summons
What is it called when your apology makes the situation
worse, and is there an award for this damnable talent?
But I am sorry, all these years later, I am so, so very sorry.
Mostly unrelated, and this isn't especially original, but I am grateful to cancer. I was having my weekly meeting with some of my staff, and a few of them were talking about a co-worker we recently lost, someone who passed away after a year-long fight with COVID. One of them said, "It's terrible, but I would have preferred to have that year with my dad. He died ALLOFASUDDENOUTOFTHEBLUE and was healthy." He didn't say, "And I could have used that time to get some things out in the open and clear the air and make peace, etc." But it was well understood. And not one but two more of the guys said, MY DAD DIED LIKE THAT TOO.
I'm lucky I had that chance. It was a lesson I am still trying to learn. And I daydream about the chance to clear the skies of that great blue norther, to feed the starving manatees of my shallow seas, to breathe in mile high air and breathe out warm plaza nights.
* * *
Anyway.
I am not sure about the mechanics of this anymore, I cannot find my password to my web site, and this post came up as a draft, but it's a post from a long time ago. I'm not quite sure what's going to happen when I press the publish button. I'm not really sure of lots of things lately.
Here goes.
Something from a while back.
You have one more adventure in you, I say to myself. But it's not true, you can tell these sorts of things. I am preparing to say farewell to my 30s and surrender to the soft routine of career insecurity. Politics should anger me more. Current events should fill me with despair. The urge to march on anything should fester. But this is your planet, people. I was here for awhile and watched in curiosity, but your kind is anything but. Who am I to keep anyone from willful personal disregard.
Now that that's off my chest, I feel remorseful and disappointed. Resignation is not an expected life stage. Self-pity is no rite of passage.
On Sunday I got up to 13 miles, which is good for a lame duck, but it hurt and how I will ever hit 20 is a matter of sorcery as much as science. Then it was Halloween, and I fought with my post-betrothed and we both said things we regret but even more regretfully we both wrote those things down in red permanent marker for some strange reason and in the morning there it was, unerasable and solemn and bizarre.
It is too painfully embarrassing to even tell my diary what it was I wrote and whereupon it was writ. Maybe that is why it was so brilliant. Fool behavior should never come with positive reinforcement.
This week, I am summoned for jury duty. As of yet, fruitlessly. My voice hurts from a week of talking. I'm hoping to aggrieve my ears similarly.
Comments
And then, as if to defy such a scenario, I started intentionally taking on new challenges and ideas (like creating a new magazine!). Each new project just fed the addiction until now, as I'm half-way through my 40's, I realize that I wasted more of my life in my 20's and 30's than I ever knew. Only now do I realize that it was THEN (despite all evidence to the contrary) that I was the most complacent and routine, and it's NOW that I'm making an effort at really living.
Because knowing that it's all going to end one day is an excellent motivator.
So please understand that I'm only trying to help when I say that you're going to die soon. There's no time for self-pity. There's too much adventure left to be had.
*Don't make me cry, Dave.
in other words: hi, brandon. (also: i'm impressed you're back up to 13 already.)
I've found that certain kinds of fulfilment require recklessness and that it's impossible to separate the ways in which death motivates. Death started motivating me young, though, so maybe ended up with a different relationship with the reaper. In any case, jury duty is time that you can never get back and that's just a pisser.
sir, good luck on the run!