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September 10, 2006

Temperature Change.

Funny how the slightest change in your environment can drastically change your state of being. At 31 degrees Fahrenheit, and ice cube is just that, an ice cube. At 32 degrees, it's a melting mess. I'm particularly affected by changes in temperature, and the older I get, the more aware of these changes I become.

For me, the summer is a tortuous lover. It starts with the blood pounding dizziness of new lovers infatuation after the long winter. Energy bursts, the sun tans, muscles tone, and the nights go longer. I become Icarus. But like a party that won't slow down, those hot beautiful days and nights of heat start me creeping towards the edge of locura. By August's end, I'm edgy, frustrated, restless; a glint of mania in the eye. My sanity glass full, I begin to sweat gasoline and invisible spikes of fiberglass. Hot asphalt and me with no shoes. I start to lose sleep, laying in bed dueling with old voices.

And then, just like that, an 88 degree breeze will blow in, and I'm medicated in calm. The sky is blue, each days feels paced, and I'm whole again. I can sit in the backyard, staring at my trees, mulling over this and that, at peace with myself and the world around me. Just like breaking a high fever, you breathe deep gulps of air, wipe the swipe from your body, and sleep untouched by the Heat Miser.

True, other elements will conspire against this brief respite, bringing The Black Dog back to my dance card, but for now, at this temperature – I'm good. I'll sit back, watch some football, drink a cold Coke, love my girlfriend, and chill.

August 05, 2006

Patron Saint of Miami Beach : San Loco.

I spent late 93 through mid 95 living in Miami Beach. When I left, I never looked back. I spent the past week working (and playing some) in South Beach. In fact, I was staying at a hotel around the corner from the skate shop I used to run. Sad to say, but in spite of a growing condo skyline and the odd fresh coat of paint, the place remains largely the same.

Over the past few years, people have asked me why I left Miami Beach. Or Miami in general. My answer has always been as follows. If you live in Miami Beach, you better be at least two or more of the following:

- Gay
- Filthy rich. Not "I drive a Ferrari" rich. More like"Lets set my Ferrari on fire for fun!" rich.
- Work in the fashion industry as a model, photographer, etc.
- Own a club or have steady gigs as a club DJ.
- Latin or speak Spanish fluently.

Pues si, hablo cristiano, pero lastimosamente, no califico en cualquiera de los otros aptitudes. Yeah, a cool place to hang out with friends. Yeah, a great place to swim with out getting even getting so much as a chill from the water. And yeah, even a great place to blow a wad of cash on a long weekend. Not a place to spend more than a few days though. Too bad too. If they had a more vibrant indie music scene, or anti-glam scene, it would go a long as an antidote to the VIP scene, perhaps giving the location some much needed heart and soul. It's a shame it doesn't.

In spite of Sobe's short comings, I must give respect where it is deserved. This beach town's crowing jewel, the diamond in it's gay DJ crown of fashionista club jewels, is San Loco. Open most of the day and night, it serves the best fish tacos on the East Coast. It was there when I left, and as of last week, it's still there serving crazy good Taco Locos with no attitude. Which is saying something for a town spray coated in attitude.

Saint Crazy. Good to the last frejole.

May 17, 2006

In the land of the blind, a one-eyed man is king.

Recruiting really good people is tough. Some look great, but when you throw them into an environment of overachievers, well, you get a really quick sense of can 'do' and who 'says they can do'. And let me tell you, there are a ton (A TON) of one-eyed, half-assed technologists out there in employment land selling themselves as the 'good ones'. To be fair, some just aren't a good fit for what we're looking for and that's OK. Makes no sense to recruit a chess player for a rugby team. But it's the chess players in rugby team clothing that are the worst.

Today we interviewed someone who wasn't as good as his resume led on. I should have known he was doomed. He brought a 1 liter bottle of Club Soda to drink during the interview (who brings a whole liter of ANYTHING to an interview). Apparently he thought he may get really, really thirsty. Unfortunately for him, he didn't realize his plastic bottle of carbonated had become an explosive device after having been adequately jostled during his walk to our office.

He sat down, pulled out the bottle, opened it up with the confidence of one-eyed king in blind country. BLOOSH. A fizzy geyser of Club Soda blew up into his face, shirt and tie, spilling all over the table. He sat there, dumbfounded, dripping wet. Poor soul. I don't know if I could imagine a worse start to an interview.

After an hour of fielding technical questions from our resident smart guys, he left quietly, wet, and a bit worse for the wear. He called me later to see how he did. I said, "well, I don't think you'll be a fit for this position".

He said, "Yeah I know" and hung up. Welcome to the land of the sighted buddy.

April 18, 2006

Phrases that stick.

Warning: the following post may stick in yer craw for hours, like the melody to "My Sharona" or that the "doo - Doo - doo - Doo" sound that announces every segment of 24.

Today I have two phrases playing PONG with each other in the echo chamber sitting directly atop my neck. I read both phrases innocently enough, but (read in your best Captain Kirksian voice) can-not-break-free-from-the-prose. So in the spirit of passing on Mono or the summer flu, let me share them with you.

PHRASE ONE:

"A field dubbed "teledildonics..."

Tele. Dildonics. Never in my wildest word concatenations have I encountered such a absurd, yet remarkably interesting word. I'm stuck replaying this phrase in my head over and over and the myriad of questions spawned. Tele implies distance... how much distance? Dildonics? The science and technology of dildos? Where does one go to school for Dildonics? Is there a brochure on the field? Who is the field's luminary? Seriously? Teledildonics? The above mentioned phrase was followed shortly by,

"The Iraq war ... was kind of a boom for our company."

Yeah, I know. Sad. Odd. Believable.

PHRASE TWO:

Wihile skipping across the many blogs I visit on a weekly basis, I came across this quote about the hot-button immigration bill (perhaps better called the "RETURN TO SENDER" bill) on my lovely college buddy's blog:

"F**k off Minuteman and white supremacists...the only people who have a right to say "send them back"...are the native americans."

Weeks of talking about the immigrant issue, debating the issue, and article after article has come no where close to succinctly putting into words my exact feeling. Lady D, you rock!

April 07, 2006

How do you use the force?

