We'll see.

November
22

I cannot believe we’re finished with the play. I’m terribly exhausted, but quite happy with how everything turned out. I’ve learned an unexplainable amount these past seven weeks, it’s insane. I feel all the more ready for Columbia now that I finally know for sure what I’m getting myself into. Directing this play has provided a sort of overwhelming sense of confirmation that this is really what I should be doing for the rest of my life. Anyway, I’m done being heartfelt. Carry on.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Blue Turning Grey Over You —Billie Holiday

since feeling is first
who pays any attention
to the syntax of things
will never wholly kiss you;
wholly to be a fool
while Spring is in the world

my blood approves,
and kisses are a better fate
than wisdom
lady i swear by all flowers. Don’t cry
—the best gesture of my brain is less than
your eyelids’ flutter which says

we are for each other: then
laugh, leaning back in my arms
for life’s not a paragraph

And death i think is no parenthesis

-e.e. cummings

(via)
So proud.

So proud.

November
21

“If you’re going to try, go all the way. Otherwise, don’t even start. This could mean losing girlfriends, wives, relatives and maybe even your mind. It could mean not eating for three or four days. It could mean freezing on a park bench. It could mean jail. It could mean derision. It could mean mockery—isolation. Isolation is the gift. All the others are a test of your endurance, of how much you really want to do it. And, you’ll do it, despite rejection and the worst odds. And it will be better than anything else you can imagine. If you’re going to try, go all the way. There is no other feeling like that. You will be alone with the gods, and the nights will flame with fire. You will ride life straight to perfect laughter. It’s the only good fight there is.”

— Charles Bukowski, Factotum

November
20
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Reeling -PJ Harvey

Starting a new research paper.

Title: check.

Starting a new research paper.

Title: check.

You Don’t Know What Love Is (an evening with Charles Bukowski)

You don’t know what love is Bukowski said
I’m 51 years old look at me
I’m in love with this young broad
I got it bad but she’s hung up too
so it’s all right man that’s the way it should be
I get in their blood and they can’t get me out
They try everything to get away from me
but they all come back in the end
They all came back to me except
the one I planted
I cried over that one
but I cried easy in those days
Don’t let me get onto the hard stuff man
I get mean then
I could sit here and drink beer
with you hippies all night
I could drink ten quarts of this beer
and nothing it’s like water
But let me get onto the hard stuff
and I’ll start throwing people out windows
I’ll throw anybody out the window
I’ve done it
But you don’t know what love is
You don’t know because you’ve never
been in love it’s that simple
I got this young broad see she’s beautiful
She calls me Bukowski
Bukowski she says in this little voice
and I say What
But you don’t know what love is
I’m telling you what it is
but you aren’t listening
There isn’t one of you in this room
would recognize love if it stepped up
and buggered you in the ass
I used to think poetry readings were a copout
Look I’m 51 years old and I’ve been around
I know they’re a copout
but I said to myself Bukowski
starving is even more of a copout
So there you are and nothing is like it should be
That fellow what’s his name Galway Kinnell
I saw his picture in a magazine
He has a handsome mug on him
but he’s a teacher
Christ can you imagine
But then you’re teachers too
here I am insulting you already
No I haven’t heard of him
or him either
They’re all termites
Maybe it’s ego I don’t read much anymore
but these people who build
reputations on five or six books
termites
Bukowski she says
Why do you listen to classical music all day
Can’t you hear her saying that
Bukowski why do you listen to classical music all day
That surprises you doesn’t it
You wouldn’t think a crude bastard like me
could listen to classical music all day
Brahms Rachmaninoff Bartok Telemann
Shit I couldn’t write up here
Too quiet up here too many trees
I like the city that’s the place for me
I put on my classical music each morning
and sit down in front of my typewriter
I light a cigar and I smoke it like this see
and I say Bukowski you’re a lucky man
Bukowski you’ve gone through it all
and you’re a lucky man
and the blue smoke drifts across the table
and I look out the window onto Delongpre Avenue
and I see people walking up and down the sidewalk
and I puff on the cigar like this
and then I lay the cigar in the ashtray like this and take a deep breath
and I begin to write
Bukowski this is the life I say
it’s good to be poor it’s good to have hemorrhoids
it’s good to be in love
But you don’t know what it’s like
You don’t know what it’s like to be in love
If you could see her you’d know what I mean
She thought I’d come up here and get laid
She just knew it
She told me she knew it
Shit I’m 51 years old and she’s 25 
and we’re in love and she’s jealous
Jesus it’s beautiful
she said she’d claw my eyes out if I came up here
and got laid
Now that’s love for you
What do any of you know about it
Let me tell you something
I’ve met men in jail who had more style
than the people who hang around colleges
and go to poetry readings
They’re bloodsuckers who come to see
if the poet’s socks are dirty
or if he smells under the arms
Believe me I won’t disappoint em
But I want you to remember this
there’s only one poet in this room tonight
only one poet in this town tonight
maybe only one real poet in this country tonight
and that’s me
What do any of you know about life
What do any of you know about anything
Which of you here has been fired from a job
or else has beaten up your broad
or else has been beaten up by your broad
I was fired from Sears and Roebuck five times
They’d fire me then hire me back again
I was a stockboy for them when I was 35 
and then got canned for stealing cookies
I know what’s it like I’ve been there
I’m 51 years old now and I’m in love
This little broad she says
Bukowski
and I say What and she says
I think you’re full of shit
and I say baby you understand me
She’s the only broad in the world
man or woman
I’d take that from
But you don’t know what love is
They all came back to me in the end too
every one of em came back
except that one I told you about
the one I planted We were together seven years
We used to drink a lot
I see a couple of typers in this room but
I don’t see any poets
I’m not surprised
You have to have been in love to write poetry
and you don’t know what it is to be in love
that’s your trouble
Give me some of that stuff
That’s right no ice good
That’s good that’s just fine
So let’s get this show on the road
I know what I said but I’ll have just one
That tastes good
Okay then let’s go let’s get this over with
only afterwards don’t anyone stand close
to an open window

