Monthly Archives: March 2004

Never want to work again

I like just hanging around, it’s much better than working.

Spent the day today at the Winchester Mystery House. This is why I want to be rich, so I can fuck around with a perfectly good house and it will become “mysterious.” What’s the mystery? How much money can a lonely, old chick spend on construction?

Anywho, maybe tomorrow I’ll right about Tabitha the tour guide. Man, she sure did work the corny pre-scripted jokes without an ounce of comic timing or playful fun. It was like listening to a great many Cambridge comics. Yeah, you know who you are.

Here’s some of my own photos, since I love to play tourist.

Back to me

OK, that’s enough schmaltzy, yet genuine, sentimentality, got to get the focus back where it belongs — on me.

Actually, I have nothing to say. Jesus, being relaxed and happy certainly does fuck with my ability to be acerbic and witty. Fucking happiness, it’s so relentlessly cheery.

I haven’t wanted to stab anyone for days. My blood pressure didn’t even register Super Tuesday. We fucking drove around yesterday with the windows rolled down, sun and wind on our faces, and sang along to the Eagles.

THE EAGLES!

If this keeps up, I’ll probably buy some Keds and get my hair frosted and cut into the cutest bob and drive a Volvo.

Won’t that sunshiny suburban dream be quite the contrast to the note and the revolver they find near the shards of what used to be my face?

HAPPY WHATEVER YOU’RE DOING TODAY WORLD. KEEP ON SMILING!

HAPPY BIRTHDATY TO M.

The fabulous and wonderful M. is a day older today, but he still looks great.
Here’s a big, public salutation:
Happy Birthday to you,

Happy Birthday to you,

Happy Birthday dear M.,

Happy Birthday to you.

I hope the year is full of fortune, heat and all sorts of good stuff.

Sometimes you really can't complain

So, this is 40, and as much as aging is not what anyone really strives for, even as it inevitably happens, it ain’t bad.

M. managed to completely convince me that between cultural differences and the developing state of his personal economy, I should not expect much by way of birthday gifting. He left for work this morning smilingly staying true to that conviction.

Ahhh, well, philosophically, I was just glad to be on vacation and hanging out with him in California. No big deal, right?

Then, this afternoon, he presented not one, but three gifts, which each were actually multiple. If it were a 12 items or less line, I would have only just made it through. In his words, one gift was a joke, the second was for originality and the third was what I like. The joke was figurines of old people called “Coots,” “youth is wasted on the young,” etc., the originality were two shirts/blouses I could wear on stage and elsewhere that were unique and in my favorite color, black, and what I like was French soap and sachets and all, which I like very much.

Damn, the man sure has been paying attention.

Then, we had dinner at a Singapore restaurant with his company’s founder, who is from India. As they discussed the authenticity of the food and what not, I basked in my own white, American ignorance (by the way, white American makes me think of cheese). It was a great meal, which I enjoyed despite my ignorance.

Back at his place, his landlady opened some champagne. And, since she and I, unlike he and his housemates, have no enzyme deficiency affecting alcohol absorption, we absorbed the bottle.

So, truly, I have no reason to complain and a lot of reasons to be thankful. And, for M.’s attention, I have to admit, I’m baffled by the idea of someone wanting to make me happy. Baffled or not, I like it.

I do feel like a dick that I haven’t been able to think of or find a great gift for him, and actually only have with me something small. But, hell, I’m 40. I’ll make it up to him next decade, right?

Vacation pics

As alluded to in a comment section below, we hung out in Santa Cruz on Sunday. Fun day, I love amusement parks. Here are some photographs.

I really liked this one, because of the bright yellows and the purple in the background and, of course, Jonathan Livingston Seagull: Seagull picture.

But, I hate the flagpole coming out of the seagull’s back. Presto chango with the magic of Photoshop:

The March to Death

It’s here! The big 4 – 0

All in all, not so bad. Waking up on a sunny day with my arms around M. with not much to worry about today, it feels alright.

I do think his forced march of last night was designed to make at least my legs feel OLD. But, hey, it least I got some fun sushi out of the deal. (I was going to link to the sushi restaurant, but this is much better.

Big shout out to the chubby from the East, who have given up rice for fries.

Freedom

I’m officially on vacation, and to me that is the sweet taste of freedom. Sadly, this sense of possibility translates inside my head to:

Things just couldn’t be the same
Cause I’m as free as a bird now
And this bird you’ll never change Oh Oh Oh Oh
And this bird you cannot change
And this bird you cannot change No No I cannot change

Not good to be waking up feeling all Skynyrd, unless, of course, I had lynching on my agenda.

So, this is it kiddies, the last day of my 30s. A decade to remember, as tomorrow I wake all grown up and 40.

As I type this line, the counter to my 40th here shows 10 hours 16 minutes until the day starts. By flying out to California, I prolong my youth by three hours! Thank god for time zones.

In a lot of ways, I don’t honestly give a fuck. I already have a mortgage, no parents and a “career” type of job. Ergo, my life has been stodgy and middle-aged, and the path to inevitably mortality is crystal clear. But, it is fun to milk the sentiments as long as I can.

And, while it lasts, I also have to enjoy the reaction of people who say I don’t look 40. Like the guy on the plane from Phoenix to San Jose, just getting back from a fishing trip to Cuba with his buddies and with whom I solved all of the world’s problems during the flight. Correcting for the fact that he was just on a fishing trip with his buddies, so his meter for seeing womenfolk was probably skewed in my favor, he did ask if I were a student. A student? Yeah, like 20 years ago.

All in all, it’s a fair trade. When I was 12 I looked old enough to by liquor, and I was (thankfully in retrospect) blissfully unaware of my adult appearance. Essentially with the body I have now, I could have gotten into piles of trouble, if I did not act my age. Now when I am older, I’ve gotten those years in appearance back and look maybe a decade younger. Without gray hair at all and only a couple of faint lines, I really can’t complain (I will but I shouldn’t).

Speaking of mortality, I saw The Passion of the Christ last night. I was a little afraid that M. is thinking of converting to Catholicism, he was so eager to see this flick. Forget emotional investment or feelings his becoming Catholic would be a deal breaker in this relationship with a capital ‘D’.

Here’s my brief comment — What the fuck is all of the hype and whatnot about anti-semitism and radicalism and whatever the fuck Mel was doing? All you Catholics and former Catholics out there need only refer to your nearest wall in a holy structure or maybe a few stained glass windows; it’s the Stations of the Cross. Or for you youngsters, the kids’ version. Although, the kiddie version confuses my admittedly faulty memory of Catholicism. I thought there were 14 Stations of the Cross and then an un-numbered coda, the Resurrection. But, the kids get a 15th station. I suppose if I cared deeply, I could figure it out.

So the

The Aramaic and the “historical accuracy” and all seem to be smoke and mirrors. No doubt Mel is one of the faithful, but the construction of the story is straight, old-fashioned Catholicism, the whole “holy and apostolic” church, Amen and all.

Granted there’s a whole lot of torn flesh right out of Wes Craven. But, if you think about what a Roman scourge could do, it makes sense.