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Articles in category 'Oh Please Not That Again'

This may become a series. I sure as hell hope not.

Right now the number one priority is finding a studio for my wife’s two pianos. We might even rent a place just for them, instead of making this an all-in-one affair. We’re reading ads, hitting Craigslist all the time, driving by at least two or three places every day. I hate the artificial frenzy, but at least we’re learning a few things, to wit:

1. Whenever a landlord says, “it was my parents’ house,” run like hell. What that really means is that they never cleaned it out. We drove past one such place this afternoon. It looked so bad, I’ll bet the old folks were still in it.

2. The word “greenhouse” in any classified rental ad is to be regarded with the greatest suspicion. We’ve visited at least half a dozen homes with alleged greenhouses, all fakes: cold frames, a garage with skylights, a couple of sunrooms, a big window with a shelf in it, etc. Ridiculous.

3. If trying to rent your property, don’t do this: “My father bought the lot and we built a house on it… it’s rilly nice… it’s in a neighborhood that’s kinda like a little subdivision, like I grew up in in California… I’m from California, so I like to go barefoot, so the back yard is grassss… and there are lots of flowerssss… it has a wood stove in it but it’s like rilly only decorative…cuz there was this girl who lived there and she never rilly used it…” *

4. We drove past a beautiful two-story house (huge), half of which is for rent. Yes, half. The owners literally split it down the middle and constructed a soundproof wall between the two halves. Before they did this, the house was divided horizontally, and they rented out the upstairs or the downstairs. I’m thinking, how many kitchens and bathrooms does this place HAVE? By the way, the owners live in the north end and rent out the south half. Geez. We may go look at it anyway. The southwest-facing outdoor space looks gorgeous, and it’s only $200 more per month than we can possibly pay.

If you’re reading this from Taos, better grab us. You couldn’t find better tenants.

* If I tell my wife about this one, though, we’ll have to go see it. Sigh.
By John H. Farr, April 10, 2008, 8:46 pm

Posting will be light to non-existent until the metaphysics improve. Indeed, saying anything at all would be stupid and dangerous. I’m sure you understand.

By John H. Farr, March 12, 2008, 3:47 pm

it’s my blog, so I can talk about the weather if I want.

On top of the mud of mass destruction comes today’s gift of water from the gods: when we came out of an afternoon movie downtown, it was pouring down rain harder than I’ve ever seen it here outside of a thunderstorm. By the time we got to our end of town, that had changed to heavy wet snow. The very heavy snowfall, coming straight down at high speed, went on for a couple of hours. It’s tapered off a bit now, but the wind is picking up, and great thudding globs of semi-frozen slush are falling off the trees onto the roof. I went to turn on the TV, and the satellite dish was kaput. Another five minutes outside in the unspeakable cold and wet with a broom cleared the dish, and programming is restored.

Tonight, of all nights, a little TV will be welcome. I don’t know how long we’ll be connected to the outside world, however: the wood delivery yesterday dug ruts in the driveway deep enough to expose somebody’s buried telephone cable, now totally submerged in glop. Ours? The neighbor’s?? Whoever’s DSL goes out first will tell the tale.

A good 10 days of melting and partial drying, undone in half a day. It was already worse than than anyone can remember, and now we have another flood. I expect half of Taos to be inaccessible tomorrow. Even graveled driveways in town will turn to pits of mud.

We have company coming the day after tomorrow. They’re down in southwest NM tonight, where it was almost 70 degrees and sunny today. Poor folks won’t know what hit ‘em!

By John H. Farr, February 24, 2008, 7:01 pm

Today a previously bone-dry dirt road near here turned mysteriously into a shallow lake, yet we never saw any runoff in the area. It did warm up a good bit, and there was lots more melting. In this case, however, I think the water didn’t come from melting snow but from thawing moisture in the ground itself. If you try to dig in the soil, you hit what looks like solid ice after just a couple of inches.

For the record, nearly everyone says they’ve never known it to be this bad. The UPS driver said this afternoon, “It’s a disaster.” I’ll second that, and it isn’t over yet, judging from what happened today. Neither of us have ever seen anything like the highway from Moscow to Yakutsk, though.

Photo from EnglishRussia.com

That’s Russia, not northern New Mexico, with many more pictures at the link. In the chaos pictured above, there were over 600 vehicles stranded! It went on for days. People broke into trucks to look for food, and highway workers sent in to help were set upon and beaten up by enraged motorists. Now THAT is a real mud emergency.

