Archive for December, 2009

Date: December 22nd, 2009
Cate: Music
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this dream america

i wrote this folk tune a few minutes ago sitting at my desk at work….

i’ve been crawling round the corners of the corridors of hell
with a light strapped to my head and a cracked old freedom bell
and this ragged piece of paper with my master’s name inscribed
i’m a runaway maroon going on a freedom ride

they call this dream america, america the brave
the city on the hill that fell to nightmares in a cave
trumpets will enunciate the eulogy of this
at least they aimed for freedom, just too bad their bullets missed

my horse is named salvation and my squire is called pride
i came across a passage dark where half the village died
the boatman’s face was white as death, his whip struck hard and true
i never felt a pain so deep or a tapped a vein so blue

they call this dream america, america the brave
the city on the hill that fell to nightmares in a cave
trumpets will enunciate the eulogy of this
at least they aimed for freedom, just too bad their bullets missed

my bones washed up in america where spirits never rest
where bloody rivers laugh at those who take and fail the test
my children were all stillborn bastards ruddy eyed and mean
buried murder in their eyes from all the foreclosed dreams

they call this dream america, america the brave
the city on the hill that fell to nightmares in a cave
trumpets will enunciate the eulogy of this
at least they aimed for freedom, just too bad their bullets missed

hail and nail the creole prince whose sweet breath changes none
sail and sink the dreaming ship whose day did never come
far away the land of old where drums sang all the time
woe betide the stained red hands that covered up the crime

they call this dream america, america the brave
the city on the hill that fell to nightmares in a cave
trumpets will enunciate the eulogy of this
at least they aimed for freedom, just too bad their bullets missed

 

Date: December 18th, 2009
Cate: Arts & Culture
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The Marriage Chronicles: A Man’s World?

I think I was born too late. I just don’t understand what a man’s role is anymore. I was raised to believe in theory that a man is the head of household. This came to me from the the unquestionable trinity of the Bible, Grandma and the Cosby Show. A woman was a rib taken from Adam to be his helpmate. She is supposed to be loyal, subservient and eternally loving. In return, the man is supposed to protect her, provide for her and cherish her above all things.

Could it be that it was all so simple…

Trinity aside, though, what I saw growing up was my mom working from sun-up to way past sun-down for minimum wage. I saw a parade of bad men with names like Leroy, Earl and Biggs. Big black men, the kind my mom had a festish for. The more ghetto the better, anything not like my light-skinned, well-spoken and totally domineering father.

The only functional nuclear families I saw were white ones where everyone ate at the table, you could only have one glass of juice a day, and dad was the uncontested ruler of all he surveyed from the bbq grill to the cat litter. The thing I loved about these families was how everyone seemed to know their place. At dinner time, no matter where everyone was, they came downstairs and assembled around the table where the plates were already laid out, ready to be heaped with food. Everyone bowed their heads and Dad said grace before we ate. It was all so orderly and right.

Now that I am a father and husband myself, I want to be the man my wife and son can look up to for perfect leadership. I want to be a source of comfort and stability. What I find more often though is that my need for unqualified respect often pushes my wife away, as if respect itself were a form of distance.

She is not my mother and definitely not her mother’s mother. She doesn’t think she has to bite her tongue not to offend me. She has no sense of a double-standard between us, that she should be satisfied with unconditional love while I require unconditional subservience. I sound like a caveman to her. I sound like the Patriarchy itself trying to hold her down and restrict her natural goddess-ness.

Yeah, I hear ya.

I may be the last of my kind for all I know. I doubt it though. I think men of my generation, having grown up largely without intact homes, have come to the realization of how important a man in the house can be. A good man that is. The absence of a father figure for so many of us has produced either a sense of impossible masculinity or defined clearly the impossible role we so eagerly wish to fill. We are essentially stepping into a job we have never seen performed except on television and in the movies. It is a legendary calling like being a dragon slayer, this rearing of family and devotion to household.

