Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Seagulls

Today, for the first time in my life I met three wild seagulls up close, very close, perhaps only 6 feet separated us. These seagulls were very large, much bigger than I ever would have expected. I had stopped the car to watch them wrestle with a take-out bag from McDonald's. All that was left were french fries. Oh how they hungered for those fries! They took turns shaking the bag with their beaks, sharp yanking as well, till the fries spilled out to be immediately gobbled. Several minutes elapsed during this episode, time for me to marvel how they seemed to respond to my attempt at loving bird talk. They seemed calmed somehow. They were thrilling company in their white finery so proud and strong; They must be smart too; they'd flown inland from San Pedro at least eight miles to a large parking lot in South Los Angeles. Every day, in Winter especially, fog rolls in from the ocean, fog formed by cold ocean air meeting air going south from the desert on the other side of the San Gabriel mountains. I'm so happy guessing nobody hunts them, or chases them, or tries to trap them, or poison them. The only violence in south LA is gang related, and gangs mostly kill each other not birds they may not almost literally ever actually see, let alone watch and thank God for.


Barry


 

Monday, December 26, 2005

Decorations Seasonal

(excerpt from my email)


There have been numerous times I've wanted to chat with you in response to one or another of your writings but sloth overtook me, I guess. Or, the little nasty voice that mutters, 'She doesn't care what you think.'  Ha ha ha ha.


I sort of miss a few of the absentees who've fled to Blogspot whatever. How could they, some of them, have been so chatty and personable, and now they're 'The Disappeared'? I feel quite cynical about it, almost to the point of going into attack mode. I'll try to restrain myself.


Happy New Year! There's a most odd, rich-looking two-storey home in Hancock Park, LA (Near the La Brea tar pits) that has the number(s) 2006 seven feet high on the lawn, beside which is a Black couple in a reindeer-drawn sled dressed as Santa. The place is all white 'snow' and 'ice.' All the lights are white. On the roof are three giant letters F  M  P and in small writing within the border of each letter are words spelling out
                      


                             FEED      MY    PEOPLE     


In daylight the rest of the year the only decorations are twelve, lifesize, statues (reproductions) of Michaelangelo's David, nude, spaced along and around the driveway. Some of those figures, today and for weeks, are, have been, wearing Santa hats. (Could it be the home of Larry Flynt?  ( Ha ha ha ha ha)


Barry


 

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Presents, Surprises, CHRISTMAS!

The tiny gold chain with a tiny pearl circled in gold looked almost invisible in the box I bought it in as a gift for my wife. Yet, when my wife emerged from the bedroom wearing her Christmas present along with a glorious smile, chain and pearl looked utterly perfect.


On the 24th, earlier, we took the three kids to Knott's Berry farm, for their amusements, rides, Disneyland competition, and took a ton of pictures  even ended up with a polaroid of us underground in a mine traversing rapids in a log boat, for which they charged us plenty. But the shot is precious as we're all lined up in the boat looking oh so pleased with ourselves risking life and limb in an underground gold mine.


Today our 5 year old rode his bike excellently, but we had less luck with the 3 1/2 year old on his bike which we'd assembled from a kit that came in a long box. It was hell to assemble; we'd weakened when we bought it because at the time our waggon was so crammed full of presents, including the middle boy's bike fully assembled, that the slim, long, boxed bike parts was irresistible. The whole bike might work if I tip the seat a bit more backwards so the peddles are more in front of him to push on.  Or, we could pretty much give up for a few months and force feed him.


What my oldest son sees in having an iPod with video beats me. But upon opening the present, and he found it had video, I feared he'd have a heart attack brought on by bold prayers answered. I don't get it. He'll no doubt elucidate me.


Other presents included truffles, ham, money, surprise greeting cards, and endearments long hungered for. Christmas can be the season for what's longed for and finally delivered; Or, for stretching our miserliness even as far as loving everyone even if only for a day. Enough Christmassess, and therefore enough practice, one just might become fully human. I can dream can't I?


Love to all,


Barry


 

Friday, December 16, 2005

Voting

Yesterday morning I experienced a flood of emotion watching and hearing the news of Iraqi voting progessing well with a comparatively low level of violence. Polling places in America for Iraqis reported on television featured speeches of gratitude for American sacrifices spoken by exiled Iraqis. If this bloody war could end with us being able to say the phrase, "Democratic Iraq" without exaggeration, a catastrophe might be turned into a splendid victory.


Barry

Monday, December 5, 2005

Attempting to 'enter' Photos

I'm trying to enter Thanksgiving pictures but all the clicking required defeats me. The picture that might show up is my wife and son, the latter now nearly four.


Barry


Later Gator.....If you can get the photo bigger,


as invited by AOL, you're a better clicker than I am.... 

Cell Phone Advertising

They can advertise, T-Mobile and so on, Cingularity etcetera, but the fact remains that by far the best Cell Phone, Wireless company, is Verizon. Verizon Wireless. My family has three phones, one a camera phone. We chatter away all month, all three of us, and I'm delighted to report that each month we fall 100 minutes short of our Hours allotted. Another thing I like is how quickly our phones recharge. The camera phone takes a bit longer of course.


My wife looks so cute on her camera phone. She took some photos of the giant freeways of LA, took them through our windshield. I sent copies to my daughter marked, "LA cement," and "More LA Cement." What else could I do? She asked, after asking me to be Best Man at her wedding some time in the next year, to call her on the phone and to NOT write a letter. The list of people not crazy about my serpentine writing is getting longer and longer. Shuuuush, writing should pack a punch.


Barry


P.S. When she asked me if I would be Best Man I thought for a nano second then replied, "Sure, that's a leading role."


 

Friday, December 2, 2005

Semi-retractions

"Ads are not an endorsement by the blog author."                             - Aol banner disclaimer.  


 


I'm impressed. You?    Barry 

Monday, November 28, 2005

Garrison Keiler, Lake Wobegon, Prairie Home Companion

You all know everything about Garrison Keillor. Not me, even though I ask and ask I get no cogent answer. It took years for me to get that the name, the place, and the 'Prairie' bit are really the same outfit. Sort of. I have a friend who lives in Brooklyn, actually Rockaway Point, aka Breezy Point, the same place having two zip codes. The identification must be complete: Keillor has three ID's, so he does too. He, my friend, and his wife do private recreations of skits done on Keillor's TV show (the one and only one on PBS, KCET in LA) and because of  this identification simply cannot, will not, did not, even tell me that his idol has a regular, Saturday night (?) TV show that lasts for two hours. 


Finally, by accident, when there was nothing else to watch, I stumbled upon KCET at night and there he was, Garrison Keillor in a conventional dark business suit, red tie and nice hair, rumbled a bit as if to deny he was just a business man. The sneak is probably in the biz of the Spirit. Oh, oh, oh the women! on his two hour show!  Women, black, and white, and really truly women, not carved from ice as manikins of the sort Hollywood and TV has conned itself into believing that's what we like because that's what they like in their hysterical hatred of all women, but especially women unself-conscious of their womanliness and who, when they sing it's not to do something to us, but simply to be with us.


That Prairie Home companion guy doesn't even have commercials as far as I could see. He did a take up of having a commercial but it was actually something else.


Here's a bit of his writing, copied from the back cover of his 'year 2001 book' Lake Wobegon Summer 1956..... a novel:


"I am stunned. I had no idea. God. A TYPEWRITER.


"The enormity of this gift is truly staggering; it's as if he gave me the keys to a new car. I promise myself that I will never think snotty things about Uncle Sugar's hair and his balloon butt ever again. I have lusted for a typewriter for so long. Grandpa is looking out the window of heaven, and Jesus is standing beside him. Grandpa says, 'Jesus, why did you give an Underwood typewriter to a boy who thinks dirty thoughts all thetime?'Jesus says,Well, we'll see what he does with it.' "


Not once since 1996 Online have I heard, read, any of the Keillor undertakings mentioned above. So, I mention them. In defiance I guess. Or as a plea for equal time.  I really, truly, don't know what to make of it all. I think I feel that the media, and my weakness in not resisting advertised media, has cheated me.  I want revenge.


Barry  


 


 


 

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Thanksgiving Reunion

My daughter, one of four, long lost to me, came to Thanksgiving Dinner, such as it was, and blew us all away with her tact, grace, humility, beauty, brains, wit, and sense of humor. 


