Archive for the ‘personal’ Category

Driving Kansas

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Prepare your­self.  I am about to make a bold state­ment that will most likely cause many of you to ques­tion my sanity.

I like–no, even love– dri­ving across Kansas.

It’s a hard drive, eleven or so hours in length, depend­ing on traf­fic in places and how much I stop along the way for gas and food.   Weather at this time of the year can be a seri­ous haz­ard.  It began to snow in Fort Collins not long after I left yes­ter­day, and by this morn­ing, 8 inches had accu­mu­lated. The storms con­tin­ued march­ing from the west to the east and arrived here tonight in the form of dis­tant thun­der­storms to the north.  I’ve been sit­ting on the couch lis­ten­ing to the thun­der and watch­ing the light­ning light up the sid­ing of the house next door through the high win­dows in my par­ents 1920s Arts & Crafts Bungalow-​​style home.  Everything here is hard­wood, rich and brown, stone tiled fire­places, antique fur­ni­ture.   It’s a nice and wel­come change from twelve hours in the plas­tic and vinyl womb-​​like space of a mod­ern car.

But the drive itself is peace­ful if noth­ing else, but also full of his­tory and the kind of beauty only some­one who grew up on the plains can appre­ci­ate, per­haps.   I hit the free­way south to Denver at 8 AM and made good time around the metrop­o­lis and onto the Long Shot east.  The first hour of the drive is typ­i­cal Colorado dri­ving.  On my left, farm­lands and fields stretch­ing to the hori­zon.  On my right, the foothills give rise quickly to the Rocky Mountains, wreathed in heavy clouds that her­alded the snow.

Past Denver, the moun­tains recede into the rearview mir­ror as quickly as the traf­fic.   If I were to drop you on a ran­dom spot between Denver and the Kansas bor­der along I-​​70, you would not be able to tell whether you were in  Kansas or Colorado.  You’d prob­a­bly say Kansas.  I wouldn’t blame you.

Eastern Colorado is eas­ily my least favorite leg of the trip.  The towns and the farms are few and far between.  The range here is just empty and flat, the kind of flat every­one asso­ciates with Kansas even if they’ve never been there.  Nebraska-​​flat.  It always takes me longer to reach the Kansas bor­der than I expect.

Seeing the small “Welcome to Kansas” sign next to the weigh sta­tion at the bor­der never fails to make me smile.  It’s not osten­ta­tious  like the much larger and browner “Goodbye from Colorado” sign that her­alds it.  It’s small, just big enough for the words, and easy to miss (although I never miss it).  The sight never fails to relax some hid­den tensed mus­cles inside me, per­haps imag­ined mus­cles.   I almost feel like I have been hold­ing my breath since Denver, and can only take my first deep inhala­tion once I have passed Kanorado, Kansas.

The first third of the drive through Western Kansas is not so very dif­fer­ent than Eastern Colorado, as far as the grand vis­tas.  The dif­fer­ence I feel is purely psy­cho­log­i­cal.  Few trees, many fields, and towns announc­ing their pres­ence on the hori­zon with either the steeple of a church or a grain silo (or both).  At this time of the year, I see my first green fields near Goodland.  Winter wheat, I sus­pect, planted many months ear­lier, already turn­ing into a ver­dant car­pet over the slightly rolling landscape.

It is on this part of the road that you had have an audio­book or a music album that you can lose track of your­self within.  The dri­ving is not chal­leng­ing.  The land­scape is inter­est­ing only to the most Kansan of Kansans and the afi­cionado of grain silos and early 20th cen­tury church archi­tec­ture.   But as you progress east, things begin to get more inter­est­ing to the dis­cern­ing eye–such as mine, trained by the drive I’ve been mak­ing in some form since I was 7 years old.

Once you pass a series of farm com­mu­ni­ties, it’s open land until Hays, a small col­lege town in Postrock coun­try.  When this area was first set­tled, wood was in very short sup­ply, but yel­low lime­stone was free to quarry from any hill­side.  As you grow closer to Hays, Kansas, you begin to notice these weath­ered, warped, and worn stone posts, non­func­tional relics that define prop­erty lines but are backed up by the more tra­di­tional barbed wire fences.  It is here in this part of the state that the grass seems to grow more wild, and you begin to see the aban­doned farm­steads.   Every fifty miles or so, you can catch a close-​​up look at the rel­a­tively unchanged remains of a lime­stone farm­house, or a rot­ted and dilap­i­dated barn.   Old-​​fashioned wind­mills turn on the wind beneath the tow­er­ing alabaster blades of their power-​​generating descen­dants.    traf­fic on the road is light,  and the road is so straight that even alone, you can soak in the sight of desolation.

They told us sto­ries in grade school about the fron­tier­swomen who set­tled out here with their fam­i­lies and were dri­ven mad by the soli­tude and the wind.   From the aban­doned struc­tures,  I won­der if ulti­mately, the wind and soli­tude drove them all away.

The other object of inter­est to keep your eyes from slip­ping closed are the hand-​​painted signs.   Some help­fully remind you that “abor­tion stops a beat­ing heart” with a crude red heart painted next to the words.   Others adver­tise an upcom­ing road­side attrac­tion that includes the world’s largest prairie dog and a five-​​legged steer among var­i­ous other ani­mals, no doubt kept in tiny pens  and half-​​starved.  Billboards have been errected here and there adver­tis­ing the ser­vices and restau­rants of towns some­times as much as two hun­dred miles ahead. Somehow, prob­a­bly per­haps due to the lack of stim­u­lus, you still remem­ber those signs when the adver­tise­ments arrive in your path.

