I had a fantastic weekend, which was a much-needed break from my current life circumstances and their multiple stressful complexities. There is something about getting to somewhere far removed, yet familiar, that is totally and completely disconnected from your reality that is really soothing. , and you requested, pics here. It was a great time for all.

My ex-roomate from college, and longtime friend was nice enough to drive r/t. As I mentioned before we left, we ended up with a minivan instead of a subcompact. Overall, this was not a bad thing, since we enjoyed the space, and it handled very well.

Friday night the Yankees beat the Sox. We got in a little after 10, and I had a few drinks after unpacking. Everyone was pretty tired, and after some good chillin, everyone bopped off to bed, while I sat up and read. I made it until around 4am, then turned in. I woke up with the sun, and took some pictures. I then went for a swim. The water was a pleasant low 60’s, compared to the air temperature in the low 50’s.

Everyone started stirring a bit later, and we had some bagels and talked and laughed, then started a game of Trivial Pursuit. There are few games I love more in life, and with a group of intelligent people bent on having a good time, there are few things more wholly enjoyable. My personal strategy in the game is to always go for the Orange section first, since it is the hardest for me to get. Sports questions are the bane of my trivia. Sure enough, it took me almost half the game to get it, but things picked up fast after that. Once more people showed up, we split into two teams. Our team was the first to finish (it was me and 3x girls) and, of course, when we hit the middle, we got an Orange question. I had, by that point, already started preparing the food for later, and was only half listening to it. I was called out for double checking.

For the first time in my life, I won a game of Trivial Pursuit on the first try off the center on an orange question.

The question?

“What does RPG stand for, amongst groups familiar with the game Dungeons and Dragons?”

No shit – two decades of TP karma back in one awesome moment of bliss.

Saturday night, the Red Sox won. We listened the the game on the radio. I made one of the best roast turkeys of my culinary career, accompanied with some good gravy, stuffing, and rosemary potatoes. Noone touched the salad much, and the native vegetarian loved the peppers I made for him. I got high compliments on this turkey, the best of which was someone telling me that they normally hated turkey, and liked what they ate.

Stayed up ’till the wee hours of Sunday morning, then went to bed. Woke with the sun again, and hung out down on the dock until we decided it was morning enough to start cooking. I was a sous chef to the master bacon styling of my friend Steve, and we collaborated very nicely. We decided if we ever wanted to kill a bunch of people with good food, he and I would definitely have to team up.

We drove back later that afternoon, stopping near the main rotary before the Bourne Bridge to watch some of the Red Sox Game. It was truly difficult being 50 miles from the NEAREST Yankees fan, but I wore my hat with pride, even though we took another whuppin.

It is now Thursday. I have had a rather hair-graying week, and am only now finishing off this post. That makes me kind of sad. I had a wonderful time – I wish life had more times like that than what I seem to spend most of my time on.

so, instead of a dodge neon, we will be pimpin to MA in a fucking soccer mom minivan. yeah 2 miles to the gallon!
::sigh::
we are gonna be in Connecticut gridlock for the Yankees game tonight.
i hope i make it without rioting.

I broke the little toe on my right foot, in two places. It is seriously swollen and throbbing at the moment. Motherfucking toes. I was just fucking walking, and ended up kicking the corner _exactly_ in the wrong place/way.

I managed to get all my shit done for pre-cook this weekend. I am going to a friend’s place in MA, and making a turkey, rosemary potatoes, salad, and some stuffed peppers for the veggies. Stuffing was made last week and frozen, gravy and stuffed peppers were made tonight. I was going to cut and pre-mix the potatoes, but I figure that won’t take too much the day of.

Before I go, I need to:

  • get peppers/gravy out of freezer
  • get charger/book before i leave
  • print directions on phone
  • buy booze/mixers and some snack shit
  • make sure my ride has his shit together

Should be there sometime around midnight, I hope.

Richelle decided not to go. As of now, I’m not moving, she is. If I move out, the lease will prolly fall over like a house of cards. So I stay, maybe roommate in my future, maybe not. I have no fucking idea.

My foot hurts.

story snippet, as born through the collective madness of myself and . published without her explicit permission (since she is snoozing) and subject to be removed at any point in the future, if she don’t like it bein here. edited from chat by me, which is to say, not well.

cut for your pleasure.


Margaret took another drag off her cigarette, and pulled her shirt in tighter against the frigid wind. Her hair whipped around in the light snow, and the white light of the porch light illuminated the backyard like some gaudy Russian James Bond shot. She hated it when her stepmother came along with her mother. Almost harder than the fact that mom was a dyke, was the fact that she married a flower child, who abhorred smoking, even if it was in her hostess’s own house.