Her half-brother who's nearly four went giddy with delight doing pratfalls, using bad language, and genuinely making a big pest of himself  but didn't annoy my daughter one bit; she seems to understand children perfectly even though she's so far childless and unmarried. She's still young however, so somewhere out there dwells a young man, single, who's gonna get a wife to die for. 


I think I have the toys to post photos here now so when I'm in the mood I'll post a photo of us all sitting in a row on the sofa. I hope Michael is pulling one of his funny faces.


Barry  

Thursday, November 24, 2005

A Pilgrim

The Pilgrims, who we honor today, were in effect the first Colonists. No Colonies, no States. No States, no United States of America. It helps me grasp the 'feel' of the period in which the Pilgrims arrived to remember that at the time of the Mayflower's arrival Shakespeare had been dead only four years. He lived, as everyone knows, in a time of extreme religious persecution. It is entirely possible, so says the recently published book on Shakespeare, Will In The World, that the first time Shakespeare walked into London he could very well have seen the murdered bodies, beheaded, strung up on the bridge crossing the Thames. Bodies of Catholics.


Whenever one gets misty eyed about Pilgrims some fiend, anti-sentimental, will blather on and on about the Pilgrim's persecution of the Indians, and the Indian's retaliation in raiding colonist's villages and taking children to Canada, children who later, as adults, refused to go 'Home.' 


Instead of sliding down that slippery path I want, at Thanksgiving 2005, to acknowledge a Pilgrim Minister who left for us his library, and half his property to found a college, a college that became a bastion of free speech, and that rarity even today, complete academic freedom. I've seen a bronze (?) statue of that minister, about life size, mounted on a stone pedestal in front of the college administration building. He looks young, thin, and expensively dressed. He died when he was only 31. The Pilgrims lived in perilous times. Pregnancy, for example, exacted a 50% death rate.


Our hearts should go out to the Pilgrims at least once a year: the rest of the year we can, if  we absolutely MUST, dwell on their bad politics, their supposed racism and religious extremism. We owe them plenty: in fact, almost everything.


Barry


Main Entry: Har·vard
Pronunciation:
'här-v&rd
Function: biographical name
John 1607-1638 American clergyman & benefactor; left his library and half his estate to college at "New Towne" (later Cambridge, Mass.); college named in his honor in 1639


Main Entry: pil·grim
Pronunciation:
'pil-gr&m
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Old French peligrin, fromLate Latin pelegrinus, alteration of Latin peregrinus foreigner, from peregrinus, adjective, foreign, from peregri abroad, from per through + agr-, ager land -- more at FOR, ACRE
1 : one who journeys in foreign lands : WAYFARER
2 : one who travels to a shrine or holy place as a devotee
3 capitalized : one of the English colonists settling at Plymouth in 1620


 


 


 

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Under the Weather

Okay, so Osama Bin Ladin found a way to bombard us with hurricanes. Keeps that up we'll get really mad.


The whole family is sick, some kind of bad cold, not the flu; temperatures are back to normal. Oldest son,10, insisted he go to school. My spirits are headed back to normal, so much so that I did a little jig when I saw the words on CNN, "WANTED: Tom Delay."  Ha ha ha ha. Texas Law ain't that somethin'.


Barry


 


 

Saturday, October 15, 2005

Genesis of Justice

I've almost finished Genesis of Justice by Alan M. Dershowitz, lawyer, Harvard Law School Professor, author, and occasional TV commentator. The book's title is astonishingly apt: the author traces the origin of our present legal system from the first book of the Bible to the Ten Commandments, and from there to Magna Carta, to the present day and our court system.


Frankly, I was totally ignorant of the true nature of the tawdry tales of incest, murder, sodomy, betrayal, fratricide, and argumentativeness with God, that is ever-present in Genesis.  On those few times I read a portion or two of this first book of the Bible I allowed myself to be fooled by the majestic tone of the prose while skimming what the words actually say; what I read must have been sanitized. Did Dershowitz, perhaps, come up with the true, accurate Jewish tales of horror? After all, it is their book.  When I studied Milton's Paradise Lost we were not told,even though the entire course was devoted to Milton, how selectively Milton chose to tell the story of expulsion from the Garden.


Oh well, I'm not much of a scholar, but from a fiction writing POV Dershowitz's studious exposition of what's really, truly in Genesis is an eye-opener. I'll have to write him a fan letter. (He gives where to write! Ha ha ha.)


Barry


 


 


 


 

Friday, October 14, 2005

Message Board Motive

All the writer's boards, professional and
otherwise, are virtually moribund because
of ceaseless personal attacks by messages
of hate from the dispossessed. In previous days
on AOL when there were volunteer, American writers with very good reading comprehension skills, and knowledge of the American vernacular, who could interpret accurately AOL's rules of TOS and CAT, there was no such roaming bands of 'killers,' whose only motive is to wreck the whole message board concept, and in the process even upset the financial maneuvering that is going on between Time Warner and MSN and the other players. AOL's reputation has never been lower
with educated writers most of whom have demonstrably
fled to other places on the Internet.

These marauding 'killers,' those who offer nothing except
their negative opinions about everyone other than themselves,
show by the barrenness of their messages of hate that they
are homeless, unloved, and suicidal.

Barry

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Viagra

>oh, lets not forget men of all ages beating down our door to get Viagra or Cialis... <


That does it: now I MUST say something about Viagra now that another (much admired) blogger has twice brought it up.


Am I alone in sensing some form of disapproval in the phraseology,"...beating down the door..."? I've claimed that women resent the mere existence of Viagra, as if the drug companies had committed yet another gross sin of greed, and humanity be damned.


My doctor seems bent on limiting me to six viagra pills per month. He suggested cutting each one in half. What I assume are illegal sellers of the drug charge $85 a year just to get started. There's apparently no limit to the number one can buy. Then there's a Canadian source I haven't explored yet.


The advent of viagra, advertised on the body of race cars for reasons so obvious it's embarrassing, and the semi-difficulty of acquiring the drug, has spurred a rennaisance of herbal and other types of aphrodisiacs.


Women, I suppose and guess, hate the notion that a drug will enable men to actually impale them minus all caring, foreplay and tenderness. Yet, simultaneously, if the man of the moment can't perform he may never climb up out of that well of disgrace. I've always feared first times, which mostly amounted to over-estimating the goal once up close and personal. But, just plain nerves do play a role sometimes. My first wife, not long before the wedding, took me to bed in her apartment in daylight. Everything went fine. I was in love. But why was there blood? She was a virgin? She'd been put up to it by another woman to make sure I was as good as I looked?  Or, she was so naive she didn't know she still had her period?


Is this talk gonna be taken down by those folks in India? They sure follow a quite strange moral code. Take that guy who literally rolls, horizontal, thousands of miles, then his entourage collects money for his pains? By most western standards that's just plain flatout immoral. We should talk: this morning again (October 13) our newspaper front page has still more - God help us - on the huge dimensions ofthe Catholic priest scandal.


More later:  gotta run.


Barry


 


 


 


 


 


 

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

'Please love me...' Entries

Grumpy today reluctant to force myself to post an entry. Reviewing the entries I peruse, somewhat super-casually I'll admit, and hold up high defying you to disagree, the general tenor reads to me as 'please love little ol' me.'


Don't love me, please. There are two  topics I'd like to write about and both are unpopular: yet, both are wildly popular. How explain such ambivalence? Societal ambivalence I mean. I want to write about two unrelated subjects, Howard Stern and Viagra. Neither subject would be introduced at a polite dinner party: too controversial; too argumentative. Too political. Women particularly turn rigid at the mention of either. While my own wife greatly appreciated Stern's splendid movie comedy Private Parts I know better than to turn Stern's radio program on while driving if my wife is with me.


While I'm struggling to write this, CNN just started showing Indian mothers suddenly childless from the earthquake! Oh God!


later, maybe, or something......


 


Barry


 


 

Wednesday, October 5, 2005

Oliver Twist Wasn't Hungry

There's one glaring error in Polanski's new version of Oliver Twist. The children aren't hungry. Polanski has been hungry but he seemed to have forgotten what it is like. I've been hungry. Hunger is insidious in that you get used to it. If suddenly presented with food when truly hungry you slowly nibble at the food as if it were a foreign object. It's as if one had to relearn how to bite, chew, and swallow.


