Saturday, August 2, 2008
ChryslerThought formulated in Igor’s thoughts at 17:21.
Tags: maine, me, ME, USA, america, boot, car, chrysler, holiday, holiday 2007, indian summer, maine, new england, portland, portland, portland, rust
It's a bright, crisp day on the autumn cusp of summer, and I’m in Portland, Maine; wandering, solitary, drinking in the surroundings and stealing snaps away with me.
As I straighten from my crouch, a young woman approaches me, an equally young man in tow. The boy, uncertain, sports a shock of orange hair; the girl wields a Sony DSLR and a resolute expression. We stand face to face, exchanging an expectant stare as though each would read the other’s intention through the eye – and, almost defiantly, she raises the camera and steals in turn a snap from me.
She lowers her device, holds my gaze for a moment, and walks calmly away. The boy follows. Not a word is spoken.
I stand for a moment, let it pass without question, and feel free.
As I straighten from my crouch, a young woman approaches me, an equally young man in tow. The boy, uncertain, sports a shock of orange hair; the girl wields a Sony DSLR and a resolute expression. We stand face to face, exchanging an expectant stare as though each would read the other’s intention through the eye – and, almost defiantly, she raises the camera and steals in turn a snap from me.
She lowers her device, holds my gaze for a moment, and walks calmly away. The boy follows. Not a word is spoken.
I stand for a moment, let it pass without question, and feel free.
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Some stuff makes me do this face.Outrage noticed and scheduled for inclusion in Igor’s rants at 16:12. 2 comments.
Tags: face, me, scowl, stuff that annoys me
Just now, I worked out that I could retrieve the photos from my ’phone using Bluetooth (oooh, check me - I’d thought my ’phone was too crap, but in fact it’s just about capable), which made me look at some pictures of things that had been lurking on it, practically forgotten, for up to a year. That reminded me of things from ages ago in general, which in turn reminded me of a list I made ages ago in response to a question I was asked about which sorts of things annoy the hell out of me. Not “annoy” in a big, important, politics-y kind of way, but in a niggling, irritating, gets-right-on-my-tits kind of way. This is that list. Well, the following bit is. The bit after this full stop. No, this one.
1. My frequent inability to find things which I only put down about 2 minutes ago.
2. Inanimate objects not doing what they’re told to do or staying where they’re told to stay, like: “I told you to stay balanced on the edge of the sink, plate! What the hell do you think you’re doing jumping on the floor and spraying gravy everywhere? You’re just an inanimate object! Do what you’re told!”
3. Related to item 2, but additionally: every (I repeat, every) time I put a bowl or pasta dish or whatever in the sink to wash it with the tap on, the spoon jumps as though with voluntary power instinct to the centre of the bowl, the stream of water from the tap gets deflected off the concave surface of the spoon and it sprays, fountain-like, all over me. I really hate that.
4. Damn wires everywhere.
6. Technology that looks really good and should do something I really want, but just doesn’t work or (even worse) works for just long enough for me to have a Damascene moment regarding its potential applications, and then breaks irretrievably.
6. Screaming kids on public transport and in supermarkets, particularly when I’m hungry or tired.
7. Actually, when I’m hungry or tired just about anything pisses me off.
8. Oh yeah, mosquitoes. Mosquitoes make me angry. "That’s my blood, you little bastard, not yours! Die! Horribly!"
9. Not being able to kill mosquitoes ’cos the little fuckers have learnt to teleport to the other side of the room right at the last femtosecond (I LOVE THAT WORD) and then just sit there, smirking at you.
10. Obsessive food snobs who turn their nose up even at better-quality premade foods, like, I don’t know, Covent Garden soups. Look, we all know that it’s not as good as a proper home- or restaurant-made soup. We all know that it hasn’t got the same quality ingredients. Etc., etc., ad nauseam. For a carton of gunk which costs about 2 quid and which you can heat up in a few minutes, it’s really not bad. Stop being a nob.
11. Anyone who actually values anything they got from The Alchemist, The Celestine Prophecy, etc, etc. Stop being a tit.
That's the end of the list. Well, that's as far as I got when I wrote it, anyway.
1. My frequent inability to find things which I only put down about 2 minutes ago.
2. Inanimate objects not doing what they’re told to do or staying where they’re told to stay, like: “I told you to stay balanced on the edge of the sink, plate! What the hell do you think you’re doing jumping on the floor and spraying gravy everywhere? You’re just an inanimate object! Do what you’re told!”
3. Related to item 2, but additionally: every (I repeat, every) time I put a bowl or pasta dish or whatever in the sink to wash it with the tap on, the spoon jumps as though with voluntary power instinct to the centre of the bowl, the stream of water from the tap gets deflected off the concave surface of the spoon and it sprays, fountain-like, all over me. I really hate that.
4. Damn wires everywhere.
6. Technology that looks really good and should do something I really want, but just doesn’t work or (even worse) works for just long enough for me to have a Damascene moment regarding its potential applications, and then breaks irretrievably.
6. Screaming kids on public transport and in supermarkets, particularly when I’m hungry or tired.
7. Actually, when I’m hungry or tired just about anything pisses me off.
8. Oh yeah, mosquitoes. Mosquitoes make me angry. "That’s my blood, you little bastard, not yours! Die! Horribly!"
9. Not being able to kill mosquitoes ’cos the little fuckers have learnt to teleport to the other side of the room right at the last femtosecond (I LOVE THAT WORD) and then just sit there, smirking at you.
10. Obsessive food snobs who turn their nose up even at better-quality premade foods, like, I don’t know, Covent Garden soups. Look, we all know that it’s not as good as a proper home- or restaurant-made soup. We all know that it hasn’t got the same quality ingredients. Etc., etc., ad nauseam. For a carton of gunk which costs about 2 quid and which you can heat up in a few minutes, it’s really not bad. Stop being a nob.
