A Pirate’s Wishlist

From time to time people ask me if I have a wishlist. I have several as a matter of fact. Some of you are on that list if you know what I’m saying. But you could pretty much see this as my wishlist. I’ll take one of each shirt. Size xxl.

From time to time people ask me if I have a wishlist.

I have several as a matter of fact. Some of you are on that list if you know what I’m saying.

But you could pretty much see this as my wishlist.

I’ll take one of each shirt. Size xxl.

thanks, CG

The lovely and talented ChelseaGirl pointed some of her fleshbotty traffic my way with a link; only I’ve not had much to say lately. If you folks got here following her link, go look here for my small catalog of written expression. — …And now CG’s entry on writing has been picked up by (the […]

The lovely and talented ChelseaGirl pointed some of her fleshbotty traffic my way with a link; only I’ve not had much to say lately.

If you folks got here following her link, go look here for my small catalog of written expression.

…And now CG’s entry on writing has been picked up by (the lovely and talented) Bacchus from Erosblog, and so I’m getting even more hits. So if you’re looking for the story CG mentioned, that’s here, in it’s pre-edit form; the erotic novella Wanton.

So thanks Bacchus as well as CG!

Rubber Legs and Cemeteries

Wow, are my legs sore. I realize now how long it’s been since I’ve been on a bike. Where’s my fuckin’ advil? Wait, actually, where’s my darvocet? Not that I need it, but if I’m takin’ pills, it might as well be ones with side benefits. It’s been a long time, and yet, I find, […]

Wow, are my legs sore.

I realize now how long it’s been since I’ve been on a bike. Where’s my fuckin’ advil?

Wait, actually, where’s my darvocet? Not that I need it, but if I’m takin’ pills, it might as well be ones with side benefits.

It’s been a long time, and yet, I find, even though I’m outta shape (it’s been that kind of year), that I’m a better bike rider than I was. When I bought myself a mountain bike twelve, thirteen years ago, I remember thinking, this used to be easier when I was a kid. Now though, even with the quads tight and the breath not coming as easy as I’d like, with the hills feeling oh-so-much steeper than they look, I’m finding my riding skills better, ten years away from my last bike ride.

I realize, though in many ways it’s different, that riding a motorcycle almost every day for much of the last decade has made me a better bicycle rider. Not that that’s a surprise; not like the realization I had after my first long dive-every-day trip that diving makes me a better motorcyclist (who knew?) yet, it’s a pleasure to find that I’m more, rather than less, comfortable after the intervening years.

But damn, my legs are rubber today. A ride up the hill to the local cemetery (which wasn’t so much because it’s memorial day as just because my kids like cemeteries; they’re morbid little monsters, but that’s no surprise) was pretty much an uphill slog the entire way. And I haven’t seen a squat or a leg press or a lunge or even a treadmill in six months.

I’ve a goal though, for both me and the young’un, of getting up that hill to the cemetery without a break. No bike walking, no stopping. By mid june. That, and a return to the gym sometime in the next week or two, and maybe, just maybe, I’ll be back to feeling like me again by the end of the summer.

I think I can I think I can…

Two Wheelers

After a very long, hard struggle involving mis-teaching, panic, fear, anger, and desire, my daughter can now, at twelve, ride a two-wheeler. Your long dark nightmare is over, I told her. This was a long time coming. She was set up badly in the early days by grandma ‘helping’ – which is to say, pushing. […]

After a very long, hard struggle involving mis-teaching, panic, fear, anger, and desire, my daughter can now, at twelve, ride a two-wheeler.

Your long dark nightmare is over, I told her.

This was a long time coming. She was set up badly in the early days by grandma ‘helping’ – which is to say, pushing. Olivia would ride around in grandmas back yard on her first adorable little red training-wheeled bike. Olivia would steer, grandma would push. They did this for about two years while telling me ‘Olivia can ride her bike’, only, Olivia could not ride at all. Somehow this set in poor O’s mind the notion that bikes should go without any pedal action at all. She’s been fighting this ever since.

We’ve tried – first by buying her a couple of cool bikes, then by offering rewards and bribes. The training wheels and coaster brakes, which should have made it easy, made it harder because she would stop peddling each time the bike started to go. The old habit would kick in, and she’s stop, and then bike would stop, or worse, flip.

