2425 lines
142 KiB
Groff
2425 lines
142 KiB
Groff
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======================================================
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CROPDUSTER -- Issue 4
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Copyright 1994 by Steven Meece and Chris Woodill
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======================================================
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This is the ASCII version of the zine. It contains everything you would
|
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receive in the real zine except for pictures and the feel of authenticity. If
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you would like to receive the paper edition, send $1.10 for the United States
|
||
or 86 cents for Canada to:
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||
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Cropduster
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||
79 O'Hara Avenue
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Toronto, Ontario
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M6K 2R3
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All other inquiries should be directed to that office as well. The editors are
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also available by international e-mail at:
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ad522@freenet.carleton.ca (Steven Meece)
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||
cwoodill@epas.utoronto.ca (Chris Woodill)
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Naturally permission is granted to distribute Cropduster in any way you would
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like, but please leave it as it is so that others can see our mistakes as
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||
well. If you have a problem, don't take it out on a text file: Tell us.
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===============
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FIRST WORDS
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by Steven Meece
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===============
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Being without anything better to do, we present this. Why should we bother
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with made-up stories when there are so many real ones already going on?
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||
Non-fiction is much more compelling, because it deals with activity instead of
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verbosity. Judge people not by what they say, but by what they do... Also,
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this issue will be a historical artifact in a few years, a snippet of social
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history of life in 1993-4.
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We remain:
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Cropduster
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79 O'Hara Avenue
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Toronto, Ont
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M6K 2R3
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===========
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SECTION 1.1
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||
===========
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||
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I had a semi long chat with a young daughter of the proletariat in the
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Unicentre today, just outside Hugo's sub shop. We spoke about LePen and the
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rest of them, and she sold me a copy of the _Socialist Worker, being an
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International Socialist herself. I asked her if she was with the Communist
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Party (they have stuck posters all over Carleton for the October congress in
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Toronto) and she gave the old no no no, they're a bunch of Stalinists, and so
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forth. She is fanatical anti-fascist.
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I just might show up for their little game and get involved with them. They
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are having a bus to Montreal next week in protest of the appearance of LePen.
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For $15 I can get a round trip to Montreal, create a ruckus, yell my head off,
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and maybe get into a little fracas with members of the right wing. It might be
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||
something to do. Asking Laurie to come with me would be pressing it, but
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||
Michelle would probably be enchanted with the idea. Not because she cares too
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||
much about politics, but a bus trip with a bunch of revolutionary Communists
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to raise hell would appeal to her, simply because it would be another urban
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guerrilla experience, which she claims to want to experience with her
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extra-New Brunswick life.
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It could also get me a girlfriend. There is precious little interaction in
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class, I am much too timid to make any first moves (for fear of prosecution)
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and there are few other clubs that I want to join.
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A girlfriend is but a transitory addition to life, like a side order of French
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fries. Steak and chips. I'd like egg sausage, chips and beans, and a tea,
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please. It isn't the most important thing in the history of the universe.
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I don't really want any of this, not yet at least. My desire to be an adult,
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hold down a full time job, have a large income and an automobile has not yet
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kicked in. I'm not yet prepped up to compete with you and Carlile. I sort of
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feel like being a Communist scumbag, a greasy slimy piece of shit that hangs
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around pool parlours.
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I wish that I was a nobody and knew no-one, perhaps living in Yugoslavia. Then
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I wouldn't have to worry about anyone but myself, and wouldn't have to become
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anything other than what I was.
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Either that, or farm corn back in Kentucky, where I belong with all of my lost
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kinfolk. I can certainly have faith in something as pre-modern as corn. Good
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solid corn, good ground, pray for rain, wait for the harvest. I could get a
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fiddle and jump around the fields singing and shouting Green corn, green corn,
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green corn... Imagine that: From hillbilly to cityslicker and back again in
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three generations. But how do you become a farmer? How does one farm? Perhaps
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not farming, but at least something real. Rather than being a watered down
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university professor, I would rather be a character out of a Faulkner short
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story. And I am already creepy enough to be half way there, just fake a
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Southern accent, and there you go.
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People are becoming adults, and taking on the negative qualities of being a
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world citizen in a shitty world. To think that the Carlile who wears fancy
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shoes and has a slick yuppie boyfriend once embarrassed herself with this
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greaseball, and was once even pregnant with our child, a miniature
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Meece-Carlile. And now she is jetting to Ireland to study something as silly
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and rich as herself (Celtic studies) and now I am trying to forget the fact
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that I haven't eaten since yesterday.
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Laurie is kind of a dope; like the bit about war being justifiable because it
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teaches marksmanship. But everyone is like that! Sometimes I don't know if
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there's anyone I could ever go out with for more than a few months. In the
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words of Robbt Johnson, The day that you get weak for no good womens, that's
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the day that you bound to fall. Believe it, my brother.
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Message #5603 "Private Mail"
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Date: 29-Oct-91 14:50
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From: Chris Woodill
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To: Wolf Meece
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Subj: Re: Sunday night blues
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I would just like to have a quiet romance for the next little while. Something
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that doesn't have anything to do with marriage.
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I was talking to Dad about Stacey the other day, and he said something
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interesting. The dialogue went something like this;
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G: Danielle seems nice.
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C: I really like her a lot.
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G: Just don't get married.
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C: No, I don't think I will. I have already been almost married.
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G: [this is the important part] The only way you could have been more married
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was if you actually walked down the aisle.
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Funk all that, we've got to get on with these. During part of L's suppertime
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visit here, she gave the old "I'm not going to let you touch me," and so on.
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It was all rather pukey, and I've heard it before. Of course I know that we
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weren't going to hold hands and go kissy kissy, but it seemed rude for her to
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||
say so, kind of like "I know you worship me, keep your hands to yourself bub."
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But it gave me an opportunity to think wisely for once, and ask myself why I
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even like her. After all, she's made it no secret that she doesn't give a damn
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about poetry, religion, philosophy, music (pretty much), politix, or even
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literature at large. So why? So why should I bother? What's so hot about
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Laurie, besides her sexual potential? Quite honestly...
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On occasions it's hard for me to genuinely like females. It always takes so
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much effort to carve off the layers of bullshit and get to the real person.
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Laurie Wein is definitely not the future, that I can assure you. It was
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different, because even though I know we wouldn't make a good couple, and I
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firmly believe it to be true, the way she said it the other night offended me
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and gave me pause. Because if we don't have the compatibility to make it as a
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BFGF, why do we appear to have what it takes to make it as "just friends"? And
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what is the missing item? I could not share with her any of my poetry,
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religion, philosophy, music (pretty much), politix, or even literature at
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large, so why is she even a friend? Why do I like her, and what do I like
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about her?
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Now that I seriously ponder that question, there isn't much I can say in my
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defense. She's moderately intelligent, in an Advanced-level way. She knows a
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little, but not a lot. The thing I like about L the most is that she's there
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and there isn't really anyone other than her.
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I haven't talked to her since she left, which was almost two weeks ago. I'm
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sure that I will eventually, but I know that it can't be the same anymore, at
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least in my head, now that she's cast the door open for me.
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I was telling L about the first BBQ meet this summer, with your peer group and
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me. I said that it consisted of Robin, the opera singer, Danielle, the
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actress, you the analytical philosopher, and me, the religious poet. She
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replied, "Sounds like a real fun time," and then smirked.
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Elgin is the neighbourhood main street and is where you go for shopping. It is
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the average inner city mixed-ethnic street, like Bathurst maybe, with small
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grocery stores, specialty shops, poor people places, and so on. Unlike
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Toronto, they don't bring the produce out onto the sidewalk. And unlike
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Parkdale, the people don't wander the streets all night. This is an urban
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middle class neighbourhood, some yuppies, but also families and old people,
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and for some reason, a lot of stray cats. It isn't the corrupt sinful place
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that Toronto is... it is so strange to hear people speaking of Toronto as if
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it is someplace far far away. Ottawa people talk about Toronto the way they
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talk about Winnipeg, someplace that you visited four years ago. I told my
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Marxism prof about the Canadian Tribune BBS, and he said "You mean in
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Toronto?" and I thought, well of course Toronto, where else? It's weird. It's
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weird to think of TO as anyplace other than home.
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||
Ottawa is a nice place, and I can feel myself becoming one of these people. I
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||
suppose that I'd classify myself an Ottawan now, more or less. I am still
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||
waiting for Taco Bell to discover this untapped marketplace. Perhaps a
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telephone call to RJ is in order.
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I feel somewhat pleasant because I feel like this apartment is mine; not
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Hammerhead's, not Moses', and not my mom's. Of course it is only rented, but
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beyond that, I can do what I want with it and in it. I can jerk off at any
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time, sleep whenever, eat whatever and whenever I want, play the music I want
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without headphones, without Uhhhhh, can you turn that down, and I can
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generally be peaceful knowing that no-one is going to barge their way into my
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room and piss me off with their presence. Anything is possible as long as I
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stay within the bounds of the Criminal Code of Canada, good conduct of
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Carleton University, and a living allowance of about $100 per month.
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I've wanted this for such a long time. I remember the times (after my sister
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went away to Trent) that my mom would go away to the Inter City Papers head
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office in Montreal for a few days on semi-annual conferences. Most of the
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times I really relished it; making myself food, leaving my clothes in the
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livingroom, faking independence for three days. One time I made a midnight run
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to the Food City in that strip plaza with Little Caesars, and nearly went nuts
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with the pleasure of buying koolaid and pecan pies and Dr Pepper.
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The rooming house contains an odd and opposite mix; mostly males, mostly
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self-contained guys. Many of the people here remind me of an exchange student
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from Turkey, a male Nergis. There is one guy down the hall who works on a road
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gang; every day he leaves his work boots outside his door and they are caked
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in chunks of pavement. There is a guy one floor down who appears to be an
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Indian playboy. I live on the top floor, facing the street, by far the best
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||
room in the complex, as well as the most expensive. I live in a turret with
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two windows. I have my own little section of hallway, and a fire escape that
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||
goes from my window to the ground. I used to sit out there (on my makeshift
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balcony) and write at night, but now it is becoming a little too cold for
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||
that. The rent is $420.
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||
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||
Across the street, at 188 Waverley, there is a higher-class apartment house.
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||
All the people there look like Ottawa U students. (This is to say people like
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||
Laura Pattison, Jennifer McColl, Matt Fenwick and so on. Carleton students
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look like Brenno, Barnsie, me, and Steve Adsmundson). The interesting part
|
||
about that place was that they took a dead body out of it about two weeks ago.
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Did I mention this? Yes. An unmarked van driven by two guys in business suits
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||
pulled up, they took a gurney out of the back and went inside. Ten minutes
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||
later they emerged with a body bag with lumps the shape of a human figure.
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||
Three days later posted on the front door there was the sign Apartment for
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Rent.
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||
So that is my basic contemporary story; frying eggs, taking out the garbage,
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riding my bike. It's quite good overall, although I know that it isn't making
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||
me "respectful" or "successful" and unlike you and Carlile, I'm not pumping
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||
fresh life into my resume or curriculum vitae. But I don't care too much about
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||
those things anymore, I am busy working on the condition of my brain. I know
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||
you think that I am at a rock-bottom and have become a rat in a cage, but I
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||
believe that I've never really felt better about things for an extended amount
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||
of time not based on having a really neat girlfriend. I don't feel gummy or
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||
stupid anymore. I feel like I'm doing things on my own, and no longer trapped
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||
in a juvenile rut. Of course, all humanity is trapped in a rut, but I feel good
|
||
inasmuch as the things that I can control are all proceeding fairly well. I
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||
could use a girlfriend, but that's not deathly necessary. As Furry Lewis once
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||
said, "You didn't bring nothing in with you, and you aint gonna take nothing
|
||
out with you either," and as John Mellencamp said, "an honest man's pillow is
|
||
his peace of mind." So if a sound and untroubled sleep is the greatest thing
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||
that we can aspire to, I am successful in at least that area.
|
||
|
||
===========
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||
SECTION 1.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Things here are fairly sedate, with a bunch of different things contributing
|
||
to a rat-race type of environment. I think that I am finally getting
|
||
wrinkles, and am starting to feel physically old. My eyes are getting baggy,
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||
and I have less time for entertainment. I don't see D as much as I would
|
||
during the summer: perhaps this is the year where I might actually have to
|
||
work in school (I remember being told in grade five, as we all were, that this
|
||
year I would have to do more than just smile).
|
||
|
||
I saw Danesi's daughter Daniella today. I had first told you about her in
|
||
first year, as she sat in the front of our intro semiotics class with prissy
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hair and Benetton sweaters and Gucci shoes. Between then and now she got
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married (I knew about this marriage in first year), and this summer she
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||
supposedly had a miscarriage (Danesi told me this for no particular reason).
|
||
The point is, when I saw her today, she had lost that innocence, that
|
||
prissiness that she had in first year. She looked real, rugged, and worn. It
|
||
was if she had finally been hardened. It was spooky, as I was thinking of the
|
||
people we idealize from the Hoodlands, ie. Fiona, Stacey, Krista, etc., and I
|
||
think to myself, "What has happened to Fiona in three years?" Neither of us
|
||
have had real contact with her. Is she as worn as Daniella, has the idealism
|
||
been sapped out of her in the same way? I think that Mandy has become like
|
||
Stacey, with practical problems like finding a job and a house and a boyfriend
|
||
(or girlfriend as the case may be), and she probably now has yeast infections
|
||
and haemorrhoids. This happens to everyone: even a house where swear words
|
||
are not allowed cannot protect one from the onslaught of maturity/old age.
|
||
|
||
Is this why I still get labeled as 14? Do I still look that goofy? Do I
|
||
still look like I am cumming in my pants over _Playboy?
|
||
|
||
"What kind of bra do I wear? About as comfortable and economical as I can
|
||
get. Daisy Fresh...Sometimes I forget to even take it off...What kind of bra
|
||
do you wear?"
|
||
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||
Danielle is like Janis Jackson: Really rumpled and loud and obnoxious, but
|
||
with some life and a weird sense of class.
|
||
|
||
There is this girl in my semiotics class that is a total babe, to the point of
|
||
ridiculousness. She is like a super-model; a babe not in the natural way, but
|
||
in the artificial sense. Her name is Elessandra; this should say all. She
|
||
has the posture of someone out on the town, even when she is doing something
|
||
like turn the lights off when we are watching a film. She would be a whore if
|
||
she looked dingier, but because she wears Italian clothes and has good hair
|
||
she is a babe.
|
||
|
||
What is the difference between a babe and whore? Nothing but clothes and
|
||
shampoo.
|
||
|
||
That is why one gets angry when you expose babes: All you find is a whore
|
||
underneath. All you find is nakedness. There is nothing to hide their
|
||
ordinariness. What one should do is not to create babeness: woman should not
|
||
be put on pedestals. It's degrading to both women but to men. All that occurs
|
||
is that there is a larger fall, and so one is even more a whore than if she
|
||
were just plain. Plain people are better, because they stay that way under all
|
||
circumstances. That is real beauty, when someone still is beautiful when they
|
||
are sitting around the house in pajamas; when they aren't trying.
|
||
|
||
Danielle is like that: Stacey was definitely not. Stacey would think that
|
||
when she put on clothes, she would be putting on a new body, something that
|
||
would be acceptable to the public. Then she would go home and expose herself,
|
||
and accept the fact that she was fat and over-sexed.
|
||
|
||
It is people like Fiona and Karen, who are generally insecure about their
|
||
outside appearance, who keep the fashion industry going. It is people who
|
||
need party clothes AND home clothes that make the fashion industry a billion
|
||
dollar industry. As for me, I buy about $100.00 worth of clothes a year,
|
||
usually in the form of jeans, socks, and shoes. You do the same thing: the
|
||
only things you buy are essentials.
|
||
|
||
The world economy can't survive on essentials. If we all made just what we
|
||
needed, North American domination over the world would fall. The domination
|
||
over the world by the US and now in part, Japan, depends on us buying and
|
||
demanding more than we really need.
|
||
|
||
I think that things are somewhat different now in that I am finally beginning
|
||
to be able to live the fiction of being well kept: ie. not spoiled, but with
|
||
enough that one feels comfortably full. I am generally not emotionally,
|
||
psychologically, or materially hungry anymore. Or at least, that hunger is
|
||
lessened. It seems this is good for me and for the people around me, although
|
||
there is that pull back to your roots, no matter how shitty you are. It's like
|
||
in those movies where some black dude moves from the ghetto and goes to lala
|
||
land, and becomes criticized because he doesn't like the ghetto anymore. It's
|
||
the same problem we have in revising and changing our view on the whole
|
||
Woodlands thang: we don't want to feel like we have been disloyal. In fact,
|
||
all we are doing is changing our current view of what are now memories,
|
||
traditions, and old tales. Carlile, for all intents and purposes, is dead.
|
||
|
||
That is an inherent problem with _Cropduster. It is a tool used by us to
|
||
resurrect the dead. However, all that will ever happen is a feeble response
|
||
from zombies: Stacey calling and yelling her mouth off, Fiona sending a bland
|
||
letter, etc. This is the question that we have to mull over with it, which
|
||
justifies or not the whole production and sending out of _Cropduster: Do people
|
||
like Stacey and Fiona think us regretfully dead in the same way that we do?
