21 hours ago
Thursday, December 31, 2009
mister new year
Monday, December 28, 2009
coffee klatch
Saturday, December 26, 2009
the loot
so in that spirit i want to share a few little items that have recently found their way into my possession. my father and mother in-law moved out of town this week and dad found some things he thought i might like to have. it's a veritable a/v treasure trove.
an old revere eight projector with a canister of films including mickey mouse and woody woodpecker cartoons along with some historical family vacation footage. a couple of slide projectors including a really ancient one pictured here that handles a two slide insert. a vintage 70's polaroid camera with an unopened box of 108 film (which is probably dust now) and a few boxes of records including a great box of rock and roll 45's.
needless to say i have many hours ahead trying to figure out all of this old technology and having fun along the way. and in coming weeks i'll be sharing some of what i find with you. so a very merry Christmas. i hope everyone else got what they wanted too.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
twas the night...

Tuesday, December 22, 2009
journey
last night it had rained a little. as i stepped out there was a great haze in the air. the streets were still wet and everything had a surreal glow like it was lit for a movie. things were quieting down. few cars passed me. as a pedestrian i move slower and i can really take in all that is around me. the Christmas lights, the sounds from the wetlands. the smell of wood burning in a fireplace. the cold. sometimes i sing or try and write a little verse in my head. it's a great transition from home to work, and i am enjoying these little journeys. when the engine is warm, it only takes about five minutes to cover this distance. but on foot this stretches out to twenty or twenty-five. i can also stop along the way sometimes and try to capture a little of what i see.
i used to regularly drive over an hour to get to work and wondered how i could shorten the time. now it seems i need to stretch it out a little.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Friday, December 18, 2009
bill ding!
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
santa's village
Monday, December 14, 2009
you meet the nicest superheroes...


i kept reading hoping the teen titans would end up running into a bunch of nasty bikers on big harleys and get into some kind of fracas. they did meet a gang of high school dropouts, who rode little bikes too. it made me realize what a different time it was. back then you could walk into a dealership and find choices from 50cc on up in 10cc increments. nowadays you can hardly find a street ride smaller than 250. which is why i was so excited when i saw the return of the supercub recently. well ok, it's not a true honda, but it is produced by sym, the company that has produced the cub all over the world for the past 20 years or more. who knows, maybe we'll see a whole new generation of post-emo kids riding through city streets on these and actually smiling.
Friday, December 11, 2009
jingle bells, batman smells...
when i was small i used to play under our christmas tree. i’d roll my die-cast batmobile around the living room as i recreated those scenes in the t.v. show where after receiving an urgent call from commisioner gordon’s office at police headquarters, batman and robin left the undisclosed location of the batcave tearing through the outskirts of gotham city.
underneath the christmas tree was a small wooden church with that sprayed on glittering plaster that you can still find on old apartment ceilings with a lightbulb inside. but for me it served as gotham city police headquarters as the batmobile would again and again roll up and parallel park in front.
sometimes batman and robin would both get out, and go inside, sometimes robin would wait in the car. once i think they may have even towed the batboat as if making one last stop by the office before leaving town for the weekend.
the small plastic batman and robin always remained fixed in their seated position so that even when they got out of the car to fight the obligatory bad guy from my james bond car, who by the way had no legs but did have a gun, they were forced to fight in a crouching position.
once i thought my mom had sucked batman up into the vacuum cleaner and though i tearfully pleaded with her to look inside, emptying the vacuum bag on the kitchen floor and newspaper revealed nothing. a couple weeks later i was outside with my cousin and a large flock of birds flew over our heads. she told me whenever you saw a lot of birds together it was good luck and that if you made a wish it would come true. i wished that i could find my batman and then ran inside the house and into my room. i opened my sock drawer and there he was.
underneath the christmas tree was a small wooden church with that sprayed on glittering plaster that you can still find on old apartment ceilings with a lightbulb inside. but for me it served as gotham city police headquarters as the batmobile would again and again roll up and parallel park in front.
sometimes batman and robin would both get out, and go inside, sometimes robin would wait in the car. once i think they may have even towed the batboat as if making one last stop by the office before leaving town for the weekend.
the small plastic batman and robin always remained fixed in their seated position so that even when they got out of the car to fight the obligatory bad guy from my james bond car, who by the way had no legs but did have a gun, they were forced to fight in a crouching position.
once i thought my mom had sucked batman up into the vacuum cleaner and though i tearfully pleaded with her to look inside, emptying the vacuum bag on the kitchen floor and newspaper revealed nothing. a couple weeks later i was outside with my cousin and a large flock of birds flew over our heads. she told me whenever you saw a lot of birds together it was good luck and that if you made a wish it would come true. i wished that i could find my batman and then ran inside the house and into my room. i opened my sock drawer and there he was.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
ice
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
favorite things 05