By John H. Farr, February 20, 2008, 11:13 pm

A couple of days ago I noticed a neighbor of mine, “Joe,” carrying old tires up the muddy road. Now that was interesting, taking them to the road instead of away, so I hiked up the driveway in the melting goo to see what was going on. What he’d been doing was remarkable.

Whenever a vehicle churns its way through the mud, the tracks make a sort of channel for the runoff. This is great as far as it goes, but as soon as someone else comes through, the impromptu ditch gets blocked again. In order to keep the water off as much to one side as possible, Joe had taken a shovel to the most promising water-carrying ruts and brought them together, channeling the bulk of the water down the west side of the road. The tires were a stroke of genius, as he was laying them out so drivers wouldn’t wreck the drainage system.

Upper Llano diversion canal

We’re coping pretty well now, except that neither the newspaper girl nor the garbage truck driver are willing to risk coming this far up the road. It’s a lot better, too, thanks to the New Mexico sun and the efforts of a couple of stalwart volunteers. Yup. When Joe was gone, I suited up and hit the mudworks myself. In fact, I’ve spent the last two afternoons playing in the mud. Today I even did some grading with the hoe, knocking the ridges back down into the ruts and breaking up the clay, so it will dry faster.

How I’m draining the driveway

Oh, it’s a grand thing. Now if only the neighbors on the lower part of the road would do their part — but they’re terrorized by the devil dog!

The most universally ignored law in these parts — and that’s a BIG category — would probably be the one requiring dogs to be tagged and kept confined. One such unvaccinated, free-roaming miscreant lives somewhere in the vicinity of the muddiest curve between us and the good road. Her “owner,” if that’s the proper term, has another dog that stays eternally chained in a bare circle of dirt in front of the house and barks when you walk by. The devil dog, however, barks incessantly, and she’s never confined. Here’s a picture of the beast stalking me a few days ago:

Welcome to the real New Mexico

Because the newspaper delivery girl is afraid to hump her Honda through the slop, she puts the paper, securely tied inside a plastic bag, beside a stop sign about 100 feet from where the above photo was taken. My wife gets up early, while the mud is still frozen, and walks down the road — past the devil dog — to retrieve it. At least she did, the first couple of times. For four straight days now the dog has gotten to the wrapped newspaper first and carried it off. Joe told me that he put his muddy work boots outside the door to his trailer, and the animal stole those as well!

“I know the girl who lives there,” he said. “She works at Wal-Mart. I’m gonna go tell her she owes me a new pair of shoes…

By John H. Farr, February 18, 2008, 12:06 am

That’s it, I’m off again. Eliminating Safari bookmarks to AmericaBlog, Crooks & Liars, Juan Cole, Daily Kos, Eschaton, Firedoglake, Glenn Greenwald, Huffington Post, Hullabaloo, Paul Krugman, MyDD, Talking Points Memo, TalkLeft, and Think Progress now… [done!]

The reason is simple. These days nothing makes me feel so completely worthless and terrible as reading about attempts to “fix” the American way of life, which I have neither the desire to repair nor the identification with to savor. I have more in common with chipmunks on the side of the road than I do with politicians, mass culture, or ideologies of any stripe — we all do, actually — and I simply must look out for myself. There’s no other answer. (I’m sure I’ll backslide again eventually, but never mind.)

Onward, chilluns, we each have lots to do.

UPDATE: It isn’t the blogs, is it! I will really have to get one of those things that keeps you from posting when depressed (a brain). As for online reading and the state of my psyche, the political stuff, which I’m addicted to and eat up like candy, really is very bad for me just now. It pulls me down and marches me in directions I don’t want to go. Your mileage may vary, as the saying goes. I’m sure I’ll go back to reading great articles by Digby, for instance, but I do need to take that world in very small doses, for my own good. It blocks out so much else that I have to fight to keep it in its place.

The “problem” is that blogs are where I get my news. What I’m really addicted to is the news itself, and in the current context, all the news is bad. Mainlining bad news depletes psychic energy and creates a self-fulfilling prophecy. I was already rocky this a.m., and then I hit the blogs…

By John H. Farr, December 30, 2007, 1:10 pm
[I wrote the following essay in 2002. It's about a certain Christmas when I was 13 years old. This is a father-son story -- not a happy one -- but maybe there's a little wisdom here. Grab your hankies and dive in, and may we all do better in our next lives. -- JHF]

(In the Abilene fall of ‘58, a catalog arrived. Inside was a color picture of a ready-to-fly gasoline powered plastic model plane and Johnny went beserk…)

I’d always wanted one, though plastic planes were new on the scene. Oddly enough, my Air Force dad had never encouraged me to build a powered model, but he knew a thing or two about balsa wood and paper. He’d shown me once how to anchor and dope the outer covering so it drew taut and shiny. But those were gliders, lesser projects, things we could afford. The raspy, snarling powered craft were not the sort of thing I dared to covet openly. My allowance didn’t reach to buy an engine, and he was never interested, or so I thought.