Mom hadn’t always been a dyke. The genesis of that weirdness lay in the latter chapters of her adolescence. The day after her seventeenth birthday, in fact, when she brought home a “friend,” a small, pale girl called Lisette, and kept her in her room all night. Margaret’s mother, divorced for years, could hardly stand the fact that her daughter was getting more action than she was, and since her luck with men had long since run out, she decided to one-up her fledgling lesbian teenage daughter. Lisette had quite a time the next morning coming out of the shower.

Lisette had been willing to continue the relationship, even though her mother had been partaking of the same delights she had. After that, Margaret simply couldn’t look at another woman the same way again. Taking a lazy puff in a short break in the wind, Margaret had to admit, her mom had done much better for the exchange than she had, which was another reason that the fact she was smoking outside of her own place irritated her. Hissing softly on the last drag before flicking the butt into the black and white of the shadows, Margaret purposefully held it in so she could exhale it after she had gotten back into the kitchen.

Deanna, Margaret’s overweight, belligerent, saggy-breasted stepmother, was sitting at the kitchen table, fingering the rim of one of Margaret’s favorite tumblers from Ikea. Margaret noticed the amber dregs floating the ice cubes in the glass, which were melting in the warmth of the kitchen. The moon was rising white as bone through the window on the other side of the kitchen. Deanna looked at Margaret in the way that only a resentful stepparent looks at a child of any age, the dark rings under her eyes deeply cast in shadow.

“What are you doing?” Margaret growled.

Deanna looked into her drink, contemplating how to react to Margaret’s question, when Margaret cut off her plodding thoughts in a staccato report of frustration.

“Where did you find that bottle Dean? I thought I hid them all well enough.”

Deanna’s chins snapped up as she fixed a dangerous glare on Margaret, her finger slipping into the tumbler like a sausage hitting a panful of bacon grease. The chills and gooselflesh Dean’s look caused would have sent Margaret running if she weren’t PMSsing, but she was, so she shoved her fist down the lion’s throat, knowing she had started a fight by using her stemother’s’s most hated nickname.

Deanna licked her lips before she started, an act that always reminded Margaret of Jabba the Hutt.

“You have no right to talk to me like that you trollop! If you had minded your mother growing up, you’d have a properly stocked liquor cabinet somewhere in this dump, instead of forcing your guests to sift through dirty laundry to find a bottle of no-account well sludge.”

Deanna’s cheeks were flushed, a bad sign for sure. Margaret wondered where her mother was, since Deanna’s tone had gotten dangerously piercing in the latter words of her little outburst. The silence hung in the air between them like a net full of trout; taut, writhing, and ready to burst at any moment.

Abruptly, Margaret cursed softly, as she remembered Darren’s habit of hiding a bottle of booze in his hamper. He must have tipped Deanna off to it, just to cause trouble.

“Fucker.”

Of course, Darren, Margaret’s younger brother, was sound asleep. After losing his job and being evicted from his apartment, he had begged his older sister for a place to crash until he found something better. “Just for a few months,” he had pleaded, using the same eyes that always netted him the bigger slice of birthday cake, even if it wasn’t his birthday. That was two years ago. If Margaret had ever detested him for his laziness and insolence, her hatred was now magnified by his devious (not to mention obvious) plan to pit his chain-smoking sister against their mutant, probably hermaphroditic stepmother.

“The only reason we don’t have a liquor cabinet, Dean, is because, since my dad died skunk drunk three years ago, and since then, I haven’t had a single fond memory that involves booze. Everything I keep around the house is for guests and parties, but I figured I should save some from your spongy mouth. I guess you should be glad Darren was nice enough to keep something lying around for you so you don’t go looking too hard.”

Margaret was breathing hard, breaking into a quick sweat in the combination of the anger, and the heat of the kitchen against her skin, still cold from the outdoor breeze.

“Now, are you going to toss the rest, or am I going to get my mother in on your position in relation to the wagon pulling away down the road?”

Dean grunted, hefting her weight back into her chair like a toad about to hop after a beetle in low flight. Margaret cupped her hand behind her back, ready to slap the glass out of the air if it came flying at her. A part of her mind chuckled at the image of a kung-fu move borne purely out of susrvival in a life with an alcoholic with good aim. Dean usually had lousy aim.

