Monday, December 24, 2007

It's a good tree...

It just needs a little bit of love. 

This post is mainly to get my last, far more depressing post off the top of my blog. But also...

Due to the oft-ranted about FauxNews "War On Christmas," I'd just like to add my two cents:
Christmas hasn't been about Christianity in a long, long time.  Ever since the following image,in my humble opinion.

That's assuming that it ever WAS about the birth of baby Jesus.  There's a lot of debate of the when of the Hosiah's birth, from what I've read. Could it possibly be that for early Christians missionaries it was merely was a convenient replacement for the pagan Winter Solstice? Nooo, couldn't be....that would be like claiming that Easter is really a replacement festival for the Spring Equinox, a celebration of rebirth and renewal, sheer crazy-talk.

But historical debate aside, I don't see the problem with Christmas not being a religious holiday. Having been a Buddhist since my mid-teens, I grappled with the moral issue fairly early on...I didn't want to not participate or get presents (or give them, for that matter) but also not wanting to participate in a christian holiday.  

Thusly, my justification was born!  To me, Christmas is like Thanksgiving: everyone can celebrate, regardless of race or creed! My apologies to Native Americans, of course.

So when I hear about the war on Christmas, I smile.  There's nothing more I love than a good, pointless war.  All the nutty christians trying to but the Christ back in haven't got nothing on the multinational corporations who make billions of billions in December, not to mention the money they make in January from the late credit card bills.  It's never been about Jesus, its as Michael Scott says, "A time where you can say, "Hey man, I like you THIS many dollars worth."

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Good Grief

Note: This post will probably bum you out. Sorry for that.  If you do continue, thanks for reading.

Today my little brother would've been twenty-three years old.  

He loved In-n-Out.

He wanted to be a cop, and if I am to be fair, probably would've been the kind that tasers people for no good reason.

He stabbed me in the arm with a pencil for some reason or another when I was fifteen.

He was a fan of Sublime, Johnny Cash, and Led Zeppelin.

I'm sitting here tonight in my den, in the spot Nick always sat in on Christmas morning, trying to convince myself that dates and anniversaries are meaningless, that time is a construct humans have made up, and failing miserably at it.  Two days ago, it was my other little brother's birthday. In two more days it will be a year since Nick died.  I had two brothers. Or do I have them still? It's the grammar of grief that gets me, when to refer to the dead in the present tense, when to refer to them in the past...

I'm trying not to let my demons get to me, trying to tell Despair to stop whispering her wind-through-a-graveyard hisses into my ear, that the times I could've been a better brother are gone now and pointless to dwell on, that just because Nick never got the email I sent him for his birthday last year because I was lazy and sent it a day late and by then it was too late in a whole other way doesn't mean its my fault, that there is no way I could've talked him out of joining the Army, that it was his life and his choice, that his death doesn't mean that I fucked up and failed and didn't the one thing that older brothers are supposed to do above everything else, which is To Make Sure Nothing Happens To Your Little Brother. I'm trying to do all these things and failing miserably at them.

The only thing I'm really guilty of is horribly long run-on sentences, I tell myself.

I'm sitting here, stone-cold sober in the dark in the house I grew up in, the place that's become a three-bedroom, two bathroom memorial to Nick, with an ever-increasing amount of patriotic memorial paraphernalia, pictures of him in every room, buttons, wristbands, cards, flags, carvings, drawings, embroidered pillows...Nick is everywhere in this house and yet he isn't at all.  His belongings sit in the garage, his truck is in the driveway, but he's not here.  There's stacks and stacks of moldy newspapers that hold articles about him, because for my parents, throwing any little bit of anything that has Nick in it away is tantamount to betrayal. It's fine, really.  I understand. 

Nick isn't here anymore, but I swear, I fucking swear to you that right now I can smell the unmistakable aroma of a double-double animal style. Happy birthday, Nick.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

May You Be Happy



So it's been awhile since I posted, sorry for that to all the...twos...of you who read.  

Consequently, I was looking at my last blogs and realized that they weren't very, um, upbeat. Which is fine, I suppose, it being October and Halloween when there were written and such, but still, its November, and January 20, 2009 feels a long way off, so I wanted to say something as  immediately as I could to as many people I love as I could, and this blog is the best way.

So, with all that in mind, here is what I am saying right now, and to whoever is reading this, whenever, wherever: May you be happy.  May you be filled with whatever makes you happy, or joyful, or loved, or peaceful.

I've been thinking that perhaps I haven't been putting that thought out into the ether like I used to, nor have I been trying to, and that's unfortunate and something I'm going to try and change from here on out.  

I can't pretend that this all isn't just a ploy for attention, nor can I pretend it's not because I have had a lot of really awesome things happen to me in the last two weeks or so.

****MAJOR SPOILER ALERT****ONLY READ IF YOU WANT TO HEAR ME BEING A JERK AND BRAGGING ABOUT HOW COOL MY LIFE IS, I'M SORRY, BUT AT LEAST I"M HONEST ABOUT WHAT IT IS...MAYBE YOU COULD JUST BE HAPPY THAT I"M HAPPY?******



Just because i'm really excited right now, and I drank yerba mate tea way too late, I'm going to give you just a small sampler of the nice things that happened to me just this week. I know it's lame and it sounds super braggy  but I have to get it off my chest, so regardless of how it sounds, check this out:

  • Just this week I finally got my room the way I really and truly want it.  I know i have a really stupid amount of pride in my room, but if you ever saw my Crack Street apartment, you know why. I got a sweet new desk and a sweet new chair that doesn't hurt my back all to shit, and a sweet new monitor that I don't have to squint and hunch to use.  It makes me feel like a professional writer and shit!  

  • I played disc golf with Mike and Conor.  Barefoot, even!
  • I got an amazing swedish massage.
  • I found a amazing place to rent for my March Costa Rica trip (there will be a blog about this when plans are more finalized...ha, like you really want to hear about some trip you can't go on...)
  • I went to Dave and Busters in San Diego with my high school buddies, drank beer and adios muthafuckas whilst shooting dinos, zombies, and terrorists, and laughed till my tummy hurt, then sang Mariners Revenge Song on the way home so loud my voice is still hoarse.
  • I began working on two different major writing projects and they're going really well and i'm excited about them.
  • Oh, and I went to a The Hold Steady show.  They rocked so FUCKING HARD.
Okay, now that I've got all that off my chest....
****END SPOILER ALERT***CONTINUE TO DAN SPOUTING OFF SOME HIPPY LOVEY-DOVEY NONSENSE***************


 I sat down this evening to do a loving-kindness meditation (which also inspired this blog) tonight. I don't meditate as often as I used to, mainly because my thoughts are so distracted so often (to which, I hear Ven. Yifa responding "That means you should meditate more, not less!") Regardless, because of this amazing week I had I feel a real joy, a real happiness that I haven't felt in a long time.  Not just since Nick died, but before that, going back to all the times I've been really happy.  So I wanted to meditate and see what might have brought this state about (because who doesn't want to replicate feeling great?).  I began by picturing all the people I love, one by one, smiling, and then told them "May you be happy" and called a new name.  I went on for over an hour, some people getting more time, almost everybody getting called up twice or three times.  I tried to expand it, as Pema Chodron (umlauts ommitted) suggests in her book "The Places that Scare You", 
 include whole countries, people I am angry with, and finally all sentient beings.  I didn't quite get there, but I felt a lot of spiritual rust fall away from my heart.  Those steel walls don't stand a chance against the constant rain of love everyone in my life pours on me.

On deeper reflection I realized that this alpha state I feel is very unique...I didn't go anywhere or do anything all that specific (compared to leaving a country or something).  Virtually nothing in my life has changed, at least not yet, but here is what set it apart the most:  A lot, a whole lot of people who I love and respect and care for very much said a lot of really nice things to me this week. I usually don't really know how to respond to compliments, they sort of take me off guard, but the people who said all these different, wonderful things said them honestly, and directly, and each of them really, really meant it, so I had no choice to accept them, which I did, gratefully and as humbly as I could, I hope.

And you know what? I think I'm starting to believe what they said.

I found myself thinking about the cumulative effect that that can have on a person, especially when that person is me. It turns out that it makes me feel like a million bucks. It feels better than any car, any trip, any girl, any movie, any drug, any book, any thing.  So thank you, everyone, for that.  Thank you for telling me what I mean to you.  I hope I told you how much you mean to me back.


 I feel a little guilty, I think, for having so many really, truly amazing people around me, like I'm somehow hogging the best for myself, and also because, as I said, (or maybe I haven't but meant to) I don't think that I've been telling people how much they mean to me and how highly I really think of them enough.  It's not that I have to do it all the time, I just realized today that I've been selfish, that I've taken people for granted, taken their friendships for granted, holed up and ignored everyone, been flaky and a jerk and irresponsible, pushed people's goodwill farther than it is fair to do, and expected far more patience than I ever gave.  So for that I'm sorry. I feel like the only way to make it up to you all and how great you are is to try my hardest to be better.  

