Category: Uncategorized

  • Sharing is for children

    I was just cleaning up last night’s dishes and glasses; the Friday Gang were over here last night.

    The testament to people’s character is found in the smallest things: there was a tube of Pringles left over, and it had two crisps in the bottom. My friends are too nice to finish the last two crisps, in case anyone else wanted them.

    I’m usually not good for this. I’m a food-whore. I’m the guy who says “Are you finished with that?” It must be great to date women: you get your dinner, then some of theirs.

    My mum said something to me once about all this several years ago: “You’ll find that grown-ups are generous — because they can be. Young people are cheap because they don’t have any money of their own.” And that has been my experience.

    The people in my gang of friends invariably end up being the sort who will divide up the tab equally, or put in more than their fair share. We don’t have any of those creeps who pick all the bills up off the table, pay the exact amount with their bank card, and keep the tip. (Of course, this is Scotland, so there usually isn’t a tip to take.)

    Sharing is for children. Sure it’s important to learn, it’s character-building, and blah blah, but… hell, I’ll just buy two. You have yours, I have mine. So it’s kind of generous, kind of selfish.

    It’s great being an adult! Stay up until whenever time you like, buy whatever you want, make a living doing something you love, and learn anything in the world because you’re curious about it, rather than studying compulsory topics that are foisted on you. And there’s nobody to say what I’m supposed to do (just the benefits or repercussions of doing things that do or don’t fit with the social compact).

    Yay!

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  • Today was 95% triumph…

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    …and 5% suck.

    (But I’m not getting into that last bit.)

    I bumped into my (amazing, great, beautiful) poet friend Elspeth Murray this afternoon, who spontaneously invited me to be a special guest at a writing workshop she was presenting this evening for one of the ginormous financial firms in the area.

    So at 5PM I entered, for the first time, one of those hallmark modern Edinburgh financial buildings near my house — the ones that look like snare drums made of beige sandstone — and met four people from the writing group she’s been leading there. It was an honour to meet those interesting people, talk with them about writing, and leave them with some of the things I’ve figured out.

    Writing is such a gift: imagining how to describe the things you see and think is like getting to live twice at once.

    So having mentioned that tonight I was going to start chapter eleven of Finitude, I had to be my word and do it. I’d made an outline though not nailed down specific scenes, but I went to a pub, bought a pint, and, just as I told the others this evening, when I made a space for the story and just watched the “skull cinema” in my head (as monologist Spalding Gray called it), it was there, playing out for me:

    “They must have a map or something in here,” said Jeremy. “We can find her when we get there. All that matters is that we get there first.”

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  • Into the Wild

    Tonight I gave away some things to people, thanks to Freecycle. (Both of whom were very nice; one of them, a man who works with stained glass — to whom I gave a scanner — suggested I should offer my bookbinding course through the Council, which is a nice idea.) I have this principle that when one thing comes in, one thing should go out. Freecycle is good for that.

    But could I give everything away?

    Tonight I took myself to a movie, knowing I wasn’t going to get any work done. (I’d spent the day waiting for something in the post that didn’t arrive. That waiting is like a hand-grenade thrown into the middle of my day. I must avoid buying things online.) I went to see Into the Wild, the story of a young, wealthy American who gave away all his possessions and money, then walked off the margins of civilisation, ending up in an old bus in Alaska, where he died, likely of starvation.

    My expectations were held in check because I’d seen a ‘making of’ piece online as well as the trailer, and it looked far too self-important and filled with empty Holden Caulfield angst. That’s ironic, isn’t it?, given my geneneral dislike of globalism and the excesses and cruelties of capitalism. But longing for love and justice is, I hope, distinctly separate from acting out against your parents or simply having no outlet for your youthful energy and thus becoming a vehement stand for “anything but this”.

    The movie, like the book, however, gave quiet depth to its hero’s journey, mainly by making his life story resonate with that question mark that stands at the end of all our life sentences. What is this for? Who am I to be? What does it matter?

    The story would not have endured, I believe, had Chris McCandless not died. That death, alone and sick with starvation, forces the question of “Okay, so where would you rather be instead when that time comes?” These things are only tragic when we hold on to the pretence that we all don’t die, like that or otherwise.