During a conversation with a work colleague this week, he made this observation. When considering the character of a person, these two questions can serve as a pretty good guide:

1) Do they use the Force for good or evil?
2) Do they believe that if everyone gets more pie, it follows that they will also get more pie; or do they believe that one should always work to get the most pieces of pie?

Chew on it.

January 06, 2006

Self Analysis

My wonderful girlfriend forwarded this to me, and I found this to be apropos. I certainly have a propensity to stare life in the face, throw down the gauntlet and bellow (in a Old English accent) "Forsooth, let us analyze this to the very brink o' death!..." Who knows, maybe you'll find it relevant too.

Op-Ed Contributor

Don't Think Twice, It's All Right
By TIMOTHY D. WILSON

Charlottesville, Va.

IT'S navel gazing time again, that stretch of the year when many of us turn our attention inward and think about how we can improve the way we live our lives. But as we embark on this annual ritual of introspection, we would do well to ask ourselves a simple question: Does it really do any good?

The poet Theodore Roethke had some insight into the matter: "Self-contemplation is a curse / That makes an old confusion worse." As a psychologist who conducts research on self-knowledge and happiness, I think Roethke had a point, one that's supported by a growing body of controlled psychological studies.

Not sure how you feel about a special person in your life? Analyzing the pluses and minuses of the relationship might not be the answer.

In a study I conducted with Dolores Kraft, a clinical psychologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and Dana Dunn, a social psychologist at Moravian College in Pennsylvania, people in one group were asked to list the reasons their relationship with a romantic partner was going the way it was, and then rate how satisfied they were with the relationship. People in another group were asked to rate their satisfaction without any analysis; they just gave their gut reactions.

It might seem that the people who thought about the specifics would be best at figuring out how they really felt, and that their satisfaction ratings would thus do the best job of predicting the outcome of their relationships.

In fact, we found the reverse. It was the people in the "gut feeling" group whose ratings predicted whether they were still dating their partner several months later. As for the navel gazers, their satisfaction ratings did not predict the outcome of their relationships at all. Our conclusion? Too much analysis can confuse people about how they really feel. There are severe limits to what we can discover through self-reflection, and trying to explain the unexplainable does not lead to a sudden parting of the seas with our hidden thoughts and feelings revealed like flopping fish.

Self-reflection is especially problematic when we are feeling down. Research by Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, a clinical psychologist at Yale University, shows that when people are depressed, ruminating on their problems makes things worse.

In one study, mildly depressed college students were asked to spend eight minutes thinking about themselves or to spend the same amount of time thinking about mundane topics like "clouds forming in the sky."

People in the first group focused on the negative things in their lives and sunk into a worse mood. People in the other group actually felt better afterward, possibly because their negative self-focus was "turned off" by the distraction task.

What about people like police officers and firefighters who witness terrible events? Is it helpful for them to reflect on their experiences?

For years it was believed that emergency workers should undergo a debriefing process to focus on and relive their experiences; the idea was that this would make them feel better and prevent mental health problems down the road. After 9/11, for example, well-meaning counselors flocked to New York to help police officers, firefighters and rescue workers deal with the trauma of what they had seen.

But did it do any good? In an extensive review of the research, a team led by Richard McNally, a clinical psychologist at Harvard, concluded that debriefing procedures have little benefit and might even hurt by interrupting the normal healing process. People often distract themselves from thinking about painful events right after they occur, and this may be better than mentally reliving the events.

What can we do to improve ourselves and feel happier? Numerous social psychological studies have confirmed Aristotle's observation that "We become just by the practice of just actions, self-controlled by exercising self-control, and courageous by performing acts of courage." If we are dissatisfied with some aspect of our lives, one of the best approaches is to act more like the person we want to be, rather than sitting around analyzing ourselves.

Social psychologist Daniel Batson and colleagues at the University of Kansas found that participants who were given an opportunity to do a favor for another person ended up viewing themselves as kind, considerate people - unless, that is, they were asked to reflect on why they had done the favor. People in that group tended in the end to not view themselves as being especially kind.

The trick is to go out of our way to be kind to others without thinking too much about why we're doing it. As a bonus, our kindnesses will make us happier.

A study by University of California, Riverside, social psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky and colleagues found that college students instructed to do a few acts of kindness one day a week ended up being happier than a control group of students who received no special instructions.

As the new year begins, then, reach out and help others. If that sounds suspiciously like an old Motown song or like simplistic advice from one of those do-gooder college professors, well, it is. But the fact is that being good to others will ultimately make us kinder, happier people - just so long as we don't think too much about it.

Timothy D. Wilson, a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, is the author of "Strangers to Ourselves: Discovering the Adaptive Unconscious."

October 04, 2005

Mongolian Beef and Ashphalt.

Today, I took a slow drive towards home, up one of Atlanta's greater treasures: Buford Highway. It's an explosion of ethnicity and a dumping ground for pop culture imitations and cast-offs. I can't think of any other stretch of road in the country where you'll find an assortment of establishments touting names like:

"Mi Havana Comida and Tax Service"
"Pho Kung Dragon and The Burrito"
"Dixie Guns and Motorcycle Emporium"

Granted, I'm paraphrasing here, but I'm really not that far off. I vow to do a photo exposition of Buford Highway in the near future. You will be fried, roasted and covered in salsa. I kid you not.

October 03, 2005

What's my deal?

The past few weeks, I've been suffering a ridiculous writer's block. I a complete feed-me-some-mental-prune-juice, slip-my-drink-a-prosaic-Exlax... a complete BLOCK. I sit down to write and I just don't feel like I can get anything out. It's not as though I don't have anything to write, on the contrary, my brain is swirling in gestating ideas, manic storms of emotion, and short spurts of creativity and hunger.

I guess there's just sooo much, I don't know were to start. A bit like the pile of laundry piling up in the corner of my bathroom.

So in an effort to experience a pleasing vowel-movement, I will do the blog equivalent of sitting on toilet until something happens, no matter how long it takes.

...waiting...thinking...

So I've been thinking a lot lately about social clustering, and how we form them in the ongoing rush of everyday circumstance. I saw a show on Animal Planet about how red ants will cluster together when dumped in water and create floating colonies of life. We seem to do the same things as humans, don't we?

