Sunday, December 19, 2010

Endless Thoughts



So i've been back in Los Angeles since Thursday night and I have already encountered certain circumstances that are worth sharing whereas others that are better left looming in the back of my mind. Why is that? You wouldn't want to know...

Looking back on this past semester at Berkeley, I have learned far more than I had anticipated; from socializing to academia. It all just took a deep, piercing bite into me, chewed me for a second, and then spit me out - wounded, a bit, but prepared for the next moment of desire. For some people it strikes them over the course of a few weeks, and they slowly progress in understanding what the fuck has been savoring them. Others, more aloof, go about their daily life attempting to take everything at face value, and "voilà," an incisor tears your heart in two. No one left to sew it back together other than yourself. Maybe you don't have a heart? Well, shit, then maybe your brain was just chewed out. Regardless, it was unexpected.

I have met some beautiful people, taken on some inspiring responsibilities and challenged myself to the point of near insanity. I don't regret anything.

-x-x-x-

So, I packed all of my belongings within a rather large backpack and waited for my future to roll by right in front of me. I kept asking myself "what the fuck were you thinking" and then would curb those negative thoughts with "this is all an experience." It was as if yin and yang had been left dormant within my soul and they had all of a sudden come back to life, and my optimism was being tested by fear and doubt. No matter - fortunately yang took my future by the stronghold and soon enough I was sitting in a car, yoga mat between my legs, backpack piled in the trunk, and smile gleaming across my face in a car of strangers.

"No turning back now..." I thought.

And I wouldn't have turned back even if I could. The first brief conversation that blossomed after I entered the vehicle set off a sense of reassurance and comfort; this was an environment that I felt safe in. Sure, I was going to be in this car for six hours with people whom I possibly shared no interests with, but it did not matter anymore. My overanalyzing nature was better left ludicrous...

Conversations slowly grew, personalities began to flourish, auras began emanating through each person's soul as we all shared this collective journey to the southern part of our "home."

I don't want to get into details because some things are better left said in person or merely kept within ourselves, but this 6 hour experience was something at a loss for words. As I wrote on a spare sheet of paper sprawled near my desk, the four of us were asking questions about the world, mankind, things, nonsense, everything. But, the difference between what happened in that strange vehicle on that strange night with those strange people was we were not only asking questions, but trying to find answers.

Trying to find answers to the unanswerable.

We came up to so many varying conclusions and couldn't help but keep talking - keep asking more questions and looking for more answers.

A lot of things that we went over that day stuck with me... much like the conversations I have had with a few people back here, in Los Angeles. I can't pick a favorite quote nor favorite question. I'll simply leave one that I still remember to the best of my abilities:

"Have you ever stopped and wondered about how humanity either questions everything or remains silent? You have philosophy, where you have questions with no answers. You have religion, where you have answers that you can't question. Then, you have science, where you have questions and answers but they are all subject to further questions and answers."
"So we're all just going in circles?"
"Long, vicious, circles in an attempt to get to the middle which we call 'the meaning of life.'"

I came back to L.A that day with a new perspective - for better of for worse, but different nonetheless.

-mon

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Well I'll be damned.


Leaving for L.A in 3 hours...

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Everything is more complicated than you think. You only see a tenth of what is true. There are a million little strings attached to every choice you make; you can destroy your life every time you choose. But maybe you won’t know for twenty years. And you may never ever trace it to its source. And you only get one chance to play it out. Just try and figure out your own divorce. And they say there is no fate, but there is: it’s what you create. And even though the world goes on for eons and eons, you are only here for a fraction of a fraction of a second. Most of your time is spent being dead or not yet born. But while alive, you wait in vain, wasting years, for a phone call or a letter or a look from someone or something to make it all right. And it never comes or it seems to but it doesn’t really. And so you spend your time in vague regret or vaguer hope that something good will come along. Something to make you feel connected, something to make you feel whole, something to make you feel loved. And the truth is I feel so angry, and the truth is I feel so fucking sad, and the truth is I’ve felt so fucking hurt for so fucking long and for just as long I’ve been pretending I’m OK, just to get along, just for, I don’t know why, maybe because no one wants to hear about my misery, because they have their own. Well, fuck everybody. Amen.
Synecdoche, New York
(written and directed by Charlie Kaufman)

Saturday, December 11, 2010

I want to maximize the 24 hours in my day. Starting ... now.



-Mon

Friday, December 10, 2010

Coachella 2011 lineup




Count me in!
-chortle-

-Mon

Monday, December 6, 2010

Current Location: Main Stacks

Something about being underground, in a library, with no windows...


not my favorite ambiance.

Dead silence, except for my coughs here and there - or a sniffle.





Such a disconcerting lifestyle; if only for a week's time.

-Mon

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Silly World

... imagine a puddle waking up one morning and thinking, 'This is an interesting world I find myself in - an interesting hole I find myself in - fits me rather neatly, doesn't it? In fact it fits me staggeringly well, must have been made to have me in it!' This is such a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and smaller, it's still frantically hanging on to the notion that everything's going to be alright, because this world was meant to have him in it, was built to have him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by surprise. Douglas Adams



Don't be so foolish to think that this world was made for you - there are billions of people, here, sharing this earth.

Billions of people sharing this collection of experiences.


So, stop dwelling in your puddle of thoughts because just like you had no say of if you wanted in this world, means you have no say when you get out.


Well, you somewhat do, but that sort of a route is morbid... and a cop out.

-Mon

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Dali




Some days I feel so alive and human...

and others, I pretend to be.



Maybe it's the sickness talking; or, this may be my honesty. I need a vacation.


-Mon

Sunday, November 28, 2010

New York Times: Focus

Focus!

Because, a mind that wanders is not a wise mind at all...

FINDINGS
When the Mind Wanders, Happiness Also Strays
By JOHN TIERNEY
Published: November 15, 2010


A quick experiment. Before proceeding to the next paragraph, let your mind wander wherever it wants to go. Close your eyes for a few seconds, starting ... now.


And now, welcome back for the hypothesis of our experiment: Wherever your mind went — the South Seas, your job, your lunch, your unpaid bills — that daydreaming is not likely to make you as happy as focusing intensely on the rest of this column will.

I’m not sure I believe this prediction, but I can assure you it is based on an enormous amount of daydreaming cataloged in the current issue of Science. Using an iPhone app called trackyourhappiness, psychologists at Harvard contacted people around the world at random intervals to ask how they were feeling, what they were doing and what they were thinking.

The least surprising finding, based on a quarter-million responses from more than 2,200 people, was that the happiest people in the world were the ones in the midst of enjoying sex. Or at least they were enjoying it until the iPhone interrupted.

The researchers are not sure how many of them stopped to pick up the phone and how many waited until afterward to respond. Nor, unfortunately, is there any way to gauge what thoughts — happy, unhappy, murderous — went through their partners’ minds when they tried to resume.

When asked to rate their feelings on a scale of 0 to 100, with 100 being “very good,” the people having sex gave an average rating of 90. That was a good 15 points higher than the next-best activity, exercising, which was followed closely by conversation, listening to music, taking a walk, eating, praying and meditating, cooking, shopping, taking care of one’s children and reading. Near the bottom of the list were personal grooming, commuting and working.

When asked their thoughts, the people in flagrante were models of concentration: only 10 percent of the time did their thoughts stray from their endeavors. But when people were doing anything else, their minds wandered at least 30 percent of the time, and as much as 65 percent of the time (recorded during moments of personal grooming, clearly a less than scintillating enterprise).

On average throughout all the quarter-million responses, minds were wandering 47 percent of the time. That figure surprised the researchers, Matthew Killingsworth and Daniel Gilbert.

“I find it kind of weird now to look down a crowded street and realize that half the people aren’t really there,” Dr. Gilbert says.

You might suppose that if people’s minds wander while they’re having fun, then those stray thoughts are liable to be about something pleasant — and that was indeed the case with those happy campers having sex. But for the other 99.5 percent of the people, there was no correlation between the joy of the activity and the pleasantness of their thoughts.

“Even if you’re doing something that’s really enjoyable,” Mr. Killingsworth says, “that doesn’t seem to protect against negative thoughts. The rate of mind-wandering is lower for more enjoyable activities, but when people wander they are just as likely to wander toward negative thoughts.”

