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Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Broken countries

[Written but not sent to a friend.]

Italians. No, they're not that bad, nor is anyone else, my idealist self insists. Only this. If you live in a foreign culture, you will step unintentionally into the smelly stuff you can't clean off your shoe, plus you will never change "them". The foreigners--to you--have their ways of doing things, as an old German friend of mine reminded me often: "They know what they do." The subtext was and is you are not one of them and will never be, so get used to their ways and adapt as best you can without grossly offending, or getting thrown out of the community or country.

Such has been life for me abroad for over twenty-five years. Stepping in it, "Oh, shit!" And do you really think I would settle a purchase in two meetings here at the lawyer's office? one private (without counsel) where a certain amount of cash changes hands, and another where the same thing happens but for the (adjusted) total to seal the contract--with legal witnesses--to be transmitted to the tax office? I did that. There was no other way to get the deal done to put a roof over my head and later get rid of it (did not take place in Italy by the way).

So discovering the ways these people do things is my daily classroom with, most of the time, no dire consequences, except perhaps some embarrassment and constant self-realizations about who I am and where I find myself. Never a dull moment. That's the juice of living outside one's own culture without native level language skills: Ever a classroom and self-guided psychological therapy tour. Oh, and education and therapy always come at a cost.

I do find Italians amusing, and I have written about both the ups and downs of residing in this country and my local area with fantastic panoramas and cultural lessons aplenty. But I walk softly. . . . And I have Italian friends, one or two. It is a friendly and inviting place. Lots of positive stuff, including the food which is more than pizza, pasta, and pane--and the daily obligatory religious ritual at 13.00 sharp, pranzo. I won't elaborate here. It is easier to complain or feebly explain. Just know, I love a lot about Italy including my friends and daily encounters, which are always interesting, often amusing. Celebrating Eataly? goes without saying.

You mentioned that someone you knew had a kind of systemic health problem from which s/he died. Could have been saved with the right intervention(s). So too I find Italy. The country is hobbled if not broken, not easy for ordinary people to cobble a living. A systemic problem. Fundamental changes needed in politics, government and culture--society--so that one can have a meaningful and productive life as well as get on well enough economically.

In the US, with regard to guns and violence, I think it also a systemic problem. Why do people have 'em? and use them, abuse them, and have unwanted accidents and tragedies? Many factors, many causes. Some with guns, perhaps you, collect them, care for them (weird?), trade them, go and practice on paper targets, hunt game, etc. But why do ordinary people feel the need to have a gun? Ordinary people where I have lived in Europe do not feel they need a gun. Of course there are intruders and bad people. But this is not a gun culture, nor a particularly dangerous or violent one--in part I would argue because guns are not a right (also weird!) to have and hold.

Here in the CZ just yesterday we had a shooter killing several. This is so rare in my experience here that to see that in the news is shocking. The same is not shocking in the US. Kind of business as usual I'd argue--because of the multiple things that need to change such that such incidents in the US become out of the ordinary, not common, rare, shocking again.

I am not qualified or smart enough to tell anyone what to do to solve guns/violence/threat to person and property in America. But it is more of a problem than it should be. Given who and what America is, make-my-day is every day and no one is or should be surprised. When you are a fish in the fishbowl, what else is there? You have to get out of the water and breathe different air differently from the tacit ways you have accepted as normal, that is experience life beyond familiar waters. America needs a new normal . . . but I fear that will not be anytime soon. We are so polarized, and I agree with some that we are not very bright as a nation (but if nudged--don't do it--could name a few names).

I find the article linked below interesting in regard to both of these subjects--living in a culture and making needed socio-cultural changes. Not optimistic but seems to sum up where we are. Read if you are interested, or we can just move on and set these more serious subjects aside. I for one am unable because of age, location, and other factors to make any difference. And there's the rub.

The article begins:
The United States is sick with income and other forms of social inequality. It suffers from cruelty, loneliness, greed, gangster capitalism, white supremacy, violence, sexism and a culture of ignorance and distraction. Our broken political system does not encourage critical thinking or nurture a capacity for responsible, engaged citizenship.
Here is the link.

https://www.salon.com/2019/12/09/author-chris-hedges-on-trump-the-democrats-and-the-dying-american-empire/

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Birthday voucher


[Give your squeeze new underwear for her birthday along with this voucher  to redeem.]

Birthday Coupon

30 plus, but who is counting?
and said you can't be a mounting?

Happy Birthday to the girl
at her age can have a whirl:

And feel something hot and sexy,
say, eating food, some Tex-Mexy.

But it's up to you to decide.
Have spicy food, or lose those pants--for a Ride!

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Silly ditty

If each other we would see,
set a time to make it be.
For time is life, don't you know,
without its measure we must go.
Our days are undeser'ved gifts
within the which--admit--we ever shifts:
From that to this and back to that,
after what?--ain't it true--back we sat,
wondering if wise and best we chose.
Shared we moments with those . . . so dear we hold?
before the gifter says, "There, there. Be bold."
I would shout indeed a yea:
Let not reticence waste a day.
If you're like to think the same,
let us quit the bench and join the game.
I would ring to enter at your gate
and en'tain long and mutual discourse--
well, at least enough gossip us to sate
till next we meet thus absolved, no remorse.
So when we knocks, do let us in.
Won't stay long, too much info is a sin.

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Re-framing and re-affirming

_A Puma in the Tree_ is about the importance of kindness and identity. We are flawed and get together, and do stuff,  regardless of whether it is the best course ahead judged subjectively, by our self-narrator, or objectively--by the you reader/observer.

A revised edition is due soon and will be free to download.