Instead of throwing the glass, Deanna stood quickly, using the momentum of her bulky arm to fuel the overhand spike she gave the glass, right into the tile floor of the kitchen. Whiskey, glass, and ice flowered in a bloom of chaos as booze. Deanna grunted again, and walked away from the mess towards the living room.

Margaret stared at the shattered tumbler, unsure of what was ice and what was glass. A thin stream of whiskey trickled down towards her toes across the crème-colored tile.

“Hmm,” she thought, “my kitchen is on a slope…”

Quickly, this thought jumped to, “I really should clean this up,” which morphed finally into, “I should have Darren do it, that little shit.”

Almost as an afterthought, unpleasant realization crested her mental horizon.

“My favorite fucking glass! Now it’s an incomplete set! That cunt is dead.”

Pressing the back of her thin body against the refrigerator to avoid the sharded remains of her beloved tumbler, Margaret tiptoed into the living room. Within, she found Deanna on the couch, rolls of puckered fat sticking out from under her t-shirt, watching an infomercial for the Ronco Grlling System.

Eyes drilling into the periphery of Deanna’s vision, Margaret spat, “That was my favorite glass, you bitch.”

Deanna ignored Margaret, intensely staring at the leg of lam the plastic faced man on the television was explaining how to “inject it with a special basting syringe”

Even more furious for having been ignored, Margaret took a tentative half step into the aura of her stepmother’s everpresent BO.

“I said that was my favorite glass BITCH!” Margaret shouted as she folded her arms beneath her breasts, and spread her legs a little. Just as the last syllable of her intonation died in the air, competing with the tinny music coming from the television, Margaret’s mother came out of the bathroom, with a flush and a foreboding (yet welcome) waft of perfume.

“Megs, you shouldn’t talk to Dee that way! Apologize immediately! I taught you better than that.”

Margaret’s head was spinning. She found herself confronted with a strange dilemma. Should she sell a drunk Deanna out to her widowed and otherwise lonely mother? Should she play on her mother’s obsessive-compulsive disorder, and tell her that there was a broken glass on the kitchen floor that demanded removal? Maybe she should just tell them both to fuck off.

“First of all,” she sighed, “my name is Margaret. Second of all…”

Margaret glanced at Deanna, who, for the first time since Margaret had known her, was looking up at her with a face that deserved pity. Her eyes wide and gentle, and there was a pucker of a frown creasing her first and second chins.

“Second of all…”

Margaret paused to think a second about how her mother was staring at her, annoyed at being disturbed during her nightly beauty regimen. Mom was waiting for an answer, her patience clearly wearing as dangerously thin. Margaret did not wnt her mother to lose that patience…again.

“Mom, listen…”

Before she could start her improve stream of lies, the sleepy growl of her brother, snapped her from her moment of rapt contemplation as he shambled out past his cracked bedroom door.

“What’s the fucking racket out here?”

Margaret’s eyes widened a bit at her brother’s tone, appearance, and choice of words. Margaret’s mother was incensed, suddenly preaching to her lover, who was trying very hard to look like a sofa pillow with doughy arms.

“Good lord! Dee, you think that with all the work I put into raising two well adjusted individuals as a single mother, my two children could learn to keep a civil tongue around her!”

Darren grunted again, and wandered towards the kitchen. If he saw Deanna at all, he gave no notice of it. Darren shuffled across the salmon shag carpet, itching his scalp with one hand, and, what Margaret assumed was his nuts beneath his boxers with the other. Margaret was about to warn him about the glass on the floor when he shouldered into her, roughly, as he pushed past her to get into the kitchen. For all her furious stance gave her in looks, it did little against the irate bulk of her 300+ lb. brother, freshly awakened and annoyed.

“Mar-gar-et,” her mother said, enunciating every syllable in the most obnoxious fashion she could muster,

“I would have thought that by now you and Dee would be getting a long a little better. She tries to put up with your attitude, I wish you would be nice to her…”

“She’s sitting right here,” Deanna mumbled.

Margaret’s mother ignored her life partner.

“I just don’t understand why you can’t be a little more _civil_ at least.”

“Mom, you don’t understand, okay? When I came in from the porch, your beloved Dee was sitting in the kitchen…

A loud yelp from the kitchen snapped the three women’s heads in that direction.

“Son of a bitch! There’s broken glass all over the floor! My goddamn foot is bleeding! What the shit? Fuck, FUCK!!”

Dee paled visibly as Margaret’s mother scuttled across the carpet, like an anemic bloodhound on the trail her son had left moments before. Before she could make it halfway across the room, Deanna stood up, and put her bulk between Margaret and her mother.

