April 30, 2014


I listened to Solomon Burke and Sam Cooke today. Night Beat is a brilliant soul album. My bicycle got a flat tire and I met a nice guy named Tim who moved here to Salinas from Boston, because his wife is from here. I went to Norma's diner to get a good meal, talk soccer with my new friends, and admire the attractive waitresses. I walked to John Steinbeck's grave through a gazing hot sun. I drove to the beach and brought along a copy of Cannery Row to mull over. This city encased in wavy green hills will be in my rearview mirror tomorrow, but it will remain closer than it appears.

"In a restless world like this is,
love is sort of ended before it's begun.
And too many moonlight kisses
seem to cool in the warmth of the sun.

When I give my heart it will be completely,
or I'll never give my heart."

April 29, 2014


"We find that after many years of struggle, we do not take a trip; a trip takes us."

two stories (close enough to nine)

To anyone who thinks my semi-obsession with soccer is silly, pointless like any man's sports addiction (not that anyone has probably ever given it a moment's thought), I say to you: heed this anecdote.

I'm in northern California in a city called Salinas, at a motel called the Economy Inn. Down the road a few blocks is a diner called Norma's. I chained my bike up under the green awning and sat myself inside at the bar. This city is predominantly Spanish-speaking people. I walked in looking about as white or more that a 27 year old male can look. Plaid shirt, khaki shorts, white shoes. Glasses. My dumb face... I ordered some food and then asked the rather handsome waiter if he would mind turning on the soccer match for me. He obliged. Then he smiled with perfect teeth and said, "You surprised me. I didn't know you liked soccer." He had seen me the night before, in the same diner, looking nerdy and white at that time too. His smile was sweet and genuine. He then went on to tell me how much he loved the sport, and how he had attended the World Cup in Germany in 2006. He shared his memories of the matches he watched. He told me how he used to play but hadn't for a while now. Then we talked about John Steinbeck, and why I was visiting Salinas. A stranger with whom I would seemingly have nothing in common received a momentary joyful surprise today. I felt good when he said that, because it meant that I had contributed something to Tuesday, April 29th, 2014. That is part of the reason I love the sport. It is a connection, and those are in frighteningly short supply in this day and age.

---

Moving on, but staying put... Currently, I am in a city called Salinas. The name is jarring for all sorts of reasons, but that's not the point of this story. Fourteen years ago when I was thirteen I made my mother take me to the public library in Lincoln, Nebraska, my hometown. At a certain point just before my teenage years began I decided that I wanted to be a reader. I was a shy and nervous child, and I was searching for a label. "Reader" seemed to be the one for me. It is not a habit I acquired from anyone in my life. At that point, I had never met anyone who had read anything other than the Bible, pretty much. Except my grandmother, who spends her time with Harlequin romance novels. So there I am in the dingy downtown public library of Lincoln, Nebraska and I ask my mother if she knows of any good books to recommend. Now, the thing that binds my family together is our sense of humor. We all have very similar senses of humor, and when we are together the most that we do is laugh. I have almost never heard a valuable book, music or movie suggestion from anyone in my family, because I do not have tastes remotely near to them. If my mom were to suggest a book, it would be some religious fiction novel about the rapture. My sister may be the only person in the world who has received a Master's degree without ever finishing an entire book, and my brother wrote at least 3 consecutive book reports in 3 consecutive grades on the exact same book (which he never actually read).
But there I am, 13 years old on a mission, asking my mother if she knew of any good books. She gave me two suggestions. The first was a book called Flowers For Algernon, which I still have not read, though I should. And the second suggestion was Of Mice And Men by John Steinbeck. She said she read it in school and though she didn't really remember it she remembered it was good.
God knows why it rang in my head. This is literally the only book suggestion I have ever taken from my mother.
So I checked out Of Mice And Men. I took it home that spring weekend day, and I read it through in its entirety while sitting in our floral armchair. It remains to this day the only book I couldn't physically "put down". Except maybe Down And Out In Paris And London by George Orwell but that's only because I wasn't able to sleep while staying overnight in Charles De Gaulle airport in Paris, France.
Anyway, Of Mice And Men basically shattered my brain. Its complex understanding of human nature made me feel like I'd bumped into a soul mate on the street. The ending tore me. Not only did he make me feel for people, but he made me feel for people who didn't even exist. He made me feel for what people are like. I didn't have many friends, and no one close, but Steinbeck became my best friend for years to come. I've read all of his books and so many have reached deep into my heart. A consummate American and writer whom my feeble words cannot give proper credit to.
So I'm in Salinas, California. The city where Steinbeck was born and the land where many of his books are set. The city bears the name of another person who changed me for the better, in most ways. A person, at least, who taught me many things and opened parts of myself that I didn't know I had. A person who made me feel stronger and more truly connected to everyone and everything.
Today and yesterday I rode my bicycle through the city of this man, adding an apostrophe in my head to everything that said "Salinas". I'll never be the writer that he was, or that any of my heros were. I want to be a man, bold and confident that can lay the world's truth down in words on paper and help others. But more than that, I want to have a best friend and lover by my side so I can live out all the goodness and the fulfillment that my favorite writers speak of. I'm like a romantic Sisyphus, cursed to only write of love for all eternity without ever experiencing it. To that I say: you can have your words, man! Give me love or give me death.