In other words, rehearsals for the acting of the movie didn't include study of human behaviour of hungry boys. Even hungry dogs look around to see if anyone might snatch their food away. Oliver looked too fat. Polanski has been living it easy for too long.


Odd, also, that NY-er critic Lane said the other boys put him up to asking for more, when Oliver thought he was drawing lots, not suspecting they'd cheat.


Barry

Tuesday, October 4, 2005

Seasons of Divorce

For years I've carried around with my mental baggage the phrase, "...it was the season of divorce," written by now very famous American author Joan Didion, whose latest book The Year Of Magical Thinking has just been published. The phrase occurs in the first paragraph of a fleshed out account of a real life murder which took place in or near San Berdardino, CA.  As I remember the complete sentence reads, "The Santa Anas were blowing, and it was the season of divorce."


Joan Didion's writing style includes the author's rare ability to observe both herself and others, and the world, without judgment. In her writing she struggles to fill in 'what's so.' My tendency, often, is to leap to a conclusion and/or judgment on the thinnest thread of factual knowledge. I might not be alone in this proclivity.


In other words, the sentence quoted above could very well mean that the Santa Anas, hot, relentless winds from the desert, blow in every year and they  tend to make people irritable. Furthermore, they nearly always usher in annual, California forest fires. Every year, as yesterday and probably again tomorrow, on TV we see family members outside their beloved forest homes clutching their photo albums saved before their homes were incinerated.


Is divorce as arbitrarily selected as the weather is imposed? Joan Didion doesn't answer, she just poses the question. In the recounting of what happened she manages to reveal the following details. A young woman has fallen in love with her dentist, so sets about to murder her husband, so she can be with the dentist, even though the dentist makes it quite clear he doesn't want her.  After the murder is accomplished, by, as I remember, setting fire to her husband's VW while he was in it, she discovers that her dentist meant it when he said he had no more interest in her. The woman is now living out her life in a California prison for women.  


In today's LA Times (under new, and most excellent management since the year 2000) it is reported that Joan Didion has been accused of not being in complete sympathy with Feminism. Her reply: "I didn't feel unsympathetic, I felt it was becoming mired in arguments over who did the dishes."


In our house I do the dishes. I believe in Palmolive, 'Original' (on a pink background), and that can't be used in a dishwasher. Ours is new, used once by my wife, who'd use it again if I didn't insist on washing the dishes myself as a means to keep my nails and hands quite clean. I soak. I wash, fast, and put away equally fast. No problem. Who does the dishes, and with what, has nothing to do with cohabiting, marriage, togetherness or motive for murder.


In short, Joan Didion gives excellent instruction through the power and precision of her insights; But she does it with no desire to be didactic: she simply marvels at the intransigence of human behaviour, probably including her own.


She wrote a terrific novel called Play it as it Lays.


 

Monday, October 3, 2005

Polanski's Oliver Twist

All clear, I wish to sound the all clear. Anthony Lane in The New Yorker is full of it; Polanski's version of Oliver Twist is just fine for children of any age to watch, especially when one considers the violent drecht (sp?) in lots and lots of everyday cartoons for kids on TV. Furthermore Anthony Lane's gratuitous ('Look at me, I'm pure') riff about AntiSemitism in the original, published version of the novel about 160 years ago, has zero relevance to this accurate movie version of the novel which was published four years after the original.


The murder of Nancy occurs virtually off-camera, a detail 'puff-up' Lane leaves out.


His reservations about the performance of the actor playing Fagin is completely inexplicable.


My only reservation in the acting is that I wish the actor who played Sikes in the David Lean version years ago could have been available to Polanski.


This movie is a splendid effort, produced by France, England and Czechoslavakia. The nominal Producers are Polanski himself, and two others. It makes Hollywood look like the girlieman playground it really has become. Trash.


Barry


 

Friday, September 30, 2005

Happy Birthday

Today is my birthday. It began early in the day somewhere around one a.m. We had a party for two, and I tried to be the one giving presents but willy nilly I got presents too. Giddyness reigned. Met Giddyness? Oh, oh she's hot. Multi-talented. I forgot, in my bit two entries down, about 'Professional relaxation,' Lee was always advocating non-verbal sounds as part of self-exploration. So, naturally, on my birthday, I made lots of non-verbal sounds, soft toned, mostly, except at the end. It was late, and I had a date. It must have been fate. Wowee, did we eat the cake, twice!ake!c@+87#@!


Barry   

Thursday, September 29, 2005

How to Catch Flies With Your Bare Hands

In retirement at Lake Chapala, Jalisco, I had the leisure to practice catching flies without stirring, or incurring any expense. My computer chess program was busted, so swatting flies was an alternative.


I sat in my armchair on the verandah enjoying the view and waited for flies to alight. Generally I used the two-handed clap method. My cousin Peter could catch flies, when we were boys, with a one-handed scoop; either he had faster reflexes than I had, or he simply caught slower flies: that way, I'd miss, and still miss, every time. Too old now maybe, perish the thought.


Flies land and either stay still, alert, or bend or crouch while wiping themselves. Anticipating when they will wipe their head, or their wings, is a good time to strike. They'll wipe their head at least two times per sitdown. Rarely do they embrace one another, but when they do, you have an easy two-for-one kill.


Waiting for them to wring their hands gives you time to concentrate, focus, relax and summon the intensity for your attack. This preparation stage, which I borrowed from acting theory**, will improve your kill / miss ratio.


One trick is to be sure not to telegraph hand/arm motion by first moving another part of the body. A variation is to deliberately and slowly move the leg or knee the fly has landed on, then simultaneously clap your hands six inches above the target. I have killed as many as ten an hour. Flies, like El Toro, love to defy death, and return over and over till it is their turn to die. After a whole hour I'm exhausted, and take a siesta. It's not the clapping that is tiring, it's the emotion of combat. As Vince Lombardi said, catching flies is "emotional."


Moral: in retirement one can do anything.


Barry


** An Actor Prepares, by Constantin Stanislavsky

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Retirement

The science of doing nothing is quite interesting. In ordinary walking around life I forget to truly relax, and 'do nothing.' At the beginning of a swim training session doing 'nothing' is a great boon because relaxed muscles made gradually to work, work better. Last Saturday at the East LA HS swimming pool I was the only swimmer doing laps in the 50 meter pool. By the end I'd completed 3,000 meters, less tired than when I began. I have a strong hunch that deep relaxation helps one achieve a longer life than one might otherwise enjoy.


"Professional relaxation" is a phrase used by Actors Studio co-founder Lee Strasberg. I was first exposed to the concept in about 1961 in Lee's acting class in the Capitol Theater building on Broadway - up the hill a bit, toward 57th street. The Method was hot in those days so luminaries, such as Marilyn Monroe showed up, albeit not for long. A bit later, in the same class, moved to the 10th floor of Carnegie Hall actually on 57th street, I had begun to surrender to the idea that relaxation can be willed through close self-examination accompanied by slow, exploratory movements. The next step in the process, in Lee's class, was to test whether the muscles associated with speech and singing are in lock step with muscles in the rest of the body. An exercize undertaken by each member of the class, separately, was to stand erect in front of the class and 'sing' a song making each syllable separately and explosively loud while keeping the rest of the body still, all the while making eye contact with the seated class. **


On one occasion a young actress (Actor, female) did quite well, boldly, but midway through her 'song' she inexplicably reached up to pull her sweater down to cover her exposed waist. Oh wow! Lee launched into a 20 minute harrangue on the utter absurdity of her extraneous, involuntary motion with her left hand. It was as if he were accusing her of fearing he, Lee, might be interested in that part of her anatomy. He didn't say that, but to me it seemed implied. Lee was good at implications. Point: if the brain doesn't know what the body is doing, or if the body has a separate life of its own, how can the actor ever perform what the actor intends to perform?


The same is true for athletes. The golfer addressing the ball almost visibly seems to be doing an inventory of what he/she is about to do: You can almost see Tiger, or whoever, letting go, lifting a foot perhaps to ease involuntary tension, then repositioning the foot.


In retirement I've continued learning to relax, in the pool, in bed (and wow that's where it really truly pays off! Lee once said that women actors in his class had thanked him for their finally being able to conceive! He said, "There's no extra charge") or even when horsing around. Tomorrow, if I can find it, I'll 'Enter' my mini essay published in a retirement periodical, called How To Kill A Fly with your bare hands.


