Sunday, December 26, 2004
Greetings from a weird payphone terminal thingie at scenic Midway airport. I have 2min15sec to tell you how much I love the fact that I have been in this airport since noon, that I am currently holdinga STANDBY ticket for a flight over two hours from now. Wish you were here.
Saturday, December 25, 2004
Merry Christmas.
I feel like a deaf kid at a string quartet. I know that this is wonderful, but I'm missing something required for enjoyment. It's something that I'll never have.
Somehow, being among happy believers just makes me feel stupid. I'm missing something that no one can even explain to me. I'm missing out.
Somehow, being among happy believers just makes me feel stupid. I'm missing something that no one can even explain to me. I'm missing out.
Thursday, December 23, 2004
Off a cliff.
There are stories in every past that haunt the living. There are truths we come to in the course of life that keep us catching our tongues indefinitely. Certain casual turns of phrase aren't casual anymore. Certain topics are off limits. We avoid the gaze of others when the buttons are pressed knowing that they won't understand that they've pressed anything; they weren't there. They don't know.
Something odd about it is that the memories that hold me back, the people whose faces flash through my head when someone says something unintentionally insensitive, the eyes I see when my mouth forms certain words -- words I know better than to say -- those people are all dead. Somehow that makes it all seem more real.
Something odd about it is that the memories that hold me back, the people whose faces flash through my head when someone says something unintentionally insensitive, the eyes I see when my mouth forms certain words -- words I know better than to say -- those people are all dead. Somehow that makes it all seem more real.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Monday, December 20, 2004
In the dark.
A recurring theme in my writing is the dichotomy I face as a know-it-all who is thrillingly naive about a few specific topics. I don't know about money. I don't know about parties. I don't know about sex. The latter two were lumped into one chapter of Brainiac Zine #1 under the title page marked "fun" and I want to expand a bit on what I wrote there.
We went to a party the other night and I know it was a great time, but I sure as hell didn't have a great time. Aaron was jubilant, Dave chatted with a few people and seemed content, Jeff was mainly by himself but smiling and drifting among friends, and Amber stuck to people she already knew but seemed comfortable. I freaked out. I'm always freaked out at parties and I don't know why -- how -- other people are not. It's noisy, there are drunk strangers making overt passes at you, the music is not your thing. You don't trust these people. Why on earth are you having such a good time?
I don't understand why people drink like that. I don't understand why it seems fun to be stumbling, blacking out, groping people, whatever. I have remarkably low tolerance for alcohol, but I have proven in the past that I can drink an entire bottle of gin *an entire bottle of gin* and still feel self-conscious, still know I'm an idiot for stumbling or slurring or giggling or taking too long to answer a simple question. What is it about other people that allows them to lose the concept that they, in fact, are also idiots. We're all fucked up. How does alcohol erase that from their minds and not mine?
There is a little bit of my mind that hangs back, a little piece of Kate that is never a part of the fun. There's a voice, a piece of my brain that just watches and listens and learns. It's the voice that pipes up and points things out... "crying doesn't change anything," "he only says that when he's drunk," "that smile looks so fake," "you're the only one," "that person probably has alcohol poisoning," or just plain, "ick." It's the sober critic. I can't drink it quiet. I can't laugh it off. It's there, it will always be there. This is not my advantage, this is my curse. This is what keeps me firmly alone, apart from the fun. This is what has me hiding.
On a completely seperate note, someone has to explain internet porn to me. I know you know. I don't get it. What the hell is it that you're all looking at? I have searched, I have even *found*, but I do not understand the appeal. Videos make some sense sometimes. Like, depending on what's in them, I can see how those might serve a purpose, like to stimulate imagination or something. But just the pictures? Those disjointed pictures that have no context, no movement, no sound, no anything. What part of your imagination do those play to? You've seen naked people before... can't you just remember them? Why do you have to look at *new* naked people who aren't even *doing* anything because they're just photographs. I want to know. I want answers. No one ever really answers. Oh, so many many many questions. This is only one. There are more.
We went to a party the other night and I know it was a great time, but I sure as hell didn't have a great time. Aaron was jubilant, Dave chatted with a few people and seemed content, Jeff was mainly by himself but smiling and drifting among friends, and Amber stuck to people she already knew but seemed comfortable. I freaked out. I'm always freaked out at parties and I don't know why -- how -- other people are not. It's noisy, there are drunk strangers making overt passes at you, the music is not your thing. You don't trust these people. Why on earth are you having such a good time?
I don't understand why people drink like that. I don't understand why it seems fun to be stumbling, blacking out, groping people, whatever. I have remarkably low tolerance for alcohol, but I have proven in the past that I can drink an entire bottle of gin *an entire bottle of gin* and still feel self-conscious, still know I'm an idiot for stumbling or slurring or giggling or taking too long to answer a simple question. What is it about other people that allows them to lose the concept that they, in fact, are also idiots. We're all fucked up. How does alcohol erase that from their minds and not mine?
There is a little bit of my mind that hangs back, a little piece of Kate that is never a part of the fun. There's a voice, a piece of my brain that just watches and listens and learns. It's the voice that pipes up and points things out... "crying doesn't change anything," "he only says that when he's drunk," "that smile looks so fake," "you're the only one," "that person probably has alcohol poisoning," or just plain, "ick." It's the sober critic. I can't drink it quiet. I can't laugh it off. It's there, it will always be there. This is not my advantage, this is my curse. This is what keeps me firmly alone, apart from the fun. This is what has me hiding.
On a completely seperate note, someone has to explain internet porn to me. I know you know. I don't get it. What the hell is it that you're all looking at? I have searched, I have even *found*, but I do not understand the appeal. Videos make some sense sometimes. Like, depending on what's in them, I can see how those might serve a purpose, like to stimulate imagination or something. But just the pictures? Those disjointed pictures that have no context, no movement, no sound, no anything. What part of your imagination do those play to? You've seen naked people before... can't you just remember them? Why do you have to look at *new* naked people who aren't even *doing* anything because they're just photographs. I want to know. I want answers. No one ever really answers. Oh, so many many many questions. This is only one. There are more.
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
Read and destroy.
Here's an article from a Canadian source. Since we're all into trusting Canadians as faultless moral beacons, you should spend enough time and energy to really dig through this one. If you do a good job, you should feel sorry that it ends (good essay) and wish to pre-purchase the full-length book which will be released by Harper-Collins in September.
I'm a fan of the critique but not the action plan. The essay perfectly lays out the problems with our notion of anti-consumerism, then tells us that taxing advertisers is a way to fix this. I'm not keen on that idea. More later. I have to go to class.
I'm a fan of the critique but not the action plan. The essay perfectly lays out the problems with our notion of anti-consumerism, then tells us that taxing advertisers is a way to fix this. I'm not keen on that idea. More later. I have to go to class.