Whenever there were air shows or fairs around the air bases where we lived, he and I would go to watch the modelers compete. I liked the smell of burning fuel, the noise, and the excitement of the handlers working furiously to get their planes up in the air. Most of the events involved flying tethered models counter-clockwise in a circle. The planes always seemed to fly much faster than their scale would indicate. I feared and envied the responsibility of the lucky few who flew them.

For years I pored over model airplane magazines whenever I could get them. I learned the different brands and types of motors, the sizes and kinds of propellors, the prices and features of all the kits and accessories. I especially liked the replicas, the finely-detailed, complicated kits that if faithfully assembled resulted in a perfect miniature P-47 or Messerschmidt Me-109. My fantasy world of flying models never materialized, but there were static wood and plastic equivalents, so I eventually built up a large collection. The motorized variety, the “real thing,” was always just beyond my financial and technical ability to manifest, so I kept mum. And the the catalog appeared.

It may have been a Sears catalog, the kind we always had, the Sears Christmas season toy catalog that my siblings and I would read all fall in search of toys we’d never get. Christmas was a time for discipline, not hope and joy: “You’re not the only one in the family, you have to share,” or “You can’t just have any thing you want, you have to earn it.” But how to earn? Not literally by being paid for doing chores or babysitting for a neighbor, but more subtly and confusedly, by being somehow worthy. “You’d better not shout, you’d better not cry” was gospel in our home. One way to prove my worthiness, I learned, was to not show evidence of wanting anything at all. But how would people know what stirred my longing, and just where was the line?

The month between Thanksgiving and Christmas was always a tense and desperate time for me. Other kids did fine by whining and cajoling and announced their conquests early at school or on the street: “My folks are going to give me new roller skates for Christmas,” or “My dad’s already bought me a new bike, but he won’t let me ride it ’til we open our presents.” I listened to all of this and only grew more anxious. Did my parents and relatives know just what I wanted? How could they? If I said too much — which could mean anything at all — would I be disqualified? My mother and father believed in dampening expectations in any case. To hear them tell it, we’d be lucky to have a few cookies and a tree. I gradually learned to lowball my enthusiasm and tried to feel virtuous in my first-born role of head sacrificer, but it never worked. They expected me to be happy with a moral prize I couldn’t understand, so all I knew was that if something hurt, it must be “good.”

That fall before my 13th Christmas, I finally took a risk. Maybe it was the hormones, perhaps it was the stars. Surely the accumulating unfulfilled desires of years past had built up to the point where something had to give, but the picture of the airplane in the catalog was the catalyst. The thing was plastic, a gorgeous blue with yellow accents and a red tail. It has a .049 cubic inch displacement two-stroke gasoline motor, a red plastic propellor, and came with control lines already attached. There was nothing to glue or paint, it was ready to fly, and I wanted it. I wanted it more than anything I had ever seen in my life, and I let everyone know.

Not a day went by that I didn’t mention that model plane, leave the catalog open on the dining room table to point it out, or find a way to let my mother or father know how splendid and fulfilled my life would be if only I could have a thing like that. My modesty and shyness were artifacts of the past. I ate, lived, and breathed that shiny blue wonder for weeks on end. I thought about it during school. I re-read the catalog at night. I know I felt my destiny revolved around the acquisition of this culmination of all my boyhood model airplane dreams.

My parents must have wondered in this change in my behavior and may have blamed onrushing puberty. The fact of a maturing sexual animal in their midst had already given rise to myriad anxieties and strategems, such as moving me to a bedroom of my own, lest I “do” something in front of innocent siblings or even to them. I could hardly even pee without a mental timer being set. “Don’t grow a beard in there!” came shouted through the door at every instance.

If bathrooms were such forbidden places, why did my father spend so much time in them? It seems I never entered ours but that he’d only just left, leaving the air perfumed with shit and Camel smoke, butts floating in the bowl. I wasn’t jerking off (I’d hardly had a chance to learn), just aiming at what he’d smoked to tear open the softened paper and send the dark, twisted tobacco bits cascading through the yellow sea to sink like doomed shipwreck survivors.