You pass through Hays quickly enough, per­haps catch­ing sight of the statue of a ptero­dactyl, or see­ing the 100,000 dome of the Sternberg Museum, one of the best col­lec­tions of kansas ocean fos­sils on the planet.  You see, the real­iza­tion that livens my drive every time as I cross the nearly bar­ren expanse is that all of this, from hori­zon to hori­zon, was once a giant inland ocean, and home to some of the dead­liest aquatic preda­tors that ever lived on earth–the mosasaurs.  One of the great ironies of Kansas is that so many of its res­i­dents flatly deny evo­lu­tion and beleive in a 2,000 year old Earth while, directly beneath their feet through­out most of the state, are 30 mil­lion year old ocean fos­sils that can only be explained in their belief sys­tem by accus­ing the stones of being planted by Satan him­self to make the hard-​​working folks ques­tion their faith.

Kansas here, in this mid­dle part, is one giant fos­sil to me.  I can­not help but pic­ture behe­moth forms sail­ing through the air above me, of mas­sive hub-​​cap-​​sized clams open­ing and clos­ing in invis­i­ble cur­rents along­side the road. I am dri­ving along the bot­tom of a ghostly ocean here.

Hays passes almost too quickly, and here is where the land­scape begins to grow more rough.  Once Salina is fad­ing behind you, small hills begin to rise from the land­scape.  Rivers weave between them, dressed in the fringes of trees only just now begin­ning to have a haze of green upon their branches.  If you were to swing south to Witchita, you would drive through a series of hills impres­sive to even a Colorado res­i­dent.  The Flint Hills were what I thought moun­tains looked like when I was younger. they’re not really that far off in some ways, up close.

I do not swing south, but con­tinue to the east.  The trees grow denser.  The hills rise and fall, form­ing ridges along­side the road.  I pass Fort Riley and its Army-​​green heli­copters with blades echo­ing the giant wind tur­bines from hun­dreds of miles back.  then Manhattan, the “lit­tle apple”  as adver­tised in bill­boards, and home of Kansas State University.  Purple-​​colored Wildcat ter­ri­tory.  And then, not so long after that, some­times more quickly than I expect, the urban blight of Topeka stretches out before me.  I say blight, because I know the city’s heart, and it is rot­ten to the core, a dirty, filthy place with few redeem­ing val­ues.  As I pass through, even from the inter­state I can see boarded up houses on the fringes of the emptied-​​out down­town.   It’s not so bad as decay­ing metrop­o­lises like Detroit, but it smells like death just the same.

Then the turn­pike, a toll-​​road to Kansas City, which I only take as far as Lawrence.  From there, I cut around the edges of town, past Clinton Lake (not named after the pres­i­dent), where I spent dozens of early Saturdays as a teen wish­ing with my father and my brother and sis­ter in my father’s boat.

Somewhere just out­side of Topeka, the mem­o­ries begin to take effect, and I see not only things as they are, but how they were when I was younger.  The growth and expan­sion shines brightly in my minds eye,  bright that hurts and makes me ache with an emo­tion I can only call nos­tal­gia.   Lawrence is where the mem­o­ries begin to crowd out the real­ity of things, and the way things were seem more sub­sta­nial than the way things are.

Lawrence whizzes by, the hill where Kansas University tow­ers above every­thing else in the area shrinks until it is no big­ger than you thumb, and I swing south on Highway 59.  Here, I think about my friend Niles and how I would take this road to his house nearly every week­end when I wasn’t work­ing in high school.  He was the first friend I ever had that could see through the bull­shit we tell our­selves and tell me what I really wanted or thought.  Such a skill is valu­able as a friend.  Last I had heard, he’d fled to Canada to escape jail in NYC.   I pass his home and wince to see that what was once a house on five acres is now crowded by a dozen more houses.  Even here your neigh­bors are closer than they were twenty years ago.

I’ve never taken this road before beyond Niles’ house, I real­ize, and soon I’m dri­ving a glacially slow 30 mph through Ottawa.  A county seat, it fea­tures an aston­ish­ingly beau­ti­ful cour­t­house from the Victorian period, dot­ted with stat­ues of lady Justice and spires and weird tower struc­tures.  I’ll try to take pic­tures when I pass back through again later.

Just past Ottawa, I turn east again, now on the mythically-​​named John brown Highway, push­ing towards the Missouri bor­der.  Here, I see even more aban­doned build­ings crum­bling and decay­ing.  I see old school houses with their bell tow­ers col­lapsed, burned out homes, and barns lean­ing so far that you would think a horse stomp­ing its foot would turn it into a pile of rub­ble.  I roll down the win­dow to smell the sharp tang of grass­fire as farm­ers clear away the growth on fal­low land to allow the green to come through with the rain.

I see all this in the golden light of a low sun behind me.  The land­scape now  has turned bril­liant green.  It reminds me of noth­ing so much as the English coun­try­side.  My mother first made this obser­va­tion on the road to Bath from London a few sum­mers ago while think­ing about how her father, a desert-​​raised boy from Arizona, sta­tioned in England in the mil­i­tary, had come to set­tle down and raise his fam­ily in Topeka.  Our Kansas is not so dif­fer­ent from that place in appear­ance, as strange as it sounds.

