Wednesday, February 28, 2007

file under: of cumpleaños

today my better half gains a bit of ground in the age race.

the first time she came to nyc for a visit, i told the waiter at that restaurant on india row that it was her birthday. that was when they played the famous "happy birthday, everybody" song on the cheap overhead speakers. i will always remember the little swivelling disco light that was on, and the clunking noise it made as the different colored lights rotated around and around.

clunk clunk clunk

happy birthday, N. growing older with you is fun!

Monday, February 26, 2007

file under: warp factor five




changes to one of the subway lines has created some local buzz recently, mostly over a re-activated station that's been closed and/or used for conductor training for the last few years. none of that really excites me, but i do love the "journey into space" feel this youtube vid conveys.

(originally covered by our local mavens of transporculturation, spacing wire, btw)

Saturday, February 24, 2007

file under: geekout in the multiverse

mark borchardt

bubbles

it occurred to me yesterday morning that mark borchardt could easily be related to bubbles, and that american movie in general forms a kind of unbounded, milwaukee-by-way-of-nova-scotia cultural continuity with the trailer park boys that's eerily reminiscent of those heady crisis on infinite earths days. worlds colliding!

[and here's a totally unforseen score for our whoknows whatpop fans out there. nice!]

Friday, February 23, 2007

file under: late nite edition for fellow night shifters

i will say this about my upcoming transition back to the daylight world: no more "beers for breakfast", which will be a little sad.

have a good weekend, everybody.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

file under: wishing well

MA was one of the people who went to that fabled private school of my youth. we didn't really know each other - we hung out in different circles, had no common "hobbies" that would have coordinated our trajectories, etc. he had 2 older brothers, which, in my mind, meant he must've inherited the benefits of their own personal struggles and realizations to some extent, even if that came mostly in the form of hand-me-down clothes (plus books, movies and music, i would suspect). at least that's how i explain my lasting impression of him being just a bit cooler than the rest of us.

he ran with the track team for a while when we were 8th graders. after a week, he quit coming to the practices. still, he gained my respect by running in black chuck taylor hi-tops and spitting a lot. i remember wondering if he was a smoker or something; he spit so much! it was funny - kind of anachronistic, like a 50's thing (especially with the chucks and buzzcut he was sporting at the time).

a year or two later, we would have a first period history class together. i came in one morning to find him with headphones on, listening to the story of the clash on his walkman. i didn't know much about them at the time, but seeing that tape case on the desk (combined with seeing another state of mind over the previous summer) somehow helped flip a switch in my brain. punk rock (via college radio) would enter my life shortly.

after i left the academy for the big public school on the westside, JMS would sometimes update me on what people were up to. he once mentioned that MA was in some kind of disciplinary trouble because he was growing facial hair in direct opposition to the academy's dress code. that's about as rebellious as any of us were in those days.

a few years after that, while i was attending my first semester of college in san antonio, some friends hopped in my tiny car and we went up to austin for a pixie's concert (they were touring to support trompe le monde at the time, although i was only familiar with bossanova at that point). in the crush of ecstatic college students pressed together near the stage, MA and i unexpectedly bumped into each other.

"what are you doing here?" he yelled in my ear, to which i could only yell back "seeing the fucking PIXIES, dude!!!" we both made the fuck yeah face and turned our attention elsewhere.

many years later, an alumni newsletter from the academy (which still finds its way to my mom's mailbox to this very day, surprisingly) mentioned that MA had a degree in mathematics and was trying to make it as a writer in santa fe. having sucked so badly at math for most of my life (yet finding it very fascinating to read about, so long as i didn't have to demonstrate a talent for it), i was admittedly jealous of such an update. he still seemed just a little bit cooler than the rest of us.

not long after that, JMS told me that he had been shot and killed during a new year's celebration in austin, apparently the result of a gun being used to ring in the new year. he and his wife had just had a child, from what i remember. he had just turned 30. i couldn't think of anything more tragic, and the news weighed me down for a long time afterwards.

i don't know why i was recently compelled to google the names of people i knew from the academy who've died, but doing so returned a web page dedicated to MA's memory. next to a photo, his mother has written about the things she'll remember him by.

i can't deny that there was a time (not long after 9/11) that i thought i should have died rather than him. during that time, when that acrid, burnt smell permeated nyc for months and months, lasting deep into the winter, there were a lot of people i thought should still be alive instead of me. i don't necessarily feel that way anymore, but MA remains somebody i wish we could have back.

