how I got them. The best by far are from tapers I've met at shows who've hooked me up with fresh copies of their most recent gigs. The process of meeting these people, trading with and getting to know them can be a lot of fun (in general, the hardcore fans are unusually interesting people). But I still love even my cruddy copies of shows, because I can still put myself there metally. Hours spent making tapes or burning CDs, and meeting the people who have them. In fact, when does a concert CD ever actually sound like the experience you actually had?
Anyway, Clear Channel is about to start offering “bootlegs” of the shows they present within five minutes of the concert’s end, as discussed in this article. I know this is nothing new, but it does signify a significant enhancement on the growing trend of live-music offerings. Will anyone actually pay to have the latest bootleg of Shania Twain’s last gig? I can hear it now:
”Dude, I’ve got this smokin’ set from Boyz2Men tour, 2001. I’ll trade you a Madison Square Gardens show for Brittney Spears at Red Rocks. I got it off Clear Channnel.”
Maybe I’m jaded from the jam-band scene, I don’t know. Considering my stance on recent developments in music sharing, I should be surprised that I’m concerned about Clear Channel’s decision to bring live music to the masses. After all, I’ve burned a lifetime of music on my Mac. I guess I just don’t want the process of getting the best tunes cheapened. Or commercialized, if there’s a difference.
Monday, February 10, 2003
Thursday, February 06, 2003
Wednesday, February 05, 2003
Hey, when you happen to be lucky enough to witness the personage of one Ms. Deborah Lynn Hamilton, it is incumbent upon you to address her by her new title: Ms. Deborah Lynn Hamilton, CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT. Yes, that's CPA, folks, for the Debmeister done passed her exam with flying colors. Shower her with praises when you are able.