While sitting at Autumn's wedding reception on Saturday night, I had the chance to sit back and observe my own personal cluster; a group of people who have snatched each other from the broiling currents of humanity that we pass each day. Is this by design or circumstance? Who can say? Perhaps my cluster is simply the result of applied chaos theory, and the equation leading me to this intersection of space, time, and conscience is far too elegant and deep in beauty for me to comprehend. Perhaps my social cluster is fated, if you believe such in such a thing.

I wonder how long red ants will hold together as they float towards some mysterious end? An hour? A day? Longer? My cluster has held together almost 7 years now. Our cast of characters has played out many dramas, and the plot has become nuanced and textured in age. And as though we are tethered to the whimsy of the writing staff for "ER", each passing season promises us stories and events hitherto untold.

So as I sit here in front of my crappy, needs-to-be-replaced, monitor, I raise my half empty can of Mug rootbeer and toast all my clustermates...

"May we continue to clutch tightly, keep our heads above water, and enjoy the trip downstream."

Salud.

August 16, 2005

Pavlovian Devolution.

Darwin would be terribly dissapointed in me. You see, try as my body might, my corpus temporalis simply refuses to evolve into a functioning cyborg. When I was young, I thought for sure I'd have red electronic eyes and bionic fingers by the time I was 30. To my dismay, I am not evolving, rather devolving into a man tormented by pavlovian responses to the invisible cybernetic gremlins that live in all pc's. Consider the following:

1 - Anytime my Intel Pentium 4 microprocessor starts to choke on the volume of computations I've tasked it, it whines in complaint, as though to say "are you out of your damn mind? You really expect ME to do THAT for you right NOW?!" I'm sure you know the sound, the high pitched chugging rythm of millions of microscopic sledgehammers banging away at a slab of silicon. The second I hear this sound, my chest gets tight, my eyes dialate and feel as though I may in fact burst into self mutilating flames. And this is how I feel before my snickers and Dr. Pepper in the morning....

2 - I am haunted by the floating, white, demonic hourglass cursor! Enduring the hourglass cursor is the equivalent of sitting on hold with Comcast cable for 40 minutes only to have someone pick up and say "Hold eh-pleeze" and then accidently disconnect you. I never know when or where the hourglass will appear, but when she does appear, that digital sucubus (thanks Fred Toucher for reminding of me a good word), my head constricts into an ice-pick headache, I break into a manic sweat and grip my desk in a French Guinea death hold.

3 - "Error 404 - File Not Found". Is there a lower circle of information hell!? After minutes of trolling through Google looking for a decent article on "Articulated Cow Knuckles" I am empty handed at a closed door called 404. It's a wonder I'm not bald what with all my compusive hair pulling I suffer in response to an "Error 404". If I ever find that file... I will KICK. ITS. ASS. Seriously.

4 - The sk --ipping m ou se bal l. Ho w amI suppos edtoen ure a mous e that won''t ro llsmoo thly?!!! You call this contraption a "mouse"? This skipping plastic contraption is a shard of glass in my eye; a rabid cat in my speedo; a mouthful of gasoline soaked tacks. If you skip again you damn mouse, I swear I will hunt down your whole right-clickn'-center-scrolling family and throw you all into a raging hell pit where your only hope of escape is to reconstruct the Mona Lisa using nothing but PowerPoint clip art and a stick of glue.


Sorry, I was trying to wrap up but my pc was hanging up agai...

July 21, 2005

Strange things are afoot in Yorktown.

It was a warms summer's eve when I took Boris out the door to say goodbye to Natasha after her visit to L'ville. The street was dark and quiety, with naught visible except a pool of dark blue light from the street lamp. For just a moment, I turned my back to the street to load some boxes into Natasha's car. When I turned around, I counted 1..2..3..4..5 Boxers! It was as though Boris spontaneously burst into a pack of dogs!

I couldn't shake the disconcerting effect this had on me, but did manage to grab two of the younger dogs and get them into the house where I could inspect the one collar between them. We had no luck chasing down the rest of the pack, but did reach a grateful owner who showed up later to pick up her two escapees.

Lesson learned: Boris is more handsome than most of his kind.

July 13, 2005

Decennial Thoughts and Memories.

In the summer of 1995 I pulled into Atlanta driving a Ryder moving truck with my Nissan Centra in tow, knowing no-one and with no place to live. At the time, I was fleeing South Beach and anything north of Dade and Broward counties held the promise of something better. I remember pulling off the interstate downtown, turning north on Peachtree Street, and slowly driving all the way up to Sandy Springs. It was sunny, the rolling hills were chock full of greenery and anywhere I stopped it seemed that Georgia hospitality was in full bloom.

This month marks the passing of 10 years in Atlanta. A decade. Unbelievable. For a guy who spent the first 25 years of his life moving 25 times, living in 3 continents, 7 countries, and 5 states … well, 10 years in one place was as unlikely a bet as any. So in the spirit of journal writing, personal reflection and the general stewardship of time spent, I’m going to write 10 anecdotes that represent the highlights, lowlights, and seminal moments of each year I’ve spent in Dixie. Undoubtedly I’ll miss a story, forget a name, fail to mention a friendship, or lapse in memory on something you, the reader, may think I should never forget. Well too bad. This is my prosaic party and I’ll lapse where I want to.

Let’s spin the magical time portal, make mystical time traveling sounds (“bee-boop-oo-lah-swivvy-loo-la-boop”) and jump back in time.

1995 - Yvonne, Laura and Revolution.

My first seminal moment in Atlanta happened faster than you can say “American Pie”. When I got to Atlanta I used the Apartment Finder service to help find me a place to live. The Apartment Finder agent was a cute redhead named April who was all southern accent and bubbly charm. Somehow, I managed to coax April into believing that as part of her Apartment Finding duties she should also give me an introduction into Atlanta nightlife. Beeper numbers where exchanged and she agreed to take me out the first Friday night I was here.

April took me to American Pie, an outdoor bar/dance club for the khaki-pant wearing, hard-bodied, fake tan sporting, bleached blonde, hoochiephile masses of Sandy Springs. Immediately I knew that this was not my scene and that knowing how to get back this bar was pretty much a piece of throwaway trivia. To my surprise, the evening was actually much more valuable to me than I could have guessed. I was introduced to four of her friends: Maggie, Tom, Laura and Yvonne.

