Monday, September 26, 2011

Rant-Writing

     It's Rant-day, a day when rants overshadow the traditional Mon, Tues, Wednes, -days. These Rant-days can happen any time. We hide rants, subdue rants, put rants off, or vent rants. Yet the best rants are banked- rants...rants that are saved up. Banked-rants are tucked away in a vault, a brain vault that accrue interest. We make rant-deposits and the rant-account grows and grows until the top of our head explodes and our brains splatter all over the walls...or in the case of this blog, all over the windows. I wonder what that would look like from the other side of the closed window, window number three. Suppose I were outside looking in and you, the ranter, were on the verge of your head exploding. Your skull would look like a balloon ready to fracture, face red, cheeks puffed, eyes bulging, hair straight out like a new spiked-out style.
    So rather than risk my own head exploding, I formally declared this day, to-day, Rant-day. In accordance with official rules of Rant-day, there must be at least ten rants and they must be listed in ascending order of Rant-power. And these rants must be purged in descending order. This is important in that by the time rant number one is revealed, the previous, lesser rants have made room inside the brain for contraction, deflation as it were. Can you imagine what would happen if the number one rant were expelled in proper rant-fashion and with the brain in such a stretched out state? Complete collapse, like a Black Hole where the brain deflates so fast and so completely that it sucks in everything around from the outside...the outside becomes the inside and you end up wearing your inside out. My head hurts.

For today, Rant-day, having expelled other rants...a rant-expulsion, I can now reveal my number one rant--squirrels. Today, squirrels take precedent over the top rants like baggy-assed britches, people parked in the passing lane, hangovers, cops driving 100 mph while driving with their knee and talking on a cell phone, and Cadillacs and IPODs at the Welfare office. 

squir·rel  (skwûrl, skwr-)
n.
1. Any of various arboreal rodents of the genus Sciurus and related genera of the family Sciuridae, having a long flexible bushy tail and including the fox squirrel, gray squirrel, and red squirrel. Also called tree squirrel.
2. Any of various other rodents of the family Sciuridae, as the ground squirrel or the flying squirrel.
3. The fur of one of these rodents.
tr.v. squir·reled or squir·relled, squir·rel·ing or squir·rel·ling, squir·rels
To hide or store: squirreled away her money.

[Middle English squirel, from Anglo-Norman esquirel, from Vulgar Latin *scriolus, diminutive of *scrius, alteration of Latin scirus, from Greek skiouros : ski, shadow + our, tail; see ors- in Indo-European roots.]

Please notice the words rodent and vulgar in the definition.

I hate squirrels. Squirrels are a razor and a shave away from a rat. My neighborhood is infested with squirrels. There are many who think they are sooo cute. "Awww, look at how cute and furry they are. "  Squirrels dig. They dig like dogs dig...nose buried, front paws scratching furiously in the dirt, that dirt being flung in clouds of black stuff which lands in displaced piles all over freshly placed cedar mulch. What are they digging for you ask? Flower bulbs. Those expensive living balls that are delicately placed in the dirt and with the warmpth of the Sun, some moisture from the clouds, and a bit of coaxing, they produce plants and flowers. I love flowers and squirrels selfishly deprive me of that adoration.

But I have found a cure for squirrels...paintball. Yes folks, paintball. I am the proud owner of a paintball gun. It sits rightfully with my collection of guns. I have a 22, a 33-33, a 12 gauge, a 30-06, a 22 pistol, a 44 magnum revolver, a 22-250, there are more...and ammo, lots of ammo...and no you can't have my address. My trusty paintball gun sits right alongside of these beauties. Since I live in a neighborhood, we cannot actually shoot these hairy rats, splatter their insides out...oh forbid, that would be cruel...I whack them with paintballs. Paintballs seem ok with most neighbors...except the neighbor in back. He is a soul with two spirits. He didn't like me whacking squirrels with paintballs...told me it was gross and inhuman and that we have long since evolved from cavemen. He doesn't know about my gun collection. It's a rat...a rat with an orange spot on his side. A marked, owned, and disgraced rodent. I wonder if there is some caste system within the squirrel world where they dispel and shun squirrels who look different...much like we humans do? "Oh look, Chuck. There's Peter. His orange spot is so disgusting. Let's run him out of the tree."

