I’m sitting in the Southwest Airlines terminal in Baltimore-Washington airport after a long week. What I’m doing here and why it was long and stressful don’t matter now. All that matters is that I’m sitting here, and its been a pretty successful week, and its a nice space, and the weather has been fine, but I’m kind of barely holding it together.
I remember many years ago, I traveled up here to interview with a professor at Johns Hopkins for their phd program in what was then called applied math. That particular program was focused on computational geometry, an area I was familiar with from my work at GSI. You’ve probably never heard of them, and they don’t exist anymore, assimilated in the long list of mergers and acquisitions across the landscape of American business over the last thirty years. Yes, I said thirty years, that’s how long ago it was.
I can recall another trip, not that much further back when I was about to graduate from UT, with Harris Corp., in of all places, Rochester N.Y. There was no way I was going to live there, though they did make me an offer. But I remember the nice hotel they put me up in, and imagining how in my career I would become an important man and an experienced traveler. That sort of happened, but its not like what I imagined. I also talked with DEC in Boston. Yet another company that doesn’t exist anymore. I remember wearing a hand me down suit that didn’t fit, and that they were all casual and working in overflow space that appeared to have been an old supermarket. I would have been happy to work there, if they’d have had me. But they were working on compilers, and other crap that really wasn’t in my area. I had a greater interest in graphics, and GSI had needs along those lines, and so it seemed more of a match.
So that’s where I went: Geophysical Services Inc., the parent company of Texas Instruments, believe it or not.
It was a different time, when I hooked up with them. They sent a recruiter to campus to hunt for “june brides” as they called us. Getting that job was like falling off a log. And I didn’t even bother looking farther once they made me an offer. And when I look back on it now, oh, hell, I knew then there were different interpretations you could put on it. But anyway, that’s how I came to be living in Dallas of all places. Kind of random and haphazard. Whatever. That was me all over.
Working at GSI and being in the oil industry during that time was a trip. But after just two years I got the bug to go on to graduate school. It took a while to make the preparations, take my GREs, and so on, and then I threw some applications around, figuring what the hell? I sent one to Harvard, which has a more modest computer science department than you might think, and some other places like that, including Johns Hopkins. They responded to some of my relevant interests and experience , and so I came up here to Baltimore for the interview. The campus was in a segment of downtown that in those days was kind of a hell hole. It looked like it might have been in the beginnings of a renewal, but it was ringed by pretty desperate ghettos. The interview with a prof, whose name I unfortunately forget, went pretty well. I do remember we got along. But I had basically no money, and I told him so, that I really wanted to be a part of their program, but I just couldn’t do it unless they gave me some financial help.
That night I called Anita from the hotel room, and I remember feeling at the time like she was a little needy and maybe even controlling. We were living together, we weren’t married yet, but she insisted I call her every night when I was away.
I was happy to hear her voice, but I was a little bothered at the guilt trip.
One time years later, I was in graduate school down in San Marcos. I was going to night school, and one time stayed late after class drinking with a buddy of mine. It got too late for the long drive home and I crashed at his place. I knew she would want me to check in, but I said fuck it she don’t own me. And I just didn’t do it.
The next day she railed over me how she thought I was dead and she was about to call the police.
And I thought it was kind of nice that someone cared about me that much, and that maybe it was one thing to forget, but another for me to willfully neglect her feelings and cause her pain.
You could say it was a training exercise and I caved, but you would be wrong. What happened was that I became more keenly aware of how much I loved her and that I didn’t want her to be unhappy.
So it was thoughts similar to these, though much more nascent that passed through my mind when Anita and I talked on the land line from my hotel room that night many years ago in Baltimore.
…
Ok, so the thought I had was that at first I was a little bit annoyed that Anita made me call her whenever I traveled, and there I was, dutifully checking in, though I knew Anita didn’t want me to leave Dallas, and we even briefly discussed how she could come with me or what we would do if I got in. Or what it would be like to be apart, since we both got so sad when I was gone even for just a few days. How was I going to make this happen? I thought to myself. But I was still kind of a kid myself, and I even remember that I wanted to watch this TV show that was on at the time, called ‘V’.
Not the superior Thomas Pynchon novel of the same name, and not the remake of the series they made decades later, and not anything important either. It’s just the kind of thing you remember. This was some miniseries about aliens — I was always a sucker for science fiction on TV — but Anita kept going on and on, it seemed to me, and I was listening to her out of one ear, and watching the show with one eye, and not really getting much out of either.