Part of that will be telling you how awesome I think you are when it strikes me particularly strongly, and another part of it will be me trying to return calls, and go outside, and do things and talk to people and, I dunno, I might get real crazy and try to show up on time to things.  (For the record, a lot of time I flake its because I say yes to too many things and end up overbooking myself...i'm just sayin'...)

Another part of it will be the wishing of everyone to be happy.  I invite you, as a person I love, to join in wishing people you love happiness/fill in your own word.  Or at the very least, don't get all freaked out when I say something really nice to you.  Hows that? But try it..who knows, maybe being nice will become a trend or something.

Regardless of anything... "Know this: You are loved."  --my good buddy Noah

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

...



...and when I open my eyes, I'm inside a house. More of a mansion, really, with high ceilings and candelabras, portraits lining the walls.
I squint to get a better look at the dim room, it must be a dining room, on account of the twelve foot, laquer-black table with accompanying chairs. Very modern gothic. Over in the corner I spy some sort of cabinet. Good. My flask could use a topping off. The house is silent--well, not really silent, I guess, I mean, they're aren't any voices, but still, it's not really quiet either. I pry open a drawer, hoping to come across a knife or something I can use to pry open the locked doors where the booze is undoubtedly kept, but it's dark and I'm not really looking in the drawer.

As soon as my hand touches it, its' not my own anymore. My hand isn't numb, it just doesn't listen to me. It's fondling this...i dunno...I can't tell what it is, but my hand, quicker than I've ever seen it move, puts it in my jacket pocket. I try to let it go. Nothing. I try to take my hand out of my pocket. Nope. I begin to feel faraway, that fugue state I pass in and out of, but I fight it back, concentrating.

The light in the house has changed, become thicker, syrupy. The portraits have lost their victorian sophistication and acquired a hateful sneer across their faces, spittle on their lips. With blackness creeping in the edges of my vision, I bolt from the room, out into a foyer, where I immediately spy the heavy wooden door that can only lead outside. I make it about a mile before I collapse in a bush.
...
Dark again. well, that's probably for the best, I think, and a thought pops into my head, a black flash, not a thought in words, and certainly not one of my own, a dark whisper that feels like cold oil dripping through my brain. Whatever it is in my pocket has been busy. My traitor hand is still squeezing it, caressing it. My thoughts roll away from it, like fish from a sinking stone. Fine. There are leaves in my hair, and as I'm reaching up to brush them off, a deer steps quietly into view. I've never actually seen a deer close up before. She's sniffing the grass, her ears twitching, and doesn't seem to notice me at all. It's a rare moment for me, quiet and still, which is what makes it so awful when the hollow-tip makes her head burst.

"Wooooohoooo! Yew see that?" shouts a voice, as several large crashing sounds draw closer.
"Boy, you didn't just shoot that deer, you damn near EX-ploded it! What a shot! Shee-it!"

I'm still sitting upright, bits of deer brain on my cheek and a cut from a renegade piece of jawbone on my forehead, lap warm with blood that smells strong and alive, when the hunters come upon me and the doe. Beer cans in their hands, their stupid hick mouths hang agape, at a complete loss for words. I try to speak, to explain, to ask for help, but my mouth won't obey. Instead, I am trapped inside my eyeballs watching the scene around me unfold. Part of me fights, but mostly I'm just so tired that this is a welcome respite. The two men, perhaps unsurprisingly, think that I too am somehow dead. They begin to argue over what to do, swearing and spitting, throwing beer. The smaller one draws a knife from his boot, a bowie with the confederate flag on the blade, and buries it in the back-fat between the other man's shoulder blades. Although it's a fatal blow, its not an instant kill, which gives the dying man a chance to use the second bullet in his rifle on his former friend, effectively vaporizing the back of his head. He gasps out a halfhearted curse to god, then repents and says an our father before gurgling his last.

I struggle to my feat, an insidious warmth creeping up my arm. As I pass by the deer carcass, the flies that are hovering in a food orgy drop out of the sky in unison. Going back to the house seems like the only option I have, so I start out back on the road. I'm not exactly sure which way is going, but my feet seem to be obeying me for the time being. My hand had stopped thrashing in its pocket, but it felt swollen and bruised, tired and full.

It's strange, seeing a road I've seen before but don't remember, but soon I am passing through a small town, and far, far off, I can see the spires of what can only be the mansion. I try not to make eye contact, fearing what will happen, knowing that this is all beyond me, I am ill-equipped for this task. As I looked down, though, I glanced at a homeless man sleeping in the crook of a building and the sidewalk. His eyes fly open, his face contorting into shapes no face should make, until he holds his chest and gets very still. I begin to run.

A dog, a beautiful white wolfhound darted into the road, right ahead of me. The oncoming truck tried to brake, jackknifed and hit the dog anyway, then plows into oak tree, ejecting the driver into a solid wood wall. I was unscathed, again. Not trusting myself to stop, I turn my attention to the road. My legs shake uncontrollably, making walking hard, but I force them to keep moving until it subsides.

The house was in view when I heard the fuel tank of the truck detonate. The whole town will burn. Staggering up the steps of the house, I pull the door, wrenching my shoulder when it doesn't move. A new voice, slow and heavy, tells me in an frozen instant of plodding color and shapes that I Have Taken The Burden It Held, And It Is Under No Obligation To Take It Back. It Is Mine To Bear, Forever.

A wellspring of fury that I've never known, a surging flood of rage burst in my eyes, and in that fraction of a second, my hand was my own again. I thrust the object out of my pocket, into the light.
...
Many people would think that time slows in moments like these, but they're wrong. It's flash-fast, its the understanding that's so instantaneous that makes you think that time has slowed. It's that you can't understand why you understand what you understand as fast as you've understood it. So everything has happened at once, but you can't fit that into you're perception, so everything looks slow so it'll make sense to you. This is what's happening right now, all in this moment, even as you're reading this.

....

My clammy hand holds what looked to be a ball of writhing yellow-white maggots, pulsing red light from their underbellies, eyelessly crawling. I know now that it is a Deathwish. My Deathwish. It the blackest thing in the pit of all mens souls, the immortal terror we all run from and never escape, fed by the fears of a billion generations crying out in the night and wondering why. It brings death and pain as naturally, as neutrally as a candle brings light, feeding off my desire for my own death, to end the suffering I cause, killing all those near mebut keeping me alive, for if I die so will my Deathwish. It is a spiraling event horizon no soul can escape.

Unless, chimes in the house, causing my nose to drip blood, Unless You Burn It. I Was Too Afraid To Try, But You....

The Deathwish surges in my hand and the redblack scream that splits my head in two drowns out all thoughts, mine and otherwise. But a tiny part of me whispers, burn it, so I pull out my flask and pour. The maggots writhe furiously, standing up somehow, growing, molting. I touch my lighter to it and it's not the explosion I would hope, its a wet sizzle that turns into a hiss that screams as the maggots begin to dance, melting and bubbling. My hand finally lets it drop, blistered and withered, where I stomp and stop and stomp until it is only a greasy black smear. I don't even notice the storm clouds release their rain, putting out the fire behind me and swirling the ashes of the Deathwish until they dissolve.


Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Sunday


By Dan Steinbacher

There is a boy, and he is sitting in the back of his parents grey station wagon. They are coming from church, and his father has the windows of the car down. The air is invigorating, full of chimney smoke and brisk breezes. The father inhales deeply-- he loves this weather. It reminds him of football, of childhoods. Church has briefly pierced the walls he fastidiously keeps around himself, and he feels goodwill towards most, if not all, men. Time slows to a crawl for him, during this drive, as he subconsciously takes the longest route home he can. He senses deep in his gut that today is important, a fork in the road day. Because the services were so rousing that morning, the hymns sung were such uplifting songs, and the pastors sermon, delivered in his irish brogue, was especially good, the father attributes this feeling to God. In that spirit, sensing the potentiality of the day and merging it with his faith, the father decides today is a perfect day to teach his son a lesson about doing good.

How will he do it? The father is unsure. There are so many ways to do good. Most of them, he thinks, are bound not to work out the way he wants. This experience, he knows, will color his son, will mark out the territory of his character for years to come, so it has to be perfect.

Driving past a familiar road, he suddenly knows what to do, so he takes a rather sharp left, jostling the boy, who is smart, sometimes a little too much for his own good, who carries dark circles under his eyes that make him look faraway, which he usually is.

The father is smiling. They are seconds away from the grandfather's house, a big house that has been a little too empty since his mother died. His father, not knowing how (or perhaps not caring) to clean up after a house himself, lives in a dark, dusty castle with blue-green shag carpet and cobwebbed abalone shells. But it is not the inside of the house that bothers the father, it is the yard. The yard is huge, twice the size of all the others in the area, and it is completely wild. This agitates the father, who as a teen, used to care for this yard by himself, because he hated having his house look ugly on the outside.

Appearances are very important to the father. By having the boy do yardwork at his grandfather's house, it will impart so many lessons to the boy! It will teach him the value of hard work, of caring for family. Three generations of his line will be working together, side by side, in the autumn air. They will rake leaves for a few hours, tell stories and then have hot cocoa inside. He'll light a fire in the fireplace, and his wife and son and father will all sit around it, talking and laughing. His son will remember it as a wonderful day, and when he has a son of his own, will bring him to his father's house, and they will relive the day again.