** A variation of this 'still' version of the exercize was to make rhythmic movements involving the entire body then at will make the same explosively loud 'sung' sounds unattached to any movement of the body: object, to free the vocal muscles to do their job, and the motor muscles to do their different job. I liked that one more than I did the still version. While wildly moving you could forget about being observed. In ordinary life we fidget to shake off being observed. Notice how many great actors, especially on screen, could stay still and remain marvellously expressive.


Barry

Monday, September 19, 2005

What's Private?

The famous poem, TULIPS, by Sylvia Plath copied out below has meanings for me probably unintended by the author but I want to mention them anyway. It reads to me a private poem. That is, she expresses thoughts and feelings not ordinary, in fact fantastical, ones I, we, anyone, might not easily express. No attempt is made to justify her experience, or to garner sympathy; if we feel sympathy, I figure, that's our, my, stuff, not that of the narrator.


My ambition is to reach the author's level of self-confidence and be able to write my experience without reference to agreement, approval, applause, or fear of censure.              


- Barry


 


 


TULIPS


The tulips are too excitable, it is winter here.
Look how white everything is, how quiet, how snowed-in.
I am learning peacefulness, lying by myself quietly
As the light lies on these white walls, this bed, these hands.
I am nobody; I have nothing to do with explosions.
I have given my name and my day-clothes to the nurses
And my history to the anaesthetist and my body to surgeons.


They have propped my head between the pillows and the sheet-cuff
Like an eye between two white lids that will not shut.
Stupid pupil, it has to take everything in.
The nurses pass and pass, they are no trouble,
They pass the way gulls pass inland in their white caps,
Doing things with their hands, one just the same as another,
So it is impossible to tell how many there are.


My body is a pebble to them, they tend it as water
Tends to the pebbles it must run over, smoothing them gently.
They bring me numbness in their bright needles, they bring me sleep.
Now I have lost myself I am sick of baggage ---
My patent leather overnight case like a black pillbox,
My husband and child smiling out of the family photo;
Their smiles catch onto my skin, little smiling hooks.


I have let things slip, a thirty year old cargo boat
Stubbornly hanging on to my name and address.
They have swabbed me clear of my loving associations.
Scared and bare on the green plastic-pillowed trolley
I watched my tea-set, my bureaus of linen, my books
Sink out of sight, and the water went over my head.
I am a nun now, I have never been so pure.


I didn't want any flowers, I only wanted
To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty.
How free it is, you have no idea how free --
The peacefulness is so big it dazes you,
And it asks nothing, a name tag, a few trinkets.
It is what the dead close on, finally; I imagine them
Shutting their mouths on it, like a Communion tablet.


The tulips are too red in the first place, they hurt me.
Even through the gift paper I could hear them breathe
Lightly, through their white swaddlings, like an awful baby.
Their redness talks to my wound, it corresponds.
They are subtle: they seem to float, though they weigh me down,
Upsetting me with their sudden tongues and their color,
A dozen red lead sinkers round my neck.


Nobody watched me before, now I am watched,
The tulips turn to me, and the windows behind me
Where once a day the light slowly widens and slowly thins,
And I see myself, flat, ridiculous, a cut-paper shadow
Between the eye and the sun and the eyes of the tulips,
And I have no face, I have wanted to efface myself.
The vivid tulips eat my oxygen.


Before they came the air was calm enough,
Coming and going, breath by breath, without any fuss.
Then the tulips filled it up like a loud noise.
Now the air snags and eddies round them the way a river
Snags and eddies round a sunken rust-red engine.
They concentrate my attention, that was happy
Playing and resting without itself.


The walls, also, seem to be warming themselves.
The tulips should be behind bars like dangerous animals;
They are opening like the mouth of some great African cat,
And I am aware of my heart: it opens and closes
Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me.
The water I taste is warm and salt, like the sea,
And comes from a country far away as health.


       - Sylvia Plath, 1932 - 1963

Thursday, September 15, 2005

Writing To Know Oneself

I bought eight books the other day, only one of those is new, a 'remaindered'book bought from Daedalus Catalogue (mail order) lawyer Dershowitz's take on Genesis up through The Ten Commandments as the source of our present day ideas about Justice. The book is titled The Genesis of Justice. Once I got into it it was fun, but the beginning clashed with my romanticised notions of our expulsion from Eden (Paradise) borrowed whole from Milton. Dershowitz finds God quite unreasonable and 'unjust' ha ha ha ha ha but Milton builds emotional drama when Adam and Eve, "hand in hand took their solitary way through Eden" out into the world "where to choose"!  Disobedience Dershowitz seems to skim over, but it cost our parents "Paradise"!  Milton's epic poem begins, "Of Man's first disobedience and the fruit of that forbidden tree..." is what I have from memory, plus the fact that the first line deliberately echoes the poetry of Homer. Not having a copy of the poem close at hand explains my ongoing book buying. The other seven books are the following, some virtually brand new bought at Goodwill for less than a dollar per book;  The Discovery of Poetry, 2nd Edition, Francis Mayes: (Primary reason being that flipping through the soft cover book I chanced upon Sylvia Plath's TULIPS perhaps my favorite modern poem a copy of which I don't have anymore. Yowee, it reads better now than it ever did primarily because of it's honest sentiments and stunning insights and reckless self-revelations.) Damage, by Joesphine Hart. The narrator is male. It tries to make high drama out of sex, I think, instead of out of character, but sometimes one wants to read 'low', ha!  I Hate Actors! (1944, yellowed pages but intact.) by Ben Hecht, Hollywood luminary, author, with someone else, of His Girl Friday, based on The Front Page a stage play. Very funny novel. Sort of Americanized P. G. Wodehouse. ALBERT EINSTEIN Historical and Cultural Perspectives. The Centennial Symposium in Jerusalem. I'm gonna groove on this book because since reading and rereading Stephen Hawking I've already caught on to the fact that Relativity and the follow-up new insights about the nature of the universe devined by Physicists has had, and will continue to have a huge impact on the arts, and, religion. Sexual Personae "Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson," by Camille Paglia. This is over 700 pages and dense, so it will take me a while. Twenty years ago when author Paglia was on TV a lot I couldn't make out if she was crazy, simply hostile, or a genius. So, I want to find out if I should write her a fan letter. In youth she was hot. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn the one and only. I'm embarrassed; I've never read it. Classic Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.


So, all that mess should keep me occupied for a while.


I'm so in love with TULIPS I might post all 63 lines here but how could I do that given the primitive nature of this format in which, as far as I know, you can't make short lines without a huge space between those lines. Yet, I've seen other bloggers do all kinds of things. I'm determinedly un-Techie.


So, I confess, I continue to read books I should have read in college but didn't because I was too busy nursing my unhappiness. Ha ha ha ha ha..........!


To torment me, an enemy, a deadly serious scurrilous enemy from the message boards, thought it would hurt me to say I took Viagra. Didn't in the slightest of course, and besides I'd never taken anything like that. Up to that time I had not. But, as of a few weeks ago, I have taken it and would like to post what thoughts I have about the experience. Do you think that is unwise? I've decided to use the trade name on the grounds that as far as I know it came first, it's the one I have used, and has become virtually the 'generic' name even though of course it is not the generic name. My physician of about three years suggested I cut each blue pill in half. I wondered how to do that but found ordinary sissors do the trick easily. For me it's better that way, half at a time. Bragging? You bet!


Barry 


 


 

Sunday, September 11, 2005

The Best Advice About Writing

"What advice have I for the potential writer?
I have none, for anybody is a potential writer,
and the writer who is a writer needs needs no
advice and seeks none....The writer is a
spiritual anarchist as in the depth of his soul
every man is. He is discontented with everything
and everybody....When he's dead he'll probably
be as dead as others are dead, but while he is
alive he is alive as no one else is, not even
another writer....He is also mad, measureably so,
but saner than all others, with the best sanity, the
only sanity worth bothering about - the living,
creative, vulnerable, valorous, unintimitated, and
arrogant sanity of a free man."