But then over the course of the next few months, and through an unlikely series of events, I was eventually accepted to the program but was not able to go.
Anita had already been sick, and was beginning to get better. Just at that time she started looking around for a house. I’m not really sure, but I think the way that happened was this: we had this nice little apartment overlooking a greenbelt in Dallas in a place called Bridge on the Creek.
It was our first shack, a great spot, and we enjoyed it a lot. That was where we lived while Anita got her fateful radiation therapy. She lost her hair, not all of it, but a good swath down around the back of the neck. It was enough to shake you up. She also lost a lot of weight. And just like more recently, I even felt a little guilty about thinking, you know, she was looking pretty good. Some kind of diet. And so all that was going on. But then one day, we came home from work to discover we had been robbed.
They just took my musical equipment, and not anything else. Our electronics, Anita’s jewelry, other valuable stuff like that was out and visible. What they did take included a moog synth (the only one that had not actually been designed by Bob Moog), and a pair of Roland Cube amps. I suspect it was this dude who jammed with me and Larry and JB that one time, some loser friend of Larry’s I had never met before, and he seemed kind of strung out. I don’t know, whoever it was, they robbed us, but only took my musical equipment. Weird. I have to tell the rest of that story someday.
But after that Anita was never comfortable in the apartment and really wanted to move. I was fine, as I recall, but if she wanted to go and spend her time looking for some other place to live, whatever, so be it. Who knew she’d come back with a house?.
It was one in a long series of accommodations, acquiescences I made to her over the years, and I knew what was happening, but it all seemed to be happening in slow motion, like it wasn’t really happening to me. I was kind of like an addict. I knew it, but I kept on doing it, because I loved her so much and I wanted her to be happy. Loving someone is like a kind of surrender.
But for some reason, we took just that moment — between the time I had been accepted to Johns Hopkins, but without financial aid, and the time when I got the call that the fellow in line ahead of me declined and the grant they were going to award to him was now available for me — this was a period of about a month or so. This happened to be the time when we decided to buy this little house out in Garland.
Looking back, it was a super dumb move. That house was never worth shit. One time I went back and looked, and found out its not worth much more now than what we paid for it then, thirty years ago now. We had an FHA loan, one of the last as it turns out — but it was what is called a negative amortization loan.
Who in their right mind would do such a thing? To take out a loan that just goes backwards like that? And to do so just at that time? We were complete idiots. Both of us. But I was the bigger idiot, because it was my paycheck that was at the center of everything, and made it possible for us to do more and stupider things, and someone on the outside might say that she was just using me. Hell, you might just as easily say that I was using her too. I suppose that’s one way of looking at it.
But that’s like seeing a beautiful flower sport up in your vegetable garden, and calling it a weed. And I won’t deny I had thoughts like these at the time, and people said things like this to me, and all I could say was “if it feels this good getting used, then you just keep on using me, until you use me up.”
We talked about it from time to time over the years, and she might spin the story a little differently. If you want her point of view, just go ask her. Oh, too late for that, I guess. Go read her journal, then. No luck there either, I’m afraid. Though I begged her many times, she never wrote one, so my version of this story is the only one there is any more, to the extent anyone cares, which is to say, not much. I guess that makes this perspective about as true as any other history.
What I’m saying is that I knew all of this at the time, as it was happening, and I didn’t care, because I loved her, and I wanted her to be happy. If a shitty little starter house out in the cotton fields of Garland Texas is what would make her happy, then that’s what we’d get her. I’m not ashamed, and I’m not making any excuses. This is just what happened.
But I thanked my lucky stars that we were able to get out of it — when I took that job down in Austin with Schlumberger. A mere nine months later. The main attraction was not the house itself, but the loan — we were able ot get someone to assume the loan. It was a non-qualifying assumable FHA loan. Another real dinosaur that doesn’t exist any more. It was a negative-am loan at 12%, something that in any sane world should be illegal. But they weren’t and furthermore there were boneheads out there dumb enough to take them.