Whatever people were doing, whether it was having sex or reading or shopping, they tended to be happier if they focused on the activity instead of thinking about something else. In fact, whether and where their minds wandered was a better predictor of happiness than what they were doing.

“If you ask people to imagine winning the lottery,” Dr. Gilbert says, “they typically talk about the things they would do — ‘I’d go to Italy, I’d buy a boat, I’d lay on the beach’ — and they rarely mention the things they would think. But our data suggest that the location of the body is much less important than the location of the mind, and that the former has surprisingly little influence on the latter. The heart goes where the head takes it, and neither cares much about the whereabouts of the feet.”

Still, even if people are less happy when their minds wander, which causes which? Could the mind-wandering be a consequence rather than a cause of unhappiness?

To investigate cause and effect, the Harvard psychologists compared each person’s moods and thoughts as the day went on. They found that if someone’s mind wandered at, say, 10 in the morning, then at 10:15 that person was likely to be less happy than at 10 , perhaps because of those stray thoughts. But if people were in a bad mood at 10, they weren’t more likely to be worrying or daydreaming at 10:15.

“We see evidence for mind-wandering causing unhappiness, but no evidence for unhappiness causing mind-wandering,” Mr. Killingsworth says.

This result may disappoint daydreamers, but it’s in keeping with the religious and philosophical admonitions to “Be Here Now,” as the yogi Ram Dass titled his 1971 book. The phrase later became the title of a George Harrison song warning that “a mind that likes to wander ’round the corner is an unwise mind.”

What psychologists call “flow” — immersing your mind fully in activity — has long been advocated by nonpsychologists. “Life is not long,” Samuel Johnson said, “and too much of it must not pass in idle deliberation how it shall be spent.” Henry Ford was more blunt: “Idleness warps the mind.” The iPhone results jibe nicely with one of the favorite sayings of William F. Buckley Jr.: “Industry is the enemy of melancholy.”

Alternatively, you could interpret the iPhone data as support for the philosophical dictum of Bobby McFerrin: “Don’t worry, be happy.” The unhappiness produced by mind-wandering was largely a result of the episodes involving “unpleasant” topics. Such stray thoughts made people more miserable than commuting or working or any other activity.

But the people having stray thoughts on “neutral” topics ranked only a little below the overall average in happiness. And the ones daydreaming about “pleasant” topics were actually a bit above the average, although not quite as happy as the people whose minds were not wandering.

There are times, of course, when unpleasant thoughts are the most useful thoughts. “Happiness in the moment is not the only reason to do something,” says Jonathan Schooler, a psychologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research has shown that mind-wandering can lead people to creative solutions of problems, which could make them happier in the long term.

Over the several months of the iPhone study, though, the more frequent mind-wanderers remained less happy than the rest, and the moral — at least for the short-term — seems to be: you stray, you pay. So if you’ve been able to stay focused to the end of this column, perhaps you’re happier than when you daydreamed at the beginning. If not, you can go back to daydreaming starting...now.

Or you could try focusing on something else that is now, at long last, scientifically guaranteed to improve your mood. Just make sure you turn the phone off.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Northside, oh Northside

We are not special. We are not crap or trash, either. We just are. We just are, and what happens just happens.
—Chuck Palahniuk


Hamlet, you will be the death of me.

Ashley arrives today! This weekend is going to be one hell-of-a-riot.

-x-x-x-

For anyone in Berkeley reading this blog, if you're getting sick of Southside trek over to Northside. Brewed Awakening is a quaint little coffee shop that seems to attract plenty of EECs students as well as the co-op residents. I find this atmosphere far better than Strada and the coffee is definitely a step up. The price point is a little expensive, but this is coming from a girl who needs her soy latte. There are great lulls after 2 p.m where you can get serious stuff done and if you're not into working, most people I have run into here have had great insight and enjoy a short chat.


Ohhh, Berkeley.

-Mon

Monday, November 15, 2010

Mid-November

It's mid-November here and the weather has still remained at a phenomenal 75 degrees in northern California. The sun is out, basking with an inviting smile that prevents anyone from a negative outlook (or, well, almost anyone). The semester is seemingly winding down to a close and I can honestly say this school is kicking my ass - totally manageable, don't get me wrong, but kicking my ass nonetheless. A lot has happened in this small amount of time and I feel that a month from now, when I return to southern California, many things will just be noted as the past rather than the potential future.

There is something up here, and I cannot particularly put my finger on it, that really makes me feel fantastic. It may be the curriculum, it may be my weekend rendezvous, it may be new yoga ventures and gym hopping, or, simply, just something in the air. Oh, the people here are amazing too. So, so, so amazing.

Not until Saturday night, when I was walking back with my roommate did I realize how thankful I am to be here, right where I am. I worked my ass off and slaved for three years, goofed off for one, and now I'm here, amongst thousands of other students who had the same fate as I. Some may become doctors, some lawyers, others drop outs, and plenty more have yet to still determine their path. Yet, every student here has something about them, a little glimmer in their eyes - a sense of belonging, perhaps?

Now that I've picked up on reading for pleasure again the little hamster in my brain has finally started up again. He's running, faster than ever before, and my thirst for creativity is being countered by my hunger for knowledge. I would have never thought that this would be the never-ending brawl that would ensue within my thoughts; to be creative, or to focus on knowledge? Surely, they coincide oftentimes, but you always put a focus on one or the other. One, is always (and unfortunately) a priority.

I'm rambling. I know. I jut haven't been carrying my journal around and have therefore come to updating my blog instead.

The sun is out and shining. I have two research papers due, a midterm on Wednesday, and a quiz as well - but, it's all okay, because the sun is out and shining.

“To live for some future goal is shallow. It's the sides of the mountain that sustain life, not the top.”
Robert M. Pirsig quote

Oh, am I living.

-x-x-x-

&, before i'm off, Id like to share this:

"I keep thinking about something you said.

Something I said?

Yeah. About how you often feel like you're observing your life from the perspective of an old woman about to die. You remember that?

Yeah. I still feel that way sometimes. Like I'm looking back on my life. Like my waking life is her memories.

Exactly. I heard that Tim Leary said as he was dying that he was looking forward to the moment when his body was dead but his brain was still alive. You know they say that there's still six to twelve minutes of brain activity after everything else is shutdown. And a second of dream consciousness, right, well, that's infinitely longer than a waking second. You know what I'm saying?

Oh, yeah, definitely. For example, I wake up and it is 10:12, and then I go back to sleep and I have those long, intricate, beautiful dreams that seem to last for hours, and then I wake up and it's ... 10:13.

Yeah, exactly. So then six to twelve minutes of brain activity, I mean, that could be your whole life. I mean, you are that woman looking back over everything.

Okay, so what if I am? Then what would you be in all that?

Whatever I am right now. I mean, yeah, maybe I only exist in your mind. I'm still just as real as anything else.

Yeah. I've been thinking also about something you said.

What's that?

Just about reincarnation and where all the new souls come from over time. Everybody always say that they've been the reincarnation of Cleopatra or Alexander the Great. I always want to tell them they were probably some dumb **** like everybody else. I mean, it's impossible. Think about it. The world population has doubled in the past 40 years, right? So if you really believe in that ego thing of one eternal soul, then you have only 50% chance of your soul being over 40. And for it to be over 150 years old, then it's only one out of six.

Right, so what are you saying? That reincarnation doesn't exist, or that we're all young souls like where half of us are first round humans?

No, no. What I'm trying to say is that somehow I believe reincarnation is just a - a poetic expression of what collective memory really is. There was this article by this biochemist that I read not long ago, and he was talking about how when a member of our species is born, it has a billion years of memory to draw on. And this is where we inherit our instincts.

I like that. It's like there's this whole telepathic thing going on that we're all a part of, whether we're conscious of it or not. That would explain why there are all these, you know, seemingly spontaneous, worldwide, innovative leaps in science, in the arts. You know, like the same results poppin' up everywhere independent of each other. Some guy on a computer, he figures something out, and then almost simultaneously a bunch of other people all over the world figure out the same thing. They did this study. They isolated a group of people over time, and they monitored their abilities at crossword puzzles, right, in relation to the general population. And they secretly gave them a day-old crossword, one that had already been answered by thousands of other people, right. And their scores went up dramatically, like 20 percent. So it's like once the answers are out there, people can pick up on 'em. It's like we're all telepathically sharing our experiences."