|
||
If they do, then _Cropduster becomes something that will send them a message
|
||
of, "I haven't forgotten. Preserve the memories. Stay true to the Rag bag,
|
||
or whatever it was." However, if the people who we have sent it to are not
|
||
mournful, then what happens is just a re-killing. Stacey is a perfect example
|
||
of this: she gets angry because what she thinks she killed, ie. a different
|
||
view of the world that puts her in the negative, rears its ugly head. Of
|
||
course the response is aggression, for the purpose of something like Stacey's
|
||
phone call is to destroy that what has come against her.
|
||
|
||
And perhaps we are doing the same thing ourselves with _Cropduster: killing
|
||
any protest and firming our own ideology surrounding the whole situation. In
|
||
other words, perhaps _Cropduster is like Stacey diary, a place for us to put
|
||
down on paper and thus solidify our position.
|
||
|
||
Is _Cropduster inherently aggressive, war-like, fascist, or is it welcoming,
|
||
accommodating, friendly? I would think the former. The question is do we
|
||
care? And if we do, what should we do about it?
|
||
|
||
You sound like a battered wife, except there is no one beating you up except
|
||
your own memories.
|
||
|
||
Now I am not accusing you of anything, so lets not get into tirades of
|
||
accusations. I am not saying that I am any better either. But I do it
|
||
differently: I tend to wallow in my ideals and optimism while everything
|
||
around me crashes to pieces. Whichever way we do it, we are doing the same
|
||
thing: we are throwing away responsibility for our situation. Carlile does
|
||
it, so does Stacey (especially her), and so does Fiona.
|
||
|
||
I think the reason why _Cropduster is so powerful is because of its accusatory
|
||
tone, because it accuses everyone we have met of being destructive assholes.
|
||
I don't think the people at Bencard would be able to do that to anyone. That
|
||
is why we are different, not because we are more intelligent (look at Lloyd's
|
||
waste of a brain), but because we are still angry and caring and emotional and
|
||
fighting. We still are fighting, we are still trying to find something other
|
||
than the compromise of steak knives and government jobs.
|
||
|
||
People have sold out for the most part. I look at the professors around me, I
|
||
see them doing good work in bits, but only by compromising their entire
|
||
philosophy. In other words, for every new element that Prof. Smith creates in
|
||
his laboratory, he has to put up with the creation of three or four new bombs,
|
||
a new way to melt tires, and so on. This is true in the humanities as well:
|
||
for every piece on philosophy there are thousands of expositions of Hegel or
|
||
Marx or some other canon figure. I think the PhD thesis is the start of that
|
||
road, if not being started during undergrad or even before. The thesis is
|
||
your ticket in, your first compromise in an effort to become a part of
|
||
academic culture. It is bogus to think that people are doing independent,
|
||
radical work. It is as if a good business man could be an environmentalist.
|
||
Its just contradictory.
|
||
|
||
Academics, more than anybody, have been bought by manufacture of consent,
|
||
meaning they have bought into a manufactured radicalism, a sense of freedom
|
||
that doesn't really exist, a sense of individuality that is only permitted
|
||
through toeing the party line. I am not saying that others do not suffer from
|
||
this as well, but it is intelligent people who need the largest dose of it in
|
||
order to be swindled. How much freedom you have to promise to the average
|
||
man? The freedom to watch commercials, the freedom to go to football games,
|
||
the freedom to be a cog in someone else's wheel.
|
||
|
||
D and I are supposed to meet up on Thursday night, for a midnight rendez-vous
|
||
thing. I do not know if I will enjoy it: I do not know the criteria for
|
||
enjoyment anymore. I can't just speculate on how much sex I am going to get
|
||
and then say, well that qualifies as a good session (ugh, what an awful word).
|
||
We don't have sessions, or at least we should not. Do you know the feeling
|
||
that one gets where if each minute is not the ideal fantasy of BFGF life, then
|
||
one feels like one has failed somehow. Its as if we are not running at peak
|
||
efficiency. But of course I realize that efficiency is not the goal, nor is
|
||
finishing on time. Stacey and I were totally finished: she could give me an
|
||
orgasm and leave in about 15 minutes. I'm always pushing, she says, always
|
||
with a plan. I'm constantly planning, always calculating.
|
||
|
||
I know you don't really care, but it is semi-important. I know the reason you
|
||
don't care, and in some ways I feel the same way: we've both heard it all
|
||
before. I have heard that whole, "Oh, let's just cuddle and be romantic"
|
||
before. Beware of anyone promising romance, because most people could never
|
||
interpret you well enough to be able to be your romantic ideal.
|
||
|
||
Things don't make sense anymore. Things are not black and white, with good
|
||
guys and bad guys. There are no more enemies, nothing to propel you forward
|
||
except your own inertia, which over the years starts to diminish. Carlile has
|
||
a boyfriend that she seems at least semi-happy with, and actually seems like a
|
||
nice guy in the typical university intellectual way. I have met guys like
|
||
him: boring and smart, artistic and bourgeois. Another safety net in the
|
||
history of safe boyfriends.
|
||
|
||
Its about control, control of one's destiny, control over one's family, over
|
||
one's girlfriend/boyfriend. It is about the power to dictate what your life
|
||
may be, to be free to choose. That is what control is all about - to not be
|
||
accountable to anyone except for oneself. But I'm beginning to realize that
|
||
one cannot find control through confrontation, through stature, through raw
|
||
power. One must yield to oneself, or one will just become chained to an
|
||
asshole mentality. The only way to freedom is to openness, to be subversive.
|
||
One can't destroy the system, rather, one must leave as it is in an effort to
|
||
use it to your advantage. That is what university is all about, using the
|
||
stature of the PhD to get someone else to listen to your bullshit. The same
|
||
goes for psychology, therapy, day-care, teaching, government, etc. It is a
|
||
way for people to use the system to put forward their own agenda. "And they all
|
||
get put in boxes, and they all come out the same..."
|
||
|
||
I don't know why, but I think that Pete Seeger is the purest music form. I
|
||
really like that whole style of one guy one guitar, just singing to the masses
|
||
in communion with them, having them singing along. I think that all those
|
||
guys, ie. Woody, Leadbelly, etc., were like that. Actually, that reminds me of
|
||
Barry Stilwell, who is, I suppose a modern Leadbelly in that he gets into
|
||
bar-room brawls while singing songs for the masses. He has a large scar
|
||
across his chest because of some knife fight that he got into, and his alcohol
|
||
problems are well known to everyone. He has been falling off the wagon
|
||
recently, much to the stress of everyone, including me. I don't mind parents,
|
||
but with Danielle's you have to be wary of them, for they are quite invasive.
|
||
They do not have the sense of privacy that you are I might have: I think this
|
||
has to be from being performers and living in an apartment. The idea of
|
||
knocking on someone's bedroom door is very silly when you can hear all that is
|
||
going through the paper thin walls.
|
||
|
||
There was this women on the bus who screamed out for no particular reason,
|
||
"Men in this country are god damn fucking assholes!" I guess she was having a
|
||
rough day. She didn't look particularly crazy, and she didn't open her mouth
|
||
after that (usually the crazy ones keep babbling all the way to the subway).
|
||
|
||
I met up with Rupi today, who now has a beard.
|
||
|
||
Things are getting more and more stressful. My computer keeps breaking down
|
||
(Oh, how I love MS DOS), with conflicts all over the place. I have barely
|
||
enough energy to learn anything, and Dad keeps yammering on about "school
|
||
should be your first priority". It's a shitty day of a shitty week, and right
|
||
now I hate life.
|
||
|
||
I had another weird dream again, about some female in a wheelchair who was
|
||
kept in an institution, until she finally gets away at the end. I do not know
|
||
what this is all about, but perhaps it is me trying to escape the institution
|
||
of Gary and Karen. In the end the female (I don't know who it was, but the
|
||
dream was in first person so I guess it was me) is sick and has to wear a
|
||
shawl and stay in her wheelchair, but at least she is free to go where she
|
||
wants.
|
||
|
||
I miss Danielle, and her father is home. She wants to shoot him. She has as
|
||
much rage against her father as Fiona had against the baseball bat guy or
|
||
Rachel had against the Digger. Or I suppose, as much as I have against my own
|
||
mother. The guy is just such a fuck-up, and a pitiful fuck-up at that. He is
|
||
not arrogant like Lloyd; rather, he is more like Martin, pitiful and lame.
|
||
|
||
Daddy to the rescue: he supposedly got the computer up and running.
|
||
|
||
False alarm: the scanner is still fucked up.
|
||
|
||
This girl I am telling you about in my Italian class is more and more like JM
|
||
everyday. It is as if she walked into my class and sat down. She even has
|
||
many of the same physical attributes: big red hair, fattish figure and freckly
|
||
face. There is a lot of this at this institution, a lot of people trying to
|
||
"find themselves".
|
||
|
||
This university has a lot of money. I have noticed that in the cafeteria they
|
||
have put in a high definition big screen TV set, so that the catholics can
|
||
watch MuchMusic while they eat.
|
||
|
||
I am committing grievous sins. Not only am I having feasts with D during the
|
||
week, but I usually end up sleeping in, and thus, missing Italian the next
|
||
morning. I have been missing Tuesday classes because of my sexual exploits,
|
||
which I admit is not good. It's not as bad as it used to be: this is not so
|
||
much Stacey and I skipping to go fuck during the day, but not going to bed
|
||
until 1:30 and so not wanting to get up the next day. I usually do not want
|
||
to get up anyway, and sometimes I don't get up on Tuesday without any cause of
|
||
Danielle being there.
|
||
|
||
I wrote that letter to Carlile. I do not know whether I will send it. I would
|
||
love to have her confidence again. That Peter guy is a total knob, a perfect
|
||
Eaton Centre shopper. It would be pleasing to hear that Carlile still deep
|
||
down hated her boyfriend, and really just wanted to go home and masturbate.
|
||
|
||
I have lunch today with Karen Rothfels, if she remembers to show up. We
|
||
arranged to have lunch at Ned's a couple weeks ago, and she never showed, but
|
||
she said she would for this one. I am not holding my breath. Why do people
|
||
do this? Is it just bad manners, or genuine not caring? I am getting sick of
|
||
it, although now I do not brood about it anymore. I do not get angry or
|
||
anything: I just trust them less, and do not depend on them for anything.
|
||
|
||
I stand by my statement that you should consider Michelle. She is definitely
|
||
a babe in the woods, and she would take you up on many offers. I think the
|
||
problem is that you would have a lot of control, so you would have to control
|
||
yourself. Is this your problem? Can you handle it? If you can avoid being
|
||
a fuckup, then what is the big deal? You seem to think that your being a
|
||
tyrant is something that comes over you, like lust. It is to a certain
|
||
extent, but in some ways both of us are responsible. Because if we were not,
|
||
then we would be no better than Matt Fenwick. Are you saying that we are no
|
||
better? Perhaps that is true, but at least with people like Danielle and
|
||
Michelle we might be able to be honest about it. I think the problem for you
|
||
is not one of losing control and jumping on someone and making it stupid, but
|
||
rather, of being able to be honest about your asshole tendencies and make your
|
||
partner understand the problems. The problem is always one of communication,
|
||
and mutual intelligence. Are you afraid that she won't be ready for you
|
||
coming out and saying, "I'm sorry but I really want a blowjob right now and I
|
||
know you do not want to give me one, so I feel like an asshole..."?
|
||
|
||
"Rock and Roll!!"
|
||
|
||
I do not think that you should try overly hard to find this tiresome hag that
|
||
you can conquer and make into a jewel. Sometimes you are allowed to have
|
||
something you're not supposed to. Sometimes you should go after the beach
|
||
blonde bomber, or the chick that is easy, or someone you would enjoy eating.
|
||
Sometimes that is OK, and it seems that you have made yourself a whipping post
|
||
for the faults of your grade eleven past. You need to get rid of Fiona. You
|
||
need something new, something you can get excited about. You are wallowing
|
||
around on this issue, which although may only be a fraction of your potential
|
||
existence, comprises a lot of mental, emotional and sexual ego.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps you are thinking that I am standing on this father figure pedestal,
|
||
giving you advice. At least I am not slipping you condoms. I do not mean to
|
||
be, although sometimes I know you like the benefits of having the father
|
||
figure, or playing the long lost son role. You need people you can count on,
|
||
that you can play with. Perhaps you are taking this Michelle thing too
|
||
seriously, or not seriously enough. Perhaps you should play in her sandbox,
|
||
and do nice things, and visit museums, and ride the bus, and listen to Deep
|
||
Breakfast, and kiss.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 2.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
More old tymes. The train trip to/from Ottawa is always a melancholy one,
|
||
since the route putters through the hometowns of three of my old flames: Cats
|
||
in Smith's Falls, Kristi in Kingston, and Kucman in Port Hopeless.
|
||
|
||
The most feeling one is Smiths Falls, because I know that in all likelihood,
|
||
Cats is still out in that town somewhere.
|
||
|
||
Barring some unforeseen development, we will both have anthropology GFs in the
|
||
near future. It looks like it is going to happen, partially because she is
|
||
progressing forward too, giving out revelations, inviting me for dinner,
|
||
leaving messages on my machine. L never did any of that. I think it is going
|
||
to work. I hope it is going to work. It would be good, provided that it stays
|
||
at the proper level. It can't be overwhelming. This isn't to say that I don't
|
||
want anything to do with her, rather that if it gets too strong in a BFGF way,
|
||
she is liable to go overboard as I said before and send me flowers and talk
|
||
about "love" and whatever. I am sick to chit of this romance crap as
|
||
practiced by L, Stacey, and Brandie and want nothing to do with it. I don't
|
||
want to be revered and put on a pedestal for six months only to be dumped like
|
||
trash during the seventh. I would rather just receive respect now and forever.
|
||
|
||
We had a really good post-coital philosophical talk. Actually, I did almost
|
||
all of the talking. I cut up L and Brandie and Stacey for their belief in the
|
||
Bev Hills 902 style ultimate infallibility of their BFs. "I've met the coolest
|
||
guy... he's funny, smart, cute, sweet, sensitive..." and so on. If you think
|
||
you've found the perfect guy, you are deluded, because the last perfect guy
|
||
was a virgin who died on the cross. Sooner or later you will realise that he
|
||
isn't perfect, and can your relationship handle that piece of information? Of
|
||
course not. People like Stacey and L and Brandie declare that the search is
|
||
over three times each year. And then when they break up and end up hating each
|
||
other, they are completely confused... "I don't know what happened, all of the
|
||
sudden he wasn't the same Chris that I used to know..." and so on.
|
||
|
||
This came to mind when I was at their house the other week, and L was getting
|
||
all gussied up to go out on a "date" with a guy named Stacy. The guy showed
|
||
up wearing hiking boots, and I just had to shake my head and say "Oh man..."
|
||
They went out to see a film at the Bytowne - because he is appreciative of the
|
||
arts, you see. Not only this, but he is Mr Sensitive and Mr Caring-Concern. He
|
||
might have volunteered to mow her lawn or do the dishes. "He took out the
|
||
trash for me - he's such a nice guy!" Wake up! I was giving the guy the
|
||
eye, and he knew that I knew his number. He looked at me with dewy eyes hoping
|
||
that I wouldn't expose him. The movies and chivalry is an act of course. He
|
||
wants to funk her and stuff his prick in her mouth, but if he said that he'd
|
||
get the boot. What could cause these changes? Why can their "love" be changed
|
||
to "hate" so easily? Because their love was never honest in the first place.
|
||
|
||
Last Christmas the Military Man got out of bed at 5:30am to chauffeur L to the
|
||
airport for her flight back to Edmonton. This was before they were actually
|
||
going out. This summer he didn't even care enough about her to not go after
|
||
another chick while L was out of the time zone. Same Military Man both times,
|
||
just with different priorities. "He isn't the guy I used to know..." because
|
||
what you knew was a fake personality used to seduce you. Look at all the
|
||
marriages where the chick gets the crap kicked out of her - notice that he
|
||
waited until after she said yes to show his true self and give her a bust in
|
||
the chops.
|
||
|
||
"Hi, my name's John. I'm five foot seven, and I like going to the movies,
|
||
talking, walking through High Park in the autumn, cats, and cleaning the
|
||
house. My box number is..."
|
||
|
||
"Hey you fucking fat ass..."
|
||
|
||
I've told M that I am a sleazeball and a skummbag, so that she doesn't get
|
||
shocked when she discovers that on her own. I've already used the word snatch
|
||
in her presence. I am immoral, manipulative, horny as a toad, stingy, and a
|
||
jackoff, a real jackoff. I'd want her to know that now.
|
||
|
||
As predicted, they are razzing her, and were silent/ignoring of me when I was
|
||
over there. They want to keep her in just the right pigeonhole, that of a cute
|
||
unassuming rural Christian girl from New Brunswick; i.e. what she was
|
||
September 1 1992. She has changed and grown up since then, but they're not
|
||
interested in hearing about that. So they crack double-entendre quasi-sex
|
||
jokes in order to humourously and subtly shame her into stopping doing what
|
||
she's doing. Michelle must be held back so that she does not challenge L's
|
||
position as dominant bitch of 1410 Kilburn. One of L's badges for her
|
||
dominance was her ability to have me dance attendance for her pleasure. So
|
||
while she had no intention of ever having sex with me, she, like Stacey, threw
|
||
out little alluring hints every little while in order to keep me at her front
|
||
door.