Having escaped The City, Eh-em cautiously reveals himself in fictional Upton. Art and attachments as well as real and imagined traumas prevent rapid progress. But this nice guy wins and gets the girl. Is it another dead end or their beginning? A second coming of age mixes postmodern bits with recurrent images. One's story and kindness might fix who they become in the spaces uncovered.

_A Penny Drops_ is about lack of self knowledge and clarity of action-decision in the running course of things. Only experience and mounting social pressures do we, sometimes, open our eyes and take the next best step.

The draft will be finished soon and will be free to download.

He can have the wholesome girl next door, the pretty nympho-psychologist, the wealthy spirit guide, or a flawed beauty queen. What must he discover to have his heart's desire?

Tom McClintock, R-Calif.--Hopeless, and incompetent

Tom McClintock, R-Calif.

You again seem to try to take us, those you work for and represent, back to school. However, you have missed some history lessons and an important read/speak/write lesson: Context.

First, let me respond to part of your lesson presented on the house floor regarding H. Res. 489. If you indeed believe that what unites us is "respect for the rule of law, and the uniquely American principles of individual liberty, constitutionally limited government and personal responsibility," I ask you to call on these principles in your assessment of our president. Can you in all candor say that he models or mocks these things you, and I, hold dear? If not . . .

As I have previously written to you, as a member of your constituency, I am convinced that we are suffering from a so-called leader who does not act in concert with the principles we espouse. Not a day goes by that a majority of Americans can see and hear and read evidence that contradicts what does unite us. I do not address how he hurts many of us. Save that for next time, or re-read my last messages.

It is long since due that you stood up and led, rather than followed, in a fight to preserve what you have tried to remind us of. Let your actions follow your words, your lesson, your reminder to all of us . . . not to say that all of us needed that reminding.

I agree with the conclusion to your remarks; except they are not in essence a reflection of what recently transpired to prompt H. Res. 489. The issue was not and is not patriotism.

This spin of yours asks the question whether you have evidence that the people the president was referring to are unpatriotic. If they are or were, perhaps we could learn the lesson again from you--your words would then not be just wasted hot air. However, people who have lived as long as you and I have know that "go back to where you came from" is at the least intolerant and more precisely and barefacedly--in this case--racist.

I suggest some homework for you in case you come up short trying to discover unpatriotic actions or words by the so-called "squad" your president has singled out. There are members in the body of which you are also a member who have at hand chapter and verse in the history of racism and civil rights and civil speech in this country. Talk with them. Go to school, unless you already have learned and rejected this more accurately contextualized lesson. (If that be the case, you are lost and without sanity, credibility, integrity.)

Belly up, bud. It is long overdue for you to exercise your individual liberty, enforce our system of constitutionally limited government and take personal responsibility to remedy a situation that we have endured for far too long. Step into the middle of the aisle and call for a stop to this aberrant cancer in our midst. You know what I am talking about and don't need a lesson from me.

Comment. I don't think he has the intellect or integrity to represent me. For the context for this message to him via his website, see his remarks about "the Squad", July 2019.

See also

https://www.npr.org/2019/04/19/715266657/republican-rep-tom-mcclintock-discusses-mueller-report?t=1564314344841

Hopeless to try to get him to do his job.

Headlines and teasers, their effects

[Yes. After consideration and no space to just place stuff, here we go again . . . I re-framed why I shut this thing down exactly two years ago.]

from Hyperallergic Weekend, July 28, 2019, with >>s

In Praise of Painting's Ambiguity: The literalism of 1960s Formalism has been replaced by an insistence on the factual, which leaves little room for the imagination or for speculation.
John Yau

 >>The factual is always and everywhere provocation to imagine and speculate.

The Defiant Undercurrents of Feminine Art: While many of Julia Kuhl’s paintings are funny and provocative others are more troubling, alluding to the ways women’s personal, professional, and sexual boundaries often go broadly unacknowledged.
Megan N. Liberty

>>And how would a painting allude if not only through an interpretation? Let me see/decide for myself. Key-tag for visual scrutiny, _boundary_.

Our Love for Fetishes: Sculptor Margaret Wharton and painter Issy Wood are both open to the irrational currents flowing through our lives.
John Yau

>>How much like me would they, or their works, be? Or if flowing through (all) our lives, what's the big deal?

A Curator's Perspective on Davide Sorrenti's Fashion Photography: The photographer captured the currents of hip hop, skater, grunge, and rave culture that flourished in downtown Manhattan in the 1990s.
Nicole Miller

>>Only voyeurs who wish to expand their breadth of visual coup count need peep.

An Unlikely Marriage of Science and Art: In the hate-convulsed worldscape of today, Heather Dewey-Hagborg proposes oxytocin as that long looked-for potion: The Love Drug.
Anthony Haden-Guest

>>The differences in responses to "different types" of oxytocin among males and females suggests Heather may not be onto something, at least as far as males are concerned. And she can't be suggesting we have more amourous females than males running around. What images come to mind with that solution to the hate-convulsed worldscape? Okay, many if not most males are so easily distracted. But after the post-coital smoke? er vape? What then?

Jamila Woods and Her Ancestral Spirits: Woods’s new album Legacy! Legacy! is framed by the presence of a larger community — the enacted community of choir singing and an imagined community of Black artists.
Lucas Fagen

 >>How present, or large, can "a larger community" be if confined to a choir, much less combined with an imagined group of whatever sort? Read, or dismiss for lack of coherence.

Dora Maar, More than a Surrealist Muse: The Centre Pompidou’s Dora Maar honors Picasso’s famous muse for the pivotal part she clearly, and often daringly, played in the establishment of the European avant-garde.
Eileen G'Sell

>>An almost unknown--to me--muse had a pivotal part to play and I am just now re-minded of her name? Bold claims for establishing if even partly something pan-european . . . I should have been aware . . .