Soon, John Brown Highway deposits me in the slowly dying town of Osawatomie, sur­rounded by rivers prone to flood­ing, once a thriv­ing town home to the state men­tal hos­pi­tal.  Now, many of its store­fronts are closed or boarded up, and the homes up for auc­tion, or for the lucky ones, just for sale.  Osawatomie wears the state of the econ­omy on its face like a domino mask.  I have arrived.

A good sound­track makes it all go by faster, and good con­ver­sa­tion even faster.  I don’t like mak­ing the drive alone very often, and I dread it up until after the sec­ond or third hour, and then I remem­ber.  I’m going home.  These road­ways might as well be the veins in my arm, I know them so well.

It feels good to come back.  Most peo­ple could never under­stand why I would ever want to come here at all.  Its beauty is not loud.  It is under­stated, like that sign at the bor­der.  All along the way, it whis­pers “wel­come home,” in a voice as soft as the wind blow­ing through the corn. I can’t really blame you if you can’t hear it like we can.

The Life and Times of Jeremiah Tolbert

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This morn­ing, I’ve real­ized that I don’t have any­thing else  to share via this blog at the moment except old pho­tos.    The truth is, I’m strug­gling a lot with feel­ings of depres­sion related to being unable to find a job.  Yes, I know I’m not the only one who can’t find work, yes I know it’s osten­si­bly not my fault, but as it prob­a­bly comes as no sur­prise to you, I have high expec­ta­tions for myself and think that if I were truly good at what I do, find­ing a job/​money would not be hard.  As a very kind and gra­cious some­one pointed out to me in an email this morn­ing, I’m not really strug­gling.  Struggling  isn’t depress­ing. I am tread­ing water, unable to move for­ward or back.  I can’t move from the place that I am in, in my life, until I have some path to a future.  There are a lot of paths but I am con­strained on which ones I can accept.  Right now, the only path I can accept is one that gives me enough income to sup­port Sarah and I while she returns to school full time for 1–2 years.  After that, she can get a teach­ing job and quite pos­si­bly I can actu­ally ded­i­cate myself to the pur­suits that I love.

With the eco­nomic cri­sis going on in the back­ground, and with me won­der­ing if any­one will have a job a year from now, if we’ll even have a valid cur­rency, it makes our sit­u­a­tion feel even more des­per­ate at times.

So I’m basi­cally spend­ing all my time flail­ing about for short term plans.  What can I do to make it more likely I will get a job?  And at the same time, I have these dri­ving pas­sions of pho­tog­ra­phy and echos of my pas­sion for writ­ing swirling around and because I have no rea­son to focus on any one thing, my atten­tion keeps shift­ing wildly from thing to thing.  I can’t tell if any­thing will work, so I am try­ing to go in 4 direc­tions at one.  I can’t keep that up.  Even unem­ployed, I only have so much time, and I’m com­ing to the con­clu­sion that my ten­dency to split my atten­tion among a vari­ety of pur­suits does noth­ing but harm my chances of ever get­ting to the level I want to be at any of them.

They told me as a child I could be any­thing I wanted to be.  That my IQ test demon­strated that, or what­ever.  And I always took that to heart.  Perhaps too well.  I’m great at open­ing doors, but I’m ter­ri­ble about clos­ing them.  Yesterday, I thought I could close the door on pho­tog­ra­phy and move for­ward.  Instead what hap­pened was, I closed the door on pho­tog­ra­phy and feel into the deep­est funk yet in this phase of my life.

Does that mean I should be giv­ing up one of the other pur­suits and stick­ing with pho­tog­ra­phy? I don’t know.  Perhaps my cen­tral the­sis that I need to focus on one thing is flawed.  Or maybe I’m just sad for giv­ing up some­thing I gen­uinely love (for the time being) and I’ll come to terms with that shortly.

I don’t really have it that bad.  I don’t work back-​​breaking labor all day.  I’ve been there. I worked in a lum­ber yard as a yard hand for a sum­mer, and ulti­mately, I didn’t much care for that as a job.  I like work­ing with my mind. I like chal­leng­ing my brain to solve things and to come up with things that wow me and oth­ers.  That’s what I like doing.  I don’t care if I do it with words or pic­tures or web­sites.  I just want to make amaz­ing things.    And I really have to be paid to do it,  because I can­not live the life of the starv­ing artist.

Not with the debt I have left over from my time as your typ­i­cal amer­i­can con­sumer.  Not with stu­dent loans.

I don’t care about money except for the sense of secu­rity it pro­vides.  If I could have a safe warm place to live with space for a bed, books, and a com­puter, if I could eat at least once a day, and if there were beau­ti­ful things around me to look at, I could be con­tent.  Give me the inter­net and the land­scape around me and I don’t need much else.   Or am I kid­ding myself about that too?

Do most peo­ple know who they are and what they want at my age?  I’m 31.  I feel as old as the earth some­times.  I expected in my youth that at 31, I would know what I was doing for the rest of my life.  Instead, I don’t even know what I will be doing next week, not for sure, although at this point it involves going to see my fam­ily in Kansas and look­ing for a job in Kansas City.

