Author Archives: admin

The curse of fine weather

It’s a gorgeous day outside these four walls. but this time of year, it’s often a gorgeous day. consequently, i’m lazy.

Back in the cold of Cambridge, if there was a day like today, it was almost required to drop everything and soak up some vitamin D. You never knew if rain would inevitably rain on your parade, proverbially or actually, or if another crisis was around the corner. It was almost required to make hay when the sun was shining, and clearly that cliche came from a dank and drizzly corner of the world.

By the way, with that link to Boston’s latest dilemma, I’m beginning to think my old town is becoming Egypt of the Bible days. When will the locusts and frogs descend?

Here I am, safely drinking unboiled water after harvesting today’s lemon crop in my back yard, and I’m OK being indoors. It makes me feel guilty, all the while I know that statistical days of sunshine are greatly in my favor here.

I’m not a complete and utter slug of sloth, to mix a metaphor. I’m on laundry load three, the dishwasher has been loaded, run and unloaded, and a fresh shower curtain now hangs anew. I have not played in the sunshine.

Walt Whitman I am not.

The play of shine and shade on the trees as the supple boughs wag,
The delight alone or in the rush of the streets, or along the fields
and hill-sides,
The feeling of health, the full-noon trill, the song of me rising
from bed and meeting the sun.

I know not of these emotions. Not today.

The anti-Whitman, but not like in an Emersonian way or anything cool like that, I have succeeded in making my iPad into essentially a thin client.

Through the automagic of network computing, I can look at the desktop of one of my home computers, and tunnel into the files and do whatever the hell I want. Better yet, that desktop is connected to my backup disk with pretty much all of my data goodness, files galore I can now retrieve and manipulate iPad in hand.

As an aside, I was a total, arrogant douchebag to a chick at the boxing viewing party we went to last night. Fascinated to play with our new toys, after a while the woman declared the iPad inferior to her Mac Air (sheesh, talk about expensive toy), because it’s all about “access.” So, click click, I showed her my home desktop at my virtual fingertips.

Apart from party douchebaggery and braggadocio along with just seeing if I could actually do it, there is some method to my geek madness. It’s rooted in the black, dark days of my early foray into weblogging bullshit.

You see, one thing my old employer tried to do in trying to show me as the ill-will driven loon they needed me to be was to show I was using their computers and time to fiddle in my shitty craft. I hadn’t been, apart from the odd lunch hour (my time) or quick comment, but they tried, oh lordy-lord, they tried.

(Internet tip # 5,376, if you are going to ‘blog on the company dime, don’t date stamp your entries. I use Splee’s Fuzzy DateTime WordPress plugin. Thank you Lee McFadden and the development community on the world wide web for humanizing my time away from the actual precision my computer could be reporting. Nothing like “wee hours” or “today” to confound the time police.)

This job, therefore, one can’t even get to my website from their network. The IP address is blocked for all and sundry and their peering eyes, myself included.

It’s been a convenient excuse for my general malaise and writer’s block. Despite my boss’s own verbal notice that I SHOULD write in my down time and not to worry about the man’s keeping me down, I have kept off my own playground. No risk, no questions, no complaints, the lessons I took from my last gig.

Now, though, technology might give me a boost and perhaps switch off that writer’s block. During stolen daylight minutes when I am not too tired and eager to doze on the couch lulled by the TV, maybe I can write a little bit.

Tunneling to my own playground on my own equipment located 40 miles from work, I could have an out-of-body writing experience privately. We’ll see how it goes, but the man can’t be keeping my data down.

Hedging toward the forbidden

Of course, being somewhat educable, i try to learn shit. Sometimes I succeed. Sometimes it even sticks.

In other words, given past experience, I try not to write about work. And with that, you know I’m going to skate near that particularly rice paper thin ice.

Mostly, I like my job, and I haven’t felt the wrist-slitting perturbations that became daily episodes in my last state of employ. It’s a weird little group of people. A collective building heaped from the chief on down with folks who academically achieved even when it meant ass kicking and wedgies.

A nerd’s paradise in some respects. But, it is fucking work, and trials and tribulations there are.

The other day, I was driving there, before my getting old V-dub decided it didn’t want to drive, and listening to the radio. Specifically, I was listening to that solid, quirky voice of public radio, Terry Gross on Fresh Air. She was chatting away with Stephen Sondheim on the occasion of his living 80 years on earth.

Total aside, I love Sondheim in terms of his work, but after listening to this interview I think he must be a dick if you were ever to hang out with him Very old school marm-ish corrections and stuff. I kind of wanted Terry to take a shot back, like “Yes, so what are you are saying is you find other people, such as me, to be plodding and inaccurate clowns, is that correct?”

One thing he talked about has stuck with me for days now. In talking about working with Leonard Bernstein in the early days of his career, he mentioned that Bernstein always failed grandly. He said he learned from him that “the worst thing you can do is fall off a low rung.”.

