experimentally pressed “press this”
I’m doing this one without a clock, because, really, who gives a rat’s ass?
I can see by this freckle on the back of my hand that my time is about up.
I really do have to make that overdue appointment with the dermatologist.
I was thinking this as I made my way back to the sleeping hatch before. “This is like a submarine,” I said to myself, with the stirrings of some other possibly clever lines following suit in that funny way they have, tumbling like monkeys. I was not in the mood to so much as jot down any clever lines, so tired I was, “shoot,” I told myself, and my monkey mind, “I’ll jot that semi-clever jive down tomorrow.” Then I turned to the compromised Lazy Boy, a sly smile creeping, “maybe….” I said, then went down the narrow hallway starboard toward the sleeping area.
Except, once I got starboard, goddamn, there was very little air in the hatch. Fresh air, that is. I’ll be lightheaded e’er long, I thought to myself absently, glad I wasn’t actually there, my heavy head pressing heavily against the many pillows on the pallet. There was also a hiss, suggesting either that we were taking on water (very unlikely, I reasoned) or that steam heat was sissing up through the tenement pipes (odder still, it seemed to me).
OK, how is like a submarine? Well, it’s fairly long, front to back, and it’s become narrow, with my dusty possessions piled aft and the length of it made narrow by things also on the other side. The fore deck and the poop deck, well, let’s not even talk about such disgusting things at this hour, I can easily move from the front of the U-boat to the back, and dive and surface, blindly but with little trouble. It’s mainly the narrowness of it and the damnable lack of a periscope– or gyroscope, for that matter, that make it so submarinelike.
“You do realize how that sounds,” says the sour-mouthed bowsin, indignant that I don’t even bother to google the proper spelling of boatswain.
“Like the periscope in this Class D- frigate following sub, you, sir, do not even exist. Forget about spelling your imaginary title correctly. ‘Woof, woof,’ as a matter of fact.”
“Sure,” says the boatswain, more sourly still, “why don’t we just boat forget the whole thing.”
Got to keep climbing, despite the negative chant, the chorus of voices who always say you can’t (tip of the mitre to that rapper who wrote Potential back around 1991) I’d be Dr. Seuss, if I had the juice. Less than six minutes remain to this scattered refrain, so let me, as they say, make the most of those now 300 seconds.
It focuses the brain, they say, being on the scaffold like this, though it distracts the brain too, the thought that it will all be over in, now, less than 260 seconds.
Thomas Jefferson, my main tragically hypocritical man, stole lines written by a man on the scaffold when he famously wrote that a favored few were not born booted and spurred to ride the rest of us. He was famously wrong, of course, as he was born booted and sharp spurred, ask his terrified, bloody horse.
“This is how you want to go out?” asks, you, say.
“Absolutely not. I want to go out with words of inspiration and gratitude for the many gifts of this wonderful life. Sure you have a right to be sad, even bitter, but why waste time when you have less than 110 seconds before the end? When you see that tsunami coming to wipe out the earth, right after you gasp ‘oh, shit!” it will not be anger, sadness or bitterness in your mouth. Terror and wonder, terror and wonder, my friend.”
“I don’t know how to do this,” observed my father moments before he breathed his last.
“Nobody does,” I reassured him. Then he did it like a champ.
we were able to produce this, during session 9 of the animation workshop
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=fo9gJvz1Km0
Hang on, let me get the timer.
Don’t know what this is, exactly, jotting notes here on a WordPress blahg. Our oldest human need– to make ourselves known to others? The exercise of writing is a good thing, and as James Lipton said in a recent interview– it is his happiest way to spend a day. Outside of, he smiled to the camera, spending time with his lovely wife, of course.
I had no idea what a remarkable and brilliant man, and superb interviewer, James Lipton is, until recently watching his interviews of Dave Chappelle and Mickey Rourke. But the clock is ticking and so, rather than trawl for the links, as I should, I commend them to you, and commend them again, recommending them, as it were.
“Hah! wordplay with only three minutes counting down?” you will ask, drawing a sword.
“Whoa, why the sword, cousin?” I will ax in alarum, because a second ago it was wordplay and now, suddenly deploying this “s”— yow!
“‘Yow! you racsal?!!– Draw I say!” you will say, waving deadly steel.
I do love to draw, but I’m afraid, with less than two minutes left there won’t be time for that now. Put by that sword, friend.
“‘Friend? Knave, draw I say!”
Eyeing the clock nervously, I’m not trying to stall, mind you, but the whole point of this exercise is to keep tapping, like Bojangles, like, I don’t know what. Why the clock?
Might as well ask God that question. “Why the clock, God?” And none of us know, except in this moment when I can see less than 30 seconds left, now 20, when the buzzer will ring and we will be gone, the only trace of us the mess we leave behind.