My life has been a series of rein­ven­tions.  First I was a stu­pid kid with bad grades.  Then I was tested and they decided I was too intel­li­gent for my classes and that’s why I did badly.  So they tested me to be in gifted pro­grams, and it turned out that my hand-​​eye coor­di­na­tion was so bad that I might as well have been men­tally hand­i­capped.  So I became the kinda bright kid who liked sci­ence.  I did great, grades-​​wise in junior high but then I got to high school.  My par­ents made me get my license and a job so that I could drive the younger sib­lings to school.  The only job that would have me worked me until 2 in the morn­ing on school nights and sud­denly my grades slipped.  I was no longer a straight-​​A stu­dent.  Chances for a good schol­ar­ship dis­ap­peared instantly into the grease traps behind the Sonic.  I fell asleep in class. Turned in papers late.  Now I was the kid who used to be pretty good at school but was hav­ing a hard time get­ting his work done because of the long, late hours he worked.   I gave up any hope of doing much in col­lege beyond state school which I prob­a­bly wouldn’t finish.

Then I met Tama, one of the smartest peo­ple I’ve ever known.  Our rela­tion­ship changed me again, and I dis­cov­ered again my pas­sion for sci­ence.  I joined a pro­gram doing research at the wet­lands and I started to dream about col­lege again.  Tama, a National Merit Scholar, was tour­ing schools all over, and she vis­ited Grinnell.  I tagged along.  What I saw there con­vinced me that I wanted some­thing more. With the help and guid­ance of her and her fam­ily, I got in to Grinnell.  And things were good.

But I got it by mort­gag­ing my future.  What no one told me was that the price I was pay­ing could not be paid back with my plans.  Biologists do not make enough money to pay back these kinds of loans and pay the rent.   At this time, I met the love of my life, Sarah, and I became an engaged and then mar­ried man.  So I shifted my inter­ests again, to pro­vide for us.  I became an artist, a web designer.  I co-​​founded a com­pany which failed pri­mar­ily because of my fear of learn­ing any­thing programming-​​like.   I wasn’t will­ing to rein­vent myself again so quickly, I sup­pose.  But it was enough expe­ri­ence to get started down that road.

Then I became a mar­ried IT guy with too much time and no social life.  So I became an aspir­ing writer, some­thing I had toyed with in my youth. Slowly, I trans­formed into a sort-​​of pub­lished writer who couldn’t crack any of the truly big mar­kets.  I was happy to be big in Europe for the time being.  I started a novel.  Then my father got sick.  I fal­tered.  He died.  My hopes for writ­ing as a future died with him. The two things became so inter­linked that I couldn’t move past it.  I’m still angry that he’s gone some­times.  Shortly after, I lost a friend who, in ret­ro­spect, was a huge part of the rea­son that I wrote.  I wrote in part  to impress, and with­out that friend, I had no one to try and impress.  The peo­ple I had, whom I love, loved me too much to really be crit­i­cal enough. To be a chal­lenge to impress.  I lost my dri­ving force in writ­ing then.

Another rein­ven­tion then. We moved to Colorado.   If I couldn’t write, per­haps I could take pic­tures to feed my cre­ative need.  Slowly, I poured money into it. And time, oh by god, I poured time into it.  And I got a lit­tle bet­ter, but then I hit a road­block.  I didn’t have the vision that truly great pho­tog­ra­pher did. I didn’t have the patience to wait for the light, day in, day out, until the clouds looked just right on the moun­tain­scape.   I couldn’t afford the lenses to get close enough to wildlife with­out scar­ing it off.

And then I lost my job again in a lay­off.  I had been prepar­ing to rein­vent myself as a Portland res­i­dent, but now I had to return to the pre­vi­ous self-​​version of “resource­ful unem­ployed nerd.”  I didn’t mind at first.  It gave me time to try and break down that road­block in pho­tog­ra­phy.  I started to enter­tain the idea that maybe I could get through my writ­ing blocks and get back to who I was then, because it had given me so much plea­sure at the time.  And thanks to Steve Eley, I was able to restore my iden­tity as an editor.

I don’t mind being unem­ployed most of the time, unless I try to pic­ture the future.  That’s when things spi­ral out of con­trol.  Because there’s no pre­dict­ing my future right now.

My iden­tity is as shift­ing as the sands of the Mojave.  The only thing I’ve truly mas­tered is an abil­ity to adapt to less-​​than-​​ideal cir­cum­stances.  To find some plea­sure in life even if things are not per­fect.   To put up with it all.  Sometimes I don’t want to though.  Sometimes, I just want suc­cess.   I want all that energy and effort and rein­ven­tion to amount to some­thing.  I want some­one with power and respon­si­b­lity to see what I have done and say “I can put this per­son to work at a great goal” and I want to feel like I can adopt that goal as my own.

Because under­neath it all is a search for per­sonal great­ness. I don’t want to be good, or ade­quate.  I have that drive that some ath­letes have to keep push­ing, keep search­ing myself until I find what it is that I am meant to be doing.

That’s why being unem­ployed hurts so much.  It focuses me on those things at which I am not great.  It makes inescapable my fail­ures to achieve that.

But I can no more eas­ily give up my drive for great­ness than I can give up my need to breathe.  It’s rooted deep and I wouldn’t even know how to stop want­ing it.  If I give up, or set­tle, that part of me will stran­gle me with dis­con­tent.  The drive is lit­er­ally dri­ving me with men­tal whips and curses.  Do bet­ter you dumb, fat piece of shit, it says.  “Accomplish some­thing that mat­ters.  Put the fuck­ing video game down and make some­thing of yourself. ”

And I do my best to lis­ten, because I don’t have a choice not to.  All I can do is hope that the drive will do more good for me one day than harm.  Right now, I’m not mov­ing fast enough or in the right direc­tions and it’s giv­ing me a beat­ing like you wouldn’t believe.  And by it, of course I mean me.  I know that it’s me hold­ing the whip, it’s me that insults myself and calls me names try­ing to moti­vate me like you would a stub­born mule.  I know that.  Doesn’t make it any eas­ier though.