For whatever reason, my parents had decided to relent. When Christmas morning came, the final present tucked behind the tree was — could it be? — yes, the plane! I can see them now, sitting on the sofa, eyeing me warily and strangely mute. Had they gone too far or spent too much? Was I worthy of this boon, and were they making a mistake by seeming to reward my avarice and lust? But the airplane was beautiful. Shiny hard plastic, gleaming .049 engine, even a small can of fuel to get me started. Naturally I had to fly it right away.

I don’t recall an objection to this, although there must have been. There surely would have been some cautious words expressed, something to warrant holding off gratifying an immediate desire. But there was no obvious justification for standing in the way. Our suburban West Texas home was on the outskirts of town, and right next door was an empty intersection, part of a road leading nowhere intended to serve neighborhoods not yet built. My father wanted to fly it first, of course, to show me how it was done, although he had only ever piloted real aircraft and not flown models. Amazingly, I got my way. It was Christmas morning, after all, and a warm, sunny Texas Christmas morning at that.

We filled the little gas tank (no bigger than a thimble), hooked up the dry cell battery to the glow plug, and my father gave the propellor a sturdy spin. The motor popped a couple of times, sputtered, then snarled into noisy life like an angry mechanical hornet. I stood in the center of the intersection with the control yoke in my right hand, scared but certain I could guide the tiny aircraft safely ’round and ’round until the fuel was spent. This was a significant moment: flying this plane would be the equivalent of leaping onto a horse or motorcycle I’d never seen before and riding off triumphantly into the sunset. By proving I could spontaneously master this skill I’d seen demonstrated countless times and practiced in my mind for years, I would become a man. I would show that I was worthy of the gift of my dreams. I would join the select fraternity of those who could, the ones I’d seen enjoying their sport in front of admiring crowds.

Surely this was easy. All I had to do was hold the U-shaped yoke at arm’s length and keep the two control lines even to achieve level flight. The dynamics were simple enough: tilting my wrist toward the ground would cause the plane to dive, and tilting it upward would cause the plane to climb. The main thing was stay cool and not overreact. My father adjusted the fuel/air mixture until the motor screamed the loudest, then held the plane in place on the pavement until I made sure the lines were taut. At a signal from me, he released the plastic wonder, which immediately streaked across the road and lifted itself into the air, moving impossibly fast.

It was all over in an instant. I over-controlled at the outset, sending the plane into a steep climb. If I had known what I was doing, at that point I could have kept the shiny blue craft flying in a tight circle overhead. Instead, I panicked and reversed the ascent. More quickly than it takes to tell the tale, my brand new toy plunged almost vertically into the ground and shattered into a hundred pieces.

The sudden silence was shocking after all that noise. Stunned, I walked over to where the thing had struck the road and saw there was no hope of repair. The engine, however, was undamaged, as were several other major parts, but none of these would ever be reunited. An indescribable sense of heartbreak, shame, and horror overwhelmed me and I turned to find my father. But where was he? — not where he’d squatted to launch the plane. I turned the other way and saw him walking rapidly away back toward the house. He never said a word.

I was alone in the street on Christmas morning with the pieces of the airplane scattered all around. Slowly I went around and collected all the fragments, like retrieving body parts of someone I had killed. I carefully gathered every part, as if somehow the miracle could be reconstituted and I would have another chance. I was shocked and sorry, but mostly I was horribly ashamed: I’d failed my test and let my father down, a verdict sealed by his silence and the sight of his back. I carried the box back to the mostly silent house. My brothers and sisters were still occupied in the living room, playing with their presents, but my parents were nowhere to be found. My present was “expensive,” after all, and I hadn’t taken care of it. That was my mother’s area of what passed for discipline and so explained her absence too.

Neither of them ever mentioned the airplane again. I eventually found a way to mount the engine on a board and tinkered with it hopefully. I felt it was a kind of penance, just the sort of patient demonstration that would gain me status as a worthy son and maybe even somehow bring forth another plane. (”Look, I saved the motor, and it works! I can use it with another model, can’t I?”). But my father showed no interest in a propellor not attached to a flying machine, and soon I stopped my backyard test-running of the .049. I kept it for a long time afterwards, however, and played with it in my hands. Feeling the compression build as I turned the prop was oddly comforting, and I liked the “pop” of a good, hard flip past the point of most resistance.