|
||
|
||
She says that I am the only person who is "inside" of her in Ottawa, which is
|
||
to say, I-You. In her life there is me and a few old Brunswickers. It is
|
||
strange, but L and Lynn (the third roommate) are still Its. We spent some time
|
||
up in her room, and then went out for a midnight run for Pizza Pizza
|
||
(737-1111). It was chummy but not dopey, close but not clingy, intimate and
|
||
serious but not grilling or psychoanalytic. At the end of the evening at her
|
||
back door it was unknown whether we were going to kiss. We did, just a little
|
||
tongue, and I fiddled with her hair and neck a little bit.
|
||
|
||
Would masturbating to a GIF file be considered teledildonics?
|
||
|
||
The most amazing part of all of this is that I am just pretty pleased to be
|
||
here and to have all of this. Last night there was a sort of parinirvana as I
|
||
lay in bed in my pajamas, looking at the shadows of light cast on the ceiling,
|
||
listening to the rain pour off my turret and Len Cohen at a low volume. It is
|
||
very good that I can be this happy on $40 per week plus rent plus tuition.
|
||
This means that I only need an income of $7420 per year to be happy. I don't
|
||
specifically need to goto school.
|
||
|
||
But rent and tuition don't count as I never see it, touch it, and can do
|
||
nothing about it. In terms of what goes through my hands, it is $40 per week,
|
||
or $2080 per year. I wonder how people like Kenneth Augustus Barnes live -
|
||
what would you do with $190,000 per year? There aren't enough hours in the day
|
||
to spend that amount of cash, and so obviously they are wasting it on
|
||
frivolous things. In an old National Film Board documentary it was revealed
|
||
that I am currently living on 1/3rd of what a single male was rationed during
|
||
the war.
|
||
|
||
This means that all of this religion crap has really started to do some good
|
||
with me. Because I can be content with an annual income of $1500, at least for
|
||
now. I really am a single male, a bachelor in a bachelor apartment. I feel
|
||
like Kafka. I feel like a Communist. I am dirt poor! But I like it. I have
|
||
learned to make do without respect, honour, status, cable tv, Home Theatre, a
|
||
car, a job, CDs, grasp files, 69's, chiltoes, turkey subs, FTP, diet Coke, bus
|
||
rides, movies, 50c pinball, fancy food and meat of any kind, all while wearing
|
||
the same clothes since I was 14. Therefore I emerge with little money and a
|
||
lot of free time. I can take walks through the park, read, stay up as late as
|
||
I want every night, write letters all day, listen to _Spinal Tap. You can
|
||
either work the touchtones all day and spend a lot of cash, or philosophise
|
||
and sleep all day and use a little. I choose the latter.
|
||
|
||
Sometimes I think that the purpose of university is to turn everyone into
|
||
Pierre Berton. He is a liberal and is able to choke out a newspaper column on
|
||
every political / historical subject imaginable. He seems like an ideal
|
||
philosophy student.
|
||
|
||
I think that if you want to reach people, you should do it in highschool, in
|
||
grade ten and eleven, where people are changing and open to new ideas. If you
|
||
teach U it will be feeding Hegelian TV dinners to a bunch of Chris Englers.
|
||
|
||
I don't follow in this great fascination with cybercrud that you do. It's
|
||
interesting, but it's just a game to me. It's just a diversion, just
|
||
something to do. I don't swallow the whole lifestyle element.
|
||
|
||
If you have the September issue of Toronto Computes, you'll see on page nine
|
||
the tale of Frank Lemiere, an old Apple II buddy of mine that I befriended in
|
||
the summer of 1988 and pirated with. He lives in the Beaches, and I spent a
|
||
couple of days that summer in has basement engrossed in duping _California
|
||
Games. He was arrested up for phone phreaking and playing around with long
|
||
distance trunks.
|
||
|
||
I have known the computer underworld.
|
||
|
||
Reading your letter was very interesting. You're still the same in a lot of
|
||
ways. I get this picture of you as someone with a great fondness for the
|
||
things that you respect. You really look up to people / things / lifestyles /
|
||
ideals / careers. It's funny the way that you can jump right into the Internet
|
||
and FTP and Quicktime, because it represents a bit of something you admire and
|
||
if you can get into that, you can get into the real thing. That makes you a
|
||
little more closer to the faraway goal. I remember that you did the same thing
|
||
around the perimetre of Stacey.
|
||
|
||
The bit you wrote in _Cropduster #2 about sitting in the basement reading
|
||
sexuality textbooks or going to the mall to play Asteroids: It was the story
|
||
of a guy without much internal drive waiting to find something good to get
|
||
into. It's like you can't trust yourself on your own, and you need something
|
||
else to hold up to Whomever as a badge of proof of your worth. When you had
|
||
your first dollop with the tongues with Natalie you had found something to get
|
||
into and to express yourself through; GFs and peer groups. When that exploded
|
||
you were adrift for awhile, but after you moved to Parkdale and had your first
|
||
dinner with Gary and his colleagues, it happened again.
|
||
|
||
Some of the things are the same, and you're still writing to reassure that
|
||
you're a valuable part of an honourable whole. Danesi, Quadras, $200 teaching
|
||
jobs, multimedia contracts, conferences in Boston; the Four Seasons, regular
|
||
stroking of your lovely penis at 15, the King of Sex, sleepovers, "the search
|
||
is over", walks by the Credit, beating out me and Pete and the Treats guy.
|
||
They both mean the same thing: I have succeeded and come out on top. I am a
|
||
real person with valuable accomplishments and have worth. I can identify
|
||
myself with this group. This group and myself stand for the same things and we
|
||
can win together. That is why you were so frantic about losing Stacey to me,
|
||
because you wouldn't just lose a GF's blowjobbing and dates on movies, you
|
||
would lose a big part of the definition of you, and you wouldn't really know
|
||
what to strive for anymore.
|
||
|
||
I remember one fad you went through a couple of years ago where every five
|
||
minutes you had to bring up the "two quo que argument," and how whatever we
|
||
were talking about at the time was a perfect example of it.
|
||
|
||
You wrote it yourself: "It is a million dollar industry, and the people who
|
||
are in the forefront started out in the same fashion that we are." The Million
|
||
Dollar Man in waiting. D is right when she says that you are always planning
|
||
and calculating.
|
||
|
||
I also think that you might have a homosexual Oedipus complex. The amount of
|
||
not-very veiled admiration for "Dad" is unusually high. You're supposed to
|
||
want to coozle up to mama and sneer at your dad, but you have it the other way
|
||
around.
|
||
|
||
It would be good if you went back to Newfoundland, because perhaps then you
|
||
would become more authentic and regionalised and less Gary-ish. Maybe you
|
||
would realise that it is a hamster wheel to try to set the world on fire
|
||
(because the world doesn't care) and that it is better to do things like play
|
||
the fiddle and love your children, something Gary hasn't cared about in a long
|
||
time and Karen never did. All you Newfies are the same though, you sell out
|
||
the Rock and come to Toronto and laugh at the savages.
|
||
|
||
Re: The Tiresome Hag thing. It isn't just whipping post and self-imposed
|
||
torture. It is mixed in with both my esteem and my altruism. First, because it
|
||
is easier to pick up a chick that other people have left behind. There is
|
||
simply less competition, and when you do capture her, you are more assured
|
||
that she will value you, and you do not have to beat back your opponents. Case
|
||
in point, Julia: We were walking around Quincy Square in Boston and she picked
|
||
up a guy right under my nose. We're walking along, and then she seems some hunky
|
||
character, goes up to him, and gives her phone number. I just stood there and
|
||
said "oh dear."
|
||
|
||
Sex is better that it is less important. It used to be so amazing, such a
|
||
great Pit deal. Now it is calmer and better. When M took her clothes off I
|
||
knew exactly what was under there. It didn't surprise me, and so I could do
|
||
better things. I could fuck or not fuck, I wasn't a wild panther loose. And I
|
||
believe that to be good.
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 2.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Things are fairly decent, relatively OK, moderately neeto. Danielle and I
|
||
are fine, as always, although events are fairly stressed at the moment.
|
||
School is much less important this year, what with everything else going on.
|
||
But at least it is becoming more interesting, and the courses are more my
|
||
choice. I saw Karen the other day, joined by her sister Claire, who I used to
|
||
know from Telepersonals. She is now pregnant, which surprised me as I always
|
||
assume that she was at least casually Lesbian. I think that she is one of
|
||
these real marginal people who drift from all categories, which is both good
|
||
and bad. The thing is that I can respect her, because it is obvious that she
|
||
really does live on the other side of the tracks, and doesn't just wear the
|
||
odd nose ring and John Lennon glasses. She is a real orphan, in the same way
|
||
that Jenny Harrison was a real orphan. They are both scuzzy, but you can
|
||
admire them, at least from a distance.
|
||
|
||
If you can get to it there in Ottawa, go see _Like Water For Chocolate. It is
|
||
an extremely good movie, and would be a great movie to take Michelle. They
|
||
really get the mother figure right on, and when you see her, she really
|
||
reminds you of Marcia, with that, "I'll have you charged" type of gaze.
|
||
|
||
The urge to write Carlile has diminished somewhat, and everytime I think about
|
||
it I get tired, not depressed or wistful. There is nothing more to write, no
|
||
more urge to connect with her. I guess it was just a passing phase, a little
|
||
dip in one's stability. It will probably come again, as it always does, but
|
||
it is nothing to be overly concerned about. It seems that my loyalty to my
|
||
present situation is clear: there appears to be little that is encouraging me
|
||
to open that box. This is true for the whole Woodlands stuff in general: I
|
||
have not looked at my letters in almost a year - they are finally becoming
|
||
history.
|
||
|
||
I picked up your Winona Ryder gifs, and they are pretty shitty. There is
|
||
little to get a boner about. As well, G+K were inquiring about pornography on
|
||
the Internet, so I showed them my grasp files and we downloaded a GIF file for
|
||
them to peruse. They appear to have no idea about underground computer
|
||
culture at all: they are so used to things like Bitnet and lists that they do
|
||
not realize that the largest population of computer users are 13-19 year old
|
||
males.
|
||
|
||
There is some guy in Karen's grad class who wants to do his PhD on S&M. He
|
||
wants to, get this, do participatory research. This is the same guy who did
|
||
his masters thesis on beastiality.
|
||
|
||
I bought a chromatic harmonica today, at a pawn shop for 30 dollars. It's very
|
||
nice, and because it is chromatic I can play the black notes as well as the
|
||
white ones. This means that I can actually play anything, not just blow
|
||
in/blow out type harmonica chords.
|
||
|
||
I have come to the conclusion that I really hate my Italian classmates. They
|
||
are such highschool scabs, such keeners. The males remind me of John Jaques
|
||
and Brad Simms, and the girls of JM. Its terrifically horrible, and I end up
|
||
looking like this depressed unconscious idiot in the back of the classroom
|
||
because I am not high on life.
|
||
|
||
Things are not the same as they were, they are falling back into nihilistic
|
||
tendencies. There are few people who are not clambering for more power. We
|
||
were talking about this in M&E today, about how the Nazis would offer pure
|
||
power to the citizenry. This is the same here in many ways, especially in the
|
||
US. They promise labour power, and they promise Christians power, and they
|
||
promise the upper classes more power. This society is going to pot, and the
|
||
only thing that can be done about it is to either jump on the bandwagon or
|
||
subvert it.
|
||
|
||
You cannot fight power with power; you cannot stop war by going to war.
|
||
Ghandi was right.
|
||
|
||
I'm very sick of people who are in arts, especially in art history/criticism
|
||
and film theory. These people are literal dummies. They have no presence, no
|
||
form. They talk and talk, and us philosophers have to this garbage. It's not
|
||
that they are wrong or anything like that, they just don't say anything. For
|
||
example, we are doing this work on frame and boundaries in art, which is
|
||
interesting, but they spend about five minutes on conceptual work, and then they
|
||
spend 30-40 minutes telling stories, discussing examples, reading into art
|
||
works. Danielle gets even a worse case because she thinks she is missing
|
||
something. She believes that there is more there than the minimal thesis which
|
||
is produced. These people are so conceptually behind in terms of their
|
||
thinking skills. What's scary is that we are doing some extremely difficult
|
||
material, works that really demand a philosophical background of some sort, or
|
||
at least the ability to conceptualize and be theoretical.
|
||
|
||
I had to watch Goddard's _Hail Mary on Friday. I started at three and I was to
|
||
meet Danielle at 4:45, so I asked the guy how long the movie was, and he
|
||
replied that it was 90 minutes in duration. This suited me fine: I figured I
|
||
could watch the film, rush down to King station, and pick up D. But such
|
||
turned out not to be the case. The film lasted over two hours, which made me
|
||
late. I was livid, not just because I was late (you know how angry I get
|
||
about that in itself), but also because the guy had given me a raw deal, and
|
||
because the movie was deadly boring. I was sitting through this movie saying
|
||
to myself, "I should just get up and leave in protest" but it took me two
|
||
hours to get up the nerve to do. I was trapped in a Goddard film for two
|
||
hours, making me late, because of my own insecurity. I was screaming when I
|
||
got out of there (at the two hour mark, I actually did walk out). The movie
|
||
itself was everything that I hate about film: slow-moving, inefficient and
|
||
unentertaining. I am so sick of these films based on scenic and photographic
|
||
tricks, which get tired when repeated over and over. I had to sit through
|
||
cuts between conversation and nature shots. As I was telling Danielle, I much
|
||
prefer art in that I can judge the value of the piece in about 15-20 seconds,
|
||
where because of the nature of the film being diachronic (across time), you
|
||
have to wait until the end to judge. Its like listening to someone who
|
||
stutters - you want to finish their sentences for them in order to speed up
|
||
the process.
|
||
|
||
Danielle is on her period. I have something very problematic with periods,
|
||
and it has become worse in recent years. I just feel really queasy about the
|
||
whole thing, and I look at her differently everything 28 days. It's weird,
|
||
because it's so Freudian, in the sense of people's problems with basic
|
||
function taboos. I do not know where this thing comes from, but it's there.
|
||
|
||
I had a very interesting argument with this guy George in my M&E class today.
|
||
We started out talking about atheism, and how he hates softish atheists who are
|
||
really semi-theological. I countered by saying that Christians were the same
|
||
way, and we got into a beautiful row about whether or not atheists were any
|
||
worse that Christians in terms of their ethical consistency. I was out to
|
||
prove that Christians are just as stupid as atheists, if not more so. It
|
||
ended up going for about two hours as the class was canceled, which was
|
||
refreshing. I really like these types of arguments, where you just test your
|
||
metal about something that is important and yet distant enough not to cause
|
||
inner crisis.
|
||
|
||
I talked to Rupinder today. He is busy taking uppers again, so that he
|
||
doesn't kill somebody (probably his father). He is a science student, which
|
||
means that he actually has to go to school and he has to be tested and
|
||
evaluated all the time, which for his condition is not good at all. I do not
|
||
know too much about it, but it seems pretty crazy. I think he is going to be
|
||
like my Dad or my Mom, a therapist who in the closet is drawing vaginas with
|
||
guns in them or penises flying through the air or something. Both my parents
|
||
are like that, and me too I suppose. Psychology is the last defense for nuts.
|
||
It is a way to shed the problems of others while forgetting about one's own.
|
||
|
||
Carlile is going down the tubes. I was right all along it seems. She is not
|
||
as she appears, with her corporate exterior. Supposedly she is become a
|
||
lonely recluse, who sits in her room all day and doesn't talk to anybody. I
|
||
think that girl is steaming, and I think she is running away from it. You
|
||
know I think that if she actually had stayed in the Others she would have
|
||
stabbed us all. She is like that - dangerously depressed.
|
||
|
||
I remember that in grade nine she said that she was never happy, just somewhere
|
||
in the middle, kind of numb. Comfortably numb, I suppose, although that phrase
|
||
was not used at the time.
