Mittwoch, 16. Januar 2008
Mr. Pink and I
Mr. Pink: so where's jon's refridge then?Mr. Pink: thought lisa had it?zickeltoose: christy has itMr. Pink: so pretty much if you had it christy has it?zickeltoose: tv, microwave, fridge. i can't figure out where my pipe went toMr. Pink: pipe as in pipe or one for as some people would say spiritual relaxation?zickeltoose:spiritual relaxation, naturally :-DMr. Pink: ahh. well that sucks zickeltoose: yeahMr. Pink: she didn't have your pipe did she?zickeltoose: noooooooooooooooooooooo!* * * * * * * *Mr. Pink: ok ok just checkin man!zickeltoose: :-)zickeltoose: ah well, 40 bucks down the drain. tom's, not mine, though.Mr. Pink: ahh.Mr. Pink: have you talked to him at all?zickeltoose: occasionally. he doesn't really answer my pagesMr. Pink: when was the last time?zickeltoose: two weeks ago i thinkzickeltoose: soemthing on masturbating helps to ward off cancer and an article related to itzickeltoose: he seemed goodMr. Pink: well if he's talking about masturbating... he's back to normal.zickeltoose: yeah. good ol' tom. the barometer of our college life
Sonntag, 9. September 2007
The Crimson Permanent Assurance Strikes!
This is what happens when you bring up a list of books to read with an English professor...I'm forwarding a list from the Associated Press. This is what they think are the 100 best novels of this century! Some of them are arguable, I think, and of course it's subjective and limited to the 20th century....and limited to those written in English, too. See what you think. I'd add James Joyce's Ulysses to your list, for sure. And maybe JJ's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. I would also *definitely* add Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy. It is a hoot...and pushes the limits of 18th C. typography. If i used it for 206, though, I think students would kill me. Ulysses is number one on this AP list, coincidentally. In fact, I ought to re-read it; it's been a long time. I would also add George Eliot's Middlemarch to the list. It can be slow at first, and then you get caught up with the characters. For poetry I love Browning's monologues....Fra Lippo Lippi, etc.Portrait of a Young Artist? *sigh*... I read it up to like page 40, the text went through my mind like bird through air. Unless you count in "The moocow was up the road" or something like that, then that stuck. But, I've heard Ulysses was much better, though. As for Tristram Shandy, I really wanted to read it, but like everything else it gradually fell out of the back of my mind, and splattered on the intelligence floor, to be whisked away. Guess that one's going on my list, too. She also included the list of 100 best novels, but I think, and she does too, that it's really biased, as it largely focuses on only 20th century novels, is subjective, rather limited in its scope, and to me, more of a British/American, caucasian male list. There isn't anything by Sartre on it, nor Camus or Toni Morrison. Hm. There's probably a disenfranchised, mixed-minority list floating out there somewhere for me *grins*The 100 Best Novels This Century .c The Associated Press By The Associated Press The 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century, as drawn up by the editorial board of the Modern Library: 1. ``Ulysses,'' James Joyce 2. ``The Great Gatsby,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald 3. ``A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,'' James Joyce 4. ``Lolita,'' Vladimir Nabokov 5. ``Brave New World,'' Aldous Huxley 6. ``The Sound and the Fury,'' William Faulkner 7. ``Catch-22,'' Joseph Heller 8. ``Darkness at Noon,'' Arthur Koestler 9. ``Sons and Lovers,'' D.H. Lawrence 10. ``The Grapes of Wrath,'' John Steinbeck 11. ``Under the Volcano,'' Malcolm Lowry 12. ``The Way of All Flesh,'' Samuel Butler 13. ``1984,'' George