If you’re going to fail, fail big. Might as well get to the top rung first.

I think it’s a life philosophy into which I could swan dive and feel at home.

Arguably, in the many employment failures I’ve had, I’ve failed big. Mind you not Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein big. Just big enough for little old me.

Maybe to them, it would be bottom rung junk. But, for me, it’s from the perspective of a micro-millimeter long ant and a conventional-sized ladder. For an ant, I’ve dropped some dizzying distances from what felt like a pretty good rung of achievement.

Sondheim talking about failing big struck me this week, because I’ve been feeling a familiar fear and loathing.

Like in my last gig, I’ve been a reliable workhouse. The higher up types have given me sufficient strokes to make me feel like there’s a corporate future in which I just might feature in some way. And, now, word on the street is that we might be reorganizing.

It’s a road so familiar, I still got the dust on my shoes to prove it. The strokes, the good positioning, the reliableness, the work ethic, the dealing with team dynamics, the helpong to make change happen and reorganizations possible. I have seen this movie before. I’ve lived the scenes, memorized a whole lot of dialog.

Yet, it is different. I gotta hope it’s different. Different folks, different gig, different job, hell, different fucking state. And, maybe, just maybe, I learned something last time at the rodeo, and I’m a little different too.

If not, if my pit of the stomach fears come true. It’s a higher rung and potentially a better failure. I just fucking hope it’s a good story, if the road turns down that same hill.

Very little of interest

No one should really care but me, but I’ve spent the past week moving this website from one hosting site to another. So while no words have appeared in this space, I have been working on the behind the scenes of this weblog.

By way of review, my website was hosted on Bluehost.com, because eons ago WordPress.org, the software on which this page runs, had a promo partnership. It seemed like a good buy, and they were the scrappy new comers in webhosting.

Now, they have grown into suckitude. Once upon a time, if they did an upgrade or wanted you to reset something, the email would be friendly and clear. The other day, they sent one telling me to update my spam protection, and, boom, I deleted a bunch of email that may or may not have been spam based on their instructions. Thanks guys.

When I called the tech line, they offered nothing. Even their “sorry” wasn’t forthcoming, as they went through the steps to determine it was all my fault. There was barely any acknowledgement that their own email lacked pretty crucial information – before doing as we ask make sure everything is all cleaned up over at Postini, because as soon as you do like we’re telling you, you’ll never see that data again.

I think that is what was so frustrating. They turned off my Postini account before I could go through it. Presumably, there my data still sits somewhere in Postini’s servers, unaccessible to only me. I can’t imagine that canceling a subscription equals – POOF! instant data gone.

An email to their founder, Matt Heaton,who implies in his blog that he’s happy to hear from customers, is to date unanswered.

Since my website subscription with Bluehost had only just automatically resumed, I looked around. One thing I found was that I was not alone in my lack of being happy or impressed with their customer service.

The other thing I found, which falls under the allegedly category, and I’m not sure whether it’s fact or bigotry, is that Matt and/or Bluehost may have written some checks in support of California’s Prop. 8, banning gay marriage. He is a Mormon, and the company is based in Utah.

It could just be anti-Mormon rhetoric making the Prop. 8-Heaton connection. Or, it could be true, in which case I’m perfectly happy not giving more dollars out of state that comes back to fuck up my laws.

The only thing people might notice with this change is I’ve added a basic home page at http://dee-rob.com and a new face to my photo gallery.

Other than that, it reminded me that working on websites is a little bit of dorky fun. So, there may be other changes afoot.

Oh, and I’m finally sorting out how to use WordPress.org’s iPad app, so maybe I’ll write more. Pictures like these, look amazing on Apple’s new toy.

The undisciplined life

M. has learned martial arts. I have not. In point of fact, it’s not even a realm of activity in which I have ever considered participating. The fighting arts lie somewhere between spelunking and coloratura soprano in my world, which is nowhere.

Until I met M. I hadn’t realized that there’s a whole lot of worlds in the world of martial arts. How the breakdown translates in my head (and i’m sure I’m missing an esoteric nite or nuance about which M. will correct me) is that there’s your spiritual, intense, disciplined, quasi-religious stuff and then there’s fighting. Except that’s not right, because it’s all fighting.

It could be that it really breaks down as hypocrisy versus honesty.

The above is a long-winded introduction to the adventure of M. signing us up to check out a class in kendo, the way of the sword, the modern Japanese art of stick fighting. We watched as three sensei (senseis?) and some veteran warriors led various levels of students through drills, rituals, some fighting and a lot of bowing.

My favorite part of the evening was imagining what brought everyone to that gym. Like the overweight, bald white guy with the scruffy, but intentional, goatee and the other white guy with the modified prince valiant hair in a shiny silver flow and fashion glasses. Each of them threw themselves with concentration into the repetitive exercises. Each of them looked like a greater than 100 percent chance that they participate in some kind of sub-cultural activity or lifestyle. Ren faire maybe or “live action role playing” or maybe just bondage and discipline.