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 3.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
It's hard to believe that people were once persecuted, jailed, exiled, killed
|
||
for philosophy. This was once on the outside of society, but now it is
|
||
society, as my prof in this class is 50ish, balding with a beard, has an
|
||
expensive watch and runs Windows on a 486. Nietzsche he aint. His successor
|
||
(the TA) cracks really unfunny jokes and names his dog after a Star Trek
|
||
character.
|
||
|
||
Those who can, do. Those who can't, analyze. There is too much explaining and
|
||
not enough doing in the world, too much hot air verbiage. Like I said about
|
||
the "round table of experts," they have on TV panel news shows: They will
|
||
analyze the information for you, as you are too dim to do it yourself, and
|
||
give you an opinion that you can take to the lunch table or water cooler the
|
||
next day. Why should I value someone else's opinion more than my own? Is it
|
||
because I'm not supposed to do anything but parrot them? I honestly do not see
|
||
the need for literary criticism or even analysis. Why bother? What would
|
||
really be the point in dissecting Abbey Road for neo-Marxist sentiments? It is
|
||
only done because the critics cannot produce art and would like to be paid
|
||
anyway. Those that can, do. You can analyze something like biology, but not
|
||
art.
|
||
|
||
People used to get drawn and quartered for possessing a copy of something by
|
||
Voltaire. Now, the establishment that once forbade it propagates it. The only
|
||
difference between then and now is that the establishmentarians all scream
|
||
that they are different, that they are not the same. Just let it go. "And
|
||
remember, a Jedi feels the Force flowing throughout him..."
|
||
|
||
M and L went to a Lightfoot gig the other day. When they got out, L was full
|
||
of idol worship, and said that Mr. Foot was a God, and asked M is she thought
|
||
so too. M said that she thought not. Then L went nuts and told M she was
|
||
closed-minded, just because she didn't believe that Lightfoot was a divinity.
|
||
|
||
Two points to be made here:
|
||
|
||
a) Laurie gets her power from turning her opponents into straw men and making
|
||
her argument seem to be a truism. Who can argue in favour of closemindedness,
|
||
racism, sexism and so forth? Even the Reformers do not.
|
||
|
||
b) L's idol worship is pretty sad, and so are the people that idolise anyone.
|
||
The New Kids concerts were pretty pitiful, as well as the people still going
|
||
nuts over Jimbo Morrison 20 years after his death. People only worship idols
|
||
because they are too scared to become one themselves. Look at all Christians
|
||
and tell me if one of them has a pulse.
|
||
|
||
I have no faith in this society as being a particularly good place to spend
|
||
any amount of time in. I was watching Coronation St yesterday, and even this
|
||
working class scene seemed out of my league, too rich for my blood. That's all
|
||
I want to be, perhaps, a bloated Englishman digging in the garden outside of
|
||
my council flat, and then going in for tea and ginger snaps, Cornish pasty,
|
||
middle rashers and treacle & jam buddies served on a Ry-Krisp crackbread! Good
|
||
God! It is very distressing, trying to put together a life out here in the
|
||
colonies. I don't think that's an exorbitant thing to ask for, but it seems
|
||
out of my reach. The sex shop never called me back, and I was underqualified
|
||
to work at the cookie stand. Not much else left!
|
||
|
||
My Uncle Errol dropped out of highschool for a year and a half because he had
|
||
a job working fulltime at Canadian Pacific. Imagine that: Having your choice
|
||
of grade twelve, or $15,000 per year, which was a big sum in 1971. Back then
|
||
anyone could get that kind of job without even a highschool diploma, all they
|
||
had to do was work for it. Those days are long long gone. The simple
|
||
well-paying unionized blue-collar job is a relic of the past. I think that
|
||
perhaps the union has priced itself out of the country, or the capitalists
|
||
have realised that there are Malaysians that will work for peanuts. All the
|
||
savings get passed onto the CEOs.
|
||
|
||
I think that your work ethic based on condemnation is from this era of
|
||
industrial relations. Back then there were jobs for the taking, and anyone who
|
||
wanted to work could work. The jobs were so plentiful that my Uncle Errol
|
||
dropped out of grade eleven and started hauling in the cash. Not because Glenn
|
||
got him the job, but because there was work out there for those that wanted
|
||
it, and he did. Back then only the eight year olds had to sell steak knives
|
||
and chocolate bars door to door, or lead ponies around by a chain at the CNE.
|
||
Yes, in that environment I too would condemn people who didn't have work,
|
||
because there was no excuse for it. But now I think the conditions are a
|
||
little different, and you should be a touch easier on me and the Newfies,
|
||
because it isn't our fault that our hands are idle. I suppose that I too would
|
||
be a gung-ho work ethic proponent if I was getting paid $12 per hour to work
|
||
at a record shop, or at the Leadbelly Museum, or anyplace in Russell Springs
|
||
Kentucky, or whatever. Take a look at my brother - $10.15 an hour to work for
|
||
the city of North York as a pool lifeguard. What does he do? Sit on a big
|
||
chair, stare at the babes in bikinis, and tell the kids not to run on the
|
||
deck. It's all about perspective. Anyone who is still conservative today ought
|
||
to be shot for heartlessness, insensitivity and tunnel vision.
|
||
|
||
This is the strangest part of life, when you are too old to be a part of your
|
||
birth family, but too young to be a part of your marriage family. Going to
|
||
university as a pseudo-poor person in a foreign town does not help things
|
||
either. Because you don't have a home, or even roots in your community or
|
||
citizens. This is the arena of the one-night-stand, not in sex necessarily but
|
||
in general relationships and interaction. There are no real loyalties left.
|
||
Witness Laurie and Susan and what happened to them. I got to know S in a small
|
||
way last year, and she is a pleasant girl - Nurturing Tan (like Shanta and
|
||
Kucman) brown hair, a little slow, some spelling mistakes, but a good warm
|
||
person nonetheless. She was Laurie's grade nine buddy, and they came all the
|
||
way to Ottawa with high ideals. They had visions of living together in an
|
||
apartment downtown, being bohemian hip chicks, eating Japanese food and
|
||
burning candles. A lot like the way that we had our own idle fantasies about
|
||
the six of us getting our house and living in a hippie commune. Anyhow, they
|
||
came to Carleton, S for architecture and L for journalism, and their
|
||
relationship was stone cold dead within the first semester. It was dead by
|
||
Christmas.
|
||
|
||
That happens often. Actually it's the status quo around here. L and M were
|
||
supposed to be such fast friends, but that has turned out to be a farce as
|
||
well, and is yet another dead body. People are keeling over dead at a constant
|
||
rate. Gone are the days when Stacey and Carlile (or anyone for that matter)
|
||
was around every day for years and years.
|
||
|
||
Add to that a sputtering academic career, and you've got a serious case of the
|
||
creeps and a weird out. After you moved to Parkdale and the Kucman thing
|
||
finished, there were a few months of it in the Saug, but it wasn't entirely bad,
|
||
because I still had my home and my town, both of which I knew quite well. But
|
||
now no-one has either, and I have to fend for myself in a lifeless city by
|
||
paying my phone bill and buying groceries. I have Michelle, but that is all I
|
||
have here, and so we both, in the words of Jimbo Morisson, "cling to cocks and
|
||
cunts of despair." She sleeps here like three nights per week, which is nice,
|
||
but it still gets me to wondering why. I am used to having just one person in
|
||
the city (For instance Stacey in 1990), but the difference now is that I don't
|
||
even have enemies anymore, for the first time in years.
|
||
|
||
It doesn't bother me all the time, but when it comes over me in a wave, it's
|
||
usually pretty gripping. Michelle has it too, as she clings to me, and gets
|
||
overly excited whenever she receives mail. Also she has begun to volunteer for
|
||
this oldster thing, probably to feel like she is doing something and not just
|
||
hanging around in Ontario and eating food.
|
||
|
||
Michelle came over here Tuesday afternoon, with a pile of ITV lecture tapes
|
||
for us to watch. She stayed for a bit and it became a very domestic scene as
|
||
she helped me with my laundry and made dinner for us while I was putting away
|
||
the clothes. We ate, lay around in the sack together, she spent the night. In
|
||
the morning a drawn-out 69 and then she then caught the #5 bus to Billings
|
||
Bridge (to transfer to #147 and her home) and I set off on my bike for Theology
|
||
class.
|
||
|
||
It would have been a master stroke of parental deception and taken minute
|
||
planning and timing to pull that off only a couple of years ago. It would have
|
||
been a great death defying feat to get a weekday off school, get mom out of
|
||
the house for the evening, confuse Rachel's parents, have her come over for
|
||
the evening, stay the night, actually want to suck my dick, and then get up
|
||
and go home or to school at 11:30 the next morning. It would have been a
|
||
diabolical stunt that deserved to be recorded in the Deception Hall of Fame.
|
||
Really, it would have been a huge deal. If it went down at the Woodlands,
|
||
Lloyd would have excommunicated me forever, never wanting to dirty his hands
|
||
again with someone as immoral and evil as myself.
|
||
|
||
But this year it kinda just happened. Age is a strange thing these days. I
|
||
don't think it's because I've changed and am somehow, magically "mature"
|
||
enough to handle a chack, but rather that it is socially acceptable for it to
|
||
happen now. You are no longer branded a slut if you come home from a night out
|
||
the next afternoon. At 15 yes, at 20, no. What is mine for free today would
|
||
have got me 20 years in Kingston three months ago.
|
||
|
||
This came to me in the shower:
|
||
|
||
If one believes is pro-life, then they ought to also believe that anyone who
|
||
has a miscarriage (spontaneous abortion) should be jailed for manslaughter.
|
||
|
||
Honestly. Because they believe that a fetus is a life, and that ending the
|
||
fetus is killing and murder. Murder just like it is out on the street. Ok then
|
||
- the law determines that accidental homicide, like automobile accidents, is
|
||
called manslaughter and requires 20 years in the pokey. Did you or did you not
|
||
kill the fetus? You deserve to do the time.
|
||
|
||
Why has no-one argued for this? Because deep down, they know that the fetus
|
||
isn't a person. The same way that most make concessions about rape victims --
|
||
but if it's really a person then murder is murder, right?
|
||
|
||
This is actually not true, as the real meaning behind the pseudo-theological
|
||
story is that they just wanted more Roman Catholics. This is the real reason
|
||
that Jean Chretien's mom had 17 children. There are many examples of that,
|
||
where the Church make it seem as if their own goals are coming from the mouth
|
||
of God. Your famous line about not being able to goto Church if you have
|
||
crushed nuts or acne has to do with their desire for the health of future
|
||
Christians. They didn't want weirdos and people with bad genes to be the
|
||
founding generation.
|
||
|
||
Anyhow, you should get over your menstruation hangup, and fuck Danielle while
|
||
she's on her period. It isn't scary, and it's not really bloody, although you
|
||
wouldn't want to do cunnilingus.
|
||
|
||
This weekend we also went out to see a play as a couple, walked home hand in
|
||
hand, the whole cutsey thing, stopping at Kentucky Fried Chicken for a little
|
||
homefood. And I've done the whole BFGF thing, mailing her little sex poems,
|
||
giving her a shirt of mine, feeding her when we eat together, the whole
|
||
cliche. All funking huggy-huggy cuddle cuddle. I have sold out my bachelor
|
||
brothers and gone all the way into being a Deep Breakfast. I have let down the
|
||
bachelors by turning my back on them.
|
||
|
||
Even Tumbleweed doesn't walk the streets alone these days... and she's only
|
||
ffsteen.
|
||
|
||
In other news, L is long gone, without much remorse or sentimentality on the
|
||
part of either party. The year started out fine, just as jocular as it was
|
||
when we had left. The first meeting here was a little nutty, but that happened
|
||
a few times last year as well. I specifically asked her what had changed after
|
||
today, and she replied that nothing had. That wasn't the thing that sealed my
|
||
fate. First of all, I got a GF that wasn't her, which was grounds for the cold
|
||
shoulder, but not expulsion. During the Stacey era, she disapproved of Karla
|
||
and later Sanja (and also had the nerve to chide me for caring more about by
|
||
GF Fiona than her - which she thought was yet another example of me ripping
|
||
her off), but didn't dump me for it. The thing that got me the pitch was that
|
||
it was Michelle who was the GF which was a little too close to home for her.
|
||
That was an act that could not be forgiven.
|
||
|
||
I realise now that we never had a friendship, or even a relationship. What we
|
||
had was a business agreement, a contract to perform. I gave her my loyalty,
|
||
attention, and praise, and in exchange I received the gift of her presence and
|
||
her voice, and a few glimpses of her female behind. I got to follow her
|
||
around, and she got the reassurance that I would do her if she ever gave me
|
||
the chance. Look at the way that Carlile always complained about Lloyd... but
|
||
notice that she always hauled him back when he started to stray.
|
||
|
||
As much as the Tweety bird dodges and avoids the pursuit of Sylvester, the
|
||
bird always comes back again for more nonsense. Because the bird would not be
|
||
the bird if she did not have the cat in chase.
|
||
|
||
But even now, L still tries to hold onto whatever power she may have left. The
|
||
other day L was listening to M's phonecall with one of her NB friends, and in
|
||
doing so heard that we were having sex. She did the parental-moral trip thing,
|
||
telling M that she was too immature for sex, that she didn't know what she was
|
||
getting into, that it was all too adult and mysterious and powerful for her to
|
||
handle, and that I was just using her for sex. Laurie actually said "Michelle,
|
||
you don't understand that your relationship with him cannot be real. It cannot
|
||
be real because he worships me and not you, and is just using you for sex and
|
||
to get closer to me."
|
||
|
||
Word of honour -- this is actually what she said. This is what she has to
|
||
cling to in order to keep her Ottawa world intact. Even now, after I haven't
|
||
talked to her in over two months, she believes that I worship her and that
|
||
this is my latest method of gaining entry into her underware. She cannot
|
||
accept that she has lost her toy. Well, it serves her right. She should have
|
||
have picked me up when she had the chance.
|
||
|
||
To answer questions:
|
||
|
||
If Carlile is indeed sitting alone in her res room, you should contact her.
|
||
She could be responsive, because res can do that to you.
|
||
|
||
I could worship Robin. She is ripe fruit hanging heavy on the vine. If I was
|
||
still a Toronto person, it would be an honour. Alas, what can I do? Perhaps
|
||
your should give her Viren's phone number.
|
||
|
||
I saw these two at the Peppermill (cafeteria) today, and it was so obvious
|
||
that they were BFGF. Not in their behaviour, but in the way they looked. They
|
||
almost looked like brother and sister. Look at you and Danielle, and look at
|
||
me and Michelle. It is too obvious. Michelle's father is a god-damn plumber!
|
||
This is why the proletariat stay proletarian; they mix and interbreed with
|
||
each other. It just happens that way. It was the same way with Rachel; they
|
||
lived in the Peel Non-Profit Housing Co-op in Erin Mills. Me and my
|
||
girlfriends from the council flats.
|
||
|
||
You and Danielle are deadringers for BFGFs. But Danielle does not remind me so
|
||
much of Marcia; she is more like Jen. And while Rachel and my mom looked
|
||
embarrassingly similiar, Fiona was more like my sister. I think that aspect of
|
||
it all is under-represented. There is not the same conflict (Oedipus style)
|
||
with your sister, but in terms of influencing your view of the ideal female,
|
||
it is definitely there.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 3.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
X-mas is closing fast, and I do not think I can really afford it. We are all
|
||
in debt, even though we have five computers. That is when you know you have
|
||
joined the middle class: when you have a credit card. Life is one of paying
|
||
bills, of trying to keep creditors off one's back.
|
||
|
||
I have not yet written to Carlilly, but I think I shall. I think I will do
|
||
it over X-mas, so that I have something do when I am in Belleville. One has
|
||
to be in the right state of semi-depression to do these things, to stoop so
|
||
low as to write to one's ex-semi-grade nine girlfriend.
|
||
|
||
You sound happier, and you write less. As soon as you started having
|
||
Michelle, you wrote less emails, with less in each of them. I do not think it
|
||
is so much that getting blow jobs dulls the mind, but rather with someone like
|
||
Michelle you have much less to worry about. All you need now is a job, and
|
||
with Moses in the background you do not really have to worry about it.
|
||
|
||
Danielle seems to be getting worse, more apprehensive as she gets more
|
||
constrained by family, school, etc. I do not know what to do about it, except
|
||
move her out of the house. There is only one more year of this after this
|
||
year, then we can move. I do not like how her parents treat her, very much in
|
||
the same Big Bob Carlile, Carol Baldwin type of way, but combined with the
|
||
alcoholism. It's bad enough that they are considering going into family
|
||
therapy, and the big problem is that Barry keeps on falling off the wagon. This
|
||
is not good for Danielle - even if we moved to Montreal she would feel attached
|
||
to that whole cycle of neurosis. I was watching this John Bradshaw (you know
|
||
the inner child guy), on PBS, and it reminded me a lot of what Danielle's
|
||
family is like. They all have these buried inner children which continue to
|
||
plague them. Barry has his alcoholic parents, Lil has her dominating Catholic
|
||
family, and Danielle has Bar and Lil. This is not good, and she does not have
|
||
a way out like I did. I am still affected by Marcia, but at least I have a
|
||
temporary haven from her. I think we all need that. We all have to move out.
|
||
Danielle is not able to do that, because there is no where to go. ("I got a
|
||
strong urge to fly, but I got no where to fly to, fly to, fly to...")
|
||
|
||
There are a lot of chickies here, most of them with no features but good
|
||
Italian tradition. They have brown hair and hefty bosoms, and an ass off of
|
||
which you could eat. However, they are mostly boneheads, and they have really
|
||
shitty boyfriends. There is guy Joe who was in the sem-id-iotic thing last
|
||
year, and he has this gorgeous girlfriend that he does not deserve. I think
|
||
he wakes up everyday and asks himself how he has been so lucky.
|
||
|
||
People are very dishonest with each other and themselves. I think this is a
|
||
fundamental problem; people are not willing to open themselves up to the
|
||
world. I include myself in this category, although I do not think I am as
|
||
ideological committed as some. I had enough of a good dose of Carlile beating
|
||
me over the head not to trying to put something forward. Carlile is a ball
|
||
crusher, and so is Stacey. One learns quickly that to act with ego, to be
|
||
oneself without care of others is going to get you killed.
|
||
|
||
Have I become shy? There are two instances that make me think so. In
|
||
Italian, I have the feeling that I am being coaxed all the time, like I am
|
||
some timid little kid. I do not fit in with the rest of them, as I have told
|
||
you, but the teacher likes me. The teacher tries to get me to speak up, and
|
||
is really supportive in that grade three, "It's okay, Jimmy, you can make a
|
||
mistake" kind of way. And today, in Metaphysics and Epistemology, one of my big
|
||
A+ type courses, I got accused of speaking too quietly. I was told repeatedly
|
||
to speak up. What is happening? Am I finally losing the Lloydish
|
||
boisterousness?
