• Category Archives Main
  • “Before enlightenment; chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment; chop wood, carry water.” Zen Proverb

    gone_baby_gone

    Extremely derelict in blogging duty. No matter.  I finally got that tree chopped down that I have been bitching about for years.  All that’s left is a pile of wood chips. In other news, there’s a huge hole in my rear fence that the dogs back there pushed through. The cats have scattered (in fear, rightly so) and now I find myself at the rather discomforting quandry that I must contact the actual owners of the house behind me and propose that we go half on the fence. Otherwise the damn dogs are going to push through every day (like they have for the last two).

    Hooooommmmeeee ownership. Yeah.

     


  • “We’ve hit a little bump, and we’re going full speed ahead.” Chuck Amato

    Holy whackadoodle. Time flies….and then it crawls.

    I’m not sure what kind of trouble I’m getting into, but it definitely seems like the kind that keeps me from blogging.

    mic_check

    I managed to fire up Pro Tools again, and determined that it’s so complex that I’ll never know what the hell I’m doing, but simultaneously user-friendly enough that it won’t matter. Got what I needed to get done, and now there’s a folk song (slash) limerick that I’ll be recording soon enough. Who needs three chords when you can play just two?

    ~?~

    There’s been a warp in the space-employment-time-flux-thingamagjig. I’m more or less a “dead man walking” at work which is quite the curious feeling.  It’s a lot like knowing the exact date of your death, but everyone else around knows it too and tries to pretend that they don’t. Some (I’m sure) will be glad to get rid of me and my half baked theories that manage to hold up long enough to prove them wrong (or myself right) and resolve the issue. They’ll breathe a sigh of relief knowing that it’s only a matter of time. No matter

    ~?~

    I did something nice for someone on Valentines day, I bought some flowers.  The weird part is that I had my keys in my hand with my car alarm remote and ended up accidentally dropping them into the bucket of flower water. Those inside the flower tent were roundly greeted with a choice expletive from my mouth-hole. My alarm unit has held up so far, but I fear internal corrosion now. It’s a hard life. Sometimes bad decisions require nothing more than a firm hand and a blast on the gas pedal.

    ~?~

    I’m not quite sure why this has turned into such a brain expanding year, but it continues to be.


  • “Charlie Brown is the one person I identify with. C.B. is such a loser. He wasn’t even the star of his own Halloween special.” Chris Rock

    Holy crap, you people got lucky. I just realized that about 60 posts that I had imported from another blogging service were still public/visible. I took care of that, you won’t have to go back and read those. Not that anyone is ever really digging into my blog any earlier than 2009 anyway….

    But these were pretty bad. Stories of defeat, alcohol, guitars, death, depression, overcoming the hurdles and then finally redemption. Redemption, or at least the very least my blog posts became readable and I started taking it semi-seriously.  I left a few posts here and there, but starting here, you can work your way forward.  Not worth clicking, but you can see the progression.  Lookit me now, custom header and everything. Big time. Thanks Abe Lincoln.

    ***///***

    As I was looking through some of the old blog pictures, I ran across some of my teen pictures. And wow, do I really feel old now.  That stuff about feeling better when you get older, “I’ve never felt better in my life!” is a bunch of deluded crap. Or boomers trying to convince themselves it’s true.  The only reason I feel better is because I work out now instead of letting my youthful metabolism do all the work.  Shoot. This is getting depressing. Let’s try something else.

    ***///***

    Since I’ve been unusually quiet about guitar related matters, I’ll should note that my buddy let me try his copy of Rocksmith.  This is the guitar-hero type game that you plug in your own guitar and play along to. He kept telling me how much he was playing, like hours a day. Anything that gets a guitar into your hands for hours a day is freaking great as far as I’m concerned.  So I tried it out. Since I’ve (depressingly) been playing since the 80’s, I managed to barrel through a few of the songs in his game until it adjusted the difficulty mid-song. Seeing a C#7 chord get thrown in out of the blue (a chord I don’t think I’ve played in YEARS) was pretty crazy. It ramped up the speed and chord/single note difficulty on me until I just jacked the entire song up. Then it backed the speed down until I could just keep up. I liked that, although the main reason I ended up picking up the game was for the technique drills and scale practice. So far I’ve had the guitar in my hands for stretches up to two hours. It’s a really nice practice tool – even for players like me who have been playing for years (and admittedly have some rough spots technique wise). I’m getting a little lag on my system which is throwing me off a bit, but it’s still working out okay.

    DSC01148-001Rock on Peoples!


  • “You stay alive, baby. Do it for Van Gogh.” ~ Frank Booth

    Wake up, bleary eyed. Dried out from the alcohol, grab a pint glass of water. Slug that down and turn the espresso machine on. Lie down.

    .