Each and every time, no matter who worked with her, she’s wind up in panicked tears.

This weekend, a beautiful, sunny weekend, she found the place in herself where desire and anger overcame fear; she wanted to try again. And so her mother’s bike came out of the garage – a brilliantly well-styled bike but frankly not a good bike for a beginner. And it looked like we had the usual taped replay, fear and panic driving Olivia, making her stop and give up every time the bike began to move. Olivia had the skills. We could see it. She could ride. But fear overcame all, and each time she hit that point that every bike rider knows by instinct, the point where you kick the pedal and the bike stabilizes, she’d instead drop her feet to the ground or worse, back-pedle the coaster brakes; and she’d go down, and sob in frustration at why the bike won’t stay up.

We had a melt-down, sobbing, anger, frustration. I’m not fearless like you guys! she sobbed.

And I sat with her, my arm around her as she sat in the seat in her grand-mother’s borrowed van, the sun on the back of my neck, and I talked to her about fear and anger and desire; about the things we all fear, about the fears adults have they won’t admit to. And I told her it isn’t about not being afraid; it’s about not letting the fear win. It’s about letting the desire, or the anger be stronger than the fear, about getting angry and saying, i won’t let you beat me. And when she found that in herself, she’d push instead of giving in.

She cried, and then came back, and wanted to try again. So I got out my beat up old bridgestone mountain bike, which I haven’t ridden in ten years, and I said, stop yelling, stop crying, stop arguing, stop talking, stop moving, and just sit and watch me. And I peddled around, stopped, started, turned, just showed her how the bike tips and wobbles, but STAYS UP WHEN YOU PEDDLE.

And she sobbed, and said she couldn’t. And in two and three foot increments, we worked our way up my street, her failing over and over. And, for the first time, though her face grew red and she began to cry, she didn’t let it win. She got angry, but instead of stopping and screaming and arguing about how she couldn’t and why she couldn’t, she did what I’d told her, what her mother’s told her, what friends have told her, and looked ahead, not down, and saw where she wanted the bike to go, and peddled when she felt like stopping, and suddenly, the bike was moving. And I was peddling along side her, watching for cars, and telling her, that’s in, you’re riding – faster now, faster, faster! and she argued with me; don’t say faster, that makes me want to go slower, so I said go slower go slower and she argued with that as well; but she was peddling as she argued, distracted and letting the instinct to peddle take over.

And that was it. All the way to the end of the street and back. She faltered and stumbled and fell, but she got back on and needed no help, and while she’d whimper I’m sorry and why am I so stupid each time, she got back on and beamed when she started to move again. We rode to grandmas house, to the local grade school, me peddling a bike with three working gears out of twenty-one and barely any brakes, her peddling that beast of a cruiser, far too big and heavy for her. And we didn’t want to stop.

I made her a promise years ago, that the day she rode, she could go get a bike, any bike she wanted. And I would have done that, even if she’d demanded this one, or the one for which I lust in my heart, this one. But she listened to the bike store guy, and listened to me when I told her those bikes are cool but they don’t work that well for the hilly terrain where we live, that they’re big and heavy and hard to carry around (all the reasons I don’t own that beautiful 8-ball bike). She listened because she felt strong and didn’t need to make a fuss.

She tried a couple of really cool-looking bikes, and struggled, and then she got on this bike at the store, took it around the parking lot, and knew instantly that she could ride this thing.

And so it’s hers, the Raleigh Passage 3.0.

Passage3.0Mblack-Ral06-F

Not flaming red or cobalt blue or whatever her favorite color is this week. Not styly or hip. She went with the choice of fit and function over an amazingly-colord bike she tried first. She never fussed, or second guessed. Black goes with everything she said, and couldn’t wait to get it home.

When you’re that age, bikes represent freedom. The world just opened up to her. The library, the bookstore, the local hangouts. Starbucks and the local mall. She can get there. She’s not ready now, but she sees the distance shrink. She sees the world, unreachable yesterday, drawing close to her, like space warping. She’s asking me, can we rent bikes, next time we go to Hawaii, or Fiji, or Turk and Caicos? Can we ride to the local Sushi place instead of driving? Can we go out now, please, right now. She doesn’t care that she’s covered in bruises from falling, that her butt hurts from the seat, that she’s got odd sore muscles in her legs. She wants to move and not stop moving.

