Approach by eye. Goal: Seeing as much as possible; experiencing as much as possible. But this is passive in a sense, because the world acts on the eye, even if the eye moves in the world.
Approach by hand. Goal: Doing as much as possible. This is active, because you go into the world to do things to it.
Monday, November 05, 2007
Monday, October 15, 2007
Friday, July 20, 2007
What's needed
What's needed is a birthday cake for my daughter, not a magical pastry baked by elves.
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
I've been
looking through the dumpsters of the mind. I'm not sure what's in them, but I can tell you that they are arranged neatly in rows a columns, and that there isn't much around to see. And when I look out the window and see these trees, they're what's really here. Just a reminder.
Monday, June 25, 2007
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Regard each
eye separately, now consider each as something that might be unscrewed from the head. Not just the eye itself but the area around, roughly the size of the largest circle that could be drawn on the front pad of your hand. You would never know this region could be unscrewed; it would not hurt or disturb.
I have a sci fi novel called "Candy Man". Author's name is something King I think. The main character is a robot. If I recall, he is told that he will be rebuilt as a human. They could rebuild him as a robot (again) but it would cost too much. That has stuck with me for about 20 years now.
I have a sci fi novel called "Candy Man". Author's name is something King I think. The main character is a robot. If I recall, he is told that he will be rebuilt as a human. They could rebuild him as a robot (again) but it would cost too much. That has stuck with me for about 20 years now.
Exploring the inside
of a giant drum. It is dark, and so far empty. But somewhere inside, surely, there is something.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Poltergeist
My ideas are the ghosts that haunt your mind.
Note: This isn't adressed to anyone in particular, nor is anything meant by it, nor do I know which ideas are being referred to. And further, the author is not responsible for the ideas expressed here.
Note: This isn't adressed to anyone in particular, nor is anything meant by it, nor do I know which ideas are being referred to. And further, the author is not responsible for the ideas expressed here.
Friday, March 16, 2007
Actually...
there are two sorts of light: solar and lunar. Solar light is emitted by the sun, and also by most lamps and lightbulbs, though in a weaker form. Solar light helps plants grow. Lunar light is emitted by the moon, ghostly lamps, and a few other things. Lunar light is connected to the fungal world.
This theory, though false, has phenomenological validity. It must have been proposed at some point with seriousness. Must have.
More later, about the real difference between solar and lunar shadows, and the reason I like the blue flames of gas stoves.
This theory, though false, has phenomenological validity. It must have been proposed at some point with seriousness. Must have.
More later, about the real difference between solar and lunar shadows, and the reason I like the blue flames of gas stoves.
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Editor Disease
Seeing wasted words everywhere; finding ways to shorten papers authored by strangers and published years ago; deleting entire sentences from conversations as one utters or hears them.
An excess of brevity.
An excess of brevity.
Monday, February 19, 2007
The Dip Engine.
1. Choose base ingredient
2. Add mix of lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, hot peppers, pepper, salt, cilantro or parsley, and maybe some onion.
3. Blend it all up.
If your base ingredient is the Chickpea, you will end up with Hummus. If your base ingredient is the Tomato you will end up with Salsa (but go light on oil and heavy on peppery). And on and on. My next base ingredient is the artichoke heart.
2. Add mix of lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, hot peppers, pepper, salt, cilantro or parsley, and maybe some onion.
3. Blend it all up.
If your base ingredient is the Chickpea, you will end up with Hummus. If your base ingredient is the Tomato you will end up with Salsa (but go light on oil and heavy on peppery). And on and on. My next base ingredient is the artichoke heart.
Friday, February 09, 2007
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
As it goes.
As it goes, so should a path be followed. And then there really is no question, assuming one is following the path. But if questions persist? Then maybe these are questions of whether some other path should be followed, or whether any path should be followed at all, or other questions. That said, things remain as they are and no more is known, the answer not having been in response to any question.
And more on tea.
Recently craving the tea of the fictional past.
We are reading Ulysses. That is, I am now on p. 12. We'll see where this goes.
Dedalus, Haines, and Mulligan have just drank some very strong tea. Now I want to try it also.
We are reading Ulysses. That is, I am now on p. 12. We'll see where this goes.
Dedalus, Haines, and Mulligan have just drank some very strong tea. Now I want to try it also.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
We tried so
many varieties of tea. And still, black tea is best. The exotic fails. Same as when we wanted to buy strange meats (snake, alligator, etc) and the butcher told us to forget it and just get beef. "You can't beat it."
And you can't.
And you can't.
I can't
get myself to write it, so here is the synopsis:
A market with neon signs marking the stalls (sort of based on the marked in Seattle). A person
(nondescript/average) visits, and then revisits and revists, etc., giving up more of regular life, until finally spending all of his days at the market (maybe sleeping there too), somehow transfixed by the neon signs. The addictive power of those particular neon signs.
A market with neon signs marking the stalls (sort of based on the marked in Seattle). A person
(nondescript/average) visits, and then revisits and revists, etc., giving up more of regular life, until finally spending all of his days at the market (maybe sleeping there too), somehow transfixed by the neon signs. The addictive power of those particular neon signs.
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