Satisfaction

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Fire Screen (Part 3)

Well, 7+ years of grudgingly enduring the decrepit and dysfunctional screens on our fire place have finally and happily come to an end. In the intervening years, there were a lot of false starts (including a completely misguided attempt at forging screens myself) and we never found anything suitable off-the-shelf.

After meeting several weeks ago with Howie H., a welder, blacksmith, and steel artist, and giving him measurements and some ideas for a custom design, TLMW and I drove up to Flagstaff again today to pick up the finished fire screens.

Previous posts on the firescreen:

North Side – Before Howie North Side – After Howie
South Side – Before Howie South Side – After Howie
Design View
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Public Transport Story #68

September 22, 2012: Not exactly Night on Earth or a Taxicab Confession, but still a worldly whirlwind of a taxi ride.

I got into a quiet Prius taxi today near downtown to go back home. It was still light out, pleasantly hot on one of the last days of summer. I climbed into the back of the cab and gave my directions. The driver, in his early 30s and perhaps from somewhere in East Africa, right away read my name off his electronic dashboard and asked me where I was from. I told him and he asked what Germans are known for or are really good at. I mentioned the usual: cars, engineering, beer, some wines, food, soccer, the mighty Mittelstand, castles, gummi bears, those sort of things. It was hard to think of a good list. He said he had spent some time in Frankfurt and one thing that had totally amazed him was the cleanliness, “so friggin clean you could do a surgery on the sidewalk.”

He asked what the biggest economic powers were in the EU? Did Germany and France now get along, or were there still animosities over the world wars? What about Alsace Lorraine, was that area part of France again? I told him that had mostly been settled after the first world war and that the countries got along well enough now, had some common goals and principles, but with divergent positions on many things as well.

He wanted to know how Germany recovered after the second world war, whether it was just “through hard work.” I mentioned the German economic miracle, the Marshall plan, the Allies, the dismantling of the German steel industry, the development of Germany as a market for US products, the US interests in the country for its geopolitical place, etc. He said he absolutely loved the PBS show Beyond Our Borders which regularly profiles a different country with every new episode.

He wanted to know whether Germany still had Gypsies and Roma, and whether reparations still had to be paid even today. He had been, he said, to Marseilles once and gypsies were everywhere there and they regularly were being deported by the government. I mentioned Django Reinhard but he had not heard of him. He asked where gypsies came from. We talked about Indian origins and Transsylvania and the corruption of the word Egyptians and the gypsies that came every year through my hometown with big American cars and long trailers and feisty kids that would beat us at soccer and take all our marbles. He didn’t think there were any Gypsies in America but thought the Irish Travellers were just like them.

He asked why the US was not helping Africa develop, why China was everywhere now on the continent building airports, dams, highways, harbors, entire cities, all with Chinese workers. I said I had read the Chinese had been selling loads of heavy machinery to Eritrea for agriculture, construction, mining and so on. I said I had always wanted to go to Asmara in Eritrea, that I had seen pictures of the capital looking like a beautiful city in Italy with modernist architecure from the 1930s and that I would love to one day take that infamous steam train up from the coast to the highlands of Asmara.

He said Asmara was not like Frankfurt but it was also very clean. He scoffed at Italian colonialism in Eritrea saying that the Italians were racists who couldn’t really fight. They were not very successful in taking the farmland they wanted from local tribes and they also never managed to occupy Ethiopia for any length of time, even though they really wanted their coffee beans. They lost the guerilla war against the British fighting “like little children.” Italians, he said, didn’t have much to offer to the region. “What could they give us? Pasta, wine, the Mafia, what were we gonna to do with such things?”

He said he was from Djibouti, a small place on the Horn of Africa. “You can see Arabia from there,” he told me. Djibouti had practically no imports or exports, and many people there still lived like gypsies, like nomads. It would take centuries for a place like his country to look like Frankfurt.

I asked about stability in the region and the pirates. He said they were mostly Somali and from further south. There were no pirates from Djibouti because of a US naval base there.

I asked if Somalia was still a failed state without a unified government. He told me that just last week Somalia had elected a president in the first freely contested presidential election there. Times might be changing, he said. But he also mentioned that many of the clans still fought with each other and true unification would not happen for a long time. Especially the Isaac clan, he said, in the northwestern Somaliland region was trying hard to achieve de facto independence.

