I always complain about my life and things. But really, I'm so, so thankful.
I'm thankful for great friends, especially David, who I don't see as much of anymore unfortunately, but that's hardly his fault. I'm pretty impressed with the way he figured out what he wanted to do, a thing most people consider a silly childhood fantasy, and made it happen. If the rest of us possessed a quarter of his will to achieve, then we would be beyond most modern problems. David is the most impressive specimen of humanity I have ever encountered, I don't think there is a single quality he has that is not enviable.
Jenni, of course it goes without saying, I'm incredibly grateful to have around. She's a woman of unusual taste, which is fortunate for me, because I doubt she would have ever fancied me at all if that were otherwise. She's forgiving, possessed of an impressive intellect, kind, and more beautiful to look at than a soft place to lie down after a week of no sleep. Trust me. I know.
But also all my friends, I am thankful of. They're good people, except perhaps one, and I'm happy to know I'm not an island. As a whole, they're wonderful people. Always ready to overlook the latestly horribly rude or vile thing I've done for some stupid reason.
My mother works incredibly hard for her family in a job that is sometimes so stressful it makes her feel sick, to the point of immobility. She gets so much hard luck she doesn't deserve, and still finds time to be a really nice lady. She's unbelievably devoted to her home.
I'm also pretty pleased with my possessions. I'm a pretty material person - I don't mean that I'm obsessed with owning the world, but rather I take comfort from the reliability of the things I own. Such as my watch, or my leatherman, or the phone I'm using to write this. If I were without but one if those things for a day, I'd be very distressed. But other things too. My clothes that fit me nicely, and my sturdy boots.
I often feel terribly guilty that such a poor person was given such great people to hang around and such wonderful things to touch and taste and smell. It makes me sad that most anyone from some country where the children starve would be better fitted to live my life, and love the people I love so much more effectively, and truly, and with a greater capacity for expressing that love.
But that is not the way of things. The good perish, and the wicked thrive. I am proof of the injustice of life, that this place will not reward the great, the brilliant, and the selfless, anymore than anyone. Rather, it is willing to give a genius moldy bread, and me, the worst kind of person (before people who literally go out to cause suffering) a new laptop.
Oh well.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Carlotta.
"Goddamn the whole fucking world and everyone in it, except you Carlotta."
The last words of William Claude Duncanfield.
(Carlotta, was not his wife, but his mistress.)
Sometimes, everything in life clicks along on bright brass rails. Click clack!
You can feel it moving forward like a determined little train.
Other times...
Well, I can be surprised how many things all go wrong all at once. I'm not terribly horrified, or "here is my life as a house of cards oh god oh god watch them tumble down" panicky. It's more of a sullen squelchly feeling, sitting in my chest, like a toad. Just when I think I've started to enjoy this moment, the toad burps, and I'm reminded, no, enjoyment is for other people.
That's what one gets I suppose. In hell, the smoker is rolled into a cigar and all that.
Well, fuck it. If I have had to make bad decisions, at least I know why it was I made them. That's more than can be said for many.
I don't believe that God hates me. But all the angels of His heavenly host are booing, and throwing old fruit at me, while they watch the play that is my life.
*shrug* I can deal with hecklers. YOU DON'T LIKE IT? YOU CAN GO SHOVE YOUR HALOS UP YOUR HOLIER THAN THOU ANUSES.
Fucking angels. What do they know?
The last words of William Claude Duncanfield.
(Carlotta, was not his wife, but his mistress.)
Sometimes, everything in life clicks along on bright brass rails. Click clack!
You can feel it moving forward like a determined little train.
Other times...
Well, I can be surprised how many things all go wrong all at once. I'm not terribly horrified, or "here is my life as a house of cards oh god oh god watch them tumble down" panicky. It's more of a sullen squelchly feeling, sitting in my chest, like a toad. Just when I think I've started to enjoy this moment, the toad burps, and I'm reminded, no, enjoyment is for other people.
That's what one gets I suppose. In hell, the smoker is rolled into a cigar and all that.
Well, fuck it. If I have had to make bad decisions, at least I know why it was I made them. That's more than can be said for many.
I don't believe that God hates me. But all the angels of His heavenly host are booing, and throwing old fruit at me, while they watch the play that is my life.
*shrug* I can deal with hecklers. YOU DON'T LIKE IT? YOU CAN GO SHOVE YOUR HALOS UP YOUR HOLIER THAN THOU ANUSES.
Fucking angels. What do they know?
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Risk
I play a game. It's call "risk".
It was originally a board game, but I play it as an app on my phone, against the simulated players. They aren't real. That's very important.
The aim of the game is to conquer the world through taking over countries of the world, while your opponents attempt to do same. You start off with maybe five or six players. But it will eventually be whittled down to just two.
