Sunday, March 28, 2010

Gee, I'm glad it's raining.

Rain.

The streets glisten with it. It falls, gently; the soft pat each drop makes upon impact blending into a subtle cacophony that fills the senses of hearing and touch. On my jacket, I feel each individual hit as time balloons and expands until the drops no longer fall, they float. Gently, gently, they float, and I with them.

Life moves in slow motion as the moment lasts and lasts, drowning my cares in awe.

I turn, quickly as I can, yet slow, slow. I see an oak tree, old even by the standards of oak. It is vibrant with life, even in its age, its colours seeming to brighten the more I stare. The rain kisses the leaves, the bark, and each solitary drop, hitting, makes a basso rumble as sound slows, like everything else. Everything is still now, except my mind. It seems to race ever faster, practically shaking with the effort of recording, of taking in.

The oak tree is no longer just an oak tree. It is somehow me, now, and my body is strong. I am firm in the earth and my roots feed me, richly, from the soil. My branches reach for the sky and my leaves trade with the air. The rain is a blessing, and I am calm, filled with the satisfaction of being; satisfaction that does not fade, cannot fade.

I see everything around me in minute, precise detail. I see the park around me, lush and green with tended life. I see cars, parked and, on the streets, beginning to move again as the moment contracts. I see the streetlights and the buildings they illuminate. I see an old man on his side, lying on the sidewalk; a brown paper bag lying next to him, spilling brightly coloured vegetables. Carrots, lettuce, and radishes. A bag of frozen peas has burst, little green spheres rolling this way and that. Among them, on her knees is a young girl, no more than eleven years old, face twisted into a grimace of loss. The young girl reaches her hand out to the old man's face.

Somewhere very far away, so distant now, I seem to feel an urgent touch, but I see no one near me. It's not important. I am an oak tree, and though I am ancient, I need only to be. I am so, so happy to be.

Somewhere, still very far away, a voice whispers, "grandpa." For a moment the sorrow in the voice touches me, but it is only a moment, brief and fleeting. It passes and again I am a tree, and it is enough. It has always been enough.

The rain falls, but it will stop. When it is finished, I will see the sun.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Stuff I wish someone had bothered to tell me when I was 17

People like to talk a lot about high school being the best years of your life, or college being the best years of your life, or the time you spend travelling, or your first new town and new job, but what they're really saying is this:

The best years of your young life are the ones in which you start to finally become your own person. When you start to try new ideas instead of the ones the authority figures in your life tell you you should. It is the time when you make your own mistakes, learn your own lessons and make your own discoveries. it is the time in which you really start to learn your body and your sexuality. It is when you learn the limits of what you will do in the search for a good time. You will never again be as outgoing and fearless in your life as you will during this time, and that's usually because life hasn't had a chance to shit on your head and teach you fear, humility and respect, but that doesn't change what it is - your coming of age.

This is what people mean when they talk about the power and beauty of youth. This is what old people mean when they say that youth is wasted on the young. This is a truth that most people won't learn, let alone be aware of, even as they go through it in their own way.

It is different for us all, and the same. This is the time when you learn who you are, what you are and why you are those things. This is when you will try to make yourself into a completely new person, and yet, in the end, probably still become one or both of your parents. It happens.

Try everything you want to and at least a few things that scare the living shit out of you. Pay close attention to the consequences, not only of your choices, but of the choices of everyone around you. Learn why things go wrong, and why things sometimes go right. Learn that most of the time, things will work out if you let them and that most of the rest of the time, things will work out if you put in the effort. Learn that sometimes there is nothing you can do. Learn that money is necessary, but not important. Learn that not all friendships last forever, and that the ones that last forever aren't necessarily the best ones, or the ones that will define you.

Some nicknames never go away.

Public speaking is a lot easier than it seems. It's still scary as fuck for most people.

When you're twenty, you think you'll be able to think that way forever. You can't. Everyone gets old eventually. Fight it and keep an open mind.

People who have done the same thing - the same job, the same friends, the same hobbies, the same sex - their whole lives are usually afraid of new things. They don't think they are, but they are. That's why sudden changes in clothing, hair, music and acceptable sexuality offend them so much. Jesus doesn't hate fags, they do.

The less you learn, the harder it becomes to learn.

You are not the first person to have the feelings you are having. You're not even the only one having them right now. Your life will not work out the way you think it will, and even if you think you have no idea how it will work out, you're still wrong. You are a beautiful and unique snowflake with beautiful and unique experiences, just like everyone else.

A relationship without trust is not worth having. Some people will stay together because they don't know any different. Actually, lots of people stay together because they don't know any different. Love isn't possession. Love is a best friend who wants to play with your naughty bits as much as you want to play with theirs.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

chicken tikka marsellus wallace

Time can move awfully quickly when you aren't paying attention to it.

