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Monday, April 30, 2007

The Canyon Chronicles – Prologue

DATE: April 3
SUBJECT: The canyon lands
TO: the fogies4
FROM: Phil
Guys,

I’m happy to report that I will be able to make the canyon lands trip.
I will arrive in Grand Junction, if the flight is on time, at 2:32 on the
20th.
Phil

DATE: April 15
SUBJECT: The canyon lands
TO: the fogies4
FROM: Phil
Guys,
I cannot make this trip after all. I’ve developed what appears to be a radiculopathy, i.e, a pinched nerve in my back.

Won’t know about the future till I get more information, hopefully next week, but I’m definitely out of action for this trip.

Hope you guys have a great time. I would really liked to have been along.

Phil

DATE: April 15:

DATE: April 16
SUBJECT: Now it’s a 3-man trip
TO: the fogies4
FROM: ed

Guys,

Well, I guess we should take Chuck’s 1-man tent and someone’s 2-man tent. I’ll leave it to you guys to sort out the common gear. What I have is too common to be common.

Ed

DATE: April 17
SUBJECT: Dropping like flies
TO: the fogies4
FROM: ed

Guys,

I may have a urinary tract infection. I’ll have to wait to see what the doctors say about me going on the trip.

Ed

DATE: April 18
SUBJECT: Dropping like flies
TO: the fogies4
FROM: ed
Guys,

It looks like I can go to Escalante after all!
I’m on an antibiotic (Cipro), and I’m supposed to drink lots of water, so I’m bringing 4 1-liter water bottles.

Now we’re on track for leaving on the 20th.

Ed

DATE: April 18
SUBJECT: Dropping like flies
TO: the fogies4
FROM: reed
Ed- you are a good man. I thought it would be okay to take the antibiotics with you on the trail. Chuck and I will make sure you take it religiously twice a day. It goes down well with the scotch. See you on Friday.

Reed

DATE: April 18
SUBJECT: Dropping like flies
TO: the fogies4
FROM: chuck

Whew! Back on track.

Chuck

DATE: April 20

–rakkity

posted by michael at 7:42 pm  

Monday, April 30, 2007

Another Adult House

painting.jpg

Steven’s house.

posted by michael at 7:09 pm  

Sunday, April 29, 2007

A Little Update

Hey, Hilary from Ohio,

As you know, after you all deserted us for your richer much sexier lives as college students, we parents coalesced into a grieving support group to reminisce about our lost youth, and attempt to overcome our despair with shared food and strong spirits. Last Saturday’s tear-dabbing meeting was at Jen’s house, and here are a few photos.

Both your mom and dad cornered and then blanketed me with stories about you. They told me how much you like your new life, the problems created by overactive roommates, and your abandoning of your chant and clap classes for, of all things, science courses. What up wit dat? Your Little Richard imitation in the protest video demonstrated how perfectly suited you are for C&C Classes (formerly called Humming & Holding Hands). They also told me of your initial intent to double major in Environmental Science and Psychology, or was it Environmental Psychology and Daily Drama?

But you weren’t the only topics. We also talked religion, politics and about roadkill.

Here’s Adam:

“At Jen’s recent turn at our chronic, traveling party, held at her new house, we were discussing someone hitting a deer in the area (deer and driver both survived), and I owned up to braking hard for birds in the road and swerving to avoid frogs. I’m a vegetarian pacifist who at home takes bugs back outside (though I’ll cop to some admittedly harsh tendencies towards homo sapiens, anyway), and I once wrote a short poem about roadkill. These pathetic, squashed remains used to traumatize me, though one can be desensitized to most anything (just ask Dubya), and as I passed yet another mangled rodent one day, rather than wallow in piteous revulsion as was once my wont, I had an intellectual satori and phrased a ditty about why it happens, and how not caring portends the death of more than just hapless rodents, marsupials and ungulates.

Dead squirrel. Roadkill. Legs up.
Condemned by the chains of evolution.
Adaptive response, random flight,
defense against the near-ballistic
stoop of raptors.
But not against SUV’s.
Mindless iron momentum does not waver
for a rodent’s hesitant panic.
Nor return to countenance its demise.
Both can learn from this.
Must. ”

Might be the wrong time to say this, but we left Jen’s late and stuffed.

We’re all doing pretty well, here, in Acton. We’re excited that Matthew is coming home for the summer (though we rented his room out to a Chechen separatist taking classes at Lesley College, and will have to house him in the damp basement), and we’re hoping Diane’s back is strong enough to permit her to join me when we haul him and all his goods out of Philly May 8th. When are you coming home?