And I remember that feeling. Like my daughter, I was a big, slow kid. I was strong; I was an ox. But I was slow and clumsy. The bike changed that, letting the strength in my legs compensate for my size. I could race my friends, and while I didn’t usually win, I never came in last. I could move and go. Freedom and power.

I stood there in that bike shop and looked at the bike she’d chosen, and looked at the killer sale price, and started mentally adding up how much it was going to cost me to get my mountain bike working. I added up the parts and the effort and the time and then looked at her riding and I said to the clerk, hey, can I try this one?

And unexpectedly, I came home with the big brother to Olivia’s bike. Again, not the 8-ball, not the Rat Fink. Not the $1200 full-shock mountain bike. No flames, but an embarrassingly grown-up metal-flake silver. But it got me out on the road without letting me build road-blocks to impede myself. And it got me out, peddling, instead of sitting on my ass playing Resident Evil, or fooling around at my computer, not writing nor working, just killing time. It got me out in the sunshine (note to self – remember a hat next time), sweating. It got me remembering how much I like being on two wheels. And it got me doing something with my kids that I remember doing with my parents.

Let’s Ride.

Here We Are Now

Oh my god. I’d be speechless if I wasn’t both laughing and deeply impressed. The lovely and talented Miss Syl posted a clip, from Jools Holland’s Hootenanny, of – well, you know, you just have to see it. Go there, then read the rest of this below the cut.

Oh my god. I’d be speechless if I wasn’t both laughing and deeply impressed.

The lovely and talented Miss Syl posted a clip, from Jools Holland’s Hootenanny, of – well, you know, you just have to see it. Go there, then read the rest of this below the cut.

Read more “Here We Are Now”

eight-oh-one

The pure delight of finding something you never knew about. I love that feeling. This may be old news to you folks. Ray, DN, CG, i bet you guys all had this on vinyl. But somehow I missed it. 801. Phil Manzanera, Eno, Bill MacCormick, Simon Phillips, etc. Maybe I never payed attention to Manzanera […]

The pure delight of finding something you never knew about.

I love that feeling.

This may be old news to you folks. Ray, DN, CG, i bet you guys all had this on vinyl. But somehow I missed it.

801. Phil Manzanera, Eno, Bill MacCormick, Simon Phillips, etc.

Maybe I never payed attention to Manzanera ’cause Bryan Ferry touches in me in that Morrissey place; that I like the music but the singer drives me up a fuckin’ wall place. You know what I’m sayin’; it may be Neil Young that touches you there, or the Violent Femmes, or Rush. None of those people touch my Morrissey spot; Bryan Ferry does.

Maybe that’s why I missed out on Manzanera. Or maybe it’s cause I can’t stop mixing him up with Ray Manzarek. But whatever it is, for some reason I’ve never payed any attention to ol’ Phil and his axework.

So this week, while not blogging or writing, while trying to get work done and not side-track myself with social interaction or flirtation, I’ve been playing a lotta music. I’ve been playing with pandora a bit, and I’ve been in a heavy (extremely heavy, you know what I’m sayin) King Crimson phase where I had to go back and get Red and Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, and Starless and Bible Black, all of which I used to have on vinyl but never got on CD. I’ve been playing this shit in my office and, I imagine, annoying the peole around me with it. I’ve been pondering getting new speakers so I can crank this more, cause you know, I really don’t like head phones that much, despite owning a pair of $800 Grados.

So yesterday I was trying to get pandora.com to grok what prog rock is. It seems to do very well indeed at getting punk rock or funk or the jazz I like, even with no concept of genre, but prog confuses it; I tell it I like King Crimson and Yes and Genesis and Jethro Tull and Camel and Gentle Giant, and it says, sure, I gotcha, here’s some AC/DC and some Sepultura and Ron Wood’s solo album. So you know, what the fuck?

But one of the more spot-on picks it handed me was 801’s East of Asteroid, which grabbed me right off with some great, jazzy-proggy guitar and drumming, and then it launches off with this heavy, heavy bass line. And I’m thinking, who’s this band? They’re… cool.

So I wander over to iTunes where I have trouble finding them ’cause the album’s listed as Phil Manzanera, not as 801. I listen to a couple tunes, and decide, what the fuck, this is a serious line-up, and I know a lot of the songs here. I plunks down me money down.