This is all as clear as day in his mind as he tells his son, "Let's go to your granddad's place and rake some leaves, whaddya say?", looking at him from the rearview mirror.

The boy, who has been staring out the window, pauses, which is hard to do because he hadn't said anything yet, and thinks not of the yard or the house, not of the cocoa or the fireplace or really even his granddad, who he loves as all eight-year olds love their granddads. He is thinking about the dog. His grandfather's dog is old, and dying slowly. Yet because he is such a good dog, so full of life and joy, he does not seem to mind his hips dislocating as he wags his tail, dying to get a single pat, some love from these people he has protected all these years. But the grandfather is too lonely and lost to pet the dog, let alone feed it regularly, and every time they visit, the dog is skinnier, more desperate. It breaks the boy's heart into a billion pieces to see this. The boy often sees the injustice and cruelty in the world and takes it in stride, but this, this is a terrifying punishment for being a good dog. The boy has played with the dog for hours when he was there before, knowing it was not enough, seeing the bewildered desperation in those cataract-grey dog eyes, understanding that there is nothing he can do. When the dog howled as they left, his parents didn't seem to notice, but the sound gave him nightmares for days.

Thinking in a way he does, by not thinking at all, the boy grasps the situation at hand. On some level he ascertains what his father is hoping to accomplish, as well the fact that his father would never understand the reasons why he didn't want to go help his granddad. The boy doubts he could ever articulate exactly how he is feeling anyhow. It feels to big for words to contain. It is fear the boy feels, not fear of death or illness, but the fear that the world contains so much hurt that one day the vibrating feeling that accompanies it, the thrum in the pit of his stomach that makes the bottom of his heart turn to cold stone will one day overload him, and he will lose control of his emotions, and they will tear him to pieces with their force. Faced with imminent death or parental disappointment of the highest degree, the boy closes his eyes and makes his choice.

"I don't want to go."

"You don't want to help your granddad?"

"No. I'm just...tired. I want to watch tv."

The father's mental picture shatters, deflates, implodes. He tries hard to be a good father, but his child is lazy. Television, video games, he has been spoiled rotten by all of his father's hard work. All that has sought to accomplish has left him with a son who is selfish. He shouldn't say it. But he promised himself that he wouldn't coddle his son, that he would dish it straight even if it was hard to hear.

"That's really selfish of you, son. I would think after all the nice things your grandfather does for you, you can't even help him rake some leaves? Too much to ask to get off your ass and help someone?" The volume and venom in his voice steadily increase.

The boy winces. He knew this was coming, and wishes that today wasn't such focal point, wasn't such a defining moment. He fights back some tears, reasoning that this hurts far less that seeing the dog, angry at situations that are beyond his control and seem to be set against him.

"I'm sorry, I just don't want to do it." he says, finally.

"Fine." The father does a U-turn in the middle of the street, sullen and silent, the tires squealing.

He ignores him for the rest of the day, which is easy because the boy spends it sitting in his room, grounded from tv for a week, reading and imagining God as a being comprised of a infinite number of ears, eternally listening to the prayers of the world and unable to stop listening to go help anyone.



Saturday, September 22, 2007

Proclamation!

Dear readers (who are as numerous as grains of sand in the Ganges),

As you may have noticed, I changed the template of my blog. I like the links on the left side, but I'm not sure about the rest of it. Really, all I want out of a template is readability, but looking super-cool would be nice as well. So, googleplex of readers, what say you? I want your feedback, since you're the poor bastards who have to stare at it as you check hourly, hoping for an update. New one? Old one? Or maybe you have a link to a site w/ sweet templates?

Or perhaps you just want to shower me with praise. I'm fine with that also.

Hello? Anyone?



Anyone at all?


Tuesday, September 18, 2007

It's a Con(or)test!

Hello, my innumerable readers! Gather 'round! Whoa, whoa, not so fast! There's so many of you that I'm getting crushed by your billions and billion's of bodies! Simmer down!

Okay.

Here's the thing: My buddy Conor of Mediocre Extraordinare, is having a contest! A writing contest! Inspired by our mutual (and much more responsible, hard-working, overall better person) friend Mike Guardabascio of A Storied Year, who has held several very successful writing contests in the past, Conor's contest revolves around a picture entitled "Offices, Gorilla World". The stories must be fifty words or more and be inspired by or connected somehow to the picture.

Now, whats the best part about contests, other than that I always win them? Prizes! Yes sir, there certainly are prizes attached to this lucrative contest. They include*, but are not limited to:

  • A full body, sensual massage from Conor and his man-hands
  • Lifetime immunity from Conor's piercing wit and sharp tongue
  • Conor will name his first illegitimate child after you, regardless of the gender
  • A pony
  • A year membership to Conor's other site, www.conorthecamboy.com, (a $200 value!)
So: Go to Mediocre Extraordinare and read the "official rules", then read my story, quiver with fear and shame knowing that you couldn't possibly write a better entry, then shake it off and take a crack at it. What do you have to lose**?

Best of luck to you all***,

Dan

*do not include

**if you beat me, you have my solemn vow that I will cut off your toes with a hacksaw and eat them like cocktail weenies right in front of you.

***You illiterate cretins don't stand a fucking chance, you hear me?

Monday, September 17, 2007

Gorilla World


I thought the choice was obvious, so I headed right, down a zig-zagging pathway lined with bamboo and paved with river rock, opening into a courtyard. It was wide, the white walls of the enclosure gently reflecting the sun onto the grassy field where a large number of gorillas were spread out. A transparent glass wall cut through the middle of their habitat, a wall that displayed, quite clearly, a cut-away vision of the office building. The apes were doing all the normal simian things: lying on their backs, scratching their heads with their toes, some were combing each others hair and carrying their kids, they were alone and in pairs and in groups, they were eating bananas and thumping chests and staring majestically into space. They were also talking.

And I could understand them. I stepped into the clearing, quietly, but not a single primate took notice of me. Walking closer to a smaller pair of gorillas, I waved. If they saw me, there was no sign of it. I leaned in to hear what they were saying better. One was a taller, heavier one, male by the look of the silver on his back. He wasn't the oldest gorilla, but he'd been around. The one who was talking was obviously female, with a smaller frame and hunched stance.

"I just think it's cruel."

"You're nuts! Those guys are having the time of their lives in there! Look at them! They get to talk all the time, and sit in chairs and drink all the coffee they want! It's paradise!"

"But they're captives! They don't have a choice! And those terrible clothes they dress them in!"

"You think that matters to them? Honestly, I wish I could do that all day. All this sitting around, eating bananas, climbing trees...I hate it. It's boring. I want to sit on chairs. I want to talk into little plastic things. I want to look at glass boxes. So don't go getting all chimpy on me."

"I'm sorry...you just know how I feel about other living things. Come on, lets go pick a fight with Chief, he looks sick, I think you can take him..."

I looked through the see-through glass, at all the people, running around, mouths opening and closing silently. They didn't look happy. They didn't look sad either, they just looked...empty. As if something inside themselves that had been burning was just ashes now. I watched the people for awhile, then, deciding that it was just as sad and cruel as the female had said, turned away. Instead, I watched the biggest silverback, Chief, give the other male gorilla (whose named turned out to be Bongo, which may have explained his lack of alpha-male status) a sound thrashing, while the others gathered around, hooting and throwing feces. It looked like a lot of fun.

For awhile, I watched the gorillas every day. You would think it was great, but Bongo was right: it was boring--the same old bitter rivalries springing up again and again, the same lofty professions of the perfection of bananas, the unending debate over what could possibly be in the little glass boxes all the humans watched all the time.


I began to ignore the apes, and started watching the people every day. Perhaps the humans really did have a paradise, even if they were had an odd way of showing it. The world on the other side of the glass looked brighter, cleaner, safer. I longed to sit in a chair, to taste coffee, but mostly to be able to talk and have someone hear me, even if it meant I could never leave. With a final look back at Gorilla world, I headed back down the path, turned left at the sign, walked down a narrow corridor, and opened the metal door that led to the Offices.

The sudden rush of noise made me jump. Buzzing and ringing and whirring and under it all was the nearly inaudible hum of the florescent lights. They saturated the Office with a flat, uniform brightness, robbing everything of its shadow. I shut my eyes and shook my head, trying to get my bearings while quietly noting that I was now wearing human clothes, what the gorillas had called a monkey-suit and holding the thin rectangular box that I knew was for putting paper in.

A man in a blue suit, who was tall and very tan, came up to me, smiling widely and not blinking nearly enough. I tried to speak to him, but before I could say a word, he grabbed my hand and squeezed it, launching into a speech with an automatic look on his face.

"Hey there! You must be the new guy! Hi, new guy! Welcome to our office. It's not much, but it's ours. Good news! You get a desk with a window! Ha! We all do! Yep, it's our one claim to fame, we're the only office I've ever heard of that looks out onto a zoo! Yep, monkeys all around, HQ thinks they help productivity or office feng shui or some shit. Anyway, lemme show you to your desk. Hey! You want some coffee?"