Yvonne and Laura where the first lesbian couple I was ever introduced to and who didn’t seem to be offended by my heterosexuality. I was sooo intimidated by them at first: Yvonne was a well known DJ on the best station in town and Laura was a stunning model who in her earlier years was a competitor in the pageant circuit. I remember that shortly after being introduced, Laura invited me to a club called Revolution in Buckhead on Wednesday night, where Yvonne was spinning. I accepted immediately and promised to show up.

What I didn’t know what that Revolution on Wednesday night was ladies night -- as in ladies who like ladies night. I walked right in, thinking, “Wow, check out all the chicks in this place…” Laura came over and said hi and then pretty much left me to fend for myself. As uncomfortable as I was, Yvonne could really work the ones and two’s and I couldn’t help but to stay and get my dance on. I kept going back week after week, always repeating the same routine: Enter the club. Say hi to Laura. Wave to Yvonne. Dance. Leave.

Eventually, I must have passed the “Is-this-straight-guy-ok-for-lesbians-to-hang-with?” test because Yvonne and Laura started inviting me to other parties, concerts and eventually to hang out at their house. Yvonne single handedly kept me in touch with the music scene because she was constantly hooking me up with free tickets to what seemed like every band that rolled through town. A year or two down the road, Yvonne was the first DJ at 99X to play a Shimmerzine track on the late night show called Pleasuredome.

Laura turned out to be the ultimate wingman. As any dude who has tried knows, meeting girls while standing by yourself at a bar/club is damn hard. I suppose it screams “SWM: LONELY. HORNY. AFFECTION STARVED. LOOKING TO HANG OUT WITH ANY FEMALE WITH A PULSE.” On the other hand, if you show up to a gathering in the company of others, you tend to broadcast a signal more along the lines of “PEOPLE HANG WITH ME. NOT SOCIALLY RETARDED. PROBABLY SAFE TO SPEAK WITH.” If you show up to a place with a drop dead gorgeous woman on your arm, the unspoken message is “YES, I AM FANTASTIC. MAYBE I’LL TALK TO YOU IF I’M NOT TOO BUSY WITH THIS OTHER HOT LADY. WHY YES, I AM THE LOVER-WEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE WORLD.” Laura did more to further my cause as bachelor-extraordinaire as any other woman I’ve ever met.


1996 – The Thursday Skate.

I came to Atlanta in 95 behalf of a company called Skate 2000. We opened two inline skate shops, one in Buckhead and the other in Sandy Spring. It felt like I spent all my time split between the two stores, managing irresponsible skater employees, teaching class, rotating wheels, managing a relationship with the totalitarian micro-manager company owner, and hosting the Thursday night Buckhead Skate.

The Thursday skate was simple. Meet at the store in the evening. Skate about 4 or 5 miles around Buckhead. Finish up at the Tin Roof Cantina for hot wings and pitchers of frozen margaritas. At the time, it was just a way to bring customers into the shop. In hindsight, the Thursday skate introduced me to what would become the two best guy friends I’ve ever had. (Also of note: it was through the Thursday skate that I met John Cloonan and Guillermo El Guapo Palermo, two great long time buddies of mine).

Dan and Jason came into the shop in a late afternoon. I don’t remember exactly the day or time, I just remember that they walked in heatedly arguing about something completely unimportant, probably along the smell of mouthwash would most impress girls at a party. The bickering was such that at first I thought they were a gay couple. I invited their seemingly gay selves to the Thursday skate and to my surprise (I was always surprised when anyone showed up to our somewhat grueling skate) then became Thursday night regulars. I realized quickly that they weren’t gay, just long time college roommates who liked to fight about virtually everything.

I have to admit that at first I didn’t place much stock in my new acquaintances and just figured them to be guys I knew through the skate shop. They were both clean-cut Emory grads, working hard in their corporate jobs and had conservative blonde girlfriends to match. On the other hand, I was busy kicking off my time with new band called Shimmerzine and fancied myself a fledgling rock star in the scene. I had just discovered a fantastic underground bar (and epicenter of the indie-pop scene) called MJQ and was busy hustling gigs and such. When I invited to Dan and Jason to a gig at the Q, I honestly thought they would show up once and then move on to other things. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Not only did they come to the show, they came to every other Shimmerzine show I can recall. I’m not exaggerating when I say that from that point on, one or both of them just seemed to always be there. Parties. Gigs. Clubs. Skating. Before long, they both learned how to set up and break down my gear at shows. They helped me print flyers. They passed out flyers. They listened intently to every demo the band put out. Unbelievably, I was young and arrogant and really didn’t recognize the hallmarks of a true friendship until late in 96 or early 97. For the purposes of continuity, I’m going to write about the night the lights came on and these two were revealed to me as true brothers in arms.

We all went out for a night skating, drinking and all around carousing on a Wednesday night. We started the night at Club March where they hosted roller disco once a month. Even though this was a gay club, they tolerated my rowdy group of buddies and let us slam Long Island Ice Teas while skating around the club. It’s a wonder we didn’t crack our skulls open or knock our teeth out on the edges of tables because we were doing more of a roller derby thing than a roller disco thing. Anyway, after roller disco we took my car and Dan’s car to the Q for brit-pop night. Since the Q didn’t have a liquor license, we started to pound brew instead. Not one to do anything half-ass, I drank myself into a category of wasted not previously achieved by yours truly. At one point, it had to be pointed out to me that I had been dancing seductively with the cigarette machine in the corner… Beer goggles indeed.

Not surprisingly, it wasn’t long before I made for the exit to get some fresh air. The Q didn’t have much of a doorway, but there was a little overhang, maybe 6 inches deep that hung out over the doorway. As I stumbled out into the night, I realized that it was POURING. I flattened my back against the wall, convinced I could find shelter under the 6-INCH OVERHANG. That’s where Dan found me a good while later. The back half of my body against the wall and dry. The front half of my body totally exposed to the rain and water rolling off the overhang, my hair matted to the front of my face, and soaked. And me grinning away like I was the smartest guy who ever needed to hide out from the rain. Dan insists it’s one of the funniest things he’s ever seen his life.

The story continues.

As you recall, we took my car and Dan’s car to the club. You would think that someone would put me in my car and drive me home. Instead, Dan put me in his nice Acura Integra (for no really good reason that we can recall) and Jason drove my car back to their apartment. On the drive home, I was overcome with the reality that I was about to return all drinks to sender and lunged to get my head out the window. Unfortunately, the seat belt locked tight and prevented me from getting my head out the window by mere inches. I redecorated the interior of Dan’s car with some serious puke. I mean ALL OVER.