The exact details of game mechanics aren't really relevant. But my favorite tactic is to build up a large army of at least fifty men, over a few turns, then crush a whole opponent in one turn.
Sometimes this works so well, that it is I and one other player, that is has but one army left, in one cornered region. What I should then do is destroy this last enemy. Then the victory screen comes up, it has fireworks and triumphant music. It's very nice.
But... I don't kill that one last foe. I let it live. It fights back against me, but to no avail. The tendrils of hope it sends out against me are instantly crushed by my now colossal force.
So there it sits. A lone defender. Waiting death. Alive only by my mercy.
If it were a person, I'd explain to it, that I don't want to kill it. It and I could be friends. We could work together to make this tiny simulated world a better place. Turn over these years of war-strewn horror for a time of peace and kindness. But it won't have that. It still tries to fight me. It defies me!
Well, that's not it's fault. What else could it do? Sometimes I even let it escape and build up its numbers again, give it, if not a genuine chance, a reason to believe I've made a serious mistake. Could it not now conquer the world, too?
The answer is inevitably no. Even as this happens out I roll the huge juggernaut that is my reserve troops. Its resistance is destroyed utterly, like an insect.
Sometimes... I want to fight it to the last man, then stop. Surrender. Lay down arms and to the other players astonishment, allow myself to be run through and collapsed on the eve of my total dominion.
But that, sadly, is not how life works in risk.
Or in life.
Life is a savage place. And my risk metaphor is as transparent as the lie of peace.
It was originally a board game, but I play it as an app on my phone, against the simulated players. They aren't real. That's very important.
The aim of the game is to conquer the world through taking over countries of the world, while your opponents attempt to do same. You start off with maybe five or six players. But it will eventually be whittled down to just two.
The exact details of game mechanics aren't really relevant. But my favorite tactic is to build up a large army of at least fifty men, over a few turns, then crush a whole opponent in one turn.
Sometimes this works so well, that it is I and one other player, that is has but one army left, in one cornered region. What I should then do is destroy this last enemy. Then the victory screen comes up, it has fireworks and triumphant music. It's very nice.
But... I don't kill that one last foe. I let it live. It fights back against me, but to no avail. The tendrils of hope it sends out against me are instantly crushed by my now colossal force.
So there it sits. A lone defender. Waiting death. Alive only by my mercy.
If it were a person, I'd explain to it, that I don't want to kill it. It and I could be friends. We could work together to make this tiny simulated world a better place. Turn over these years of war-strewn horror for a time of peace and kindness. But it won't have that. It still tries to fight me. It defies me!
Well, that's not it's fault. What else could it do? Sometimes I even let it escape and build up its numbers again, give it, if not a genuine chance, a reason to believe I've made a serious mistake. Could it not now conquer the world, too?
The answer is inevitably no. Even as this happens out I roll the huge juggernaut that is my reserve troops. Its resistance is destroyed utterly, like an insect.
Sometimes... I want to fight it to the last man, then stop. Surrender. Lay down arms and to the other players astonishment, allow myself to be run through and collapsed on the eve of my total dominion.
But that, sadly, is not how life works in risk.
Or in life.
Life is a savage place. And my risk metaphor is as transparent as the lie of peace.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
What I did for Christmas
So, what did I do for Christmas? Well, I'll tell you.
First, I went outside and breathed the fresh rainy air. But I smelled brimstone down the drain, and saw red eyes staring at me from the darkness. A voice came from it, saying, "Free me from this sewer with gold and I will grant you three wishes. But beware, for some who wish for material desires... Hey! Hey! Come back!" For I was already walking away. My grandmother always told me never to trust strange drain creatures.
Anyway, I kept walking along, and was accosted by a desperate man who begged me for rubies to feed his children with. "I must have rubies!" He said, his filthy beard waving in the wind, "For my children's hearts grow cold as stone!" He smelled pretty bad, and was being very rude, so I poked him away with my umbrella, telling him I had no rubies, but maybe try a jeweller? Hearing my refusal, his mad white eyes rolled into the back of his head, he transformed into a large yellow rat, which scampered away.
The rain was letting up at this point, and I decided to use my umbrella for a walking stick for a bit.
I was pretty hungry, and I couldn't find anywhere to eat. But I noticed a banana tree growing in the middle of the road I was walking. Its fresh ripe fruit appeared there for the taking. I shook the tree a little and caught one that fell. It was delicious, I can tell you.
However, the tree was apparently haunted, and a spirit or ghost emanated from it, and threw all this rubbish at me. "Thief! Thief! Die!" It screamed angrily, tossing old bones, egg shells and all manner of disgusting things at me, most of which I avoided through cunning and agility.
