Scrolling Past

The everydayness of content chips away at spirit if left unchecked. Even the deepest insight turns stale if daily recited.

In something so seemingly random and vastly replenished as Tumblr (insert current bumblepuppy here) there is this same grinding repetition of selves burning their effigies into ash. Where dull lives inform dull fantasies with but one story to tell.  A grossness not of the technology but (in part) of the frequency of use, creating and consuming at speeds incommensurable to meaning.  The reductive urgency overwhelms me, so many acting all at once, in unison and repeatedly, a display of fireworks without end.  

Five, ten years later, one could return to the same blooms of being, locked-in, that never left.  The resin of a life leftover, preserved and perverted and weightless. We are given but part of the life, the least interesting part, the unlovable part.  There is no meaning in a thousand proclamations strung together, no meaning in anything that can persist in the everyday.  Not this, not anything.

For this or anything to have meaning it has to go home with you long after the network has been turned off.  It has to begin and end in you.  It has to begin and end at all.

This Voice is Borrowed

This voice is borrowed.  The first murmur of the voice was whispered to me through Douglas Coupland’s book, Life After God.  The stories were short, the descriptions sweet, and there were even pictures - naturally I was seduced, and found something meaningful where I had initially sought idle distraction.  It was to be my introduction to the Melancholic.  With each story he told I felt involved more than I had with any book, his characters were wrestling with feelings I harbored beneath the surface of my awareness.  Glibly fashioned in shape of a pocket bible, it became, in its own way, a path to personal revelation.  I didn’t know what to do with this awareness, but it percolated irrespective of my ability to contain it.  In the end, the fictional Coupland confesses he needs God and, in that stroke, subverts even the magnanimous identity owed the Melancholic of being the resister of all social mores.  I never thought about God much before reading that book, and in years to come I would read from many soon-to-be heroes of mine, Wittgenstein, Dostoevsky, Dylan, this same resignation to the Almighty.  This voice gives into that hesitation, to fall neither toward nor away entirely.   

Probably too early in my development as a human being let alone as any kind of writing conduit, I fell upon Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground.  Maybe it was the right time precisely to let it fully bloom in my skull.  It certainly left an impression.  I was the corrosive rationalist then and bruised metaphysically by all that comes from such over-emphasis.  The Underground Man was me, and his faults were mine, and therefore his lessons were mine.  But it took awhile for that to settle in, I was twenty and I knew everything.  I think at first I admired him, and my writing took a turn for the philosophically perverse.  My first year in University, a TA chided me for being the resident rationalist, always ready to uproot a position.  Not able to cope with other people, nor myself.  Still the book held up more than a mirror to me, it got under the skin, particularly in the final chapter, On the Occasion of Wet Snow, it showed me how I must appear to be in the world, without hope of guile to conceal myself.  A nervous tic of a man unable to hold the most basic conversation due to the paralysis of my mind and the raw fibers of feeling it pinched.  I fisted out poetry that marveled over decadent words without the hindsight of knowing what decadence was.  The voice gave into reason and wrote mostly to know, to know and know and know and know and know and know.  My heart felt the con that Dostoevsky showed me but I couldn’t find a way to stop being that man.   

I remember the first time I read Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, and, specifically, Song of Myself.  I was in my parent’s basement, my body weary from long hours working in a factory, still knotted in the chest, and reading it was like feeling every part of me just let go, soften and rejoice - a Whitmanesque word but damn it, rejoice it was!  All at once in the way that only literature can entrap you with, I felt true joy, true happiness, I wanted to live like that poem said to live, I wanted to stop moping and give into the creative spark that I believe lies in all mankind.  The voice found the will to write outside of knowing if only to pleasure in the sound of its own voice.  The choice line: “Dazzling and tremendous how quick the sun-rise would kill me, If I could not now and always send sun-rise out of me”.   

I returned to Dostoevsky to understand what it is to be human, to understand right from wrong in an existential sense.  Also it fueled my voice, his passion for rigmarole, allowing meaning to find its way in the loose bowels of one’s train of thought, and one tier higher, as characters interceding in each other’s lives without a cosmic message from the almighty writer, to let the meaning be in the telling not the prescription of thought.  My first blog entries spilled this way. 

With Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, the rigmarole became autobiography, a sincerity that bashes its skull against irony to let something true bleed out.  In this book in particular there is a noticeable lack of what usually is constituted as ‘sophistication’, he is writing against the grain of the literary.  His sentences run on, but also do what I do, keep replaying the beginning of a sentence to carry the thought beyond the mandates of an idea, but just to see where you can take it - the thought process fossilized, you can look at it from all sides.  Not to say there is no craft to what he does, there is, but he is not afraid to indulge and reveal himself.  The craft does not edit that out but celebrates it.  He is post-post-modern, for where at first there was the polished conceit, then the polished ironic conceit, both playing to a sophisticated audience, Eggers comes along and challenges the very importance of labels one way or the other by making something uncomfortably in-between, jamming their significance, until the only significance is his unvarnished voice.  I feel like I know Eggers from this book, not because he talks about events in his life, but by the way he talks about them.  Perhaps more than any of the other sources of inspiration, I find my voice in Eggers,  in this courage to write oneself out.           

This voice is familiar now, I don’t need to coddle it or regiment it, there are enough wheels turning of their own revolutions to get me through the second part of my life. It was not as straight a line as this post may lead one to believe, nor was there a teleological knowing at any point along the path, but for a myth, this will do.

On Hold

I lost the words, I write in waves and the last wave has ebbed. I do come lightly to the page, not a writer really.  I have been called lazy by people who should know better, or maybe they are right and I am lazy.  I like to think I am waiting for my moment, patiently.  Bad form to wait for the muse.  The myth of the writer calls for the sacrifice of one’s life to the cause, to be heroic so as to overcompensate for the loneliness of being misunderstood.

I spent yesterday playing with my son, I made him laugh so hard he squealed over and over “Again! Again!”  I was out of breath by the end.  I am not so foolish as to think anything I write will top that.  I side step writing like I side step philosophy, each can claim to own you but you gotta dance around them, flirt of course, but dance around them.  Keep moving into each day and find the means of momentum. For eagerly the spiders spin their cobwebs around you.

I am happy, I like having words to live past me, enjoy this chance to articulate feelings and ideas, cry and laugh and be exhausted.  Being is primary, momentum is primary, not momentum to any particular end, just to hold for a moment that feeling of wind in your hair.  It is all about death in the end.  To know this is really it.  There is not enough time to waste on small talk and social niceties, I can barely sit still long enough to clean my house.  I live outside of the pattern, the way the world operates, I dance around it too.  Took awhile for me to figure this all out, to starve off those parts of life, find the core and savor it.

December

December is the time that people meet up with characters they have ignored all year, find themselves holed up in coffee houses or for brunches, to catch up or confess, to tear the fabric of habit and find momentary asylum in the rabbit-hole born of sly solicitations.  It goes as quickly as it comes, and afterwards it is not spoke of again.  I live in those frigid, fringe Decembers - and hibernate the remaining months of the year. 

The Spiral (new edit)

Spark ignite the disobedient mind, let it burn away a consciousness grown fat and fallow, burn away the prodigies clearing their throats in dusty books, burn away the editors glaring, who retreat the arena floor. Most of all, burn away the writer waiting, that extraneous bundle of prestige, pettiness and fear, to summon in the panic heat of language a most savage poetry.

Into its steely fire fed a labor of sentences to goad the hunger or starve of fullness.  Midst the crackle-hum of creation, a fuse lit that no amount of unthinking can snuff out.  Where once a circle, now a spiral, leading where I know not yet. Vertigo’d by nerves, the architecture of my words provide the proper perspective.  In the meantime, keep hidden the aborted works and the finishing school of slush piles, stammer the rigmarole of some loose end and set ablaze the whole edifice to leave but page and ash.

So shall I be patient and recognize the text when it appears.  So shall I postpone the crisis and begin anew, incarnate: the smiling father on some kind lawn, sunlit squinting, cliched heart and all.