This afternoon, I went through all the King Crimson I had, and all the King Crimson one of my co-workers had on his shared iTunes library, and then remembered this 801 stuff I’d gotten.

I’ve been playin’ it all afternoon. And I want to play it again. These guys are – brilliant. Manzanera’s an amazing guitar player, but we knew that. But Bill MacCormick – wow. Who the fuck is this dude? He’s awesome. And the odd counterpoint of Eno’s silly art-rock lyrics with this heavy prog aesthetic somehow works perfectly, leaving something that skates the surface of the usual prog pretentiousness, veering into spacey jams and sorta psychedelic bits. In places it’s vaguely like Pink Floyd, in other spots it’s like King Crimson, some of the guitar sounds like Bill Nelson of Be-Bop Deluxe (another of my all-time favorite bands). And of course here and there it sounds like Roxy Music.

I’m having one of those oh my god I love this band, and they only have one or two albums moments. How did this album – which came out in 1976 – escape my notice? I have no idea.

Maybe it was – you know – the drugs. But now I have to figure out what else I missed by not paying any attention to Manzanera.

I Have No Mouth, and I Must…

Evidently I’ve not only stopped blogging but stopped communicating almost completely. Even my mother just asked me if she’d pissed me off, and she’s never said anything like that to me, ever. I’m certain there’s a list of people who are likewise wondering if I’m angry, or who are angry with me. Mea Culpa. I’m […]

Evidently I’ve not only stopped blogging but stopped communicating almost completely. Even my mother just asked me if she’d pissed me off, and she’s never said anything like that to me, ever. I’m certain there’s a list of people who are likewise wondering if I’m angry, or who are angry with me.

Mea Culpa. I’m sorry. It’s been a weird week or so. I’m trying to settle down and write something, anything. The words slip through my grasping fingers like eels.

He is called the human nest-egg
Is known as Prince of Leaves
He is hidden now but you can see
The bubbles where he breathes
He has mastered all the hard things
And is difficult to shock
Has a muscle on the bottom
Which attaches him to the rocks

     –Shriekback, New Man

blog break

I didn’t really plan it but I seem to have taken some sort of break from blogging. I look back at my last couple weeks of entries and find that even though there are a few posts, they’re free of content. And since last weekend I’ve had nothing whatsoever to say, not even able to […]

I didn’t really plan it but I seem to have taken some sort of break from blogging. I look back at my last couple weeks of entries and find that even though there are a few posts, they’re free of content. And since last weekend I’ve had nothing whatsoever to say, not even able to write apart from a couple current-eventss notes.

I don’t know if this is the end of taking a break or just the beginning. But I know I still have nothing to say.

So. Let’s just call this a blog break and see what happens.

Cats foot iron claw
Neuro-surgeons scream for more
At paranoias poison door.
Twenty first century schizoid man.

Blood rack barbed wire
Polititians funeral pyre
Innocents raped with napalm fire
Twenty first century schizoid man.

Death seed blind mans greed
Poets starving children bleed
Nothing hes got he really needs
Twenty first century schizoid man.

Leigh Ann Hussey

Fuck.

This is a friend of mine – or used to be, hadn’t talked to her in a couple years. Old ‘net friend from motorcycle newsgroups; a gifted violin player who played in local celtic bands.

LIVERMORE – The Alameda County coroner’s office identified the motorcyclist killed when a dump truck ran over her Tuesday night as 44-year-old Leigh Hussey of Berkeley.

Authorities were investigating late Tuesday the circumstances that led Hussey to inexplicably lose control of her BMW bike about 7:20 p.m. and slip under the back axle of a yellow dump truck on westbound Interstate 580 near North Livermore Avenue, Highway Patrol said.

Hussey was crushed by the truck’s two rear tires and was then thrown to the right hand shoulder, Highway Patrol officer John Pabst said. She was pronounced dead at the scene from massive trauma.

http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/14596956.htm

While she wasn’t a close friend, she’s a close friend of several of my friends. And I don’t even know what to say. Other than, you know, ride safe people.

season over

Hockey season is officially over. Forget the cup. The Sharks are out, thus no no hockey from here matters. When’s football season start? *sigh*

Hockey season is officially over. Forget the cup. The Sharks are out, thus no no hockey from here matters.

When’s football season start?

*sigh*