So, after a year of testing this method of squirrel control, I can safely say that although they do err occasionally and find their way over my fence, for the most part, squirrels keep to the neighbors yard these days. And although I hate squirrels and lay patiently in wait for one of the forgetful rats to scamper within range, I feel I have scored a monumentous victory for mankind. Sometimes when I get home late at night, after rant-venting over a few too many pints on a Rant-day, I stand in the middle of my back yard and turn in the direction of my neighbor, the one with two spirit. Wearing only a  loin-cloth and horned helmet, in the ancient ritual of my ancestors, I raise the paintball gun over my head like a war-worn sword, and fire off a long volley into the quiet midnight air...and with my face turned toward the heavens, I let out an blood thirsty victory yell that would make Odin and Beowulf proud.        I have--conquered the squirrel.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Memory via the Senses


How many times have we caught a faint scent passing with the wind and an image of something out of the past floods our mind, or a flash catches the corner of our eye and a friend, relative, or even a stranger who has long since passed away is remembered? We all have struggled to recall that person over there…we know we have seen her before…or we stand in confusion in a new place that we have been before. Moreover, how often do we explore these queries, write them down, ponder them, savor them as parts of ourselves from long ago that have helped mold us into who and where we are today? Most often, we pass them by with an “oh well” or an “I’ll have to think about that when I have more time.” The concept of sensory recall was the premise of my exercise in last week’s class.

I asked that we think of a smell, an image, a taste, or a sound that triggers a memory and we were to write about both the trigger and the response. After reading the short paragraphs, I must say that everyone conveyed some powerful thoughts. There were smells of grease, cow manure, horse manure (I’m wondering about the preoccupation with manure), the ocean, chlorine, fall, leather, hospitals. The sense of taste included cigarettes, wine, and melting butter dripping from corn on the cob…these tastes sound like a party. There was one sound trigger, the sound of migrating geese.

After we read a couple of these memories, everyone wrote what they thought of the exercise. In reviewing those responses, it seems we all have memories that are brought out by some event that stimulates our senses, yet rarely do we pursue them, or write about them…and maybe we should…we have traded a part of our life for them. Thanks to everyone for your help in a quest for triggers that shake the rafters of my own mind.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The Fourth Window...A workshop essay