    I understand his urge to vanish. When I’m with people for long periods of time, I am filled with the urge to get away, to be on my own. Yet that, to be away in the woods with no company ever, at all… I’m sure I would go mad and would let go of the will to live.

    As a fiercely independent person, this came as a strange realisation to me this evening. But much as I love being a forester in the woods of my imagination and senses, I do begrudgingly accept that the greatest rewards in this life come from sharing it with others.

    The things I struggle with the idea of giving away are all tools for enhancing, drawing out, and giving form to my creativity. And creative expression is, ultimately, all about making connections with others.

    A few years ago, I helped out with a book about Strategic Coach’s idea of “Unique Ability™” — whatever specific, in-born personal talent we have that we’re passionate about using. During the writing of the book, I articulated my Unique Ability as “Describing the real and the imaginary so they come to life and create a moment of wonder.” When I got this phrase, it rung true: “Yes,” I thought, “that is what I’m all about, what everything I’ve done has been for.”

    So what if there was no one to wonder with? What if the tree fell in a forest where there was no one to hear, so it didn’t matter whether it made a sound or not?

    I would still wonder at life, for certain. But for how long, and why?

    I’ve imagined many times going off to live in the tiny coastal Scottish village I once visited on a long car trip with my friend Philip. “But you mightn’t have anything in common with the few people there,” I think. I also wonder how I would get to my family; unlike the person in this story, I love mine and want to be closer to them even when my searching takes me further away. And in spite of myself, I always seem to stumble into having great friendships I cherish. How could I move away from those people? But I’ve done that before, and the friendships stayed strong. Then, I must admit, there’s also the question “And what about meeting someone? It would never happen there!”

    It’s been ten years, and I’m single. I’m now pushing forty. It’s been a long time since that was an active part of my planning, but there’s a little end of wool there I haven’t let go of. I suppose there’s no deciding about these things, but perhaps it’s time to have that not be a factor.

    The instinct behind this small-as-possible-village idea, though, harmonically resonates with the idea of walking off into the wild. It’s the urge to prearrange the credits sequence of one’s life. Visiting Findhorn had a touch of that, but it’s the one place I’ve been where I can still imagine the story continuing. Everything else seems motivated more by that instinct Freud called the “death wish”.

    I know that’s become a piece of common parlance, but look at it again: Freud asserted that competing with our will to survive is an instinct to just give up. When I picture being off in a bus by myself in the Alaskan wilderness, I can’t conjure up much that isn’t given by that morbid urge.

    As with the recent Hallam Foe, I find I no longer relate to rebellious young men coming of age. Their tantrums are like that benzene-ring serpent-eating-its-own-tail figure: the rebellion’s purpose is to exercise the muscles of rebellion. The substance isn’t there yet. As someone who has established his independence, I want to know what’s next. By dying, McCandless skirted the answer, but left behind the question for the rest of us.

  • Mort a la resistance!

    I forgot, forgot the Fifth of November. Ah well, no fireworks.

    I’m eating more and feeling sluggish. I’m having trouble staying focused. I guess it’s the change of season. I’ve taken up my exercise plan with extra vigour, because I know December in Canada will involve lots of eating. But I’ve resolved to stick with my vegetarianism through Christmas. I can’t defend any reason why I wouldn’t. So Mom, Dad, I’m going to make a pie instead of having turkey. At least you believe I can cook now (I barely believe it myself).

    I haven’t much to write, because not much is going on. Work is great and chock-full of projects, as is the rest of life, but it’s all happening in my head, not out where it shows up as news to report.

    My biggest frustration is that I’ve drifted away from the book. I got the last chapter out, which was a big one to write. I was excited about it and wanted to keep going, but then I got busy with other projects, and now I find myself facing… the distance.

    As I’ve often said, there’s no such thing as Writer’s Block. That’s simply a by-product of losing your place in the creative process, thinking about product or effect when you should be focused on craft and imagination.

    And yet, every time I step away from the work, that distance gets in there, and manifests as resistance to the work. I feel fear and uncertainty, and while I’ve been through this process enough times to recognise this for what it is (and to know that it never goes away), the experience of it is no less real.

    The trick, of course, is just to take that first faith-filled step from the boat onto the waves. I know I’ll do it, but I haven’t yet. Of course, that thought is just another facet of the resistance.

  • Samhuinn

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    Samhuinn was last night. I love it, because it’s fiery, lusty, real… and it’s ours.

