Friday, November 25, 2005

i won't be leaving you leaving you child / i'll just keep driving you driving you wild

Number one: I got a raise. The composter did some market survey and figured that they weren't paying their employees enough, so we all got bumped. It's something that we've all been half-expecting/half-hoping would happen, and it isn't quite as much as I expected it would be, but it's better than grabbing my hand and taking a dump in it. It's good news, is what I'm saying.

Number two: I'm going to get a chance to get certification in a couple of weeks, which would mean I could potentially work for the city someday, or get some other union-type job. Certfication, a piece of paper that proves that I can do my job, a hard thing to come by actually.

Put together, these two bits of news made this a pretty handy-dandy little day. I have a performance review coming up in the next month, and I'm pretty sure I'll get a raise out of that as well.

Of course:

I can't get anyone to stay interested in playing music with me, least of all myself; that, and my only outlets of creativity these days have been these pathetically short little dribs which I've been posting here. Not much to go on, eh? Unclear what this guy is really about. Infrequent, no center, a man who has not made best friends with his dreams.

I've been listening to downloaded Alan Watts lectures pretty much non-stop for an hour or more, and thinking seriously about what I am supposed to be doing, you know, with my life, with this moment, with the eternal now. I feel as though I am failing to be an authentic person.

There was a moment for me at work a couple of weeks ago where I let my paranoiac wanderings play about my head. There was an incident - a very serious one. Noone was injured, though someone surely could have been. It was, to say the least, expensive. Also, it involved equipment which I use on a daily basis. I'm not sure just how nebulous I should be here. The investigation, as far as I know, is still going on.

Anyways, left to my own devices, I somehow convinced myself that it was my fault. Somehow in my head it made perfect sense. I could see the line of responsibility extending backwards to me. I'd had it all wangled around so the true cause - a man, not me, did something very, very stupid, and the environment in which he works allowed it to happen - paled in significance to the thing passing from my hands, being at some point under my control.

This guy - I want to call him this fellow - he hadn't been working with us for too long, but had more or less drifted into a position of quasi-responsibility. I'd barely worked with him at all, but in my short time giving him a hand with what he was doing to the thing I'd passed on to him, I got the impression of a really objectionable co-worker. He was barking orders, being a real dink. I'm too savvy to really let someone like this get to me anymore, but I used to be really fearful of guys like this.

I truly am beyond giving a shit what anyone at work thinks about me.

But, and here's why I'm talking about this, he gave the impression he knew the up and down of what he was doing. I was taking his lead; it was his department.

It was so miserably cold outside. The sun was just up, and the wind was brisk. I just wanted to leave, to go for my coffee. But I was thinking, I should stay, take a late coffee, absorb what this guy's doing, give him a hand, learn a bit. But I didn't. I left him with it.

Not ten minutes later I'm sitting in the lunch room and it comes over the radio, the whole mess. Fire. Serious, and fast. Over the next half hour, rumour had vent. This guy had made a choice, a poor one, and it had disastrous results. And then, when things have settled down and we've all gone back to work, because you can't sit in the lunch room with shocked looks on your faces all day, I am left alone to think on it a bit. Something like vertigo has a bit of a go at me the first time I think the following: If I'd been there with this guy, I probably wouldn't have had sense enough to tell him to stop.

I am grazing on my own insecurities, my feeling of unheimlich-ness, my not belonging here, at this place. And all the stairs are crumbling wet sand: my fault, my fault, my fault. Was it? It was my responsibility, surely, and so, my fault. Irredeemably. I would be discovered. This time I was going to be caught, and my face would really be rubbed in it: What are you doing here? You're not meant to work here. You have been trying to fool us. Your charade has cost us dearly. We have always hated you. You are different.

I am going to be fired, I thought, completely sure of it.

I felt relief.