11. Anyone who actually values anything they got from The Alchemist, The Celestine Prophecy, etc, etc. Stop being a tit.
That's the end of the list. Well, that's as far as I got when I wrote it, anyway.
Sunday, March 20, 2005
OK, I give in.Thought formulated in Igor’s thoughts at 23:04.
Tags: me, spock
I'm starting one of these darned "weblog" things, right now. Everyone's doing it, you know.
I dislike immensely the term "weblog", and "blog" is evidently many times worse. However what's happening is that I'm falling prey to what seems an inevitable sequence of events; one ages a little, and one starts to realise that it would be helpful to keep the occasional record of things that happen, and one's reactions to them. The encyclopædic memory of youth - horrific a thought though this may be - begins (albeit almost imperceptibly at first) to fade, leaving one prey to the ghastly realisation that one's recollections of a given incident, its time or place, or the list of participants in its occurrence may be faulty, and that one's connection with it is no longer mediated simply by the mire of perception but also by that of time and distance along that axis.
Thus: this.
I'm aware that a personal diary published on the public Internet is a grotesque conceit. I shall attempt to diminish the scale of that conceit firstly by claiming - in part truthfully - that it's for my benefit rather than for the myriad web-surfers whose attention one presumes the standard "blogger" aims to attract. After all, if I refrain from embarking on a submission spree or lobbying for links to my lines, surely few will stumble across them? (This attempt will, of course, be negated should I resolve to recant this intention and make moves towards publicity, rendering my first defence worthless and therefore myself more conceited, by at least half.)
My second conceit-diminishment mechanism will be a simple one of recognition; "I know it's conceited, but I'll do it anyway". Through that act of recognition I implicitly accept all the criticisms which could be levelled against me, and thus attempt, with a pretension to an authorial intention loftier than I could ever justly claim, to engage in the activity itself without indulging in the attendant vanity. "I'm just doing it for its own sake", I shall say. "I'm not aching for approbation, neither am I following fame. My wish is merely to write".
This will convince few, I'll warrant. Nevertheless it's true that I take pleasure in creative activity, the production and the polish of artifacts (though in my case they are more often digitised and thus abstract or "artificial"); as engagement in writing has for me been for some years largely constrained to technical matters, documentation, proposals and the like, I certainly relish the thought of pandering to my verbose inclinations.
I'll make some passing semblance of an effort to forebear from indulging in the excessive navel-gazing which appears to be the wont of most "bloggers", but I can't guarantee that my indulgence shall not stretch to ranting, bemoaning or bewailing. Neither, of course, can I guarantee that I shan't be so susceptible to such moments of seniority as gestured towards above that I shall ever remember to add any more thoughts to this initial one. What I shall guarantee, however, is that those words which I do commit to electrical pulses will be only those which please me; they will by virtue of their existence be only those which address subjects which have moved me to express my thoughts in this somewhat nebulous and obscure manner; and, to conclude, will almost certainly be expressed in my preferred convoluted and verbose idiom. Like it, or lump it.
I dislike immensely the term "weblog", and "blog" is evidently many times worse. However what's happening is that I'm falling prey to what seems an inevitable sequence of events; one ages a little, and one starts to realise that it would be helpful to keep the occasional record of things that happen, and one's reactions to them. The encyclopædic memory of youth - horrific a thought though this may be - begins (albeit almost imperceptibly at first) to fade, leaving one prey to the ghastly realisation that one's recollections of a given incident, its time or place, or the list of participants in its occurrence may be faulty, and that one's connection with it is no longer mediated simply by the mire of perception but also by that of time and distance along that axis.
Thus: this.
I'm aware that a personal diary published on the public Internet is a grotesque conceit. I shall attempt to diminish the scale of that conceit firstly by claiming - in part truthfully - that it's for my benefit rather than for the myriad web-surfers whose attention one presumes the standard "blogger" aims to attract. After all, if I refrain from embarking on a submission spree or lobbying for links to my lines, surely few will stumble across them? (This attempt will, of course, be negated should I resolve to recant this intention and make moves towards publicity, rendering my first defence worthless and therefore myself more conceited, by at least half.)
My second conceit-diminishment mechanism will be a simple one of recognition; "I know it's conceited, but I'll do it anyway". Through that act of recognition I implicitly accept all the criticisms which could be levelled against me, and thus attempt, with a pretension to an authorial intention loftier than I could ever justly claim, to engage in the activity itself without indulging in the attendant vanity. "I'm just doing it for its own sake", I shall say. "I'm not aching for approbation, neither am I following fame. My wish is merely to write".
This will convince few, I'll warrant. Nevertheless it's true that I take pleasure in creative activity, the production and the polish of artifacts (though in my case they are more often digitised and thus abstract or "artificial"); as engagement in writing has for me been for some years largely constrained to technical matters, documentation, proposals and the like, I certainly relish the thought of pandering to my verbose inclinations.
I'll make some passing semblance of an effort to forebear from indulging in the excessive navel-gazing which appears to be the wont of most "bloggers", but I can't guarantee that my indulgence shall not stretch to ranting, bemoaning or bewailing. Neither, of course, can I guarantee that I shan't be so susceptible to such moments of seniority as gestured towards above that I shall ever remember to add any more thoughts to this initial one. What I shall guarantee, however, is that those words which I do commit to electrical pulses will be only those which please me; they will by virtue of their existence be only those which address subjects which have moved me to express my thoughts in this somewhat nebulous and obscure manner; and, to conclude, will almost certainly be expressed in my preferred convoluted and verbose idiom. Like it, or lump it.
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