So some ne’r do-wells who couldn’t qualify for a proper mortgage were eager to buy us out. I remember sitting in our little kitchen with the shark who found them for us. He was an older gent with a big gold nugget ring on his finger. He was some sort of associate of Larry Clodfelder, the recruiter who hooked me up with Schlumberger. Larry was a real character, a boozehound too. He made us some tall drinks over at his place to celebrate me taking that job — he loved me — and I remember him calling after us, as we went to leave — a little uncomfortable about his drinking — and him offering us a couple of “roadies” tall mixed drinks in plastic tumblers for the road. Who does a thing like that?
But as I focus on that period of time during which we bought that house. Was it a month? Or three? What was I thinking?
I feel now like a man waking up after a long period of unconsciousness — like a shipwreck survivor coming to on a desert island, thinking “what the…?”
But its not like I was really unconscious, I knew what I was doing the whole time, or rather I became aware shortly after this episode I’m writing about — what was going on, but I kept going anyway — it became a habit, then I became committed to it, and now that she’s gone, and I travel on business, I sit on my bed in the hotel room at night and think, “this is the time when I’d call Anita.”
And over the years, she changed. She was different. I mean she changed and then changed again, as I had.
At first, as I recall, she seemed a little clingy. She was always kind of childlike. That’s one of the many things I found attractive about her. Like her good friend Debbie wrote recently, she had a lot of “emotional energy.” From a guy’s point of view, she was the kind of person you just wanted to take care of and protect. I know I’m not the only one who felt that way about her.
She was open, trusting, naive perhaps. Many of the things I was not — or thought I was not — but especially after we left Dallas, and were basically alone in Austin, she was pretty attached to me, and didn’t like me to travel.
But the first set of changes came with the kids. She changed physically and emotionally. And I know its a regular pattern, they came to replace me as the center of her life. At first I was a little jealous of them, especially when Monica first came along. She was the whole universe to Anita. Monica’s birth was a watershed event. She represented hope for a future and something resembling a normal life. We had been advised we might have difficulty having children, and had had a miscarriage previously. That was hard. Like I said, Anita was very open and accessible, but she still had a private side, and we were as close to one another as two people can be. Deep down she had dark thoughts, and desperate days, and questions about where it all was going. I mean back there when we were going through all these life changes, which can be challenging enough under normal circumstances. But when you’ve had a life threatening experience with cancer, or some similar sort of issue, it just messes with your head. And then Monica came along, and we thought, “hey, you know, there might be a life ahead for us after all.” I was an immature young man, and like many others, I was unreasonably optimistic, or even cavalier about life, and looking back I was like, “duh.” But you know, for her it was different. Oh, its a beautiful, eternal cosmic dance. And anyone who thinks that women can live without men or vice versa, is like a baby splashing water, and calling it rain.
But then Anita started putting on weight and little by little her behavior was changing. She still hated seeing me leave. Years later, I was working for PSW, and I remember my boss Brian Baisley telling me the story of how he ran into Anita and the kids in the airport shortly after we had made a tearful goodbye, as I went on up to Seattle. And I remember I have a journal entry from around that time, when I was sitting in an airport just like I was today, watching the rain on the darkened window of the terminal, listening to “Angel of Montgomery” on the PA. And its hard leaving your little family. And later on over drinks, Brian said he envied me. He told me how he was divorced and his second wife pretty much just waved him off goodbye, and he said as many others have, “she really loves you.” And I knew it, and it made me proud, and it made me love her back all the more.
But then as time went on, Anita’s behavior started becoming more and more whacky, and someday I’ll have to go back to cite you chapter and verse on it, but I remember she was kind of fierce and angry all the time, and a little bull-headed and had a bit of a temper. And I remember the kids were still little but I could always talk with them almost as if they were young adults even then, and we would talk about it, after an argument, say, of which there were many, and I would ask them “is it me?” and they would say “no dad, mom was acting funny again” and this went on for some years before we figured out it was her thyroid. And it was my idea she have it checked, thank you very much, and it turned out to be cancer, and they took it out. Actually that was a stressful experience in itself — she had to ingest some radioactive crap and spend the night alone in a lead lined room — but that’s another whole story.
And it took a couple more years of bouncing around with the synthetic thyroid medication before they finally got her balanced more or less, and this was a long process, including the time I advised her to see a shrink, after a long series of silliness and nonsense. He listened to her story, and the way I understand it, his jaw dropped about halfway through. Remember like all these docs, he’s just a kid compared to us. So Anita begins to tell her story, and halfway through he jumps up and says “no wonder you have anxiety! You’d be crazy if you didn’t!” and hands her a paper bag full of pills right there on the spot. The way I imagine it, he took a handful himself before falling back in his chair, nearly fainting.