        - William Saroyan

Quoted in ESSENTIAL SAROYAN
Reviewed In LA Times Book Review
September 11, 2005
The Book, unlike today's newspaper review, probably includes study of Saroyan's play(s?). For a writer of fiction this quote is liberating, inspiring, stirring, wonderfully reckless, somewhat along the lines of the power in William Faulkner's Nobel Prize acceptance speech in which he has the guts to urge writers to write about love and passion. And, best of all, Saroyan (an American Armenian) truly says that anyone can be a writer. I believe that, know that, celebrate that truth.   Barry   (Now, please, please, read the quote again, and slowly, like making long love.)

Thursday, September 8, 2005

Six 'Seven Things' Game

Following the always excellent example of AOL Journaler pixiedustnme I want to play the game in which one answers these questions:


1.Things I plan to do before I die


2.Things I can't do


3.Things I can do


4.Things that attract me to the opposite sex


5.Things I say most often


6.Celebrity crushes


(7. Added: Seven things I SHOULD want to do.)


 


Seven things I plan to do before I die:


1. Complete a novel


2. Live part of the year in the Southern Hemisphere


3. Win a Master's Swimming National event, any event


4. Attend my children's weddings


5. Reward my wife for her sacrifices


6. Learn to abjure coffee


7. Atone for numerous broken promises


Seven things I can do                  


1. Skin a rabbit


2. Ride a motorcycle


3. Ride a horse


4. Speak well


5. Listen closely to someone else


6. Do nothing without anxiety


7. Say prayers


Seven things I can't do 


1. Can't dance


2. Can't sing


3. Can't stand on my hands


4. Can't do a decent springboard dive


5. Can't touch type (grrrrrr)


6. Can't stop looking at women


7. Can't want to stop looking at women


Seven things that attract me to the opposite sex


1. Carriage 


2. Modesty


3. Conversational skills


4. Interest in, and curiosity about, me


5. Faithfulness 


6. Fecundity


7. Intellectual breadth


Seven Celebrity Crushes


1. Greta Garbo


2. Liv Ullman


3. Judy Holliday


4. Margaret Thatcher


5. Maria Schell


6. Queen Elizabeth II


7. Selena       (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)


Humbly submitted by,


Barry

http://journals.aol.com/bbartle3/Vengeance/

Oops, I left out two subjects; oh well, in the next life.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Sunday, September 4, 2005

The Church of the South Pole

The French who made the splendid, Oscar Nominated Winged Migration, have done it again, even more dramatically, with the now-playing March of the Penguins. 'Enthralling' is too mild a word given how enraptured and astounded I was last night at the movie theater.


Those penguins God bless them have lessons to teach us. Numero Uno for me happened to be that it is normal, in line with nature and God's will, that the male of the species actively engage in the sheltering and nurture of his offspring. How the male Penguin does that is so astounding that you, one, might think it was invented by Walt Disney.


During the credits at the end we are treated to inset action shots of the film crew actually shooting the movie. In some of those shots it appears the penguins were not at all afraid of the humans. Those shots, of the French crew, couldn't be used along with the credits of an American-made movie, most likely, because of union restrictions: if they are onscreen, for example, they must be paid as actors! Ha! I half agree with that.  


The tenderness, courtliness, sensuousness and love clearly visible on the screen during the penquin courtship sequences are a 'marriage manual' for us men: don't be afraid of enthrallment, slowness, waiting for the moment, solicitude, showing need, and being responsible.


Another inescapable thread throughout the magnificent script, is the role played in our lives by hardships. Somehow, I believe the movie, and Nature, is telling us, hardships must almost be welcomed, or at least not resented or taken as a punishment for evil, but bowed to with humble acceptance, and once achieved we will be rewarded by innumerable thrilling compensations. We have been offered the option of partaking in creation.


Barry   


 


 

Thursday, September 1, 2005

New Orleans September 2005

As our esteemed "cheerleader" (so tagged by an astute Blogger) JohnM blogged this morning, New Orleans kinda eclipses everything else for the forseeable future. From news clips alone it would seem that by far the largest number of victims of Katrina are Black. What's to be made of that fact (if it's true)?  


I can repeat what a New Orleans resident, an artist and musician, an elderly Black male, said on National Public Radio yesterday. He said he was angry. In fact, he said that the Mississippi River had brought the White Man's refuse to New Orleans for more than two hundred years where it was turned into art and culture. New Orleans, he said, wasn't destroyed by a hurricane, it was slowly destroyed by "neglect." Since the chief instrument of the destruction was broken levees it'd be hard to argue with him.


New Orleans will rise again. Just you wait 'Enry 'Iggins' just you wait. After a suitable period of mourning, and we are in mourning, the subject of New Orleans' future will become hotly, white hotly political. Hillary, or any other Democrat running in '08, will cry out for the complete rebuilding of New Orleans, while the Republicans will intone the wisdom of doing what's 'feasible.' Prediction: guilt and goodness, and hunger for votes, will propel the Democrats to victory. Notice how quiet the Black leaders are for the moment? Ominous, for their enemies.


Here's a little refresher from my own, personal experience in Mobile, Alabama when I was about 20.  Mobile, like a couple of other Gulf States towns and cities, engages in ship building and ship maintenance. As crew on an American flag ore ship we were drydocked for a week or so in Mobile. On the bus going into town I stood in the back of the crowded bus. The driver refused to go on until I came to the front and sat down. I didn't want to.  But the Black passengers wanted me to not make waves, so I came to the front.  Hey, I had not a lick of the pluck of Rosa Parks! Ha!  Even then, for me, a white rube not long from Australia, where I lived from age 3 to age 16, it all seemed kinda stupid. But then I hadn't been conditioned by hundreds of years of ugly prejudice. All through my last two years of HS in San Francisco I went from 947 Green Street, to Lowell High School then on Hayes Street, on a public bus sitting in the back with my left foot on the metal bubble over the left rear wheels. It was a ritual. I smoked a cigarette, secretly. So, on the bus in Mobile I was trying to do what I had always done, just as the bus driver was doing what he'd always done, and the gracious, lovely Black passengers were doing what they'd always done.


Now a hurricane and a broken levee or two has woken us the heck up. Oh, oh, oh, I must, I simply must end this and write to Hillary immediately!  I have a grand scheme of victory for her to get the entire black vote in the South!


May God please bless every victim of the catastrophe no matter their color, religion, or politics.


Barry


 


 


 

Friday, August 26, 2005

Single Childless and Dead

My newspaper reports that the "largest segment of the population" is from households single and childless. The LA Times says it's quoting figures just released from the 2000 census. (Today, five years later, that figure must be even greater.)


If that's true, then there can be no mystery about the woman picketing GW in Texas is/was the dead soldier's mother, not his wife. There's a shortage of soldiers. My goodness, how about that? Volunteers? Anyone? Come on, men and women wanted. Women today can fly jets into battle. The thrill! Dead men at the press of a button. I served in Korea. I'm damned if I can remember if, at night, on guard duty (even though I was a scrub nurse, MOS 1835 at the 25th Station Hospital, Taegu, Korea) alone, my rifle, my "weapon" was loaded? Bothers me. At Camp Pickett, VA (now vanished I believe) I was on guard duty at the PX, at night, and my weapon was not loaded. See? Soldiering is easy.


It used to be that for every soldier on the front line, there were five other soldiers in support. But of course in the present wars there virtually is no 'front line.'


So, I guess, the majority of bloggers, and chat people, and message board Members, are single and childless. A very popular Blogger, right here in AOL City, mentioned she had a "Mister-in-the wings" and was astonished, I believe, and just possibly slightly annoyed, that she got so many emails of enquiry (or surprise) about a date with this guy that only resulted in both falling asleep in front of the TV. All my posts, therefore, about sex have been a huge waste of time. I imagined I was writing for and being read by married people with children. ALL, I believe, the kind people men and women (mostly women) who have left a comment are virtually all married with children. I don't know how to talk to single, childless people from the majority of households in America. Boo hoo!


Apparently my most successful entry was mine on Father's Day posted in June 2005. I have no proof, but I suspect and even hope, my estranged daughter, now in her 30s, telephoned me after about 15 years of silence, partly in response to my Father's Day entry. The call was completely out of the blue. The single most dramatic moment in the conversation was when she said, with some ardor, that she wished she was married.


For those wanting to get married let me please recommend the superb book On The Way To The Wedding by Linda Schierse Leonard. Here's a free tip: sex in marriage is infinitely more powerful than that resulting from a date in front of the TV.