Words aren't enough to keep me here, but I thank god I had Steinbeck and a few others to help me see and experience people, because people aren't that easy to experience.

This is the longest blog post I've ever made, and for that I apologize.

The other day I thanked my mother for suggesting Of Mice And Men to me that day. She has no idea she saved my life, in a certain way, dear woman.

April 28, 2014

So the tornado that hit the South basically destroyed my brother's town, save for my brother's street. A block away from him his friend/co-worker was killed and his wife is in a coma. Their two kids whom they were protecting are unscathed (physically, that is). Apparently my brother is pretty shaken up... which is saying a lot, because he is not emotional. My mother said, "Thank God!" that his family was spared, and I wasn't really sure how to respond to that. It's a lot more complex than "Thank God" but at the same time, it's an expression and what human capable of feeling wouldn't feel grateful that their loved one is the one that escaped a tragedy.

---

In other more encouraging news, a church is North Carolina is suing the state for breach of religious freedom because currently in North Carolina it is illegal for same-sex couples to get married. The church is saying that this ban on gay marriage infringes on its religious rights to legally wed same-sex couples. It's not every day you see a positive story about a church in the news, and it's a pretty ingenious way to battle discrimination.

---

Today was filled with green, lush rolling hills, Queen, Van Morrison, the incomparable Hank Williams, Bruce Springsteen and many others. Anyway, no more stories for today. Here's a picture I took on a much-needed bike ride that made me smile.

"Your smile girl, brings the mornin' light to my eyes,
lifts away the blues when I rise.
I hope that you're coming to stay.

I'm waitin', waitin' on a sunny day.
Gonna chase the clouds away...
waitin' on a sunny day."

April 27, 2014

The tornado that hit Arkansas went through the tiny town where my brother and his family lives. My brother and his family are all right, but there are many casualties within the area, which is sad. Had I decided to go to New Orleans, I would've been visiting them along the way.

A couple weeks ago my mother visited them, and she sent me a video of my 5-year-old nephew scoring a goal in a soccer game.
The day was full of rain, Damien Rice, Marvin Gaye (one of my all time favorite albums: Here, My Dear) and Townes Van Zandt. I visited the architectural curiosity that is the central public library of Seattle, Washington. And to my friend that lives in Seattle I made the following (awesome) joke: "This place is crazy. Who designed the floor plan, M.C. Escher?!"

That's right. I referenced 20th century abstract Dutch artist M.C. Escher. You know that Jay-Z song where he says, "Who you know flow as vicious as me?" Well, who you know reference M.C. Escher as vicious as me?

I was all set to read some of Irish poet W.B. Yeats' work in the complex library but I couldn't find the poetry section. So in his honor I'll quote him today in the caption instead of any of those freeloading musicians.

"For everything that's lovely is
but a brief, dreamy, kind delight.
O never give the heart outright...
He that made this knows all the cost,
for he gave all his heart and lost."

April 26, 2014


Today belonged to Norah Jones. I realized just how ugly my voice is while singing over her beautiful one. Not that I hadn't realized it before, but anyway.

"All your love is a lost balloon,
rising up through the afternoon,
till it could fit on the head of a pin."