One squirmy little guy, maybe 8 or 9, looked like there were a dozen places he would rather be doing a dozen other things. Drill after drill involved slipping feet across the gym floor in a controlled glide. He snuck in extra skips with random hops whenever the senseis weren’t looking and often when they were. He had a drummer inside his head that was playing his own song, and his wooden sword waggled in it’s own, non-warrior orbit.

The backstory for him in my head was that given his apparent mixed heritage, someone in the family decided maybe he could get some much needed discipline while basking in his Japanese history.

He was in marked contrast to the other little boy in line with him for the drills. Lower to the ground, maybe a couple of years younger at an age when a boy starts looking like a boy not a baby, the second little guy was battle ready. Every drill he maintained the dead-eye, stone stare of a warrior. His movements were controlled, precise. I imagine his parents have always wanted a Navy Seal or other Special Ops in the family.

He scared me.

An earnest but not soldier strong blond girl kept looking up at the ceiling to a sensei’s admonishment that there were no ninjas there ready to jump her from above. For her, I think maybe she’s adding some activities to her youthful resume to entice college admission to her well-rounded soul.

We, M. and I, were both drawn to an older gentleman, the aforementioned ninja-evoking sensei. He was Mr. Miyagi in a gym of chest puffed arrogance. To be able to watch, M. had gotten emailed permission from one sensei who was probably about our age, maybe a little older. After a few minutes of watching it was clear that he’s a complete dick.

The old guy, the Mr. Miyagi figure, was different. He had the skills, knew the traditions, the sensei title AND had a fucking sense of humor. He invited us back next week, told me I had a strong kendo build, intimated that women needed stick fighting to keep men in line and wanted us to spontaneously join the exercises.

The dick sensei, on the other hand, snapped at a clear newcomer as he crossed the gym floor that he should say excuse me. I didn’t get it, but think it was just because he had dared walk in the shadow of the great sensei himself. Power trip much?

We spent an hour or two watching exercises to promote muscle memory in the heat of fighting, stick drills, foot work, warm ups, and finally two-person interactions that looked like choreographed smacks to the armor and bashes to the helmeted head. We also watched repeated cycles of bowing and prostration along with identical movements for everything from sitting to wrapping s rag around your head.

It was exactly too formal for our go with the flow selves. I think some martial arts to me would be like AA meetings are to people I know who don’t believe in a higher power. Too much emphasis on bullshit.

I would gladly show respect to the older gentleman full of ninja jokes and samurai sword skills. Bowing to the cranky, testosterone laden sensei and paying him ritualized homage would get fucking old extremely fast.

The quest for a joint activity moves on, despite my desire for a teacher-sanctioned or encouraged stick beat down for M. by me sooner rather than later.

Writing the modern way

Early adopters M. and I are, so here I sit with Apple’s latest gewgaw on my lap. I have to say this little thing is something.

Now, me, I’ve gotten all sorts of portable devices over the years. I had Motorola clamshell phones that let you download weak, little Java or Brew applets. Chunky pixels of solitaire games or calculators that required a whole lot of clickity clicking.

The web, I’ve been surfing that thang for years and years. Normal folks don’t remember the magic of pairing an amber screen of text with a zippy 9600 baud modem and discovered words on bulletin board services that were left behind by other explorers. Usenet was a mystical land.

Gopher. I went down some Gopher holes and found treasures of information. I was a member in good standing with Delphi, and that neighborhood of oracles. I had mastered WAIS searches a year or so before I ended up sleeping with a guy responsible for some of the core code.

Yeah, I’m geek girl enough to sleep with a true geek guy. (In those days it also meant a house full of roommates who not only could code, but could gather up the binary files and make “Simpson” episodes and Grateful Dead and Phish bootlegs appear from data strings.)

Hell, I even rocked a Sidekick for long awhile.

But, this, the iPad, it’s not your grandma’s computer. Although, it probably should be.

I think the best thing about it is it doesn’t have much of that computer feeling to it. Not a lot of pesky menus or commands. Just words and pictures that humans might use.

Want a book? Hit the iBooks icon, which looks like a book, et voilà. Want to know what books you have? Tap on the library. Want to buy a new one? Tap on the store. Pretty much the same thing for loading up apps and email accounts and whatnot.

I know for sure if my mother were alive I would buy her one.

Now Pat wasn’t a dumb woman, or particularly fearful of trying something new and different and electronic. Among her computing accomplishments was to not only find on the web a bunch of images of Wyoming when my sister moved there, but to download them and print them up on good photo paper for a collage of framed art. However, AOL and her desktop set up were haunted by various gremlins.

A common call I might get, whilst sitting home alone some quiet evening, was “Help. There’s just a big line or thing on the screen and it won’t go away.” Or, “I click on that thing and it doesn’t make that sound.”