Well…

So there’s a deeply per­sonal look inside my psy­chol­ogy.  I wish I could say this has been cathar­tic to write, but I sus­pect it will drive away friends and poten­tial employ­ers just to read all this.  It’s prob­a­bly been a bad idea to write it.  But it’s the longest thing I have writ­ten in six months, so screw it.  Being  hon­est is more impor­tant than get­ting a job.  If you dis­agree with that, then I don’t want to work for you anyway.

Where Should We Go?

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Sarah and I are leav­ing for a much-​​needed cheap vaca­tion on Saturday.  The only thing is… we don’t really know where we’re going.  We’ve dis­cussed sev­eral dif­fer­ent options, but none of them are per­fect.  Here are the options:

The Desert Road Trip

This is the default trip.  This involves load­ing up every­thing in our car and aim­ing for Flagstaff.  This is a photography-​​oriented trip.  We’d visit many great desert scenes such as Lower Antelope Canyon, the Grand Canyon, the Petrified Forest, and so on.  We’d spend 9 days roam­ing the American Southwest look­ing for beau­ti­ful images, meet­ing inter­est­ing peo­ple, and gen­er­ally soak­ing up the atmos­phere.  It woudl be very relaxed and leisurely.

The New York Crazy Trip

We’ve also con­sid­er­ing fly­ing into New York for the week.  I’ve never been, and I’ve been get­ting inter­view calls for design com­pa­nies based there.  If I get a follow-​​up inter­view with one com­pany, I would need to go, so why not com­bine job-​​seeking with plea­sure?  Airfaire deals are right under our bud­get of $1500, so we’d have to eat inex­pen­sively while there to keep from going through our cash too quickly, but we could make it work.

“Lets Go Into Debt Again” Trip

I’ve been watch­ing the prices to Paris, London, Barcelona, and Costa Rica for a cou­ple of weeks.  Unfortunately, none have dropped quite to the lev­els that they would need to for us to be able to jus­tify it with­out ring­ing up credit card debt, which is not some­thing you real­lyw ant to do when you’re unem­ployed.  Vacations are impor­tant, but you still have to come home at the end of them and deal with your finances.   So if a vaca­tion pack­age to Paris mirac­u­lously turned up for $1500, you can bet that’s where we would go.  But that’s not likely to happen.

Something else?

Got a wild idea of what we can do for 9 days for under $1500?  Preferrably some­thing not bone-​​cold?  Drop us a line with your sug­ges­tion.  I have no idea where we are going to be on Sunday.  I’m excited to find out though.  And if you have ideas for the Desert Trip about things I should pho­to­graph, let me know.  I don’t really know the area that well.

…Trials and Tribulations Continued

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My sta­tus for my unem­ploy­ment claim  finally updated today to tell me that I won’t be paid for the time period because it is my “wait­ing week.”  Whatever the hell that means.  I thought the fact that it took them 2 weeks of screw­ing around to even get all my infor­ma­tion processed equaled my “wait­ing week.” So one month of no income.  Thanks, The System!  The System is just grrreat!

I think I’ll work on get­ting my info loaded up with The Creative Group (temp agency) and count that as a job con­tact and be done with it for the week.  I get to ask for another pay­ment on Sunday.  Let’s hope this one actu­ally gets paid.

Thankfully I don’t have to worry about the state actu­ally pay­ing me in March, as I’ve got a good bit of free­lance lined up for then.  So I’m not going to let this get me down for long.   I’m back on my feet and dust­ing myself off and throw­ing myself back into the work.

A Curious Phenomenon

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I’ve noticed some­thing unusual in my time unem­ployed.  Incredibly expen­sive stuff breaks all at once.  It’s almost as if your pos­ses­sions have been wait­ing for the moment you can­not afford their upkeep and then, snap–broken.

Our Saturn just had brake work done, had a bat­tery replaced, and now it’s not so good at start­ing, so I’m going to throw in some fuel injec­tor cleaner.  Hopefully that will finally make it pos­si­ble for Sarah to drive the damned thing.

The Alero needs rotors replaced, the whole brakes deal.  Also, I went and got myself stuff in Rocky Mountain National Park and had to be towed back­wards out of some snow.  I hooked up the tow line and couldn’t find any­thing really solid.  So I hooked it up to a bar that runs along the axel.  I’m not 100% sure what the name for it is, but I bent the hell out of it.  I’m tak­ing the car to be fixed right now, but they wouldn’t even give me an idea of how much it would cost to replace that metal bar, but they did say it can­not be replaced on its own.

I haven’t had to do this much car main­te­nance in years.  Perhaps it feels like every­thing is break­ing all at once because it’s such a pinch on us to have shell out hun­dreds out of sav­ings to pay for the repairs.  Unfortunately, not hav­ing two decent run­ning cars isn’t an option around here, espe­cially if I might end up ulti­mately com­mut­ing to Denver.  Sarah  once sat down and fig­ured out the bus route to where she works, and despite it being a 20 minute car ride, it’s a FOUR HOUR bus ride.  So not really an option there.

I would not mind one day hav­ing one car that we use on the week­ends, and then tak­ing some kind of pub­lic trans­porta­tion the rest of the time.  It’s one of the appeals of Portland to me.  At this rate, we’ll never live there though.  I have wanted to live there for so long, and so badly, but fate itself has repeat­edly con­spired against us.