He put her on this drug called wellbutrin, which is an anti-anxiety medication, and it seemed to me that between the synthroid bouncing around and the wellbutrin, Anita was really much more stable, but a little of the fire was suppressed. She wasn’t as passionate as I remembered her being years before, for better or worse. Its hard to put your finger on it, exactly. Just a little less color, and more shades of grey, I guess.
I don’t know if it was just my imagination or what, but the change, though subtle, was definite and it just kind of took a little bit of her edge off. It’s hard to describe. She just kind of cooled off.
And sometimes I would call her when I was traveling and maybe she was tutoring or in the middle of something and I was laying there lonely in my hotel room, but she was sort of just distracted, and it felt like maybe just tolerating me, or something like that. Which I knew wasn’t really true. I knew she loved me, but that’s how it felt, and so it was true in a way, if you know what I mean.
So its been a long road from that hotel room in Baltimore in ’82 to the last few nights, also in Baltimore in ’11. And I don’t know what I feel, but part of it is a terrible sense of loss and emptiness. But the more I think about it, the more I realize its alright, and its like I’ve lived a whole life in that time, beginning, middle and end. And now I’m outside that life, taking its lessons with me into another, riding the crest of the wave of the eternal now, onward into the unknown future.
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sitting in the hollywood hawaiian hotel
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Dharmaputra
April 29, I think.
It’s a beautiful day.
It had been warm and humid, but a dry front came through and cooled off at night, all the way down to the 50’s and its coming up through 70 degrees maybe, its nice, and bright and sunny.
I felt this morning like the beautiful weather was a slap in the face put up against my mood.
Anita has been gone two weeks now. Lizzy went back to school to collect her things. She should be back home on Sunday. Monica spent the night at her house.
So it was the first night I spent rattling around in that big old house all by myself, and let me tell you it weren’t a pretty sight.
For the most part I was ok. I did a little gardening, and took a dip in the pool, and sat out there and talked to her, … it wasn’t so bad.
But I had some episodes of bawling and moaning. I really let myself go, and, there was noone around.
Then I pulled up some old pictures, of Anita’s 50th. Actually Carol Fischbeck called and reminded me of that.
And I went through that and then pulled out my old journal from around that time, and oh boy, that was hard.
And I thought about that as an example of our life together.
And I was glad that I did that. You know I pulled out all the stops for her 50th birthday. You know I blew a lot of money on that thing, the lake house, and the massage ladies, and even flying her best friends in, and the big party, and all that. But I was happy to do it. I was proud to do it.
And at the time, I had no idea that we’d have so little time left. But we did cherish the time we did have, because as I said then, there were days when we feared we might not even see 50.
So all this is well, I won’t say “not unexpected.”
Ha, what is that, a triple negative? But still, you’re never ready for it. You dont think, we didn’t think it would come this soon.
And then at one point in the night I sorted out my feelings, literally. And that was a useful exercise.
It came to me yesterday, driving into work, what to do there, and I cut up a piece of construction paper into probably 15 or 20 pieces, and I wrote down all the different ways I feel on each one, and I had no trouble using all of them.
And so I layed them out on the desk, and I bounced back and forth between all these different feelings, I cycled through them in various orders and sequences, between anger and loss and emptiness and numbness and even a little relief, that its over with. and I forced myself to say, “yes. this is the anger. and this is the loneliness.” and its important to know the difference. and one of the feelings I wrote down was righteousness, I am confident I did everything I could for the woman, and I did my duty. I was happy to do it. I was honored to be able to do it.
But now all that’s in the past.
I’m lonely, and anxious about the future.
It’s like a page in my life has turned.
You know when you’re young you have no idea what life has in store for you.
But normally you think you have time, and you’re going through the process, … I don’t know … speaking for myself, I didn’t think too much, I was just living my life, just trying to survive and to have a life.
But then Anita and I found each other, and we built a life, and it was a good life. You know making a family, and building a nest, and everything revolving around the kids, and the community and the neighborhood, and that whole thing, that whole lifestyle, it was really good. I mean storybook good.
And now that’s all over.
Well, you know it’s kind of like people talk about a mid-life crisis, it’s kind of a normal passage, but even then you have a life companion to go through it with. The kids grow and move out, and you have this empty nest and all, but you still have the love of your youth, the person who was there through it all, there next to you.