-Mon

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Pablo Honey

Oh oh, Pablo Honey.

Pull me through these research papers...


"Deessstiny, Destiny protect me from the world
Deessstiny, hold my hand protect me from the world

Here we are, with our running and confusion
And I don't see no confusion anywhere

And if the world does turn, and if London burns
I'll be standing on the beach with my guitar
I want to be in a band, when I get to heaven
Anyone can play guitar
And they won't be a nothing anymore

Growwww my hair, Grow my hair I am Jim Morrison
Growwww my hair, I wannabe wannabe wannabe Jim Morrison

Here we are with our running and confusion
And I don't see no confusion anywhere

And if the world does turn, and if London burns
I'll be standing on a beach with my guitar
I want to be in a band, when I get to heaven
Anyone can play guitar
And they won't be a nothing anymore"

-Mon

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Saturday Nights


Rolled a j and set out for the night, iced soy latte in one hand and a ball of energy in the other.

"Hey, gorgeous, come stand with us - we'll show you a good time."

Strangers are peculiar individuals. On the one hand, they are creepy as can be, surreptitiously crouching at the most unexpected of places; however, they are also human beings, making "friends" in the most peculiar of manners. Regardless, there was no way in hell I would be caught dead with the two "gentlemen" who offered me a good time (with a forty).

So I set out alone, because sometimes that's the best way to really experience things.

It wasn't until the sitar began reverberating through my body, until that sweet sound entered my ears, that my hips began rolling back and forth to this unheard of rhythm. Beat poetry.

Beats.

The crowd was wild with energy. Every few minutes a puff of smoke would come my way, only to enjoy the sweet scent of marijuana. A collective enjoyment, across the crowd. The crowd was a cloud of smoke. Puff-puff; passsss. It was swaying back and forth, to the beats. Beat poetry.

A goooooooooooood time.

And those lights! Oh, the lights were spectacular. Every emotional lyric resulted in a new color and a new texture. Yes! There were textures. At one point, the crowd was just a mass tide, swaying back and forth. No longer a cloud of marijuana smoke, but a ripple in the water. The whole crowd was one - a collective experience. But, that's a given (a Gibbons?). No, a given.

So, I lit my joint, respectively, to enrich my experience. All I could do was laugh. Giggle, chortle, chuckle.

Was this really happening?

And it was. Soon enough a wink came my way. I swam through the crowd. New people. New experiences.

"Hello, my name is Chazzzzzzz." She looks at me, intently, with beautiful blue orbs that embrace childish frivolity in a gorgeous mid-forties body. You are as young as you want to be.

So we danced, Chaz and I, as the winker stayed next to me.

Another puff of smoke!

Two girls, to the right, dressed up as new-age hippies smoking from a miniature piece, passing the pipe around. A sense of community! I laugh again, because Chaz and I are dancing and the new-age hippies are asking the whole crowd to smoke. The cute interracial couple takes a hit, and they keep dancing. But their dance is a little different than mine, or his, or hers. You could see their chemistry emanating out of their souls.

Bass drum. Oh the fucking bass drum.

With every hit of the bass drum my hips kept swaying. Michelle and Phil introduce themselves, the ones whose chemistry is remarkable. Another hit? Why not!

Of the bass drum, of course. Or the pipe? I forget. They all seem interchangeable.

So Phil, Chaz, Nicole, Michelle, Tim, Noy, and even more strangers are in a circle. Dancing and enjoying the rhythms. The crowd is a wave of movement as much as it is a wave of emotion. A collection of strangers, who have all come together in hopes of having a good time. Which we were. We were, oh oh oh.

Hands on my hips! More strangers. More love. More dancing. Ohhh the beats.

Rasp, sass. Vocals.

Everything was so smooth: the music and the movement. Who the fuck is this guy? More hands on my hips.
[I said, who the fuck is this guy?]

My hands in the air, swaying to the synth. Heads bobbing to the bass.

Another hit - I swear it's the last!

But I feel like nothing really "hit" me. Just an experience. Not stoned, but aware. Open.

And, the colors slowly drift away and the tide rolls out. It is a crowd of individuals again. No more smoke. No more music. Simply a batch of strangers, at the same place at the same time, ready to go about the rest of their night.

It's funny, you have this great experience and share it with hundreds of people, but rather than taking that all into perspective you run back into your schedule. Places to be; things to do.

Just aware, and open. I walked the streets of Berkeley to my ladies and we, too, went about the rest of our night (which will not be disclosed).

Live music is something truly phenomenal. Strangers are friends in the making. And, the words of that lovely lady, from earlier in the night whose sass emphasized the intensity of the rap, stayed with me...

"we must turn insanity into humanity."

And that is what we did, as a crowd, before we went about our Saturday night schedules. Hu-man-i-ty !

It was time to enjoy the rest of the night. Insane strangers are just friends in the making of humanity.

-Mon

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Words from the wise




I have a low key crush on my philosophy professor, regardless of his age.


&, I am not the only one!


back to work, but I felt like sharing that quote.

-Mon

Monday, November 1, 2010

I sat thinking how terribly sad it was that people are made in such a way that they get used to something as incredible as living. One day we suddenly take the fact that we exist for granted - and then, yes, then we don’t think about it anymore until we are about to leave the world again.
—Jostein Gaarder, The Solitaire Mystery


Well, there's a thought.



-x-x-x-
November is finally here! I had one hell of a weekend and need a fresh start.



One hell of a fucking weekend.

-Mon

Friday, October 22, 2010

The World As I See It : Albert Einstein

"How strange is the lot of us mortals! Each of us is here for a brief sojourn; for what purpose he knows not, though he sometimes thinks he senses it. But without deeper reflection one knows from daily life that one exists for other people -- first of all for those upon whose smiles and well-being our own happiness is wholly dependent, and then for the many, unknown to us, to whose destinies we are bound by the ties of sympathy. A hundred times every day I remind myself that my inner and outer life are based on the labors of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give in the same measure as I have received and am still receiving...

"I have never looked upon ease and happiness as ends in themselves -- this critical basis I call the ideal of a pigsty. The ideals that have lighted my way, and time after time have given me new courage to face life cheerfully, have been Kindness, Beauty, and Truth. Without the sense of kinship with men of like mind, without the occupation with the objective world, the eternally unattainable in the field of art and scientific endeavors, life would have seemed empty to me. The trite objects of human efforts -- possessions, outward success, luxury -- have always seemed to me contemptible.

"My passionate sense of social justice and social responsibility has always contrasted oddly with my pronounced lack of need for direct contact with other human beings and human communities. I am truly a 'lone traveler' and have never belonged to my country, my home, my friends, or even my immediate family, with my whole heart; in the face of all these ties, I have never lost a sense of distance and a need for solitude..."


"My political ideal is democracy. Let every man be respected as an individual and no man idolized. It is an irony of fate that I myself have been the recipient of excessive admiration and reverence from my fellow-beings, through no fault, and no merit, of my own. The cause of this may well be the desire, unattainable for many, to understand the few ideas to which I have with my feeble powers attained through ceaseless struggle. I am quite aware that for any organization to reach its goals, one man must do the thinking and directing and generally bear the responsibility. But the led must not be coerced, they must be able to choose their leader. In my opinion, an autocratic system of coercion soon degenerates; force attracts men of low morality... The really valuable thing in the pageant of human life seems to me not the political state, but the creative, sentient individual, the personality; it alone creates the noble and the sublime, while the herd as such remains dull in thought and dull in feeling.
"This topic brings me to that worst outcrop of herd life, the military system, which I abhor... This plague-spot of civilization ought to be abolished with all possible speed. Heroism on command, senseless violence, and all the loathsome nonsense that goes by the name of patriotism -- how passionately I hate them!

"The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion that stands at the cradle of true art and true science. Whoever does not know it and can no longer wonder, no longer marvel, is as good as dead, and his eyes are dimmed. It was the experience of mystery -- even if mixed with fear -- that engendered religion. A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, our perceptions of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty, which only in their most primitive forms are accessible to our minds: it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute true religiosity. In this sense, and only this sense, I am a deeply religious man... I am satisfied with the mystery of life's eternity and with a knowledge, a sense, of the marvelous structure of existence -- as well as the humble attempt to understand even a tiny portion of the Reason that manifests itself in nature."