Barry


 


 


 


 

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Boyhood

(In repeated corrections and rereading of this entry I realize that in my zeal to be honest, and revelatory, I may have inadvertently given the impression I think it's okay to be openly critical of one's own children. I do not. Earnestly and every day we attempt to fully convey to the three children how much we love them. Yet, between us we find it expedient to admit to ourselves and each other how difficult parental responsibility can be. Mister Rogers, for example, very likely never had to be Mister Rogers 24 hours a day. Hope you can understand.) 


Little boys are fiends, everybody knows that, right? To be socially correct, these days, I suppose I should give equal time and say little girls can be monsters too? After all, Cookie Monster is for the amusement of parents of little boys and girls as well as to sort of 'give permissions,' to be naturally greedy, to little boys as well as to little girls. Well, I don't have a little girl so in the mischievous department, and the self-maiming department, I can only speak of little boys. My littlest boy's mother complains, "You never give me girl."


My boy, the youngest, three, has bang marks all over his head, and a scar still visible through his right eyebrow. What am I supposed to do, tie him down all day and all night? The second floor windows, of course, must always be tightly shut, even on the hottest of summer days. He'd have flown to the garden below many times but for that caution. He treats the bunk bed he shares with his older brother as if it were a piece of gym equipment. Since he was two, or younger, he could scramble down at the sound of my approach so fast the squeaking of the bed, and the rustle of his gymnastics caused me to run to the bedroom ready to catch him before he hit the floor, which, miraculously he never has done. To my knowledge he's never hurt himself in the 'gym' only on more prosaic pieces of furniture, and large toys such as metal Tonka Trucks.


I wonder if his aggression comes from wanting and needing to keep up with his several-years-older, two brothers? Recently when both brothers went off to school, leaving him alone, the youngest's personality, and his caution, blossomed. Gee, pretty soon we might even have a conversation. Yesterday we walked around the block sort of chatting the whole time. I figure if I can exhaust him he'll injure himself less often, so our walks will get longer and longer. It's not easy being the youngest.  I was the oldest, and shame on me, I thought the two younger were a pain, an irrelevance to be ignored if at all possible.


Then there's the 'Gimme,' 'Buy me' mania. I've lied and lied about all the things I'll buy him and give him just to shut him up. He's only three, so he mercifully forgets the huge long lists of things I've promised to give and get him. Toy police cars and toy put-em-together-yourself trucks are his favorite. But what am I to make of it when he has a two-by-four, used as a battering ram, a pile driver, crunch savagely into those toys so as to get them apart and to see what's inside? Grin and bear it? I've weakened and asked the idiotic, "Why do you like to break things?" The temper in my voice makes me ashamed even while I'm saying the ridiculous words. I know the answer to my own question only too well, 'Because it's fun, man!'


Hmmm, "You never give me girl" she says with a pretend pout. Shoot, let's give it another shot.


Barry


 


 


 

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Infidelity and Double Murder

I visited Betty Broderick for the first time at the prison near San Diego awaiting trial for shooting to death as they slept, her former husband, and his new wife, a 'Betty' look alike.


Actually, I know from talking to Betty the second time, long after her conviction, and sentencing to 25 years in prison (a degree of leniency was granted, I believe, on the grounds that her husband had virtually tortured and humiliated her over a long period, a defense which might have earned no prison time if not for the murder of the new wife) the actual timing of the murders. She shot the new wife first, killing her instantly.  As the husband got out of bed and headed for the phone, wounded, Betty fired again, she said, not to kill him, but to stop him from reaching the phone. It was then, says Betty, he uttered the immortal words, "Okay okay, you got me, you got me." Bang, bang. I mention this only because Betty believed that, not necessarily because I do. I believe the line, but not the motivation for continuing to shoot. I have no opinion otherwise. My interest is primarily about the destruction of a family with small children when the initial 'crime' was the husband's gross infidelity and torment of his loyal wife who greatly assisted in putting him through not only Medical School, but Law School too. After their divorce, when she left abusive language on his answering machine, he "fined" her by deducting money from her alimony. He made millions from Medical malpractice law suits. I realize that a book, written by a LA Times woman writer, and two TV movies were made about the murders, and readers here may recall the details. But it was a long time ago, and I do have some direct contact with the author of the book (she is now dead) and with Betty.


Those murders have come back to me from the accident that my wife and I, and Michael, went to Langers restaurant near MacArthur Park near downtown LA yesterday, bringing back memories of  the LA Times woman writer I rendezvoused with at that restaurant. The writer accused me of having a personal interest in Betty, and that lots of men were like me, she said, and some even proposed. She recounted this platitude accusingly, without apparently making any distinction between male lust and female lust, or male benevolence and female benevolence. In her book there isn't a shred of sympathy for Betty! Ha! The writer is right, perhaps, that Betty took my interest seriously: when I saw her the second time, at a different California women's prison out in the desert, long after, she was very excited and said she felt as if she was on a date. Good Lord, who could fault her for such simple, easy to understand emotions? I had no interest at all in capitalizing on my knowing her, I had no book to write, at least not then, and I greatly enjoyed writing to her often. My doing so was actually somewhat spurred by California government-paid-for public service announcements pleading with the public to visit prisoners. The government's motive? To help prevent recidivism.  She was not much of a correspondent by temperament, but not from disinclination. Even then, after her life was a wreck, she was sunny, pleasant, forthcoming, open, appreciative. The husband must have been nuts! When I first layed eyes on her, when she was behind bars, I felt she made involuntary motions as if she'd kill me if she had a weapon. The kindest thing I could say about him is that maybe America turned him into an avaricious, grossly insensitive clod. If I could go back in time I'd try to quiz Betty by subtle indirection and ask if her husband was semi  impotent. Often money replaces sex. Blaming the partner, in this case the wife, the man seeks another woman with, he imagines, more oomph, someone who'll really turn him on. Of course such a man desperately needs to understand how to turn himself on, with fantasies if needed, and quit the blame game. Today, if I was permitted just one question to ask Betty, I'd ask her if her husband ever made non-verbal sounds while making love. Of course I can't try to see her again: I'm now married.


Barry


 


 


 


 


 


 

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Infidelity

How do adults in relationships feel about infidelity? Curiously, with all the respect in the world for the experts, on this subject I have almost no interest in the views on the subject from people who are not actually, presently, in a relationship: there has to be something at stake! Pretty much of a taboo subject? Oh, if that's so it'll be more fun to talk about, and maybe a rare truth can be unearthed.  One thing's for sure: a great deal of pain and suffering are assocciated with infidelity.


I have no knowledge of infidelity outside of heterosexual relationships. I've read that homosexual relationships are indubitably associated with infidelity; in practice that view is often behind voters choice against laws permitting same sex marriages. (I mean didn't Ellen degenerous split almost on the eve of 'announcing' her 'marriage'? If so, she sure hurt the movement.)


So, I will speculate out loud about conventional couples who live dangerously and opt to cheat.


I've cheated, but not today, not yesterday and not tomorrow either. Does dwelling on the subject constitute an infidelity, or can that be part of the act of rejecting the urge, temptaion, compulsion, whatever?  I'll write, here, on that subject.


Barry


 


 


 

Advertising

The Hobby AOL message boards have been made bigger to accommodate bigger advertising space with more animation. So far the smaller, Professional Writer's boards remain small with few animated advertisements. Some of those windows contain no advertising. This window I'm writing on has no advertising. Yet.


The moment it has advertising it's either pay me, or I'm oughtta here. I hope you feel the same way.


Bloggers: please email me sites where one can have an advertising-free space. Thanks very much. I want to be prepared for the inevitable blow. You know, there's no containing greed in America.


Barry


 


 

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Intermission

I've suffered a failure of nerve. I'll get back to my topic of influences that can shape our sex lives, that oh so important part of our lives - unless of course we're sworn to celibacy - after I've succeeded in shutting out the noise in reaction from message boards.


Every day that goes by without my having written an entry, when I've therefore not kept my word with myself, I feel a shudder of revulsion. Now I must not blame anyone, just keep my word, something that's imperative for happiness, I am so completely convinced.