You start to feel like the world is kick­ing you when you’re down after a while.  The hits just keep on com­ing.  I keep get­ting back up and putting my shoul­der to the wheel again.  But it’s not easy.  I’m lack­ing very much in hope.

It has now been 9 days since I filed for a pay­ment with unem­ploy­ment.  I still have not received a dime.  I call the cen­ter 20–30 times a day, but it is always busy.  I have not got­ten through inside of busi­ness hours when a real human could talk to me.  It’s not that I’m on hold.  I can’t even get through to be put on hold.  Local news reports that peo­ple have spent up to 4 hours wait­ing on hold to talk with a real human being.

I think I’ve got some projects lined up for March so I won’t have to rely on unem­ploy­ment.  At least my clients can pay promptly 95% of the time.

The Trials and Tribulations of the Unemployed in Colorado

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I filed for my first unem­ploy­ment pay­ment a lit­tle over a week ago (Sunday, to be pre­cise).  I have since waited not-​​so-​​patiently for the money to arrive in my account.  As of writ­ing this post, I have yet to see a dime of it.

I have called repeat­edly to get a sta­tus from the auto­mated sys­tem over the past week.  Each time it sim­ply says that my pay­ment hasn’t processed yet.  It’s no sur­prise that the pay­ment sys­tem is under siege right now.  Thanks to the Bush Crash, we’ve got more peo­ple out of work than we have had for  quite a long time even in a rel­a­tively sta­ble state like Colorado.   Idiotically, there’s no way to check your pay­ment sta­tus online, so I am forced to call the sys­tem over and over again.  Today, I can’t even get through.  I want to know if there is a prob­lem so I can sort it out imme­di­ately. But I have no way of knowing.

It shouldn’t take a week to process a pay­ment.  Not in this era of auto­mated deposits.  People are rely­ing on that money to pay their bills and feed their chil­dren.  In our case, we have a lit­tle sav­ings to get by on while we wait, but each time they do this, our buffer against what I call “The Cardboard Box Life”  gets a lit­tle slim­mer.  And we’re bet­ter off than most.  I can’t imag­ine how a sin­gle par­ent is han­dling this system.

Filing for unem­ploy­ment in the first place is hum­bling and embarass­ing.  I felt humil­i­ated to do it, and every­thing about the process treats you like a sus­pect in a crim­i­nal case.  The least they could do is make sure we receive our pay­ments in a timely fash­ion.  We’re not talk­ing about walking-​​around money here.  We’re talk­ing about rent and prescriptions.

Colorado gov­ern­ment, get your act together.  Speed up the pay­ment process.  Use some of that stim­u­lus money to hire some of the unem­ployed to bol­ster your ranks in the depart­ment.  Do some­thing.  A lot of peo­ple are hurt­ing out there, and you are fail­ing them.  You can do better.

Hopefully I’ll land this free­lance gig for March and I won’t need to col­lect unem­ploy­ment for the month of March.  It’s ridicu­lous how few jobs I am find­ing lately for which to apply.   Again, I say to you my most excel­lent read­ers, if you need a web­site built, or know some­one who does, please con­tact me.  (Yep, turned that post into a whor­ing post.  Many of my posts are going to end this way I am afraid).

Why So Silent?

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You may have noticed that I don’t blog much any­more except to share the occa­sional pic­ture or pile of links.  When I do blog, it’s typ­i­cally a very short entry about some other project I’ve done.  If you look back at my old blog, you’ll find a very dif­fer­ent blog­ger.  What changed?

When I built this site, I built it with the inten­tion of being a pro­fes­sional.  I was going to con­duct myself in the most pro­fes­sional way pos­si­ble, try­ing not to ever com­plain, and intend­ing for my entries to be some­thing of sub­stance, rather than fluff.  The truth is that there are a mil­lion inter­est­ing blog­gers out there.  I got tired of just adding to the noise with my inane bab­bling.  I decided that I wouldn’t say any­thing if I didn’t feel that it was some­thing truly interesting.

I’ve done this before in my fic­tion writ­ing too.  I resolved to only write the best things I could. In both sit­u­a­tions, the real result has been that I don’t write much of any­thing at all.

There are two ways I could choose to look at this.  One is that I sim­ply don’t have any­thing pro­found or inter­est­ing to say.  I imag­ine a few of my friends would agree to this if pressed on it.  The other way is that when you put pres­sure on your­self to only do great things, then you sti­fle your­self so much that you don’t do any­thing at all.  Rather than attempt­ing to do the best you can, you set the expec­ta­tion of doing bet­ter than you can, which doesn’t just hap­pen.  You do bet­ter than you usu­ally can by doing lots and lots and some­times hav­ing a breakthrough.

I’m going through a rather early mid-​​life cri­sis right now.  Probably an accu­rately mid-​​life given the aver­age lifes­pan of men in my fam­ily.  I’ve been laid off from two jobs in the last year.  The last one was a job I thought I could do for a very long time.  It gave me pre­cisely the free­doms I wanted from an employer, and while the stress was at times rather high, I didn’t feel trapped in the posi­tion, which was a wel­come change after some of the jobs I’ve worked.

I’ve toyed with try­ing to go free­lance writer/​designer/​photographer, given that my wife pro­vides our insur­ance now.  Again, I have to set these goals aside because it falls upon me to pro­vide our insur­ance ben­e­fits so that Sarah can go to school full time to receive her teach­ing degree.  This will pro­vide her with great ben­e­fits and a ful­fill­ing career.  I’m in full sup­port of it.  It just means that ulti­mately, I _​have_​ to get another job. Which I have been look­ing for, of course, but the pres­sure wasn’t on then like it is now.