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

My flag has singed bullet holes polka-dotting it. The colors in the cloth ran a little bit after the sweat bath it was baptised in, but you can still see the blood that stained it under a cloudless sky. You can wear this flag like a cape, with your head through the ragged hole, or you can hang yourself with it. Today, I'm wearing it as a hospital gown on the street corner, yelling at passerby, ranting about my rights and their rights and ignorance and death and war and no one is listening. The shiny new nylon flag waves over my head, hanging like an anvil. No one looks my way. It's fine. I don't need them to anyhow. Flags are a symbol, symbols have power, and my flag has been bleached of all its symbolism, broken down and remade as a symbol of a different kind. My flag is charged with all the bitterness and hate I can cough up out of my guts. It's the cumrag of the world now, a hankerchief for the bloodiest phlem, a mop for all the urine and feces of a planet, kindling for fires, a fuse for molotov cocktails. I am unmaking this country with my flag, unraveling the stitches of its dream and using the scraps as tourniquets. The bigger pieces are good for filtering out tear gas. Not that I need it for that. The police officers that come to talk to me are wearing flags on their chests, just above their badges. I'm not surprised to see them, just tired. These cops are different though. Their guns are already drawn, and if could see into their car, I'd find the police report for my murder already filled out, signed and dated. My flag is about to get a few more holes. I ask one to read me my rights, which confounds the both of them, if only for a second, giving me all the time I need. I sit down into the lotus position, close my eyes, and flood my pores with memory of America I have stored up, all the greed, all the hypocrisy, all the arrogance, all the apathy, every abuse I can remember hearing about or seeing. It soaks into the canvas, hissing like acid, smoking slightly. We are at the edge now...and with a thought, I tilt us over the precipice, and my flag and I burst into flames. Once the video and pictures are online, everyone decides that I look like that vietnamese monk, except for my expression--I am not serene. I am wide eyed and laughing, an image so horrifying that afterwards, all this or any other flag can ever symbolize from then on is death and madness.

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Day 10: Keats and Yates Are On Your Side...Paris, Part One

Where were we? We were, perhaps unsurprisingly, stuck in the bus, in traffic. This time it was for a legitimate reason-- Bastille Day, the biggest holiday in France, was in two days. We would miss it by one day. This brought the number of times I was leaving a major city one day before a super-amazing city/nationwide festival up to two, the first being the Water festival in Bangkok last April.

Even with all of that, MJ the tour guide came through like the champ she is, so the first day in Paris we did a bus tour...in our own bus. It was a good way to see the city and get acclimated, and we stopped for several photo ops along the way. The best part of the drive was easily when Frank, our bus driver, took on the Triumph D'arch-thingy roundabout. Roundabouts are terrifying enough, as anyone who has lived in Long Beach knows, and this one is the most dangerous in the world--apparently there's an accident every half-hour on average.

At first I was leery of taking a giant tour bus onto a crowded parisian deathtrap, but when I looked at the tiny little peugot's and smart cars, I realized we had nothing to fear. MJ put "Highway to the Dangerzone" on the speakers and we whipped into the circle. The inertia was terrifying, and I braced for a crash that never came. As quick as it had begun, we were out, headed down the Chante Lize (Say "Shant-A Lee-Zay...I think). Our hotel was unremarkable--tiny, functional. I had a baguette and a small bottle of wine for dinner, and then we were heading to the Eiffel Tower, as it was going to be insane tomorrow, the day before Bastille Day, and besides, the ET at night is a must see. The lines there were pretty long, and a few French assholes tried to cut in, only to face a bunch of irate, threadbare, mildly drunk 20 somethings: us. We yelled at them and they slunk off. Kirk, perhaps out of boredom, made the boneheaded move of talking to a Hawker-of-Mini-Eiffel-Towers, only to be rewarded with the guy refusing to leave us alone for twenty minutes. Getting to the top proved to be a series of elevators and lines for elevators, but all in all it took about 3 hours. The top is small and fenced from top to bottom, obviously, but the views are still incredible. So is the wind. I have to say, it was pretty fucking romantic and shit. We stayed up there for over an hour, but by that time it was closing. For kicks, a few of us took the stairs all the way down. Alllllll the way. It's a lot of stairs, obviously, and it really gave a much better impression of how tall it was than taking the elevators did. We even saw the resturant that's in the middle of the Tower. Sweet! It was closing time so the lights were off, but it looked very hoity-toity. I'd like to eat there some day.

We would have a long day ahead of us, so Kirk and I grabbed a cab like the pros we were by that point, and I fell asleep watching a Simpsons episode that was dubbed in French, which gave me odd dreams.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Day 9: In Which I Wish To Be Swiss

My first impression of Switzerland is that it must be where the myth about dwarves come from. Not because the people there are short and hairy (they're not), but because the entire country seems to be one long corridor of narrow fields with impossibly large mountains on either side, and a iceblue, snowfed river bisecting what little arable land there is. Because of the abundance of water, everything is green. Really, really green grass being eaten by those Swiss cows you see on cheese packaging everywhere, pockets of huge evergreens spring up from mountain ledges, but the most noticeable is me, being green with envy for not being born here.

While we're driving through the countryside (or extremely long tunnels that go through entire mountains), MJ gives us some background on Switzerland, which was pretty interesting stuff. In Switzerland, every male over the age of 18 is required by law to enlist in the military and serve for a minimum of 2 years. I'm not sure if you have to do it right at 18, but I'd bet it's within a few years. You are also given a submachine gun. This might account for the lack of home invasion style robberies there. Who in the hell is going to rob a house when you know for a fact that there's someone with a military grade gun inside? Once you're out of the military, you still have to go to target practice once a month, and do a month long refresher course every couple of years. Because it's required by law, this doesn't count as your vacation time, and you still get paid. As a result, the Swiss can raise it's military to full readiness in less than 36 hours. Pretty impressive. Due to how ridiculously rich the country is thanks to anonymous banking, apparently many of the mountains have been converted into giant bomb shelters (one of which can hold up to 20000 people for 2 years), weapons reserves, satellite monitoring stations, and so on. Oh, and all buildings are required to have bomb shelters. This might account for why Switzerland is so neutral--woe betide any country that decided to invade, because the entire population is essentially the military (women aren't required to join, but most do anyhow), and if they ever got bombed, you'd really only piss them off.

Now, this means that the cities are clean and that the citizens are for the most part law-abiding, but the large anti-authority part of me sort of worries about any government that has that sort of stranglehold on personal choice. Although on the other hand, the benefits from having an entire country on the same basic page seem worth it, at least on the surface. You could never do this with America though, we have a population that is far too large and too diverse to ever make it feasible.

Anyway, it took us forever to get to Lucerne, a small town in Switzerland, because the rain we had left behind in Germany had found us as soon as we got out of Italy, slowing traffic to a crawl on an already crowded road. The bus riding was becoming near-unbearable at this point, although it was mainly due to my skin being so dry (and thus so itchy I was scratching till I was literally bleeding) because of the nonstop recycled air, and my lack of even remotely clean clothes (read: I smelled awful and there was nothing I could do about it).

Once again, we had only a few short hours to wander around Lucerne, made shorter by the fact that every shop closes at around six o'clock. In retrospect I guess thats not that strange, but the city looked deserted by eight. Even still, there was ample time to peruse the Swiss chocolate shops...and then to go back again and again. I'm not a huge chocolate fan, which I think I've mentioned in an earlier post--not that i'm anti-chocolate, just that I'm not a fan of chocolate in the way the sad, lonely lady who has a cat calendar is. But this...this was something else. This wasn't chocolate. This was angel brains coated in children's dreams. The adorably old Swiss lady explained that the reason it was so different was because the cows ate grass that was watered with pure, mountain spring water, so their milk was correspondingly better, thus producing higher quality dairy products. After tasting about 15 different types of truffles, bon bons, and so on, I was inclined to agree with her.

MJ had neglected to mention that the hotel we'd be staying in that night was a refurbished prison. And it was themed, meaning that it still had bars on the windows, bare walls, and instead of room keys, you had a code you had to put into the door to unlock it. It didn't freak me out too bad, although I made it a point not to wonder about how many people had gotten shanked in my room. Given my impressions of Switzerland, though, I think that the majority of criminals were white collar. I hope.

We only had Paris left on our itinerary, and even though it's marked as 2 days, what that means in Contiki-speak is eight hours in a bus and about four or so in the actual city, minus check in time and dinner and all that. I'm not saying that it's bad, I just want to clarify for anyone who might be thinking of a Contiki tour.