The soundtrack to yesterday was mainly Paul Simon.


"Losing love is like a window in your heart;
everybody sees you're blown apart.
Everybody feels the wind blow."

April 25, 2014

Only just now read that Tito Vilanova died. He was a long-term member and a one-time head manager of my favorite football club, FC Barcelona. He'd been battling cancer for some 2 1/2 years or so. He was promoted to head manager of the club in 2012, and despite having missed half the season due to cancer treatment, led the team to a league title and a record amount of points.

This blog's flag is at half-mast.

Great Moments In 21st Century Television

The internet connection at the Royal 7 Budget Inn in Bozeman, Montana is surprisingly less than stellar. I was planning to post a few photos from my road trip but that will have to wait. So here's a funny/brilliant clip instead:

"Loch Ness Monster" – Stewart Lee

April 23, 2014

Great Moments In 20th Century Music

"You can play the game and you can act out the part,
though you know it wasn't written for you.
Tell me, how can you stand there with your broken heart
ashamed of playing the fool?"

- james taylor
I want a Harvey Milk stamp.

the chicken salad

The genesis of my departure seems almost ancient, but the revelation of its necessity came on Easter Sunday, April 20th, 2014. The celebration of Christ's resurrection, the anniversary of Hitler's birthday and the tragedy at Columbine... the international day of pot-smoking. I suppose if ever a day required marijuana it would be Hitler's birthday. I sat stoically uncomfortable in the pew of a Catholic church, watching my dearest friend embrace a ritual he has long despised, for the sake of love. My friend was baptised into the Catholic faith in order to appease his Catholic ex-wife, whom he intends to remarry.

I sat next to his young son Rocco and fondly recognized that anxious solemnity that well-behaved kids exhibit in church. Rocco said to me, "We have the longest mass." I replied, "It's a massive mass?" and he smiled. That kid is as sharp as they come. His mom told me per his latest standardized tests and parent/teacher conferences he's on track to be taking college courses at U of I in high school. It was funny how unsurprising that news was, as I could've predicted that when I met him at the age of two.

So I was sitting next to my friend's misty-eyed mother when the only person who ever meant everything to me was emailing me. And I wouldn't know until the following day. But reading her words the day after they were sent and after I had departed Iowa City for what will most likely be a long time proved to be very overwhelming. I have to admit, it seemed rather passive-aggressive that someone who promised to call me 4 years ago and didn't would say, basically 30 minutes after I arrived in the city, "if you come back through Iowa City again let me know--we can get together somewhere." I was there, near her. We were probably minutes apart as she typed that and I'm pretty sure she knew that. I highly doubt she'd "get together" with me. I just wish I knew why she feels the need to lie to me. If I come back through Iowa City? If she'd "get together" with me, I'd drive the length of the globe to get to Iowa City tomorrow.

Hollow words... Is there anything more painful to hear?

I'm sick of being a goddamned loser.

Today I wandered through my sister's empty house and thought about all the missions that I have failed. I thought about how deeply I wanted to talk with my ex-friend, to hear her voice and explore her mind. But tomorrow I leave, the same fractured man that arrived and left no mark. My alcohol-drenched, psoriasis-ridden body carrying nothing but a disheveled heart and frayed wires into a meaningless sunset.
I cried today, but it wasn't when I said goodbye to my mother, or to my sister, or to the pets or to the home or the city or the landscape that I've poured over this past year. I cried because of this:

I said to my sister, "I don't know if you noticed, but I was wasted yesterday. I got an email from [her] and I didn't know how to deal with it. So, sorry if you noticed."

"Actually I didn't notice," she replied.

"At least the chicken salad was good," I said. My sister had used some leftover chicken to make chicken salad. I cried because I ate some chicken salad and it tasted pretty good, and as I was eating it I realized that a good chicken salad sandwich might be as good as life gets.

The chicken salad sandwich seemed to be better and more valuable than anything I'd contributed to the world, and it was truer and more reliable than any person I'd ever met. For a man to live with such low expectations was very sad to me.

April 21, 2014

Jesus Christ.

There go my goddamn New Orleans JazzFest plans.

She has everything of me, and that too apparently.

April 17, 2014

R.I.P.

Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez passed away today. He composed some truly phenomenal prose. I hope he was happy with his life. He is owed a great deal of thanks.

"Madly in love after so many years of sterile complicity, they enjoyed the miracle of loving each other as much at the table as in bed, and they grew to be so happy that even when they were two worn-out people they kept on blooming like little children and playing together like dogs."

It's a great dream, to thrive and bloom eternally (life-long, anyway) with the one that you love, from the breakfast table in the morning to the bed chamber at night. Marquez was a great dreamer.

April 16, 2014

Barcelona's loss today was so depressing, not even watching a foreign film could make me feel better. They played horribly.

The team effectively lost all 3 titles in 3 successive games at the tail end of the season. It was crunch time and they buckled.

Messi's eyes were so restrainedly misty... mi pobre amigo!

---

"So In Love" by Curtis Mayfield is a spectacular song. I was listening to it today and thinking, "The feeling of this song is exactly the feeling I want people to get from having known me. It'd be great for my funeral, or even just my exit." Then in my head the film rolled of me leaving my current office, saying goodbye to my friends, with this song playing in the background as I drove away from the place one final time.

April 15, 2014

"Why'd you fill my sorrow
with the words you borrowed
from the only place that you've known?

And why'd you sing 'Hallelujah'
if it means nothing to ya?
Why'd you sing with me at all?"

- damien rice

April 10, 2014

Took the first real bike ride of the year today.

The spring afternoon was beautifully chorused by a smooth summery soundtrack of the great Smokey Robinson. It's nice when you're on a ride and the music is right.

Iowa's lovely lingering sunsets will be missed. I wish I could get on the road and have no destination. But the sounds of the earth, of everyone and everything, beat like a blistering drum in my ears the banal missions of existence. The futile struggle to matter that we all must pursue.

... Well I'm in a pleasant mood.

The truth is, bike rides are fine and music is lovely, sunsets are gorgeous but all suns must set, and when you're left with the colorless night there are those that can paint on its blank canvas with the ones that they love, and those that seem to have run out of paint.

I'm not particularly thrilled with anything that I've just written, but for a few minutes I had the words to be my company, which is nice and familiar.

Songs are better than my thoughts, and Smokey had some magical moments of clarity.

"Just a minute ago your love was here,
then all of the sudden it seemed to disappear.
Sweetness was only heartache's camouflage,
the love I saw in you was just a mirage."

April 9, 2014

Almost emailed her... just wish I had someone I could sit with and listen to them summarize their day. A companion's voice in the quiet of night rings like music in the placid air.

It sings a song I haven't heard in ages, but whose mystical lyrics I have all but forgotten.

A forty degree day

Today can't be said to have been particularly good.

Work was an absolute bore. Apart from an awesome joke I made encapsulating sex, tattoos and the 13th century master of Italian poetry Dante Alighieri that went largely unnoticed, I didn't have many inspired thoughts at all.

Sometimes it's exhausting being personable. But it's also exhausting being lonely.

I used to just be embarrassed about my mind but over the last two years I've grown wildly embarrassed about my physical appearance as well. It's not helping matters much.

These three songs really got to me on the way home from work today:

"That's The Way I Want To Live My Life" – Percy Sledge

"Lovin' You Down" – Bobby Brown

"He'll Have To Go" – Solomon Burke

The Solomon Burke song, in particular, caught me off guard. That song, coupled with Barcelona's disappointing defeat to a more than worthy adversary, made this a very lonely day indeed.

A forty degree day, for sure. Watch one of the best shows ever written, The Wire, if it matters what that means.

April 1, 2014

a thought i have had

A few weeks ago one of the supervisors in my department asked me about the suicide clause that is a part of most life insurance policies. A typical life insurance policy excludes payout if the insured commits suicide within the first 2 years of the policy. I explained that a suicide clause is designed to prevent people who are already planning to commit suicide from being able to purchase a policy and provide a death benefit for their beneficiaries in the process. This was all new information to my supervisor, who has never worked in insurance before. She was a bit shocked at the idea, a tad naively surprised that such a clause would be necessary in an insurance contract.

She said to me, "I would never have thought of that. I guess suicidal people think differently from you and me."

When she said that, I stopped in my tracks ever so slightly. The only response I could muster was an awkward smile and I kept on walking.

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