Orwell 14. ``I, Claudius,'' Robert Graves 15. ``To the Lighthouse,'' Virginia Woolf 16. ``An American Tragedy,'' Theodore Dreiser 17. ``The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter,'' Carson McCullers 18. ``Slaughterhouse Five,'' Kurt Vonnegut 19. ``Invisible Man,'' Ralph Ellison 20. ``Native Son,'' Richard Wright 21. ``Henderson the Rain King,'' Saul Bellow 22. ``Appointment in Samarra,'' John O'Hara 23. ``U.S.A.'' (trilogy), John Dos Passos 24. ``Winesburg, Ohio,'' Sherwood Anderson 25. ``A Passage to India,'' E.M. Forster 26. ``The Wings of the Dove,'' Henry James 27. ``The Ambassadors,'' Henry James 28. ``Tender Is the Night,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald 29. ``The Studs Lonigan Trilogy,'' James T. Farrell 30. ``The Good Soldier,'' Ford Maddox Ford 31. ``Animal Farm,'' George Orwell 32. ``The Golden Bowl,'' Henry James 33. ``Sister Carrie,'' Theodore Dreiser 34. ``A Handful of Dust,'' Evelyn Waugh 35. ``As I Lay Dying,'' William Faulkner 36. ``All the King's Men,'' Robert Penn Warren 37. ``The Bridge of San Luis Rey,'' Thornton Wilder 38. ``Howards End,'' E.M. Forster 39. ``Go Tell It on the Mountain,'' James Baldwin 40. ``The Heart of the Matter,'' Graham Greene 41. ``Lord of the Flies,'' William Golding 42. ``Deliverance,'' James Dickey 43. ``A Dance to the Music of Time'' (series), Anthony Powell 44. ``Point Counter Point,'' Aldous Huxley 45. ``The Sun Also Rises,'' Ernest Hemingway 46. ``The Secret Agent,'' Joseph Conrad 47. ``Nostromo,'' Joseph Conrad 48. ``The Rainbow,'' D.H. Lawrence 49. ``Women in Love,'' D.H. Lawrence 50. ``Tropic of Cancer,'' Henry Miller 51. ``The Naked and the Dead,'' Norman Mailer 52. ``Portnoy's Complaint,'' Philip Roth 53. ``Pale Fire,'' Vladimir Nabokov 54. ``Light in August,'' William Faulkner 55. ``On the Road,'' Jack Kerouac 56. ``The Maltese Falcon,'' Dashiell Hammett 57. ``Parade's End,'' Ford Maddox Ford 58. ``The Age of Innocence,'' Edith Wharton 59. ``Zuleika Dobson,'' Max Beerbohm 60. ``The Moviegoer,'' Walker Percy 61. ``Death Comes to the Archbishop,'' Willa Cather 62. ``From Here to Eternity,'' James Jones 63. ``The Wapshot Chronicles,'' John Cheever 64. ``The Catcher in the Rye,'' J.D. Salinger 65. ``A Clockwork Orange,'' Anthony Burgess 66. ``Of Human Bondage,'' W. Somerset Maugham 67. ``Heart of Darkness,'' Joseph Conrad 68. ``Main Street,'' Sinclair Lewis 69. ``The House of Mirth,'' Edith Wharton 70. ``The Alexandria Quartet,'' Lawrence Durrell 71. ``A High Wind in Jamaica,'' Richard Hughes 72. ``A House for Ms. Biswas,'' V.S. Naipaul 73. ``The Day of the Locust,'' Nathaniel West 74. ``A Farewell to Arms,'' Ernest Hemingway 75. ``Scoop,'' Evelyn Waugh 76. ``The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,'' Muriel Spark 77. ``Finnegans Wake,'' James Joyce 78. ``Kim,'' Rudyard Kipling 79. ``A Room With a View,'' E.M. Forster 80. ``Brideshead Revisited,'' Evelyn Waugh 81. ``The Adventures of Augie March,'' Saul Bellow 82. ``Angle of Repose,'' Wallace Stegner 83. ``A Bend in the River,'' V.S. Naipaul 84. ``The Death of the Heart,'' Elizabeth Bowen 85. ``Lord Jim,'' Joseph Conrad 86. ``Ragtime,'' E.L. Doctorow 87. ``The Old Wives' Tale,'' Arnold Bennett 88. ``The Call of the Wild,'' Jack London 89. ``Loving,'' Henry Green 90. ``Midnight's Children,'' Salman Rushdie 91. ``Tobacco Road,'' Erskine Caldwell 92. ``Ironweed,'' William Kennedy 93. ``The Magus,'' John Fowles 94. ``Wide Sargasso Sea,'' Jean Rhys 95. ``Under the Net,'' Iris Murdoch 96. ``Sophie's Choice,'' William Styron 97. ``The Sheltering Sky,'' Paul Bowles 98. ``The Postman Always Rings Twice,'' James M. Cain 99. ``The Ginger Man,'' J.P. Donleavy 100. ``The Magnificent Ambersons,'' Booth Tarkington Literary Capitalism - too many choices, not enough time. *Chuckles* :)
Donnerstag, 30. August 2007
"The mi...