After seeing as many cities as we did on the trip, I have to say that I prefer the northern part of Europe. Maybe its that the cities are slightly newer, but I've had my fill of streets so narrow that they can't accomodate a single person walking and a car driving at the same time. The cities we visited from the north seemed on the whole to be cleaner, safer, and more ascetically pleasing. Then again, maybe that's just my German blood bias talking.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Day 8: The Wheels on the Bus (Make Me Queasy)

Day 8 found us in Florence, which is supposedly an art mecca. However, at this point in the trip, it would be hard to impress me with anything. My legs were sore, I was sunburned, and we had a scant 6 hours to spend here. For lack of anything better to do, a few of us went to a sculpture museum, where it became very apparent that the Italians back in the day were really fond of sculpting male genitalia. Surely there was some cultural reason behind this, but there's only so many life-sized naked dudes you can see before they all look the same. The only thing I really enjoyed about it was guessing the occasional greek myth that the statue was based on. I was right about 90 percent of the time, although no one in the group except me was impressed by this, least of all my little brother.

There was a really amazing looking cathedral in Florence as well, which I would've loved to see the inside of had the line to get in not wrapped all the way around the damn block.

Included in the Contiki tour was a bunch of cool stuff to do (for an extra fee) which ended up being worth it in nearly every case. In Florence, it was a full Tuscan dinner, four courses, with a cool opera singer coming out every so often to do a song. I've never thought of myself as much of an opera fan, but seeing someone up close, singing that beautifully, I could certainly see why it's as popular as it is. Included with the dinner (which was as fantastic as one would have hoped. Italians truly do have the best food in the world, hands down) were two huge jugs of wine, which I indulged in wholeheartedly.

This was a huge mistake.

It wasn't that the next morning I was hungover. I hadn't really drank that much wine. But I don't think my tummy was ready for it, and it was killing me, from our six o'clock wake up time onward. I might have been fine if I had had a decent breakfast and a few hours to recuperate, but no. Breakfast (our only daily included meal) in Italy consisted of a hard, nearly hollow roll with about as much caloric value as a roll of cardboard. Oh, and water. That was it. What the fuck? The inconsistencies involved with a culture that enjoys four hour dinners and three second breakfasts are too great to be explored here.

Anyway, it was a wonderful coincidence that I was feeling really sick that day, as we had a 9 hour bus ride ahead of us, all the way to Switzerland. I might have been fine if not for the winding mountain roads, but instead I said goodbye to Italy by vomiting in the bus bathroom. Classy, I know.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Day 6-7: Rome- *Blasphemy Alert*

Days 6 and 7 were spent in that place that all the roads lead to, Rome. I made it a point to use the phrase "When in Rome" as many times as I could, either to myself or others, because where the hell else is that phrase nearly as applicable? The first day was mostly spent getting to Rome from Venice, but we had a nice half-day, seeing the Pantheon, which is mindblowing in its scale, not to mention how ancient it is. It's nearly impossible to not gape as you see stone columns several stories high while your brain simultaneously tries to figure out how it in the hell people would build it now, let alone 2000 years ago. I would get used to this sort of feeling during my time in Rome, as it applies for most of the ancient architecture there.

The next day was absolutely exhausting--it was hot, even for me, humid, crowded and filled with nonstop walking. Not that any of that was a surprise, I'm just setting the mood. We started off at St. Peters Cathedral, which I felt I should see simply because I'd never been in a Cathedral before.

The cathedral is big, I'll give it that. It's also gaudy. Really, really, really gaudy. Gold and marble everywhere. The inside has monuments to every pope inside it, and they're running out of room, so it sort of looks like a art museum made love with a marble quarry, found Jesus, and then puked.

"I won't blaspheme, I won't blaspheme..." I told myself, but if you know me at all then you know that that's just impossible. But, let the record show that I only said "goddamn it" only three times while inside, and they were all accidents. I had hoped that the overwhelming spirituality of the place would outweigh my utter hatred of the Catholic church, but sadly, it couldn't. All I could think about as I looked at marble statue after marble statue was how much money this all must've cost, how many cultures were destroyed, how many peoples were turned into little more than slaves in order to feed the beast that built this church. It's supposed to be a monument to god, but it looked more like a monument to cruelty and greed to me.

But the real reason we had gone to St. Peter's rather than the Vatican muesum (other than the fact that I would probably have burst into flames upon crossing the doorway) was for St. Peters dome, which rested on top of the cathedral, way, way, way up. The elevator they have will only take you so far up, and then it's just marble stairway after marble stairway. It was quite an experience, because as the staircase winds up the inside of the dome, the wall on one side begins to curve into the ceiling, and the limited space means that the walkway is such that you have to almost walk sideways up it. The steps seems endless, and their pattern changes seemingly at random, curving along the inside wall, then up some normal flights, then more curved, vertigo inducing stairs, all getting steeper by the step. Finally, you go up a staircase that is so tightly wound that they hung a rope through the middle of it to keep you from falling down it after you get dizzy from turning around. This rope is a sight in itself--imagine how many hands have touched it--it's black, sticky, and throughly disgusting, but if you don't want to die, you've got to hold onto it to get to the top. The view from the dome once you finally get there is worth it though. You can look over the entire city unobstructed by anything except the massive air pollution. It was amazing to me, given how crowded the city is, how much undeveloped land there is, huge tracts of hilly parks. Clearly, the Romans understood something about city design that we have forgotten: people need open spaces.

The roof of the cathedral (lower than the dome, but still way high up) has a gift shop that smells exactly like chicken Mcnuggets. They also sell shot glasses there. If that weren't a disturbing enough image, the likeness of Pope Hitler's Youth the Third glares balefully at you from about a million different postcards, crucifixes, paintings, refrigerator magnets, and so on. He looks like he wants to eat your face.

So: If you find yourself in Rome and you're not deeply religious, skip Vatican city. You're not missing all that much.

What you shouldn't miss in Rome is the pizza and the gelato. Pizza places there are, obviously, far superior to anything we have in the states. For example, they don't serve it by the slice. Intstead, they have one huge square that they cook all the pizza on, making it essentially one giant pizza with different areas of toppings, you point out which kind you want, sort of measure it with your hands, and they cut if off and hand it to the cashier, who weighs it. That's right, you pay for your pizza by weight! The dough is also this light, flaky amazingness that kind of ruins american pizza forever. The gelato there does the same to ice cream. I don't really go for chocolate, but the chocolate gelato I had was far beyond anything i've ever tasted that was supposed to be chocolate. In retrospect, eating anything that sugary was probably not the best choice when the temperature is in the upper nineties and water is roughly six dollars a bottle, but still, it had to be done.

By midday the heat was intense, amplified by the pollution that had no breeze to carry it away. I really just wanted to find a shady spot and fall asleep, but the overabundance of pickpockets made that option completely ridiculous, and besides, no matter how uncomfortable, I didn't get all the way out to Europe to fall asleep. Instead, my friend Ryan and I went to the Coliseum, which was...underwhelming. Sure, it's big, but not that big. What I found most intriguing were the unmistakable signs of age--stone steps with giant grooves in them, signs of untold numbers of feet climbing them. I suppose I was hoping to get some mystical sense of history, some indescribable feeling that sitting on a stone ledge that had been sat upon by people whose bones were now dust, but instead, I couldn't conjure up anything except some disappointment at it and myself. My inability to be impressed may have been a mixture of MJ telling us that this wasn't the only coliseum built, that they were built all over the Roman empire, but that this one was special because...it was Rome's Coliseum. So basically, it's special because people say it is. Also, the sewer vent's that surround the outside spew a mixture of urine and feces into the air, making stepping over them a mixed blessing, as the smell makes you instantly gag, but cool air from the sewers is a welcome reprieve from heat.

As the day wound down, Ryan and I headed to the last destination--the Cappuchin monks Monastery. The monastery isn't open to the public, so really, it's more like five normal sized rooms side by side. What makes these monks special, however, is their tradition of only being buried on monastery grounds, which presented a problem a few hundred years back when they grounds ran out of room for all the bodies. Instead, those wily monks came up with a solution: who needs to be buried? And for that matter, who needs to be kept together? Thus, the rooms are covered, nearly from top to bottom, in bones. Skulls are stacked in artful columns surrounding a coat of arms made out of femurs and pelvises (pelvisi?) in one room, in another, a withered, still decomposing monk sits on a bench made out of ribcages. Although the signs were in Italian, I found out later that each room represented a stage in man's journey through death. This was probably my favorite sight in Rome. It wasn't creepy, or morbid, it was a frank display of the human condition, a not so subtle reminder that regardless of who you are, you will one day be indistinguishable from anyone else.

Ryan and I headed back to the hotel around nine, after about thirteen hours of being on our feet. My sandals had compressed so much due to the heat and the constant pressure that I could feel every stone I stepped on. Sandals are not recommended for that level of touristing.

With the caveat that by the point in the trip I was pretty travel worn, both mentally and physically, which undoubtedly contributed to my feelings about Rome here's the bottom line: If you simply have to go to Rome, don't do it during the summer. If you aren't really that interested in Rome to begin with, skip it-- you're not missing anything that pictures won't capture.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Day 5: Canals and Chianti

From Munich, we traveled south, out of the Alps and the rain and into Italy, where the weather reminded me of SoCal: Hot, without a cloud in the sky. Ahhh...I had been missing sunshine and was sick of wet sandals. I would've worn shoes, but I fucking HATE shoes. It took us most of the day to get to Venice, but the scenery was goregous, vineyards as far as the eye could see.