What that generally translated to was an errant mouse drag or two had made a menu bar stretch to half the screen obscuring the menus that could it back under control. Or, maybe in the days of modems, the familiar squeal of the phone line never connected. In later days of cable modems the email window wasn’t crying out “You’ve got mail.”

Hours of our relationship, which ended in one of us dying prematurely, could have been salvaged if Steve Jobs had been inspired sooner and technology had caught up to Pat’s fantasy of how “that damn computer” should have worked.

A lot of people hate the cult of Mac and the messiah that is Jobs. It is in the end a commercial enterprise, and he’s a very wealthy man.

However, I defend him and his products perhaps because of his personal interests and how they are found in his designs. It is the tech company where CEO Jobs stood in front of an image of intersecting street signs – Liberal Arts and Technology. It takes a guy who likes to read books himself to design something a book reader might like.

Mostly, I think computers are designed and made by geeks like me who enjoy clicking around and solving puzzles and don’t mind coded language. For them, and some of the time for me, it’s OK to have to click on and on through a series of Skinner-inspired conditioned responses.

Normal folks, though, and a good percentage of the time myself, don’t want to have to think that hard. In Jobs’ world the computer is a means that should be easy with the hard thinking part reserved for the actual task at hand.

We just want to click on the picture of a book to get there and have the reading be the main event. That the iPad does quite prettily.

Too croupy to write

Man am I tired. I haven’t written. Haven’t felt like writing. Mostly I just sit and cough. And cough. And cough. And cough.

Apparently, or at least the word on the street from the fine doctor at Kaiser Permanente willing to diagnose me by telephone, the old barking cough that scared many a Victorian mother has never gone away. A virus might get driven underground by good health and good treatment and vaccines. But, then, it can rise again in a whole other host of hosts.

In other words, the croup, which I associate with novels and stories of sickly families and Dickensian tragedy, is currently making a come back in a large way around Northern California. Instead of crying babies under a towel sobbing through a cloud of steam, it’s old folks like me coughing up a lung all night long.

For me, croup is Minnie May not dying and Anne getting to hang out with Diana again, despite having gotten her tanked on currant wine.

Well it used to be that. Now, it’s a pain in the ass cough that kept me up nights with a heaving wheezing chest that now lingers into scratchy annoyance. I’m pretty sure it’s not from my being overfed on potatoes and my bad hygiene, like this old-timey article asserts. Or “protein poisoning.”

Night after night coughing and wheezing is exhausting.

What I have learned most of all, is I better not get anything terminal any time soon. Illness frazzles me. I’ll be saving my pennies for a nice, permanent vacation to Switzerland, if the worst ever happens. In fact, if this coughing doesn’t stop, I might have to off myself soon.

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Pat, the annual tribute

If Pat had lived until today, she would have turned 81. She didn’t make it that far.

In years past, I’ve had fun thinking about the ways I live my life today that is my antidote to her end while embracing what was best about her. A creative kind woman, with a whole slew of hard knocks and heart breaks. The only antidote I know to life’s grind is living what you can as best you can.

Not to get all power of positive thinking, but the more sunshine I appreciate. The lemons in my yard, the sunsets on the drive home, that kind of Hallmark cliche. The more I remember all that and don’t let the bullshit drag me down to deep, I think I’m honoring her memory. Even in depression, there was stuff that mattered and most of all was keep on keeping on.

Now, I could try to remember another great whacky story from the annuls of Pat. One of my fond memories from fairly late in her life, or at least around the retirement from teaching years, was a gift basket she arranged. Her friend was either having a milestone birthday or a retirement party, something fairly momentous. Pat decided to put together a gift basket. It was no bath salts and cologne and wash cloths run of the mill department store gift basket.

It was mined from months of picking up the weird and interesting and a few actual cool gift items. I only vaguely remember it, because it was like a memory game where a bunch or random, disparate objects were spread out before me and later I would be tested for recall. One item I remember was the Steiff bear.
000843 T

The recipient collected teddy bears, or she had an antique from childhood (or the childhood of someone in her family tree), and naturally such a find would have to be in the growing basket. Only, Pat wasn’t really going to lay out large bills for a fuzzy old bear, not when ingenuity and a sense of humor were on her side. Collectors would know that among the things that make Steiff bears unique and prove their authenticity is a button in the ear. Dating back about a century or so, that’s how the Steiff family swings.

Pat, she bought a big old button, and a little, old haggard bear, and voila, Steiff. It’s that kind of fun gift pack that took people by surprise. Other folks just don’t think of that stuff, and, if they do, they don’t carry it out.

In those occasional moments of my own whimsy, I think of Pat. It’s one of the reasons I like the Walsh Brothers. They have an awesome ceramic figurine of a wise, green mentor from the Star Wars movies.
Yoda-Ep2
I think the story goes that their mother made it for them in the height of the frenzy when they were boys in the 1980s. Like many a mom at the time, though, the intricacies of names like Obi Wan Kenobi were lost. So, carefully hand painted on the figure is it’s name — JODA.