We finally formally introduced ourselves. I had seen his name on the driver’s ID card. His name was Hassan B. and we shook hands at a red light. He told me he had become an American citizen seven months ago. He said he spoke English, Arabic, Afar, and French. I hadn’t realized that French was still an official language in Djibouti and that the relationship with France remained very deep, in particular in terms of economic assistance. We continued our conversation in French. He mentioned that he eventually wanted to work for the American Embassy in Djibouti. He had a bachelor’s degree from NAU and with all the languages he spoke he thought he might have a good chance. He said he had met the current US Ambassador to Djibouti and she had encouraged him to take his foreign service exam.

When we got to my place and I paid the fare, Hassan told me that he was saving money and studying downtown at the public library and that he would try taking the exam next year.

Driving time = 25 mins

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Public Transport Story #43

Another item found in my notes:

Dec 22, 2011: An elderly African American woman with dreadlocks a meter long told me on the bus line #96 this morning that I looked just like Graham Chapman from Mony Python.

I said that I didn’t remember him or knew what he looked like. “It’s the eyes,” she told me.

She went on to say that the dead Norwegian pet parrot was “my idea” and that they had originally wanted to use a toaster. “I” died, she said, about 20 years ago from throat cancer and that “my” ashes were spilled somewhere when Terry Gilliam tripped over “my” urn.

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Public Transport Story #35

I found the following in my notes today:

I love the humanity and short stories of public transportation.

May 13, 2011, today’s new acquaintance: Louis, truck driver, originally from Newark, NJ. Black polo-shirt, day-glo swim trunks, black sneakers, black socks. Mid 50s. Below, summary of friendly chat with Louis on Light Rail between Roosevelt/Central Ave and 24th/Van Buren stops after he asked me whether he needed to swipe his day ticket anywhere on the train. (Answer: No, man, you’re good).

As told by Louis: “Had a layover here in Phx for 12 hrs today. Need to get back to the terminal now to catch my Greyhound bus to LA. Going to pick up my truck there to drive a load to Chicago. Don’t have a home no more in this country, I live in my truck. Everything I got here is in my truck or in storage at Greyhound. It’s just 5 bucks a locker. Spent day downtown wandering around, checking shit out, drinking some wine – need to catch some zzzs on the bus ride over night. Been married 8 times. Yeah, tell me about it. Got 7 kids, oldest is 37, youngest 3 yrs 2 mo. I make 800/wk, that’s take home. I send 700/mo to the Philipines to my new wife. Met her on filipinocupid.com. Must have interviewed like a hundred women. Took me 18 months to find her because I was looking for someone who wanted to stay in the Philipines. You know, 98% of women there only want to come to the US. My monthly wire transfer triples in the Phillipino village where we built a 3-bedroom house. It’s got all the amenties of a Western home in the suburbs. When I married my wife 4 years ago she immediately became the 3rd richest women in her village. My wife is as tall as my nipple, that’s from the floor. Ha! She weighs 78lbs. She’s real tiny, like a 9yr old American girl, but she’s fully matured. She gave us the most beautiful boy you can ever imagine.” He showed me pictures of his house there, his wife, and his youngest son. Ran off the train turned around, smiled, and said: “If I dropped a 100 bucks on my seat, you can keep it.”

Total travel time together – 6 minutes. So much said, so much more to imagine.

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Exit Music

Done reading.

Second to last title (so far) in Ian Rankin’s Detective Inspector John Rebus series set in Edinburgh. I think there are about 17 in that series before that. I may have read one or the other a long time ago, but I just can’t remember. Rebus seemed vaguely familiar. If this book is any indication the series is an excellent one. Rebus is an interesting, if not altogether likable character and the backdrop of Edinburgh with some socio-political commentary (e.g. “less concern with the underworld, more with the overworld”) is pretty fascinating, too. The police procedural in Last Exit takes place roughly at the time of the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko in London. That story comes up a few times and leads one to believe that a similar conspiracy is afoot here in the murder of a Russian poet.

I bought the first 8 in the series to slowly catch up from the beginning.

