Wednesday, March 29, 2006

I was all ready to buy myself the wonderful "Prose before hos" shirt but then I found this one, which is seriously competing for my affections.

Though, the full story of why is only revealed here, and is not on the shirt, sadly.



I had dreams of wearing one of these shirts to the Shakespeare class I have to take in fall semester, but it won't happen ... the class is online. But I'll totally wear them once I'm actually the teacher.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

With apologies to my wife and many of my best friends, I don't really like horror movies. But in college I saw one horror movie that I absolutely loved. It was Val Lewton's 1940's movie "Cat People" (do not even talk to me about that godawful 80's remake).

My love for it tends to highlight why I don't like most modern horror movies. For years, I looked for the film but couldn't even find it on VHS. Happily, it was released (with a lot of Lewton's other work) on DVD just last year. And I just found this wonderful article from Roger Ebert's great movies series about the movie, as well.

I don't even remember why for sure I watched the movie. I saw it as part of a "Film and Literature" class. Generally, we read a book, watched a movie based on the book, and discussed. There were some older movies and a few never ones - Kiss of a Spider Woman and Clueless come to mind. But Cat People isn't based on any book so far as I can tell and I don't recall reading anything with even vaguely ssimilar things. Maybe the prof just really liked the movie and wanted to show it, for all I know. If so, good on ya, prof.

It's a mood piece. Not for everyone. But I really encourage you to give it a chance (it's short!). Watch it with the lights off and no distractions. It's way scarier than "Scream."



***

Other stuff I like right now:

1. James Blunt
2. Ben Harper, esp. his new CD "Both Sides of the Gun"
3. The new season of The Sopranos
4. For that matter, season 1 of The Sopranos, which I have been re-watching with Diana
5. Big Love (new show on HBO)
6. really just HBO in general
7. Chino Bandido
8. that wet stuff what has been falling from the sky lately

Saturday, March 25, 2006

The living

Disclaimer

The world has seen a lot of writing about death. It is, after all, the most universal theme imaginable. Writers (who generally ply their trade as a kind of therapy) are especially likely to write about death. And, once something is written, the writer’s temptation to share it (even if it was only written for personal reflection) can be too strong to resist. So we have entire sections of bookstores on death and grieving. And (seeing as I don’t have a publisher willing to indulge my every written whim) we now have this blog entry.

Subject

Two of the books I’m reading now are about death. This was not necessarily intentional, but neither is it wholly a coincidence – death has been on my mind more than usual lately.

Maybe it’s because my grandmother has been sick. Last year she had a stroke and now she has breast cancer. This is my maternal grandmother who has always been (as grandmothers go) youthful, independent, and intelligent and eloquent beyond all reason. For years, even decades, I have been preparing myself for the death of my paternal grandparents. They are older and have been in generally poor health for a very long time. They live in Nebraska and have scads of other grandchildren and frankly have never been a part of my life in the major way my grandma Lucore has been. And, sad to say, I always expected my Dad’s parents would go first. I haven’t seen them for almost four years but I still have the mental picture of the last time I saw them – a habit I got into many years ago when visiting them, because I was aware the opportunities might be few. But now my Mom’s mom is showing startling and terrible signs of her mortality and it hurts like being hit in the stomach.

Also, a few weeks ago, apropos of nothing so far as I know, Diana asked me about death and dying and the extent to which I have known people who died and what it’s like. Maybe it was because of that I have been keenly aware this month that it’s now been five years since my friend Gwen died. Five years ago this month. And I’m sure it would have been on my mind anyway, but Diana’s question put me in a particularly philosophical mood about it all.

Anyway, this obscenely long post is not really a book review, though it kind of is – it’s mostly some thoughts about a not-especially-blog-friendly subject: death. Or, more specifically, living after those we love have died.

Background

I have known a few people who have died. Many older relatives of some degree of removal. I’ve been to lots of funerals that were really nothing more than formalities. But I have been to two significant funerals in my life, and missed one other that would have been the most significant of all.