alright, i am admittedly a big swiss army knife guy. always have been. there's something so cool about an army who historically have seen little action that go marching around with a multi-tool in their kit that has a corkscrew on it. "hey nico, good marching today!" "yes levin, now let's crack open that magnum of cabernet!" "i don't feel like fighting anymore..."
but as great as the sak's are, there's one thing they don't have that i always seem to need in a jam. those grabby things that snap together. i guess that's part of why tim leatherman originally wanted to create one in the first place.
multi-tools aren't the first best option for every job. theyr'e like hybrids, in the sense they do many things, but not necessarily all of them well. and yet i always seem to be reaching for this thing. maybe partly because it's easier to access in my bag than going out to the garage every time i need a tool. and it actually saved me big a couple years back. if you want to read more check out my little contribution to leatherman's tool tales here. (it's in january 2009)
but as great as the sak's are, there's one thing they don't have that i always seem to need in a jam. those grabby things that snap together. i guess that's part of why tim leatherman originally wanted to create one in the first place.
multi-tools aren't the first best option for every job. theyr'e like hybrids, in the sense they do many things, but not necessarily all of them well. and yet i always seem to be reaching for this thing. maybe partly because it's easier to access in my bag than going out to the garage every time i need a tool. and it actually saved me big a couple years back. if you want to read more check out my little contribution to leatherman's tool tales here. (it's in january 2009)
Sunday, December 06, 2009
the healer

it seems like pain is a theme in the lives of some of the people i love this week. i wrote a short piece about healing a few years back during a difficult period. i think now is the right time to share it.
pain is not pleasant. we twist and run to escape it. but pain has its purpose. pain alerts me to the hurt I must address. pain requires some kind of response. i can choose to ignore it, or i can medicate it and somehow try and bury it. but it will not go away until i decide to seek healing. and healing may not be my immediate desire. the pain has become a familiar-something i have grown to live with and accept. it may be crippling, heavy and burdensome but it is my burden. and perhaps the ownership is something i don’t wish to give up.
but if and when i do, it will require submission. i must lay still and let the healer attend me. often anesthesia is unavailable on the battlefield. i might prefer to be asleep, but the healer tells me i must be awake. i am a part of this process. he forces me to confront the wound. i do not want to see it. it is ugly and it has disfigured me. i don’t like seeing what is inside of me opened up this way. i feel helpless-broken.
the healer’s hands are gentle yet firm and confident. and he attends to the work directly. i want to stop it. i want to get up and feel the pain no more, but the healer directs me softly to lay still. he tells me there will be some more pain as he tends to this wound but that it is necessary for the healing to have a lasting effect. he says that the wound has been treated many times before by someone who is unskilled and that it has become infected. only his treatment will cleanse and restore it.
his hand touches the wound. i scream and cry. he finishes his work and then holds me, my sobbing muffled against his strong shoulder. he waits for me to finish crying and then whispers in my ear. “it is done. you do not have to bear it any longer.”
the weight is gone. my burden has been lifted. i am free. how could i ever have lived like that? that was not life. the healer tells me however that i may experience the pain again. if i am not careful i may re-open the old wound or experience a new one. he says that he is the only one who can properly heal, and if i continue to try and take care of these wounds by myself they will never fully heal.
he gives me cool water and i drink. the water is refreshing and tastes good. i am restored. i want to stay here with the healer and be safe from futher harm. but he tells me it is time for me to go. there are others out there on the battlefield who require his attention. and as i am able, i must do what i can to help bring them to the healer.
Saturday, December 05, 2009
bus selecta

Thursday, December 03, 2009
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
deck the halls...