But now I have to look at life on my own, and what’s in front of me?
I’ve talked this over with the kids and a few other people, and maybe there’s something good in front of me, but you know it’s like I’m going to have to make some changes, and its going to take some energy. Energy that I certainly don’t have right now, but maybe it’ll come.
The stabbing pang of grief should subside eventually and then I’ll move on to another phase. And I guess it could be worse, I’ve got some things working for me and you know you go through this whole process. I’ve got my health, I still feel like I’m productive, I still have some creative years ahead of me, and I still have dreams.
I’ll tell you one thing; I don’t want to spend the rest of my life alone. But I think it’s right and its ok to want to be alone, and it comes naturally to me, like Carol said, to “go solo” for a while.
I think about people out there who never had this life that I’m mourning, never experienced that kind of love. I won’t lie to you, a devotion and an intimacy that only comes from sharing life threatening experiences together, and then sharing other life transforming experiences, a love life so fantastic it was transcendental, and then creating a family, together, to be part of this cosmic eternal dance to add another leaf to the tree. For those who’ve never gone through all that process, and now, what is there to hang on to?
Well, this is just awful.
Oh yeah, I got an email from Barb too, and it’s kind of nice to know people are thinking of you. And it helps at some level to know there’s nothing unique about any of this. Every single one of us will share the same fate and every one of us has some experience with grief and loss, of a parent, a sibling, a child, a spouse.
And well, Anita was young, and though we were sensitized to the possibility that she might not have a full life expectancy, it still feels like we were robbed of something.
You really can’t grade them; you can’t compare different forms of grief. And losing a child is just so wrong… so unjust and disturbing. But the intimacy of that relationship is comparable I guess in a way to losing a spouse before her time.
Another part of me is infantile about it though and says no, this is special and unique. This is different. It’s not, but it is my time, it’s my turn. It’s happening now. It’s happening to me. It’s happening to me now. So in that way, it is different.
And another part of me feels like its assuming a role of some kind.
I tell you, I read this version of the Mahabharata years ago and it just resonated with me.
I’ve thought about this one main character, Yudhisthira, a lot over the years.
He was a king, but flawed. He lost his kingdom gambling, if you can believe that. To his cousin Duryodhana, who tricked him into it and then cheated. He was a bad guy. But what king puts his kingdom up at stake in a game of dice? Yudhisthira had been tricked, but he was a compulsive gambler. And it was a hard lesson, but he honored his debt and gave up his kingdom.
The Hindu perspective is different, but similar to the classical perspective I think, like the assignment of different attributes to different deities and the claiming of descent from one or another of these deities, either transferring or personifying that attribute in an individual.
So Yudhisthira was called “Dharmaputra,” being the mystical son of Yama, the god of death, also called Lord Dharma.
And “Dharma” is a Sanskrit word that we don’t have a cognate for in English. It’s kind of deep and mystical, meaning destiny or duty or character, and also righteousness.
These concepts are all tangled up together, and so your fate — we each have our fate assigned to us, and it is our duty to live the life we’ve been given and always to do the right thing, the right thing meaning you’re following your destiny, being true to yourself, no matter the cost, no matter the difficulty.
It’s not about free will vs. determinism, it’s just the way it is. You are who you are, and it is what it is, and it’s bigger than any of us, and it’s awesome and beautiful. Don’t fight the wave.
And there’s so many anecdotes that reinforced that message, that kind of resonated with me in terms of my relationship with Anita: It was our fate to meet just when we did. And it was her fate to get ill. And it was my choice and my duty and my destiny and a defining aspect of my character to be the one to take care of her.
And I thank God for the opportunity and the privilege to be able to do that, to become the man she needed. And I am grateful, and I tell you the rewards were sweet, and the honor was mine, is mine. And its not for us to understand the whys and wherefores of the thing, but even if it were, I wouldn’t change a God-damned bit of it, except to have her with me for one more day, and one more day after that, and for us to ride off into the sunset together, in love forever and ever, Amen. -
a door opens
We’re making a very difficult passage.
Its been a little more than a week since Anita passed away and we’re just wrecked.
Anita and I were together for about thirty years almost exactly as it turned out.
We were to celebrate our 27th anniversary this year. I proposed to her in bed actually. It was February of ’84, just before I moved down here to Austin to take this job I found. It was a good job and I liked Austin.