The moment the writer’s attention is diverted by considerations of style, rhetoric or verbal glory, his words, instead of containing, will merely evoke. The moment he simply repeats facts instead of imagining the experience of them, his writing will be reduced to a document… an unspoken dialogue is taking place between the events. The problem of narration is not, as is often believed, the problem of ‘finding the words’ but that of choosing and placing events, of allowing or instigating their wordless dialogue.

Keeping a Rendezvous, John Berger (p.216)

Writing is Easy When You Live it Right

I believe (perhaps a superstition) that there is nothing heroic about writing.  To lay down sentences well is not prize-worthy, nor evidence of some hard-won dominance; here we neglect the stealth impact of favorable circumstances and happy accidents.  Craft might be little more than the distillation of properly attuned priorities so aligned, and with circumstances so calibrated, that the act of dreaming through language gushes freely.  If only we find a way to siphon out our daily lives and its seepage of deadlines, quotas, commercial aspirations and the smack of erudition; the less those things matter, the more simply the writing comes. They are the bane of the unfortunate writers who ascribe duties beyond the bricolage pleasures of language. To be a writer at all, makes up half the battle.  With the scaffolds of self and industry dismantled and the door to distractions firmly closed, with ample time and patience to perform, the writing of writing comes easy.  As heroic as a watermelon ripe and round and ready under optimal conditions.   

Alone but Alive

Writing is a ritualistic act to smoke out old selves that, left unsought, wisp formless into the stratosphere.  From this cultivation of selves we must stage a mutiny on the everyday and redact every last contact made with the networked collective formerly known by name.  It may be as sad and tragic as they say, but so long as we resist how things appear we may safely stowaway in our ignorance.  Better to befriend ourselves and keep those fires burning than grow cold and friendless in the self-congratulating world we got going.  Somewhere skipped a track, even if people deny it, even if it seems we are saying more than ever, that the celebration of self has never been this raucous. We will die in our dreams, boots pressed firmly to the ground, die terrified of the mistakes we made while typing…

if we don’t talk to ourselves, carry the rumor of our hearts, walk stubbornly back and start over, alone but alive, trudging defiantly to the place where we left off. 

This Voice is Borrowed

This voice is borrowed.  The first murmur of the voice was whispered to me through Douglas Coupland’s book, Life After God.  The stories were short, the descriptions sweet, and there were even pictures - naturally I was seduced, and found something meaningful where I had initially sought idle distraction.  It was to be my introduction to the Melancholic.  With each story he told I felt involved more than I had with any book, his characters were wrestling with feelings I harbored beneath the surface of my awareness.  Glibly fashioned in shape of a pocket bible, it became, in its own way, a path to personal revelation.  I didn’t know what to do with this awareness, but it percolated irrespective of my ability to contain it.  In the end, the fictional Coupland confesses he needs God and, in that stroke, subverts even the magnanimous identity owed the Melancholic of being the resister of all social mores.  I never thought about God much before reading that book, and in years to come I would read from many soon-to-be heroes of mine, Wittgenstein, Dostoevsky, Dylan, this same resignation to the Almighty.  This voice gives into that hesitation, to fall neither toward nor away entirely.  

Probably too early in my development as a human being let alone as any kind of writing conduit, I fell upon Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground.  Maybe it was the right time precisely to let it fully bloom in my skull.  It certainly left an impression.  I was the corrosive rationalist then and bruised metaphysically by all that comes from such over-emphasis.  The Underground Man, as I have said before, is/was me, and his faults were mine, and therefore his lessons were mine.  But it took awhile for that to settle in, I was twenty and I knew everything.  I think at first I admired him, and my writing took a turn for the philosophically perverse.  My first year in University, a t.a. chided me for being the resident rationalist, always ready to uproot a position.  Not able to cope with other people, nor myself.  Still the book held up more than a mirror to me, it got under the skin, particularly in the final chapter, On the Occasion of Wet Snow, it showed me how I must appear to be in the world, without hope of guile to conceal myself.  A nervous tic of a man unable to hold the most basic conversation due to the paralysis of my mind and the raw fibers of feeling it pinched.  I fisted out poetry that marveled over words, decadently without the hindsight of knowing what decadence was.  The voice gave into reason and wrote mostly to know, to know and know and know and know and know and know.  My heart felt the con that Dostoevsky showed me but I couldn’t find a way to stop being that man.  