so as we are now officially in the Christmas season, i wanted to share a little Christmas package. i don't know about you, but i can't get enough new Christmas music. even though from here until new year we'll all be hard pressed to get away from it, i'm ok with that. it's like a compressed time that when properly kept under wraps can be enjoyed without overdose. so this first pick is from a children's album called "the night before Christmas" it's an old peter pan 45 in our collection. definitely check out the track called "the Christmas tree that ran away". it fits well into the rudolph misfit toy category.
Monday, November 30, 2009
ssr
ssr means sustained silent reading. but you already know that because it’s what you’re doing right now. it’s what we do for 30 minutes before p.e. starts every day. mr. thomas tells us “find a spot, and no talking!” and we all spread out. i climb to the top of the bleachers which are retracted and sit under the drone of the fluorescent lights and breathe quietly to myself. mr. thomas is one of the better ones. he doesn’t say what we have to read like some of the teachers do. today he’s scanning a copy of sports illustrated. most of the other guys have mags too. car mags, rock mags and no doubt one or two have a copy of penthouse or playboy concealed beneath one of their “cover” mags. i’m reading a copy of mad today. if i stretch it, i might be able to make it last all week. i’ll literally read it from cover to cover including all the copyright b.s. and the address and everybody's name. i especially like the little cartoons they put in the margins. a lot of people don’t even notice them. right now i’m reading one of those bits where they take a song and write new words to it. i don’t always know the songs, but i know this one. it’s the Christmas song “we three kings” it’s got a cartoon of these guys drinking in a car. the lyrics go “we three clods from omaha are spending Christmas eve in a car. driving, drinking, glasses clinking, who needs a lousy bar?” i’m trying not to laugh because that would disrupt he first “s” in the ssr. but it’s great. i can hear the voices of these guys singing in my head. “ohh...drink to charlie drink to paul drink to friends we can't recall. swerving, speeding signs unheeding drink to anything at all” ok, that last line didn’t quite work, but it’s still funny. i’m smiling now as i look around like i’ve got this little secret. way better than the playboy and penthouse guys. second verse - - - “we three clods are feeling no pain. drunk as skunks with booze on the brain. senses losing 'til we're cruising into a wrong way lane” hahaha. that’s funny. “ohh...drink to melvin, drink to fred. drink to those two trucks ahead. headlights flashing screeching, crashing drink till they pronounce us dead” again that last line. maybe if he said “drink til they say we’re dead” it doesn’t matter though because i’m busting a gut now. hahaha! at which point mr. thomas looks up from his s.i. and yells “brown!” which means i’ll be running an extra lap today. totally worth it...
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Friday, November 27, 2009
window shopping
as the traditional first day of christmas holiday shopping begins today, i wanted to share a little of the wonder i remember as i passed the windows into my own desires. happy hunting!
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
almost missed it...

the dawns light is coming on now. he pushes his old ford escort a little harder down the boulevard as it gasps for air. the streets are empty except for the all-nighters, stumbling up and down sidewalks. he holds on to the wheel loosely as the cold numbs his fingers. "gotta fix the damn heater soon" he thinks. "maybe next paycheck" the ford crawls into a driveway and the fan belt lets out a yell as he lurches up the drive. he pulls into a stall and it shudders again as he kills the ignition. he gets out and closes the door which rattles the window as he lets it slam. he pulls the coat up around his neck and walks up to the front of the cafe. as he opens the front door he can feel the swirl of cold air rushing past him seeking to mingle with the warm inside. he lets the door swing and shuffles up to the counter. the fresh coffee fills his cold nostrils and he hears the sizzle of sausage from the grill. the walls are decorated with paper pumpkins and turkeys and cornucopia displays of paper corn and vegetables. all around him are great swaths of brown and orange. he sits down and folds his hands on the counter. the waitress is young and pretty in a plain way. she looks tired, but it is a tired that makes her more attractive. the name on her badge reads "judy". she smiles as she turns over the cup in front of him and pours the coffee. "usual?" "uh, yeah...no. i mean, isn't it thanksgiving today?" "hmm? oh, yeah. i guess it is. i work the overnights so much i forget sometimes when one day ends and the other begins. you want somethin' different?" "i, uh...well, if there's..." "we're not servin' the special till later. but i think the chef's got some sliced turkey in the frig. i could heat up some if you like. maybe find some sides to go with it. would you like that?" "yeah, that'd be real nice." she turns to go, putting the pencil back behind her ear and he turns to look around. gus is over in the corner booth working out the shakes over warm coffee till the bar across the street opens. doris and ben have a big stuffed dog on the table and she's talking to it. and on the waiting bench karl has a newspaper laid over his face as he saws logs. yeah, they're all here alright. judy returns with a steaming plate and lays it down in front of him. "turkey, potatoes, stuffing, green beans and cranberry sauce. and i heated up the gravy too. it's all there. you want anything else?" "thanks judy. uh, i, know you went to a little bit of trouble for me and i really appreciate it. i was just wondering..." "yeah?" "would you mind making up extra plates for all my friends here?" judy gazes out into the restaurant. "them?" "yeah, i'd be real grateful." her face tightens up a bit like she's getting ready for a fight. and then it softens as she looks back at him. "what the hell." she says. "four more specials." "thanks judy. happy thanksgiving." "happy thanksgiving."
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
fire hydrant 003
Saturday, November 21, 2009
quilttown


Thursday, November 19, 2009
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
shaking
my thoughts are shaking
faster than my hands
too slow to catch
all that flashes by
themselves disappearing
still
i haven't
made
into nothing
carrying infinite possibilities
of decision
and outcomethere is nowhere to run
no time to siti try to capture
a glimpseof what
i see
the world is spinning too fasti haven't
a connectiion
i cancount on
for therest of my
lifehow do you do it?
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
the new lo-fi