Some nice expressions:

  • Perish the thought.
  • Slay us with an insight.
  • Bully for you.
  • Fancy a fry-up?
  • You taking the piss?

 

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Stunning Portrait

From: The Guardian

The photograph captures a sensitivity and intelligence that makes this monkey look like it is sitting for its portrait by Rembrandt. It reveals a staggeringly insightful, wise, and melancholy face. Like Rembrandt’s son Titus in the portrait of him by his father that hangs in London’s Wallace Collection, the lesula looks right back at its beholder, calm and pensive, examining you as you examine it. Its eyes have the depth and frankness of those seen in moving portraits on Roman-era mummies from the Fayoum, or in Antonello da Messina’s haunting portrait of a man gazing back out of a glassy oil panel.

 

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Playlist 09/2012

Name Artist Album Track Number
Lillies Of The Valley Jun Miyake Pina, Tanzt, Tanzt, Sonst Sind Wir Verloren 2
Never Understand Fang Island Major 5
Edith and the Kingpin (feat. Tina Turner) Herbie Hancock River – The Joni Letters 2
The Secret Sun Jesse Harris Forgetting Sarah Marshall
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
14
You Gotta Feel It Spoon Kill The Moonlight 10
Blank Slate The National Boxer 13
Que Pasa? (Trio Version) Horace Silver Song for My Father (The Rudy Van
Gelder Edition Remastered)
8
The Night Before the Funeral Arab Strap Philophobia 7
Rio Ancho (Rumba) Paco De Lucía Almoraima 7
Easy Living Sonny Stitt Personal Appearance 2
Sick of Elephants (Bonus Track) Andrew Bird Armchair Apocrypha 13
Mona Federico Aubele Gran Hotel Buenos Aires 7
Knowing Me, Knowing You The Bad Plus Knowing Me, Knowing You – Single 1
Sweetheart (feat. Zooey Deschanel) M. Ward A Wasteland Companion 4
La Enganadora Rubén González Introducing…Rubén González 1
The Girl from Ipanema Stan Getz and Astrud Gilberto Discover Jazz 10
Planet Rock Jason Moran Discover Jazz 16
Je veux ZAZ Zaz 2
Polka Dots and Moonbeams Paul Desmond Paul Desmond: Greatest Hits
Series
7
Esta Noche Federico Aubele Gran Hotel Buenos Aires 5
Sagreras: El Colibri, “The Hummingbird” John Williams Spanish Guitar Music 6
Par Hasard et Pas a Rasé Serge Gainsbourg Serge Gainsbourg [Mercury] 16
Viejo Ciego Antonio Agri, Morgado & Roberto Goyeneche De Barro 8
Wogs Will Walk Cornershop Handcream for a Generation 5
Before I Grow Too Old (Silver and Gold) Joe Strummer & The
Mescaleros
Streetcore 10
The Way You Look Tonight Johnny Griffin A Blowin’ Session 1
Suzanne Julie Christensen, Nick Cave
& Perla Batalla
Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man 13
Bossa Antigua Paul Desmond Bossa Antigua 1
Fever Jessica Pilnäs Norma Deloris Egstrom (A Tribute to Peggy Lee) 5
Moniebah Pharoah Sanders Pharoah Sanders’ Finest 1
Back In The Crowd Tom Waits Bad As Me 7
On the Sunny Side of the Street Dizzy Gillespie Sonny Side up  1
Terra De Ninguem (Nicola Conte Remix) Sabrina Malheiros & Nicola
Conte
Vibrasons 1
Frente Al Mar Roberto Goyeneche La Maxima Expresion del Tango 1
I See Your Face Before Me Miles Davis The Musings Of Miles 2
Yes I’m Country (And That’s OK) Robert Glasper Double Booked 3
I Surrender Dear Paul Gonsalves Gettin’ Together! 3
You Are My Sunshine Donald Harrison, Ron Carter & Billy Cobham This Is Jazz – Live At The Blue Note – Donald Harrison 3
Babe, You Turn Me On Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Abattoir Blues / The Lyre of
Orpheus
3
No Greater Love Ahmad Jamal At the Pershing: But Not for Me 5
Tengo Roberto Goyeneche La Maxima Expresion del Tango 3
The Most Beautiful Girl In The World Sonny Rollins Tenor Madness 5
Sin Luna Daniel Melingo The Rough Guide To Tango Nuevo 19
You Do Something To Me Sonny Rollins The Bridge 6
Different Sides Leonard Cohen Old Ideas 10
Angelica Duke Ellington & John
Coltrane
Duke Ellington & John
Coltrane
6
Pra Dizer Adeus Till Brönner & Luciana Souza Oceana 7
Bad Luck Heels DeVotchKa 100 Lovers 9
Etudes Charlie Haden, Alan Broadbent, Ernie  Watts & Billy Higgins The Private Collection 7
I Don’t Know Kat Edmonson Way Down Low 2
Convict 13 Bill Frisell / Elvin Jones /
Holland, Dave
With Dave Holland and Elvin
Jones
8
Smells Like Teen Spirit Robert Glasper Black Radio 12
Cheris The Day Robert Glasper Feat. Lalah
Hathaway
Black Radio 3
Galang (Trio Riot Version) Vijay Iyer Trio Historicity 3
Ne Me Quitte Pas Marcus Strickland Of Song 1
Tres Lindas Cubanas Fabian Almazan Personalities 9
Como Dos Extranos Esteban Morgado, Litto Nebbia
& Roberto Goyeneche
De Barro 7
Montmartre de hoy Daniel Melingo Maldito Tango 9
Asunder Fang Island Major 6
Afro Blue Robert Glasper Feat. Erykah Badu Black Radio 2
Tell Me Tom Waits Bad As Me [Disc 2] 2
Goodnight Bad Morning The Kills Midnight Boom (Bonus Track
Version)
12
Melodia del Rio Rubén González Introducing…Rubén González 4
Easy Living John Lewis, Percy Heath, Bill
Perkins, Chico Hamilton & Jim Hall
2 Degrees East – 3 Degrees West Remastered 3
Castles Made of Sand The Jimi Hendrix Experience Experience Hendrix – The Best of Jimi Hendrix 13
Moonlight (Claro de Luna) Charlie Haden / Gonzalo
Rubalcaba
Nocturne 4
Swing Lo Magellan Dirty Projectors Swing Lo Magellan 4
Long Way Home (Featuring Lyle Lovett) Kat Edmonson Way Down Low 9
Painted On Canvas Gregory Porter Be Good 1
Dirty Blue Wovenhand Mosaic 8
Muerte en Hawaii Calle 13 Entren los Que Quieran (Deluxe
Version)
10
Samba Dees Days Charlie Byrd / Stan Getz Jazz Samba 2
One Night On Earth The Veils Nux Vomica 9
Samba Cantina Paul Desmond Bossa Antigua 4
Primitive Girl M. Ward A Wasteland Companion 2
Tu Mi Delirio Astrud Gilberto & Walter
Wanderley Trio
The Diva Series: Astrud Gilberto 3