We were living in Dallas. We met in Dallas. I wrote a song about it, and from time to time I used to sing it to her. I wrote a couple of songs for her. Its a funny life when your reality sounds like a country song: “Then one day in Dallas I met a young woman with love in her eyes and stars in her hair. I’ll never forget what I felt when I saw her, what I said to myself when we met way down there.” We had a house there together before we were married. And everything about that little exercise was wrong except for Anita and me I guess.
I moved down to Austin, and she stayed behind and finished out the school year at DISD. We sold the house, and she came down and joined me in this crappy little duplex I had found not far from my new office. We were married in July of that year and we went and bought a house, a little nest, that fall, and started a family not long after.
And you know, though it rained on us a lot, life shit on us a lot, but you know we were very happy together. We were good for each other and I’m gonna miss her a lot.
But I feel now like a window opened in my life, or a door opened and then it closed again and in a way, I’m sort of back where I started. I don’t regret a thing, you know we lived life all the way. I don’t think I left any business unfinished. We both left it all out there. But I feel kind of funny. Like a loose wheel in the world, not connected to anything. Wobbly, like a wheel without an axle.
I feel like a worry has been lifted off my shoulders actually but replaced by something else, an even heavier weight.
Like a door opening she brought light into my life. She was a really social person. A fun person. And when the door closed it left me here in the dark.
Now that she’s gone I’m kind of lost.
We had that kind of relationship. We defined ourselves in terms of one another.
I called her “beautiful princess” and she called me her “prince charming.” Her “knight in shining armor.” Her savior. She said that I had literally saved her life on more than one occasion. And the devotion and the love that goes with that is something that is impossible to describe.
And it made me so proud when she talked like that and it kind of validated me, you know?
“Whatever else is wrong with me,” I thought, “that is one thing that is right.”
And toward the end, we tried to be strong for each other and focus on the diminishing strands of hope, and once I burst out crying, “Baby, please don’t leave me here alone!”
And she consoled me and said she wouldn’t and we held each other and she rubbed my head and said “Shh. I’m still here.” She thought she was going to get better, that we’d have one more round, one more year, right up to the very end.
But this was one thing I couldn’t fix for her, I couldn’t save her from.
And so now all that’s in the past. And I’ll never be the same. I sit alone out by the garden as the sun goes down, and I talk to her, and I cry.
Oh, God, why did you take her from me? -
Reality Depends
“Reality depends on what questions we ask” – Vlatko Vedral
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what d&d character are you?
It occurred to me the other day to figure out what’s the deal with dungeons & dragons.
Sounds like a kind of nerdy thing that I would have been into, if I had been a little younger. I was completely nuts for the Lord of the Rings trilogy. That would seem to be relevant. I remember I read it through for the first time when I was about thirteen. that was 1969. I’d been through all of Jules Verne and plenty else by then. My whole life, I’ve been out there. But I was never plugged into a network, or maybe I was plugged in but to the wrong network, like a 60hz appliance plugged into a 50hz world.
I read Lord of the Rings for the second time in 1974, putting my time in suspension to good use, I think. I’d gone through the entire science fiction aisle at my town’s rinky dink library, and I’d taken to riding my bike over to the nicer libraries in the neighboring towns, Wantaugh had a really nice facility I thought, and Massapequa’s facility was old and funky, worse than ours in a way, but with a more eclectic collection. I couldn’t find anything I liked, but I did find Ezra Pound’s Cantos. What a brilliant wacko. Imagine a 14 year old nerd trying to make sense of that stuff.
My favorite authors of the time were Asimov, Heinlein, Vonnegut, Herbert and the occasional brilliant piece of others like Poul Anderson, Ursula K. LeGuin, Harlan Ellison, Clifford D. Simak, which I found mostly by following the lists of Hugo and Nebula award winners.
So one day I asked the web, “What d&d character am I?” Turns out there’s a page for that.
But before I go on, I also found out lots of other people were asking that same question, and many of them were interesting.
So, the first thing is that one point of a role playing game, is that you assume a character and interact with other people, likewise assuming their own characters. So there’s another barrier to entry, not only am I from another generation than most people who know anything about this kind of crap, I fall short in another way. Even the biggest geek out there at least seems to be able to participate in some kind of community. Each to their own, I guess. What few friends I do have are old and antisocial, just like me.