Before I left for Europe, I was most excited for Venice. The idea of a city built on water has always intrigued me. And all in all, it's an amazing sight. This was clearly a city that was the center of the world at one point. The place reeks of age, although to be fair, it may have been really dirty water from the canals. It's interesting being in a place where the city itself is the main attraction. Had I been alone, I would've been content wandering around the narrow streets for hours, but were were only there for an evening, and I really didn't want to get so lost that I couldn't find my way back, which would've undoubtedly happened. Instead, a bunch of us tread the beaten path, seeing a few sights and eating copious amounts of gelato. On one of the main bridges that overlooks the Grand Canal, some clever soul had scrawled "ASSFACE" onto an old brick building.

We all reconvened for a evening gondola ride, most of us bearing bottles of wine, myself included. It is my belief that there are some things in life that one must do, and drinking wine on a gondola in Venice is certainly one of them. As romantic as the city is, it was kind of a bummer to be drinking the wine without the company of a lovely woman, but after the bottle was finished, I wasn't too worried about it. The windows of crumbling buildings stared out at us as we floated by, vacant and abandoned, as if imploring us to remember what they looked like in better days. Our gondolier was dressed in the classic striped shirt, but the magic was a little spoilt by his being on a cell phone for the entire time. Venice is eroding, in all senses of the word.

Afterwards, a group of about 5 of us found a affordable restaurant that wasn't too crowded and had a proper Italian dinner while the evening settled around us, taking our time, and enjoying more wine. Kirk had mentioned something during dinner about wanting to buy a suit of armor, and on our way back from dinner we passed by a shop that appeared to sell things of that ilk, so I tried with all the big-brother persuasiveness I could muster to get him to at least buy a sweet medieval helmet, even though it was over 350 dollars. I assured him that he would get plenty of use out of it in college, but his stubbornness (read: cheap) won out in the end. MJ the tourguide had assured us that the boat back to shore would not wait for late people, so we made our way back to the meeting point with plenty of time, although we were slowed down considerably by people hawking fake designer purses. They're everywhere, with their shitty merchandise clogging an already crowded walkway, and although I knew it was the wine, I was severely tempted to kick a couple faux-gucci handbags into the sea.

Looking back, I wouldn't say that Venice lives up to the hype. This isn't to say it's a crappy city, or that I didn't like it, because I did, but I guess I just bought into the overly romanticized reputation it has a little too much. Maybe I'm just hard to please.

Day 4: Prost!

While traveling to Munich, we stopped at one of the side-shop-eatery places that spring up every few hundred miles all through Europe. They're usually fairly big places, made to accommodate large batches of bus travelers during high travel season. There aren't tons of fast food places everywhere like in the states, so instead, all the tourist money goes straight to one place that offers decent food, high prices, long bathroom lines (for the ladies) and tons of souvenirs. This isn't really of any note, but I spent so much time in them over the course of the trip that I felt it deserved mentioning.

Anyway, on our way to Munich, we stopped at one such place, which in addition to the cafeteria had a Burger King. Normally, I wouldn't have even noticed, except that they had a large sign urging everyone to upgrade their meal to a large...which was translated to "MAKE IT MAXI!" for some reason. This, of course, made me laugh, and so as we were leaving to get back on the bus, I snapped a picture. I had made it a few steps out of the place when the Burger King manager ran out and started pointing at me, looking pretty pissed off, saying "You take picture?" I told him yes, and he told me "No, not legal, delete!!" I generally try to avoid being a typical arrogant american, so I immediately complied. However, as I was walking away, I heard the guy mutter "I should have him arrested." It was a beautiful lesson in human nature: no matter your race, color, nationality or creed, if you're a low-level manager at a fast food chain, you're a douchebag.

We arrived in Munich around 6 in the evening, pretty much leaving us enough time to have dinner and then go drink at the HofBrau House, which is apparently the most famous beer hall in Germany. We tried to get a table in HofBrau immediately so as to maximize our drinking time, but it was incredibly full. We were all hungry, and given that HofBrau serves their beer in ONE LITER mugs, I felt it prudent to put something in my stomach to absorb all the beer I was . Instead, I had Wiener Schnitzel, which I ordered simply because I couldn't believe that it was an actual dish, and also because I was kinda hoping that it was a hot dog. It's not. Instead, it's breaded/fried pork, a heart-stopping delight. Full and ready to drink, we went over to HB and, with a little luck, scored a table.

Hofbrauhaus is exactly what you'd think an old German beer hall is-- long, wooden tables, hot women selling large pretzels, and that great German drinking music that makes you feel more inebriated than you actually are. There are only three types of beer there: Lager, Dark, and another concoction that's half beer-half lemonade, which I guess is the German equivalent of a chick drink. I don't often feel a part of any ethnicity, but here I felt more like I was coming home than visiting for the first time.

There are a few rules for drinking at the Hofbrauhaus, and none of them are posted, so just in case, here's what you never do: Yell or sing loudly. MJ the tourguide informed us of this, which made it really fun to watch as a bunch of Aussies broke into some Australian song, only to have a very large, very scary looking German man who was dressed like a Secret Service agent walk over to their table, put a catchers mitt sized paw on the loudest, drunkest one, forcing him to sit down. Mr. Beer Security then put one finger to his lips and walked away. Germans are fucking serious about their beer. So much so that they have stringent laws regarding brewing, which include the outlawing of preservatives. This is great, because that's what causes hangovers. To toast, simply raise your glass (which can be difficult--a liter of beer is heavy) say "Prost!" and then maintain eye contact as you drink. Breaking eye contract or not toasting back is very rude. I could only put down 2 mugs worth of beer (schnitzel is very, very filling) which, by the way, was absolutely delicious, probably the best lager i've ever had.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Day 3: Steins and Wine on the Rhine

The Rhine Valley is absolutely gorgeous. Populated by pine trees and grapevines heavily terraced into the hillsides, lined by castles. I highly suggest driving into the Rhine Valley when the sun is just barely setting over a rainy day. The light turns bright yellow, reflecting the snowy peaks of the Alps off the broad Rhine river...it's quite nice. We stayed in a family hotel which had about 3 staircases too many for a 3 story building. I assume it had something to do with the river flooding every so often. Outside, it was beautifully quiet. We ate dinner and then headed off to a wine tasting, which took place in a straight up 17th century wine cellar. It was cold, the tables were wooden, and it was awesome. I could see a bunch of bearded germans wearing those awesome felt caps and big jackets toasting "High Prossit" (which I think means "to your health"). There were 5 wines in all, i think--mostly of the Riesling variety which is specially suited to the region, but also an icewine, which sounds rad, and it is: its wine made out of grapes that have been frozen solid for 2 weeks on the vine. Its a desert wine, very sweet, almost honeylike in flavor.

Afterwards, we all drank in the hotel bar, where the beer was cheap. I ducked out early to sit on a bench underneath a willow tree and watch the river. From my vantage point I could see three well lit castles, and just sat quietly, the air smelling in that way that only cold, clean air can, very happy that I was here.

I went to bed a little earlier, feeling a little sleepy from all that tasty German wine. In the morning, we walked to a small store that was lined wall to wall with Steins. It was here that I believed that yes, there clearly was German blood running through me--i was entranced with the work that went into crafting these ornate mugs. I was intent on getting one for me and my Dad. Kirk picked out a couple great shot glasses for Mom, and then we proceeded to debate over the perfect fireman themed stein, which I'm happy to report was a big hit back home. I settled on a classic blue painted stein with a crest of some kind on it.

And that was it for St. Goar, the sleepy riverside town. We were onto Munich, where I narrowly escaped getting arrested by a Burger King manager. But more on that next time.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Harry Potter Is Wordcrack


I enjoy reading a lot, maybe not as much as the Word Baron, but still. One of my favorite authors from my childhood is Roald Dahl, who wrote "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and a bunch of other rad stuff. One of my personal favorites is "The BFG." In it, a giant eared giant acts as a sort of Sandman, collecting dreams and distributing them to kids at night. One of the bottled dreams is about an author who writes a book so good that anyone who begins it cannot put it down until they have finished it. Society effectively grinds to a halt as everyone tries to spend all day reading and driving/teaching/playing football at the same time. I always felt that this was, out of all the dreams that appear in the book, probably the best.

I think J.K. Rowlings got that dream. Because I could not do anything until I finished Book 7. I even (for a second) tried to read while driving. Haha, only kidding...Perhaps it's just the cumulative effect of delayed gratification for an ending over a decade long in the making, or maybe it's a terrifying clue into the true power of marketing, but frankly, Harry Potter was the only thing I really cared about from when I opened it till I closed it with a sigh.

And it was worth it. Really, really, worth it. It's a great book, and I think a fitting ending to a series that will likely be read hundreds of years from now, long after everyone has forgotten who Harold Bloom is (he's a dick). So congrads to Ms. Rowlings--she's inspired a lot of writing, which is something to be proud of, and brought a wonderful story into a world that is far better off for it.

That being said, that's mostly why i'm behind on the travelogues. Sorry, Mike!