Dan kept his cool and both he and Jason carried my sorry ass up their apartment where they set me up on the couch, garbage pail nearby and kept me company until I eventually passed out. OK. Now here’s the moment of truth. The moment where Matt learns the meaning of friendship.

Upon wakening, I’m completely chagrined and humiliated and I go out to Dan’s car to clean it up… but Dan had already taken care of that. HE HAD ALREADY CLEANED UP ALL OF MY PUKE FROM HIS CAR.

The deal was done. We were (and remain) friends for life. Later in 97 I actually used the friendship the three of us shared as the basis for one of the better songs I’ve ever wrote. The song was called “Jason Daniel” and was basically about the wonderful times we spent at the Q.

1997 – Welcome To This: An Electric South.

I already wrote about this recently (click here) so I won’t write much more about it now. But there is no mistaking the fact that 1997 was all about the band.

We played virtually every local venue in time multiple occasions. I spent months in the studio recording our album “Welcome to This: An Electric South”. Which we never released. We played the closing night of the Old MJQ. We had the band James come to a show and get down with us. I bought more mod racing jackets than I knew what to do with. We eventually broke up that December.

To say that 1997 was about anything other than living the rock and roll lifestyle would be a complete falsehood. The year was a blur of gigs, band practice, parties, girls, in fighting amongst the band mates, recording sessions, and more girls. I went night after night with a few hours of sleep between day and night. It’s really a surprise I made it through the year alive and intact. Life is not without her small mercies.

Other honorable mentions for 97:

Cat and Karen: Sometime during early 97 I think, I started going to Swing Night at the Masquerade. I don’t remember if it was my first night there or not, but I know that it didn’t take long before I was introduced to Karen and Cat. What started out as a hard core devotion to being the best swing kids ever, turned into a much deeper friendship that has yet to die. They’ve stood by me through thick and thin. Cat has since been kidnapped by the allure of the Colorado but there isn’t a street in the city that the three of us haven’t spent time on.

1998 – Suddenly Sarah.

Wow. In contemplating 98, it’s pretty clear to me that I can sum it up in one word: Sarah. This is the year that I fell in love for the first time. It sounds unbelievably corny to admit, but yeah, a girl stopped me cold in my tracks one night in March at Masquerade. I can sum up the first year of our relationship like this:

Boy meets girl.
Boy loves girl.
Boy marries girl.

It went pretty much that fast. We danced together for the first time upstairs in Heaven at Masquerade. By our second or third date I knew I would pop the question. A few months later I knelt down in front of her while we were dancing with retired WWII vets at an American Legion big band night and gave her a modest diamond engagement ring. We spent the summer planning our own wedding and in October we had my Dad marry us in the backyard of our ramshackle apartment on Greenwood Avenue. Mom made her dress. John and Suzy Cloonan made our cake. Jason was the DJ. Dan was my best man. Karen, Cat and Shay were bridesmaids. It was perfect weather. I was so stressed I don’t remember much except she loved the song I wrote and recorded as my wedding present to her. I also remember that the white lights and luminaries cast a warm glow all over the yard and driveway; I had my own piece of heaven that night.

In time, the marriage would run its own course, but that’s a story for another year.

1999 – The Corporate Blossom and The Internet.

In the fall of 98 and at the recommendation of Dan, I left the retail business and joined a small company called ExecuTemp as a recruiter. This was my first foray into a true Monday through Friday, 9 to 6, office job. To be honest, I really had no idea what I was getting into, but Dan assured me that I could be successful at it. I know I got the job purely on his recommendation.

By the middle of 99 I had proved myself successful as a recruiter. To my surprise, I was offered a job as an account manager and before long I was learning the do’s and don’t of corporate sales. My start was modest, but I had success as often as I had failure, so I quickly began to gain confidence in the work place. You have to bear in mind that only 18 months prior I was keen on making it as a hard core rock and roll star, so this was a complete change of lifestyle and it took awhile for me to find my footing. As I did find my footing though, I began to gain a confidence in my abilities beyond music, and as I look back now, my time spent doing cold calls and making sales presentations to a world of good for my confidence.

1999 was also the year that I really became aware of the power of the Internet. Until I joined ExecuTemp (now called ESource) I had never even so much as used email or online chat. With access to the web at work, I was so taken with the boundless limitations of the Internet that by the end of 99 I had already taught myself the basics of HTML and JavaScript and was building my first website. Ultimately, all the time spent building websites would translate into my little web development venture that I do on the side, called www.ataricharm.com.

2000 – Turning 30 and My Dot Com Boom.

What a year. I can sum up my outlook on life in the year 2000 with one statement: In the year 2000, I quadrupled my income over the previous year. Yes, I said QUADRUPLED. It just seemed like every company in the US had money to spend on what I was selling. I couldn’t miss. I was on fire. For the first time in my life, I had the cash to buy pretty much whatever I wanted and spent my cash like it was going out of style. Damn. Damn. Damn that was stupid. Fast forward one year and you’ll see why.

Sarah and I moved into a small bungalow in Reynolds Town. The first year of our marriage was really rocky. Hardly surprising considering the pace at which we escalated the commitment of our relationship, the stark changes I had made in my lifestyle (I was completely sober now), and the natural hardships of living with someone. In spite of my financial windfall, cracks were developing in the shallow foundation of our marriage, but I was too blind to see them. Foolishly, I figured that if I just kept throwing money at a problem, it would eventually go away.

The winter of 2000 was great. Sarah threw me an amazing 30th birthday party. I had no idea she had planned anything, but she brought friends in from all over the place and caught me totally flat footed. To this day the best and only surprise party I’ve ever had. We were also making plans for an early January trip out to Montana to go snow boarding. Sarah once made a comment to me that our time in Reynolds Town was the happiest time we spent together.

2001 – The Opposite of Good.

For all the good years and times I’ve had in this town, this was by far the sourest apple in the bushel. There just isn’t much good I can say about 2001.

The year started out ominously I suppose. We went to Montana and had a wonderful winter snowboarding trip. But I was so enamored with the mountains and open air of being there that I actually suffered a couple of months of depression once back in Atlanta. I just couldn’t deal with the traffic, smog, and overall crowding of the city. By April of that year, I series of events pretty much did me in. I could write a volume about each, but I’ll spare you the self-pity and just present you with the facts.

