a great article on the role abandoning projects plays in our creativity. really good. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/15/books/review/mark-oconnell-abandonment-issues.html?emc=edit_tnt_20150313&nlid=52571394&tntemail0=y&_r=0
i follow – as should you – the artistic delves of Deletist Bleakhaus (or collaborators). Exceptional portrayal of our and the world’s shadows.
Cras ultricies cursus tortor, at posuere metus. Maecenas porttitor, purus id rutrum facilisis
got here from my interest in Peter Lorre. M getting a tattoo of Lorre’s name on my hand – as soon as i save the bucks.
Some things stick in my memory. Maybe that is what memory is – a stickiness with time where certain events float through one’s consciousness. Like flotsam, but with people drifting in its midst. The 1959 Bethlehem Steel strike is one such piece of detritus. Involving a dozen steel mills across the US, it was a strike that lasted six months. My stepfather was one of those strikers. I remember him and my mother living in a housing project near the children’s home me and my siblings were in. My mother and stepfather lived off of the union’s strike fund, a coffer that grew slim as each month ticked by. I was flipping through Ghostly Ruins: America’s Forgotten Architecture looking at photos of abandoned buildings. I am soothed by black and photographs of things from my past and earlier – cars from the ’50’s, prisons, mental institutions. Maybe it is because I am of that era; perhaps it is due my being a Southern. A malady in and of itself, my sense of time lopes along at a pace that is out of synch with other parts of the US. I think this is the Southern illness. Born and raised there, it was not in synch with the rest of the country. It is as though it has a stuttering relationship with time preferring to dwell in its own past. It was in that book that I stumbled across photos of Bethlehem Steel. It was then that I fell into my rabbit hole of memory.
There’s more to be said on this syncopated sense of time that is so much the my experience of being from the South. But, for now, I thought I might just give you a link to the photography of the Southern author Eudora Welty and leave it at that.
As a means of unionizing against my over-working, vague-about-when-i-am-working-or-not self , i am basing my work patterns, my obsessing about work, as well as the days i close my biz on the lunar phases. Currently, we are in the dark moon aka new moon phase. The actual day is monday although like some cults, cultures, covens, spiritual practices etc., i am noting the dark moon phase as including 2-3 days before the actual event. “Hush crazy mind, hush,” i’m telling myself. “No work, no thinking about work. Just hush.”
This is my favorite commentary on Michael Jackson’s death, from the Ill Doctrine’s Jay Smooth. Hat Tip to Jesse Thorn of Maximum Fun.