I spent the day painting a table that I had found in front of a cathedral one Saturday afternoon which I then somehow managed to move a few blocks (about a quarter of a block at a time) until I reached a direct bus, hauled it and myself into it and held onto it for dear life as the bus careened the streets of San Francisco until it deposited me and that heavy table directly in front of the Asian Art Museum, which is across 8th Street from the Civic Center, but which also, oh so fortunately, happens to be directly across McAllister
Street from The Abigail, as well.
And The Abigail is is where I have
lived now for nearly a year. I painted
the table the same acrylic color, chrome orange, that I had just a few months ago painted the much smaller more decorative table that I had found one afternoon lighting up a Hayes Valley sidewalk, which I also grabbed and brought to the apartment into which I had quite
recently turned into my home. Now
my home has matching orange (al
most red) tables beside my bed which I, also just this afternoon, made fresh with linens patterned with white flowers embedded with
I haven’t felt this alone since yesterday. Counting backwards from a thousand would be just as easy. To turn this pout into anything that holds even a nib of pleasantry, isn’t that all I want? Isn’t it? Maybe my goal is to mope. It repulses just to shine a thought in that direction, but this is me, I just know it (like I often know myself) and certainly cannot shake the darkness from my character at this hour. The damage is done, I know. But if I could just bathe for a bit within an Easter pastel, and it is the season, would that begin to satisfy? Was my
mood bruised by the evening’s odd
hellbent thunderstorm? Downpours
often rather bring me to at least a swifter speed, much like a metal band’s drummer encaged in a concert for
a fifteen minute solo. Would that
such would quicken as it once did. Or white chocolate bunnies, like
the ones I’d get in my basket, special,
because I disliked regular-colored bunny
chocolate. I feel tonight as if I never even
liked the white chocolate ones. And yet I’d
lie to myself and to these walls that are my
closest friends tonight, just to keep the gloom. It’s the bohemian life, Del! Which, like every other life must surely be this same color of pewter, at
For more than a moment I thought he said that the walls were panting with excrement. ‘Oh, Frank,’ I thought, ‘so dark and too soon.’ But it was excitement with which those walls were panting, of course. The dark mood was my own mind’s eye. I’m only up to read (and so screwily) because I couldn’t sleep to begin with, the swill in my head swirling deep into someplace neither my head nor I could ever dig deep enough to reach. I refused to turn anything on, including myself. So with no one to play with and nothing to look at, I opened this book, which could be both (something to play with and something to look at) were it not a night like this. I dare not look up, lest my own very walls, all out of breath from trying to lift my spirits with a storyboard of short happy dreams might themselves be panting ever
I am introducing myself, at 58, to my first work by Maurice Sendak, who many may know as the creator of Where the Wild Things Are. But this story is Higgledy Pigglety Pop! or There Must Be More to Life, and it is about Jenny, a Sealyham terrior who decides to leave her comfortable home for a life of adventure, despite having no experience outside of her haven. It seems a whimsical, almost impossibly immature decision, but when I think about it a moment, it is one in which I am all too familiar. From age 7 to 17 I dreamed of leaving home to strike some wild adventure, myself, often creating storyboards for such. One such dwelt-upon dream was making it somehow to Charleston, West Virginia, where I’d stow away on a ship heading to Ireland, where I’d live for a long duration. Or I’d often think of hopping in a car and driving to Hollywood to become a soap opera actor. Jenny, too, wants to be a star, which is of course a familiar notion to a fellow who has two degrees in the dramatic arts. So Sendak’s story, which he has both written and illustrated, is something I should be able to get into. And while I’ve only read a small portion of the book thus far, I presume this adventure that Jenny is on will be mostly peaceful (I know this especially since I have snuck a peak at the last page). So, despite my initial reaction to Jenny’s decision, I can very much relate to her desire for leaving her comfort zone for an adventure. While it seems quite rash as a life choice, I will continue to read it, but without being so very judgmental, remembering that I, too, wanted so much to do what she does in the book, where I would inevitably be
Landing on My Feet, in the Right Plact, at the Right Time.
That Jerk! That Smug Thieving bastard! Never again will I begin to worry over Such a sorry ass! But what if I can’t see into his brain to really Know that is who he is? I Wonder what might happen then. Ooh, I tell you, once in a while I can Be a big Lunk, myself…. Once in a While… But What a total Jerk! He came all the way here So he could swing that
Bent, crumpled up, golden baton, twirl it around prettily until it makes something Great. Hanging with all of his criminal Nerds, on top of it all. Everybody knows there’s not but a little Hocus Pocus going on in That neck of the woods (His). Sheesh. They say you can’t see the Forest for the trees. But itt’s really those gigantic overnight Weeds that will catch you of guard, make your head a bit too Airy. Weeds! Those Ordinary plants that we all find erroneous. Wrong. Need to get Rid of every one of those lanky, leech-like blunders. Reason I’m even so FREAKIN’ angry about it all is because of the flat-out Embarrassment. Anger is a stupid medicine for such an awkward dork.
S S T (is this anything like DDT – something that permeated my childhood?)
T T M (which is just a reminder that I should talk to my mother this afternoon)
T T T (I’m not heterosexual, so let’s not start any rumors here)
I T M T (well, Ive always felt like something of an information technology guru, but I’ll be awake well into the morning wondering what Mother Teresa would have to say about that, if anything, to tiny, insignificant, overly-
confident me)
But What If This Were A Real Test to Get Into Heaven?
Best call this one “Valley in the sense of valley” at Jack’s posthumous request. The
Radio may be transmitting appropriately, but it is very likely transmitting to
Very messed up receivers. These can be monkeys, human brains, literal electronic receivers, can us monkeys and humans and electronics agree on what we might call these, the objects which receive these terribly important messages. “I
Doubt it,” says a monkey that can be heard by the humans and the electronics who agree in their individual ways (nodding, Morse code blips, bananas and a few chords pulled elegantly from longstanding harps.)