April – Find out I owe the IRS $15,000 in back taxes because my HR wasn’t withholding properly.
May – Close on a new house in Lawrenceville to be closer to work.
July – The economy starts to tank and by July/August my salary and commissions have completely collapsed.
August – Sarah and I are really struggling with life in the burbs. Between her struggle with life in L’ville and my internal horror being newly saddled with a mortgage and losing most of my income, we were at odds more often than not.
September – 9/11. I was in NYC on 9/10 and staying in Washington DC on 9/11. To think I was in both places within 24 hours of each other is eerie.
October – Splitsville for Matt and Sarah.

2002 – Marginally Better Than 01.

The first 75% of the year was spent basting in self-pity, self-loathing and self-destruction. One could say that I handled the divorce as gracefully as a typist with ass cheeks for fingers. I won’t and can’t justify my time spent in that black funk of wicked depression. I will only report that I eventually made it through and started to register sun light in conscious thought once more.

Two things happened this year that make it noteworthy.

One – I landed a new job that would require me to travel the world over. Pretty good medicine for a guy tortured by memories around every corner. I joined a retail software developer as a Technical Instructor, and although in many ways under qualified for the job, I buried myself in books, user guides, and software documentation until I was dangerous enough to send to a client.

My first assignment was two weeks in London. I arrived on a Monday and took the Gatwick Express into the city. After checking into the hotel I made my way across the street to a pub called the Millennium Arms. Arsenal was playing Man U on the big screen. I ordered fish & chips and a pint of Boddy’s and listened to Oasis on the juke box. This was the most euphoric moment I had had in years. My soul rekindled and I quietly decided that it was time for the healing to begin.

Two – I moved back in-town. After struggling to stay in the house and then in an apartment in Lawrenceville, I reached my breaking point one and decided it was time to move. I abandoned my apartment lease and moved into Bass Lofts in Little Five Points. It was a great corner loft that overlooked Euclid Ave. The old hardwood floors had a warm creak to them when I moved around. The sun light would streak in blues and green across the loft in the morning as dawn broke. I had a great housewarming party where my entire group of friends showed up to wish me well and welcome me back to the land of convenient in town living.

2003 – A Globe Trotting Fool.

As a traveling corporate road warrior, I spent a lot of time on the road. I worked in London, San Francisco, Tokyo, Winston-Salem, Vancouver, Minneapolis, and Boca Raton to name a few. I took advantage of every minute of travel. I worked hard during the day and then did as much sight seeing as time would allow in the evenings and on weekends.

2003 is the year I remembered why I love Atlanta so much. In spite of the great places I traveled to and worked in, there was something really comforting about walking out of Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson to the South Terminal economy parking lot and smelling the scent of the South. In the spring and summer, the humidity holds a unique perfume of old pine, clay, and asphalt so while driving home I’d roll the window down and suck in air with deep breaths. Olfactory memories would reboot and I’d be overcome with the comfort of being home. Sometimes stepping away from where you’re at is all it takes to create value in what you’ve had all along.

2004 – Natasha, Boris and the Tokyo Death Plague.

This was the year of something bad highlighting something good. Let’s start with the bad:

While working in Japan in April, I was invited out to eat Sushi at the ground zero of sushi – Tokyo harbor. My wonderfully hospital Japanese colleagues sat me down at a long low table in a smoke filled sushi house and asked intrepidly what I would and would not eat. This is what I said:

If you put it in front of me, I’ll eat it.

What an idiot. I was an idiot to say it, but more important to my story is that I was a complete idiot for following through on my boast. Board after board of exotic fish, shellfish, and unidentified gelatinous masses passed before me. I ate it all. I was on a mission to literally take in the culture and I wouldn’t be dissuaded. My new Japanese friends were duly impressed. It all went down smooth and I felt like a National Geographic traveling writer who was putting another notch in the belt of world experience.

12 hours later, I’m standing in front of my same Japanese colleagues during the last day of class. I’m in mid lecture when all of sudden, my world tilts on axis, I turn green, break out into an uncontrollable sweat and go weak in the knees. The change in my body chemistry was not subtle, so everyone let out an audible gasp at my change in demeanor. I ran off to the bathroom (a tiny post modern Japanese shrine to the automated porcelain throne) to get very sick…

I stayed sick for days. Days turned into weeks. Weeks turned into Months. When I say sick, I mean a constant state of nausea and wooziness. Let me be more graphic: You know how you feel right before you puke? Your tongue gets tingly, you break out in a sweat, you start to salivate more and your body registers alarms in your brain along the lines of “Quick! Stop what you’re doing and assume the position!” I felt this way most hours of the day, but would never actually puke. Talk about torture.

After four months of extreme discomfort, I had lost about 40 pounds and gone through a stomach biopsy, CT scans, rounds of antibiotics, antibacterial agents, pro-biotics and such. However, I finally started to respond to all the varying treatments and got back to a place where I could eat more regularly, manage the conditions and resume more normalcy in life. The final prognosis was that I got wicked food poisoning but that my stomach was already severely distressed from high stress/lifestyle and that those two things combined where enough to cause a gastric meltdown of sorts. My stomach had stopped digesting, so the acid build-up made everything worse. I still have fully recovered, but I’m probably around 90% of where I used to be.

Now for the good part of 2004:

Shortly after contracting the Tokyo Death Plague, I met Natasha. It was a casual enough meeting through our mutual friend Shay and we hit it off pretty fast. We didn’t hang out tons at first, mostly because I couldn’t handle going out and didn’t want to try to impress a girl while I felt like puking on her at the same time. Nat was hyper understanding though, and slowly we figured out things we could do that wouldn’t totally destroy me. By the 4rth of July, we were seeing each other exclusively and I found myself actually willing to get into a relationship again. Surprise of surprises I tell you. That was the last thing I expected to find. Things stayed great all year long and by October I had temporarily moved with her in her loft. I was starting to feel as though I had really lucked out.