- Albert Einstein
The essay was originally published in "Forum and Century."

There is something remarkable to be emphasized about that last paragraph. If such a philosophy was ingrained into everyone's daily life (though that would constitute less individuality) would result in a society that appreciates the world's offerings as opposed to anticipating what might come to be. I am all for being a dreamer - embarking on such a path results in discovering a cornucopia of ideas; however, you need to acknowledge that fact that your dreams are only real and thriving within your mind and the physical, tangible world is real and thriving right in front of you.

Breathing.



Letting you pass it by.





So, what is more important: seeing the beautiful within your thoughts or seeing the beautiful right before your eyes? It all boils down to a matter of philosophy... a matter of perception. Me? Well, I guess I might be a cheater because I see it on both ends.

I believe in Reason. And I guess that is where I derive all of these ideas within my life.



This empty chair in front of me at Cafe Med has Einstein written all over it. We could share a pastry and sip some espresso (because I am not a fan of their drip coffee).

I am letting the world pass me by in these few seconds because Einstein just walked in, and we are in dire need of a re-cap. Time to rekindle our flame - maybe not in this reality.

-Mon

Friday, October 15, 2010

Existentialism Up North

This hits close to home:
"We are all alone, born alone, die alone, and — in spite of True Romance magazines — we shall all someday look back on our lives and see that, in spite of our company, we were alone the whole way. I do not say lonely — at least, not all the time — but essentially, and finally, alone. This is what makes your self-respect so important, and I don’t see how you can respect yourself if you must look in the hearts and minds of others for your happiness.
—Hunter S. Thompson"

My midterms end on Wednesday, finally. And, after my brain bursts into a multitude of glass-like shards, I am going to get started on my side project.


I spoke to my philosophy professor on Wednesday and he really got me thinking...
"why do you write in journals and blogs when you have such a different perspective on life? Why not sing, or dance, or play the guitar?"
I stood there, stumped, because I did not have an answer.
"Writing is always there, and since I do it so much, it's simply easier."A shitty answer, I thought, but an honest one at that.

I think I need some musical intervention.




Unpredictability at its finest. Being surrounded by happy individuals rubs off on me; however, even without them, I would be elated.

I might be an optimist, or maybe my caffeine addiction and marijuana consumption is getting to me.

-Mon

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Radiohead

My nights are bordering insanity and I'm not even using questionable drugs.




What the fuck?

A real entry soon - I promise; for now, just this. Too many thoughts that shouldn't be released on the net.
Not on the net.
Not just yet.

-Mon

Saturday, October 2, 2010

?


Where am I going?


Keep on keepin' on.


-Mon

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Oh shit,


Things just got interesting.

Things just got overwhelming.

I forgot how much I missed juggling the world - juggling a variety of different aspects that make up my puzzling life.
Dead ends and pathways. When I run into a dead end, I climb a tree.

When there's no trees, I dig a hole.

And, if I'm in the water, I dive right in, because there's only so much fun you can have just wading through the water.


I am thirsting for more all nighters and thirsting to become a part of something big. Larger than me. Lasting.




Freaking out, in the best way possible, because I am pushing myself over the edge.

The view is prettier this way. It's only dangerous if you make it so.

-Mon

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Aldous Huxley's Last Trip [to the unknown]

Transcript
6233 Mulholland Highway
Los Angeles 28, California
December 8, 1963

Dearest Julian and Juliette:

There is so much I want to tell you about the last week of Aldous' life and particularly the last day. What happened is important not only for us close and loving but it is almost a conclusion, better, a continuation of his own work, and therefore it has importance for people in general.

First of all I must confirm to you with complete subjective certainty that Aldous had not consciously looked at the fact that he might die until the day he died. Subconsciously it was all there, and you will be able to see this for yourselves because beginning from November 15th until November 22nd I have much of Aldous' remarks on tape, For these tapes I know we shall all be immensely grateful. Aldous was never quite willing to give up his writing and dictate or makes notes on a recorder. He used a Dictograph, only to read poetry or passages of literature; he would listen to these in his quite moments in the evening as he was going to sleep. I have had a tape recorder for years, and I tried to use it with him sometimes, but it was too bulky, and particularly now when we were always in the bedroom and the bed had so much hospital equipment around it. (We had spoken about buying a small one, but the market here is flooded with transister tape recorders, and most of them are very bad. I didn't have time to look into it, and this remained just one of those things like many others that we were going to do.) In the beginning of November, when Aldous was in the hospital, my birthday occurred, so Jinny looked carefully into all the machines, and presented me with the best of them - a small thing, easy manageable and practically unnoticeable. After having practiced with it myself a few days, I showed it to Aldous, who was very pleased with it, and from the 15th on we used it a little every day recording his dreams and notes for future writing.

The period from the 15th to the 22nd marked, it seems to me, a period of intense mental activity for Aldous. We had diminished little by little the tranquillizers he had been taking four times a day a drug called Sperine which is akin, I understand, to Thorazin. We diminished it practically to nothing only used painkillers like Percodon a little Amitol , and something for nausea. He took also a few injections of 1/2 cc of Dilaudid, which is a derivative of morphine, and which gave him many dreams, some of which you will hear on the tape. The doctor says this is a small intake of morphine.

Now to pick up my point again, in these dreams as well as sometimes in his conversation, it seemed obvious and transparent that subconsciously he knew that he was going to die. But not once consciously did he speak of it. This had nothing to do with the idea that some of his friends put forward, that he wanted to spare me. It wasn't this, because Aldous had never been able to play a part, to say a single lie; he was constitutionall unable to lie, and if he wanted to spare me, he could certainly have spoken to Jinny.

During the last two months I gave him almost daily an opportunity, an opening for speaking about death, but of course this opening was always one that could have been taken in two ways - either towards life or towards death, and he always took it towards life. We read the entire manual of Dr. Leary extracted from The Book of the Dead. He could have, even jokingly said don't forget to remind me his comment instead was only directed to the way Dr. Leary conducted his LSD sessions, and how he would bring people, who were not dead, back here to this life after the session. It is true he said sometimes phrases like, "If I get out of this," in connection to his new ideas for writing, and wondered when and if he would have the strength to work. His mind was very active and it seems that this Dilaudid had stirred some new layer which had not often been stirred in him.

The night before he died, (Thursday night) about eight o'clock, suddenly an idea occurred to him. "Darling," he said, "it just occurs to me that I am imposing on Jinny having somebody as sick as this in the house with the two children, this is really an imposition." Jinny was out of the house at the moment, and so I said, "Good, when she comes back I will tell her this. It will be a nice laugh." "No," he said with unusual insistence, "we should do something about it." "Well," I replied, keeping it light, "all right, get up. Let's go on a trip." "No", he said, "It is serious. We must think about it. All these nurses in the house. What we could do, we could take an apartment for this period. Just for this period." It was very clear what he meant. It was unmistakeably clear. He thought he might be so sick for another three of four weeks, and then he could come back and start his normal life again. This fact of starting his normal life occurred quite often. In the last three or four weeks he was several times appalled by his weakness, when he realized how much he had lost, and how long it would take to be normal again. Now this Thursday night he had remarked about taking an apartment with an unusual energy, but a few minutes later and all that evening I felt that he was going down, he was losing ground quickly. Eating was almost out of the question. He had just taken a few spoonsful of liquid and puree, in fact every time that he took something, this would start the cough. Thursday night I called Dr. Bernstein, and told him the pulse was very high - 140, he had a little bit of fever and whole feeling was one of immanence of death. But both the nurse and the doctor said they didn't think this was the case, but that if I wanted him the doctor would come up to see him that night. Then I returned to Aldous' room and we decided to give him an injection of Dilaudid. It was about nine o'clock, and he went to sleep and I told the doctor to come the next morning. Aldous slept until about two a.m. and then he got another shot, and I saw him again at six-thirty. Again I felt that life was leaving, something was more wrong than usual, although I didn't know exactly what, and a little later I sent you and Matthew and Ellen and my sister a wire. Then about nine a.m. Aldous began to be so agitated, so uncomfortable, so desperate really. He wanted to be moved all the time. Nothing was right. Dr. Bernstein came about that time and decided to give him a shot which he had given him once before, something that you give intravenously, very slowly - it takes five minutes to give the shot, and it is a drug that dilates the bronchial tubes, so that respiration is easier.