Maybe with this new circumstance, a series of entries on the same subject, I can profitably repeat something I posted here before. Twenty years ago (huh? so long?) I took a seminar, under the auspicies of the est Training, called About Sex. It was a popular offering. But you know what? It was not as popular as About Money. Ha ha ha ha.  Only in America, ha! I made an attempt at a joke here on this journal that I wasn't suprised that About Money was so enormously popular back then in Santa Barbara. Werner Erhard & Associates kept voluminous statistics. That organization, as mentioned before, still exists, but under new management called Landmark Education. Instead of being called The est Training, it's now called The Forum.


Here's an example of a clever piece of theatrics employed in the seminar, About Sex. We were shown full length photos in rapid succession flashed on a screen, of naked women, and separately men, of every age, type, race, weight, height and demeanor. Not just hundreds of shots, some filmed, some photos, but tens of thousands. The overload gave one the notion that sex isn't only about bodies. In fact, it's not really about bodies at all. A benefit: if my wife mentions being overweight I say, without having at all to lie, I like that. If she thinks she's too thin I say, and mean it, that I like that. Everyone knows, don't they? the brain is where it's at. Not that bodies aren't magical, they are.


If I were to mount a seminar on the subject of sex I think I might include for viewing the French, Oscar Nominated Documentary Winged Migration. Although birds migrate for food, they also migrate for reproduction. The love portrayed among the birds is enthralling to observe. I can easily imagine that the new documentary solely about Penguins is equally moving. If birds can do it with love, how come people have so much trouble?


Barry


 


 

Wednesday, August 3, 2005

Teenage Male Sex

I lost my virginity at age 18, kinda late by today's statistics. Although I lived alone, and had no relatives in America, I was hugely blessed by people who protected me. I delivered the San Francisco Chronicle for a living, and used to save up for a restaurant meal once a week at New Joes: my favorite dish was veal scalopini which cost $2.76 a huge sum for me back then. In that era a new Cadillac convertile cost $5,000; it was hot, for then, at 205 HP. I drooled outside the auto showroom.


My newspaper route manager picked me up in his truck outside every morning of the week and took me, and my papers, to the beginning of my route. Newspapers must have been far thinner, and lighter then than they are today. Today delivery people are men in cars. The route manager treated me with elaborate respect. He almost forcibly took me to my own High School graduation which I intended skipping. Yet, he had a dark side; he transported pornographic films from Las Vegas to San Francisco. He told me that, or I overheard it in his conversations with another, but he'd never have allowed me to see any such film, and at that time I had no interest. I've never found them interesting: the acting is too bad. (I'm an actor.)  However, chagrined to find that I'd gone to a bar where he knew I'd be preyed upon, he arranged for me to visit a prostitute. He kinda acted like he was my father, a father of the old school. I'm still grateful for him. Don't remember his name. Not even his first name.


At that time houses of prostitution were protected by the city of San Francisco. The justification was probably to control the spread of STDs as well as crime. Drugs had not yet become epidemic. The city was curiously benign, tranquil, and had been a huge factor in the US Navy's combat planning in WW2. You may know that The Hornet, a famous aircraft carrier, is still docked in San Francisco Bay.


What I mean to say is that in spite of unusual, or not so unusual, exposures to things sexual beginning at age 3, I arrived an untroubled teenager. My only serious problem was acute loneliness. I assuaged that by going to the movies. Movies must have been very inexpensive in those days because I went all the time. That was the extent of my social life. 


The prostitute the route manager fixed me up with was very gracious and ordinary. I liked the fact that she was ordinary. There was virtually no conversation. The act took place in shaded daylight from windows with translucent blinds. She did no phoney acting, something I appreciated even then. She was the boss and positioned herself on top.


I made so little effort to find a girl friend that I'd probably have missed my HS graduation dance if I hadn't been asked by a girl whose name I can't remember. She was a rebel, and intellectual, and ended up at Radcliffe, living off campus with some guy which was very unusual for that era. She never spoke to me in Cambridge. Maybe the guy was jealous, or more likely she found me far too square.


I remained square. I'm still square. But at least it's by choice, and not from fear. I doubt I understood the spiritual dimensions of sexuality until comparatively late in life. God provides the option of making sexuality spiritual to give couples the strength and endurance to selflessly raise children. But, of course, some gifts are not recognized as such. No doubt I've been guilty of that.


Barry


      


 


 


 

Mail from a friend

As you see even in my e-mail I did not say anything that needed to be censored eventhough I explained it in a more detailed way than in your journal. Recalling your past in your journal and reading your journal, gives me hope that I am not the only one who had to endure many strange things or wondrous things. As I always tell you, keep writing, for I enjoy yourwriting and if you ever get a book on the shelf I like to get it for my personal shelf. Your friend


BEA  


Bea says she posted her Comment on Determinants 2 and I believe her. Someone in authority took it down. Who?   Barry

Tuesday, August 2, 2005

Big Brother is Watching???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

An AOL Member I know from the Poetry message boards has had a reply to my current AOL Journal taken down. To say that I am upset would be to grossly understate the case. I'm in a fury that will not stop until I get satisfaction.


1. Why didn't AOL tell me that it was taken down? And tell me the reasons it was taken down?


2. Is this revenge for my thinking, so far unexpressed, that AOL Journal's Editor is mind-numbingly childish? In fact, his obtuseness I take as a personal affront.


3. Where, where exactly, can I find in writing AOL's policy regarding AOL Journal Comments and their content? Do you mean to tell me, AOL, you allow uneducated Monitors to make it up as they go along, and to censor whatever they personally object to?!?!  I think, AOL, that is called a whole slew of ugly names.


Barry


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Saturday, July 30, 2005

Determinants 2

Sigmund Freud, when a child, happened upon his parents while they were making love. He wrote later, and others joined him in writing about what he had written, that the experience had an effect on his life. So there's an example from my 'Determinants' previous post of "accident" playing a role in how we respond in childhood to our sexuality; because it's obvious to most parents that childhood sexuality begins almost immediately. A comic example mentioned by Anthropologist Clyde Kluckholn in my Humanities 5 undergraduate college class, was the spectacle of Navajo, young Indian boys (members of a peaceful Native American tribe) breast feeding with an erection; A fact which might for most suggest earlier weaning.


Freud's confession was used in an attack on Freud's psychoanalytic postulates by a Medical doctor, Nat Morris, in his 1974 book A Man Possessed. The whole scheme of the attack was repeated in 2004 by another Medical Doctor, from Northern Ontario, Canada, Medical School. Medicine wants the psyche for IT'S province. So far it's failed miserably.


Earlier than the firewood-gathering saga, in which I repeatedly mentioned I simply did not know, and do not know now what happened, where we lived some miles from my Grandmother when my family first returned from America, there was at the end of our tennis court, behind the house, a neighbor's carpentry workplace. On a gorgeous sunny day, early in the morning, the neighbor choreographed a scene in which I stood on the stairs to his workshop and watched him masturbate. I now know that some child abusers are clever at directing very young children and come from a place where they consider what they are doing is completely normal, sane and ordinary. I was three or four at the time.  So young that I was still in what must have been the traditional anal stage of childhood development. After the scene watched from the steps, some days later, I took a cricket stump, speared a large human turd in the tennis court outhouse, and flung it in the direction of the carpenter's workplace.  Later still, when a cousin visited, I led a pantomime in which we would hammer nails into the head of the carpenter. From this I deduce that the scene I watched was later interpreted by me as having been a violation.Even, or especially, children know what is right, and what is not so right.


There is one other memory from about the time we lived with my Grandmother that I have told very few people. My impression, now vague, is that the very few I told it too failed to convey they knew what I'd said. So, I'll try again. A neighbor child, a girl my age, played with me in the empty garage at the end of the front yard. In the garage there was a oil can with a long, thick spout. I couldn't have been older than five. I put a few drops of oil in the depression of her navel, while she was lying on the oil-slicked floor, on her back. I then sealed the oil, or tried to, with a piece of plastercene (playdough). Is it too much of a stretch to posit that at age five boys sometimes symbolically impregnate?


Unlike Freud not only did I never see my parents making love I have not one single memory of them even touching, or even sitting near each other. Yet, they were nearly always together for more than fourteen years when my mother died of polio. By huge contrast, while my father was away in the war my mother was so lonely she had me sleep in her bed. On one occasion she had me put my arm around her while she slept on her side with her back to me. It was awkward, a long way to reach up. Not long after, days later, I asked her if I could see her breasts. She quietly declined. When we returned from the surf we would stand in our swim suits at the hall mirror, shoulder to shoulder, looking back into the mirror, to see who had the best tan.


