Sunday, October 17, 2010

What's in a face?

What's in a face? Everyone has one but why do we respond to some and not others? Is a face just a shape? I don't think so. A face is at the center of what we consider to be attractive. It is the heart of attraction. What all effects the faces we like? Gender for sure, men in general like round, women like angles, but not always. The frame of an athletic woman is not so very different than an athletic man. Size plays a role sure. Men like to feel big, women like to feel small. But back to the face. It is not surprising that a face can launch a thousand ships. Humans more often than not make the hasty decision that a face represents the heart inside. Is the face just part of the total package? Lots of big girls have pretty faces and big bodies. The odd thing is that big women, don't like big guys. A fat boy, don't have a chance. Are the faces we are attracted to some assimilation of the people that were kind to us as children. I like my grandmothers nose, my aunt Sara's red hair, and my mother's beautiful brown eyes. Do all of these features fuse together and form the face for which we are looking? Or do we go for the opposite of things that we know. The unknown draws us with its mystery, what fun is knowing something? The fun is in finding out. Or is it something completely unpredictable and who we like is the sum of our experiences: the girl that sat next to us on the bus, the women who showed us interest and kindness as children, the hippy chick neighbor, or the hot nerd girl that you secretly lusted over. Do all of us lean toward a certain "look" or do we just like people who are nice to us. I think the answer is even more complicated than I could ever imagine.

Friday, November 06, 2009

How did I get so lost?


At 43, one would assume to know his/her self pretty well. I am always amazed that upon occasion I discover something new. Somethings are simple like finally aquiring the taste for a hated vegetable or stumbling upon a new hobby. Other things are more complicated and weird like developing a taste for unusual sex or finding out that you don't really like people. I am talking hypothetically of course..wink. Are these things that present themselves as new, ...really new? Or are they just the sum of my experiences catching up with me? 99.9% percent of the time, I know how I will act in most situations. I know what makes me mad. I know what makes me cry. I can recognize situations that will induce certain emotions and choose to avoid or embrace them. More often than not, I am surprised at how little I have really changed in my core. I have always been hyper-sensitive, prone to bouts of depression, and had a penchant for silly humor. I think by the time I turned 15 (or more likely even earlier) my die had been cast and my mold set hard. Is it even possible to change a life set in stone? I guess the whole psycology industry is based on the premise that you can change and I agree...with a caveat. Changing is a lifetime battle. You have to recognize your triggers, avoid and learn to bail out of certain situations and probably most importantly learn to forgive yourself when you fail...and you will fail a lot. I still love, hurt and laugh much the same as I did in High School. I like to think that I have had time to polish off a rough edge or two but I know there are still bristles in the places where I do not want to look. I really could not tell you if I am a better person now or was a better person then. I guess it all depends on what facet of myself we happen to be talking about. Can we ever really grow up and what in the hell does that mean anyway? Is it paying bills, raising babies and TCB baby (taking care of business)? Maybe it is taking responsibility for your own happiness without treading on the happiness of others. All I know is that in a few minutes I will be driving home in the dark with a head full of worries and wondering how I got to this very moment. How did I get so lost?

Saturday, October 24, 2009

A new atheist's lament


I spent an hour this morning walking around the Bethesda Church Cemetery. I wandered around in no particular pattern snapping pics with my iPhone: a little Angel, a Holly branch with red berries, Acorns and Walnuts, some mushrooms, a weathered tree stump...anything that caught my eye. Between my pictures I would glance at the dates on the stones and do some mental math to calculate the life span. Young children, middle-aged men, elderly couples and no one any more dead than the other. After reading some of the epitaphs I could not help but wonder which is better: to go young and innocent or old and full of life? There are some people that are brought into this world that do not have enough time to cause any harm whether intentionally or not. Lets face it, the older you are the more time you've had to F' things up. A bitter lesson of my life is that the nature of life is hurting others and being hurt. It is damn hard to live in this world without your life touching others. It seems sad to say but selfish people are happy people. Put the oxygen mask on yourself before you help others... It makes sense but why do I feel that there is some detail missing that would negate this generality? Lately my life seems bombarded by similar sayings of the kind: it's all good, the heart wants what the heart wants, I don't know what people say but I know what they do, wish in one hand and shit in the other and see which one fills up first...sorry that last one was just for fun. I look around and I see people taking themselves out of the big world and entering the 'me' world. Maybe this is just growing up and I am not ready to do it yet. Maybe I will never be happy until I put my happiness about others. Maybe all we can ever be is alone, no matter how many people you have milling about. A brain trapped in a skull, trapped on a body, trapped on this earth, trapped by time. I sure picked a bad time to not believe in God.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

A short piece from Maia's Well


Little stepping stones of joy

I’m crossing the river and that’s what it is

But I get some choice as to where to put my feet.

There’s a gem of a rock, the taste of sweet cereal carried by a lover’s hand.

The next stone rings, and I step and answer and I hear the voice of a friend who is on his way.

This next one is big enough to sit on and rest a moment, and the little dog upon it puts her face next to mine because she knows I can’t reach for her right now.