|
||
|
||
But there are leftover problems, and although I am living the life of luxury,
|
||
of academic yuppiness, there is still that resentment, that hatred. This is
|
||
typical, and I do not know what can be done about it, probably nothing. Kare
|
||
and Gare think I should go into some kind of headshrinker, but I doubt that
|
||
will do alot. It seems that with all the therapy that they have had, all it
|
||
has done is helped them to put it aside, to get on with their lives so that
|
||
they can be more productive. This is not really my concern. I have never been
|
||
one to let my emotions influence my productivity. I get things done in the
|
||
crunch. I am not like Barry, who leaves his keys with strangers in a drunken
|
||
stupor. I would never let myself wallow enough to be irresponsible.
|
||
|
||
It seems that your letter is being written by six different people, in
|
||
different cities. Two are being written in Mississauga, and the narrative is
|
||
one of Stacey doesn't matter, Steven was just this weird guy who really didn't
|
||
care in the end, and Chris and Lloyd were really just assholes. One is being
|
||
written at Bencard, and this one includes such things as I tried so
|
||
hard but no one else cared, it is not my fault, and I was just trying to make
|
||
everyone happy. Another is being written in Parkdale, and this one includes
|
||
statements like: there was nothing in the end, I got betrayed at every turn,
|
||
and everyone hates me. One is being written in London, and this one
|
||
includes things like: I never really was liked, nobody could understand, and
|
||
everyone had more than me. Lastly, there is one written in Ottawa, and that
|
||
one spouts things like I was the only one who cared, I was the only one who
|
||
could love, and I was deceived into believing that worthless people were
|
||
valuable.
|
||
|
||
Do you see what I am saying here? We mock Stacey for keeping to her story,
|
||
while doing the same things. We are all writing this narrative where we are
|
||
the victims, where we are the one's who got ripped off. Fiona definitely has
|
||
this: I think she entered into it with this in mind. Stacey is the most vocal,
|
||
which only reveals more pomposity that anything else. We are the most devious
|
||
about it, and the most fearful. We hide behind our letters, by getting
|
||
vengeance through laser printed pictures. And we are all finding our own ways
|
||
to escape, our own fantasy world where we are the righteous. For you it is
|
||
religion, for me language and philosophy and computers, for Carlile the Celts,
|
||
for Lloyd his phone-freaking, and so on.
|
||
|
||
For me this is an old habit, and I have been aware of it for a long time.
|
||
This is why it disturbs me in the sense that I don't really find much comfort
|
||
in it. I lived in Narnia for a long time, and that was not a solution to my
|
||
problems. I remember thinking about the same things we are now in grades six
|
||
and seven, where I would look at the girls in my class and think what it would
|
||
be like to have control over them. Perhaps I was right for Stacey.
|
||
|
||
The problem for me is that there is no way to remedy the situation. How I
|
||
can I say goodbye to Stacey? Remember we tried for months, and all it got was
|
||
more anger. I do not know that I could even now. I think I could with
|
||
Carlile, which is why I want to. After five years of being upset, I am
|
||
finally getting to the level that I can forgive her, and say goodbye. It's the
|
||
first time that I think of her as someone else that the person who went out
|
||
with Alex Tang.
|
||
|
||
And I do not think it is because of lack of energy either. For obviously we
|
||
have energy to waste because we are all carrying this stuff, and writing
|
||
hundreds of pages on it, and feeling everyday. That requires energy, and lots
|
||
of it.
|
||
|
||
I am finding myself much more squeamish these days about sex. In one of your
|
||
posts you asked why we have not had sex yet, and I said that it was just
|
||
because I had not bothered to ask her. But I think there is something very
|
||
squeamish/shy in me that doesn't want to do it, in the same way that I do not
|
||
really want to turn anyone into a slut again. I guess I just don't want
|
||
another Stacey, where I come over for half an hour, get blown and then leave.
|
||
She swallowed tonight, which made me feel really queer. It was different in
|
||
the sense that Danielle's pragmatism shows where Stacey just did it because I
|
||
wanted it. Danielle did because it would be "easier to clean up afterwards".
|
||
This is typical of Danielle and her style: extremely unstylish, but very
|
||
practical. In many ways I like this better than the biting scratching,
|
||
virgins united in flesh, I want to eat you, type of Stacey approach.
|
||
|
||
There is something very odd it about though. There is always going to be
|
||
something kind of dirty about it. I do not know, but it seems that it is a
|
||
regression back to the days before Stacey, when kisses were OK and blow jobs
|
||
were not. Sticking it in is the same way. I do not really want to get into
|
||
condoms and the pill and staying home all day to fuck, etc. It's weird,
|
||
because in some ways I do not feel ravenous for sex. It's not something I want
|
||
more and more of, and feel OK with getting as much as I can. I do not feel so
|
||
much like that anymore. Perhaps it is because of everything that has gone on,
|
||
or perhaps it is because of some semi-conscious decision to reform myself, I
|
||
don't know. This is of course not some "I'm holier than thou" speech: I do
|
||
not really care about what other people in their bedrooms. It's more abnormal
|
||
on my part than normal, more unrighteous. It's wierd, because you would think
|
||
that by now I would have been over much of this, that I would have been less
|
||
squeemish. I think it relates to the general asshole tendencies I have in me,
|
||
both in bed and out. This was true in high school, but is still true today.
|
||
There is little I can do about it except try to avoid getting into situations
|
||
where I am going to be insecure and egotistical. I perhaps perceive
|
||
intercourse to be that way, a cause of ego. I do not want to be Stacey's
|
||
boyfriend again, gloating over Lloyd because I am sticking it in. I know this
|
||
is foolish, because everyone is fucking. It is no big deal. There really is
|
||
no dilemma, or at least there should not be.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 4.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Xmas is coming but it doesn't even feel like it at all. Ottawa is cold but dry
|
||
and not very snowy.
|
||
|
||
In talking with M, it has been revealed that I was the floor whipping boy, the
|
||
person that everyone wrote off as a weirdo and then despised for the rest of
|
||
the year. Just like the Hoodlands, they all hated me with varying degrees of
|
||
venom; a lot of it had to do with the big horror incident of me borrowing
|
||
Rick's bike for two hours in September. I wrote you about this one. It turns
|
||
out that the floor don, Rich Duphor, called in M to testify because she
|
||
supposedly knew me the best ("Well, who knows this guy?" ... "uh, I think
|
||
Michelle does...") and without my presence or knowledge they tried me in a
|
||
kangaroo court, pronouncing me guilty and to be detested forever. I brought
|
||
back the bike in one piece an hour later, so they couldn't do anything, but my
|
||
status was cemented in the eyes of people like the Military Man. I still can't
|
||
comprehend what it was about that incident that was so inflammatory.
|
||
|
||
Yeah, and by the way, during the weekend that you came up to Ottawa, my
|
||
roommate saw us sleeping together and then spent a few days of cafeteria
|
||
conversation telling everyone that would listen that his roommate was
|
||
homosexual, and brought up his homo boyfriend from the big fag town of Toronto
|
||
for a weekend of buttfuck bliss.
|
||
|
||
I don't think that I forget about people too easily. In fact, I hold on for
|
||
longer than I really should. I am always too kind to people and even during
|
||
all of last year I tried to be diplomatic and friendly to my floormates, even
|
||
though they would have gladly stuck a knife in my back. My resolution for 1994
|
||
is to only remember people who want to be remembered. Unfortunately this
|
||
includes Fiona. Krista is partially correct when she says that all of that
|
||
stuff is ancient history, and probably should be left for textbooks and not
|
||
real people.
|
||
|
||
Some of it is good for a purely psychoanalytic basis. Situations become ancient
|
||
history, but psychology and people do not.
|
||
|
||
L is going back to Edmonton for good after this year, and I doubt
|
||
that she'll do it wringing her hands with regret over old Stevie Meecie. I
|
||
don't feel like I need to say goodbye to L or Stacey any more than I should
|
||
say goodbye to Bronco. But I think I'm going to send a hateful little letter
|
||
to L and get some of the bile out of my system. But I'm going to do it in
|
||
April, so that I don't have to see her afterwards. Of course the chances are
|
||
good that she'll rip it up or write me off as a jealous madman. I doubt she'll
|
||
actually consider any of the things I write. She never has before.
|
||
|
||
You seem to be misinterpreting my position. I'm not arguing that I never
|
||
cared, because of course I did. I ran around screaming my head off and going
|
||
nuts for months over the both of them. But was it love or was it something
|
||
else? It was love at times but not all the time. Even if it wasn't exactly
|
||
love all the time, it was there, mattered to me, and was very heavy and
|
||
powerful. It was important from my side of the fence, but not from hers
|
||
apparantly. I am not trying to hide from being a fool, because of course I
|
||
was. I was foolish to believe her and play around for as long as I did. The
|
||
only good part about the whole things are that they are over. I'm not
|
||
discounting everything from grade eight until graduation, but I am saying that
|
||
some of us were no better than the characters on BH90210 in terms of how we
|
||
treated and used each other. I will change my tune when either Stacey or
|
||
Laurie find me and say that they are sorry. Or if they find me and say
|
||
anything at all. It won't happen - because what can you say to an empty milk
|
||
carton?
|
||
|
||
I'm doubting that it was purely love due to my semantics of love. I can only
|
||
tell if love exists in retrospect. Love if it is real "never dies" or at least
|
||
can't be completely killed. It is immune to logic, moods or even if you are
|
||
still with them. The people that you love you do so "no matter what". Then I
|
||
love Fiona for sure, Carlile probably, and Sanja and Rachel perhaps, and Lisa
|
||
al-Habib has a fair chance.
|
||
|
||
I think that there is less to the human interaction than we peg. We make it
|
||
more of a big deal than it really is. Like those sex philosophers who rant for
|
||
pages about the psychology of sex, yet really it's just driving for orgasms.
|
||
Such is also the case with human interaction. In watching Beverley Hills 902
|
||
you can tell that none of them have memories that last beyond six weeks ago.
|
||
|
||
When I look at M's photographs of floor people, I see a group of 19 and 20
|
||
year olds lollygagging around, doing cool and fun things, getting drunk and
|
||
going wild. But I don't actually see people, or feelings, or anything that
|
||
couldn't be done just as well by Frankenstein's monster, provided he could
|
||
hold a beer stein. You and I and precious few others are the only people who
|
||
are alive and actually doing something that matters. It's beautiful that we
|
||
are still writing and having dreams about those people because that means that
|
||
we are alive and that we have feelings and have actually noticed the world
|
||
going around us, and then people in it. Do you think Travis and Matty Fenwick
|
||
are doing the same?
|
||
|
||
The arcade at Carleton has that _Clown Time pinball game, the one from the
|
||
Comrade X Memorial Arcade that goes "I could be sitting here all day!" and "My
|
||
grandmother throws better than you!" and "You got an arm like a wet rag." I
|
||
can get a replay early on in the day with some effort and some luck, and it
|
||
reminds me of the first half of 1992; playing a game or two of it after school
|
||
after I got off the route 44 from Streetsville. An arcade on Rideau St. has
|
||
_Splatterhouse, the one where you play the Jason figure and decapitate walking
|
||
lizards to (as usual) save your kidnapped girlfriend. The old Amusement Palace
|
||
where we went for two skins per hour has disappeared. So much for the concept
|
||
of flat-rate videogames. I guess the guy with no teeth has faded off into
|
||
another part of the ghetto.
|
||
|
||
Life seems to be about amusement in one way or another. You certainly learn
|
||
this from watching television; life consists of amusement or working to earn
|
||
the cash to provide for amusement. Because if we weren't interested in being
|
||
amused, we would stay in bed all day and be fed from an intravenous drip line.
|
||
"With his poo poo, and pee pee, slipping out through a hose."
|
||
|
||
Why does anyone do anything? Because it's interesting or fun, and the opposite
|
||
of interest is boredom. Video games, delicate tacos, silicon, university,
|
||
cunnilingus, doggy-style, tours of Europe. It is all about being amused, but
|
||
the problem is that it is based in time and never lasts very long. Or to quote
|
||
the words of Bob Dylan, the tragedy of our lives is that "the same thing that
|
||
I want today, I will want again tomorrow." Another videogame, another chilito,
|
||
another download, another suck. Another girlfriend when you figure that
|
||
nothing her cunt or mouth can do could possibly amuse you anymore. Lloyd
|
||
fucked Jayshri's cunt a dozen times, and then when the amusement level of sex
|
||
with Jayshri surpassed the embarrassment level of sex with Jayshri... "I don't
|
||
think we should be going out anymore, you bitch!"
|
||
|
||
Levels of amusement, maybe that's why it's tougher to be poor in Canada than
|
||
it is to be in Senegal... in Senegal you learn to be amused by less. I can
|
||
remember the days when I was blown out of my chair by _Raid over Moscow on the
|
||
Commodore 64. I experienced more amusement with that game than I do now with
|
||
Quicktime. The critical-mass needed for amusement has been upped. Hell, I
|
||
remember when I was hailed as a hero and Lothario of 8e when I felt Carlile's
|
||
left tit over her sweater.
|
||
|
||
Which is why it is tougher to be poor in Canada than it is in Senegal. In
|
||
Canada you know what you're missing and therefore you're unhappy. In Senegal
|
||
everyone is poor and you believe that amusement comes from playing Wari or
|
||
whatever. When we were playing Pong, we thought that it was great because we
|
||
didn't know that GIF files were lurking in the future. It was the most amazing
|
||
thing we had ever seen. You are amazed by the computer you have now, but it
|
||
will be humourous and quaint in ten years, just as the Vic-20 is today. It is
|
||
hard to believe that anyone was ever impressed by
|
||
|
||
10 PRINT "FUCK YOU IDIOT"
|
||
20 GOTO 10
|
||
|
||
but it really blew them away at the time. They thought it was a big deal, just
|
||
as we think that grasp files are a big deal. But I am sure that when they make
|
||
_Look Who Won't Stop Talking Part Six (in which the furniture starts to
|
||
converse) it will be released on VHS, Laserdisc, and Quicktime.
|
||
|
||
In Canada, poor people see _Wolfenstein 3-D but get _Pong. In Senegal they see
|
||
_Pong and get _Pong. Who do you think is happier? This is another reason to keep
|
||
the multinationals out of third world countries. They never really saw
|
||
anything wrong with their bike until General Motors started running
|
||
advertisements.
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 4.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
This is a letter that I will send in the next few days, so it should get to
|
||
you before Danielle and I get there in Ottawa.
|
||
|
||
I am watching Clinton doing his throne speech (what is this called, I don't
|
||
remember), about his health care system, and welfare reform and so on. Its
|
||
very interesting to watch him, because he really is a brilliant politician.
|
||
He is much more interesting than Bush, much more personable. There is much
|
||
more to him than any politician that I have seen, a combination of raw people
|
||
power and political ingenuity. And I also like what he is saying - for once I
|
||
think I can look at the United States and think of it not so much as a
|
||
superpower with nukes (although it still is), but as a country that starts
|
||
with working rural people who are trying to make it for themselves. It's
|
||
interesting hearing the guy, because everytime he opens his mouth he sounds
|
||
like he is speaking like George to Lennie, as if he is saying, "And we are
|
||
*going* to have the rabbits..."
|
||
|
||
It is extremely cold here, with warnings of freezing your ass off within
|
||
minutes, with six car pile-ups on the QEW. I have to stay here until 5pm, to
|
||
pick up Jen from mentorship. She is doing the last year nerd thing, with
|
||
mentorship, three or four OAC's in which she gets 95%, and bunch of
|
||
girlfriends whom she gives Xmas and birthday presents.
|
||
|
||
Speaking of letter writing, the Carlile thing is done. I do not know whether
|
||
it is best to send, as the the zeal I felt in October has at least slightly
|
||
subsided. I just want to get it off my chest, but in some ways if I get no
|
||
response it will just make it worse. And if I do get a response, and we start
|
||
to talk again, there will be tonnes of complications. I do not see how I can
|
||
win by any of this, but something that goes back to about grade ten compels me
|
||
to do it. In some ways it's like Stacey; after I wrote that letter telling her
|
||
I was sick of her I felt that it was finally over, that I had finally stood up
|
||
and made peace with myself. It is the same way with Carlile but in the
|
||
opposite way, instead of proving that I can stand up for myself I have to
|
||
prove that I am not the asshole I was in grade nine. I think that is a big
|
||
problem for me... there are a lot of regrets about things and actions I took
|
||
when I was in junior middle school. I do not like the idea that there are
|
||
Lloyds out there telling their respective Jashries that there was this goofy
|
||
guy named Woodill who really was an annoying twerp.