That same October, we decided we should get a dog together. I searched the classifieds in the paper and tracked down a Boxer breeder out in the country who had a new litter of pups. We drove about three hours into the rolling hills of west Georgia until we arrived at a horse stable in a scenic pasture. We opened up one of the horse stall doors and about 5 puppies came tumbling out. Within minutes I had picked out Boris as the dog for us. I’ve never had an easier dog to live with. For a boxer, he’s remarkably calm and obedient. It was tough house breaking him, even using a crate when we lived in a 3rd story loft and had get him to hold his pee until we were outside, but eventually we managed to help him figure it out.

2005 - Halfway There.

The year is only half way over and it already been eventful and full of memories that won’t quickly fade. I won’t write much about it here, because I’m already wrote enough about it my recent blog entries.

Here’s to hoping I get another 10 years as motley in experience as the previous…..

April 07, 2005

Lime Cafe Photo Revelations.

When I travel, I tend to spend a lot of time inside my head, reflecting on the many themes that stitch together my life's panorama. Lately, the word "multiplicity" keeps coming to mind. It started last week when after a long day at work, I rushed home to change clothes, only to turn around to head back into the city with Natasha for a concert. At the time, I was half complaining/half joking about having to rush home to 'change uniforms'. Like going from my day job to my night job. Like going from one world to another.

When I was comparing these photos, I found that they represented the duality of my life experience quite well. In the upper photo, I was determined to capture the observation of a cafe across the street through indirect reflection. In the lower photo, the observation seems almost clinical, safe, and general. Both angles where born in my inner eye. Right brain versus left brain. Artist versus Working Man. Outside-the-lines versus inside-the-lines. I own up to both. I am frustrated by both. I am deeply hooked by both. Like keeping two lovers, I feel forever lucky, tired, and on thin ice.

Perhaps my photography is becoming more about a man telling the truth about himself.

April 01, 2005

Random Friday Ruminations

It's Friday, and I'm in the mood to ruminate. Deal with it.

1 - My roof is officially leaking, I don't have the $$ to fix it, my credit is a long way from bright and sunny, and I need to buy buckets. I am officially looking for ways to squeeze financial water from my financial rock. Donations to the "Keep Matt's Sanity and Carpet Dry Fund" are gladly welcomed.

2 - By my count, every Indian or Pakistani co-worker in my office has a mustache. If this is representative of what can only be described as the hallmark of a culture steeped in progressive men's fashion, then perhaps I ought to make a pilgrimage to the lands of Bollywood, curry, sacred cows, and call centers. Hmm... Imagine the photo treasures I would return with...

3 - Increasing my commute to work by a total of 40 miles per day + the ever rising costs of gas ($2.06 per gallon?!!) = more reason for Federally mandated work-from-home requirements and subsidized scooter and motorcycle purchases!

March 16, 2005

On Canada and Synchronized swimming...

If the national mental illness of the United States is megalomania, that of Canada is paranoid schizophrenia.
--Margaret Atwood, Canadian writer

I stumbled across this hilarious article written by Matt Labash entitled, Welcome to Canada in the Weekly Standard.

As I perused the article, this paragraph jumped out and struck my nationalist funny bone, prompting a full read of Mr. Labash's insightfull essay on our Canadian neighbors:

"If we have bothered forming opinions at all about Canadians, they've tended toward easy-pickings: that they are a docile, Zamboni-driving people who subsist on seal casserole and Molson. Their hobbies include wearing flannel, obsessing over American hegemony, exporting deadly Mad Cow disease and even deadlier Gordon Lightfoot and Nickelback albums. You can tell a lot about a nation's mediocrity index by learning that they invented synchronized swimming. Even more, by the fact that they're proud of it."

Enjoy...

February 16, 2005

Good-bye David.

Today my family lost a keystone in the premature passing of our beloved David. I'm not sure where to start the mourning of his death, so I'll start here.

Keystone -
n 1: a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith
is his anchor";
2: the central building block at the top of an arch or vault
[syn: key, headstone]

I can't think of a better word to describe David. I can't imagine visiting Pensacola without him there. I can't imagine the hole that will be left in his premature departure. The grief I feel is unwanted and deep, yet I can't imagine the feelings of David's wife and young sons. I cannot guess at the reasons God may have for David's sudden exit from the here and now.

So I will do my best to remember what I do know:

That David was the closest thing to an older brother that I have ever had. That I have never laughed harder than in his company - never. That my tastes in music where forever altered when he forced me to listen to the Human League and Eddie Grant. That he has always been the embodiment of charity, long suffering, and quiet virtue. That he has always been the moral compass of my family's generation.

Granddaddy, our king patriarch, passed a year ago. In Granddaddy's final years and after his passing David quietly assumed that mantle. His immediate, extended, and church family all saw in David the same qualities of greatness that were present in my granddaddy and my greatgranddaddies before him.

In my heart of hearts, I know they are all together now, sipping rootbeer, eating fried chicken, and watching over the sun set over their beloved Pensacola.

January 12, 2005

Chocolate Flavored Crack.

Chocolate Frosted Krispy Kreme doughnuts are the snack food equivalent of free-basing. I had two on the way home, and I'm still jjjjiiittteeerrryyy.....

January 06, 2005

The Frill and Folly of Dasani.

Americans are the embodiment of excess. Our malls. Our mammoth meal portions. Our heaping menus of cable channels (how many HBO channels does one REALLY need). I could go on here, but I won’t. I’m going to jump straight to the front of the line, cut past the bouncer, and smack the Grande Dame of Excess across the face with my smoking gun: Dasani Water.

I purchased a one-liter bottle of Dasani water at Publix, on sale, for $1.39. I’m thinking, hmm... 1 liter = .264 gallons. I do the match, and to my suprise, realize that I'm paying $5.29 per gallon of Dasani water.

Let me repeat that.

A gallon of Dasani water costs $5.29. I’m paying $5.29 for a gallon of liquid that is free and readily available from most any public tap, faucet, spicket?! I start to smell a rat.

Consider that a gallon of unleaded gas costs a national average of $1.75 per gallon right now. Ok boys and girls, for those of you that are feeling a bit dull right now, let me break this down for you.

  • Petroleum is a complex mixture of organic liquids called crude oil and natural gas.


  • These crude oils and natural gases are extracted from the ground, on land or under the oceans, by sinking an oil well and are then transported by pipeline and/or ship to refineries where their components are processed into refined products. (Authors note: In many instances, large democratic nations will send battalions of young men with guns, at a great cost of life, to secure these oil fields so the continued extraction of petroleum may continue).