The health sys­tem in this coun­try is pri­mar­ily respon­si­ble for killing my entre­pre­neur­ial spirit.  If you go ANY period of time with­out health insur­ance in the U.S., all of your med­ical con­di­tions become labeled “prex­ist­ing” which means that when you DO get health insur­ance, they won’t cover any­thing they think you were sick from before you got cov­er­age.  And even if you have insur­ance, and apply for pri­vate insur­ance, you get turned down.  Why?  Because you have prex­ist­ing con­di­tions and they would actu­ally have to spend money on your health. The only peo­ple who qual­ify for med­ical cov­er­age are those who are so healthy they don’t need it.

No mid­dle class American can afford basic med­ical neces­si­ties like pre­scrip­tions with­out health insur­ance.  I have to take a cou­ple of med­ica­tions every day.  For instance, I take an acid reflux med­ica­tion.  Without it, I become rather vio­lently ill.  Imagine throw­ing up in you mouth.  Now imag­ine doing that all day long, for your entire life.  That’s my acid reflux.  There’s no cure.  All I can do is take lit­tle pills the rest of my life so my stom­ach acids don’t boil over and give me throat cancer.

Me and the stom­ach don’t get along very well thanks to this.

With insur­ance, these pills cost me $20 a month.  Reasonable.  It prob­a­bly costs the man­u­fac­turer 25 cents to make a month’s worth.  However, should I go with­out health insur­ance, that same pre­scrip­tion becomes around $300 a month.

I take a generic, which shall remain name­less.  It’s $10 a month on a health insur­ance plan.  Without insur­ance, it’s $150 a month.

To put this in per­spec­tive, I lived in the ground floor of a small house with two very cramped bed­rooms and a liv­ing room which can barely take a couch and a TV at the same time.  My rent is $1000 a month.  If I were to not have health insur­ance, two of my pre­scrip­tions would be equal to nearly half my rent.

And that’s not even tak­ing con­sid­er­a­tion of Sarah’s med­ica­tions for asthma.

Even with­out the risk of cat­a­strophic health issues that could cost hun­dreds of thou­sands of dol­lars to be treated, just basic health main­te­nance stuff, the stuff that makes me not vomit blood all day and makes sure that Sarah can breathe would put us on the street.  We’re two intel­li­gent, col­lege edu­cated adults, and we’d be forced to choose between pay­ing the rent and pay­ing for our med­ica­tions.  And because I don’t like the taste of stom­ach acid, I would prob­a­bly choose homelessness.

Good qual­ity of health should be a fun­da­men­tal right.  I would gladly pay more in taxes if they burned our med­ical sys­tem to the ground and replaced it with one that didn’t have out­ra­geous rules of prex­ist­ing con­di­tions.  I’ll PAY for insur­ance.  Do you hear me, you con­ser­v­a­tive lib­er­tar­ian ass­holes?   But the sys­tem is flawed, and it’s keep­ing me from build­ing amaz­ing things.  Countless oth­ers are chained to jobs they hate, filled to the brim with ideas for ways to change the world, busi­nesses to launch, but they can’t leave their employer for fear of  trip­ping and break­ing a toe and receiv­ing a $5000 emer­gency room bill.

Our sys­tem crip­ples us finan­cially.  It’s either be crip­pled phys­i­cally or give up every­thing to pay the bills.

If you don’t believe in uni­ver­sal health­care, if you think all peo­ple don’t deserve it, then fuck you.  Fuck you, fuck you, FUCK YOU.  I hope you lose your job and then have a health prob­lem and your COBRA insur­ance is more than half your unem­ploy­ment pay­ments so you can’t afford it.  I hope your child devel­ops a cough late at night that won’t go away, and you lie awake in your bed lis­ten­ing to it, doing the math over and over again about how you can pay for a doctor’s visit and still feed the fam­ily.  FUCK YOU.  You have no human­ity and I hope you con­tract leprosy.

So to answer the title in my post above?  Why so silent?  Because I’m so angry, when I start to write, this is what comes out.  I’m so angry with the world right now, all I want to do is scream with rage at every­one around me.  Capitalism has failed us and the coun­try is crum­bling all around us and some ass­hole on TV is whip­ping up fury directed at peo­ple who got raped by uneth­i­cal bankers who might get some help so they don’t have to live in a fuck­ing card­board box.  That man is a pop­ulist piece of shit.  Many of us are angry right now, so angry that I worry about what hap­pens when some­one comes along and finds a way to tap into that anger for power.  Power derived from the anger of the peo­ple is too dan­ger­ous for even good men and women to wield.  It back­fires every time.  It ends with streets slick with blood and heads in bas­kets.  With peo­ple lined up with gun bar­rels to the backs of their skulls.   I don’t want that in my future.

I just want to set out on my own and inno­vate and cre­ate a busi­ness with­out hav­ing the taste of stom­ach acid in my mouth from dawn to dusk.  That’s all I want.

I’m done being “pro­fes­sional” here.  I’ll cre­ate a new pro­fes­sional per­sona else­where.   Because if I don’t find an out­let for my frus­tra­tion, I will burn up like a microwaved potato in tin foil.  I’m not going to be quiet any­more.  If that keeps you from hir­ing me for a job, then I didn’t want to work for you anyway.