“Tina, just sit, I’m sure Meg..er..Margaret can help Darren. You know how you get around blood, and he did say he was bleeding…”

Margaret’s mother’s demeanor shifted the instant Deanna’s hand found her wrist. Margaret watched, fascinated, like a bystander before a master snake charmer, as Deanna guided her mother towards the sofa. Roncoman, still looking like a poorly painted Joker from a Tim Burton movie, speared two whole chickens on his tripod of torture.

Margaret’s trance, however, was broken soundly by a very loud “Shi…FUCK.” from her brother, right before a floor shifting thud, and a whiny scream finding it’s way from the kitchen like a teakettle left on to boil too long.

Margaret’s mother’s knees were bent to sit on the sofa, entranced partially by the rotating chickens on the screen, and partially by Deanna’s soothing voice. When she heard Darren’s whimpering cries, she snapped to maternal attention and surprised her daughter and her lover by slipping past both of them into the kitchen. A sliver of broken glass slipped into the soft arch of her tiny feet, but she barely noticed, transfixed instead by the sight of her baby boy, sitting on the kitchen floor, blood seeping out from between his fingers.

“Darren, my baby! What happened?”

He was shocked, the palm of his hand was shredded. Margaret and Deanna stood in the doorway, staring at the linebacker-ish Darren, who looked from his mother to his sister and back again, before settling his eyes on Deanna.

“It smells like closing time at a bar in here!” grunted Darren softly, as if he were speaking to himself.

“Never mind that now Darren honey, you are bleeding, all over! Oh, your foot too! Meg, do you have a first aid kit? Actually no, that will be too messy. Get me some towels. Dee, go warm up the car, we are going to go to the emergency room. Meg, forget the towels, get me a phone, I’ll have to call an ambulance. Oh, and the snow, lord, what if they can’t make it. Oh Meg, don’t stand there, hurry! Dee, what are you gawking at? Get hustling woman, there is probably an inch of snow on the car by now, and the engine isn’t getting any war..”

Tina’s nervous gabbering was pulsing against the ears of everyone in and near the cramped quarters of the kitchen. As she turned about to bark her orders, Darren found his feet, and was slowly picking over his wounds. His hand looked like the mutant child of a glass porcupine and a roast beef. His back on one side seemed to have quite a number of small scratches in it, and his elbow on his left arm was bleeding. He was holding one foot off the floor slightly, and Margaret could see a small puddle of blood working its way across the kitchen floor from it, sliding slowly towards the outside door.

Slowly, but with growing volume, Darren began telling his mother to shut up. As her rate of gibbering increased, so did the depth and volume of his intonations, until he finally cut her off at her last request to her wife with a “SHUT THE EVERFUCKING HELL UP MA!”

Tina stared at her son in utter disbelief and shock. Deanna was stopped in her tracks toward the closet to grab coats for everyone, and Margaret stared at Darren’s mouth, stunned at what had just come out of it. A tittering of giggles suddenly racked her thin frame and unfettered from the strong chains of will she had bound them in, deep in her belly. The giggles quickly turned to laughs, which, before long, led to her face contorted in an uncontrollable fit of laughter. Tina looked at daughter like a mother eagle chosing between two eaglets.

“Young lady, this is no laughing matter! Your brother is bleeding!”

Margaret could not reply, for she was too busy trying to catch her breath through hysterical gasps.

“Mom!” she finally managed, tears streaming down her cheeks, “he just told you to shut the EVER FUCKING HELL up! That is beautiful!”

Margaret’s laughter danced around the room like a butterfly alone in a sunflower field. Before long, both Darren and Deanna were chortling where they stood, and Margaret was downright doubled over with laughter. Tina’s face took on a grim smile, dangerous, like a nurse shark at the bottom of a reef cave.

Before either Darren or Deanna could move into wholesale laugher though, Tina noticed that it was not only her son’s foot that was adding to the small red sea streaming towards the Promised Land at the low end of the kitchen. As soon as she realized she was bleeding, Tina fainted dead away, like a tied stack of newspapers tossed from a slow moving truck in the early morning – a small bounce and a vociferous flop.

Deanna pushed past Margaret, and crouched at Tina’s side. The jostle of Deanna’s shoulder against hers turned Margaret’s laughter into a light chuckle and she undoubled herself and took a tentative pace into the kitchen, careful not to step on any of the glass.

“Tina?” Deanna yelled, “Teen? Wake up honey!”