Joda and the Steiff bear will end up together in a toy heaven some day.

I didn’t mean to tell a Pat story, though. What I meant to do was write about the issue of the day that is not getting enough news coverage and would have had her muttering for days an days and days and days.

I’ve only seen a bit in our U.S. news, but Germany is having its own Catholic Church meltdown with various scandals. Right now, it’s a lot of what did Pope Benedict, then Archbishop Joseph Ratzinger, know and when did he know it. You gotta figure he knew is brother Georg was a hothead with some anger management issues lighting the choir up at his school.

I saw the stories, and I couldn’t help but think what would Pat’s take be on the whole issue. No doubt, there would be a whole lot of ranting about hypocrisy and priests and their lies. In this case, I think some Nazi name calling would be marched out, and maybe a remembrance of how the Catholic Church doesn’t exactly have an exactly stellar historical record in terms of World War II. Of course, when she was alive she picked out the Polish record during the Holocaust to indict the prior Pope, so a former Nazi youth would be fish in a barrel.

I love that not only did I think these thoughts, but my email box reminded me that my thoughts were not alone. My aunt reminded me of what may have been Pat’s last words to anyone in our family on this earth — “Law should be shot.” Her concise analysis of how the Vatican should have handled Boston’s church sex scandals.

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But wait there's more

If our weekend wasn’t great enough with the brunch and psychic energy, Saturday night got better. After a meal of wood-roasted chicken, pork and beef with kale, squash and lots of taters (not all in one entree, Lulu’s serves family style), we headed off to a real live theater show.

The company was great, including Kevin, who has the dubious honor of being the person I know on either coast who has known me almost as long as my own family. Our birthdays are a few days apart, plus the year that he is older than me, which was true back at Central Junior High School. I like to consider the cycle of Pisces in the calendar as a full-on month of birthday celebrating for me and M., and I’m happy to include Kevin in the festival.

The real live “play” we saw was more of a theatrical experience — The SF cast of “Point Break Live.”

Here’s something that might not be my finest trait, I loves me a Patrick Swayze movie. Far as I’m concerned any afternoon or night with a remote control is enhanced by a chance encounter with Point Break or Roadhouse. Nobody did muscle-bound, soft-spoken quasi-philosopher better than Patrick. Add some cheesy dialog and over the top (or in Keanu’s case in Point Break under the top), I’m done for a couple of hours.

The Metreon in SF is one of our usual places to see new movies. From where we now live, it’s about the same distance away as the suburban movie houses, but there’s more food and fun to be had in the big city, plus it’s an IMAX theater. The last two or three times we went to see a flick, I saw the flyers and then the lobby advertising “Point Break Live.” I was becoming a bit obsessed, which was heightened when I caught 3/4 of the movie on late night cable recently. The frequency of my calling M. “dude” had been increasing. Then Kathryn Bigelow won some Oscars.

So we lived my dream.

From the minute I grabbed a can of PBR and sat on a metal bench inside a clear plastic poncho inside a dingy little theater, I felt at home. The grimy black box with stage wings created by homemade curtains and the rowdy crowd of fairly hip looking 20- and 30-somethings reminded me of the gritty fun of sipping a cheap beer in the back of the old ImprovBoston Theater waiting for the “Great and Secret Show” to start. I was disappointed from that feeling as the night wore on and the show unfurled.

The cast was great. The hook of a new Johnny Utah chosen every show worked better than Keanu’s performance. It was much funnier than I thought it might be.

The downside was the playing up of the homo-erotic closeness of the surfer boy gang. It was played broadly and for laughs, which meant an edge that teetered between homophobia and comic eroticism. However, that played out well for my creepy old lady thrills. At one point when the surfers are introduced sans their “Ex-Presidents” masks, they stand and lie and lounge along the side of the stage, including having one cast member draped on the laps of the audience. They rearranged our seating order to make sure that he was on top of women only, and there I was with a cluster of young, muscled boys surrounding me. The one on my lap with hard pecs and pierced nipples grabbed my hand to rub the suntan lotion they were smearing around into his flesh.

I was an incidental and unintended cougar with a PBR in one hand and a young man in the other. I cooperated for the sake of art.

Between the show, the dinner and the psychic, not to mention the pedicure and massage M. decided that we needed before heading out for the evening, I almost forgot to hate this weekend. It takes a lot to mellow me out during the hell that is Daylight Saving Time.

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Where to begin?

Saturday, March 13, 2010 may go down in the history books for me as significant for its fun factor and for its diversity. It all began much to early for me on a Saturday, when I was rustled out of bed about the same time I would awaken for a work day. I hate that early-rising shit like poison.