Monday, February 19, 2007

file under: conspiracies in lower case

i swear, at some point i'm going to create a blog devoted solely to all of the weird coincidences occurring these days.

for instance: having a bit of extra time at work last night, i googled the names of 3 people i knew from my short-lived private school days who've died tragically over the last few years.

i discovered that the one i probably knew the least, RE, had a scholarship fund set up in her honor. what a great tribute, no?

imagine my mild surprise, then, at seeing her name on the list of patients in the hospital tonight. granted, it's a common enough name; but that timing is wicked.

i'm not trying to suggest that these things happen more in my life than anyone else's, or that they're anything more than random weirdnesses. but at the risk of coming across as a total paranoiac, keeping track of them all might be fun.

possibly even... illuminating.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

file under: more crisis talk

[a restrained patient in one of the isolation rooms calling out to the counselor standing in the doorway:]

come clo-ser!
come clo-ser!
come clo-ser!
come clo-ser!
come clo-ser!
come clo-ser!

nights like this will end soon, but i don't want to completely forget the little moments that made up a lot of my time here.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

file under: dream of leaving minimum security

i'm walking along labyrinthine grey hallways in some kind of jail/detention center, avoiding all of the "cells" (no bars, just office-like doors with room numbers beside them on the wall). i eventually find an unmarked metal door, with no doorknob or handle. i kick at it firmly to get it open. a cement staircase comes into view. i head down the stairs, but am not sure what floor i'm on or whether i've set off an alarm.

one floor down and i walk into a wide lobby with the words "main level" painted in black near the ceiling. there is a lot of sunlight coming through windows and sliding glass doors, with people busily walking in and out. a man with a HUGE camera is positioned just outside the exit, taking pictures of everyone who leaves.

expecting to be tackled by cops at any second, i set down a metal cafeteria tray i've been carrying as non-descriptly as possible (fearing all the while that it will identify me as an inmate), and begin to stroll very casually towards the exit. i can hear the shutter of the big camera near the door clicking away, but no one stops me or sounds an alarm. getting out of there takes forever.

once outside, the day is bright (late afternoon?) and it looks like it's just rained. KW from work is walking away from the building as well, and we joke about my jailbreak. i'm wondering if there's a bus or something i can hop on to get further away, but i'm not familiar with this city (austin?) and can't figure out where the bus stops are.

seriously, though: escaping is so much easier when your dream doesn't involve orange jumpsuits.

Friday, February 16, 2007

file under: a question to the world

where is katie handmaker these days?

Thursday, February 15, 2007

file under: almost famous

while it may not be the most riveting account on record, it's still somewhat gratifying to see one's very own street profiled in a free weekly.

it helps alleviate some of the insecurity that comes with living in the vaguely square, vaguely suburban-feeling fringe of the the city's urban core. it makes owning up to being a midtowner just a little bit easier.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

file under: frozen hearts club

as it is in toronto:



so shall it be in abq:



but then, what part of north america hasn't been assaulted by snowdrifts recently?

Monday, February 12, 2007

file under: risen from the grave!

i'm trying to be back, but there's not much to say (other than the fact that, as NB mentioned earlier, i start a new job shortly that will allow me to bask in the sunlight of our approaching spring).

honestly, i'm a little intimidated by this new job. it's going to be busier than my current situation, and in an area i'm not too familiar with. learning curve ahead! shit.

but it will be nice to walk amongst the rest of humanity for a change. i guess the night life won't go on forever after all.