Sign in, please.
click the picture to see animation by kids 7-10 years old
I am working on a new site to help solicit funds for wehearyou.net a NYC 501(c)(3) nonprofit animation workshop run by elementary schools kids, please take a look:

in one of Sekhnet’s large, open traveling bags. A great relief.
I sometimes wonder about it, where the exact line is. It’s hard to say sometimes. A person can be fully justified, and still insane. Oversensitive, obsessive- compulsive, “crazed”, psychotic — where the precise line is? Fuzzy.
You can leaf through the DSM and find every one of your friends, relatives, colleagues. We’re each the product of long-programmed reactions, prejudices, actual knowledge, fears, suspicions, notions of success and failure, collected tics.
The actual line is not so bright, that’s all I’m saying.
koan
The Noble Toble was given the tit,
Griff fought the breast;
it was not offered to the baby.
The dream dreamed that it was not a dream, unperformed task piled upon undone task til they are all-surrounding, heavy as a bag of wet quilts. In the old days we wrote these on ribbons many miles long, in long hand, while trains rattled and tramp steamers tramped, people embarked, grim yet hopeful.
Our mothers were alive back then, given the gifts of long lives, gifts they many times fretted over and complained about. But when the lights went down, and the orchestra throbbed to life as the stage lights came on, their hearts always soared, giddily gulping air as the vault of the sky opened.
“I can’t hear a melody without someone singing it,” my mother, a lifelong lover of the Opera, confessed one day when I’d been unable to completely hide my dismay that she hadn’t recognized Stardust when I played it on the guitar. I learned to conceal my dismay out of love, and trying to protect her in some small way. But sometimes dismay can’t be hidden completely.
“Until I hear the singer start to sing, I really can’t tell what the song is from just an instrumental melody,” she explained.
I was shocked to learn this (though relieved it was no reflection on my guitar playing), because she sang tunefully. I’d learned the melody of Mairsy Doats from her renditions in the car, probably Swingin’ on a Star too. She would join in to sing “I’m An Old Cowhand” til the end of her life, whenever I struck it up on the ukulele. We sang it for her at her memorial at my father’s grave on that hot summer day in 2011.
My father, also a fair singer, also with poor control of his emotions sometimes, and a tendency to snap, would eventually snap at her from the drivers’ seat with a carping comment and she’d clam up. My sister and I would continue our battles in the back seat and there’d be a heavy, brutal silence in the car, or the radio would blare news.
Funny, to think how well they both sang, that they always both claimed to have no musical ability. My father was always self-mocking, self-excoriating, really, when it came to his voice, but had impeccable taste in music and an ear for truly great tunes. He loved Sam Cooke and Bill Kenney and other soulful singers, and he’d deliver his four or five note riff of each selected killer melody with style, off the beat and perfectly in tune. He loved the crooners, the hip ones. I wasn’t surprised to find out after he died that he’d loved Bobby Darin’s singing too.
“I’ll never hear Joe sing again,” my mother cried one night over the phone, when the final chemo was done and it was only a matter of time now before a twenty-three year run of relative good luck with the cancer finally came to a bad end. Joe came by after I told him that, and we looked through some songbooks. Picked out any we thought my mother would particularly like, or that otherwise struck us as beautiful.
September Song, Stardust, Are You Lonesome Tonight? We played through them and a dozen more, Joe reading from the computer monitor as I followed on guitar, reading chord charts penciled into small books. Put some reverb on us, panned us slightly to get a nice stereo separation, it sounded pretty good. Then I added a second guitar and, on a few, a little keyboard pad. Joe was backed by a spare trio, or sometimes a guitar duo.
I brought the CD to Florida, played it over crappy little computer speakers for my mother who was sitting on the couch, off to the side. She sat through it quietly, smiled a few times, but without great excitement, then smiled again when I asked what she thought. She said “eh….” and apologized for the disappointment I was feeling, thanked me for the attempt, told me she really appreciated it and how sweet it was of us to try, and all that.
It don’t remember if it occurred to me to tell her right then to listen to it through her iPod headphones, I’m sure I probably did have her listen to it at least once that way before I left Florida. I left the tunes on her iPod when I went back to New York. I spoke to her thirty or more times in the next month with no further mention of the songs.
“Oh, the most amazing thing happened to me before, this afternoon,” she began enthusing in that Bronx way of her’s, many weeks later, “I just heard the most beautiful music on my iPod, I don’t even know how it happened, how it got there. I was lying on my bed, I put the iPod on and suddenly there was Joe singing!” and she began to kvell, as they say.
Joe has a great voice and my mother always loved when he’d sing opera to her. She probably hadn’t heard him singing popular music before and she went on about how beautiful his voice was.
“What did you think of his backing band?” I asked her, when she was done. She was perfectly happy with them, who were they?
“Me,” I said, casually, told her I was so glad she enjoyed it, reminded her of her first reaction, told her about stereo and the fine sound quality of a properly mixed digital recording through headphones, and we went on to speak of everything else.
One of the great memories of my musical life.