|
||
|
||
It's very hard to say, because I really feel like I have come along way in a
|
||
lot of ways, but I also feel that in some sense I am still the same. I was
|
||
talking to this girl in Metaphysics and Epistemology class, and it was
|
||
friendly. It was very different than what was a few years ago in that I
|
||
really did not feel like having any ulterior motives, background fantasies and
|
||
such, ie. Farah. I don't really have a whole lot of desire for that sort
|
||
of thing, mainly because I do not see the point. In the end, I learned that
|
||
Farah was a mirage, and that the only reason that she meant anything to anyone
|
||
was because I really had hope for her. I am not saying that she is fake. I
|
||
think the hope was well-placed, but it just didn't produce any results in the
|
||
end. Perhaps Lloyd was right: Maybe I do just look at the bottom line. But
|
||
than again, what else is there? I do not like this idea that love is a
|
||
journey, and that the end is no where in sight. What is the point of a
|
||
journey if it is not going anywhere, if there is no vision, if there is no
|
||
hope for anything working out? See I do not think it is a journey, but rather
|
||
a point at which there is a stability. The only times when Carlile and I were
|
||
really good together, and when I thought I was "in love" with her was when
|
||
there was a certain level of stability. I could call her and we would talk, we
|
||
would go out together, we would swim together, etc. That in itself is the
|
||
goal, the stability created. But this is no journey, no adventure. This is
|
||
also why I don't go for the idea of romance: I do not see the point of tension
|
||
when it is artificial. It's like Stacey: "Let's not sleep together until we
|
||
can't stand it anymore".
|
||
|
||
For me, I never get to the point where I "just can't stand it anymore." I get
|
||
to a point where I just give up and don't care.
|
||
|
||
I cannot afford to do single things, to have a single mentality. Why?
|
||
Because I am not single. I can't think like a single person, like someone on
|
||
the prowl. There is no point in preying on people, or saving them as you like
|
||
to think. We cannot hope to save the world, and in fact, they don't really
|
||
want us anyway. All that happens is that in our attempts to save the world we
|
||
destroy ourselves in false martyrdom, we become victims of the Staceys,
|
||
Carliles and Farahs of this world.
|
||
|
||
I'm so full my tummy aches
|
||
How sad it must end
|
||
But I'm glad I've a friend
|
||
Sharing cups and cakes with me
|
||
And cakes with me...
|
||
|
||
I just want to return to a peaceful home, to a family, to something that can
|
||
be called loving. I do not want to be big and powerful, at least not
|
||
emotionally. There is no joy in having to beat someone out for a girlfriend.
|
||
It's a fairly hollow triumph.
|
||
|
||
Have you ever noticed that Sue Johanson has the same sense of humour that
|
||
Barnes does? Sue is the biggest pro-pill person in the world, every time some
|
||
girl gets on she instantly puts them on the pill. She also is a big user of
|
||
KY - every person gets a complimentary tube. Dominic and Marie (French
|
||
people) use it, and Gare and Kare use it. I never thought about it much, but I
|
||
guess there are lot of either really dry 40 year olds or a lot of people
|
||
greasing themselves up.
|
||
|
||
Have you ever heard these adverts for the Family channel? I think that the
|
||
Family channel is a conservative propaganda machine, the last bastion of family
|
||
values. The ads feature these inane kids, the same type who appear in
|
||
antismoking ads, who are shouting for joy "Family Channel! Family Channel!
|
||
Yay-ay!" because they get to watch _Winnie the Pooh or _Burns and Allen. "Do
|
||
what is right for you. Don't do drugs." Its the same here. "Fun for the
|
||
whole family," a dictation of "classic" television and over-edited Disney
|
||
cartoons. What these people want is censorship in a bag, a nice way to get
|
||
regulated by people like the CRTC and Tipper Gore. Karen has this friend
|
||
Linda Weigal who only lets her kids watch the Family channel and such things,
|
||
and the last time she was here she was braggin how her kid had regulated
|
||
himself so that even if she wasn't there, he would not watch the evil channels
|
||
(like Global?). It was so fuckin' scary, I was just watching with disbelief.
|
||
She is an Albertan in the most freaky sense, totally Reform. This is to whom
|
||
the Family channel relates, to people who want to clean up the crime in our
|
||
streets by blowing the criminals brains out, by giving the police bigger guns.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 5.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Of course, if I was back in residence, I really would be a demon. Res is a
|
||
place where the spirit of highschool, or perhaps junior highschool, lives and
|
||
thrives. The sad part about the UNB prof is that what he said about university
|
||
residence is for the most part true. That place really is a glorified
|
||
cathouse. The motto of Housing & Food Services of Carleton might as well be
|
||
"You need a place to spend the night and we provided it. You need sex, we
|
||
provided the girls!" But I digress.
|
||
|
||
It would have been interesting for a little while, however. I remember last
|
||
year that I tried to show off Chandra. I had a sly grin everytime that
|
||
Hammerhead came in on her and I, because he had previously admitted a Suzanne
|
||
Hastie type lust for her. There was one time, after one of our long late night
|
||
chats, that the fire alarm went off at about 5am. It was in the winter, so
|
||
instead of going outside everyone crowded in the tunnels and the mailroom. I
|
||
happened upon Chandra there, in the midst of everyone but sitting down against
|
||
the wall. She was bleary eyed and dazed. She said "Good morning sunshine" to
|
||
me, and I sat down next to her and gave her one earphone of my walkman, and we
|
||
listened to Bruce Cockburn. It was so nice. It was like I was giving her my
|
||
music to act as a protection from Coco and Gunner - I was taking her away from
|
||
the floor dicks, and they could all see this.
|
||
|
||
And behold, the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God
|
||
descending as a dove and coming upon him. A voice from the heavens said, "This
|
||
is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased."
|
||
|
||
Oh well. These chicks come and go. At least I hope they do. "Chandra" was such
|
||
a beautiful name though. I even enjoy typing it. Why do I always fall in love
|
||
in the spring? Planet Earth is blue and there's nothing I can do... I guess we
|
||
differ in that I do have a single mentality. I always have a roving eye,
|
||
scoping out the chacks, wondering if so-and-so has it together or is a lost
|
||
soul. It's difficult to ignore the pale-faced big-bottomed Body Shoppe
|
||
vegetarians with names like Martha, Wendy and Shannon. I like the stability
|
||
side of having a GF, but I can't forget that there are new experiences, new
|
||
things to learn. If I wanted stability I could have stayed with Carlile.
|
||
|
||
I know I can't save the world but I can make a difference in their lives in
|
||
the way that Viren or Derek never could. Listening to Jen muse about all these
|
||
BFs, you realise just how shitty males are in relationships. They just don't
|
||
care. Honestly, they don't. What was the product of the L-Military Man union?
|
||
Nothing more than sexual gratification. Neither of them learned one damn
|
||
thing.
|
||
|
||
Your letters from JM are very interesting, because they show a female coming
|
||
out from under her winter coat and learning to be herself. You can almost see
|
||
her mind expanding more with each letter. She wasn't able to handle it, but
|
||
most chicks are. I've done that a few times and I love to see it happen.
|
||
|
||
I'm not doing it for ego: To beat out Dogbone. I don't think that they
|
||
necessarily worship us, or maybe even care. Maybe they don't deserve it or
|
||
understand why. (M never does: She's incessantly asking me why I put up with
|
||
her & her crap. She expects me to trash her as everyone else has.) I don't
|
||
know. But I do know that they want what we can give. How else could guys as
|
||
awkward, geeky, ugly and inept as we are have so much snatch in so few years?
|
||
|
||
A few nights ago she woke up during the night, cooed my name, and then reached
|
||
out for me. She didn't feel anything, so she moved over and tried again with
|
||
the same results. She kept on doing this until she fell out of bed. Turns out
|
||
that I wasn't there. It has come to the point that she expects me to be
|
||
sleeping with her. Talk about marriage.
|
||
|
||
I am watching _Faith-20 and the preacher is praising Xianity because it takes
|
||
away your free will. He says that Weight Watchers takes away your freedom to
|
||
get fat, and Xianity is Morality Watchers that takes away your freedom to sin.
|
||
|
||
The scary part is that I could do his job. I already speak like him. "And the
|
||
thing about diets is this: You just aren't allowed to, that's all there is to
|
||
it, you just aren't allowed, it's very simple..." You and your numb skull and
|
||
your hard-on. They are so hung up on families and family togetherness. Spend
|
||
Time With my Family! Families are like big dicks: Everyone wants and talks
|
||
about them, no-one has them.
|
||
|
||
Packaged morality. There is one diet ad where the model says "The next time
|
||
you see me there'll be even less of me!" as if that is the greatest thing in
|
||
the world. Talk about not-too-well-hidden self-hatred.
|
||
|
||
I am seriously considering jobs as a preacher or a pornographer.
|
||
|
||
I admire Glenn Tilsonn for one thing, his dedication to his music. By aligning
|
||
himself with that heavy metal suicide stuff, he totally shot all his chances
|
||
with any kind of normal female. In grade nine he had to decide, "Am I going to
|
||
buy this Bleeding Brain Matter cassette, or am I ever going to have a
|
||
girlfriend?" He chose the latter. I can appreciate his commitment to it,
|
||
because his sacrifice for his music was any kind of respectable adolescence.
|
||
|
||
He followed Rachel around for a good time, in a typical lost-dog Lloyd
|
||
fashion. I felt kind of embarrassed and ashamed when I waltzed in from
|
||
nowhere, and in the span of three weeks had her bra off. He had been trying
|
||
without success for years.
|
||
|
||
On the transit bus out of Port Credit during our night school shared
|
||
experience (Feb to May 1992) he told me that he wanted to start a band with
|
||
Jimbo for a short time. Another thing I remember about those Port Credit
|
||
nights is hearing the arrival of Glenn to class. You would hear him all the
|
||
way down the hall, the sound of crashing heavy metal guitars and machine gun
|
||
drumming at 140 dBs played through 1 cm headphones. Then the music would snap
|
||
off, and Glenn appeared in the doorway with a glazed expression.
|
||
|
||
What happened to him?
|
||
|
||
Gimme some money.
|
||
|
||
I have had a few talks with M about music, and most of it seems to be going
|
||
over her head. She doesn't connect with it on the glandular level, and so
|
||
anything I can say just doesn't stick with her. She can't understand how music
|
||
that you just hear (instead of create) can mean so much. I tell her that you
|
||
don't have to be a priest to be religious.
|
||
|
||
Most people are like her. Sometimes it's hard to believe the kind of shit that
|
||
will sell 14 million units. I recently took a look at the chart from the back
|
||
of a 1989 _Rolling stone, and about 70% of that music is now garbaged,
|
||
closeted, in 99c bins, or for sale at the St Vincent de Paul. Does anyone want
|
||
to give "She Drives Me Crazy" another spin? How about the "Ghostbusters II"
|
||
soundtrack? I never hear too much about Martinka anymore.
|
||
|
||
Barnes is like that. She has almost as many cassettes as I do, but the
|
||
majority of them are by Tiffany, the Nelsons, Right Said Fred, and Tommy Page
|
||
and haven't seen the inside of a cassette player since the 80s.
|
||
|
||
The turd keeps piling up, old turd replaced by new turd. But people are shitty
|
||
and their musical tastes are in line with that. Shitty and rich, so they can
|
||
afford to buy crappy music. I am thinking of a Kenneth Barnes type driving one
|
||
of his Benzez with a Michael Bolton CD in the player, Kenneth getting in touch
|
||
with his sensitive side by hearing Mike scream out ballads.
|
||
|
||
CD-I as the latest catalyst for family togetherness. Happiness at the other
|
||
end of a remote control. The commercials show the Land family of dad mom and
|
||
the kids happily crowded around the television, cheering and smiling and
|
||
laughing over Carmen Sandiego. They used to market the Atari 2600 with the
|
||
exact same tactics, but it wasn't enough to put family councellors out of
|
||
business. But who knows, this might be just the thing. You can solve Marcia's
|
||
demagoguery, Anita's thesis hesitation, cw's homosexual Oedipus complex, Jen's
|
||
ulcers, Brandon's Devil worship and Coby's diseases with the purchase of a
|
||
$700 CD-I by Philips.
|
||
|
||
I am glad that you have hesitations over the Carlile letter, because that is
|
||
the probable course of action. As we both know from experience, when people
|
||
are presented with a letter that is out of the ordinary that may hold new
|
||
challenges, 95% of the population decides to do nothing 95% of the time. Do
|
||
you remember that letter that I wrote to Karla in June of 1992? Neither do I,
|
||
because I never heard a peep from her afterwards. For about three weeks after
|
||
you drop the letter off, you will be jumpy when the mail comes and have a hole
|
||
in your chest cavity. It will become apparant that nothing is coming, and you
|
||
will sink back into the standard Carlile feelings. Six months later you will
|
||
have another Ned's encounter, and you will start to feel it again. Case in
|
||
point: I have heard zippo hippo flippo from the either of them in reply to my
|
||
reply to their _Cropduster comments.
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, your efforts have my blessings and support.
|
||
|
||
Do you think you'll be the guy to make the queen of the angels sigh? People
|
||
are sluggish in general. If you really want to find out the truth about
|
||
Carlile, the way to do it is to corner her and stick it between her eyes. This
|
||
puttering around isn't going to go very far. You'll find that this is true
|
||
when Carlile does nothing in response to your letter.
|
||
|
||
If you want to change someone's long-held opinions of you, one letter, no
|
||
matter what you put inside of it, isn't going to do the work. Letters, words
|
||
and stamps are cheap, and anyone could pass for anything when it's in writing.
|
||
Live flesh always presents a more convincing argument, and it puts you in a
|
||
better position, because you get instantaneous feedback and reaction. I know
|
||
Carlile, and she's always been fairly gutsy when it comes to these things.
|
||
Tiptoeing around is no good.
|
||
|
||
When/if you get a reparte with her, please casually ask her about me, because
|
||
I would like to know. I still don't know what happened after grade eight, how
|
||
the pig-doorstep thing went over with her, and so on. I would doubt that she
|
||
thinks of me as a demonic devil figure, although she may say that she does to
|
||
Rupe or maybe even you. She could claim this, but it certainly isn't how she's
|
||
since acted with me. We went through a period of bitterness (most of grade
|
||
nine) in which she once spat at me, and the music class stories, and some
|
||
other things. But after that it sort of warmed up again. In grade ten, after a
|
||
few weeks of letter exchanging, she invited me to her house so that she could
|
||
'tutor' me in math, also known as renting videos. Later she heard about Fiona,
|
||
screamed at me the day after the gig, and we were apart for another stretch.
|
||
|
||
But then interestingly enough we came out of that again. Near the end of Dr
|
||
Maloney's class we started talking again, and one sunny day in May we went to
|
||
the Links enriched conference together. It was like your bowling trip with D
|
||
and the rest: Just me along with Karla, Farah, and Carlile. (That day I met
|
||
Wowbagger in person for the first time, quite by accident. He was an enriched
|
||
kid at Meadowvale. I pointed Carlile out to him and we guffawed.) We spent the
|
||
day together, and the four of us dined at Burger King there. All of this is to
|
||
say that if she thinks of me as satanic, she never acted that way to my face.
|
||
|
||
Carlile was actually very soft on me after grade nine. She may tell Andrew
|
||
Ryder and all these guys about what an immoral villan I was, but when we were
|
||
actually together in the same room at the same time, there was nothing but
|
||
smiles and warm friendliness.
|
||
|
||
Which may prove that I am not the Christ that I speak of, but actually the
|
||
Evil One himself. Because internally she wanted to hate me, but every time she
|
||
came near she fell under my spell and could not resist. It would be
|
||
interesting if you could ask her. But I know what she will say.
|
||
|
||
Carlile may or may not look upon me as Periole. I wouldn't be very surprised
|
||
if she did, because I am used to being despised. The man you love to hate...
|
||
You know the way that JM sees you? Many many others see me in that light.
|
||
Scores of people, including my grandmother and most of my cousins, see me as
|
||
an obscene character that ought to be crushed underfoot like a cockroach.
|
||
|
||
Black man'll give you a dollar and won't think it strange
|
||
White man'll give you a dollar and want 95c change
|
||
|
||
- Blind Willie McTell
|
||
|
||
Don't get too heavily involved with CIL@T and disability technology, for fear
|
||
that you will start living someone else's life instead of your own.
|
||
|
||
I was listening to the CBC the other day, and they had a reading from the
|
||
latest-hip Canadian writer. Being Canadian was a tip off to how shitty it
|
||
would be. There was one line in it, delivered in some kind of gripping ultra
|
||
serious gutteral voice that stuck with me: "The thick and misty night was
|
||
blacker than a dog's throat." Blacker than a dog's throat? What the fuck is
|
||
that? I turned the dial immediately in disgust. I imagine that Stacey would
|
||
perhaps enjoyed it. There's nothing intrinsically better about reading than
|
||
anything else. It matters greatly what you choose to read. This dog's throat
|
||
shit is an example of the kind of crap that our society and this country
|
||
especially is based upon.
|
||
|
||
Just take a look at the news. Some days it is hard to determine which news is
|
||
real. For awhile last month, _Channel 6 News and _A Current Affair were the same
|
||
shows: 1) Figure Skating Attack 2) Severed Penis Attack 3) Michael Jackson
|
||
Attack 4) Commercial break. There was no difference between the "legitmate"
|
||
news and the "sleaze" news. It's almost as if they would tune in the news to
|
||
see if they were laid off today. If they weren't, they would breathe a sigh of
|
||
relief and then check out the latest titbit of good vs evil with Geoff
|
||
Gillollie and his famous billy stick.
|
||
|
||
>From a book called _Changing Bodies Changing Lives, part of my research for my
|
||
fuck essay:
|
||
|
||
Wendy Sanford: I am co author of The New Our Bodies Ourselves and serve as
|
||
campus minister at a commuter college in downtown Boston. My eighteen-year-old
|
||
son is now well past the stage of being embarrassed that his mother writes
|
||
about sex. I dedicate my part of this wonderful book to him - may he enjoy his
|
||
sexuality, grow in love, and protect himself from AIDS!
