Monday, November 12, 2007

Because nobody likes goat porn

My dad has five laptops. Four of them have goat porn on them. The other is brand new, and is now being used to write about said bestial extravaganzas. He can’t write invoices because of all the goat porn on his computer. He can’t send e-mails because five midgets and a donkey covered in fat free ranch dressing run continually across the screen. Everything is full of viruses: little naked pregnant women running around inside your hard drive. Nobody likes goat porn. It comes to me, as four different men of various races run across the screens, unseen, that this is not the way that people do business. At least, not people in the landscaping business.

There’s no reason for it. The frustration begins there. Like goat porn, there’s no reason for the complications inherent in having five machines on which to do business, when the man doing the business is suffering for petit mal seizures and a fair to middling psychotic break brought on by pressures internal and external and for the most part inexplicable and unintelligible. Though a non-believer in a random universe, random acts of madness, entropy, and violence tend to wrap themselves around my father like a tightening maelstrom, or a shroud. It seems to me that no one likes goat porn precisely because of this.

I do believe in randomness: in chance and entropy and mystery, and the things that I find mysterious are often human. My dad came home one day to find my brother and sister arguing in the kitchen. At least, that was his perception. His response was to get on his riding lawn mower, which is dwarfed by his six-foot-four-inch two-hundred and thirty pound frame to such an extent that he appears clown-like, and destroy his lawn furniture and one of his barbeques. His response to this, when questioned later was: “Well, I’ve got two. What’s the big deal?” My siblings, it turned out, were not fighting, just talking and chasing each other around the house screaming, attempting to beat one another with various pieces of furniture and gardening implements.

About three times a week I hear stories, or witness myself, acts of humanity and madness that, like snowflakes in southeast Tennessee, often fail to materialize. One day my dad flipped a 12,000 dollar trailer full of mulch over with a 300,000 dollar front end loader. The next day he striped the ignition on said frontend loader, and after letting it run for about an hour, systematically cit every wire leading from the dash until the engine turned off, turning the equipment into a 15,000 pound paper weight. Edward Abbey on his best day couldn’t do a better job. He and his business partners scream at each other for no reason, then keep working. He chased down a bus driver in rush hour traffic after she hit his three-quarter ton truck and didn’t stop. He was driving on the sidewalk and through red lights, on the phone with his brother the whole time. Even madness can’t stop him from multitasking.

If these events seem jumbled, they are. His affliction is such that the past is all of one plane: immediate, five minutes ago, if he remembers it at all. So every trial and every conflict is as raw as if it had just ended, or it is as if it never occurred, but there is no in between. We now live in a world of extremes, like the propaganda of Kundera’s Czechleslovakia, where things are pure, or they are not, where everything and nothing butt heads, with no buffer, with no matter or situation in between.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

so...i was @ graduation (woof...woof) and enjoying all of the rights and priveledges that accompany said gradgeeation (we're at a suthun school, ya'll recall) when i was overcome with so many emotions....age, passages, and the absence of my family.

let me tell ya'll a little story....bout a man named holden.....yeah, but anyhoo....my son's mother and i haven't been t'gether for quite some time so we were looking forward with some ennui and other featherless foul, getting together and celebrating my son's brilliant career as a academician..(betwixt you and me, he kicked the shit out of the bachelors pulling back just in time to have the (may i have the envelope please) honor of summa cum laude ( "say, that's dirty talkin' mister") without the pretension of nary an a minus.......(the scene ends as the hero slowly lowers the vanquished and utterly defeated foe to the ground via his sash....unconcerned as to the state of his animation (whether or not he was dead you dumbshit!)). enow of that my young friend. and in true serial form...i'll have to have a crafty ending for our young friend as we carry him through to the next episode.......

Saturday, April 28, 2007

as an erstwhile catholic and not one to be particularly ruminant or contemplative, and with deference; beuchner notwithstanding, i read the most fascinating tidbit in Mother Earth News. the money spent so far in our conflict/war in Iraq equals the same amount it would take to not only make the U.S. totally independent of foreign oil, but have our energy sources be 100% renewable. thanks, Condie....thanks Dick.... excellent choice.

Friday, April 27, 2007

buechner's brendan

Now Ita lived and died a virgin. I believe that is true if anything about her at all is true. Had any man ever tried to take his pleasure of her, he'd been blown clean off his feet by the great wind she was. She had never freshened.

Monday, April 23, 2007

mimes, et cetera

Holden! I'm about to plunge you into an existential crisis. I know you take your blogging seriously: see comments about religion and Alec Baldwin for examples of this. But blogging is about as serious and productive as miming or masturbation. ;-) Researchers have said recently that the internet as we know it is a failure. Is this a futile activity? (secretly, I'm pulling for you: you have to hold off the creeping fascist coyotes, and insanity) If you want to engage in serious discussions, that's fine. But keep your sense of humor and humility. Retain a degree of sarcasm. And I won't have to find you and torture you with irrelevant Cohen brothers quotes and excerpts from Jerry Falwell's sermons. Viva la Resistance!

Saturday, April 21, 2007

is alec baldwin the devil? are his expectations too high for his daughter? when one is eleven years old, do they have the ability to tell time and use an otherwise complicated device like the phone?

Friday, April 20, 2007

a basic starting point

the point i suppose is the same for everyone......remain anonymous with the sense that what one is contributing to our own smatterings has poignancy, urgency, heft.....the weight of a sopping wool sweater.

my own dilemma is that i won't ever be Catholic; an accepted fully cloaked Catholic that is (for reasons we can discuss later). catholicism in the true sense (..i believe in the Holy catholic church) can't be grasped or denied only experienced. but the other...the wafer (host), the ability to sidestep the blessing (i want it to be the same but i still feel like i'm wearing a moo moo to my counterparts Hugo Boss tuxedo) and go directly to communion.

it's my desire therefore to share with, cajole, and otherwise engage the occasional visitor in an erstwhile disobedience. the surreptitious communing with our Lord and Savior apart from the scaffolding of the priesthood.