Deanna slapped the unconscious woman’s face a few times. No response. She put her ear to Tina’s mouth and when she found her breathing shallow, Deanna placed her lips to those of her lover and began to administer CPR.

“Fuckin gross!” Darren blurted, as Margaret watched in shock.

After three or four puffs, and a pregnant pause, Tina’s head snapped away and her eyes flew wide open.

“Dee! Have you been drinking?”

***2BC***

How do you get past the memory of place? People,things,even dates are easy toforget , mistake, or misplace.

Places though, not the case. I think that is the point of memorials, to capture the screaming essence someone who was there when a thing happened must feel every time they revisit.

I have lots of memory places. Part and parcel of being an overcontemplative bastard I guess. But how does one overcome, when the memorial becomes something you would rather forget than commemorate?

So I went to look at a slum hole today.
Literally.

The apartment was OK. Spacious, with another person living in it, and very pre-1930’s (with period-appropo lead based paint) The location was the pits, and the second floor door looked like SWAT had knocked it down at least three times.

News to some of you: Richelle and I have been having some bumpy times for several months running. For those who don’t know, don’t feel slighted you don’t know – Ive been doing my best to try and make it not so. I am talking about both the rockiness and the knowing.

That is part of the reason I have remained pretty low profile. When you bend a lot of energy towards one goal, you don’t always have a lot left to share. That is also part of the reason so many of my posts of late have been mopey complete wastes of time (and I don’t mean the good kinds). I have not been sleeping well, and am at the end of several ropes, most notably emotional stability and tranquility.

I am not going to get into details. The situation is not hostile or hopeless, but it is not the best place to be right now. Neither one of us want the relationship “over with”, but Richelle wants time and space. The only step forward, at this point, is a step backwards, if things are to work out. I have never been more afraid for that “pursuit of happiness” bit than I am today.

One of us has to move out.

As I am dogless, and make more money/have more credit, the process realistically falls to me. That is not to say Richelle is not looking, but rather, that it is probably more realistic that I will find something first. I am gonna have to toss some serious crap in storage, and I am gonna have to rebox my life for the third time this year. I am gonna have to buy things I didn’t think I’d ever have to again, and part with things that someone else will need more than me.

I am going to have to buy a desk and a proper desk chair.

I am going to have to talk to my family about this.

This is harsh shit. Aside from the crappiness of the apartment I went to see today, I was somewhat unprepared for the hammer blow of emotional and intellectual doubt that landed somewhere between the base of my skull and my shoulders.

I feel like a bug on a pin right now, legs squirming into empty air.

I feel like a geode.

I feel like I am at the bottom of the longest hill I’ve ever had to climb, and I don’t even want to be at the fucking hill to begin with.

Everything I have worked for has to change. My foci need to be repositioned, and my momentum needs to build, not only from a standstill, but rolling in a very different direction than the path I have been plotting for two years.

Almost to the day, ironically.

Why am I talking about all this crap?

Its like this. I am going to need help. If ya got leads, please forward them. If you are short on patience, especially because I’ve been a less than stellar friend of late, please dole out one more teaspoon while I try to get my shit nailed down.

I can’t figure out how the fuck I got to this point. I just hope doing the right thing will lead to a manageable path. My batting average at this plate is not so good.

Order is shattered in a strange guttural tone that resounded
along the walls of the houses, which seemed dead and deserted,
while, behind the closed shutters, eyes watched the conquerors,
who, by right of war, were now masters of the city and of the lives
and fortunes of its people.

In their darkened ruins the inhabitants have given way to the same
feeling of panic which is aroused by natural cataclysms those
devastating upheavals of the Earth, against which wisdom and
strength alike are of no avail.

Though the same feeling is experienced wherever the established
order of things is upset, when security ceases to exist, when all that
was previously protected by the laws of man and nature is suddenly
placed at the mercy of brutal unreasoning force.

The earthquake, burying a whole people beneath the ruins of their
houses, the river in spate, sweeping away the bodies of drowned
peasants, together with the carcasses of cattle and rafters torn from
roofs, and the victorious army slaughtering all who resist, making
prisoners of the rest, looting by right of the sword, and thanking their
god to the sound of cannon.

All these are terrifying scourges which undermine all our belief in
eternal justice and all the trust we have been taught to place in divine
protection and human reason.

Happy New Year! From a goyim, that is some pretty funny shit.
invited me into her house of old, to experience a part of her family. I also met her boy, who is as great a guy as legend tells.

It was four hours away from my life, and immersed in wonderful conversation, good food, and lots of fun. Fantastic people all.
Put some stuff in perspective for me, which made the bubble pop walking up York that much harder.

