I feel like I’ve spent half my life — almost to this moment — conveying my seriousness, my commitment to making the world a better place through design and other of my skills. Now that I’m perceived ever-so-slightly more seriously, I am feeling the need to integrate my fun-lovingness into my days and moments. So strange.
Poem, 7/17
yes, summer,
I accept your grandiosities.
the relentless dusky colors,
the honeysuckle, the shrub rose,
ev’ry hilly meadow seems a dream.
how you show your stillness
is a whispy memory. so much bursting
and so much calm.
I wait for the road home to change;
I do not wait for the cold.
My first three lessons as a Jeep Wrangler owner.
I’m acquiring a friend’s ’97 Wrangler because it maximizes my outdoor + summer + fun experience. Plus it’s the only place I can play cassettes now. I’ve already learned three things in the first week of riding it around:
- With so much bouncing around, it feels like a core stabilizer exercise nearly 80% of the time.
- Acknowledging other Jeep Wrangler owners — all of a sudden I see a lot of them! — is as simple as a wave of the hand from the steering wheel. They wave back the same way.
- Windshield wipers don’t mean diddly when you forget to put the top up when there’s threat of thunder and you have rain on the inside of the windshield.
Noted.
Couplet, 6/26
My partner makes himself a midnight snack.
Time only goes forward; it does not go back.
Pride reminder
Just a reminder: friends, friends of friends, friends of friends who have friends who may know someone who is gay, lesbian, trans, questioning, queer, exploratory, GLBT, LGBT, BLT, or getting better — you do not have to be extra prideful* all in one night or one 24- or even 48-hour period. You can feel your pride every day.
*see also: partying, woo-hoo, livin large, trashing the city, causing a commotion, wild rumpus, extra loud, exacerbated, or god forbid reinforcing stereotypes.
Pinball wizard 3.0
While working in midtown and staying in Jersey City this week with dear friends Tamara & JP, after work one night JP and I checked out (and I “checked in” to) the new Barcade location, close to Grove. Besides the delicious craft beer selection, and the equally delicious NJ-style hipster specimens beginning to trail in, JP said the owners rented a trailer and drove around the country to stock up their space with vintage 80s video games. What could be better than a custom pint-wide shelf between each free-standing game! It had been decades since I had been among that many machines — with the exception of one random Ms. Pac Man game with Matt at a laundromat in DC a year ago, and a night at Ground Kontrol as part of the 2008 AIGA Leadership Retreat in Portland, OR. Galaga, Millipede, Joust, and Burger Time were always only somewhat appealing, so I continued, as I have since I was a kid, to plunk my hard-earned quarters into Qbert, Tempest, Frogger, and Ms. Pac Man (luckily, the sped-up version). These games are controlled simply via joystick or with the addition of a single button — fire! That’s their only interface. Let’s call this Pinball Wizard 2.0. This is my generation.
Now, it’s safe to say that my Jersey City compatriot JP is a gaming geek, with both XBox 360 and Wii hooked up to the projector, and generations of previous gaming platforms and gaming promotions proudly on display around the apartment (anyone else remember Sony’s Easter Island campaign?). During my stay, he fired up Portal 2 and grabbed the dozen-button controller to solve it — I could tell he’d done so given the rolling credits. I realized that the more heady and narratively complex games (which seem to have started with Myst) — the ones that require you to figure out what you’re doing first before you start figuring out how to do it — require more buttons to control.
JP is clearly a Pinball Wizard 3.0 maven. I kicked his ass at the arcade.
What's (a) meta (for)
Are you looking at the road, or the windshield?
They never end.
“Research” last night with Jon posited that Chuck Mangione actually wrote The Price is Right theme song. Why? Because both Chuck’s hit, Feels So Good, and that song could go on forever.
How to describe me
A really really good friend said today: You are like rainbow toe socks - cute, comfy, cozy and a bit outrageous.
I dig.
The original... Three. Word. Tagline.
I’ve always deplored trends. They lack originality. They smack of a bandwagon mentality. So it’s no surprise that I wholeheartedly enjoy 37signals’ perfect lampoon of the trend to use three word taglines, each as separate sentences. Yesterday, it occurred to me that there were two sets of three word taglines taught to us as kids. The first, Stop drop and roll, was to be recalled in case of fire. The second, No go and tell, was to be recalled when sexual abuse was instigated.
And yesterday, I thought: what if, under stress of either, they were reversed? You wouldn’t want to stop (what you’re doing), drop (your pants), and roll (over).