  • The crude oil is largely a mixture of hydrocarbon compounds and relatively small quantities of other materials such as oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, salt and water. In the refinery, most of these non-hydrocarbon substances are removed and the oil is broken down into its various components, and blended into useful products (like gas).


  • Automotive gasoline is then trucked to a station near you for your consumption.


  • The $1.75 you're paying per gallon of gas includes the cost of crude oil to refiners, refinery-processing costs, marketing and distribution costs, and finally the retail station costs and taxes.


So now the common-sense-fairy on my shoulder is starting to thump my skull with a bat, and the veins in my temple are starting to throb under the stress of my brain trying to work this out. Certainly there is a reason that bottled WATER, the most plentiful resource on the planet, costs nearly 4 times the amount of refined petroleum.

I begin sleuthing and as web pages turn… the smell of rat increases.

"Surely Dasani is imported from a remote glacier,” I think. “A glacier so sacred, hosts of adventurers make pilgrimages to the glacier’s source, tapping the mystical fountain of life that is Dasani water…” Um. No.

Dasani is PURIFIED LOCAL WATER. And by local, I certainly don’t mean purified local glacier water, or purified local magical well water. I mean purified tap water. The same water is that is FREE to many of us, is being run through a few filters, a little UV light, sprinkled with a few minerals at a local warehouse, and bottled for our consumption. These blue bottles are sold to us at nearly FOUR TIMES THE COST OF REFINED PETROLEUM.

For those of you that might wrap themselves in a clinical health defense, there is a lot of evidence that bottled water has higher rate of contamination than actual municipal water. At the very least there are “Gaping Holes in Government Water Regulation”. Read the report. It’s a bottled water the “Super Size Me”.

To those of you who hate the taste of tap water, do yourself a favor a buy a filtered water pitcher from a reputable company like Brita. Based on the cost of replacement filters, Brita filtered water is costing you approximate 15 cents a gallon. ($6 per filter per 40 gallons of water).

So the next time you’re watching CNN, and you wonder why your average Afghan or Iraqi citizen is all that impressed with Joe Yankee, ask yourself what they’d think if they knew you paid $5.29 per gallon for something you already get for free.

Dasani. Frill and folly indeed.

December 20, 2004

The "Next Level".

How to make my skin crawl and my ears chew themselves off my skull: Use any phrase with "take-it-to-the-next-level" it it. This is the biggest waste of consonants and vowels since the words "celine dion" made their way into the English language. I mean, take "what" exactly, and who the hell knows where the "next level" actually is? This might work in a conversation about Dante's Inferno, but even then, it's tawdry and fraught with ambiguity. AR-TI-CU-LATE. Please.

So I'm sitting in a training class today and the instructor uses oh so clever catch-all phrase not once, but TWICE. So I threw the ice cold pitcher of drink-as-much-as-your-bored-bladder-can-take water at his head, and then proceeded to stone him with all the loose Blackberry's and PDA's laying on my "team-building" round table. Then I crushed his left knee with a devasting overhead blow from my 500 page three ringed binder and put a "Great Idea!" lightbulb sticker on his head. Then I turned the flipchart easel into a fiery pagan bonfire, and forced the stunned class participants to dance in circles around the fire, chanting "MUMBO. JUMBO. MUMBO. JUMBO." to the mind numbing sounds of the John-Teshian corporate warm-up music coming from the tiny white corporate boom box.

Ok. I exagerate. I didn't do a damn thing. I'm just trying to take-it-to-the-next-level, you know?

October 20, 2004

Mental Snapshot.

Coming home from work after a long rainy day and finding your girlfriend asleep on the floor of the living room wrapped in white blanket, her new puppy asleep at her side, and the Beta Band gently echoing across the loft.

October 05, 2004

Table Tennis Classic: Cheney vs Edwards

I am admittedly on the fence right now, and for the most part, frustrated in equal parts by both candidates. However, the debate tonight went a long way in restoring my belief in the ability to learn through debate. I'd much prefer to see the entire campaign as a series of debates that touched on specific issues at length.

Cheney was impressive. I've never seen someone who is heartbeat away from the presidency -- or a massive coronary -- look so legitimately authoritative. He looked completed calm, a true veteran in combat. I didn't see him flinch once. I'd hate to play poker with this guy. I thought his reflection on El Salvador was on point, and a good argument for the current's administration in Iraq. His willingness to speak his own view on same sex marraige, although in opposition to the President was admirable. The greatest takeaway I got from Cheney was the link to www.factcheck.org. I'll be doing a lot of reading here in the weeks to come!

Edwards on the other hand, was an exhibit of youthful energy, hope, and naivete, which is not necessarily a negative thing. I was really impressed with Edward's understanding of the economic toilet bowl that is our economy. I truly believe that Edwards/Kerry will fight more passionately for reduced healthcare, better education, and a stronger middle class.

So to date, I percieve my choices as follows: Elect Bush/Cheney and you will see them lead the nation through another 4 years of loss and bloodshed in Iraq, but in the end both Afghanistan and Iraq will assume the fulltime fight and sacrifice to maintain their gains and investment in democracy. I believe that they will get there, but at a high cost. I also believe that terrorists will think twice before flexing muscles when two old school junkyard dogs still wield the big stick that is the US military. However, elect Bush/Cheney and you'll see continue to see jobs outsourced, education struggle, and healthcare maintain the same if not increased costs.

Elect Kerry/Edwards and I think Iraq will become more sticky, and ultimately, an opportunity for the US to look even more incompetent. Any traction they gain in the diplomacy and mending fences with those who have called us out as imperialists will be lost in chaos that will ensue if we don't stay and finish what started out to do. It is an ugly, bitter hunch that I'm making, but it makes me hesitant to put them in charge of this task. On the other hand, if I do elect Kerry/Edwards I think that we will see rapid improvement in legislation that will protect my social security, better our homeland education system, increase the wealth and fiscal welfare of the middle class (mi familia!), and a decrease in partisanship.

So I'm left feeling like I'm being asked to vote to let our nations economy founder while we try to see our way through a war we should have never started (which also feels like the moral thing to do) or vote to increase our strength, wealth, and education at home and let the chips fall where they may.

Looking forward to the next debate.