Another slow night at the offsale has come and gone; I find myself on the couch at 4:07am, central time, with every reason in the world to go downstairs and get into bed. Yet, here I am. Of course, I let it slip that I had a blog today, which led to me taking a gander at it myself when I got home and being confronted with the fact that I just haven't updated in a while.

This will be more of a journal entry than an exercise in creative writing, simply something to get the words flowing.

Having had a recent consultation with my physician, it would seem my medical condition is no better nor worse than it was four months ago, which is both good and bad. I have some new meds to try out, but the fundamental core of my treatment remains the same: a pillow case over my head, a sock over my junk (just like the Red Hot Chili Peppers used to do), a UVA booth and about an hour of my time twice a week. Once again, he used me and my complicated condition as a pop quiz for a couple of gorgeous medical interns. The first time he did that, I was actually quite nonplussed and more than a little self-conscious. Now, of course, I'm so used to being scantily clad in front of the range of women that largely constitute medical personnel that I felt no traces of my previous discomfort. I am fine with my body. It wasn't exactly the way I would have wanted to meet those med students, but that's the way the stethoscope HOLY DOODLES COLD.

Well, of course I was attracted to them. They were comely, charming and intelligent. I like women who can hold their own in a conversation. Stupid is not attractive. But being nigh-nude and getting used as a conundrum, a query, a dilly of a pickle, if you will, is not conducive to romance. "Say there, sweet thang, you want to continue this diagnosis back at my place? Lay your healing hands on me, baby." Oh yeah, smooooooth. I had to laugh at the absurdity of the situation.

I've been to some live music. Bought their t-shirt and was largely deaf for two days, but man, what a great show.

School, of course. Midterms went well, assignments are doing well; I had to give a five minute speech in my rhetorical communications class, and while it didn't go as well as I'd hoped, it was certainly better than it could have been. I now have to write an essay based on the topic I used for my speech, which I'll probably post here when I am finished. It's something I find quite interesting: alternative medicine.

More to follow tomorrow, I think. It's 4:30 now and I my bed has become more eloquent and persuasive in its arguments.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

I wish my wife was this dirty

Ah spring.

The sun is out, the streets are covered in slush and cars everywhere sport poorly scrawled cocks and "wash me" jokes in the ubiquitous layers of dirt. Also, since this is Canada, lost civilizations of extension cords that once powered the block heaters of our fleet of automobiles begin to peek through the rapidly thinning snow cover.

I like getting my extension cords back.

Friday, March 5, 2010

On Climate Change and the Irresponsible Use of Science

I see a major part of the problem being that opinion seems to be considered just as valid as research. Yes, our understanding of the effects of greenhouse gasses has changed since the 1970s. Yes, new conclusions have been drawn. This is how science works.

To quote Dara O'Briain, "[s]cience knows it doesn't know everything, otherwise, it'd stop."

I, personally, find it an obvious conclusion that human industry, including agriculture (and by extension, cattle), can and have had a significant measurable effect on climate. I'm starting to hate that word. Let's say weather instead. Our species is changing the weather.

This is not the first time we have demonstrated our capability to alter global systems, nor will it be the last. Fishing industries around the world have devastated what once seemed an infinite resource. The need for cheap beef has sundered the rain forests. Strip mines and clear cutting left great swaths of land naked and scarred. There is a lake in Russia that is so radioactive it kills anything near it in minutes. Our people have done these things. Why does it seem so far-fetched that we could affect the atmosphere? Especially since we already have, notably the ozone layer, which is now full of holes due to the use of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).

Looking at the advances in our understanding of the global climate over the last fifty years, and focusing specifically on the staggering increases in computing power and hence our ability to build more accurate models of the world, we should expect that recommendations will change. It was a decade ago already that more powerful computers finally allowed scientists to begin to accurately model the sun. Previously, they had been unable to simply have enough particles interacting. Similar problems have plagued climatologists.

Unfortunately, there is a great deal of money and power at stake, not only for the industries who are affected by attempts to moderate their unintended side effects. Naturally, the men who run these industries will be skeptical and just as naturally, they will put their money and power to work on efforts to prove the opposite.

With carefully chosen data, you can subtly skew the results of a study to say just about anything you damn well please. Big tobacco has demonstrated mastery of this. This is pernicious, wrong, and evil. Corrupting science reduces trust in it, and trust in the leaders who make decisions based on it. What we are left with, now, is a legacy of confusion where clarity is badly needed. Worse, we are left with little hope that clarity will ever be found.

The worst part is that the most fundamental truth of the situation is being ignored. That truth is this:

Whenever possible, we should strive for efficiency and a lack of toxic byproducts. In industry, in society, globally. It is irresponsible, ignorant and idiotic to do otherwise, no matter what you believe.