 

 

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Happiest Moment

Speaking of Lydia Davis, here’s another of her short stories that I really like:

This is a beautifully constructed story with matryoshka-like nesting of several accounts: first, Davis writing this story; second, of the account written down by the English teacher; third, of the story told by his student; forth, of the experience by the student’s wife; which turns into Davis’ favorite story. And then there’s the nice parallelism of the word “hesitate.”

Turns out this story is based on a section (p.58) in Mark Salzman’s book “Iron and Silk” in which he writes about his experiences as an English teacher in China in the 1980s.

(Someone once compared Davis to the Velvet Underground, saying that, although their first LP sold only a few thousand copies, everybody who bought one went out and started a band. (e.g. Jonathan Franzen, David Foster Wallace, Dave Eggers, etc.))

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Advice Often Gone Unheeded

This quote is from one of Beckett’s lesser known (or, to me, totally unknown) prose poems, Worstward Ho, and as an isolated quote the perfect counterpoint to the important maxim from Beckett’s Endgame: “The end is in the beginning and yet you go on.” While I vaguely recall seeing a poster with this quote in the room of a college friend, I never knew about or read Worstward Ho.

I mention this because I came across a four page long story today in “The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis” called “Southward Bound, reads Worstward Ho.” Not having been aware of the Beckett story before, I had to read up on it because otherwise, as was clear from the first paragraph, Davis’ story and especially her odd staccato writing style closely following the quote above, would have been entirely lost on me.