All around us technology is moving at a breakneck pace. The new is old before it’s out of the box and we all go around the product cycle chasing after the tip of the razor on the cutting edge. There’s even a sliding rule of tech-ability and elitism measuring both an individual’s success and cool by their up to the minute possession of the latest and greatest gadgets. If you have the last version of the newest device, you’re a target for scorn in tech circles.
And yet in the midst of all this endless chasing after the wind, there has emerged a new “lo-fi” sensibility. No, I’m not talking about the old “lo-fi” followers like myself, clinging to a vanishing analog, kicking and screaming as we are dragged on to the digital matrix. The old lo-fi followers are integrating into the new, and with that comes a world that in many ways looks similar to the old.
Here are some examples. When television was in its infancy, both the devices and the programming looked pretty primitive compared to today’s standards. The screens were small, the content fuzzy and some folks were just puzzled as to why anyone would want to sit in front of a little box and stare at the grey pictures when they could go to the movie theater and see a full color show that was larger than life.
Now compare that to the way people today stare at comparably small screens on their computer laptops and desktops watching hour after hour of sub-par video as some folks wonder “why would you want do that when for a few thousand dollars you can get yourself a big screen with HD and surround sound?”
In the 1950’s transistor radios began showing up allowing users to share hand held music wherever the signal reached them. Although a marvel, the tradeoff was a relatively smaller output in sound and the loss of tonal qualities that were more and more available in the new “stereophonic” recordings.
Now consider the cellular phone as a replacement. You can download songs right to your phone and hold the music in your hand in the same way teenagers of the fifties and sixties did sharing the latest tunes blasting crudely from an even smaller and sometimes less sophisticated speaker than the transistor radio.
And then there’s home movies. When 8mm movie cameras first showed up, they gave people the ability to capture their memories on the spot with real movement and then later, (gasp) color! Forget the fact that there was no sound and the images were often washed out or grainy. You had your own movie camera and sharing the family vacation would never be a static event again.
And today many digital still camera and cell phones also display a primitive if not reminiscent look to those old home movies. Sure, for not much money you can get yourself a pretty good little digital video set up, but I’m talking now about the devices that were intended for quick clips, many without sound. Some of the first digital cameras had a video quality that has become today’s old home movies.
So there you have it. What’s new is old. And the old is suddenly new again. And the lo becomes hi, and the so called hi looks lo again. Oh well, I guess the most important thing isn’t the devices we use, but how we use them. What we capture and record. We may look back and laugh at the way media is transferred, but in the end it’s all about the story we’re telling about ourselves.
And yet in the midst of all this endless chasing after the wind, there has emerged a new “lo-fi” sensibility. No, I’m not talking about the old “lo-fi” followers like myself, clinging to a vanishing analog, kicking and screaming as we are dragged on to the digital matrix. The old lo-fi followers are integrating into the new, and with that comes a world that in many ways looks similar to the old.
Here are some examples. When television was in its infancy, both the devices and the programming looked pretty primitive compared to today’s standards. The screens were small, the content fuzzy and some folks were just puzzled as to why anyone would want to sit in front of a little box and stare at the grey pictures when they could go to the movie theater and see a full color show that was larger than life.
Now compare that to the way people today stare at comparably small screens on their computer laptops and desktops watching hour after hour of sub-par video as some folks wonder “why would you want do that when for a few thousand dollars you can get yourself a big screen with HD and surround sound?”
In the 1950’s transistor radios began showing up allowing users to share hand held music wherever the signal reached them. Although a marvel, the tradeoff was a relatively smaller output in sound and the loss of tonal qualities that were more and more available in the new “stereophonic” recordings.
Now consider the cellular phone as a replacement. You can download songs right to your phone and hold the music in your hand in the same way teenagers of the fifties and sixties did sharing the latest tunes blasting crudely from an even smaller and sometimes less sophisticated speaker than the transistor radio.
And then there’s home movies. When 8mm movie cameras first showed up, they gave people the ability to capture their memories on the spot with real movement and then later, (gasp) color! Forget the fact that there was no sound and the images were often washed out or grainy. You had your own movie camera and sharing the family vacation would never be a static event again.
And today many digital still camera and cell phones also display a primitive if not reminiscent look to those old home movies. Sure, for not much money you can get yourself a pretty good little digital video set up, but I’m talking now about the devices that were intended for quick clips, many without sound. Some of the first digital cameras had a video quality that has become today’s old home movies.
So there you have it. What’s new is old. And the old is suddenly new again. And the lo becomes hi, and the so called hi looks lo again. Oh well, I guess the most important thing isn’t the devices we use, but how we use them. What we capture and record. We may look back and laugh at the way media is transferred, but in the end it’s all about the story we’re telling about ourselves.
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