So, when I read 'Medical' books pooh-poohing Freud's theory of childhood sexuality I'm certain from experience that they are wrong, and worse, probably in denial. Similarly, not finding anything Oedipal in Hamlet, and making too much of the fact the Greek didn't know he was marrying his mother, I just laugh. Little boys get their cues to adult sexuality from their mothers, period!


Barry


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Determinants

Factors which may or may not, sometimes for some people, or never, have an effect on our orientation to love and sex include the attitudes and behaviour of our parents, and/or parent figures, chance life occurences, the actions of our siblings, what we're exposed to in movies, plays, books, art works and schools.


For now I'd like to dwell on only those things which happened in fairly early childhood, say up to about age six or seven. My life was idyllic, yet in retrospect it seems now most probable that my parents, grandmother (who had all the money) and myself  had no inkling of just how lucky we all were. We lived in a huge, eccentric version of what later became known as the 'California Bungalow' a sort of Pasadena Gamble House, but twice the size, and funny looking, only half a mile from the ocean north of Sydney, Australia. Architectual styles spread all over the world, even back then, with speed. The movie theater built at the time, nearby, for which my father was the architect copied German, 'poured conrete' Bauhaus (sp?) concepts which allowed curved surfaces. My grandmother's house however probably had no architect; the builder must have simply copied something Californian from a magazine. It looked like the home of characters from a fairy tale by the time he got through. It was still being modified when my immediate family moved closer to the city of Sydney.


Yet even in that Eden there was a snake in the grass, and of course in the guise of sex.  That should not have been a surprise to my mother. Young mothers in their happiness and naivete tend to think well of everyone and miss the sound of rustling in the grass. The grandfather of my female playmate, Muriel aka "Moo-Moo" asked my mother if he could take me in his little truck to find firewood up and over the hill. She gave permission. When I was later home alone with my mother she found that my clothes must have been removed and put back on different from how she put on my clothes. I had then, and have now, no memory of anything having to do with my clothes. But, my mother was adamant, and called the police. I remember the flashing lights of the patrol car at the foot of the garden in the dark, and my father, home from work, shouting what he was going to do to the grandfather of my friend. I was queried over and over but I told nothing because I could remember nothing, and in spite of many attempts at recreating the scenes of the day I still could remember nothing. Even today I still have hopes of being able to catch some wisp of an elusive memory.


Moo-Moo's family never forgave my parents. Later, around age 13 I visited mother and daughter while I was in boarding school; they were friendly but aloof, unsmiling, almost grim.


See? Nothing happens in this narrative from life experience because I don't know what happened. But, the impact of "nothing" was huge. Quite early, in 'Paradise' I accidently learned that the world was not a safe place.


Barry


(To be continued)


 


 


 


 


 

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Preamble 2

Before I continue with my 'threat' to talk about sex and the sex act caution warns me to put what I'm going to say even further into a context. That is, my intent is always to have as context sex in marriage for the purpose of procreation, or later to celebrate the children that have already arrived. That doesn't mean sex can't be a heck of a lot of fun, to say nothing of thrilling, exhilarating, astounding, bonding, and even transformational.


As I go along I'll probably blurt out things better left silent, but I'm not going to worry too much about that because I'll admit up front that in my life I've been bad, even wicked. Perhaps it's having recovered from irresponsibility that motivates me to write about this subject. I notice, btw, that nobody from AOL Journals has shown up at my door with a warning or suggestion on what to say and what to not say.


It's inherently invasive, I fear, to talk about something as private as the sex act(s) in a public place; sex is obviously experienced differently by different people, and even more differently by people at various times in their life, and with various partners. I want to share my gratitude (to the Creator) for sex, by extolling the benefits and comfort bestowed by sex. I couldn't even dream of offering instruction. There are a zillion books on the subject good for that.


When I was seventeen, living alone in San Francisco, living behind an 11 storey apartment building at 947 Green Street (an address which looked down on Alcatraz in the Bay) in what had been intended as servants quarters, I attended Lowell High School, which at that time was on Hayes Street, but since then has been rebuilt at another address.


One of the books I took out of the school library was the first sex study book written by Kinsey. The librarian at Lowell told me on the phone the other day that the book was out of print, and was no longer in the library. I asked her if she'd give it out to a student these days. Yes, she said, and said with emphasis. The cheap, vulgar movie made about Kinsey released not long ago obscures the good that book contributed to the world. I read the book avidly. I needed to know, I was lonely. I needed the book. It made me laugh and laugh, and made me feel a whole lot better about myself. It caused me to relax, that's what it did, relax and not worry too much: made me certain that in good time sex would eventually become a part of my life.


Gotta run right now. Talk to you later.


Barry


 


 

Monday, July 25, 2005

Warming up for Sex Entries

Some writer I greatly admire but strangely can't remember at this precise moment said, in effect, that the end of fiction writing is to describe the sex act, "...but how do you get there?"** What's amazing about whoever it was that wrote that - the name might come to me before I finish writing this entry - is that you'd think he, of all people, would just dive in. But no, even he was scared. I'm scared. And not just about the act, but love in all its guises and expressions. My summary: It's smart to be scared, but cowardly not to dive in - if I may be so crude - when the prize is nearly won. One steps into the unkown, with prayers of thanks. 


My very favorite book on love and sex is titled On The Way To The Wedding, by Linda Schierse Leonard, Pub: Shambhala, 1986. Here's the table of contents:


The Wandering


1. Through the woods


2. Prince Charming and the Special Princess


3. The Ghostly Lover


4. The Bewitchment


5. The Demon Lover


6. The Ring of Power


The Loving


7. Into the Clearing


8. The Missing Bridegroom and the Woman in Black


9. Beauty and the Beast


The Wondering


10. The Devine wedding


11. The Veil


12. The Vow


13. The Ring of Love


So, there's the menu. Enjoy.


The best nuts and bolts book I've ever read, which probably should be read together by the lovers, but in cold hard practice read separately is probably best, except perhaps by teenage married couples, is titled The Art of Sexual Ecstasy, by Margo Anand. Hot! Handle with care: For adults only. (Teenagers, some, can certainly be "adult.")


The single biggest and most surprising conclusion I've come to about sex, beside the obvious that everything goes best in marriage, is that the bond ultimately is fueled by the senses, but is maintained by somewhat frightening psychological connections. Marriages fail, obviously, at least obvious to me now, when these intricate psychological connections are not in place.


The Leonard book given first above, treats those connections in a sweet, poetic way; they can also be discussed bluntly in the manner of Freud, but in today's climate of anti-psychoanalysis I'll probably avoid that angle until I simply can no longer resist. May I leave you hanging with a promise to return?


Love,


Barry


** Norman Mailer (Give the guy a break!)


 


 

Saturday, July 23, 2005

Competition / Gamesmanship

"When you play Bobby, it's not a question
  of whether you win or lose, it's a question
  of whether you survive."

               
- Boris Spassky
             Soviet Russia: World Champion
             chess player up to 1972 when he
             lost to Fischer in a famous match in
                   Iceland.

Robert J Fischer is now a citizen of Iceland. The
United States government took away his passport
when, in 1992, he entered the former Yugoslavia
to play another match with Boris Spassky for a purse
of five million dollars. Fischer ignored the US Government's
order and for a while lived in Japan where he married a
Japanese woman chess champion.

The match in the former Yugoslavia was virtually an
exhibition. Fischer won, but the purse was split
3 million for Fischer, and two million for Spassky.
You wouldn't be too far off to conclude they were friends,
and are still friends. Boris Spassky is an admirable man,
educated, sophisticated, and humane. I met him at
a chess tournament at a hotel near LAX, Los Angeles.
He is witty, urbane, has lived in Paris, and does
what educated people do: attend the opera, the theater,
and seek culture and Peace.

If any chess players read this, and are curious about
precisely what Spassky means when he talks about
"surviving" Bobby's chess skill, take a look at game one
from the 1971 Interzonal match Fischer vs Bent Larsen.
played in Denver. In that game Fischer sacrificed his Queen,
early in the game, in the center of the board, yet won
handily against a world class Grandmaster. Additionally
Fischer won the next five games as well, winning the
match 6-0. Bent Larsen suffered a psychological collapse.

Barry