This article describes my reaction perfectly:

Baffling yet wonderful, Davis’ story “Southward Bound, Reads Worstward Ho” may have one of the more bizarre short-story premises of all time. An unnamed woman sits on an airport-shuttle van and reads Samuel Beckett’s enigmatic story Worstward Ho. However, due to the bright morning sunlight, she cannot read the book when the van is heading north, because she is sitting on the right side. The story consists of detailed descriptions of the woman’s van ride and exactly what she is reading, accompanied by copious footnotes concerning the trajectory of the van, the quality of the light [etc].

Reading a difficult story about a person having difficulty reading a difficult story is exasperating, even outraging. Of course, this kind of frustration is exactly what Beckett’s story is about. Worstward Ho is an existential lament over the unending frustrations of life, a Sisyphean howl. The woman in the van, with her constant attempts and failures to read and understand Beckett’s text, embodies Beckett’s basic dilemma, but in a hilariously mundane fashion.

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Peter Temple

Done reading.

Two books by the Australian crime fiction writer, Peter Temple: The Broken Shore and Truth. Here’s a good review of The Broken Shore and here is one of Truth.

One point to emphasize is Temple’s gift at dialogue. I haven’t read such high-quality and truly authentic exchanges since Lush Life by Richard Price, he of The Wire fame (5th season). And that’s not only because of the ubiquitous use of Australian slang which is entertaining by itself, but also because of some of the dialogue which is subtle and smart, raw and visceral, and steadily dripping with sarcasm. The elliptical story-telling is superb as well and the characters are sublime. Especially Truth has some good story lines of discrimination against aboriginals, father-son conflict, urban planning, etc., all expertly woven into the plots.

Needless to say, the dictionaries of Australian slang in the back of both books come in handy.

A few quotes:

  • “He smoked, tapped ash into his plastic cup. He looked away, watched the birds across the street. Sleep, shuffle, shit, fight.”
  • “All chip and no shoulder.”
  • “There is no firm ground in life. Just crusts of different thickness over ooze.”
  • “Don’t get waylaid.”
  • “There are no permanent alliances, only permanent interests.”
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Procrastination

H/T to MS for recommending this entertaining 30-minute BBC 4 program with Rowan Pelling: “Helping Hamlet – Can Science Cure Procrastination” (Note: this may no longer be available by the time of reading).

Procrastination, the show argues, appears to be one of humanity’s greatest and oldest plagues. In Works and Days, Hesiod exhorts us:

Do not put off until tomorrow and the day after.
A man does not fill his barn by shirking his labors
or putting them off; it is keeping at it that gets the work done.
The putter-off of work is the man who wrestles with disaster.
(ll. 410-413; 1959, 67)

This reminds me of something contrarian I once heard from a Moroccan friend, AKA, who told me a phrase in French, which now escapes me in its original, but which roughly captures the following absurdist but oddly appealing procrastinating position: “If you can’t do something tomorrow, there’s no point in starting it today.”

Somewhat related, my friend IA once told me, only half in jest, “You know, I think in Arabic we have a similar word like the expression mañana in Spanish. It’s just that our word in Arabic doesn’t carry the same sense of urgency.”

Below are a few interesting quotes and references from the BBC show:

    • Root of procrastination: Akrasia (/əˈkreɪzɪə/; ancient Greek ἀκρασία, “lacking command (over oneself), not properly balanced”), occasionally transliterated as acrasia, is the state of acting against one’s better judgement.
    • “As a procrastinator, what you are actually doing is attacking a future version of you.” (after Aristotle)
    • “I love deadlines. I love the whooshing sound they make as they go by.” (Douglas Adams)
    • “Writers and procrastination are an odd mix. You never here somebody say, “I have plumber’s block. I got to go for a walk in the woods before I can do you a u-bend.”
    • Books mentioned:
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Mormon Lake

Click to view slide show

(Addendum: Originally, I had mistakenly titled this post “Lake Mormon.” Thanks to my friend BK for correcting this in the line of duty pointing out that “a geographic fail safe light was blinking somewhere and I got the call to go into defcon 1…”)

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