     The chalk screeched and squealed across the blackboard. Dr. J.G. spoke softly through his tobacco-stained chest-length beard as he drew four rectangular boxes one after the other, each much taller than wide. His hair was white, long, and stuck out under a straw hat with stickpins and a feather. A gray tweed sport coat, faded blue jeans, and worn-out sneakers made him look almost homeless. I would soon discover this rag-tag collection of antiquity was one of the most profound people I would ever encounter.
     Dr. G explained his artistry as he paced and drew what he called, The Four Window Metaphor. Each rectangle represented a window. With different colored chalk, he adorned each window with layers of tapestries and curtains. He drew the curtains tight together on the first window. He explained that we couldn’t see anything on the other side of the window. Our senses, feelings, thoughts were locked up safe inside the walls that held the window. The drapes were shown as pulled aside in the second window. Here, we see the world outside. We begin to wonder what the kids are playing out there. We see buildings, roads, cars…or explosions, death, violence. Dr. G. continued to the third window. This window looked much the same as the second, except the lower sash was raised…the window was open. Our world is expanding, our senses becoming aware of a world larger than ourselves. We can not only see the smiles, but we hear the laughter. We are able to make a connection between the rich colors of flowers and their sweet smell. Our senses are stimulated and our interest aroused. Yet, many times, we off-handedly acknowledge the open window and go about the timeless tasks of cleaning our room.
      The fourth window had no glass. Dr. G. drew an image of a man half in and half out of this window…an escape from here to there. We consciously leave our safety zone of blind comfort hidden behind the windows? What internal strength needs to be mustered to deliberately run to the fourth window, smash the glass into glistening shards that fall through the sunlight, and leap through the portal into places unknown? Dr. G’s Four Window Metaphor is a multi-level epiphany into worlds of understanding about how we choose our paths, where those paths will lead, and why we stand in the place we now occupy.
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     It was chilly the day we buried my Dad. He died on a Sunday last March. The sky was clear and blue, the ground cold and muddy, the air still and crisp. I stood for a long time, after everyone had left, looking at the casket, the grave…and saw nothing. At the memorial service, I heard people saying, “Remember when…”, “I remember…”, “There was this time…”. Yet, I heard nothing. I was locked in my own room, my own world…hidden safely behind the curtains.
     I have a few ancient black and white pictures…the ones with the scalloped edges and a date on the back. I have the stories from my mother, from my siblings…and I have hidden pathways deep inside my mind, my memories. In the weeks and months that followed, memories of my childhood flooded my world… memories of play, of learning, cuts, bruises, toys, and boyhood experiences. They became exploding manifestations of images pushing on the insides of my eyes. Without warning, memories were emerging. They were smashing the glass out of the window and building a bridge for me between then and now.
**********
     Memories are the neural journey into our past. We repress, pass by, cover over, attempt to erase, relive, revive, rebuild memories. We each have intimate ownership of our memories. No one on Earth has our memories. Events happened the way we remember them. Each memory occupies a special place in our own history, our own journey. How many times do we stop speeding in frantic laps around our room and venture out into the obscure world of memory? How important is it to us to open the window that separates yesterday and today, walk through repression and join them together into singular and coherent world of serenity?
**********
     Four months had passed since Dad died. Processing that kind of event is a life-long thing. The effects are far-reaching and profound. On a hot day late in June, I decided to drive to Florida and watch the last space shuttle take off. The first week in July, I took off in my truck to witness history. 
     There are no words, no videos, no pictures able to describe a shuttle launch. The magnificent power unleashed by those rockets, the cone of fire creating the millions of pounds of thrust, the eruption of smoke billowing around the launch pad, the majestic flume of vapor left behind the hurtling orange fuel tank…and the noise. A roar that shakes the Earth, shatters the air, sends shock waves through palm trees for miles…and rattles windows. The affair lasts a mere few seconds…then it is a memory.
     I stood leaning against the box of my 4x4 and watched the vapor trail linger, threaded through the clouds like a tether between the rocket and the Earth, between a world of everything, and a world of nothing, like a bridge between now and then. There, standing alone among thousands of people, thoughts of long ago when the space program first started, began to find their way out of my head.
**********
     I grew up on a farm. It was five miles into town…a mile south to the canal bridge, another half mile to the corner just across the railroad tracks, then west another three and a half miles. Many times I’d ride with Dad in the old Chevy farm truck loaded with hampers full of tomatoes headed for the Hunts plant. There, the tomatoes were stewed and processed, then bottled in tall octagon glass bottles as catsup or canned as sauce. At night, we could smell the sweet, rich aroma of the boiling tomatoes drifting through the trees like a late summer swamp fog.
     Locked in a cold war of propaganda, the United States and the USSR were in a space race. President Kennedy announced that the US would win the race and land a man on the Moon before the decade of the 60’s was over. Nights were dark on the farm back then. The concept of light pollution was as far away as computers and spell check. We would stand outside at night, Dad, Mom, my brothers and sister and I, smell the stewing tomatoes, and Dad would point out constellations. Sometimes we could watch a tiny speck of light reflected from a spacecraft as it raced across the sky.
     I watched as the space program was born, when humans first entered space, stood by during the maturing process…now I watched as the manned space program died. Book-ends, a bridge between now and then, a life span, a bridge made of memory. Emotions flowed there as I thought about Dad and how he took the time to teach me about the world around me, how unburdened I felt by uncovering the past, and how enlightened I felt as I found myself on the other side of the window.
     There are many such stories, such bridges, like the go-cart Dad and I built when I was seven or eight…later in life, I built and drove race cars. Racing was and still is my life’s passion. One of those old black and white photos is of me. I was four and driving an old Farmall A tractor…I have made a very successful and rewarding career operating heavy equipment. And there were the guns…I still own my first 22. Dad bought it for me when I was six or seven. The list is endless and circular encompassing every segment of my life. There were model airplanes, model cars, baseball cards, bicycles, tricycles, toy trucks, cap guns, hand tools, power tools, mud puddles, summer rain, swimming holes, fishing poles, things to see, things to do…we were poor, yet we had so much. Many of us today have so much, yet are so poor. Much of the world lives tucked safely compartmentalized behind prejudices, judgments, and bitterness…never realizing the bridges, the history, the memories. We hide from our memories as we boldly race against time without regards or cares to where we have been, or to what traces we leave behind.
     While I was still in Florida, I met up with a friend…a girlfriend from long ago. We have recently been reacquainted…it had been many years, since before I was married, that we had seen each other. I thought about her many times…wondered where she was, if she was married, kids, if she remembered the times we had. Over the last few months, we have written, talked on the phone, exchanged pictures, stories, and memories. The sharing of memories has created a friendship of monumental proportions. We had gotten together once before a couple of months ago. She was visiting her mother in the north and I was traveling close to there on business. That meeting was very warming and emotional. Yet when we met in Florida, it was different. The newness of re-acquaintance had faded and the friendship, the ease of sharing had replaced the newness. We shared our memories with each other. We exchanged and compared, brought out from deep compartments the essence of those days when we shared life and related how those times have influenced our journeys. Our friendship has been a shared awakening for both of us…perhaps I am not the sole owner of my memories after all.
**********
     My life is a journey from back there to somewhere ahead, with today being the sum product of there to here. My memories of back there, the paths I have taken, are in essence who I am today. Everything I have become, in some way, has been shaped by where I have been…my experiences, my lessons, my memories. As I sit writing, remembering, I think about The Four Window Metaphor and of the many allegoric levels that apply. I am in awe of the multitude of windows through which I peer and pass through—and I wonder if my Dad had those same memories as I…I wonder if in life part of him shared those memories, my memories. I wonder how many windows I share with him…with family, loved ones, friends, and acquaintances…and when I am gone, when I have completed my journey here, when I have passed through the Fourth Window of life, I wonder—do we all share windows?