I’m tired, and tired of being tired. I hope this trend ends soon.

go to http://www.style.com/fashionshows/collections/S2005RTW/runwayshows/video.html
watch my dad’s company’s show from fashion week.
click on Carolina Hererra – i command you.

that is all.


Today’s post brought to you by despair

Yesterday was busy. Work was hectic.

Aside from my appointment yesterday afternoon taking longer than I anticipated, things went well. I managed to hand off the title for my car, so once I get a bill of sale written up, it is gone forever from my name.

Yew Haloo, as they say on Mary Poppins.

Any way, milling around after just missing my train last night, I ran into two women who were very lost. Between the two of them, they spoke what amounted to (perhaps) the English of a 3 year old whose head was crushed by a pair of ineptly wielded fence-post pliers. After a bit of work, it became clear that they were trying to get to South Jersey by bus, and that they were looking for Port Authority.

They were in the wrong, county, much less the wrong borough.

I had just missed the train, and it was going to be another hour before the next one, unless I took a local. I made a fast call to information, then Port Authority, and found out that there was no human way they were making their bus via mass transit that night. It was already 10 and change, and the last bus out was at quarter to midnight, which was well after they would have made it to Port Authority, if I could have actually explained to them how to get there.

The girls were worried that the train station was unsafe, and followed me around like ducklings after a stray cat the whole time I was pacing on the phone. One of the girls, Isabella, asked me to get on the phone with her beau a few times, but every time she handed me the phone, he would hang up.

At any rate, decisive action was needed. I had them change in their train tickets, and we split a cab down to the city. I managed to haggle the cab driver down to 30 for me, and 15 for them, after he dropped me off. They seemed amenable to this plan, and the cab driver actually cut all of us a break by the end of it. As I was trying to explain to them what they needed to do once they got to Port Authority, he realized I was being a good samaratin, and said he would do thirty for the whole shot, so I gave him the 30, and told them to give him a few dollars for tip when he got them to Port Authority. Hopefully, they were not sold as human slaves.

Just as we were leaving the Bronx, my cab driver, Gregory Matthison, asked me if I had Jesus in my soul, as if that explained my actions somehow. I told him that my soul had a big neon no vacancy sign. He started to Preach the Word™ , and i told him that he could abandon all hope of tip if he kept it up. The rest of the cab ride was broken Spanish from the back, low jazz from some AM station, and me looking all about as we approached the city from a vector I had previously never come before. Gregory spoke no Spanish, and smelt faintly of licorice.

I made it home in excellent time. I can only assume my co-passengers, whose lost way I paid for the most part, made it to their destination as well. I hope they did, because if not, they are still wandering around midtown on the West Side, or, as I said above, were sold to some group of religious fanatics as slaves.


In totally unrelated news, ‘s latest post has me jonseing to caber toss.

Steven Segal needs to contract rampant incurable cancer.

This collection really wowed me. I love Japan, I love Polaroids, just…damn.

Better than this collection due to thoughtful emotional provocation, but not as picturesque throughout.


Where now the horse and the rider? Where is the horn that was blowing?
Where is the helm and the hauberk, and the bright hair flowing?

Where is the hand on the harpstring, and the red fire glowing?

Where is the spring and the harvest and the tall corn growing?

They have passed like rain on the mountain, like a wind in the meadow;

The days have gone down in the West behind the hills into shadow.

Who shall gather the smoke of the dead wood burning,

Or behold the flowing years from the Sea returning?


sometimes things don’t turn put exactly like you want them to
sometimes things end up in a totally different place then you imagined they would
sometimes the greatest things become the most minimized
sometimes the most minimal things become colossal
sometimes you get tired of wondering about all these things
sometimes

I just finished the second-to-last book in The Dark Tower series.
I need to stop being a bad writer, yesterday.
Love him or leave him, I don’t really care. King gets my blood singing, and not always in a good way.

Other than that, the weekend was relatively quiet. Worked on some projects. Saw ‘Hero’, which I highly recomend. Glad Miramax coerced Tarantino into endorsing that one.

Not prepared for work yet. No, not at all.
This is going to be a week of Mondays that will last as long as a month of Sundays. I can feel it now.

I have read a lot of late, and not posted much about it. I need to review where I left off with my reading list, and update things. I am probably about 20 books behind or so. Conservatively.

I am not Pygmalion
You’re not Galatea
Who created who?
I will not stand reminder
Of all the things
that cannot be.