Thinking I would be stuck there forever with the vengeful ghost, an old woman in a rusty red pick-up truck rolled up. She offered the ghost a chicken from the back of the truck, and it agreed to leave me alone.
She gave me a lift further up the road. But when we stopped at her little crooked house, I saw that her mother was an ogre, ten feet tall, all covered in warts and was feeding on a human leg, so I took my leave.
On my walk back home, I saw a huge yellow rat running through the gutter with a ruby the size of a walnut clamped in its teeth. I nodded to it, and it bobbed its head in response.
I decided to catch a bus the rest of the way back. A young woman rode it with me. In her arms rested a jar, it contained formaldehyde and in the that floated a golden egg. "It's the egg of a Phoenix." She told me, "When it breaks open, it will cover the earth in flame, and in a day and a night, a new race of man and beast will rise from the ashes. It will live for ten thousand years, and then lay another egg."
It had been in her family for generations, but she had to sell it, for her landlady charged a high rent, and was an ogre who ate her brother and bound his spirit to a banana tree.
We talked at little more, till her stop. Mine came soon after. I found a dollar on the road outside my house. I tossed it down the drain to the creature who was trapped there. I heard it sigh as it was released from its imprisonment.
I had a glass of wine with my dinner, and went to bed.
First, I went outside and breathed the fresh rainy air. But I smelled brimstone down the drain, and saw red eyes staring at me from the darkness. A voice came from it, saying, "Free me from this sewer with gold and I will grant you three wishes. But beware, for some who wish for material desires... Hey! Hey! Come back!" For I was already walking away. My grandmother always told me never to trust strange drain creatures.
Anyway, I kept walking along, and was accosted by a desperate man who begged me for rubies to feed his children with. "I must have rubies!" He said, his filthy beard waving in the wind, "For my children's hearts grow cold as stone!" He smelled pretty bad, and was being very rude, so I poked him away with my umbrella, telling him I had no rubies, but maybe try a jeweller? Hearing my refusal, his mad white eyes rolled into the back of his head, he transformed into a large yellow rat, which scampered away.
The rain was letting up at this point, and I decided to use my umbrella for a walking stick for a bit.
I was pretty hungry, and I couldn't find anywhere to eat. But I noticed a banana tree growing in the middle of the road I was walking. Its fresh ripe fruit appeared there for the taking. I shook the tree a little and caught one that fell. It was delicious, I can tell you.
However, the tree was apparently haunted, and a spirit or ghost emanated from it, and threw all this rubbish at me. "Thief! Thief! Die!" It screamed angrily, tossing old bones, egg shells and all manner of disgusting things at me, most of which I avoided through cunning and agility.
Thinking I would be stuck there forever with the vengeful ghost, an old woman in a rusty red pick-up truck rolled up. She offered the ghost a chicken from the back of the truck, and it agreed to leave me alone.
She gave me a lift further up the road. But when we stopped at her little crooked house, I saw that her mother was an ogre, ten feet tall, all covered in warts and was feeding on a human leg, so I took my leave.
On my walk back home, I saw a huge yellow rat running through the gutter with a ruby the size of a walnut clamped in its teeth. I nodded to it, and it bobbed its head in response.
I decided to catch a bus the rest of the way back. A young woman rode it with me. In her arms rested a jar, it contained formaldehyde and in the that floated a golden egg. "It's the egg of a Phoenix." She told me, "When it breaks open, it will cover the earth in flame, and in a day and a night, a new race of man and beast will rise from the ashes. It will live for ten thousand years, and then lay another egg."
It had been in her family for generations, but she had to sell it, for her landlady charged a high rent, and was an ogre who ate her brother and bound his spirit to a banana tree.
We talked at little more, till her stop. Mine came soon after. I found a dollar on the road outside my house. I tossed it down the drain to the creature who was trapped there. I heard it sigh as it was released from its imprisonment.
I had a glass of wine with my dinner, and went to bed.
Friday, December 21, 2012
Hurrah!
This is how drunk I am:
According to the stamps on my hand, I went to at least three clubs I have no memory of whatsoever, and a couple I kinda feel a faint recollection of.
I'm pretty sure that everything went to plan. Pretty sure.
Have no doubt, I'm completely smashed as of this moment. The only point of this post is to demonstrate how good I am at typing while drunk.
Continue with your day.
According to the stamps on my hand, I went to at least three clubs I have no memory of whatsoever, and a couple I kinda feel a faint recollection of.
I'm pretty sure that everything went to plan. Pretty sure.
Have no doubt, I'm completely smashed as of this moment. The only point of this post is to demonstrate how good I am at typing while drunk.
Continue with your day.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
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