Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Just Walk Away From the Big Box Store's Door and Nobody Will Get Hurt.

Before committing to the holiday madness of Black Friday and the weeks that follow I would like to ask you to as least consider with me the following challenge. Let us change our holiday behaviors because the world needs us to.

Our planet is very small and with unchecked population growth the space we all have to live in is shrinking. The resources that we can use to feed and cloth ourselves are becoming harder to obtain. Around this small blue planet the gap in wealth inequality is growing.

 Being a hamster on the commercial wheel of what year end giving has become both wastes a lot of energy and takes us all to nowhere of value. We shouldn’t go on like this. We can’t go on as if there are no consequences to unchecked consumerism.

 This year let us:
 • Buy mindfully.
 • Give mindfully.
 • Buy local.
 • Buy small. 
 • Give for need.
 • Give for love. 
 • Don’t give for obligation. 
 • Don’t give in exasperation. 
 • Don’t give jokingly or without concern or contemplation. 
 • Consider the gift as a whole. o Where did it come from? 
o Was it made with virtual slave labor.
 o Does purchasing fund oppressive regimes? 
o Does its packaging burden the waste stream? 
o Is it stuff that works? 
o When it is used up can it be recycled? o Will it really add to the health or welfare of the recipient. o Is the gift a response to a need in any sense of the word? 
o Does it fill any void in the recipient’s life? 
• Buy thoughtfully. 

The currently claimed reason for celebrating the coming solstice is a poor shepherd from the middle east. He was a humble man. He exhorted his followers to travel light. He warned us against rampant consumerism when he said to us all “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal.” Does this sound like a person who would want you to stand in line all night to be one of the first ten in the store on Friday? 

Live with reason and not excess this season.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

My First Love Was A Wicked Winding Road…






In cleaning my kitchen I come to hear artists I normally wouldn’t hear. I have a little radio that allows me to sit my old iPhone in a cradle and play Pandora.  I have a James McMurtry channel that but hitting the like/dislike button had become a bit of an Americana channel.  Most of the songs are ballads albeit with rocky guitar riffs.  Most of the songs are by men and carry a bit of murder ballad flavor.  

Two artists that I have come to like quite a bit in the past year or so are Reckless Kelly and Chris Knight.  The Reckless Kelly song that pops up often is called A Wicked Winding Road.  A Wicked Winding Road reminds me of my dreams at age 20 or so. Knowing full well that I had wild dreams but a built in protestant guilt governor the song sort of raises the same feelings in me that reading On the Road did  I go back to those dreams from time to time. Emotion stirrings come to the surface on those visits not really with regret but rather a warm but melancholy nostalgia.  How much lay ahead, how much I would achieve, it was only limited by what I was willing to gamble.  Truth be told I really wasn’t much of a gambler.  http://youtu.be/B38pNFM9a3k

Chris Knight is an entirely different kettle of fish.  He is a down home Harlan County Raylan Givens kind of singer. Knight sings a great ballad for the loser.  I don’t think I am a loser but I know so many of the people in his songs.  Knight’s songs are about alt.americana moments that have gone sideways and have gone sideways so far that you just can’t fix it. You only can live with what has happened displaying the scars incurred. It is only by grace that I did not end up down that road.  Enjoy http://youtu.be/YVXI4l_JU5Q

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Another Sunday Begins



Sunday, November 17, 2013

What makes a Sunday morning? Perhaps it is a big breakfast of waffles and pecans along with strong rich tasting coffee? Maybe it the service where common absolution is delivered?  Perhaps it is the slowness of this the last space that exists between two weeks? I don’t know what makes Sunday morning for you but for me it is the quiet I find when I first get up, before people rise and begin to set and lay out the agenda for the day.

Ola Belle Reed was an old timely bluegrass singer.  She had a small following.  You can find her on Smithsonian Folkways records. Right now on this silent Sunday morning she is singing in my head.
Back when I lived in Delaware WDSD out of Dover would play stained glass bluegrass late on Sunday night.  Gospel and twang, oh how I loved it.  Funny that affinity it was not anywhere near popular music at the time. But I think the joy I found in hearing those songs came both from my family roots, Mom from Kentucky and Dad from North Carolina coupled with my main musical taste, the Grateful Dead.  The Grateful Dead was really nothing more than a bluegrass band infused with lots and lots of LSD.

I digress. Ms. Reed with her hardcore hill country voice was the radio show’s host’s favorite.  Well there was also the duo Jim and Jesse but the show would always close with a song called Tear Down the Fences.  The opening line had something about Sunday morning and that is probably why Ola Belle is in my head today.  That opening was followed by a chorus that was roughly, “Tear down the fences that fence us all in, fences created by such evil men.” As I sit drinking my coffee and milk that song is sitting in the back of my brain. Somewhere I have that tune on a cassette tape but who knows where it is now. Oh how many fences there are, but I am refusing to look at the news or to listen to NPR.