Besides work work, we’ve been tackling house projects. I’m installing new windows, painting the bedrooms, tiling the kitchen floor, tilling the garden, cleaning out the barn, and I’ve hired the same colorful crew who roofed Adam’s house (those guys’ gauges would’ve made Robby whimper) to do ours, and maybe a local company to pave our driveway. That’s the big ticket item we may not be able to afford, especially since we’re paying Goose and Matt to paint our house. I know, you can’t imagine Matt engaged in that kind of slave labor, but remember he and Goose and Robby did a terrific job on the Grojean’s garage roof three summers ago.

I also had the nettlesome hedges that border our driveway and the street trimmed. In the old days, when they were shorter, that was an easy homeowner job. But now that they provide cover for our peeling house cutting them back requires using a ladder like a Pogo Stick. Climb up, snip, climb down, move the ladder, climb up, snip, climb down, and so it goes. It’s about a day’s job and Goose did them last, two summers ago. I should have hired him again, but I couldn’t wait, and when I found a flyer in my mail box for this landscaping service that advertised everything from sprinkler systems to creating genetically altered rodent resistant broccoli strains, I decided to hire the Vietnamese owner. I figured a crew of guys sliding along zip wires with buzz saws finishing my hedges in the time it takes me to take a bath. That’s why I felt justified in haggling for a cheaper price.

But Tranh showed up two weeks late with a pair of hedge clippers, an electric trimmer that wouldn’t start, and a yellow step ladder. At mid-day, using my Craftsman trimmer, but mostly his hand held clippers, he was nowhere near done. Sympathetic me, I almost stopped my kitchen tiling to help him work. Instead I opted to give him lunch from Idylwidle. That got him through the afternoon, at which point with all his tools scattered on the ground, and all the trimmings piled on our driveway, he hightailed it home promising to return the next day.

Contrary to Diane’s convictions, he did come back, but not the next day. He arrived in the rain and borrowed a pair of my gloves to cleanup the driveway. Yesterday he came back again, this time with his wife and son, but only to retrieve his tools and assure me he’d return another time.

Yesterday, we dropped into Cambridge to see Mike Daisey’s “Invincible Summer” at the American Repertory Theater . Maybe you read about the high school students who walked out on his performance last Saturday. Though attendance was sparse, his performance was quite moving. The saddest thing to me is thinking of those kids who couldn’t tolerate a few four letter words. I wonder how they feel about the School of the Americas.

Write again,

Michael

posted by michael at 6:00 am  

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Harvard Test

So in one of my classes, we were passed out an article that discussed this test.

Give it a shot and see how you like the answer.

www.implicit.harvard.edu

I scored with seventeen percent of America and have little to no automatic preference between black and white people.

Matt

posted by michael at 6:36 pm  

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Ginger's Home

china_cabinet.jpg

I like this theme: friends’ houses. Here’s an inside look at Ginger’s. By the way, the grown-up version of the cat-holding little girl in the photograph is in Theatermania’s production of Jean Genet’s “The Maids.”

posted by michael at 7:13 pm  

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Ginger’s Home

china_cabinet.jpg

I like this theme: friends’ houses. Here’s an inside look at Ginger’s. By the way, the grown-up version of the cat-holding little girl in the photograph is in Theatermania’s production of Jean Genet’s “The Maids.”

posted by michael at 7:13 pm  

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Kurt Vonnegut

Click

posted by michael at 11:58 am  

Monday, April 23, 2007

Lake Sylvia

lake_sylvia.jpg

Where FierceBaby lives.

posted by michael at 9:26 pm  

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Hey You!

I’ve been really bad about reading the blog lately, but I figured I’d send along a little something for you and whoever else you want to share it with. My teacher for “Bang on drums and talk about feelings” class (also known as my class on Latino Cultural Activism which is getting to be pretty fabulous) e-mailed this to us along with our other readings for the week.

Also, I just saw some kid riding his bike outside holding another bike on his shoulder. That’s kind of normal here.

It’s around a million degrees outside. I’m in the Science Library since it’s TOO DAMN HOT out to get any work done. But I’ll go outside really soon to toss a frisbee around, I’d bet. You can’t just sit around inside when it’s so beauitufl outside since it’s normally, ya know, snowing.

Much love you! I miss you tons! I’d love a little update!