I remember my great grandfather, but I can recall nothing of his death. He and my great grandmother lived in New Mexico and I suppose the greatest impact his death had on me was that it meant my great grandmother moved to Pueblo to be near my grandmother and so I saw her much more. She died when I was five or six. It was a Saturday morning and I was watching cartoons. My parents were still asleep. The phone rang but one of my parents (probably my Dad) answered it before I got to the kitchen. I went back into the living room, watching TV. Then my parents called me into their bedroom and told me great grandma had died. I don’t know that I really understood but I was very aware of how sad my mother looked about it and so I was sad, too. I went back into the living room and a McDonald’s ad was playing. This was when I began to hate clowns and their fake, painted-on smiles, and especially Ronald McDonald. I dressed up and we went to Pueblo for the funeral, during which I fell asleep. On the way back home I started to understand what it means to be dead – we never went to Pueblo without seeing my great grandma, but we had just been and I hadn’t gotten to see her and from what everyone was telling me I never would get to again.

When I was a freshman in college, I was in a long-distance relationship with a girl who still lived in Denver. Her sister had died very suddenly from leukemia a few years earlier and the loss had absolutely wrecked her family. One morning in December, a few hours before I was supposed to take a math final, my girlfriend called and woke me up. She was crying. It had happened before and from the very first moment I tried to soothe her and tell her it would be OK. But she told me that I was wrong, it was not OK. She told me her mother had killed herself in the night. I think I may have flunked the final. Just a few days later I was back in Denver for winter break. It was one of the coldest weekends I can remember in Denver. The first time my parents met any member of my girlfriend’s family was in the receiving line after the funeral. A Christian service for a woman who has committed suicide is awkward enough but toward the end a piece of music was played. Toccatta, maybe? Several rows in front of where I sat with my parents and for no immediately discernible reason, my girlfriend stood during the playing of the song. Everyone else remained seated. When, later, I asked her why, even she seemed not to know. “It seemed like the thing to do,” she said. I think it was defiant, a final fuck-you to her mother, who took the pills just after an argument with my girlfriend. Death, I learned, does not always bring on grief.

And then there’s Gwen, who was my best friend sometimes and sometimes almost like a girlfriend and sometimes someone who broke my heart and who I hated. And I don’t talk about her much because it’s awkward and because I think if I were Diana I might not want to hear about it all the time. But Gwen, who died five years ago this month in a car accident that was her own stupid fault, is ultimately the only real experience I have with loss and grieving. She lived in New York when she died and I was in Tucson and didn’t even find out for days that she was gone. I didn’t go back to New York for the service and I don’t know what her mother did with the ashes. The closest I got to saying goodbye was a small gathering I had with four other people who had known her in Tucson. We lit some candles and we talked about her and we cried a lot and that night it seemed like maybe it was some kind of closure but the next morning I woke up and nothing was different.

Losing Gwen, for me, was fundamentally different than most significant deaths because she was not physically close to me at the time and hadn’t been for a couple of years. We were still very close as friends, but I was accustomed to not seeing her, I was used to the feeling of thinking of her and wishing she was around. It’s the way I feel today about Tony in Chicago. Except that if I see something that makes me want to talk to Tony I can call him and I used to call Gwen for the same random reasons – and now I can’t. Gwen’s death is not a constant hole in my life because for two years before she died she wasn’t constantly there. I had already, with the benefit of a few thousand miles, conquered what I imagine to be the most difficult part of the death of a loved one – the lack of their physical presence. Which is not to say that her death was not devastating to me, for it was. But what I do mean is that I have been surprised while reading Joan Didion’s startling memoir about the death of her husband to find how similar my grief was, how similar it is.

The Books

Joan Didion’s husband died, very suddenly, at the end of 2003. That event and the experiences of the year that followed, form the basis for her newest book, a memoir called “The Year of Magical Thinking.”

The other book is fiction, an almost sci-fi novel by Kevin Brockmeier, called “The Brief History of the Dead.” The book takes very literally an idea common to many African and some eastern cultures that there are not two states of being (alive and dead), as we generally believe in the West, but three: living, the recently deceased who are still “alive” in the memories of the living, and the forgotten dead. “Brief History” takes place partly in a city inhabited by that middle category, those who exist only in the imaginations of those still living. They come to the city when they die, and survive there only until all the people who remembered them are still living – then they vanish. The book takes this concept much farther with a global plague and other adventures, but it’s the philosophy that everyone (me included) wants to talk about, not the plot.