    Get up, shake off some of the haze, drink some more water. Make espresso (dripped for 22 seconds, getting better). Foam some milk, add to espresso. Sit down at the computer. Remember a conversation from last night that reminded me of some great songs on SuperUnknown. Check MediaMonkey and realize that my library got all jacked up when I was rearranging everything (making backups of important stuff – when’s the last time YOU did that?). Grab the CD, pop it in, re-rip it at the insane quality bit-rate setting. Start to play it.  Realize that I’ve never EVER heard the quality and separation this good before. I used to listen to it on cassette on the crappiest car stereos in the world. At my desk, my Alesis monitoring speakers are crystal clear. Nice.

    Sip the black elixir. Try to recall what it was that I committed myself to. Wait. Crap.

    CRAAAAAAAP.

    It’s becoming clear. I committed myself to performing in the next Boylesque show. WhatHowWhy?  Ouch. Time for some more espresso.

    I slowly shake my head with a mix of wonderment and maybe lingering regret. Well, many, MANY of the manly burlesque guys are already going to be performing in the first show.  I heard through the grapevine that it was happening and someone said, “Aww, dude, you should do it!” Apparently that wasn’t enough of an arm twisting. I forgot all about it. Then the show lineup got posted. Wow. That’s a lotta guys. Somehow I got skipped out in the first round draft. I figured out why, it’s because I’m generally in the background, I still don’t get to as many shows as I used to. I still feel tied to everything because I post the shows but I still walk around a lot of the shows with Office-Standard-Avoidance-TI4 mode. You know, the “I kinda know you, but don’t really know you so I’m not going to make eye contact or say anything to you even though we both know each other but not well enough to strike up a conversation.” Don’t blame me, blame society.

    society

    So I tried to spread myself around a little last night (wait, which part of the night was I showcasing my particular moves?) and ran into the producer and started discussing the Boylesque.  After my initial reaction of seeing the flyer I was like, “Well, what song would I dance to? First off the top of my head was Rumble by Link Wray.

    Cerebrally, I have to imagine that all these guys are thinking about all the normal things that women burlesque dancers think about – anxiety, body issues, performance ideas…etc.

    This should be interesting.

    The producer already has some ideas for me. *Sigh*

    hopper


  • “We learned a lot and lost a lot of sleep.” Mabel Smith

    Becoming a less-screwed up version of yourself is hard work. Actually, it’s really kind of exhausting.

    Old dog, new….yeah.

    This also reminds me why reading is so hard. Books aren’t back lit.

    Question Mark

    Don’t kindlekindlekindlekindle me, I don’t need one of those. Relatively speaking, by the time I get my hands on a tablet PC, people will have microwave chips beaming the internet directly into their brains.

    I really need to relax. The meditation route never really works for me – it’s a LOT of work to keep still. Perhaps I need to investigate taking yoga again. It’s relaxing to the Nth degree and also affords flexibility. Unfortunately, my twerpy ankle is still wincing. It’s been a few years now, and the only thing that manages to make it feel better is intense exercise.

    I’m sure that a little over half of my blog followers were following because of guitar related content. Sorry, not much going on there. My buddy built me a small pedal board and I’ve been sporadically picking up my Robin here and there.  My self-improvement doesn’t involve much guitar playing….at least not right now anyway.

    robin_frontback

    I talked it over with that guitar tech, and turns out I gotta find some nitrocellulose lacquer to go over those rough spots. After I sand them down. Such an odd shaped guitar, but what a sweet player!

    Back to the book! *sigh*


  • “Ms. Currie, in her grand jury testimony, had a fuzzy memory,” Asa Hutchinson

    I’ve got a pretty bad habit of remembering things.  Not entirely intentional, I read somewhere that Albert Einstein once said, “Never memorize something that you can look up.” Recently I’ve used this as a justification for my forgetfulness, but throughout my life I’ve let things slip, much to the dismay of various wives, girlfriends and daughters (not all my own).

    The other night, my own personal haziness came into sharp relief.  I was in a bar discussion (as I am wont to do).

    After I had professed my daughter’s age, I was then prompted for how long I was married. And then I was asked how old I was.  Rather than letting them off the hook, I asked them to do some boozy math.

    giant-math
    During the requisite pause, I did some thinking on it. Like some weird algebraic equation x+y-c did not equal z.  I started rethinking it – double checking my work if you will.
    I couldn’t figure out where I went wrong until I determined that I was quoting an incorrect age when I was actually (previously) married.  How or why would I have done this? Strange?

    My initial stance was that I was married at age 25. After I checked my numbers (carry the two), I realized that I had gotten married at 23.  Young, YOUNG marriage.  When people that age tell me now that they’re going to get married, I immediately think, “Oh wow, too young”. But I never apply my own personal experience to that. Obviously I don’t even remember that I got married that young. Perhaps fatherhood wipes some memories clean? Or was that a part of the raucous 90’s that I was just too…..altered….to remember?  (Amid the nose ring and tattoos?)

    At my nephew’s birthday party the other day, I was talking to one of my brother’s friends and she said, “Yeah, I’m glad to have gotten to have fun before having all our children”, which I guess I can’t relate to on some level. I was married young, but I don’t feel like I consciously “missed out” on my 20’s.  If any thing, my early 20’s were a mishmash of bad decisions as it was, so I’m lucky to have survived most of them.