This drug made him uncomfortable the time before, it must have been three Fridays before, when he had that crisis I wrote you about. But then it helped him. This time it was quite terrible. He couldn't express himself but he was feeling dreadul, nothing was right, no position was right. I tried to ask him what was occurring. He had difficulty in speaking, but he managed to say, "Just trying to tell you makes it worse." He wanted to be moved all the time - "Move me." "Move my legs." "Move my arms." "Move my bed." I had one of those push-button beds, which moved up and down both from the head and the feet, and incessantly, at times, I would have him go up and down, up and down by pushing buttons. We did this again, and somehow it seemed to give him a little relief. but it was very, very little.

All of a sudden, it must have been then ten o'clock, he could hardly speak, and he said he wanted a tablet to write on, and for the first time he wrote - "If I die," and gave a direction for his will. I knew what he meant. He had signed his will as I told you about a week before, and in this will there was a transfer of a life insurance policy from me to Matthew. We had spoken of getting these papers of transfer, which the insurance company had just sent, and that actually arrived special delivery just a few minutes before. Writing was very, very difficult for him. Rosalind and Dr. Bernstein were there trying also to understand what he wanted. I said to him, "Do you mean that you want to make sure that the life insurance is transferred from me to Matthew?" He said, "Yes." I said, "The papers for the transfer have just arrived, if you want to sign them you can sign them, but it is not necessary because you already made it legal in your will. He heaved a sigh of relief in not having to sign. I had asked him the day before even, to sign some important papers, and he had said, "Let's wait a little while," this, by the way, was his way now, for him to say that he couldn't do something. If he was asked to eat, he would say, "Let's wait a little while," and when I asked him to do some signing that was rather important on Thursday he said, "Let's wait a little while" He wanted to write you a letter - "and especially about Juliette's book, is lovely," he had said several times. And when I proposed to do it, he would say, "Yes, just in a little while" in such a tired voice, so totally different from his normal way of being. So when I told him that the signing was not necessary and that all was in order, he had a sigh of relief.

"If I die." This was the first time that he had said that with reference to NOW. He wrote it. I knew and felt that for the first time he was looking at this. About a half an hour before I had called up Sidney Cohen, a psychiatrist who has been one of the leaders in the use of LSD. I had asked him if he had ever given LSD to a man in this condition. He said he had only done it twice actually, and in one case it had brought up a sort of reconciliation with Death, and in the other case it did not make any difference. I asked him if he would advise me to give it to Aldous in his condition. I told him how I had offered it several times during the last two months, but he always said that he would wait until he was better. Then Dr. Cohen said, "I don't know. I don't think so. What do you think?" I said, "I don't know. Shall I offer it to him?" He said, "I would offer it to him in a very oblique way, just say 'what do you think about taking LSD [sometime again]?'" This vague response had been common to the few workers in this field to whom I had asked, "Do you give LSD in extremes?" ISLAND is the only definite reference that I know of. I must have spoken to Sidney Cohen about nine-thirty. Aldous' condition had become so physically painful and obscure, and he was so agitated he couldn't say what he wanted, and I couldn't understand. At a certain point he said something which no one here has been able to explain to me, he said, "Who is eating out of my bowl?" And I didn't know what this meant and I yet don't know. And I asked him. He managed a faint whimsical smile and said, "Oh, never mind, it is only a joke." And later on, feeling my need to know a little so I could do something, he said in an agonizing way, "At this point there is so little to share." Then I knew that he knew that he was going. However, this inability to express himself was only muscular - his brain was clear and in fact, I feel, at a pitch of activity.

Then I don't know exactly what time it was, he asked for his tablet and wrote, "Try LSD 100 intramuscular." Although as you see from this photostatic copy it is not very clear, I know that this is what he meant. I asked him to confirm it. Suddenly something became very clear to me. I knew that we were together again after this torturous talking of the last two months. I knew then, I knew what was to be done. I went quickly into the cupboard in the other room where Dr. Bernstein was, and the TV which had just announced the shooting of Kennedy. I took the LSD and said, "I am going to give him a shot of LSD, he asked for it." The doctor had a moment of agitation because you know very well the uneasiness about this drug in the medical mind. Then he said, "All right, at this point what is the difference." Whatever he had said, no "authority," not even an army of authorities could have stopped me then. I went into Aldous' room with the vial of LSD and prepared a syringe. The doctor asked me if I wanted him to give him the shot - maybe because he saw that my hands were trembling. His asking me that made me conscious of my hands, and I said, "No I must do this." I quieted myself, and when I gave him the shot my hands were very firm. Then, somehow, a great relief came to us both. I believe it was 11:20 when I gave him his first shot of 100 microgrammes. I sat near his bed and I said, "Darling, maybe in a little while I will take it with you. Would you like me to take it also in a little while?" I said a little while because I had no idea of when I should or could take it, in fact I have not been able to take it to this writing because of the condition around me. And he indicated "yes." We must keep in mind that by now he was speaking very, very little. Then I said, "Would you like Matthew to take it with you also? And he said, "Yes." "What about Ellen?" He said, "Yes." Then I mentioned two or three people who had been working with LSD and he said, "No, no, basta, basta." Then I said, "What about Jinny?" And he said, "Yes," with emphasis. Then we were quiet. I just sat there without speaking for a while. Aldous was not so agitated physically. He seemed - somehow I felt he knew, we both knew what we were doing, and this has always been a great relief to Aldous. I have seen him at times during his illness very upset until he knew what he was going to do, then even if it was an operation or X-ray, he would make a total change. This enormous feeling of relief would come to him, and he wouldn't be worried at all about it, he would say let's do it, and we would go to it and he was like a liberated man. And now I had the same feeling - a decision had been made, he made the decision again very quickly. Suddenly he had accepted the fact of death; he had taken this moksha medicine in which he believed. He was doing what he had written in ISLAND, and I had the feeling that he was interested and relieved and quiet.

After half an hour, the expression on his face began to change a little, and I asked him if he felt the effect of LSD, and he indicated no. Yet, I think that a something had taken place already. This was one of Aldous' characteristics. He would always delay acknowledging the effect of any medicine, even when the effect was quite certainly there, unless the effect was very, very stong he would say no. Now, the expression of his face was beginning to look as it did every time that he had the moksha medicine, when this immense expression of complete bliss and love would come over him. This was not the case now, but there was a change in comparison to what his face had been two hours ago. I let another half hour pass, and then I decided to give him another 100 mg. I told him I was going to do it, and he acquiesced. I gave him another shot, and then I began to talk to him. He was very quiet now; he was very quiet and his legs were getting colder; higher and higher I could see purple areas of cynosis. Then I began to talk to him, saying, "Light and free," Some of these thing I told him at night in these last few weeks before he would go to sleep, and now I said it more convincingly, more intensely - "go, go, let go, darling; forward and up. You are going forward and up; you are going towards the light. Willing and consciously you are going, willingly and consciously, and you are doing this beautifully; you are doing this so beautifully - you are going towards the light; you are going towards a greater love; you are going forward and up. It is so easy; it is so beautiful. You are doing it so beautifully, so easily. Light and free. Forward and up. You are going towards Maria's love with my love. You are going towards a greater love than you have ever known. You are going towards the best, the greatest love, and it is easy, it is so easy, and you are doing it so beautifully." I believe I started to talk to him - it must have been about one or two o'clock. It was very difficult for me to keep track of time. The nurse was in the room and Rosalind and Jinny and two doctors - Dr. Knight and Dr. Cutler. They were sort of far away from the bed. I was very, very near his ears, and I hope I spoke clearly and understandingly. Once I asked him, "Do you hear me?" He squeezed my hand. He was hearing me. I was tempted to ask more questions, but in the morning he had begged me not to ask any more question, and the entire feeling was that things were right. I didn't dare to inquire, to disturb, and that was the only question that I asked, "Do you hear me?" Maybe I should have asked more questions, but I didn't.