Just thinking with my fingers

I like the idea of that middle state of existence. It fits with my ultimate belief that there is no afterlife and that we are nothing more than what we leave behind. And it seems kind of true, as well: Gwen isn’t really gone for me. I still think of her. I know others who do. Two years ago I bizarrely ran into Gwen’s freshman year roommate at Coit Tower in San Francisco and we spent just a few hours together and we didn’t talk about much except Gwen. So long as she lives in my memory, then, she’s not really, completely gone. Is she? I don’t now remember much about my great grandmother but I do always think of the way she would touch the top of my head. That might not affect me as much as memories of Gwen (or my ex-girlfriend’s mother) do, but they’re still real memories, strong, clear.

My problem comes from one of the only other books I have read about dying and grief, which I read after Gwen died because when someone you know dies you will inevitably be given a copy of this book (maybe by me), called “A Grief Observed” by CS Lewis about the death of his first wife. He wrote:

“Slowly, quietly, like snow-flakes – like the small flakes that come when it is going to snow all night – little flakes of me, my impressions, my selections, are settling down on the image of her. The real shape will be quite hidden in the end.”

This is true of all memory – we remember what we want to remember – but is especially true and worth remembering when thinking about the dead. After all, I don’t fully know anyone, even my wife – I have but impressions and selections of her. I have only what she chooses to show me and the way I interpret that. The thing is that while she’s living my idea of her continually grows, every interaction with a person you know challenges your idea of them, offers a chance for you to re-write the file that the computer of your brain has labeled with their name. But if that person should die, they no longer have the chance to challenge you and your own vision can become the reality – you can choose the details that best fit your needs and forget the rest. Most of us forget the bad times – the dead are more often than not angels in our memory, no matter how much they may have hurt us when living. Then again, at least in the short term aftermath of her mother’s death, my ex-girlfriend remembered none of the good things about her mother – only remembering the fights made it possible to hate her.

And I tend to feel that if I die the part of me that lives on in the memories of those I have known will not truly be me. Pieces of me, maybe. Fragments. But not me. I haven’t read far enough into “Brief History” to yet know if this identity problem is an issue in the world of the dead, but it seems a bit much for such a slim book to take on.

What I’ve marveled at from the initial chapters of Didion’s memoir is the way our brain never fully comprehends the notion of death. It is very literally unimaginable. We have many theories of what being dead is, but we cannot know. So, when someone close to us dies, it never fully makes sense.

I have always assumed, to the limited extent that I think about death, that it’s the physical part that drives home the reality. Maybe this is because the way I miss Gwen – as I described before – is not physical, but emotional. I had already adjusted to the physical distance before she actually died. My assumption, then, has generally been that if someone who is literally physically close to you dies that the reality of it is much more immediate. Clearly, it will make the loss of that person worse in the short term. But my guess was that, in the long run, the physical withdrawal would also result in a better mental conception of the reality of the person’s absence. Didion’s memoir tells me that this is not so. Even in the midst of her struggle – and it is of course a horrible struggle – to adjust to the physical loss of her husband, what she finds harder is to accept, to mentally conceive, of his death. I sometimes catch myself thinking I should call Gwen, or that it’s been a while since she called me – Didion, similarly, keeps expecting her husband to walk through the front door. She won’t get rid of his clothes or his shoes – she assumes he will need them as soon as he is back.

It’s a beautiful book, marvelous in its awful, dark honesty. Highly recommended.

Friday, March 24, 2006

High-schoolers are completely unaware of shocking adult concepts like rape and sex and murder and they must be protected from their own desire to actually read serious literature.

I wish I had more to blog about for you today, but stories like this just suck my entire will to live. Sorry. Happy weekend everyone!

Monday, March 20, 2006



Someone needs to buy me this shirt. Like, now. Before I buy it for myself in size XXL and olive color.