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  • Wednesday

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    You know you’ve been working with digital imagery for too long when you look up at the moon and think “I can see some banding around that. It’s over-compressed.” Then you realise, no this is life, not a JPEG.

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    And this from the “Wow, that’s really not what I read at first” department.

    So this afternoon, in-between sorting out some Strategic Coach projects, I picked up supplies for the bookbinding class and outlined what I’m going to teach (their heads will be ‘sploding from the information). And my staples were delivered — though an hour and a half after they were supposed to be. I hate waiting for delivery stuff. It starts with “Should I get in the shower?” and peaks at “#%$!! I want to get out of the house and do some work!”

    Anyway, the staples fit in my enormous magical stapler, and with this new method I bound the first ten chapters of Finitude in, seriously, less than five minutes. It’s amazingly fast, much more durable, and even cleaner-looking than the other method. (The other two novels, though, are just too fat to bind this way.) This is more or less the same method used by the guy in this YouTube video.

    So I’ve decided that on Sunday a) I’m going to teach three different types of binding, and b) for the reading session I’m going to read the first section of the first chapter of my new book. This is what authors are supposed to do, isn’t it?, read a sneak-peek from their newest thing while pimping the book you can buy now.

    Then this evening I went to the opening of The Edinburgh Independent Radical Book Fair, where I heard a pair of women from the Middle East talk about their experiences of the place as women. I know, it sounds heavy and dreary, but it was wonderful. One of them, Haifa Zangana, is from Iraq. She is the first person I’ve seen in life since the occupation who’s from there, and there’s something chilling about it, imagining this person subjected to that, but she’s just this smart, lit-up woman. She was ‘in conversation with’, or basically interviewing onstage, writer Nawal El Saadawi. Saadawi was like a grandmother from a Latin American magical realist novel, except she’s from Egypt. She just glowed, and spoke with joy, passion, and conviction. Yet she’s been persecuted, banned, and threatened for years because of her writings.

    The only part where she lost me was when she drifted (in response to a question from an audience member) from female genital mutilation to circumcision. Now, sure, I agree that it’s a strange thing to do, and I laughed very loud, turning heads, when she mentioned the bit in the Old Testament in which God promises Abraham a patch of land in exchange for his children being circumcised; “I don’t get the connection,” Saadawi said.

    Anyway, she was a doctor, she never performed them, always thought it bizarre. Fair enough. And I daresay it is a weird practice that’s not justifiable in a modern world. (She took issue with it as a defense against AIDS in Africa, which I don’t know about. I’ve read about epithelial cells and blah blah blah, but I don’t know enough about the science and it’s not my area.)

    Where the discussion loses me is when people — especially people without a penis — start talking about how horribly mangled and psychologically wounded the circumcised are, as well as being completely sexually dysfunctional because they can’t possibly feel anything with a member that’s so ruined as to be insensate (I exaggerate — but not by much).

    You know what? I’m fine. My wang and I get along fine. In fact, it works so well it’s a constant source of distraction. It’s amazing I’ve accomplished anything in this life.

    The only psychologically-damaging thing is having strangers talk with revulsion about some part of your anatomy. It’s something that, as a homophile, I’m very careful not to do about women. Too many gay men say things like “Eeeew, minge!” Really, it’s totally out of my experience, and how hateful to talk about my sister humans that way. No, I don’t want to have sex with them, but that’s about me. How horrible to characterise some part of another’s body that way. What’s especially weird is when it comes from people who are supposedly humanitarian and politically, empathetically switched-on. Say whatever you want about the future of this medical practice, but keep my willy out of it!

    Anyway, it was just two bad minutes or so out of an otherwise brilliant talk. It’s just a topic that, ahem, arises from time to time over here (not so much in Canada, where just about my whole generation is “cut”), and it always seems to be the un-cut or penisless who are most adamant about it.

    Is it bad form, just before you’re about to make a public appearance, to spend 4/5 of a blog post talking about your “junk”?

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  • The cult of “busy”

    I have a lot on the go this week — the two biggest things (in addition to my paid work) are studying for my “Life in the UK” immigration test next week and preparing to give this bookbinding lesson on Sunday.