Later on I asked the same question, but the hand didn't move any more. Now from two o'clock until the time he died, which was five-twenty, there was complete peace except for once. That must have been about three-thirty or four, when I saw the beginning of struggle in his lower lip. His lower lip began to move as if it were going to be a struggle for air. Then I gave the direction even more forcefully. "It is easy, and you are doing this beautifully and willingly and consciously, in full awareness, in full awareness, darling, you are going towards the light." I repeated these or similar words for the last three or four hours. Once in a while my own emotion would overcome me, but if it did I immediately would leave the bed for two or three minutes, and would come back only when I could dismiss my emotion. The twitching of the lower lip lasted only a little bit, and it seemed to respond completely to what I was saying. "Easy, easy, and you are doing this willingly and consciously and beautifully - going forward and up, light anf free, forward and up towards the light, into the light, into complete love." The twitching stopped, the breating became slower and slower, and there was absolutely not the slightest indication of contraction, of struggle. it was just that the breathing became slower - and slower - and slower, and at five-twenty the breathing stopped.

I had been warned in the morning that there might be some up-setting convulsions towards the end, or some sort of contraction of the lungs, and noises. People had been trying to prepare me for some horrible physical reaction that would probably occur. None of this happened, actually the ceasing of the breathing was not a drama at all, because it was done so slowly, so gently, like a piece of music just finishing in a sempre piu piano dolcemente. I had the feeling actually that the last hour of breathing was only the conditioned reflex of the body that had been used to doing this for 69 years, millions and millions of times. There was not the feeling that with the last breath, the spirit left. It had just been gently leaving for the last four hours. In the room the last four hours were two doctors, Jinny, the nurse, Rosalind Roger Gopal - you know she is the great friend of Krishnamurti, and the directress of the school in Ojai for which Aldous did so much. They didn't seem to hear what I was saying. I thought I was speaking loud enough, but they said they didn't hear it. Rosalind and Jinny once in a while came near the bed and held Aldous' hand. These five people all said that this was the most serene, the most beautiful death. Both doctors and nurse said they had never seen a person in similar physical condition going off so completely without pain and without struggle.

We will never know if all this is only our wishful thinking, or if it is real, but certainly all outward signs and the inner feeling gave indication that it was beautiful and peaceful and easy.

And now, after I have been alone these few days, and less bombarded by other people's feelings, the meaning of this last day becomes clearer and clearer to me and more and more important. Aldous was, I think (and certainly I am) appalled at the fact that what he wrote in ISLAND was not taken seriously. It was treated as a work of science fiction, when it was not fiction because each one of the ways of living he described in ISLAND was not a product of his fantasy, but something that had been tried in one place or another and some of them in our own everyday life. If the way Aldous died were known, it might awaken people to the awareness that not only this, but many other facts described in ISLAND are possible here and now. Aldous'asking for moksha medicine while dying is a confirmation of his work, and as such is of importance not only to us, but to the world. It is true we will have some people saying that he was a drug addict all his life and that he ended as one, but it is history that Huxleys stop ignorance before ignorance can stop Huxleys.

Even after our correspondence on the subject, I had many doubts about keeping Aldous in the dark regarding his condition. It seemed not just that, after all he had written and spoken about death, he should be let to go into it unaware. And he had such complete confidence in me - he might have taken it for granted that had death been near I certainly would have told him and helped him. So my relief at his sudden awakening at his quick adjusting is immense. Don't you feel this also.

Now, is his way of dying to remain our, and only our relief and consolation, or should others also benefit from it? What do you feel?


-x-x-x-
A letter written by his wife, Laura.

...

A beautiful, genuine letter written by his equally beautiful and genuine wife, Laura.


-Mon

San Francisco Art (right off of Market St)











até mais,
Mon

Friday, September 17, 2010

San Francisco: Creek Cafe

A nice balance of social interaction and reclusive netbooking. Three paintings hang above the 3 larger tables that accomodate parties of 4.
Abstract, with subtle blues and purples, as if the piece had been dipped in the mediterranean, and the crisp blues intertwined with the previous colors.
There is also a lady, no older than forty, with a voluptuous figure, greeting the second table with her enormous breasts. Yet again, the blues... the blues...
Botero, is that you hiding under the painter's imagination?

And back to abstract!

All in all, a great space to get "work" done. What I thoroughly enjoy about this space, however, is the people it seems to attract. Individuals in their mid to late twenties, desiring for success but not afraid to share a smile or nod. Spent an hour with a gentleman speaking about Jorge Luis Borges which, eventually, led to digressions about Brazil and life itself. Yet, I never caught his name, not because I didn't care, but because I was far more curious about his insight and perspective.

Talking to strangers is becoming a habit (amongst other things).

With regards to the coffee and food: I had a delicious soy latte paired with a veggie sandwich. I preferred the former over the latter, but that's fine, since I drink more coffee than eat actual food.
-x-x-x-

Dreary beginnings in San Francisco that eventually become beautiful sunny skies paint a smile across my face and resonate a sense of assurance that "all will be well, eventually." Things are now slowly falling into place, but I am trying not to get too ahead of myself.

People are clicking, intentions are arising, and I am here, as an onlooker, analyzing each situation (whether idiotic or intelligent) in hopes of understanding. And it feels good to be back on track and out of a rut.

A man who doesn’t know he’s in prison can never escape. As soon as you realise the planet and your body constitute an almost escape-proof jail, as soon as you know you are in prison - you have a possibility to escape.
—William S. Burroughs


Burroughs and I are inmates, escaping together with the assistance of as many illegal possibilities as necessary.
-x-x-x-
All I heard was that rasp; that sass; that..
"why don't we do it in the road...?"
and the door shut behind me;
the coffee shop, or penitentiary?

-Mon

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The Guardian: The Price of Love?


[Artist: Get Up; Berkeley, CA]

The price of love? Losing two of your closest friends
Research reveals that, on average, having a new romantic partner pushes out two close friends from your inner circle

Falling in love comes at the cost of losing close friends, because romantic partners absorb time that would otherwise be invested in platonic relationships, researchers say.

A new partner pushes out two close friends on average, leaving lovers with a smaller inner circle of people they can turn to in times of crisis, a study found.

The research, led by Robin Dunbar, head of the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology at Oxford University, showed that men and women were equally likely to lose their closest friends when they started a new relationship.

Previous research by Dunbar's group has shown that people typically have five very close relationships – that is, people whom they would turn to if they were in emotional or financial trouble.

"If you go into a romantic relationship, it costs you two friends. Those who have romantic relationships, instead of having the typical five 'core set' of relationships only have four. And of those, one is the new person who's come into their life," said Dunbar.

The study, submitted to the journal Personal Relationships, was designed to investigate how people trade off spending time with one person over another and suggests that links with family and closest friends suffer when people start a romantic relationship.

Dunbar's team used an internet-based questionnaire to quiz 428 women and 112 men about their relationships. In total, 363 of the participants had romantic partners. The findings suggest that a new love interest has to compensate for the loss of two close friends.

Speaking at the British Science Festival in Birmingham, Professor Dunbar said: "This was a surprise for us. We hadn't expected it.

"If you don't see people, your emotional engagement with them drops off and does so quickly. What I suspect is that your attention is so wholly focused on the romantic partner you don't get to see the other folks you had a lot to do with before, and so some of those relationships start to deteriorate."

The questionnaire allowed people to mention whether any of their closest confidants were "extra romantic partners". In all, 32 of those quizzed mentioned having an extra love interest in their life, but these people did not lose four friends as might be expected. Instead, the extra person in their life bumped their original romantic partner out of their innermost circle of friends.

In a separate study, Dunbar's team looked at how men and women maintained friendships on the social networking website Facebook. They found that women's Facebook friends were more often friends from everyday life that they spent time with, while men tended to collect as many friends as they could, even if they hardly knew them.

"Boys seem to be in a competition to see who can have the most Faccebook friends and that could be a form of mate advertisting. One of the cues women use for male quality as a mate is the number of other girls chasing them, so signing up lots of girls as Facebook friends seems to be a good idea," said Dunbar.

-x-x-x-

How silly...

Welcome, to the "new" age.

Har-har

-Mon

Monday, September 13, 2010

Courtesy of Beirut on my iPod

It was at that very moment, when the air slowly caressed my face and the few cyclists pedaled away, that loose pieces began falling into place. Two worlds, two very different worlds, slowly began developing immeasurable parallels (yet, neither was distinguished as "better" than the other). Lines began intertwining these axes and I stood there, waiting for the cars to dart away before my body did the same, in the opposite direction, regardless of the street signal. I stood there, thinking.