And the noseeums dance and laugh and the river flows and

Really

There is nothing wrong here.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

A Flower for my Hoe


Morning glories... they use to invade my fathers garden and wrap tiny finger-like vines around the squash and corn stalks. Many of these grabby little lifeforms fell victim to my hoe on hazy hot Saturday mornings when the rest of my friends were basking in the AC, eating cornflakes and watching the Super Friends. It is funny how only recently I noticed that morning glories are... flowers. Last Saturday I even felt compelled to take a few pictures of some vines clinging to a chain link fence that surrounded a vacant lot. The flowers were the color of Nerd's candy: glowing purple and pink and seeming to pop out against the dull green backdrop of barren, dusty honeysuckle. I am not sure what made me walk over and take notice of them. I think it may have been because somehow I knew that this little patch of morning glories was blooming for the last time. The thought of the summer ending made me feel both sad and relieved. All of my friends know me as an Autumn person, however if you were to ask me today I could not give you an answer. I am afraid to let go of the heat and the sunshine this year. Time seems to be flying and who knows where I will be the next time I blink. Morning glories do not care about such things. They are just as beautiful on the last day of summer as the first. I know they will be climbing up that fence again next year unless some kid like me whacks them with a hoe. I hope he doesn't.

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

A Breach of Trust

In relationships there seems to come a pivotal moment. More than likely it is un-noticeable. It is as slight as a mosquito landing on your wrist or an autumn leaf getting tangled in your hair. It is the moment that everything changes. I can't help but wonder if change befalls us whether we are ready or not or somehow we bring it about with a troubled heart. Let's take friends. We all start off as friends and if we are lucky ( or not ) we blossom into something more. At this stage, we trust or associate with no ill intent the words, facial gestures, and intentions of our potential partner. We are in fact EVEN at this point. In short it can be said that I have determined that you wish me no ill and you do not perceive that I wish anything evil on you. So, even the most questionable response, the oddest twink of the eye, even the out of place comment are taken...innocently. This is crucial to our foundation...our friendship...this most important assumption. After the years pile up on your relationship and hardships wax and wane, this fundamental base "that I wish you no harm" can become blurred. It is like a little worm ate it's way into our hearts. Once the foundation is compromised, it is doubtful that the best construction work will repair the damage of the infestation. I don't like to think that this corruption is inevidible. I like to think that the most compatible of us are immune to this disease...however I really don't fucking know. You hear things like, "don't go to bed mad" and it seems like such a simple thing to maintain a trust. However, it is as fragile as a pink antique ballerina rose. Relationships are friendships but at their heart they are more than that... they are friendships that aspired to "go to the moon"... they are friendships turned up to "11", they are friendships on acid at a Grateful Dead Concert...At least that is the way I see it.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Wildflower Blues

I once pulled up a dying man’s flowers and lied about it. I was living in Tigard, Oregon (which is not too far from Beaverton and the Nike’s headquarters), and working for a landscape maintenance company. Actually, it was a company that took care of the grounds of low-income properties. There was really not much landscaping to it. Pretty much you just cut miles of grass and walked around with a backpack blower all day long. Oh yes, and there was lots of raking and filling trash cans with the result. Funny, I can’t even remember the name of that fucking place, which is poetic in it’s own way. Anyway, the day I pulled up the flowers was my last day at the job and three days away from my flight out of the great, rainy, shitty North West. My work crew had been assigned to cleanup the construction debris at a new apartment complex. The grass was knee high and the land swampy in places as well as there being lots of dirt every fucking where. I was the leader of my crew… after all I was highly qualified: I could speak English and had a valid drivers license. I also had managed to get certified in tree identification and I prided myself in being learn-ed of plant knowledge in general. Notice the word pride in the last sentence…we all know what comes next. Well, my band of vagabond bushwhackers and I were sentenced to walk the grounds and whack the tall weeds that infested the place. My crew followed me obediently and sentenced to death any and all living things to which I pointed my boney Grim Reaper like finger. All was going along swimmingly until I came to a small front porch stoop and a patch of what I assumed looked like weeds. Notice the word assumed in the last sentence. Now really, there is no such thing as a weed. A weed is in the eye of the beholder. I reached down and gave one a tug but it held more firmly than its predecessors that day. I searched my plant lexicon for the appropriate name and species but came up empty. I had to make a decision…to deal death and destruction to this little patch of greenery or pass it by on my way out of Oregon. I made the call…not my best. My crew descended upon those wildflowers like Spartans against Persians. In no time flat, what must have taken months to grow was withering in a cheap plastic garbage can. Luckily for the other innocent flowers in the neighborhood, the owner of the newly renovated dirt patch called my boss and dispatched what we used to call the straw boss to the property. I lied, my men lied and we hid the corpses of not yet bloomed flowers on a truck loaded with dirt and trash. I can still remember that poor mans face when he looked me in the face and asked me, “Why did you do it”. As if that was not bad enough, I found out later that the man was ill and planted that flowerbed as part of his healing process. If my life is every reviewed upon its completion, I will have to look away when the record of that day is read back to me. The truth is that I know why I did it. I had been trained to bust ass and leave the thinking up to my boss. To me the repercussions of not pulling those weeds was more severe than pulling them. Me working man…you give me task…me finish…real simple…no too much talky-talky. I was 23 years old. Three days after I killed a dying mans flowers I was on a plane back Georgia and hoping that three thousand miles was far enough to put my shame behind me. Evidentially, not.