    But I’ve forbidden myself to use the word “busy”. There’s kind of a cult of busy, as if being busy has a virtue to it, and you don’t even have to produce anything to be busy. It’s just a way to keep people at arm’s length and justify worrying.

    No, instead I’m up to a lot this week, but there’s time for it all. The trick is just for me to do one thing at a time, and not get caught in the mental rapids of thinking ahead to all the other things. No, just this thing, now.

    I’ve got a big stapler. It arrived yesterday. But it came without staples. Ugh. So I ordered some, and those should arrive this morning.

    “Procedural Living”, I shall call this — which is, I suppose, like saying “Falling forward while moving your feet in succession” when you mean “walking”.

  • Book-stuff I’ve just discovered

    This really belongs as an addendum to the introductory “Do-It-Yourself Book Press” article I wrote for No Media Kings, but for some reason I’m having trouble submitting forms on that site. So, hopefully people looking there will end up seeing this here:

    I’m about to give a bookbinding tutorial next weekend, so I’ve gone back and revisited my process and looked up some info, so here’s some updated material.

    First, a great YouTube video of one fella’s perfect-binding process (using low-budget materials, but with very nice results):
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcwwQDIlCKE

    And now I must bow before a far superior effort and move out of frame: I found a website offering a book about perfect-binding at home, and it contains nearly everything I’ve learned over the past two years and then some. Three caveats about it, before I give you the URL:

    1. It’s a commercial product and costs $49. But I would very happily pay that to go back in time and hand that to myself, sparing me from a lot of trial and error. As it is, I picked up a few new ideas from it. So it’s $49 for an e-book, but I still think it’s well worth it.
    2. The website is one of those hellacious late-night infomercial-types that uses many fonts, many large fonts, and promises you absolute salvation through “super-secret reports”. You will feel as if you had a bath in Coca-Cola after looking at it.
    3. For such an incredibly detailed and useful guide (the author even includes ISO and North American paper sizes for every example), I’m amazed that no one spent half an hour grammar- and spell-checking the thing. As someone who writes copy for a living, I had to keep suspending judgment to accept that the content was still of excellent quality.

    Okay, here’s the site: Easy Bookbinding.

    Finally, for my self-publishing friends in the UK, here are some pieces of information about officially registering your book:

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  • Pressing escape

    I want to focus inwardly lately. I’m deleting all the RSS news feeds I usually follow, and just sticking with the ones by my friends and the ones that regularly contain inspiring ideas.

    I’m sick of the news. I do feel like I should stay connected with the Scottish news, but it’s done so badly. Every day, the same few story templates are used over and over:

    • Crazed motorist hits man/mother and child.
    • Dog bites man/boy.
    • Man/boy hurts dog.
    • Man kills wife.
    • Nurse (policeman, other trusted figure) kills unsuspecting client.
    • Innocent person mugged/knifed/shot/abducted while minding his/her own business. If it’s a child, they will be referred to familiarly (“Little Rudy”, “Little Rebecca”) and be turned into a constantly-visited media cash cow until they recover/are found/die.
    • Government has new plan that will make life much better.
    • Government plan fails, costs taxpayers millions/billions.
    • War in far-off place gets worse. “My son just came back in a box.” We should never make this mistake again.
    • Far-off place is acting up and really asking for it.

    And always this template is applied with the suggestion that this is some alarming new trend, when this is historically, statistically untrue.

    Meanwhile, I’m up to chapter ten of my novel and am completely enamoured of the world I’m exploring in my imagination — not because it’s a nice place, because it’s not particularly, but because I’m constantly amazed that anything I need for the book, anything I might hope to find, is already in there.

    I find myself focusing on books, movies, and ideas with fantastic themes — and they’re out there to be found right now. Maybe this is a reaction to how badly the world sucks at the moment… That is, as a story we’re telling ourselves through the collective apparatus that is our media.

    I went to see the limp remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers the other night. It’s pretty bad when the world the invading aliens make seems better than the brutal “normal” state the characters are fighting to restore because “this is what makes us human”. I kept thinking, “Nicole, honey, just go to sleep. The aliens are right.”

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    p>Tonight I worked on the bookbinding tutorial I’m presenting on the 28th. While gathering ideas, I think I may have discovered the next advancement in my own process. Last year I was surprised by the hunger for this material, so this year I hope to give away even more useful ideas to help people publish themselves. I want to make more aliens.