Also: I think Transformers is eyecrack.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

It's a Pun-off!!

Shar, of Shar Blarg! and I occasionally get into Pun-off's, and they're the best. This is one from some who knows when o'clock is Hulk themed and pretty great. I'm the blue text.

SharBlarg:
we should over-dup a documentary about penguins

it'd be a smash hit
a HULK SMASH hit

Steinblogger:
it would make a lot of GREEN I bet

SharBlarg:
it would be a MARVEL

Steinblogger:
It'd probably BREAK lots of records

SharBlarg:
even my grandpa and GAMMA would enjoy it

Steinblogger:
yeah it can be even enjoyed by those of the WORLD WAR generation

SharBlarg:
we would have to ERICt a BANA proclaiming its awesome

Steinblogger:
If everyone CONNOLLY understand that the hulk is just very angry!

SharBlarg:
i'm [purple] SHORTS just a matter of time

Steinblogger:
I wonder if his shorts give him ARRAAAAAAAAASSSSHHH?

SharBlarg:
hahahaha
damn
you win

Steinblogger:
WOOOT
i may have post that

SharBlarg:
pretty frickin awesome
everyone would be jealous
they'd turn GREEN with envy!!!
ahem

Steinblogger:
i'm sure some would ROAR with delight

SharBlarg:
it would be INCREDIBLE
hulk
he he he
incredible hulk
mike says that he's sorry he forgot to give you the decembies thing
he hopes you forgive him. if not, tho, it's your [betty] ROSS

Steinblogger:
hahahahahhah
ITS A TIE

Day 2: What...Is This Place?

Kirk and I woke up around four, mostly by accident. We stopped by a 24 hour 7-11 type place for food. The British really like a sandwich. There's about 40 different kinds all premade and packaged, cheap and mildly filling. Now, if you know anything about me, you know how happy I was made by this. I also made another interesting discovery: Cordial is not the brit way to say "juice," but is instead the bri way of saying "very thick syrup juice concentrate". I discovered this after taking a large swig of my Rasberry Cordial. It didn't mix with the falafel sandwich very well. Kirk passed out as soon as we got on the bus, so I busied myself with more Beatles and watched London go by. Our tour guide, MJ, introduced herself and talked for a bit while I stared at the countryside. I still don't understand how a tiny little island like that can have so many people and still have miles of rolling fields. We made it to the cliffs of Dover, which we would take the ferry over to France. I immediately put on The Decemberists "We Both Go Down Together" and gazed at the Cliffs of Dover, which are indeed so high you can't see over. After we arrived at the hotel outside Amsterdam, unpacked, and ate, then got back on the bus for a 20 minute ride into the city. Most of the group went on a canal cruise while Kirk and I wandered the streets. It is a beautiful city, clean and ornate, 17th century architecture and tall narrow buildings make it feel like San Franciso's cool older cousin. Kirk headed home, still jetlagged, while Bharvin, a indian South African student and I proceeded to indulge in a coffeeshop called The Grasshopper, which would have been fun had I known how to better roll a joint. Regardless, the White Widow, which is a Holland indoor I believe, was so strong that one joint later Bharvin and I were fast friends, marveling at just how otherworldly the Redlight district can be. Especially when you're really, really stoned. Bharvin, not I, wanted to peruse the women of the night, and although I would have been just as happy having another joint at another shop, I'm glad we did. The redlight district and coffee shops are a smoker's paradise--food from every corner of the globe, sex shops, head shops, graffiti, and beautiful women who will have sex with you (for fifty euros). Also, if we hadn't, it's likely we would have had no idea how to take the metro station to the free shuttle to the hotel, because we followed some other people from the tour (who had just got out of a live sex show) back to the hotel, where we fell fitfully asleep for about 4 hours before we had to wake up for breakfast.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

How To Be Invisible

It is easier than you think. Live alone. Shun tv, hot water, your stove. Graduate. Become lost, angry at and tired with the world. Keep irregular sleep patterns. Watch the circles under your eyes darken. Drink wine out of the bottle. Nap constantly. Lose your wallet several times in quick succession, creating a paper trail layers thick.

This part is important: There will be moments, no matter how hard you try to avoid them, of human connection. A lady who smiles genuinely at you, an old man who says hello on the street, children. You must be vigilant, and resist the need to reciprocate. They’ll be hurt, but the alternative is far worse. The more you reject these moments the more you sever the things which truly make you who you are.

Pay in cash. Get a cellphone. Never answer it, and let the voicemail box get full. Drop and break it. Have your email account frozen for violating homeland security codes. Let the electricity go off in your apartment. Eat at the Cambodian deli and get sick. Avoid eye contact. If you must converse with others, stick to scripted responses. The attached scripts are for reference. Meditate on becoming an optical illusion. Try to position yourself in people’s peripheral vision.

You may also feel the need to understand what you are doing. Wrong.

Doing so means you think about yourself as existing, and this is a clear violation of the whole process. While you still labor under the illusion of your own tangibility, you will never achieve it. Ignore your neighbors. Stop dreaming. Curl up into a ball, slowly. Let yourself slowly rot from the inside. Take all mirrors out of your apartment; try to forget what you look like. If your hand becomes translucent, if your feet are suddenly see-through, it is working.

Keep friends at a distance, become horribly undependable. Fall in love, end it abruptly. Get a puppy, give her up for adoption. You must become numb to all emotions, to forget they are even there. If you cannot see them they cannot see you. Alienate your parents, old friends. Project such a terrible energy that strangers become visibly uncomfortable near you. Soon, all phone calls will cease. This is good.

You are becoming invisible because you are a poison, radioactive and deadly. It is not your fault, but you secrete it from your pores. Medical science can’t detect this creeping blackness that seeps from you, but nevertheless, it is lethal in high doses. The courteous thing to do is to quarantine yourself as you begin to fade away, as you cannibalize your own lymph nodes, cells, and organs. If you wish to save those you love, you must never ever let them see what you are now.

Day 1: Please Mind The Gap

I slept for about 90 percent of the plane ride to London, where we'd leave from. We pondered our way out of Heathrow, and were on the right metro to our hotel. I decided that listening to The Beatles was the only appropriate thing to do, so Lennon was reminding me that nothing is real while row after row of brick buildings sped by us. There wasn't a stucco building in sight, a very strange thing indeed for two LA kids. British signs are very wordy, "Way Out" instead of Exit, "Please Mind the Gap" in white and blue all over the inside of the car and on the loudspeaker. I liked them, and the fact that there were signs, big signs(!), for books! People were readining in their spare time! It warmed my heart, it did. My blood went cold when we got off and saw the plaque commemorating the victims of the July bomb attacks in 2005. In retrospect, it might not have been my blood, but it was definetly my toes. I was dressed in sandals, jeans, and a tee shirt--which might have been fine had it not been raining the coldest rain I've ever been rained on by.The streets make spiderwebs and rhombuses from the air, but we managed to get to the hotel, to our tiny room with the most broken down mattress i've ever slept on. Thankfully, I was too tired to give a shit. We were to be up and at the Contiki departure site at 6 in the morning, then it was several hours on a bus and a ferry to France. Kirk conked out fully clothed, jet lagged as all hell, but I, having survived a collegiate sleep schedule, went to bed a few episodes of Supernanny later.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Europe! Exactly Two weeks late!

I wanted to blog while I bus-toured around Europe, but for lots of reasons, I couldn't. But I did write it down! I'm going to post a blog for each day of the trip, roughly two weeks late but in chronological order. Should be fun, especially when I get pictures. I think i'll start tomorrow...i've been up for 36 hours and i'm starting to crash. Oh jet lag, you're the best!

This is a has a lot of things you want to know in it. For Reals.

Here are some things you wanted to know, and their answers:

She doesn't.

He thinks you should, but won't say.

Don't even think about it.

That's your responsibility, not his.

Sorry if you don't like it, but that's how it is! Anyways....

Hi there! I'm back from Europe. It was a good trip, top to bottom. Kirk and I took something like 800 pictures, drank and fought and laughed a lot. But that's for later. During this trip (which was by bus) I had lots of time to think, which was nice, but not to write, which wasn't so great. But: I have decided what I want to do with this blog (with other stuff too, just that it's not relevant here). I haven't posted much because I feel like something has to be of a certain level of quality for it to be public, which this blog is. However, that's a high standard. So instead, I'm just going to post things as I write them and then edit them the next day or so. I'm putting this in the about section because there is now a bit of a flood of things to be posted and you might not have believed the title of this blog.

Here is the scoop:

I need a place vent more publicly, and this blog is it. I think you'll like it, but still, I feel that I should warn you. Also, leave comments on people's posts. Not just mine, but everyone's! They are are nice to read.

Thanks!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Six Ways To Mistreat A Balloon, A Sestina

Why’d you have to go and hold this balloon under-
water? A balloon’s nature is to float, just as hopping is the nature
of a cricket, which makes trying to drown one so foul.
Could you not feel it struggling, fighting for air?
Your defense is a lack of intent, but saying ignorance is
nine/tenths of innocence indicates your guilt.