We had to wake up early, because M.’s co-worker, a friend really, with whom we recently trundled off to Tahoe, because she believes in psychics. Or, more correctly, she believes in Felix the Psychic. Actually, he’s a medium, and while not all psychics are mediums, all mediums are psychic, or so I think Felix explained. Point is, M.’s friend hosted a brunch where Felix would give a reading to 10 or 11 of us gathered around her sunny, large living room in the suburbs of the East Bay.

To say I am skeptical about this kind of shit is an understatement. Worse, I kind of wonder about the ethical realm in which professional psychics work. Too often, I think, they work among and prey upon vulnerable folks who want answers or are coping with grief and generally are casting about for a shoulder to support them or ears to listen. I’ve had my tarot cards read after a bad breakup and burst into tears to a strange woman, who was in retrospect an inexpensive therapist for my broken heart with her vision of a wounded animal outside my door afraid to come in or commit, as metaphor for that now-forgotten boyfriend. Best case, it’s a few bucks and a few tears. Worst case, it’s a terrible and potentially expensive bandaid to deeper issues.

On the lighter side, I’m not 100 percent opposed to entertaining psychic shenanigans, both for their entertainment value and for the exercise of a different perspective. I read Carl Jung as an impressionable, precocious youth, and who the fuck knows what is buried in the various layers of our subconscious, collective and otherwise? I used to carry around my own pack of tarot cards and a handy interpretation guide and what it did for me was essentially, in new age hippie speak, guided meditation. The cards images and alleged meanings could get me thinking about my actual problems and thoughts, but aligned in a different direction or with a fresh perspective. I could also talk other people through their readings the same way.

I only really except three things when it comes to this stuff, though. Life is complicated and not everything makes sense, coincidences happen and human brains like to organize and find solutions and organization. Cold readings work, because everyone likes to help out, because everyone likes to hear about themselves in all their glorious uniqueness, and because everyone likes to connect dots. We are predictable beasts, we humans.

All of that being said, old Felix creeped me and the rest of the room out with his specificity.

He had a lot to say to everyone in the room, and much of it was infinitely explainable as standard carnival fare. Who doesn’t know someone with a J. name? How can you verify alleged past life identities? Who doesn’t want to be told they are intuitive or a people person? Many in the room were gifted with their own psychic abilities, many missed loved ones from the past. Some replied freely working with Felix to prompt more answers to his questions before he asked. Others, M. in particular, gave him little traction.

By the way, he told M. and me that we were brother and sister in a past life, ew, and thus our close relationship in this life. We are compatible, it seems, and the spirits think we’re fine together.

When it was my turn, I was not going to be swayed. Skeptical and unwilling were my mantras. But, Felix said some shit that I can’t explain. With the wonders of modern technology, I’ll get to play and replay the recording someone made of the readings, and then decide what was magical, what I am now remembering positively and the “truth.”

Quickly, he pegged the most significant death and the most grief I ever felt in my life. I won’t go into the details, because I’m not looking to irritate the living, but it was an eerily accurate jump point. We chatted, me trying to keep my answers fairly monosyllabic, while Felix probed. He asked me if there was a quilter or someone who sews in my family. Yes, of course, my sister. He went on to say that my mother wore something she made, well actually that’s how I’m remembering it, I’ll have a recording to verify if that’s what he said. In that moment, he was talking about my mother in the present tense, so I corrected him.

Medium that he is, communicator with the “spirit world,” he summoned good, old Pat forth to get in touch with us all. Somewhere in here, he didn’t ask, he stated that my mother had suffered hair loss, that she was in his words bald. And, that she was, unfortunately. I admitted that she didn’t just wear something that my sister, the seamstress, had made, but it was a polar fleece cap that was all but glued to her head up until the day she died. He passed along Pat’s message from the other side, “I have my hair back.”

As my brother Danny laughed, it’s funny that in communicating through the veil of death she wouldn’t have something more momentous to mention.

Of all of the words Felix could have used, the identifier he had for Pat’s spirit when she came forth and spoke to him was strangely familiar. The first word he used to describe her, according to what she herself was allegedly communicating, was “stubborn.” He said she acknowledged she was stubborn.

Now, this word is either certain proof that there is an afterlife and she was communicating from it. Or, it’s certain proof that it wasn’t her, because the Pat on earth would NEVER acknowledge that characteristic for herself. In fact, it was a running joke with my aunt and I, one with which we would tweak her whenever the opportunity arose, that is, fairly often. Pat would call my aunt and let her know how stubborn I was for not listening to her. In phone calls to me, the stubborn one would be if not me often my aunt. We would laugh and point out how it was always one of us who was stubborn, never her.

Why, I couldn’t help my skeptical but confused mind wonder, would Felix use stubborn?

I think it was later in the whole party, after the readings were done and Felix offered more time for questions, when I asked about myself and writing and performing. Early on, he saw me in a different job than I have now within two years, a different career. He “saw” teaching, because I was standing up in front of people explaining something in his vision. I mentioned writing and performing and he went with that.