"The mind ought sometimes to be diverted, so that it may return the better to thinking." —Plato I'm compiling a list of books to read, maybe 10-20 books, and I'm aiming to finish most of them by January 1st. I'm posting so you guys can add books you've read (and liked, I hope) so I can add, remove or modify my list. I'm reading those right now:The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, Michael ChabonThe Dharma Bums, Jack KerouacThe Faerie Queene, Edmund Spenser My partial list of books to read is:The Sun Also Rises, HemingwaySlaughterhouse Five, VonnegutLolita, NabokovAll Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria RemarqueCandide, VoltaireThings Fall Apart, Chinua AchebeA Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, David EggersI'm pursuing a possible minor in Philosophy (to go with my English major), and I don't think Gallaudet's teaching principles are adequate, so I'm throwing in some philosophically oriented works too: The History of Sexuality, Michel FoucaultUnpopular Essays, Bertrand RussellAlso, I'm looking to read some plays so I can learn how to write one. What's on my list is: The Misanthrope, MolièreWaiting for Godot, Samuel BecketThe Glass Menagerie, Tennessee WilliamsLysistrata, AristophanesI'm fond of Kundera, Camus and anything that discusses the changing attitudes of the time. I'm also interested in feminist literature, as well as books that were historical flashpoints (Think Hitler's Mein Kampf, or Darwin's Origin of the Species.)Please add if you want to. Thanks, and have fun!
I'm a mercenary. Cool.
I am a Heliotropic Dragon!Hey, I took the http://dragonhame.com online Inner Dragon quiz and found out I am a Heliotropic Dragon on the inside. In the war between good and evil, a Heliotropic Dragon tends to walk the fine line of Neutrality....When it comes to the powers of Chaos vs. those of Law and Order, your inner dragon walks a fine line between Law and Chaos....As far as magical tendancies, Your inner dragon has the ability to conquer the world of magic, but it will not be easy....During combat situations, whether by spells or by claw, your inner dragon will do whatever it takes to get the job done....Instead of scales, Heliotropic Dragons have a thick hide to cover their body. At the early stages of life, the Heliotropic Dragon is green with red speckles that resemble blood spots. When fully grown, the dragons color changes to any number of variations of violet, but predominantly they have a deep, reddish purple color with streaks of azure blue and magenta.'This unusual skin type also gives them an unusually sleek appearance and allows them to move with greater speed and freedom both in air and under water. These Dragon's are known to be highly competitive.'They often meet with other dragons to compete with each other for sport. NOTE: A few small villages have been destroyed by being so unlucky as to be in the path of a speeding Heliotropic Dragon taking a shortcut to gain an advantage over it's competitor. Heliotropic Dragons are well known for their protectiveness, but also are known as loyal friends and allies. They make true friends rarely, but those friendships that they make are well chosen and long lasting.'This Dragons favorite elements are: BloodStone and Valerian Roothttp://Dragonhame.Com
Samstag, 18. August 2007
In a funk
It's raining. Pretty heavy, too. Rather cool, I can see my breath trailing out. I just fished two Kool cigarette remnants out of the ashtray and smoked them outside on the porch. There's straight lines of water slamming down on a small canister of roofing tar in the corner of the cast-metal wraparound. I'm slumped down on the concrete, against the whitewall. I haven't been able to really go to sleep, or sleep well, and have this migraine following me around. I'm going to make coffee soon. For now, I only want to wrap myself around a warm body. I could care less.