Women cannot understand it anymore than we can understand their occult mysteries. We belong to different religious orders, coming together in a sacred drama to create new life, but we are not the same. At our cores, our souls are, but our paths have been pre-ordained.

Or have they?

In a world where its ok to be gay (and it is), and okay to change your gender (why not) – where identity itself is fluid and subject to whim – what does it mean to be something as antiquated as a “man” or a “woman?” I understand profoundly the fears of social conservatives who lament the seeming destruction of all that is right and orderly. They are right (no pun intended) and they are tragic.

As am I, longing to embody an ideal that not even my wife seems to desire.

A man’s world indeed.

Date: December 16th, 2009
Cate: Philosophy
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War is unscientific

I get sick to the stomach whenever civilians fall all over themselves to thank and congratulate soldiers for their service to our country because it’s almost always followed by a fawning endorsement of whatever half-cocked political notion they happen to be expression.

My father was a career airman and my brother served two tours in the Army. I have always had a great deal of respect for the military concepts of hierarchy, discipline and honor. They are some of the only examples of true warriorhood training in our society.

But I draw the line intellectually at assuming that the actions they undertake somehow endow them with special insights about the effectiveness of war. In fact, I often think just the opposite. My father would be the first to tell you that without strength of arms, America would have long fallen to any number of its eternal enemies. He would dismiss any kind of pacifism as pie-in-the-sky nonsense.

Now I don’t know if I’m truly a pacifist, as there are a great number of things I can imagine whopping some ass over, but there is a vast difference between defending yourself from attack and instigating attacks on other people out of some abstract notion of “national interest.”

The diabolic nature of this kind of propaganda rests in the untestability of war’s efficacy. Consider the mundane task of getting your toilets unclogged. If you get a clog, your first thought might be to get a plumber to unstop it. That would make perfect sense. After the plumber is finished, you can verify simply whether his efforts have worked. There was a problem, you took action, the problem is resolved.

Now imagine there is nothing wrong with your toilet, but you have been told it could possibly get stopped up without pre-emptive measures taken. You call the plumber, he does something and – presto – the toilet is working just as well as it was before. In fact, it doesn’t clog for a long, long time after wards. You pat yourself on the back, job well done, and carry on with life as if you’ve learned something.

This is how we treat war these days. Our toilet hasn’t been stopped up in a long time. The last real coordinated attack from a foreign power was Pearl Harbor. We had to join the fight because we were attacked. Since then, we’ve waged one war of “national interest” after another. But have they benefited us in any way? What would be the proof? That the boogeyman we imagined never attacked us?

This is magic thinking.

Without setting an expectation of the result of one’s action and verifying it according to observable metrics, you cannot know to a certainty anything you are doing is worthwhile at all.

Date: December 15th, 2009
Cate: Music, Video
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My new favorite rapper

Date: December 15th, 2009
Cate: Philosophy, Poetry
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Master and Servant: Power and Service

Dearly Beloved,

What is the relationship between coequal virtues, Power and Service? For a being without power cannot preserve itself and a being without service has nothing to preserve.

Observe the birds of the air who have the power to take to the sky to elude their enemies and overmaster their prey. They are in turn food for greater birds and for the worms of the earth. They spread the seed of plants and help them flourish.

Every creature of the earth is given the power to preserve itself and also the ability to serve others.

Every being is a vessel, but what holds the clay together? What Will impels atoms to form chains of molecules and make the visible Universe?

What power serves us?

God is Greatest because It said “Be” and breathed into us the power of life and we were living beings. It created the Universe and supports it to this day. It is Master because It serves us all.

Who you serve, you own. This is why they said of Jesus, “He is the Son of God.”

When you follow in the path of something, you become its child. The branch is the child of the tree. The leaf of the branch. But if a leaf should fall, it is swallowed by the earth and becomes a child of the earth.

So we pass from dream to dream, reborn in the likeness of our choices.

