Posted on July 20, 2003 in The Orange Writing in Orange
El Toro Road stretches from a point just beneath me to its intersection with Laguna Canyon Road, some 16 to 20 miles away. I do not see many pedestrians along the route.
Posted on July 20, 2003 in Site News The Orange
The aerial photo fairly represents my neighborhood as screaming suburbia, a place of stucco pressed right to the edge of asphalt, where individuality is denied on the exteriors, but fervently expressed inside.
Posted on July 20, 2003 in Celebrity Sexuality
Would I be the first? they asked themselves. Would I be the first to break Britney open and cause her belly to swell?
Posted on July 19, 2003 in Book of Days Reflections
Every time Troop 38 consecrated an Eagle Scout, I’d tick off the scout virtues and compare them to the candidate.
Posted on July 19, 2003 in Fact-Dropping Reflections
35% of those who were abused as children end up in prison for violent crimes.
Posted on July 19, 2003 in Dreams
A very long and complicated dream of which I can only remember fragments:
A neighbor has a room — more of a coffin or an outhouse really — that he uses to write and meditate. This room is a polished oak box that allows you only to stand inside and I am not able to enter or remain in it because it is too short. He can, by means of a nylon rope, pull it into a hole in the ceiling. He is retired military officer, a Marine.
I’m off in a war zone, inside a large building where a group of Iraqi nuns are hiding behind a long line of trucks. The “monk” mentioned in the previous paragraph is outside, leading the troops as the Iraqis counterattack. I know the monk is angry at me, thinks I am a coward because I have chosen to remain with the nuns. Someone hands me a rifle that has a skin that sloughs off.
Later, I am trying to write a short story about a ship that was following another ship and became lost at sea. What happened, I learned, is that the ship saw what appeared to be an island and steered around it, far to the north where it ran into the storm. The “island” — previously uncharted — proved to be an optical illusion, condensation welling up to resemble blue mountains. I am trying to make the story believable, claiming that I have found the first mate’s log — how can I write it as if it recorded right to the very end what happened?
The trouble is that I am surrounded by family members making noise. So I go off with my room mate, a young impassioned fellow who thinks he knows what is what. We go to a meeting at a Quaker Meeting House which is sponsored by a local peace center. There are big arguments going on and no focus. A fellow gets up in front of us and begins selling off his lunch, which includes elogated blueberry pancakes. He then “witnesses” to how he became a Quaker.
My roommate gets disgusted and organizes a meeting within the meeting. It turns out that the leader of the peace center is also having a class, an event of which most of the people are unaware. My room mate organizes half the audience into a meeting. The others are busy filling out books for their class, a credentialization as a peace activist. I call everyone’s attention to what my room mate is doing and, jokingly, point to the tin foil pants that he is wearing. He is angry and when I help set the chairs in place and seat myself in a corner, he reorganizes them so that I am out of his half circle. As the peace center director goes to praise him for his work, I sit down alone and keep working on my story.
As I start to wake up, I realize that I can change this ending radically. But the rough-walled passage into consciousness seems the better route.
Posted on July 19, 2003 in Zoos
We strolled the grounds, allowing Garnette to lead the way because this would be here last time as she is leaving to go to New Orleans in a few weeks. Love beckons.