The Angry Bastard is back.

Diamonds in the Sky: Free Hard SF Anthology

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The anthol­ogy of astron­omy sto­ries I’ve been work­ing on for the last year or two, off and on, is finally com­pleted and avail­able: Diamonds in the Sky.

The anthol­ogy is free and you can go there now and read the sto­ries, most of which are orig­i­nal but a few of which are reprints from Analog or Asimov’s. Contributors include Hugo and Nebula award win­ning authors. Each story focuses on one or two key ideas from astron­omy and should have some edu­ca­tional value, but are hope­fully first and fore­most sim­ply enter­tain­ing and good qual­ity sto­ries. The project was funded by the National Science Foundation as a pub­lic edu­ca­tion and out­reach effort, and I’d like to reach as many read­ers as pos­si­ble so please spread the word!

via Mike Brotherton: SF Writer.

I did the web­site for Diamonds over a year ago.  This one has been a long time in the works, but it’s now finally live!

Federations Table of Contents

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Federations | John Joseph Adams.

John has posted the table of con­tents to Federations, the anthol­ogy to which I have made my lat­est sale.  Excuse me while I get a lit­tle starstruck and nostalgic.

The first author I ever shared with my father was also my first sci­ence fic­tion author.  When I was around 8 or 9, I stum­bled across a lit­tle book in my grade school library called Dragonsong by Anne McCaffery.   To this day, it is one of less than half a dozen books I have read more than once, an honor I reserve only for the most impor­tant titles in my life or, books I had to read for more than one class through my long edu­ca­tion. One of the first books I ever bought with my own money was an omnibus of the Dragonriders tril­ogy.    The first (and as far as I know, only) fan let­ter I wrote as a child was to Anne McCaffery.  I think she even wrote back.

My Dad and I read every sin­gle McCaffery book she pub­lished, pretty much.  She was one of those authors who the library sys­tem man­aged to get new books for, oddly enough.  Whereas I was mostly stuck read­ing Golden Age SF in the bow­els of the local library (lit­er­ally, the SF sec­tion was in the base­ment, in the back cor­ner), the new books shelf seemed to always have a McCaffery.

My Dad and I didn’t talk SF very much, but most of the time we did, it was regard­ing the lat­est McCaffery book.  We had long dis­cus­sions when [spoil­ers] Pern turned out to be a lost human colony of space far­ers.  [/​spoilers]  Later books, I haven’t been on top of.  Since her son started writ­ing them, I haven’t read them, not because of any rea­son other than lack of time, and well, nobody to talk about them with.

In one of the last con­ver­sa­tions I had with my Dad, when he was in the hos­pi­tal the day we learned that he wasn’t going to get any bet­ter and that it was time was hos­pice care (a med­ical term meain­ing ‘give up and die grace­fully’), I signed a copy of All Star Zeppelin Adventure Stories for him, telling him that he could beat the can­cer like a pulp hero beats up Nazis.     He stood up, all 90-​​some pounds of what was left of him, and gave me the strongest hug I think he ever gave me and he said, “I’m proud of you son.”  I must have acted sur­prised because he said, “I’ve always been proud of you.”

That was prob­a­bly the most emo­tional moment of my life, and will remain so for a very long time. At least until I get to tell my own child the same thing,

Today, I feel like I earned that pride a lit­tle more, and I know that if he were here, he would be as excited about me being in this book as I am.

Comcast Treated Me Right

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I’m in the process of cut­ting what bills I can.  Cable tele­vi­sion is one of those things that we con­sider a lux­ury, not really nec­es­sary to sur­vival.  We watch a lot of TV via ser­vices like Hulu now anyway.

So I called Comcast and after a few notices about how I shouldn’t worry about the dig­i­tal con­ver­sion and a cou­ple of menu options,  I got a very cour­te­ous sup­port per­son.  I told her I wanted to can­cel my TV por­tion of my pack­age but keep the internet.

Sir, may I ask why?”

Well, unfor­tu­nately, I was laid off from my job on Friday, and I need to cut costs as best I can.”

I’m so sorry to hear that,” she said, sound­ing really quite gen­uine.   She looked at my account and made a sug­ges­tion that I should  go to a basic pack­age which would be about $16 a month.

How much of a total sav­ings would that be, I’m kind of bad at math while on the phone,” I said.

One moment,” she answered.  But before should could give me the total, she added, “You’ve been a good Comcast cus­tomer.  I’m going to lower your high speed to $19.95, but only for six months.  So your total bill would be $40.93.”

Thank you so much,” I said.  “Hopefully I will find a new job in the next six months.”

I know it’s hard out there,” she said. Then we pro­ceeded to have a chat about her son-​​in-​​law look­ing for a job as well, and then she told me that I really should watch American Idol tonight, and seemed excited that she had saved me the abil­ity to do so.  I laughed politely and thanked her.

The first part was nice, noth­ing unusual. Just a reten­tion spe­cial­ist doing her job.  But when she took down my high speed inter­net to $19.95 for 6 months, just to help me out, that’s where I was impressed.  All told, my cable bill went from $106.23  to $40.93, for a sav­ings of  $65.30  for the next six months.  And we just lose some TV chan­nels we weren’t watch­ing much of  anyway.

Thanks, Comcast.  You’ve made my day a lot bet­ter by hav­ing done this. I appre­ci­ate it, and if you folks would just stop mess­ing with BitTorrent traf­fic, you would have a life­long customer.