But when we hear the original song, our hearts are broken. Our vessels are shattered.

We cry ourselves out.

Until along comes the janitor with her mop and pale to sop us up.

Date: December 14th, 2009
Cate: Poetry
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america and how it all ends

right now we’re playing out the karma of the greatest generation

they made a deal with the devil

they made consumption their spiritual engine

fueled by functional and fashion obsolescence

at first it worked because the more americans bought the more they worked, cuz all the jobs were here

but now they’re not

but we’re still spending like they are

it’s a death spiral

this is how the empire ends

and it’s not a big deal

we’re black anyway

we had no permanent vested interest in this nation from jump

give it back to the indians for all i care

or the mexicans

they have better food

Date: December 14th, 2009
Cate: Uncategorized
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Weeded out

The ether of my place has brightened a little since my mother-in-law moved in. Something about having an elder in the crib just makes things better. Langston seems happy to have another adult around to play with and get his attention from. Melissa seems happier with the help. It’s all good. It’s definitely the first time I’ve felt like I belonged to a conventional family since arriving in LA.

We went out to Candy Cane Lane last night. It’s this thing where a cul-de-sac of white folks festoon their houses with insane amounts of Xmas lights and invite strangers inside. I’ve been two times before and every time I integrate the place. This time was no exception, but I don’t trip. White people don’t shake me anymore than any other minority these days. Watching the most reactive of them flail at the loss of their historically “protected” status elicits sympathy. I have enough Jesus in me not to take too much pleasure in their inevitable fall off.

That was Saturday night. The following Sunday we all woke up gently. The rain that had been graying the whole weekend finally burnt off, leaving LA fresh and good. The air was crisp but not close to cold. Denzel’s The Great Debators was on TV and it was getting me good. When they finally beat Harvard, I was in tears.

It wasn’t until around 1pm that I realized nobody in the house was high, that neither I nor my wife had even mentioned our weekly wake-and-bake ritual. I was reminded of that scene from Six Feet Under where the crazy white chick fucking Nate tells her latest fuck-buddy, “I don’t want to smoke pot. I smoked so much pot it turned me into me.”

Yeah, I relate to that. Shit gets old, son. No matter how high you try to get. And when you have real happiness to compare it to, being stoned really doesn’t compare. At best, weed can enhance a good thing – music, sex, food – and at worst, a bad thing – depression, paranoia, laziness – but at the end of the day, it doesn’t create anything. It’s not real. It’s not ultimately what we’re all looking for, it only does in a pinch. If you’re following your bliss ardently, I can’t imagine you ever really needing a drug to get by. When you’ve got love and familial stability, you’ve already got the best fix there is.

But I’m a hold onto my vaporizer just in case.

Date: December 14th, 2009
Cate: Uncategorized
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serenades from the deep

subtle change in the ether. had a strange note the other day. felt like stopping.

so much river left. turned my head to the left, to the right, taking deep breaths.

fill my lungs until the river gives out or i do

gotta keep pressing on, only thing left to do.

Date: December 7th, 2009
Cate: Poetry
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Marriage is hard

Marriage hits you with a hammer everyday.

Says, wake up and give a shit already, there are things to do.

The baby needs food, the bills need paying and the woman needs listening.

So you get up, count your flock, and slit the best’s throat, an offering to love.

In exchange, a brief kiss, an unhostile glance.

It’s the best you can hope for, this ember of passion, this cooled, collapsed nova.

You learn to cope, talking solves nothing.

Imagine tree roots viciously intersecting the earth.

Imagine a field of weeds, wild and hungry, flowering and apocalyptic.

Imagine lightning splitting in the sky, detonating the ground below.

Yeah, that’s how it goes.

Date: December 3rd, 2009
Cate: Aphorisms, Philosophy
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what religion is

religion isn’t a particular set of beliefs, it’s any belief one holds to be true no matter what evidence or popular opinion support.