Thinking.

Comfort zones are ironic. They make one feel good, maybe even happy; but we lose a sense of living in the process. The thrill of living. The thrill of losing? Because, one cannot live without losses; nor can one lose without living. So... I found a few of these lost pieces, floating in the air near Bancroft and Telegraph, and I grabbed them, because sudden realizations are only good when remembered.

And I put them in my pocket...

My pockets are full of sudden realizations - good and bad. And, in turn, they are slowly growing in size and magnitude. They hit me harder, make me think longer, and drag me out into the most uncomfortable of situations.

yet...yet... I am alive.

And this pushing and pulling in my pocket that eventually enters my body and sets off a multitude of emotions throughout my bloodstream feels - good. Hurting is sometimes a good feeling, as is pleasure. But then...

sometimes pleasure and pain coincide as does happiness and sadness and so much more. All of these non-cognitive functions that are not explained by scientific means just, erupt. Just like that, they erupt.

My comfort zone has lost its place in my worlds. I say worlds since I have two, of course. I was lost, and still am; but, I am in no way confused (about myself, at least). I am stretching immensely.

Now, if this makes no sense to you, which it sure as hell might, paint this picture in your imagination
"Growing is stretching right? Isn't it true that regardless of how flexible you are, when you stretch more it hurts. You are out of your comfort zone. Then you reach and that stretch doesn't hurt anymore. And so it goes on.

Sadness and Happiness are part of the stretch, as the pain and the pleasure a muscle feels when stretching and reaching.
They are both natural.

Nothing to feel bad about in sadness.

But no confusion.

Understanding."

So I continued walking, because I had class in five minutes and a pocket full of understanding; loose particles coming together on an x and y axis where there is still so much room for discovery but enough points to begin crafting an image of something - anything.

Of life and living.

-Mon

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Truths

Hamlet to Rosencrantz.
Since nothing can be perceived except through the senses—and since all individuals sense, and therefore perceive, things differently—there is no absolute truth, only relative truth.

-x-x-x-

I have been running into this philosophy so often these days. So often it makes my head spin and thoughts burst.

Not, because I cannot handle the intangible objectivity of this world, but more so because I want to see through the glasses of another onlooker.

I want to try on a variety of shoes, beginning with you (and ending with your lover).


Maybe not to that extreme, but I do I do I do want to broaden my perceptions and appreciate the variety of angles that make up buildings, cities, concepts, realities, human beings, and more.




?
-Mon

Monday, August 30, 2010

New Hot Spot: People's Cafe

I know I have severely been laggin with the blog posts these days but I have not had the time nor energy to convert my ever-changing thoughts into words onto this petty website... until tonight!

It has been a week and a few days since my whole sense of direction skewed from south to north (as well as my sense of weather prediction). No longer in an inexplicable limbo, I am gathering my southern California rhythm of café hopping and used book store binging. Cheers, Berkeley, you are in for one hell of a ginger!


After spending my last four hours here, at People's Cafe, I can truly nod my head in approval for both the ambiance as well as coffee. Okay, so the ambiance definitely makes up for the rather weak coffee (then again, I have a bias, being a binge coffee drinker) and there are plugs situated under each desk... about 20 desks, at least.

What this generally amounts to is a quiet atmosphere where people generally keep to themselves, much like I am doing right now, as they work through the night until good ol' midnight rolls by and they decide to greet the night in it's frigid glory only to wake up for class the next day. Because I guess that's what Berkeley kids do... they study... a lot. Not that I am complaining, or anything, because I am swimming in debt (already) in order to learn. This coffee shop is great though. Especially to get your shit done... and swim in debt- at least the coffee is cheap?

No photos do this place justice. Upon entering, it seems like a typical coffee joint: breakfast menu, salad menu, sandwich menu and, of course, the drink menu. Bar seating is conveniently located right next to the window for perfect people watching, whereas the back is where the spawn of electrical outlets thrives. The small "typical coffee joint" facade quickly shifts from one room to the next, where one is nestled in a more mellow atmosphere, more tucked away from new customers but still not in the very back where computer fanatics sit there, caressing their electronic children.

I am in the back, caressing my electronic child (the only child I ever plan to have thank-you-very-much). Not only am I here to be a hermit and be mildly productive (which, for your information, I have been) but also because it looks like a complete opposite from the innocent front register. THe walls are adorned with beakers, test tubes, atoms of various shapes and sizes painted with none other than spray paint. Is that E= mc2 that I see? Yeah, the inner nerd in me is giddy as ever. In front of me a volcano is erupting and clouds are either ejaculating or producing lighting bolts. I think it's the latter. I might be wrong.

Oh! The upper portion of the wall is adorned with old comic books! Although comic books have never been an obsession of mine, I do give People's a thumbs up for the innovative idea in using classics as a decoration. I guess the people who sit back here are not only to caress their electronic children but refrain from getting too excited by the scientific wall experiments and comic book explosion.

I would totally take a picture if I had a camera.

-x-x-x-
And for everyone who is wondering how Berkeley is thus far - I love it. I love love love love it. The professors are fascinating. The students are inspiring. The city is as beautiful as it is sketch. It is the perfect balance of unpredictability and fascination. There is room for adventure and there is room for growth.

It's time to fart around, like good ol' Vonnegut would say.

-Mon

Monday, August 23, 2010

!

Good evening, Berkeley.

-Mon

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Thank You

Just a moment of thought...

This whole year has been a whirlwind, to say the least. A bundle of productivity, idiocy, curiosity, rebellion, and so much more - and I would not have wanted it any other way.

Yet, through the back of my mind, I constantly hear a little man, no more than a centimeter tall, pestering me about "severed ties" or "unfinished business." I suppose in this short amount of time I cannot do much; however, the memories that accompany many friendly faces will continue living on [until my short term/long term memory wilts]. With that in mind, I can happily look at my current time line of life and smile, knowing that I have accomplished quite a bit, whether it be a success or a failure.

But you know what? I have learned.

and...I am ever so thankful for the individuals who have made a significant impact in my life - I truly am. Rather than disclosing a multitude of names, I would much rather have the reader smile and nod, possibly thinking to himself or herself "maybe she is talking about me." You are right, maybe I am talking about you; and, if I am not, then hell, just keep smiling and thinking that you still made an impact in my life. You will never know, and that, my friend, is the beauty of anonymity.

For those of you whom I literally fall into the same wavelength with, I am happy to know I am not alone with my ideas, opinions, morals, etc. For those of you whom I can rely on a great laugh or a cup o' joe, I am happy to know my addictions for happiness and caffeine do not go unnoticed. And for those of you on the sidelines, who have always been around but never surpassed the boundaries of small talk and gossip, I am happy to know you made my days better, making me realize there are some consistencies in life.

This thought of leaving "home" (whatever that word means) kept me motivated throughout this duration of time; unfortunately, as comfort began spreading throughout my body, taking over every centimeter of my skin and soul, did I come to realize how much I took for granted. Not that I am scared to start fresh as a stranger in an even stranger city; but I am scared of leaving everything so constructive (or destructive) to my character, here, and returning to an old "home" filled with familiar faces but strangers, nonetheless. Strangers, whom I have known and enjoyed in the past, but who have since treaded onward - whatever that may entail.

And such is life, I know, I know. I am being selfish, over analyzing reality and letting my bits of optimism float away like the seeds of a dandelion. However, as these little parachutes carefully float through the air, they will disperse across a distance and rapidly colonize, cultivating a new sea of optimism.

So, here is my "thank you" to everyone who has [or thinks they have] influenced me this year in even the slightest manner. I am happy, happier than I have ever been and it is thanks to y o u..

-Mon

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Random Post



Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero...