Mittwoch, 15. August 2007
Sonntag, 5. August 2007
Rubik's Heart
Hmph. I set out to make a quesadilla and ended up with slightly burnt cheese crackers. Strange. Just like today.Today's been a little weird. I woke up at about 11:30, 12p and within 15 minutes was down at Super Johnny's buying egg noodles (medium, if you must know) and two money orders that total up to $102.85 to go with my can of Arizona Green Tea. Spent better part of the early afternoon trying to figure out how a money order - screw up on it and you can't redo it, you gotta plunk down the same amount for a new one, and considering the amount I spent, I sure as hell didn't want to fuck up. Washed dishes, noted the magnificient black cloud above the bananas, so I tossed them out, and hoped the fruit flies (drosophila, as I recall from biology class, and Christen, that pretty girl — what do you care? :D) would die out quickly, or I could get John Coffe ("Like the drink but spelt diffrently, Boss") to hoover them down. Did some laundry, talked to Christy (christyslife) and tried out some of the Iced Java my mom bought for me. I'll tell you now; if you have not had coffee for two months, a dwindling supply of milk (sorry, Lynn [charmenders], I still do drink cow milk, but I'm working on it!) and a packet containing chocolate mocha syrup, make sure your ceilings are not too short. I found out that even if i'm 6' and my room's ceiling is 7'6", I could flatten my afro almost all the way to my scalp just by jumping around. I also stepped on my bed frame and shoe, so I stopped before I ended up breaking another ankle. Frailty, thy name is mud. My heart now has racing stripes. I went to unleash a barrage of caffeine-enriched urine into the toilet and had this loopy thought in my head (you fill in the blanks): Hello Bush! What WMD? It's just piss, you crazy fuck. No, I don't think Saddam is in the market for enriched piss. No, I believe Saddam has better things to do than throw wads of cash at me for a quart of caffiene-laden piss. No, I do not look like Ibn Laden. No, I'm not his son. Why the hell are you even here? Yellowcake? I flush after every leak! You disgust me! Get out! Can't believe we elected a cokehead for a president.After I was done with my business, I come back and there's something from a friend sitting on the computer. It was a little weird seeing how we didn't talk for two months and she's trying to casually strike up conversation. I didn't know what to say so I was pretty nonchalant about it. She had IM'd me a few days ago to thank me for wishing her a happy birthday and we left it at that. I know most people won't bother with someone who doesn't talk to them, but I suppose, either out of foolishness or optimitism, I went ahead and wished her a good 20th. She told me about her new tattoo and I didn't really care about it, but only said if she was happy with it, great. She left and I went back to doing my laundry and talking to Christy. Didn't want to think about it. About a hour passed, and I was folding up clothes, taking the occasional text from Jon (lumenluna), Jennie (pmpknfn) and Lynn, as well as looking for something online, and this IM comes up again. Her again. She asked me if I knew a kid from here, I told her yeah he lives 10 blocks from me, and she and I talk a little — If you consider my grunting yeses and no's and cool's talking. I'm a little impressed she's finally taking the initative for once, but at the same time, slightly perturbed. I think poetmatt's been in this situation before, maybe. Don't know about the rest of you guys, but it's like getting to know the person all over again, or for geeks, starting your favorite RPG on New Game+. After five minutes she's back on her job and in ten minutes I'm talking to Pap, who just happened to be the same guy who lives not too far from me, and I'm asking him how he's enjoying his time at GU, and Pap brought her up and I felt like my gears ground to a stop. Why? I can't understand the strains and bonds of human emotions and needs. I sometimes wondered if a Rubik's Cube wanted to solve itself, but was immensely afraid. It would mean completion, and would lead either to languishing somewhere or being destroyed and slowly rebuilt by an outside force. At the same time, it needed to understand how to proceed, which is maybe what the feeling is. How to move? Not how to move on, but how to move. Like beating a guy at chess and moving on, but then trying to move in a new game. It's how you do it, and