Somewhere in a parallel universe a different reality unfolds. A young boy wrecks a brand-new toy on Christmas Day but finds a manly arm around his shoulder and learns to carry on. Perhaps he saves a tiny motor and the two of them build a new device to use the thing and keep the game alive. In this other universe, spirit counts for more than gold and love is unconditional.

Raise your children there, I say.

By John H. Farr, December 23, 2007, 1:25 pm

Maybe it’s just religious Christmas music that gives me fits. I honestly don’t know. But in case anyone is following this dreary saga, I just listened to an entire CD of Christmas songs with Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters, of all people, and somehow, it was [gasp] okay… Now that is really weird, or is it?

The songs were all from the early 1940s to the early ’50s. Popular music, mind you, including hit radio singles. Most of them were quite unfamiliar to me, although I might have heard the later ones. (I was very young, after all.) So they were songs from the time of my childhood, and as such were fascinating historical artifacts. What struck me most about the music were the spaces in it, and how well everyone could sing.

Earlier today I remembered another time or two when I actually enjoyed Christmas music as an a adult. There may be more. The first one I want to mention was during our first Christmas in San Cristobal, New Mexico. A couple of ladies we’d barely met invited us up to a little house way back up in the valley to sing traditional old Spanish carols. There were only about six or seven of us there, all Anglos, including a high school teacher and a son or daughter home from school in Russia. One of the women played violin, my wife played the piano, and I played guitar. It was very cold and snowy. We were all crowded into one little room. It felt like being marooned in the Alps with all the hot cider and cookies you wanted. All very civilized and genteel, as I recall. Another time was a long-ago Christmas party back in Maryland. For some reason I’d brought my guitar and amp, and with the hostess on piano, we jammed to what could only very loosely be called Christmas carols by the time we got through with them and had a rollicking good time. Later we tried that again at another party and it flopped like hell.

Fascinating, I’m sure. But after listening to that CD of Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters, it hit me that I grew up in an age when the CLARINET was prominently featured in popular music!

That’s right, the clarinet.

I think I’m done now.

By John H. Farr, December 20, 2007, 10:42 pm

 

Dios es mi motor

Sometimes things just fall apart, a little or a lot.

It can happen in an instant, but usually builds up over several days. A little emotional awkwardness is the first sign, neurotic guilt symptoms the second, and then wham, a sharp drop down a well-worn slope. Some people take anti-depressants. I guess I understand. Without them, natural selection would have eliminated a lot more of us. But I’ve never done that. I can’t imagine it. If I have a broken leg, shouldn’t it hurt?

The situation is not enhanced when all I hear are drums for war. An occasional commenter here once said that while the administration is evil, they’re not insane, ergo I shouldn’t worry that they’d actually start an even bigger war on top of the two they’re already losing. And with Iran yet, a nation with a culture older than Jesus. They don’t know a thing about Iran except the numbers, as if that’s enough, and they’re also ranting about “saving Israel” when all this will do is blow it up. The accelerated “return” of an immaculately conceived descendent of Abraham to reward true believers for the mess they’ve made is part of this equation, and who does that remind you of? (”Heckuva job, Christians!”) The man thinks he’s acting in the name of the Almighty. The more impassioned the protest and cries for reason, the keener his revenge. How is any of this sane?

Simply taking it all in is dangerous. It can set off my own reactions, and then the things in the basement wake up. It’s outrageous how similar they are, my own learned flagellations and the planetary depression of war and apocalypse. Scared? Check. See no way out? Check. Feel no love? Check. No joy? Check. Everything a waste? Check. Why go on? Check.

Meanwhile the arguing and strategizing roll on. It’s like we’re all riding the same gigantic eel. But who wants to ride an eel? Better yet, WHO WANTS TO RIDE A STINKING SLIMY UGLY FISH DOWN TO THE BOTTOM AND DIE???

Want to know what really happens when the hammer drops? Everything disintegrates. I mean everything. I know what’s going on, but I can’t stop it. I fall all the way down through the blackness and get dumped into a cold stone dungeon dark as pitch. At this point, useless and dysfunctional, I might as well be dead. It’s over. My heart is cracked completely open. And then, spontaneously, I hear a quiet little voice. Over in the corner, there’s a light. Essentially, Little Johnny Angel-Boy in a propeller beanie says “Wait a minute, that’s not right,” and instantly there’s a total shift. It’s literally that fast. Without any warning, I’m saved by I don’t know what. I think it comes in through the crack. But I have to hit bottom hard enough to break things. One way or the other, I have to feel.