I’m not sure when, but when he was chatting up Pat, she mentioned to him that her love for me was symbolized by a single, long-stemmed rose, thorns and all. He repeated about the rose and said there was some connection with me and my mom and a rose, asking, as folks in his line of work do, if this rose meant anything to me. A single rose.

Others in the room were shocked by my answer — I saved a single, red rose from my mother’s grave before they lowered her into it. A few of us did. I still have the petals, high up on a shelf in an antique blue willow glass that was her mother’s.

Old Felix told me that my mother, the one now chilling on the other side, was fine now. She’s with our old family dog, Ben, the Irish Setter, who she begrudgingly grew fond of over time. There’s another dog, he said, from our family who had “passed.” In my interpretation, I like to think in the afterlife it’s a calmer Sherlock, my aunt’s, uncle’s and cousins’, well really my uncle’s terrier, who Pat mostly referred to with the word “damn” or “damned” as a preface. It would kind of serve her right for her philosophy and strong opinions on pets here on the earthly plane for Sherlock and Ben to be underfoot.

Apart from mentioning stand-up comedy, I didn’t say anything about what I have written. Felix asked/stated that I wrote about my mother. Cue spooky music.

He went on to say that she knows that I write about her, and Pat is proud of me and my writing. She wants me to continue and isn’t angry at all, hoping that I will go ahead and live my life as I need to live. He said that she said I had to write and get my emotions out and it was a good thing. Somewhere in there he also blurted out, after I mentioned that I had moved here to try to live said life, Ma…Massachusetts. The spirit on the other side, my alleged mother, had insisted we were from Massachusetts. Could I have signaled all of that to some kind of wildly receptive con artist; I’m not even sure if I said enough to belie an accent?

Pat of the other world also said that she likes M. and that he seems to be a sweet guy. Again, my brother Danny was skeptical if it was truly her, since Felix didn’t mention that she said anything about his being Asian or Oriental. Our Pat would have had some reference to that.

One other eerie moment I have to hear the recording again to figure out if I agree still with where I thought Felix was going. We were talking about my siblings. He mentioned the Beatles and someone playing their music over and over again. The story it sparked for me was one that the brother in question would vehemently deny. I suddenly remembered a story from when we were kids and one of my brothers was angry at the rest of the household or someone in it. His revenge was to lie on his bed behind the closed door of his room, not budging to unstick a skipping album on his stereo. “Let it be…click…let it be…click…let it be.”

Similarly for M., Felix had some pretty specific things to say. He declared his mother as a cook, which seems common enough, but then he said she was a “big cook,” a person known for her cooking. She is truly a fabulous cook, and when he was growing up, she was a cook for a living. Felix also seemed to know that M.’s grandmother lives with his mother, and his mother is her caretaker. M. was pokerfaced, and I’m not sure ever admitted that was the arrangement even while Felix insisted that he saw his mother taking care of an older woman.

M.’s eerie moment of psychic truth was over his now deceased grandfather, a drinker back in the day, who came forward to tell M. that he apologizes to his mother. If you knew the whole story, which isn’t mine to tell, you’d be a bit blown away by that one.

Right at the outset with him, he also confirmed what everyone in the room, many of them his co-workers knew, that M. was working on developing a side business that had to do with design or making something. Here in the real world, M. indeed is working on a custom tailoring idea, with measurements and orders taken here and suits made back in Asia. It was one of the reasons we went to Thailand.

Per Felix, and I sure hope he’s right, the business will bring money to M.

On another note, the uncooperative M. denied any musical tendencies, even while Felix talked up someone playing a guitar and singing. The funny thing about Felix and that one for me was M.’s high school reputation. On my first and subsequent visits to Malaysia it’s been a key part of his family’s narrative about him. They remember him and his best friend at the time, Peter, pairing up and serenading the girls in their school and their neighborhood with their pop crooning. M. was an ’80s (or maybe ’70s) idol in some circles.

My favorite little thing for M. was about collecting and piling up junk. He actually hates doing that, I’m the pack rat in our house. But, ever since he’s been able to settle down here with a steady paycheck, M. has increasingly embraced the ownership, consumer culture middle-class America enjoys. So much so, he now wants to live through his own reenactment of the bastion of suburban weekend renewal — The garage sale. He’s looking forward to piling up our shit on the driveway, so that we have room for newer, shinier shit.

Felix decided M. was a hoarder and that the time had come for spring cleaning and M.’s getting rid of things he doesn’t need. Did Felix intuit the garage sale?

There was more. Some I believe I can use as information to ponder. Some stuff is dubious at best. A bit would be too personal for other people for me to share, including an allegation about a family member that I don’t know I believe.

Apart from the mimosas and the bear claw, it was an interesting way to spend a morning.

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Toast mastery

I kind of wish this entry was about toast. But, it’s about public speaking.