I remember the first time I read Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, and, specifically, Song of Myself.  I was in my parent’s basement, my body weary from long hours working in a factory, still knotted in the chest, and reading it was like feeling every part of me just let go, soften and rejoice - a Whitmanesque word but damn it, rejoice it was!  All at once in the way that only literature can entrap you with, I felt true joy, true happiness, I wanted to live like that poem said to live, I wanted to stop moping and give into the creative spark that I believe lies in all mankind.  The voice found the will to write outside of knowing if only to pleasure in the sound of its own voice.  The choice line: “Dazzling and tremendous how quick the sun-rise would kill me, If I could not now and always send sun-rise out of me”.   

I returned to Dostoevsky to understand what is to be human, to understand right from wrong in an existential sense.  Also it fueled my voice, his passion for rigmarole, allowing meaning to find its way in the loose bowels of one’s train of thought, and one tier higher, as characters interceding in each other’s lives without a cosmic message from the almighty writer, to let the meaning be in the telling not the prescription of thought.  My first blog entries spilled this way.

With Dave Eggers’ A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, the rigmarole became autobiography, a sincerity that bashes its skull against irony to let something true bleed out.  In this book in particular, there is a noticeable lack of what usually is constituted as ‘sophistication’ to his writing, he is writing against the grain of the literary.  His sentences run on, but also do what I do, keep replaying the beginning of a sentence to carry the thought beyond the mandates of an idea, but just to see where you can take it - the thought process fossilized, you can look at it from all sides.  Not to say there is no craft to what he does, there is, but he is not afraid to indulge and reveal himself.  The craft does not edit that out but celebrates it.  He is post-post-modern, for where at first there was the polished conceit, then the polished ironic conceit, both playing to a sophisticated audience, Eggers comes along and challenges the very importance of labels one way or the other by making something uncomfortably in-between, jamming their significance, until the only significance is his unvarnished voice.  I feel like I know Eggers from this book, not because he talks about events in his life, but by the way he talks about them.  Perhaps more than any of the other sources of inspiration, I find my voice in Eggers, in this courage to write oneself out.  

Finally, or finally as of this moment in time, the voice draws inspiration from this very medium, Tumblr.  There is something happening here that I find remarkable, an oasis from the world I think I have been looking for since I read Coupland’s book so long ago. I never had a community, the melancholic walks alone.  But much like reading Song of Myself I am eternally inspired by fragments of writing I find here, by people I follow or from sources of inspiration they want to share.  Also this notion of micro-blogging, of writing succinctly, something I have admired in literature (three of the four works I mentioned above are hovering around the 100 page range).  I still love the rigmarole and draw energy from it, but I am finding myself more and more trying to edit down to something precise, and even veering into poetry which I haven’t tried to do in over a decade.  By being here I am changing, and the next chapter will likely be quite different from what came before.  The wounds have healed, save the existential ones.  By virtue of just how much sun-rise is around me here, it seems inevitable my output would likewise increase.  

This voice is familiar now, I don’t need to coddle it or regiment it, there are enough wheels turning of their own revolutions to get me through the second half of my life, and then some. To begin is the hardest, but with momentum it all gets easier.  It was not as straight a line as this post may lead one to believe, nor was there a teleological knowing at any point along the path, but for a myth, this will do.

Now, by what path have you tumbled here?

The Neverthelessness of Nature

I was terrified as a child by an episode of the Swiss Family Robinson where the island inexplicably became overrun by ants, chewing through the jungle like it was nothing.  Even then, I considered how strange it is that in nature something as horrorific as that could happen out of balance with the way things were supposed to.  We like to think of ourselves as lion tamers in relation to nature, but every so often the lion takes a chunk of us in its jaws, and ants for no known reason spill over the land like pestilence.