I felt, now I can get on with my life. The past two and a half years - god, the Beatles changed the world with less time, twice over - have been a mistake. But it's not too late. Now, I can really concentrate on writing. My life isn't over. Only my phony allegiance to this place, which has just been tripped up and made a ridiculous trinket. It's no secret anymore. Thank you, I thought. Now there's no excuse. My attempts to cling to the world have always been pathetic. I was not meant to be a grownup. I will either be completed or be institutionalized, or both. I will fall into the cracks, and the bottom of the world will be the next to say: "But you had a degree!" And as always, I will shrug, as if hiding some secret. A chrysalis within a chrysalis. There was that day, I would think at those moments, the last humiliation, the day I set my job on fire, the day I set my place in the straight world on fire.

It was not my fault. Not even remotely. Even in my own head, the way I think about it, now. "What are you doing?", I see myself saying to the fellow, fire extinguisher preemptively in hand. If I'd been there I surely would have played it as such. And as I've said, I've been in fact rewarded with a raise, with certification. My future here even more cemented. Persevering, beying loyal, being competent, deserving it all.

A valentine from the wrong girl.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

featuring a variety of musical numbers

I can't believe I'm going to work at midnight. What a bunch of fucking shit. I need a new job.

Elsewhere in life, and of some new unspecifiable significance, I think anyways, I actually ran up the road on Walterdale Hill. I've never, ever been able to do that before. It's fairly steep and does not end. I know a lot of runners take both Walterdale and Bellamy hills in the same route - if I'm ever able to do that, that'll be when I know I've gone too far and need to be clotheslined at ramming speed by a mountain bike.

I think I need to vary my route, though - the car fumes over the High Level bridge almost knocked me out. I need to get down deep in that river valley and get my friggin' oxygen.

I also need to bring a watch. It is time to get an understanding of just what I am so newly and significantly capable of. Expect no mercy, as Nazareth say.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

had head removed

common solipse polyps follow and into the backspace we traipse and I was holding your hand in spite of all that. too shallow to share with the everywhere around us. time records transactions, fantastic expeditions, paper is shuffling to the right and behind me, the kings of the mafia, the cobbles blasted from the road, curbside drugs and beestung colours, fruits and vegetables laid symmetrically, lexicons drifting like waves of wheat in fields, radios tuned to one transmission fifteen miles from memphis, where all my friends moved years ago.

Saturday, November 12, 2005

sixty seconds of useless evil like you can read just about anywhere, but that's what i got for you tonight

John Prine: I guess he can play guitar, but so can my uncle and I don't make my buddies listen to his fucking albums. Guy's boring, man. Sorry. You could take his lyric sheets to the grocery store and walk up and down the aisles with them, picking up laundry soap and coffee filters. And it's not like his voice is captivating in any Haggard Owens Miller sort of way. Listening to John Prine makes me wonder why it is that I listen to music at all. I'd sooner listen to something nothingy like Green Day. Though I wouldn't go as far as Jack Johnson.

Burt Reynolds, John Voight, Ned Beatty and Ronny Cox burying a dead guy in the bank of a river, though - that's what's on television.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

how manic depressives ever get anything done

I'm listening to the drums (just the drums) on Calla's "It dawned on me" right now, so it seems like I could grab a chisel and drive it through the nexus of the universal skull with the force of my fist. I am sweating from my run. I am bored with my job, but why not just get another? This province is where jobs are made. Dumb ones, of course, all the logic of a cancerous cell, mucilage for the Frankenstein economy. But so many. There must be a flip side to all of that money. There must be a place for it to go besides crack cocaine and black leather couches from the Brick. Someone, somewhere, must want something like me.

There is snow on the ground now. It looks like it will probably not stay quite yet, but its being here at all is the membrane of the monster moray, its perfect jaw clamped down on everyone's mood, the dullest of disorders. Another year you didn't quite make it out. There is romance in staying forever. But there is no story.

In spite of quitting smoking, I've actually lost about five pounds in the past month. Things are looming, things I'd forgotten about. Bone furniture is being carved and smashed in the hollows of my ball joints. I am being underscored. I am being Born Horny.

I gotta shower. I gotta update my resume. Wait for me?