In the same way, I have this image of humanity needing its collective heart cracked open, so change can come. Maybe it’s just a matter of allowing. Otherwise, the eel snaps its tail. That’s the default method, though what I think what we have here is a chance to be different. I know there’s a chance because I’ve seen things change instantaneously. Sometimes it’s really crazy. It’s like there’s this big dumb secret only rocks don’t know, except they do, and we’re the ones left out in the cold by being stupid.

This afternoon I was still a wreck and took a walk up the mesa, more to take my vibes out where they wouldn’t stink up the house than anything else, and halfway up the hill it happened, just like I described above. Everything shifted, I was “back” and fine, but in a slightly different way. As I walked down from the top, I started writing this post in my head. Thirty seconds later, I looked down and saw a rock with a singular shape. I bent down to wipe the sand off and picked it up. It was heavy, about a foot across, in the shape of a heart that’s been cracked open.

I tucked it back under a piñon for later retrieval with my backpack. When I get it home, I’ll post a picture. It’s the damnedest thing I ever saw, at least this week, and you really won’t believe it.

By John H. Farr, November 1, 2007, 2:02 am

A big dark brown spider crawls silently across the rug. My wife’s in bed, so I take no action, even though he’s heading underneath my chair. As with the spider, I’m not sure what this is about. I just want to share a little of what I’ve noticed lately.

For decades I was a voracious political & news junkie. Roughly nine years ago I gave up TV more or less completely. Since Bush got in, I had to stop listening to NPR as well. For an awfully long time now, I’ve gotten probably 99% of all my news from the Internet. That means I was able to control my consumption to some extent, to select the kinds of stories I wanted to read. During the last few years of major crisis mode — personal, national, and geopolitical — blogs provided an even tighter focus: I didn’t have to wade through a bunch of other articles to find the ones I wanted; in fact, I didn’t even need to read them: most of the time, a hot quotation with someone else’s appended outrage was enough. And if I wanted more of the latter, all I had to do was read through the comments and join in. I mean, you can mainline this emotional state.

But it’s almost like I had to take the risk. If you’re expecting a check for a million dollars, you keep looking in the mailbox. Likewise, if you think the dam’s about to burst and you live downstream, you listen for the sirens — there might not be any escape, but at least you’ll know.

Well, for most of August and September I turned off the blogs completely. It was extremely difficult to do, an eye-opening experience that proved the depth of my addiction. Not unexpectedly, I did expand in other directions. Maybe a few loony ones, but still. There is life out there — (”in here”?) — I realized. At the same time, I became curious and took a few backward glances at the daily hullabaloo. Remarkably, everything was just the same, as if I’d never left. That insight didn’t stop me, though. ["Hello, my name is John H. Farr, and I'm a crisis junkie."] And now I’m back to reading blogs again, checking half a dozen on a daily basis. That’s a pale shadow of my earlier involvement, thank God. Nonetheless, I’m getting the news again, observing and dealing with the psychological and metaphysical effects, and so on — only with a wee bit more detachment than before.

I can’t just ignore what’s going on, but I need to understand the context created by the focus: what strikes me most is how the vortex of negative energy, amplified by convergence with an apocalyptic archetype manifesting in the world [No shit! -- Ed.], feeds back into itself and suppresses creativity, i.e., solutions. That’s what makes it a vortex, having no apparent choice. From inside, all options are framed by the downward spiral: what will we do when gasoline is $10 a gallon, where can we go before the clampdown, what about the ice caps, etc. etc. It’s a frigging mess. You can’t get there from here, because there isn’t any there!

This is so close to what it’s like to be mortally depressed, I can hardly believe it.

It’s the same pain. My pain, the country’s pain, the pain of the world. It’s like there’s only one wound. Suddenly, instead of feeling alienated and alone, I’m me but also part of everyone else. It’s all sloshing back and forth a billion times a second. I CAN’T QUIT. NO MATTER HOW HARD WE TRY TO MAKE IT SO, NO ONE IS ALONE. Which is why it has to work the other way, too: heal myself, I heal the world.

Holy crap! As Rob Brezsny’s [sidebar] newsletter signature quote assures me Pogo once said, “We are confronted with insurmountable opportunities.”

Go forth and multiply (quickly). Make art. Something else is out there.

By John H. Farr, October 17, 2007, 12:49 am