165 lines
4.4 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
4.4 KiB
Plaintext
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From slcpi!govt.shearson.com!mjohnsto@uunet.UU.NET Tue Jan 8 09:47:22 1991
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To: wordy@Corp
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Subject: Part 7 of CAA #2
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A BLEARY 3 AM MONOLOGUE
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#7 in the second online CAA series
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by
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Steven K. Roberts, HtN (WORDY)
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Bainbridge Island, WA
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October 10, 1986
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Seventy-eight hours and counting fast. It's Friday morning, 3 A.M., and I
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think I've become asynchronous with respect to the rest of the world -- working
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all night and sleeping until the phone rings (as it always does, too early).
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I'm tired, puzzled over a couple of design problems, and in no mood to write.
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If there's any art at all to this installment, it's the art of spontaneous
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invention, not that of a concentrated quest for the exquisite transcendence of
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a well- turned phrase.
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Yes, the exhaustion is gripping. But I'm savoring these last few hours of
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stability -- of knowing where I'm going to sleep every night and having a
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pretty good idea of who my local friends are. It's not like that on the road,
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you know; on the road, stability is something you find in your packs. The
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coffee's always right there in the outer pocket of the kitchen pannier next to
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the spare candles... the logic probe and digital multimeter live just inside
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the forward access panel... the micro-TV is tucked in with the HP system... and
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I commute to work through the wonderfully familiar electronic window that opens
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wide whenever I type HHH and a string of arcane digits. Kind of bizarre, isn't
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it? I feel like a Gary Larsen cartoon, living so many contrasts and reversals
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that even trimming my moustache is sometimes absurd and thought-provoking.
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Life is as it should be: there are no boundaries between sweat and
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wizardry, work and play, computers and bicycle transmissions. I'm living in
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no-mode land.
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Actually, an interesting effect of this wandering life is the profusion of
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homes that develop, metaphorical electronic ones aside. There's one here on
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Bainbridge Island, this place isolated enough from the Big City to be both
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efficient and relaxed. Maybe someday (like I told myself in Austin, Key West,
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Santa Fe, Crested Butte, Telluride, Santa Barbara and a few other surprise
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places) I'll come back to live for awhile. Yeah, I'll come back, park the
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bike, find a house, start a consulting business, and dovetail socially with all
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these delightful folks I've come to care about over the last month...
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But home doesn't work like that when you're a nomad: I'd go crazy in less
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than a year. For once you taste the energy of beginnings, middles are never
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quite the same.
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I went for a test ride today after finishing the new console mount (the
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old one, after only 400 miles, was beginning to fracture). Sleek, waterproof,
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and free of rattles I whisked along, making my first attempt at on-the-road
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typing (sloppy but rather thrilling... technically speaking). I smiled at
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joggers, waved at drivers, and stopped to chat with the kids. And it started
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to happen -- that sweet, slow metamorphosis from deadline-driven madman to
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wanderer, nomad of the spirit. I rode along, slowly keying ASCII in time with
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my cadence, sweating in my Patagonia under a clear cold sky, almost managing to
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be more aware of my surroundings than the subtle interplay of microprocessors
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spinning in synchronous wait loops and dancing at my touch.
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(The software's synthesized voice message on startup has been: "I am the
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Winnebiko control system, version 7. Are you ever going to ride me, Steve?")
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You bet, my little Bikeasaurus -- in 77 hours. Ticks of the clock are
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taking on heavy meaning, and the bike stands over there poised, a thing of
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promise laden with significance, the result of all my time and resources for
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over a year. "How much did that cost?" the kids always ask. "All I had," I
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answer, trying to imagine a number, seeing the insights and specialties of
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friends reflected from end to end. But the task now is to lift my eyes from
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the machine and see what I've set out to see -- to switch this bizarre
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contraption from foreground to background, from obsession to tool. Only then
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will the journey have meaning.
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Ah, off to bed -- I can't even focus my eyes, much less my mind (had I
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ever given this much of myself to a job, I'd have my own teak desk by now).
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The next time you hear from me, it will be from somewhere... out there...
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-- Steve
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The First 100 Miles
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