    My father always carried around index cards with lists of things he needed to remember. We would meet up, and he’d whip out an index card and discuss all the things on the list that he NEEDED to cover, then once we’d finished, he put them away.  As of late, I almost feel like I should be doing that. But, of course, I have a smart phone. So I let Google Calendar take care of most of the heavy lifting. I refuse to let “The Big Blue F” handle birthday reminders. In fact, in one of my periodic disconnects from that site, I deleted my birthday.

    FreeVector-Facebook-Birthday

    Sure enough, my birthday rolled around and there were NO well wishers clogging up my page with birthday status updates. I thought it was curious rather than disturbing. I don’t think any less of my close friends for not remembering since I can hardly remember those things myself (see above for lifelong habit of).  But curious nonetheless.  I’ve taken to sending cards to some of my friends – something I rebelled against for the longest time as something that was “expected” of you rather than doing it just because it’s a nice thing to do.

    Still working on that.


  • “That’s a tough one to lose. It was a great game that no one deserved to lose.” Ellen Bridgewater

    As last weekend rolled into the second day, I woke up late thanks to some bad decisions that I had made shortly after I had gotten my hair cut. It’s one thing to feel like a million bucks, it’s quite another to throw caution to the wind and be a man-about-town. I completely give myself credit for keeping my wits about me for getting my ex-brother-in-law safely home at errr…..ahem…three a.m. On the other hand, poor decision-making caused me to lose a pair of sunglasses and him losing his phone.  I liked those sunglasses a lot, kind of a bummer.

    the_hung

    Oddly enough, each time someone nods out while I’m driving them home, I start getting REALLY nervous. Visions of Jimi Hendrix and Bonn Scott float through my head when their head starts bobbing – I’ve got one eye on the road, the other on them. Silly boy, it’s not like you can check their breathing at 60 miles per hour!

    Hendrix mateus rose

    Sure enough he was fine. I made sure he could stagger into the house and put him to bed.

     

    So, as to my other post, I have to say it’s tough to come to a realization about your life that’s life changing and not be able to really do anything about it……I mean, of course I’m talking about more cat pictures:

    cats-in-sink

     


  • “I still grump and grumble, but I’ve really opened up to opening up.” ~ Liz Phair

    Wow. As much as I complain about the internet in general, scattered throughout the detritus, there are many nuggets of value. Someone that I’m peripherally friends with on FB, (which henceforth I will call, “the big blue F”) posted something that really hit home. Really, REALLY hit home. I’m going to be intentionally and irritatingly vague here, sorry. But it was one of those things that kind of stops you in your tracks and makes you reexamine a few things. I also managed to have a rather mindexpanding conversation at dinner last night with someone some of you might know as theBlowPhish. Maybe 2013 is just going to be that kind of year?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    (Duh, it was a cat picture obviously.)

    image


  • “Innocence is like a dumb leper who has lost his bell, wandering the world, meaning no harm.” Graham Greene

    After the first evening of a rather self-destructive (and yet somehow productive) weekend, I went and got my hair cut on Saturday. As I walked in, my notable barber was discussing one of the things that I’ve never found that enjoyable – camping out. Several times I have been camping, and not just because I am a city-boy, the experiences I had never seemed to live up to the golden glory of the Great-American-Campout™.

    Since my barber is a rather self-sufficient kind of guy, he’s got deer antlers and pictures of himself with giant catfish all over the walls of his, uh, barber shack. Really cool guy, we had a great discussion about his pecan trees all over his lot when it was my turn.

    Anyway, the discussion of the campouts reminded me of some of my out-of-country time. In the local rivers there, there  were such things as fresh water eels. This could not have been more freaky for a city-boy like myself. The waters were typically crystal clear mountain snow run0ff, and while it was generally cold, the swimming was great, and the rivers full of huge boulders and rocks. BUT, around these rocks hid these freshwater eels. I’ve noted our local swimming “hole” with an asterisk. You can see more or less where my old house was (marked with the ever-present Google Maps Point “A” )

    MerrilandsDomain

    So when people are at the beach imagining sharks mere inches below them, the same was happening when we would swim in these icy clear swimming holes.  Sometimes you would forget about them, but there would usually be dark overhangs of brush, and you sure as hell wasn’t going to swim in there!  One time we went out on a school sponsored trip and some of the guys fished for eels and caught some. They caught the first one (I think the guy’s name was Chad if I remember) and laid him along the bank.  Chad was contemplating his next catch and started tapping his foot. Right on the head of the eel.  Chad was wearing the sandals that our boy’s school typically wore in the summertime. Nothing but a small flap of leather between his foot and this eel who was obviously not happy being out of the water.  In a very typical lord-of-the-flies ritual, I recall them beating the eel in the head until it was dead. I also recall someone skinning it and cooking it, so I guess while it was a little barbaric, it wasn’t completely senseless violence.

    Either way, those buggers are creeepy man, very creepy.

    That almost dovetails the time my brother was nearly attacked by a sea-snake, but I’ll leave that for another time.