-Mon

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Stories, Photos and Thoughts

The Lost Decade by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Esquire (December 1939)

All sorts of people came into the offices of the news-weekly and Orrison Brown had all sorts of relations with them. Outside of office hours he was “one of the editors”— during work time he was simply a curly-haired man who a year before had edited the Dartmouth Jack-O-Lantern and was now only too glad to take the undesirable assignments around the office, from straightening out illegible copy to playing call boy without the title.
He had seen this visitor go into the editor’s office — a pale, tall man of forty with blond statuesque hair and a manner that was neither shy nor timid, nor otherworldly like a monk, but something of all three. The name on his card, Louis Trimble, evoked some vague memory, but having nothing to start on, Orrison did not puzzle over it — until a buzzer sounded on his desk, and previous experience warned him that Mr. Trimble was to be his first course at lunch.
“Mr. Trimble — Mr. Brown,” said the Source of all luncheon money. “Orrison — Mr. Trimble’s been away a long time. Or he feels it’s a long time — almost twelve years. Some people would consider themselves lucky to’ve missed the last decade.”
“That’s so,” said Orrison.
“I can’t lunch today,” continued his chief. “Take him to Voisin or 21 or anywhere he’d like. Mr. Trimble feels there’re lots of things he hasn’t seen.”
Trimble demurred politely.
“Oh, I can get around.”
“I know it, old boy. Nobody knew this place like you did once — and if Brown tries to explain the horseless carriage just send him back here to me. And you’ll be back yourself by four, won’t you?”
Orrison got his hat.
“You’ve been away ten years?” he asked while they went down in the elevator.
“They’d begun the Empire State Building,” said Trimble. “What does that add up to?”
“About 1928. But as the chief said, you’ve been lucky to miss a lot.” As a feeler he added, “Probably had more interesting things to look at.”
“Can’t say I have.”
They reached the street and the way Trimble’s face tightened at the roar of traffic made Orrison take one more guess.
“You’ve been out of civilization?”
“In a sense.” The words were spoken in such a measured way that Orrison concluded this man wouldn’t talk unless he wanted to — and simultaneously wondered if he could have possibly spent the thirties in a prison or an insane asylum.
“This is the famous 21,” he said. “Do you think you’d rather eat somewhere else?”
Trimble paused, looking carefully at the brownstone house.
“I can remember when the name 21 got to be famous,” he said, “about the same year as Moriarity’s.” Then he continued almost apologetically, “I thought we might walk up Fifth Avenue about five minutes and eat wherever we happened to be. Some place with young people to look at.”
Orrison gave him a quick glance and once again thought of bars and gray walls and bars; he wondered if his duties included introducing Mr. Trimble to complaisant girls. But Mr. Trimble didn’t look as if that was in his mind — the dominant expression was of absolute and deep-seated curiosity and Orrison attempted to connect the name with Admiral Byrd’s hideout at the South Pole or flyers lost in Brazilian jungles. He was, or he had been, quite a fellow — that was obvious. But the only definite clue to his environment — and to Orrison the clue that led nowhere — was his countryman’s obedience to the traffic lights and his predilection for walking on the side next to the shops and not the street. Once he stopped and gazed into a haberdasher’s window.
“Crêpe ties,” he said. “I haven’t seen one since I left college.”
“Where’d you go?”
“Massachusetts Tech.”
“Great place.”
“I’m going to take a look at it next week. Let’s eat somewhere along here —” They were in the upper Fifties “— you choose.”
There was a good restaurant with a little awning just around the corner.
“What do you want to see most?” Orrison asked, as they sat down.
Trimble considered.
“Well — the back of people’s heads,” he suggested. “Their necks — how their heads are joined to their bodies. I’d like to hear what those two little girls are saying to their father. Not exactly what they’re saying but whether the words float or submerge, how their mouths shut when they’ve finished speaking. Just a matter of rhythm — Cole Porter came back to the States in 1928 because he felt that there were new rhythms around.”
Orrison was sure he had his clue now, and with nice delicacy did not pursue it by a millimeter — even suppressing a sudden desire to say there was a fine concert in Carnegie Hall tonight.
“The weight of spoons,” said Trimble, “so light. A little bowl with a stick attached. The cast in that waiter’s eye. I knew him once but he wouldn’t remember me.”
But as they left the restaurant the same waiter looked at Trimble rather puzzled as if he almost knew him. When they were outside Orrison laughed:
“After ten years people will forget.”
“Oh, I had dinner there last May —” He broke off in an abrupt manner.
It was all kind of nutsy, Orrison decided — and changed himself suddenly into a guide.
“From here you get a good candid focus on Rockefeller Center,” he pointed out with spirit “— and the Chrysler Building and the Armistead Building, the daddy of all the new ones.”
“The Armistead Building,” Trimble rubber-necked obediently. “Yes — I designed it.”
Orrison shook his head cheerfully — he was used to going out with all kinds of people. But that stuff about having been in the restaurant last May . . .
He paused by the brass entablature in the cornerstone of the building. “Erected 1928,” it said.
Trimble nodded.
“But I was taken drunk that year — every-which-way drunk. So I never saw it before now.”
“Oh.” Orrison hesitated. “Like to go in now?”
“I’ve been in it — lots of times. But I’ve never seen it. And now it isn’t what I want to see. I wouldn’t ever be able to see it now. I simply want to see how people walk and what their clothes and shoes and hats are made of. And their eyes and hands. Would you mind shaking hands with me?”
“Not at all, sir.”
“Thanks. Thanks. That’s very kind. I suppose it looks strange — but people will think we’re saying good-by. I’m going to walk up the avenue for awhile, so we will say good-by. Tell your office I’ll be in at four.”
Orrison looked after him when he started out, half expecting him to turn into a bar. But there was nothing about him that suggested or ever had suggested drink.
“Jesus,” he said to himself. “Drunk for ten years.”
He felt suddenly of the texture of his own coat and then he reached out and pressed his thumb against the granite of the building by his side.






Contagious laughter causing tears to stream down my face.
A good combination, though the culprits of such situations will soon change.

Comfort - a doubled edged sword.

-Mon

Monday, July 26, 2010

[after a long argument about society and my idealistic nature]
"You'll be disappointed with the world," he said to me as I patiently sipped my coffee.
I looked up and smiled.
"All it takes is a change of perspective. The beauty of idealism is everything is possible. You have no limits; no boundaries. Happiness is actually attainable... With realism, you oftentimes set yourself up for disaster, especially emotionally. And, when things fail to turn out the way you had hoped for, rather than moving forward, many dwell in their dilemmas... drowning in a pool of negativity."
"You're going to realize this whole world is a mess..."
"I already know, sir. This world is certainly a mess... a beautiful, unpredictable mess."

and I walked away.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Anonymous

Just finished reading an article from The Guardian about a woman by the name of Kate Monro collecting the stories of many individuals and their most vulnerable moment - losing their virginity. A fun little read; however, what caught my attention was the snippet of her project:

"I was in college, working at a bookstore. I had a key and often worked late at night and this meant that I and the girl I loved had a place where we could go and be away from our roommates. To say that I loved her would be a pale word. I savoured her. Every angle, every facet of her mind and her words and her eyes seemed to infuse me with an energy that I had never experienced before.
One night, late in the dark store, after talking about Joseph Conrad novels, we kissed more and more deeply, and everything began to spin around me; all the square angles of the books and shelves blurred like a cartoon as I removed the lace from the curves of her body. We were laying on the floor between shelves of old books. I remember how her heat surprised me. I remember how her legs felt when they moved up around my ribs. I remember something she whispered to me — a whisper I sometimes still hear at night. I remember playing with her hair afterwards, as we lay together panting and hot. And most of all I remember the feeling much later, as the sun was rising and we left the store. She was wearing my coat. And everything in the world was different. I noticed it instantly — as though everyone had been speaking in a foreign accent and now suddenly switched to my own."

Beautifully written (and executed)!

"...as though everyone had been speaking in a foreign accent and now suddenly switched to my own."
Ah, so good.

'tis all,

-Mon

Friday, July 16, 2010

Art Show: San Deigo


This Saturday, July 17th, the Museum of Contemporary Art in San Diego will be celebrating the opening of Viva la Revolucion: A Dialogue with the Urban Landscape!

Looks to be a really interesting show. Unfortunately, the price tag of 20 dollars is a bit much for a soon-to-be starving college student and, not to mention, there is a limited supply of non-member tickets.

With that said, if you have nothing to do this Saturday from 7-10 and do not mind spending 20 dollars to see some killer art and meet interesting people (also, enjoy a DJ set by Shepard Fairey) then check it out!

Website here...


Até mais,
-Mon