since there's no take-backs, it's just damn hard to decide how to do it at times. Better than leaving the shrink-wrap on, though.I decide to go to my room and draw a snake-eater. I've been mulling this design for a while, the Indians, I think Cherokee, had a symbol of renewal and rebirth, a snake that was devouring itself. My take on it is a dragon devouring itself, but as it's too grandoise an image for a tattoo, and I'm afraid of pissing off the Yakuza fellows, I decide to stick with the snake-eater. It's an interesting image. The Circle of Life, as represented by a self-cannibalistic snake. The pain of renewing, the purity, the cleanliness. Real snakes usually shed their skins when it gets too small and old for them; this imaginary snake is eating it, as if you would devour your own fading past in order to make your present stronger, your future brighter. Of course, the fact the skin hasn't come off didn't occur to him, but damn it, he'll symbolize something! I also added a tweak to it; The snake would be in the symbol of infinity. During that I decided I was going to text her and make modest conversation, to show I had good intentions and a little interest in what she was doing. In between texts and Jon's headbanger comments (When asked about what class and which level of Inferno he was trapped in, and why, he replied, "This is astronomy. We're gonna look at slides of planets. This is the 8th level — defamination of art!",) I worked on the snake-eater. It's not easy drawing when your desk turns into a big battery-powered dildo every five minutes, and I was too focused to just turn the damn thing off. In twenty minutes, I had a simple charcoal sketch, but quit so my eyes could rest. She's talking to me somewhat, laughing at my remarks. It's weird how quickly comfort creeps in after a chill, so I bust into Kerouac's Dharma Bums. Favorite of mine, I love this book as much as I do On The Road, but I'm slightly biased to Dharma Bums due to its enviromentalistic, buddhistic, and dare I say, bodhisattvatic implications. After a while, I decide to hop into the shower. Haven't had anything clean to wear until just now, so I go up. Now, the wiring in the bathroom's fucked up, and the lights won't turn on. As usual, the landlady is holding tight to her 'But I'm just a girl!' attitude, and won't get it fixed, so my mom bought two spot-lights that you push on to light up, similiar to that audist 'Simon Says' game. Even though they only emit 10 watts each, the bathroom is small enough to be lit up totally. It's almost like candlelight, and on a cool night like tonight, taking a shower in this kind of ambience is great. Guys, this is a great way to get in touch with your feminine side without looking queer! :D Pretty relaxing, too.I'm reflecting on our times together, and I'm thinking about this comment someone made, about how it is good to have an occasional fight, to show that the people involved still care about the relationship. Otherwise, you meander along as if you were a leaf on a river, just passively. Easy to do, but fighting the current will make sure things don't stagnate somehow. Washing out my curly locks, I'm thinking how some tribes in Africa fled while others stood their ground in the early days of slavery. Those who fled either got away with their lives, only to be killed later on by stronger and richer tribes, or were killed in the process of fleeing. Those who fought, either won the fight and gained enough respect to be left alone or become business partners, or were killed, injured and taken as slaves. My point is fight or flight, something will be lost. But what's to be gained if you don't attempt to stay your ground when it's important? Then again, there are times when staying your ground is what's going to get you finished off. Back to the idea of how to move.Love is eternal confusion. Buddhist doctrine encourages acceptation. I'm accepting it. One problem. What am I accepting: Love, or the eternal confusion?At this time, midnight has come and gone. I'm still wondering about the Rubik quagmire. I'm rather tired from all this writing and thinking, and I've been neglecting my pager, which threatens to lob itself at me with angry vibrations. I'm just looking for a way to get the best of the situation. Meanwhile, I'm making tea. Tea is good for the soul. I need to sample Teaism when I visit DC. :) Everyone should thank me for the free advertisting! ;) Good night!
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