—Raymond Carver (via)
November
19

The play went pretty decently. Great, actually. Yes. It went great.
I need sleep.

I had a train flatten out a few coins today for luck.
The show opens in a little more than two hours. 
So excited, so scared!

I had a train flatten out a few coins today for luck.
The show opens in a little more than two hours.
So excited, so scared!

I found this really neat showcase of presidential doppelgängers done by Patrick Witty for The NY Times photojournalism blog Lens.  Heres what he has to say about it:

“The idea of making portraits of everyday people who bear the names of American presidents came to me in 2007 when President Obama had just begun his campaign, and my pregnant wife and I were mulling over names for first child. Naming a baby is a daunting task. Would a name that carries a powerful history shape his future, direct his destiny?

Some of the presidential doppelgängers I met over the past nine months were named to honor the great men who have occupied the Oval Office; others inherited the name from their fathers. Regardless, living with such a name can be a burden.”

So far, he’s found a George Washington, John F. Kennedy, Calvin Coolidge, Ulysses Grant, John Quincy Adams, and Richard Nixon.

 Beautiful photos. Great articles. Very interesting.

I found this really neat showcase of presidential doppelgängers done by Patrick Witty for The NY Times photojournalism blog Lens. Heres what he has to say about it:

“The idea of making portraits of everyday people who bear the names of American presidents came to me in 2007 when President Obama had just begun his campaign, and my pregnant wife and I were mulling over names for first child. Naming a baby is a daunting task. Would a name that carries a powerful history shape his future, direct his destiny?

Some of the presidential doppelgängers I met over the past nine months were named to honor the great men who have occupied the Oval Office; others inherited the name from their fathers. Regardless, living with such a name can be a burden.”

So far, he’s found a George Washington, John F. Kennedy, Calvin Coolidge, Ulysses Grant, John Quincy Adams, and Richard Nixon.

Beautiful photos. Great articles. Very interesting.

colinweaver:

SNPD, hahaha

Oh, hey John Mayer. Can I have your autograph?!?

colinweaver:

SNPD, hahaha

Oh, hey John Mayer. Can I have your autograph?!?
November
18
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Nuit Sur Les Champs-Elysees (take 2) —Miles Davis

Honda CB350 (via)

I will own a café racer before I’m thirty. And live in a city spread out far enough so that using it as my main mode of transportation for half of the year wouldn’t be impractical.

Honda CB350 (via)

I will own a café racer before I’m thirty. And live in a city spread out far enough so that using it as my main mode of transportation for half of the year wouldn’t be impractical.

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