You are not supposed to puncture the balloon, and steal its air.
The balloon wanted to lift you up, to see the fowl
and geese and swan swim in the sky, with the sea far underneath.
Balloons don’t go along tying themselves to wrists, it’s
not something they do very often, not to add to your guilt.
We’ve never seen balloon behavior like that, even in nature.

To bat a balloon around on a short rubber string is
a cruel and uncalled for punishment. It was immature--
the pressure you put that balloon under
when it desired only to gently orbit your head and ebony hair.
The balloon was full, rotund, and finesse is not what it is built
for. You ignored this, asked too much, but you are no fool.

If you were merciful, you would understand
how much balloons need to be suspended in air.
They have no gravity, so letting one disappear into the flowing
tradewinds only invites it to hurt the natural
balance, being choked on by baby seals. Is
that going to give you more or less guilt?

To watch a balloon stuck in a tree, as if frozen in midair
or imprisoned by fingers, slowly exhale under
Earth’s pressure, become old, shrunk with guilt
over past misdeeds, but actually starving to death in the natural
way: slowing and surely, watched by an lonely owl
as it deflates, unable to withstand the strain, as fragile as it is.

The opposite isn’t much better, let your pretty words flow
into the rubbery form without end, filling it with your hot air,
watch the balloon grow round and complacent as you nurture
it, never letting the orb see the glass dome it is trapped under.
You just whisper beautiful untruths and spit until it is
burst open, ragged on the floor, its skin spilt.

It is a shame, really, that we can share a sky, breathe the same air
and rise above the foul stink of packaged air so naturally
but trading anger and guilt instead of love is a spell we’re under.

By Dan Steinbacher

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Whistle Blower

Please, do not be angry with me.

I know my whistle is harsh, its sound echoing off the concrete and steel of the skytrain tram station. But if the whistle was not so shrill, you would ignore it. I know this for fact. I have been an employee of Bangkok Skytrain for seven years, and I know this about people. You only hear what shocks you. A pleasant note, a melody, a simple tune would not keep you away from the yellow line.

You might think bright yellow line would be enough. Or maybe signs, big signs we have, would stop people. Wrong. People ignore everything, even when it is their safety to do so.
You ask someone, “Hey, don’t you know railway dangerous? Skytrain is automated, cannot stop or even see if person falls onto track?” They know, but pretend not to. Everyone is hurry, rush, rush, rush. That is okay. That is what people do. This is why my job is so important. Most people, they look through me. I am another sign, another advertisement. This is okay, as long as the stay away from edge, from yellow line.

I have learned much about people at my job, too. One look a couple, I know if they are happy, whether man or woman is cheating, if they have babies at home. I can tell the dreams of a young man by the way he waits for a train—he stand straight, he wishes to be business man. Slight crooked stance: doctor. Left foot forward, teacher. I am never able to check, but I know it is true anyway.

When I was new, I did not understand people. I thought I did, was wrong. Thought whistle was too loud, too rude. Thought job unimportant.

That first day, I see a girl peering over the edge, past, way past yellow line. She looking for train to come, but she looking wrong way. She so pretty, long, silky hair, kind eyes. When I now remember her posture, I know she is woman with much love in her heart. The whistle is too harsh, I think. It will hurt her ears and she will be upset with me for scolding her. So gently, I say, “Miss!” Nothing. Louder and louder I yell, but it too late. The train comes, and it catches her arm, throws her onto tracks. I am blowing whistle then, my cheeks hurt from it, but it cannot be heard over the screech of brakes and screams of people.

It took many months before I could close my eyes without seeing woman’s face as she fell, kind eyes open, mouth wide. Many more months before I could see line as yellow instead of a rusty orange. So, please, do not be angry with me for blowing whistle.

Swansong


I was standing in my kitchen, and when I glanced out the window to note the huge thunderheads, I thought I saw something on the power line. Assuming it was nothing out of the ordinary, I turned to face it fully, but there was nothing there. Except...it was like a bulge in the movie screen. I could only see a black blur of it out of the corner of my eyes. I tried hard to focus on it, but I couldn't--my gaze rolled off of it like a marble on a globe. It took a minute of seriously straining my eyes to roll it into my field of vison, but I had nothing to do particularly.

I gawked. It was this huge bird. Not comically huge, but big enough to take down a baby deer. The power line was a little weighed down by it. Claws for ripping, more like talons, really. It was eerily silent too, like radio booth foam, as if sound was drawn into it and then cancelled out. The bird just sat, staring off down the graffiti and broken glass soaked alley, unmoving. It had the darkly intelligent, detached look of a bird of prey, but no raptor I’ve ever seen was that shade of black, glinting coral blues and turquoise opals in the morning sun. The beak was long and curved, elegantly sharp and, like its breastfeathers, were iridescent, oils on colored glass.

What really got me were the eyes, though. Size of a half dollar, yellow-gold, gold-yellow-orange, purple-green-blue, I'm not sure. But they pierced you, went right down into your heart and just grabbed hold of the soft spots. All those places where you are thin and scabbed over, where some holes are so deep that to survive, you must patch glossy veneers over them, like bridges made of bone china. Those eyes speared you right in the heart of the matter, held you there, shined a spotlight on them so brightly you couldn’t look away anymore. I gasped, because I was forgetting to breathe, and because suddenly I was inside the surging rush of blood pounding at my temples and inside my chest. Time slowed and crystallized. Finally, the bird opened its beak, a slow moment of beauty in and of itself.

He spoke one word--my name. It was the voice of my younger brother, who had died two months ago. I was shocked at how much one can cry silently if he just stops blinking long enough. He gave me what I could only interpret as an expectant smirk.

An audible gasp broke the spell for an instant, and over the shoulder of his wing I noticed a tired neighbor-lady standing on her balcony across the way. She was smoking a cigarette and wearing what may have been a maid or waitresses dress. The cigarette dangled off her lips in an impossible way, and her mouth hung wide. She had heard the bird speak as well. "Harold? Is that you? Harold?" She shouted, working her way up to a hysterical pitch. Then she stopped, mouthed I love you, and hugged herself with both arms, rocking slowly back and forth, humming an old slow song to herself.

As for the bird, it still had not moved, but now he contracted and burst off the line in one liquid motion, and as his wingspan, impossibly huge, expanded outwards, I saw what may have been an entire galaxy of stars and planets, or blue fire, or melting diamonds, or the memory of my brother and I, throwing a ball for the dog at the park, trading stories. Then it set off in an easterly direction.

Last One Out

Now, my task is almost done...t beginning of it is lost to me, everything is a swirl of tectonic shifts and lava flows, the throes of birth… both mine and Hers—our tasks set before us: Hers was to mother, to create and nurture, mine to shape, carve, erode—our dance has been going for innumerable kalpas, ranges of mountains rise up, and I tear them down with centuries of gales, my breath never ceasing, fighting with my cousin Water for the attention of Earth…Water is weak, spread out, and lacking internal drive; while I, Wind, carve canyons and whistle my shrieks with cavern-mouths until She blushes with longing, joining slowly in my desire, groaning with pleasure for millennia until another mountain range is born—in the past, you may have found the spots where our lovemaking has ground her surface flat, dry, where I have chased even Water away…I do not only exist to destroy however; It is I who brings the breath of life everywhere I travel, cooling Her with breezes, light caresses, blowing zephyrs where she is cold and in need of touch—still, I go about my task, finishing, making sure the job is well done, I have all the time I need…it has been so long since anything moved on Her surface…once it was teeming, now, I have conquered all life, choked it with sand, my victory roar—but it is a hollow one, for I am all alone…in the throes of his death-rattle, Father Sun boiled my liquid cousin away…I tried to save him, to catch as much as I could so he could rain down again, but it was wasn’t enough… Mother Moon lay dull and lifeless, having no light to reflect, and no one to gaze upon… Father scorched my lover’s beautiful skin, leaving nothing but bleached skeletons and cold, endless cold darkness… Faced with such loss, with nothing to nurture, Earth herself lost all hope, and we grew distant, lovers who turned into strangers —then She began to slow…no mountains came…then no new islands…even her tremors stopped: Her internal fire was dying, and there was nothing to be done, whether it was by force of will or just the way of things, it was happening nonetheless, and I, so powerful, could do nothing…I screamed at her to wake up, roared longer and louder than I had ever dreamed I could, but no reply came—she was gone…there is no telling how long I raged for, eons, epochs, perhaps, but when I was done, with nothing but her dead husk to mourn over, I had carved a belt of desert around the diameter of her shell; wearily realizing that my task would be over when I had truly ground her down into flat, efficient uniformity—I was able to clear the western hemisphere simply by remembering her curves in the early days and how now I was erasing them, while it took me several years to finish the Himalayan ranges—I saved the old metropolises for last, as they were the simplest—just some light metals and crystals, with occasional concrete for good measure…now that I know I am done and nothing remains, I release my atmosphere, my own gravity, and drift into nothingness to join Her…how simple it is, how beautiful…I had it within me all along, my task and prison were of my own making, but now it is over: I am resting, ceasing, finally at peace and at an end.