The next thing to bear in mind is that your character doesn’t have to reflect your actual personality or values. In fact, it probably shouldn’t. Where’s the fun in that?
But after thinking it over, the interwebs told me I was a chaotic good human strong fighter. Sounds good. Anti-establishment. Value oriented. Strong. Hm. I can be that.
It even gave me enough to jog my creativity, and I allowed myself to imagine and research a backstory:
The Asturs were the Celtic Gallaecian inhabitants of the northwest area of Hispania encompassing a portion of the Mountains of Cantabria to the west, and facing the Bay of Biscay and the Celtic Sea to the north. It is an ancient kingdom dotted with Roman ruins and traces of human activity from the Neolithic, Megalithic, Bronze, and Iron Ages. Cantabria has iron, and Asturias is home to a few gold mines, making it very interesting real estate.
In Roman times, Cantabrian and Asturian fighters were renowned, having fought as mercenearies against Rome for Hannibal and later for themselves. They were expert with short sword, lance and cavalry. Their tactics were so innovative and influential, they entered the Roman martial lexicon in terms such as the ‘circulus cantabricus’ and the ‘cantabricus impetus’. Cantabrians were among the very few ever to have acquired a Roman standard in battle.
The medieval Kingdom of Asturias was overrun by nobles and ne’er-do-wells retreating to the mountains from the advancing Moors of the great Caliphate.
I imagined myself the rightful prince of Asturias, deprived of my birthright through intrigues by my scheming cousin, Alfonso, King of Leon, who had designs on my lands, and my beloved .
My name would be Juan-Gaspar Santiago Asturias de Cantabria. I roam Gallaecia, Brittany, Normandy, England and Wales, a chivalric knight, romantic and brooding of character, landless but leige to no lord, righting wrongs and doing good when I can. -
Getting Your Head Screwed On Straight
From time to time, I like to take a bike ride at lunch.
Two years ago this month, in the midst of a death march through the holidays, my buddy Charles Ramsay pointed out to me that there were some decent bike trails out behind a neighborhood nearby our new offices. They weren’t obvious, but he used to live there, so he knew the ins and outs. You are here:
We went out for a few crazy rides taking a a break together between long shifts in the lab, where the team was giving birth to a new machine. I knew that’s what we were doing, because I had been midwife to many other machines before. I was glad to do it, and my many years experience in the business tells me, that just like when a baby is being born, there’s a time to push, and God damn it, when that time comes, someone has to shout “Push!” That was my role at that moment in time. But it never fails to be intense and like I said at the time, I learned a long time ago that getting out and blowing off some steam was the only way I knew how to keep my head screwed on straight.
I have since explored most of these trails many times and feel myself very fortunate to be able to take an occasional long lunch break when time and the weather permit, and get out and test myself against the hills and rock outcroppings of central Texas. When I do, I always return a new man. The world and I are both the better for it, believe me.
So the other day, while Anita was in the hospital, and I struggled through another work day, I decided to take myself out for a ride. She always told me to take my phone, in case of emergency or whatever, but this time, I actually did. She was in the hospital, after all. But that’s another story.
But then I thought, since I have my phone, I might as well try to take a few pictures of some of the interesting features of this ride. Here’s a few shots of the Regent Hills trail:For the most part, its just a fun ride and an excuse for a good workout, but some of these features can be pretty challenging.
Later on Charles showed me this map he had drawn (his kid named some of the trails):
Trail biking is a great physical activity. Its exciting and good for you and fun to get out there and enjoy the great outdoors. But like one time I told Anita, trail biking around here is a lot like skiing. Just instead of riding up in the lift, you get a damn good cardio workout on ascent. And you get a thrill similar to skiing on descent, except instead of fluffy white snow, you have jagged rocks to help you keep your concentration.
Overall though, its a really sweet ride. Try it sometime.
-
The Battle of Britain
Today is January 1, 2011.
We had a fine Christmas with the kids around us, and we’re really feeling the love.
My pretty little wife is as cute and lovely as the day we met. We’re as much in love today as any two people ever were. Our love is the kind of love you read about, some poor people only get to dream about. But we’re living it, baby, every day!
We got some stuff going on in our lives that really ain’t all that good, but taking things one day at a time, in spite of everything, these days are still pretty sweet.
…
I find myself listening to Churchill more and more, maybe even a little obsessively.