Also, while you're there, you can go ahead and buy this one for Diana, too.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Lani more or less tagged me and so I did the survey, but before that I wanted to share this:

When a stranger e-mails

Now the survey

Four jobs I have had in my life:

1.a. Concessions worker / Ticket seller / Usher at United Artists Theatres. 1b. Movie theatre supervisor. I was promoted after being there a month and a half. And then I quit about another month and a half later.
2. Waiter at Olive Garden. Yes, I’m still sorry.
3. Copy editor at the Arizona Daily Wildcat. This is the job where I met Diana. She was, I think, technically my boss’s boss. Or something. Anyway, they needed copy editors so Diana told Eliza, the copy chief, to hire some cute boys for her. But instead Eliza hired me. Diana has still not forgiven her.
4. Special Subrogation Claims Representative at an unnamed insurance company (not that you don’t all know anyway). Quick pop quiz: Does anyone actually have any idea what I do? Sidebar: The "special" is a relatively recent addition to my title. A lovely example of the non-pay-related "promotion."

Four movies I'd watch over and over:

1. Almost Famous
2. Nightmare Before Christmas
3. Wonder Boys
4. Love Actually

Four places I have lived:

1. Aurora, CO
2. Tucon, AZ
3. Phoenix, AZ
4. Technically I’ve only ever lived in those three cities. Two different houses in Aurora, three different dorms and an apartment in Tucson and two apartments plus a house in Phoenix. But I spent an awful lot of time in Boulder, CO one summer during college. Does that count?

Four TV shows I love to watch:

1. Sopranos
2. Entourage
3. Law & Order
4. anything by Aaron Sorkin

Four places I have been on vacation:

Let’s go with most recent

1. Disneyland
2. Chicago, IL
3. Estes Park, CO
4. Maui

Four websites I visit daily:

1. Bookslut
2. New York Times
3. Slate
4. bt.etree.org

Four of my favorite foods:

1. that seafood pasta I had in North Beach (SF) a couple summers ago.
2. Diana’s pasta shells
3. Diana’s spaghetti
4. Diana’s apple butter muffins

Four places I would rather be right now:

1. bed
2. Hawaii
3. San Francisco
4. Tattered Cover

Friday, March 03, 2006

Spring Is In The Air

How do I know? Not because I had to turn my calendar to March yesterday (I forgot, actually). Not because the sun is up before my alarm goes off in the morning. And not because spring training started today.

Because on Wednesday Dave Matthews Band announced their 2006 summer tour dates. And since I know you all hang on every word I write when it comes to DMB, I shall now pontificate upon this news.

More DMB content than I can really expect anyone to care about
(feel free to skip to next boldface section header)

Really, the tour this year makes me sad. Not that there’s anything wrong with it. It’s an exciting schedule. Another New York festival, Alpine, Gorge, SPAC, all those typical goodies. Plus two nights back at home in Charlottesville to close the tour. The problem is that I can’t realistically do any of that.


Phoenix's Cricket Pavilion: Not the world's most beautiful venue


I’m still at least tentatively planning on two shows. They play Phoenix on my birthday and San Diego that Saturday. (Also, there are rumors of something in Chicago in September and I hold out hope about that, what with the free lodging there and all.) It bums me out a little bit that due to constraints both on my time and my finances that I can’t justify going to Alpine, or Gorge, or Shoreline. And, yet, even more than I feel slightly sad about that I feel even more guilty about it. And that guilt leads me to feel sad in a whole different way, because part of me feels like I’ve gone and spoiled something pure and beautiful.

Seeing multiple shows in a year wasn’t entirely unusual for me. In 97 I saw Dave three times. Twice in 98. But I never traveled to a show until 2002, when I drove to San Diego. I did the same in 2003. Even then it was still something really special. Even the two shows of a given year were within a week of each other, they were special because it was my only opportunity that year. It was like a religious thing. That changed in 2004, which is the first time I ever traveled far enough that it required me to get on a plane. The first show I saw that year (here in Phoenix) was great, but it felt more like a warm-up. The second show (in LA) was like a boring second act, leading up to the big finale. That finale (in San Francisco) was everything promised and more. But it only made me more determined to get to those handful of “special” shows and “special” venues.