On Sunday I mornings I always try and make some coffee.  In days past I would use Kenyan whole beans that I obtained from the omnipresent Starbucks.  Now I use Biggby’s Best, it is a local brand and it is good.  When you don’t have children Sunday mornings are for coffee and newspapers.  (Oh how twentieth century, of me perhaps I should say Java and the ‘Net.) When you do have children these first days are for sports and if it is an off weekend for laundry and the raking leaves and whatever else your far too busy life has pushed down the line.

For me what I have pushed down the line is my writing. My A Space True and North blog has had no new entries in several weeks. With my cat Coltrane pressed up against my side I have decided to pound out some new lines. There are reasons I have not been writing, some mechanical, some emotional.  I really can’t get into the emotional because I am merely a third party to a time consuming drama. If I were to speak of it my mere words could change the dynamics drastically. Thus I must be vague.  Still you should know I am an integral part of one small aspect of the resolution.  Somebody else’s world has blown up and I have to attend to one of the victims, my son.  My hope is that he will come out of this stronger.

The mechanical stuff is pretty easy to explain.  The school board is in turmoil.  We are meeting every week.  Reams of electronic paper are showing up in my inbox daily.  I also have a job.  Between a full time job and a full time civic duty not much time is left for anything else.  And then there was my laptop.

A few weeks ago I bought a new laptop.  This computer on which I now work was the cheapest most barebones models out there.  It does not have a touch screen.  On the other hand it does have a great deal of storage. The reason I bought this model was because my old Gateway has issues.  Well, my old computer had two main issues.  About a year ago one of my cats in a fit of pique decided to inform of his or her displeasure.  This was accomplished by said cat peeing on my keyboard.  While the computer still “worked” every time I powered it up the odor was just nasty.  Ergo a new computer seemed to be all but mandated.

The other reason for the new computer is that like most members of my generation music is important to me.  I have about 50 days’ worth of music to craft into the soundtrack of a given day.  Using my old computer had become complicated.  The amount of old files and music had about absorbed the storage capacity thus slowing the overall speed of the unit.  Argh.  So to summarize I had a slow computer that when on and working smelled like cat urine.

One of the evil companies I do business with sent me a $50 gift Visa for having their credit card, a credit I should mention I do not deserve. That coupled with a Best Buy ad got me a stripy HP for about $225 out of my pocket.  Now I get to write again.

As I look out the window that what I see is the brown of late fall.  Barren trees line my street for in the past week all of the leaves have fallen.  Over the last seven days we have had spikes in the temperature between highs of 40 F and 65 F.  The music playing is Of Monsters and Men Little Talks.  The kitchen is now smelling with the smell of sweet, sweet apple butter.  Between the time I woke up and reached this paragraph my wife has awoken.  She is fighting a sore throat.  I made her oatmeal with brown sugar and shared with her the coffee I had brewed and stashed in the carafe.  

We have some found apples that will rot if not dealt with soon.  As a result she has proceeded to commence making apple butter.  I am in reverie right now in anticipation of eating apple butter on a homemade slab of bread. Crunchy French bread with a bit of sea salt matched up with apple butter sounds like heaven.  A slice of good extra sharp cheddar would round out that experience. 
Looking out the window I think I need to bring in the herb box.  It has survived so far but it will not make it much longer.  Snow will fall soon.  It is November here in the northern tier. The rain has stopped and this may be my best opportunity.  After I bring in the plants I will take a walk about the block. A warm wet day is close to my idea of heaven.

On the artistic front last night Secundus and I watched movies.  We watched an Irish film called “A Film With Me In It”.  Dark, dark black comedy, but for being a very small film it was fun.  A relatively high and unexpected body count but it had a certain gleeful wink and chuckling tone.  It is currently on the Movie Channel.  DVR it for when the major studio fare is not working for you.

I also watched “The Words”.  The Words” was really flawed but there were bits of it that I quite enjoyed.  Mostly the pieces with Jeremy Irons stand out as quite fun.  Dennis Quaid looked out of place, especially with Olivia Wilde.  Bradley Cooper could have been used to better effect.  

Greg Laswell has come on the music.  Very nice piece, called “It Comes and Goes In Waves.”

It comes and goes in waves, I
Am only led to wonder why
It comes in goes in waves, I
Am only led to wonder why
Why I, why I try

This is for the ones who stand
For the ones who try again
For the ones who need a hand
For the ones who think they can.

Blissful is... a Buddhist beatitude.

I found this in Tricycle which is a Buddhist quarterly.  It resonated with me for the day I found it was one filled with various moments of challenge and affront. I guess in reading it I felt a calming come to me and I decided that I should save it somewhere.



Blissful is solitude for one who’s content,
     who has heard the gradual awakening of truth,
     who sees.
Blissful is non-affliction with regard for the world,
     restraint for living beings.
Blissful is dispassion with regard for the world,
     the overcoming of the pursuit of pleasure.
But the subduing of the conceit “I am”—
     That is truly the ultimate bliss.