I’m focused in on this period from 1940-41, when after the inglorious fall of France, and before Stalin switched sides, Britain stood alone in the world against Hitler. Through the fall and winter of 1940 the people of Great Britain withstood a punishing bombardment of their ports, airfields, factories and even populated centers, all the while lacking any means of retaliation. These days I sometimes think of ourselves as if we were Londoners under the blitz. Churchill said at the time that “the British people would withstand the merciless onslaught with grit and determination and in the sure knowledge that they would survive and ultimately prevail against the cruel menace.”
Later, after many dark days, but when the hour of victory finally seemed to be approaching he allowed himself to admit that “it would have been a rash man then who could put down in black and white exactly how we were going to do it.”
So without getting too philosophical or anything, when the road is dark and the times are hard, all we can do is focus our entire energies and concentration on the immediate task at hand, sometimes with little more than our own faith and courage to sustain us.
As they say, its always in God’s hands, and sometimes it just takes times like this to remind you.
Merry Christmas, and a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year to all! -
Right on brother, Right on for the darkness
This post is probably not going to be about what you expected.
For reasons that don’t matter, I got myself thinking about Curtis Mayfield, who died on this day, December 26, 1999.
Sometimes I’m just overcome when I think about it. He was just an artist, a performer, writer and music producer. He wasn’t important like a civil rights leader, like Martin Luther King or Malcolm X. Or was he?
He is credited with first infusing the power of the civil rights message into black popular music coming out in the 60’s. And he wasn’t a musical phenomenon like Stevie Wonder or a bona fide preacher like the Rev. Al Green, or whatever comparisons you want to make. He was unique.
But the latter part of his too short life was filled with tragedy. He was paralyzed from the neck down in an accident in 1990, and lived for ten more years, having various parts of his body amputated from diabetes and declining health before finally passing in 1999.
His last album, “New World Order” was released in 1996. Somehow he managed to produce it, despite his paralysis.
The thing that messes me up is when I ponder the total waste and tragedy of the 60’s and the way the whole thing has been chewed up and digested and barfed back into our mouths like the applesauce baby food so called recollections of conventional wisdom like “Forrest Gump” and “The Greatest Generation” make it out to be. You forget how much hate there was out there, how they played dirty, and used every tool in their toolbox to discredit and destroy any leader who came up to challenge the way things were. And if they couldn’t scare you into quitting, and if they couldn’t destroy your credibility, they just killed you. You can pick and peck about this one and that one, but just step back and look at how many poor bastards somehow wound up dead. Civil rights workers found dead. Churches burned down. Car accidents. Plane crashes. Its hard to figure, but it sure seems like a lot of the assassinations and mysterious deaths involved people of a particular persuasion.
The twist is that some of the ideas that were revolutionary back then are commonplace or even coopted today. Civil rights for all races. Equal rights for women. Environmental consciousness.
And while we still have work to do on all these fronts, no one any longer even tries to deny the objective. You don’t have no more Maddox or Wallace barring the doors to schools to keep the blacks out and down. Some might say the struggle has moved to a more abstract and cynical level, where as King said “they wrap themselves in the garments of love, and say that they’re loving, when they’re really hating.” And I’ll come out and say it: Haley Barbour and Pat Robertson are no different from Maddox or Wallace, just craftier liars with even less integrity, if that’s possible.
But in the end Mayfield remained or at least seemed hopeful. “It’s a new day,” he said, and his voice calling for “a change of mind of the human race” just breaks my heart, thinking that he was singing, laying there in his hospital bed.
“Right on brother, Right on for the darkness.” -
view from my window
This is the view from my office window. In the distance, across the intervening Barton Creek Greenbelt and Colorado River, you can see the skyline of downtown Austin, including the Capital. We like to joke, you can only see the right wing from here, but you’re not missing anything, because the Texas State Capital has two right wings.
Something about the optical effect makes it look microscopic in this shot, but to the naked eye, its actually seems closer. Another unfortunate optical effect obscures the half rainbow arching over the skyline, which to my eye was beautiful and evocative.
There is something about this city that arouses an affection. I can’t put my finger on it. Its kind of an insouciance, or maybe the feeling you get when you recall a lost love of your youth. That’s not exactly it, but close. Sometimes they use the word nostalgia, which literally means “homesickness.” Its a longing, but not for a “where” so much as for a “when”. I said at the time that someday I’d write about it, and tell the story, and God willing, I will still do someday. But then as now, my life was not my own.