Hilary

(PS: I didn’t change any of the punctuation/line endings/etc)

Poem about My Rights

by June Jordan

Even tonight and I need to take a walk and clear
my head about this poem about why I can’t
go out without changing my clothes my shoes
my body posture my gender identity my age
my status as a woman alone in the evening/
alone on the streets/alone not being the point/
the point being that I can’t do what I want
to do with my own body because I am the wrong
sex the wrong age the wrong skin and
suppose it was not here in the city but down on the beach/
or far into the woods and I wanted to go
there by myself thinking about God/or thinking
about children or thinking about the world/all of it
disclosed by the stars and the silence:
I could not go and I could not think and I could not
stay there
alone
as I need to be
alone because I can’t do what I want to do with my own
body and
who in the hell set things up
like this
and in France they say if the guy penetrates
but does not ejaculate then he did not rape me
and if after stabbing him if after screams if
after begging the bastard and if even after smashing
a hammer to his head if even after that if he
and his buddies fuck me after that
then I consented and there was
no rape because finally you understand finally
they fucked me over because I was wrong I was
wrong again to be me being me where I was/wrong
to be who I am
which is exactly like South Africa
penetrating into Namibia penetrating into
Angola and does that mean I mean how do you know if
Pretoria ejaculates what will the evidence look like the
proof of the monster jackboot ejaculation on Blackland
and if
after Namibia and if after Angola and if after Zimbabwe
and if after all of my kinsmen and women resist even to
self-immolation of the villages and if after that
we lose nevertheless what will the big boys say will they
claim my consent:
Do You Follow Me: We are the wrong people of
the wrong skin on the wrong continent and what
in the hell is everybody being reasonable about
and according to the Times this week
back in 1966 the C.I.A. decided that they had this problem
and the problem was a man named Nkrumah so they
killed him and before that it was Patrice Lumumba
and before that it was my father on the campus
of my Ivy League school and my father afraid
to walk into the cafeteria because he said he
was wrong the wrong age the wrong skin the wrong
gender identity and he was paying my tuition and
before that
it was my father saying I was wrong saying that
I should have been a boy because he wanted one/a
boy and that I should have been lighter skinned and
that I should have had straighter hair and that
I should not be so boy crazy but instead I should
just be one/a boy and before that
it was my mother pleading plastic surgery for
my nose and braces for my teeth and telling me
to let the books loose to let them loose in other
words
I am very familiar with the problems of the C.I.A.
and the problems of South Africa and the problems
of Exxon Corporation and the problems of white
America in general and the problems of the teachers
and the preachers and the F.B.I. and the social
workers and my particular Mom and Dad/I am very
familiar with the problems because the problems
turn out to be
me
I am the history of rape
I am the history of the rejection of who I am
I am the history of the terrorized incarceration of
myself
I am the history of battery assault and limitless
armies against whatever I want to do with my mind
and my body and my soul and
whether it’s about walking out at night
or whether it’s about the love that I feel or
whether it’s about the sanctity of my vagina or
the sanctity of my national boundaries
or the sanctity of my leaders or the sanctity
of each and every desire
that I know from my personal and idiosyncratic
and indisputably single and singular heart
I have been raped
be-
cause I have been wrong the wrong sex the wrong age
the wrong skin the wrong nose the wrong hair the
wrong need the wrong dream the wrong geographic
the wrong sartorial I
I have been the meaning of rape
I have been the problem everyone seeks to
eliminate by forced
penetration with or without the evidence of slime and/
but let this be unmistakable this poem
is not consent I do not consent
to my mother to my father to the teachers to
the F.B.I. to South Africa to Bedford-Stuy
to Park Avenue to American Airlines to the hardon
idlers on the corners to the sneaky creeps in
cars
I am not wrong: Wrong is not my name
My name is my own my own my own
and I can’t tell you who the hell set things up like this
but I can tell you that from now on my resistance
my simple and daily and nightly self-determination
may very well cost you your life

posted by michael at 7:20 pm  

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Bloom County

We’re going to the Cape the weekend starting May 4th, and we’re going to miss Acton Clean-up Day, our annual Boston Psychotherapy, MFA symposium where Diane picks up a few CEU’s, a Jamie Eldridge fundraising event, and, maybe most importantly, Berkeley Breathed at Willow Books (Friday, May 4 at 7 PM)

posted by michael at 6:47 pm  

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Soak Up The Sun

The youtube police may have my head, but I’m off to the beach

posted by michael at 8:57 am  

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Boulder Bronzes

Michael,

Boulder is an amazing town to bike through or walk through. There are spectacular bronze/steel/brass statues, busts, and plaques all over town. There may be more per sq km here than even D.C. I’m not sure. Attached is a jalbum of 13 that I’ve collected in the last couple of days. The Mrs sez there are at least a dozen more that I’ve missed, and I will try to collect them in the coming days. Alas, my pictures don’t do justice to the real thing. The lighting wasn’t right, the backgrounds interfere, my camera and brain aren’t up to the job….So consider this a work in progress.

rakkity

PS: Next on my list of partially finished projects is “Boulder’s Bumper Stickers,” and then comes “Boulder’s Curious Business Names.” Stay tuned.

posted by michael at 7:20 am  
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