|
||
|
||
I would have loved to have a mother like that. She sounds like Marcia. My mother
|
||
has always been very hush-hush about it. She isn't a prude, because she does
|
||
screw, but by her covering up of it she has tried to teach me to be ashamed of
|
||
sex, like it was dirty or something. She would never tell me to enjoy my
|
||
sexuality, even if I was married. She never walked around naked and I was
|
||
never Best Bod at age eleven. A real St Augustine thing. I used to be ashamed
|
||
of my body, and convinved that sex was oh-so-naughty and forbidden. The
|
||
strange part was that I was able to fuck them, but up until Kucman in late
|
||
1991 I always ran and hid and covered my private parts in all other
|
||
situations. That was my mother's doing because she taught me that nakedness
|
||
was something to be frightened of.
|
||
|
||
Obviously you know much more about growing up under Marcia than I do, so
|
||
you're perfectly justified in feeling however you do about her. She is a bitch
|
||
though. She got mad at me twice, both times for something I didn't do. Once
|
||
was when the Gumby Gangers were sleeping in the trailer and she dropped by and
|
||
found it a mess. We all got chewed out. The second time was when I supposedly
|
||
trampled her flowerbed. But I like the sex aspects of Marc, and the peacenik
|
||
stuff. At least from this anti-Xmas card you can tell that she has a brain,
|
||
and that she is thinking about things.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 5.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
The latest religious harangue is a song recorded by Bobby "Don't Worry be
|
||
Happy" McFerrin of _The Lord is my Shepherd which has changed all the he's to
|
||
she's. People are up in arms because they cannot take the idea that mother is
|
||
God.
|
||
|
||
People are quirky this way: they think psychoanalysis is bunk, and yet they
|
||
display such gender problems. I think gender should be eliminated altogether.
|
||
I have no real reason to feel male, except for the member dangling between my
|
||
legs, and the fact that I prefer breasts to chest hair.
|
||
|
||
It has been interesting to watch these females travel from first year to
|
||
third and fourth. In the same way that we noticed the difference between the
|
||
look of grade eight to grade twelve, I have noticed the same here. They have
|
||
gone from being wide-eyed orientation folks to really haggard looking
|
||
survivors of "the system". It's remarkable how physical a difference it makes:
|
||
Bad hair, baggy eyes, fatigue, and so on. It seems to bring the most
|
||
beautiful first year goddesses to their knees. There is several girls like
|
||
that in my soiree group, who are about 19 and have never experienced life.
|
||
There is this one girl Danusha, and she acts like the ideal Carlile figure,
|
||
driving me through an immense tizzy. But I will see her in a couple years and
|
||
she will look like Danielle. There will be little left to be conquered,
|
||
little innocence to be sheltered. This is why the whole scene is kind of
|
||
tragic. The dreams of these enriched drama students will be shattered as they
|
||
realize that skits about gay lumberjacks won't get them through life anymore.
|
||
|
||
Although things seem to be getting better, what with a good job, girlfriend,
|
||
house, etc. the depressions are getting worse. I frequently finding myself in
|
||
a daze of pseudo-boredom/suicidal tendencies. I am still constantly running,
|
||
constantly trying to find something to do that will excite me. Life as it is
|
||
just doesn't instill anything in me anymore. I think that it is perhaps
|
||
because of too much white noise. If I sit in a park and try to enjoy the
|
||
scene as it is, the noise of twenty years of history comes through, screaming
|
||
out "Carlile" and "Marcia" and "Stacey" and "Dr. Maloney". It seems that I
|
||
can only rest when there is enough distraction to block out all those voices
|
||
in my head, all those regrets. I sit in this cafeteria, with a walkman
|
||
screaming into my head, and the computer turned, or I play video games, so
|
||
that I don't have to stop and remember. I am seriously thinking of going into
|
||
therapy, generally because I don't want to end up dead sometime in the future,
|
||
or get myself arrested my writing the names of farm animals on somone's
|
||
driveway. I can survive for now, but one crisis could shatter the whole
|
||
stability. If I became poor, or got a really bad grade, or lost Danielle, or
|
||
someone died, it would teeter the whole thing out of control...
|
||
|
||
My father announced that the Woodill's have regained the title of most
|
||
dysfunctional family from the Perryman/Comries. My Aunt Linda's (Gary's
|
||
younger sister) husband killed himself, and they found out that he had been
|
||
sexually abusing her two kids for the past ten years.
|
||
|
||
The Ottawa thing was good: You were very well behaved. What is interesting
|
||
that you both had the same fears, that you were going to embarrass me. I
|
||
don't think it was too bad an arrangement, although Danielle was not to happy
|
||
about the landlady problems. I think you should bring Michelle here, so that
|
||
we can have a sleep over or something of that nature. My parents are probably
|
||
splitting in August for Regina, so I will have the house to myself.
|
||
|
||
I had to go to this cast-party with Danielle on the weekend, and it seems that
|
||
I had a close- encounter with real Generation X people. These guys were total
|
||
beer guzzlers, and this one chick kept making lewd comments about being fucked
|
||
and being sucked - at one time she was talking getting sperm caught between
|
||
her teeth. Their record collection was embarrassing: the total sum of all the
|
||
greatest hits records of the last twenty or thirty years. This is what is
|
||
thought of as Gen X., and there really are a lot of people like this. They
|
||
all have two bit jobs, and they spend all their money on booze. They are like
|
||
Matt Fenwicks who have grown up and moved out of their parents house.
|
||
|
||
We are definitely not this. We are not anything, a complete enigma it seems.
|
||
This is not to say that we are great rebels, or non-conformists: we are just
|
||
nerds who have to be different because they can't be anything other than that.
|
||
|
||
On the tube is this early video by Mr. T, a rap about doing the right thing,
|
||
as he goes through this wearhouse and beats the crap out of some drug dealers
|
||
("Hey there, Mr. Dealer..."). He punches them out, and everyone cheers. He
|
||
does not even sing: he just shouts in that classic "I'm gonna get you sucka"
|
||
grunt.
|
||
|
||
Things with Carlile are pretty much a dead matter now. It seems that the
|
||
letter was delivered about a week or two ago, and I have yet to hear anything
|
||
from it. Such is what I expected: I did not really have a lot of faith in
|
||
Carlile's responsibility.
|
||
|
||
In Metaphysics and Epistemology, we spend a lot of time talking about the idea
|
||
of respondeo, which means to commit. The idea is that we respond to the world
|
||
by giving it a chance, by allowing it to presence in us. In order to do this
|
||
one has to be respons-able, that is able to commit to a world that may be
|
||
scary, angry, hateful, etc. Carlile lacks responsibility: she lacks the
|
||
ability to communicate with the world. Perhaps we all do: we all seem to have
|
||
gone underground, creating our own little cults that will worship us. Each of
|
||
us now has our world of pals: Carlile has Andrew Ryder and Peter, you have
|
||
Michelle, I have Danielle and Robin and Micheline and Deb, etc. And with each
|
||
circle, we have control again.
|
||
|
||
I was over at Micheline's the other day and I really realized how much there
|
||
was a sense of control. There was absolutely no way that I could get booted
|
||
out of the group, no way that I could beat out by the competition, or shut
|
||
down by a Dobson or a Viren. Perhaps it is because there is no power
|
||
hierarchy, but rather, a certain balance. However, it is obvious that Deb is
|
||
an outsider. I am too, but I fit a new role, so I am more easily accepted.
|
||
They don't need another giggly girl: Deb has no unique role, no quality that
|
||
can enhance the group dynamic. I do in that I am male, and I am not a slumber
|
||
party buddy. And because I am the only in that position, I don't have to
|
||
compete for anyone's attention.
|
||
|
||
What I also resent is that these people cannot be tried for their crimes.
|
||
When you and I are at least attempting to reconcile the shittiness of the past
|
||
and improving, it seems that Carlile is just driving it under the rug and
|
||
moving on, as is Stacey and Fiona and Krista. It seems that this is typical,
|
||
and although I don't want to be obsessive or full of some victim mentality, I
|
||
think that we have to acknowledge that we have all been hurtful. We really
|
||
have been extremely mean, and we are all guilt of exhorbatent crimes. We
|
||
would be less guilty if we were just Matty Fenwicks, taking chicks here and
|
||
there. But we were far worse, because we perverted something, we betrayed
|
||
peoples trusts, and we destroyed people's innocence in a way much more
|
||
damaging than the traditional virginity-taking.
|
||
|
||
You need to take care of your girlfriend. If you don't, she is going to be
|
||
another Fiona.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 6.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
How many times have I tried to tell you son that your problem is that you
|
||
never stop running? You can't even sit still in Taco Bell for more than ten
|
||
minutes without getting restless, like some kind of eight year old. If you
|
||
can't find peace in simple things, you are never going to be very religious
|
||
and you are going to have to be a yuppie in order to feed your habit.
|
||
|
||
You have a real love/hate relationship with your father figures - Carlile,
|
||
Gary, Danesi, et al.
|
||
|
||
Strange that you are the one who is having mental problems - it always used to
|
||
be me doing crazee things. If Dr Maloney and Carlile are chasing you, it may
|
||
be beneficial for you to get out of town. Coming to Ottawa has changed things
|
||
- you no longer feel like you are under a microscope when you eat your New
|
||
York Fries at the mall, because there's no-one there to condemn you. I walk
|
||
around town knowing that I am almost completely free, that there isn't anyone
|
||
in this city waiting to seek revenge. Most importantly, it has put up an iron
|
||
curtain between that life and this one. When I am back in Toronto I become a
|
||
Saug boy once again, and hang around Yonge St arcades, but when I am in
|
||
Ottawa it is as if that stuff never happened at all. I can sit in a park and
|
||
not be bothered, because the ghost of Carlile and Stacey can't reach me here
|
||
in Eastern Ontario. The only instance where the worlds cross over is on the
|
||
floppy discs that contain my diary files from 1988, and from a few parts of
|
||
Ottawa U and the public gallery at Parliament, where the ghost of Carlile
|
||
still lives behind the pillars. A few times it has come out and I have seen it
|
||
- thrown back into the field trip that we took to Ottawa when we were together
|
||
in grade eight. But most of the time it isn't around.
|
||
|
||
It may help you to split town for a few years - maybe goto Fort Qu'Appelle.
|
||
|
||
The exclusive stinginess of Gare/Kare is not new. Remember the summer of 1992
|
||
and the Everfresh incident? When I was working for him and living at the
|
||
house, Gare made a big deal of showing me the kitchen, where everything was,
|
||
and how I could eat anything/everything I saw. He made a big deal of his
|
||
generosity. Then I started drinking Karen's mineral water spritzer things, and
|
||
they took them away and hid them upstairs so that I wouldn't be able to get at
|
||
them anymore.
|
||
|
||
It reminds me of the high water point of the Others, and also how when we
|
||
actually got together all we did was create a fascist state. As has been
|
||
pointed out many times, that is the only purpose of the feminists. They want
|
||
the power - in the most literal sense, "they want to be the bosses", and
|
||
they'll use anything that can get them there, be it sex, merit, affirmative
|
||
action, or anything else. There is a big name feminist (Bell Hooks) coming to
|
||
speak at Carleton, and the name of her lecture is Ending Dominance. She
|
||
intends to scrap male dominance. I don't think she's a communist, so she wants
|
||
to replace it with female dominance.
|
||
|
||
Fine. But the question is this - will they be any more responsible with the
|
||
power than the males were? Exhibit A is Margaret Thatcher. Exhibit B is Kim
|
||
Campbell. Missile envy can be experienced by females too.
|
||
|
||
But if you see the handout, you will notice that they are advertising that
|
||
campus Foot Patrol will be available for members of the audience. This means
|
||
that females who are too paranoid to be out on the street at dusk can have
|
||
security guards escort them to their car. Why did they offer this for this
|
||
lecture, and not for anything else? Because many lesbian feminists have been
|
||
sexually assaulted, and are subsequently so afraid of males that they feel
|
||
more secure with it. And these people are feminist scholars? They understand
|
||
the gender situation? Not a chance. Can you expect rational analysis of the
|
||
male identity from someone who is too scared to go outside after suppertime
|
||
because some male might get her? That's like someone from the KKK calling
|
||
themselves an expert on race! I empathise with their position, and I'm not
|
||
belittling it, but I don't think that their writings should be taken seriously
|
||
as scholarship. Have you seen Andrea Dworkin? She is the one who belives that
|
||
all heterosexual sex is rape. She weighs about 300 pounds.
|
||
|
||
All this clap-trap about feminism on a crusade to liberate all women. What an
|
||
affront to good taste. Ah yes, Karen Anderson the self-sacrificing martyr.
|
||
What a bunch of shit. I was at the St Vincent de Paul yesterday, with all the
|
||
Hintonburg low-lifes buying used 1982 era Jordache jeans for $3, and so on.
|
||
Some Coby looking girl was walking a baby, and the backyards had lines of
|
||
underware and towels flapping in the breeze. All these people with their
|
||
unattractiveness, unfashionability, and poverty. Many people smoked, used
|
||
vulgar language, were racist and generally not very appealing. On Somerset St
|
||
as I biked past there was a bleach-blonde whore with a paunch, a cigarette,
|
||
and spandex tights sitting on the kerb.
|
||
|
||
This is the triumphant proletariat that the communists rally around, and the
|
||
'oppressed' that the political correctors ballyhoo. Strange, I didn't see any
|
||
PC crusaders hanging around Hintonburg: They must have been someplace else
|
||
that afternoon. Then again, the Hintonburgers didn't seem to be too interested
|
||
with their liberators: Everyone who went to the Bell Hooks lecture looked more
|
||
like Karen behind the wheel of the Saab. Hintonburg dinges they were not. They
|
||
were so convinced of their ethical high-standing and piousness.
|
||
|
||
Karen supports feminism because it is the only thing that she could use to
|
||
launch herself from full professor into faculty chair. She spends over $2300
|
||
per year making her cunt look fancy, and $7 on a tube of K-Y to make it wet,
|
||
and what does that have to do with the scum of our own cities? These womyn
|
||
don't give a rat's ass for anything other than the status of themselves and
|
||
their friends and I wish they would give up this martyric pretension. Feminism
|
||
is taken so seriously. The people do not care. Feminism is cocktail party
|
||
conversation for the aristocracy. They do not have respondeo to the people
|
||
they claim to help.
|
||
|
||
Gary and Karen really do make me uncomfortable, which is why I get so ANSI
|
||
when they are around. The whole hypocricy of it makes me angry. When I think
|
||
of education, it stirs up the Meece blood in me. All the Meece education
|
||
reformers, and Leonard Ephraim with his hopes for bringing education to the
|
||
hillbillies, would not be pleased to see what has become of higher education.
|
||
It's wrecked as far as I can see, and now almost all professors give me the
|
||
creeps: I'm not pally wally with them as you are. Karen reminds me of a
|
||
grown-up Laurie or Honorable Member from Warnes, with their egoistic
|
||
self-image equally inflated.
|
||
|
||
Look at Nietzche, too. Another phony, another paper-m<>che Mephistopheles.
|
||
|
||
At Frankfurt, on his way to the front, he saw a troop of cavalry passing with
|
||
magnificent clatter and display through a town; there and then, he says, came
|
||
the perception, the vision, out of which was to grow his entire philosophy. "I
|
||
felt for the first time that the strongest and highest Will to Life does not
|
||
find expression in a miserable struggle for existence, but in a Will to War, a
|
||
Will to Power, a Will to Overpower!" Bad eyesight conveniently disqualified
|
||
him from active soldiering, and he had to be content as a stretcher-bearer;
|
||
and though he saw horrors enough, he never knew the actual brutality of those
|
||
battle-fields which his timid soul was later to idealise with all the
|
||
imaginative intensity of inexperience. Even for nursing he was too sensitively
|
||
delicate; the sight of blood made him ill; he fell sick, and was sent home in
|
||
ruins. Ever afterward he had the nerves of a Shelley and the stomach of a
|
||
Carlyle; the soul of a girl under the armour of a warrior.
|
||
|
||
Will Durant, _The Story of Phil, 1926.
|
||
|
||
Nietzsche was an old man with the clap, a retired university professor who had
|
||
his request for marriage turned down by Louise Salome, yet fancied himself a
|
||
Dionysus worshipper and a killer. Another Johnny Reb, another Glenn Tilson who
|
||
worked at a pharmacy in a uniform in order to get the dough to buy heavy metal
|
||
suicide cassettes.
|
||
|
||
Richard Wagner believed he had discovered the cause of the young Nietzsche's
|
||
frequent headaches, poor eyesight and prostrations to lie in 'excessive
|
||
masturbation', which he communicated to Nietzsche's doctor. When he learned
|
||
what Wagner had done, he flew into a rage and declared he would never forgive
|
||
what he termed 'this affront to my person'.
|
||
|
||
from the Intro to _Ecce Homo. I look at the adult world and see that they
|
||
really do not know what they are doing. They are not 'advanced' or anything
|
||
like that. They have cash and stuff, but they are not superior to me. Marcia
|
||
is as nutty as a fruitcake. Her marriage lasts four years, and she switches
|
||
jobs, homes, and cities all too easily.