So last year I went to Alpine, and it blew me away. And then I saw a show in Phoenix, which was a good solid show, but so paled in comparison to Alpine before it and what I was expecting Red Rocks to be that even driving out there that night felt like an afterthought. And, again, the three nights of shows I saw at Red Rocks were more than I could ever have dreamed. But here’s the problem: They spoiled me.


Coors Amphitheatre near San Diego. A beautiful venue where the breeze blows in from the ocean, just a couple of miles away.


It makes me feel really obscene to feel even the slightest traces of disappointment just because I’ll only get to see two shows. Only? Every single show used to be like a pilgrimage. I’m invoking the religious imagery very deliberately here. Because there’s this small part of that feels like seeing DMB at Cricket f-ing Pavilion now is like going to mass at your local parish after being to the Vatican. And like the Catholic who gets bored with his own church, I can’t help it, but some part of me knows deep down it’s a sin.


The Hollywood Bowl. Why oh why does this show have to be on a Monday night?


On the other hand, there’s a new Pearl Jam record coming out in May. And tour dates to be released soon. Oh, Mike and Stone, give me comfort.

The post gets more philosophical, if not entirely less dorky

Why do I feel so guilty about this change in the way I feel about seeing DMB in concert, though? I’ve been a fan of that band for more than a decade, you would expect my feelings to change some way or another, right? But I think this really gets to the heart of why it’s an issue for me. Because I am the way I am to a great extent because of DMB. I do everything I try to live in the moment. I don’t believe in delaying gratification. I recognize the realities of adult-hood: that saving money is necessary, that we can’t always do all the fun things we want to. And yet I fight against that “adult” voice in my head every day. I know I have to go to work, for example – but how depressing is it to think that if today were to be my last day that I spent it sitting in this office? My compromise is this: I hate my job, sure, but I let it go as soon as I walk out the door. I listen to happy music in my car as I drive home. I drink in the sunshine and am thankful for it. I am this way because some twelve years ago KBCO started playing a little known band with a stupid name.

Well, OK, this is really a chicken-or-the-egg kind of argument. Am I the way I am because at an impressionable age I heard some music and it inspired me and I grew into a mold that fit with that? Or was I inclined to be this way no matter what and that’s why ultimately things like DMB held more appeal than Nine Inch Nails? And of course, even that doesn’t get fully at the root of it, because as much as I embraced the carpe diem stuff in high school … I didn’t really. How can you really appreciate the idea of your own mortality until something forces the issue? For me, college forced the issue in a big way. I had a girlfriend who’s sister had died at 18, who’s mother killed herself, and – more important than either of that – I had a best friend who one night was but a phone call away and then somehow ceased to exist. (Five years ago this month. Where did that time go? But the thing is I still miss her. All the time. Even after five years.) And while I think that aforementioned girlfriend’s experiences with losing loved ones at an early age has made her cautious and fearful of the world, seeing the reality of mortality has made me only more determined to live. Every day to live as much as I can. Does that sound trite? I suppose it is, sort of. But it’s also probably my number one motivating factor.

But there are two ways the guilt is working, remember. The first is that I feel guilty for giving in to my adult side and admitting that this just isn’t the year to fly all over the country for DMB. (Rhetorical aside: Is this entire post invalidated if I do end up going to see them in Chicago in September?) On the other hand, even I’m capable of admitting that it’s a little sad that I might be measuring my life experience based on when and where I get to see a band in concert. I mean, really. I can embrace a song lyric that says, “I can’t believe that we would lie in our graves dreaming of things we might have done,” but if those things are concerts? I admit it’s a little pathetic. But then I hate to begrudge people their fetishes, and this is clearly mine. To each their own. We all do what we must to get through.

Unrelated to all the above

Also, how cool is this? Assuming you're a Costco member anyway. (Though, really, it would be worth it to join Costco just for this single purchase if you were in the market. As best I can tell this same G5 Costco is offering for $1,480 goes for $1,868 via any other Apple outlet. 3-year Apple Care included. Kinda makes me want to buy one ... just cuz.