Saturday, September 10, 2011

Toys R Us

     Our Creative Fiction Workshop had an assignment to list three favorite toys as a child. We were then to try remembering a toy we wanted but never had. I must admit, at first glance, I thought this exercise was rather simplistic. But, like a toy, a simple thing can keep us occupied for hours...in this case, days and I suspect weeks or months. Simple? Not hardly.
     We grew up on a vegetable farm in Western New York. I don't know for sure, but I can guess that Dad made about 75 cents an hour. Life on the farm was hard for him...for all of us, only we didn't know it. Life was what it was. We were warm, had enough to eat, Mom made our clothes, and we had toys. Mom and Dad went without toys so we could have toys. Looking back, I can plainly see how much those toys influenced all of our lives.
     I won't reveal any more for now, except that the opportunity given from a simple exercise, to think about a simple thing, has exploded into a labyrinth of memories from simpler times. Exploring those memories have smashed the glass from the third window, and have allowed me to escape through that fourth window, into the fourth dimension, the dimension of memory, to journey through this place, and become more enlightened about how the web of neural highways have become my today.    
 

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Welcome to The Fourth Window



     Welcome to my blog. Our Creative Non-Fiction Workshop class is trying something new and exciting…we are doing our assignments, our writing, and responses as blog posts in our own blogs. This unique concept is the brainchild of our professor, Dr. A.P. here at B. University. While along the way a few nuances may crop up, I suspect the entire semester will be a learning experience on many levels.
     While the mechanics of blogging will be a challenge, writing for an audience unknown will draw back curtains which have hidden very safely, my tattered notebooks, my piles of papers, my electronic files that only professors and a few classmates have been allowed to read.
     The internet is an unlimited and timeless. Blog surfers, lurkers, and authors scan the internet each day…and will likely do so for years. What we will write is free game for anyone, friends, family, enemies, potential employers, and complete strangers will have access to our thoughts, feelings, wants, desires…access without reciprocity…surely an exhilarating concept, if not altogether scary. Who will read it? What if a friend takes something out of context? What if a parent reads it? What if a future employer bases a decision on what I write? Should I temper what I write with these questions in mind?
     For me, stepping through the comfortable curtains, behind which I have safely hidden my writing, presents me with a monumental challenge…like the first kiss, the first step into a college classroom, the first lap in a new race car…or the last breath one takes. A new venture…I might get bruised, I might get hurt, I will have fun, and I will learn something about myself I never knew. In any case, what I write will be parts of me that I care to share. Those parts I do not care to share will rightfully stay safely hidden behind the curtains of my mind.
     So, without further explications, I am going to run past the curtained windows and  jump right through The Fourth Window and into parts unknown. Enjoy yourself here, leave a comment or two,  and please stop at my other blog called When Trees Fall, here at blogspot.com.