One of the things about where I work is even though it’s relatively small, negating opportunities for advancement, it’s committed to professional development. To that end, they have various workshops and talks and whatnot for the taking. I took one.

Specifically, I signed up for a two-day professional development workshop on public speaking. It was up in the big city of San Francisco, and, man, do I miss the rhythm of working in a city. For a million years or so, I was used to work and live around Cambridge and Boston. Here in the Wild West, it’s been suburban open spaces galore. I don’t lack for seeing trees and lawns.

For two days I drove in amidst the skyscrapers of SF’s Financial District, and I even grabbed a hotdog from a vendor for lunch. OK, it was an uber gourmet, free-range type of dog purchased among the foodie heaven stalls of the Ferry Building. Still and all, urban dining experience it was.

The workshop itself made me excruciating self-aware, which, of course, was part of the dealio. They filmed you speaking and played back the discs of private agony, as a few of my co-workers and I offered each other thoughts and encouragement.

Given that I have done stand-up comedy, nay, naked stand-up comedy, it was actually not that painful for me. I’ve seen much shittier tapes of myself mumbling into a microphone anxiously, caught between the physical urge to wet or shit myself or the desire to burst into tears. All of that work it turns out is completely translatable to professional, like workplace conference room-based, public speaking. Same difference without the beer.

Weirdly, watching the disks of my own performances and those of my colleagues, I had the personal epiphany of realizing how different I am today from the day before I tried stand-up. Even weirdlier, because now I’m so smart I can make up words and shit, I think I had a premonition about that epiphany before I even started the class. We were told that upon arrival, we had to give a two-minute spiel on something we felt a commitment toward. I decided to speak about what a shitty writer I am, or in the end maybe not a writer at all.

Here’s the video of that not exactly interesting interlude.
Speakeasy

Now the whole point of this first exercise and the camera rolling and all subsequent exercises was to show how folks tend to present and then break them. Or at least highlight habits and warts and all. That’s where anyone who has maybe tried a little stand up has an edge.

In fact, before we gave it the proverbially shot and spewed our two minutes the instructor broke down the plan. Her buzzword phrase, because for fuck sake’s this was executive training type grownup stuff so there had to be a buzzword or phrase or slogan or motivational gimcrackery, was that it wasn’t about “Speaking out, but speaking IN.” Dig it, she earnestly intoned, without the actual use of the word “dig,” that the whole fucking point was the listener.

Now, if you have ever stood in a shitty open mike or a quality comedy club, and, if even stupider, you climbed on the stage, if everything is working right, you learn one fucking thing. Just the one. It’s about the audience. If your joke is a fucking gem of a concept but you can’t sell it to another human in the room, you fail. That’s about all you ever learn in comedy.

This expensive (I’m assuming), downtown San Francisco trainer was selling the same gut punch lesson you can get from any grizzled vet comic for the price of a glass of beer or soda water. It ain’t about you, Sunny Jim.

Now, the audience to this trainer’s message was my fellow work comrades, a well-educated, scrubbed and earnest bunch. These are not folks who go looking for the gut punch lesson in seedy dives. Without the “fucks” and “stupids” and without the grim march of drunks shutting you down with disinterested stares, we learned the just the same.

At one point, I told the instructor about the wonder that is Tony V. Everything about that man on stage could be a thesis for this kind of training. From the commitment, the authority and the energy they bullet-pointed on a flip chart. With the techniques they were teaching to face the audience and sound like you give a shit and know what you are talking about, the stance, the demeanor, everything they were selling, he can turn an angry mob or hostile open mike to a goddamn show.

Turns out, one of the instructors at this impressive facility, I was told, runs his own show up somewhere in the wilds of Marin County.

My epiphany wasn’t really around the fact that I have actually learned some shit over time. Not very impressive if I hadn’t at least picked up a dime’s worth of info.

Nope, my epiphany was over the dreaded 20-somethings who were alongside me in the training. Now, I still continue my hatred and contempt for eager youth, but it was good to see them damn insecure and queasy in the realm of public speaking, one of human existence’s greatest phobias. In truth, though, they could have been me back about a thousand years ago, when the blush of youth still shown upon me.

I tried stand up, precisely because it made me want to crap my pants to even think about it. I was G. Gordon Liddy eating a rat or tying himself to a tree to overcome his greatest fears.

Now, today, right now, it’s largely second nature. That to me is the weirdest truth of all. These kids who only have met my California-living self see someone who speaks straightforwardly, bluntly even, confident-like. To them, I am fucking lying to say I was just like them. They know not of the Walsh Brothers mocking my nerves, or my total envy of watching Patterson devour an eggplant parm sub before a show.

I have become a different person, far as I can tell. And, I guess I owe the current incarnation to that day I actually got on stage and tried. Probably would have been a lot less painful and less alcoholic to pay a corporate trainer some bucks. But, jeebus knows, I wouldn’t have met a finer collection of characters.

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