|
||
|
||
Continuing on in the tradition of self-aggrandizing, I realise what it is that
|
||
I am -- an anti-missionary. I come into some site, set up camp, and go about
|
||
de-Christianising the natives. A curious part about me is that I seem to
|
||
manoeuver myself into the most beautiful postions. I do things with people
|
||
that "friends" never do. L has admitted that last year she was closer to me
|
||
than she was to the Military Man, her boyfriend - in terms of knowledge of her
|
||
soul, etc.
|
||
|
||
Partially we have both earned our titles, and partially it was a hand-out
|
||
because there was no-one else that wanted it. I believe that this is good for
|
||
us, but especially for you, because it keeps you from becoming a shit again.
|
||
The azimuth of this happened at the Perryperson picnic in the summer of 1990.
|
||
The photograph you have captures it perfectly: The bare-chested male with a
|
||
shit-eating grin and Robert Plant hair, holding his concubine at his hip who
|
||
smiles approvingly. Talk about Dionysus. I don't really have that problem,
|
||
probably because I never cared that Lloyd was out after me. I have become an
|
||
asshole with my girlfriends, but not because someone else was after them.
|
||
|
||
The difference between Fiona and Michelle is that most of the time I don't get
|
||
sick of Michelle after I see her. I used to have to space out the times that I
|
||
saw Fi, because too much of her shit would drag me down. In the summer I would
|
||
sneak away for more than a week before I went back to renew my status. In the
|
||
summer Fiona was about 80% hassle and 20% niceness.
|
||
|
||
M is the opposite, 80% niceness and 20% hassle. I miss her when she isn't
|
||
around and when I sleep alone, and sometimes I will bike up the gut-wrenching
|
||
Kilburn Avenue hill just to hang around with her for two hours in the
|
||
afternoon. We have conflicts from time to time but the difference here is that
|
||
we care enough to solve them and so do. With Fiona and Carlile it wasn't
|
||
important that we had difficulties, because I didn't give a rat's ass to solve
|
||
them: By the time the difficulties grew enough to threaten the relationship
|
||
with Carlile I didn't want it to continue, and with Fiona I cared more for
|
||
Stacey's state of mind than for hers. I was like Pinky gazing at the
|
||
television while Fiona hovered around me and said "Are you feeling OK?"
|
||
|
||
Pornos and videogames. You have a point, but if it were true, uncorrupted
|
||
young people would start on _Donkey Kong and work their way up to _Mortal Kombat
|
||
as they got bored. Porno and videogames are artificial sensation, and people
|
||
always seek the most sensational. Little kids start with _Mortal Kombat, and
|
||
they would start with porno tapes if they could get their hands on them. They
|
||
start with Kombat, they don't even bother trying out _Snowballs first. We
|
||
always go for what is most exciting, but not because what we already have gets
|
||
boring. We don't know it is substandard until we are told that it is.
|
||
Cavepeople pounded rocks, and they found it amazing. They did that all their
|
||
lives and never got tired. If you gave a Caveperson a game of Galaga, he would
|
||
find it amazing and play it all the while.
|
||
|
||
Your line we increasingly need more reward to get the same high is not true. I
|
||
think we are conditioned to believe this to fall into the hands of the
|
||
computer manufacturers and pornographers. No-one thought that CGA was all that
|
||
bad until EGA came onto the scene. Everybody loved _Summer Games and I think
|
||
that what made them tired of it was the existence of _Summer Games II. They
|
||
seek the best, whatever it is at that time, be it _Spy Hunter or _Virtual
|
||
Fighter. Of course the best keeps receding beyond their grasp. These new
|
||
PowerPCs are amazing, but they cause me a bit of dismay because I know they
|
||
will be garbage in a few years. This is a game where you can't win, unless you
|
||
lock yourself in a bubble. I remember in 1987 when the 386 chip came out,
|
||
the computer magazines said that it was targeted for the high-powered techie
|
||
user, and that the average joe would not "need" the extra power afforded by
|
||
it. There was no "need" for the average user to have more than his 640k 286
|
||
system. I think this is true, and that we are all patsies. Why am I tired of
|
||
this Classic II? Because I have seen more impressive machines at a lower
|
||
price. If I had not seen better, my satisfaction would still be complete.
|
||
Actually, if we had not seen better we would still be using a pen and paper...
|
||
|
||
We all have our own dumb ways of wasting time. You work to liberate wheelchair
|
||
dudes, I sleep and play the silver ball, and my girlfriend apparantly has
|
||
become addicted to soap operas, _Days of our lives to be specific, which is
|
||
causing me a great deal of bother. We are always arguing about it. She claims
|
||
that she knows it is all phantasy and not real, she says it is a placebo to
|
||
help carry her through the afternoons that she shares with her distasteful
|
||
roommates.
|
||
|
||
But it is this that I object to the most, her using soap operas to escape.
|
||
Escapism is not the best thing in the world. To paraphrase Marx: Soaps are the
|
||
opiate of the masses. She is deluding herself. Soaps are without social
|
||
merit, and you learn nothing for them. They are pure manipulation. There is no
|
||
reason for soap operas to exist other than to support themselves by getting
|
||
you to tune in tomorrrow. The biggest issue you will see on soap operas is
|
||
whether Luke is the father of Melissa's baby, or how long Victoria can keep
|
||
Stone hostage in a cage in her livingroom.
|
||
|
||
Look at Carlile's thing about wanting to cut my dick off. Jayshri heard that
|
||
and was not shocked. Why? Because Carlile knows that she can use my name
|
||
forever without being disproved or even challenged. I am just a General Tyrant
|
||
figure now, your average Hitler type. Fifty years later everyone is still
|
||
talking about the Nazis, but no one challenges what they do. Even the modern
|
||
day Nazis don't dare side with Adolf and state that the Holocaust was a good
|
||
thing, they just insist that it didn't happen. Hitler, Attilla the Hun, Tojo,
|
||
Saddam Hussain, Judas Iscariot, the Sheriff of NOTT, Steven Meece... who cares
|
||
about the dif anymore?
|
||
|
||
Judging from the fact most of them have not even tried in the least to contact
|
||
me since, they aren't waiting for me to say anything new. Take someone like
|
||
Farah - did she ever really care about me? Did we ever talk about important
|
||
things? Never once - not in 1990 and certainly not in 1994. Unlike you, Stacey
|
||
does not leave messages on my machine and get jealous of my current GF. I
|
||
don't run into Carlile at the Peppermill on campus. Fiona has turned my "let's
|
||
talk" offers down three times.
|
||
|
||
I don't look upon them as my old friends of which I was seperated from for
|
||
unnatural reasons - I see them as people who feigned friendship and then
|
||
dumped me. If you think this is victim mythology fakery, you should have had
|
||
to live my life for those months. If there is anyone I guiltily miss, or sigh
|
||
about, it is the girls I met in Streetsville - Sanja, Lisa & Genievi<76>ve,
|
||
Dorothy, Rachel. It is hard for me to have any genuine remorse for Carlilly,
|
||
Fiona, or Stacey. Like I said last time - I will apologise to any of them if
|
||
they actually care enough to track me down and ask me. Guess what: My mailbox
|
||
this morning was empty.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 6.2
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Things around here are crazy, and father is going nuts on this multimedia
|
||
business. Now he has people who are thinking of giving him money for this
|
||
wild idea, and he has major sugar plums and apple dumplings dancing in his
|
||
head. You can almost see the glow of glee that surrounds him as he
|
||
continually thinks of the potential millions he is going to make off of
|
||
Woodill Corp. And you think I am going to see any of it? Good luck. The
|
||
only way I will anything is if both Kar and Gar die. I will get a small
|
||
allowance, small enough so that it won't impinge on their right to go to
|
||
France and blow ten thousand dollars. This is how it is now, and how it will
|
||
always be. Even with the rhetoric of "Oh, we have tried to support you, blah
|
||
blah blah" it really comes to peanuts, and money allocated only after the
|
||
wines and dines have been payed for.
|
||
|
||
Karen spends more on underware every year than I spend on tuition.
|
||
|
||
This is typical of everyone in my family. This sense of false generosity, of
|
||
being so giving while meanwhile hoarding thousands of dollars is quite
|
||
disgusting. My grandfather is supposedly this great generous man but
|
||
meanwhile he is like Lloyd's Dad; after saving half his income every year for
|
||
the past forty five years he has massed a small fortune. And do I see any of
|
||
it? Do I see even enough to cover basic expenses? No seree.
|
||
|
||
What I resent is that people around here are so critical of the fact that we
|
||
don't save, that we are not taking care of ourselves, when our income is less
|
||
than one tenth of what there's is. It is difficult to do anything but tread
|
||
water when your income is less than ten thousand dollars.
|
||
|
||
I know this is blithering, and I know you are an even greater martyr than I.
|
||
I would rather have my own place though than have good food, because I am not
|
||
even eating the food here these days anyway. I usually don't spend too much
|
||
time at home anymore, kind of like at Marcia's. I basically just use it as a
|
||
free bed.
|
||
|
||
Speaking of Marcia, she called me yesterday because of some dream she had.
|
||
She dreamt that we were all on the CN Tower (my mother is scared of heights),
|
||
and there were amusement park rides. Jen and I were in these planes that went
|
||
round and round, and up and down, and we were kids. Well I fell out, and she
|
||
said that I had this expression of fatality, as I could not do anything about
|
||
it. I did not tell her but it seemed obvious what this meant to me.
|
||
Especially considering the fact that I was falling out as a kid, not as an
|
||
adult.
|
||
|
||
My mother is getting nuttier as the days go by. She is now officially the
|
||
head preacher for MCC Lake Simcoe, and thinks she is going to make a video
|
||
on the history of MCC (she actually thinks the task is easier than writing a
|
||
paper/book). Somehow I don't think it will turn out to well. But at least
|
||
she is out of my hair, although she got pissed off because we forgot her
|
||
birthday. Her birthday was the last of my priorities, and I have no time for
|
||
relatives.
|
||
|
||
I think more about Carlile than I do about my own mother. Perhaps that is why
|
||
she is so important, as a substitute. I have had substitute mothers since I
|
||
can remember: Carol, Barb, your mom, grandma, etc. I don't really have one
|
||
now (Lil is almost as scary as my mother). I was at Robin's house the other
|
||
day, watching videos, and Robin's mom walks in about midnight. She was
|
||
rip-roaring mad because we were there, and because Micheline was parked in her
|
||
parking space (they live in an apartment on Davisville). It was like when
|
||
Marcia walked in on us at 7:30 in the morning and started screaming because
|
||
the place was a mess. Well this was the same thing, except that there was no
|
||
mess, and we were not even doing anything. She did not scream at us (I would
|
||
have really shut her up if she had), but she did the kind of Big Bobbie type
|
||
thing where she made it plain that we were not welcome, and we knew that Robin
|
||
was going to get it afterwards.
|
||
|
||
I am so sick of people like that: My parents are shitty, but at least they are
|
||
not rude to my guests. They tolerate you, and you don't even give them the
|
||
time of day. They would never abuse either me or Jen's friends. It is a
|
||
shitty thing to do because it is a war with pawns, as the friends can't do
|
||
anything except take off. I don't see what was the big deal either, all we
|
||
were doing was watching television. I think it is the same thing that Marcia
|
||
has: This is my space, and I want absolute control over everything and
|
||
everyone that goes in or out of it. You can tell that Robin is flighty. She
|
||
has the same type of nervousness that Jen has, a kind of obsessive neatness
|
||
and uptightness. With Robin it would be so easy to crack her because she
|
||
desperately wants to escape, where my sister still feels some value in the
|
||
power that she gets from being a 95% kid. Robin doesn't really have that, and
|
||
just wants to relax. All she needs is some ballsy male to take her parents
|
||
on, in the same way that you did with Carlile. All she needs is some
|
||
boyfriend that will bring her out after hours, will keep her from going home.
|
||
|
||
I was reading this book on pornography yesterday and I realized that video
|
||
games are much like pornography in that the only thing that keeps one going is
|
||
the contextual and visual rewards. Because video games are just a bunch of
|
||
controls: A few button movements here, and in the end they are fairly boring.
|
||
This is why people don't play space invaders anymore; not because there is any
|
||
real difference between space invaders and Bart Simpson, but because they
|
||
have become bored with a black and white reward system. In other words, the
|
||
only reason why we keep playing something that we have been winning for years
|
||
is because the rewards become better. And the tolerance level is getting
|
||
higher and higher: We increasingly need more reward to get the same high.
|
||
This is why you see mortal combat II with killings and maimings, while only a
|
||
year ago they were just punching each other out. The same is true with
|
||
pornography: While thirty years ago a boob was good enough to cause craziness,
|
||
now it is something to be seen on ordinary television. And it is going to get
|
||
worse as the mediums come together, as pornography, entertainment, television,
|
||
etc. become one and the same thing. The new pornography CD's are nothing:
|
||
they are merely AVI files on a disk. But when you get real interactivity, you
|
||
will see a transformation of the industry.
|
||
|
||
My sister thinks she is going to go across Canada, and get this, is going to
|
||
talk to people across the country and write about it. I think she is a lot
|
||
like your sister, stupid, yet with that pompous sense of wanderlust. Hell, if
|
||
someone wanted to pay me to travel, I would do it. But I don't like the idea
|
||
of having to be so obsessive about it.
|
||
|
||
I had a dream about Danielle and I having a baby. It was really odd, and we
|
||
called it Kate Elizabeth.
|
||
|
||
I also had this dream the other day that I met Sarah McLachlan and she turned
|
||
out to be a real bitch.
|
||
|
||
I think you should watch out for Michelle. Especially considering when the
|
||
summer comes around, both of you are going to be much more fiesty. This could
|
||
be good; there are lots more things in the summer to do with your girl, ie. go
|
||
to the ex, etc. than in the winter, but there is also more time on your hands,
|
||
and more strain in a way. You should really bring her here to Toronto for a
|
||
couple weeks; we could show her around, take her out, she could come over,
|
||
etc. I think it would be really cool and your mom would adore her. So would
|
||
Moses: She has that immediate sense of comfort that parents really like. I
|
||
think it would be tragic if you spent the summer apart in that you would end
|
||
up falling back, getting bored, angry, etc. It would be like stalling just as
|
||
things got good, and than you would have to pick it back up in September.
|
||
|
||
Have you thought more about moving in with her? I think you should; it would
|
||
force you to grow up and be responsible. In the same way that living on your
|
||
own has made you responsible for yourself, living with her would make you
|
||
responsible for the people around you. And that, friend, is what you need.
|
||
You need someone to force you to not be so insular and pigheaded when it comes
|
||
to other people. I think you would really change and become much more
|
||
comfortable with others as you would not be such an orphan.
|
||
|
||
Plus, it would be a coup in that you would be the first. There is nobody that
|
||
we know of that has done such a thing.
|
||
|
||
I think that I am doing okay, but I am not sure. I went through a bad stretch
|
||
of general depression, and now I seem to be out of it. I have talked to
|
||
Danielle about going to a shrink, and she is thinking of doing so over the
|
||
summer, and I might do the same thing if I feel depressed again. I don't
|
||
know, because it seems to come and go as different stress levels go up and
|
||
down. Right now I just want to get finished, and I have only a week and a
|
||
half of school left. I have a lot to write still, but I seem to have a handle
|
||
on it. All the big things are finished: I have no more italian tests, no more
|
||
speaking gigs, just writing in my corner. And after writing a few papers I
|
||
will be finished.
|
||
|
||
Do you sometimes feel like we are back in the 19th century, writing back to
|
||
each other like school comrades in Europe? I do. People really don't do this
|
||
you know, the idea of two men writing each other for no particular reason is
|
||
completely foreign, even faggy, to the average male.
|
||
|
||
By the way, you got a letter from Julia Pratter. I am including it with this
|
||
letter. Not much has changed it seems.
|
||
|
||
Speaking of which, I was watching Vicki! today and Ms. Pratt from _Sassy was on
|
||
talking about sassy gals and guys, and cool language. She seems to be a total
|
||
bimbo. Candace Cameron (the teeny chick on Full House, Kirks sister) was also
|
||
on as a celebrity teen, and the two of them sounded like a pair of gabby
|
||
girls. I think we are right on about those mags. Ms. Pratt was actually
|
||
defending the sassy guy/gal as a good thing because it was not a beauty
|
||
contest, but based on who was really cool. In other words, it's not okay to be
|
||
just a beautiful bimbo (because you might get fucked), but you have to a
|
||
beautiful puritan who will never get laid because they are too brainy. That
|
||
is what these sassy chicks are, the epitomy of teases.
|
||
|
||
It is absolutely beautiful here.
|
||
|
||
|
||
===========
|
||
SECTION 7.1
|
||
===========
|
||
|
||
Right now I am writing at 1:15 in the morning after getting back from
|
||
Michelle's place for a weekend of ITV watching. Tonight she decided to order
|
||
us a special package deal from Pizza Pizza: She paid. So I ended
|
||
up with a free medium pizza with green pepper, pepperoni, garlic & oregano,
|
||
and extra thick crust, as well as two cans of Coke, and a Sara Lee cheesecake
|
||
thingy. I got all of this for nuthin', just for being me and just for being
|
||
her boyfriend.
|
||
|
||
Life is tolerable sometimes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
"We can't prevent every incident, but the message is out in the community
|
||
that if you want to be violent, we'll hit you hard."
|
||
-- Yves Ducharme, mayor of Hull, Quebec
|
||
|