Summer
Used to mean something
When we got off school
Now
It’s just the hottest
Of the seasons
And we work
Right on through
Sweating
August 10, 2021 at 02:42PM
Summer
Used to mean something
When we got off school
Now
It’s just the hottest
Of the seasons
And we work
Right on through
Sweating
August 10, 2021 at 02:42PM
Have we done enough
In the meantime
To earn our right
To eat and sleep
Again
God damn
That’s all we do
Eat, sleep, eat, sleep
Try to fuck
With a semblance
Of the passion
That some great great
Grandfather of mine
Who I will never know
Fucked with
The passion he fucked with
That birthed
All the generations
That fucked with
Gradually less and less passion
As certain men and women
Fucked with such passion
To birth, not more
Men and women
But advances in science
That established so strongly
Our position on this earth
As a species
That those of us now
Don’t know what the fuck
To do with ourselves
It’s all a big sham
In these modern times
The only life that’s real
Is the surviving
The eating and being eaten
The sex and reproduction
And these originals acts
We still perform
But we are only
Going through the motions
There are no
Noble professions left
Other than
Being a burnout
Our species has burnt out
The only generations
That had to fight
In order to survive
Have long since died
Everything we do now
Is just killing time
Literally thousands of people
Over thousands of years
Have spent their lifetimes
Trying to come up with
Some meaning for our existence
And they can’t fucking do it
We’ve taken over the whole planet
And now we just want it to mean something
In the meantime
As we continue to exist
On the planet we’ve conquered
Each of us as individuals even
Want our individuals lives to mean something
Fuck me man
For once I should publish a poem
With all the expletives
And the rawness
As I wrote it
Because god damn
Of course I’m going to edit out
All the curse words
When I’m sitting in the apartment
And not feeling a damn thing
Other than the desire
To make the poetry good somehow
August 08, 2021 at 02:58PM
Two burners going on the stovetop
Shelves in the pantry freshly stocked with groceries
Diced onions next to the knife on the cutting board
A shower that runs hot or cold
A sink faucet with as much water as I could drink
My girlfriend in the other room on the phone
A computer with access to limitless knowledge
Shirts hanging in the closet
Pants and underwear in the dresser
July 19, 2021 at 11:28AM
There is no point. First, what does have a point? Survival seems to be the most widely accepted point of doing anything. For a long time, there was no point in doing anything other than what was required to survive because, if we did not, then we would have died and we would not have been able to carry on much longer with the pointless activity upon dying. But we are past that now. Can we now begin to spend our time on pointless activities?
My parents would feel better if I get a job. They would prefer that to me being a poet. Where does this obsession with working come from?
I myself feel a little guilt when I spend an entire day and all I have to show for it is maybe twenty or thirty lines of poetry. It seems like very little compared to the economic production of which I know I am capable from having worked a job before.
Why do I deserve
This boredom
This right
To do nothing
Is this the freedom
The revolutionaries
Fought for
Is this the luxury
The industrialists
Worked for
For me
To lie in bed
Until noon
Eat the food
Delivered
To my door
And struggle only
To find new ways
Of entertaining myself
July 06, 2021 at 04:34PM
Like all the money
I made
In my short tour
Of the working world
Was for naught
But to buy
As many mushrooms
As our dear grower
Could grow,
Take them,
Trip my balls off,
And write poetry
July 02, 2021 at 02:37PM
The price of a human life
Has gone up, Brother
There is no more time
In the bank
And survival is cheap
I have made enough
In one year
To live for ten
So what keeps me
From taking the first train
Out of the city?
Money used to buy
All that we ever wanted
Now it just buys
More of the same
But you can’t buy time
June 30, 2021 at 04:20PM
I spend
And spend
And eat
And consume
And earn
And then spend
And eat
More
And more
And earn
Again
Until
I’ll eventually
Lose either
My appetite
Or my ability
To earn
And then die
Or else
Get taken care of
By another
Earner
May 30, 2021 at 11:35AM
These scissors smell like they’ve told secrets to get here. Like there were barge men that needed bribing. Like this pair was part of a special pack at the factory that needed to go out right on time. They smell like the metal mined wasn’t enough and there’s still some poor miner there, mining for more. They smell like plastic that came from a big vat of plastic that has all since been molded into separate things and ended up elsewhere, individuated and useful in some capacity or another. These scissors smell like they are capable of cutting hair. They still smell like metal, though, and not like hair yet. Having not yet had the chance to actually cut hair, they reek of factory-made frustration. “Let us work!” they shout. Let us cut, and keep on cutting. Let us do whatever we were made for. Until we are broken and dead and gone and discarded. Let us work!
I am a little off balance now as I walk. And so it begins.
Large ants crawl on the Mexican blanket. I am interested in their movements.
The shadows have caught my attention as they dissipate with the movements of the clouds between the sun and the ground.
It is starting to open up. Ideas in my head seem to be connected.
My friends are talking on the deck above. I am on the patio below. Their words are disruptive. They are talking about college.
I have a desire to put on my shoes and go into the woods.
I am going into the woods, to discover species anew and to give them new names.
It is hard to write
With the light so bright
On white paper
As I put my pen to paper, I almost forget the words, but still they come to me somehow, flowing from objective reality itself, then through my senses, and seamlessly into Word.
I feel the sun hot on my shoulders through my shirt.
An ant crawls up the leg of my shorts.
I have found a convenient stump to sit on and write.
There is an ant on my left pointer finger, probing me with his antennae.
I need to get out of the sun. My neck is already burnt.
I am tripping, assuredly. I have wandered a bit farther into the woods, where there is some shade. I stepped across a crumbling trunk, like a balance beam, to get here.
I can hear my friends laughing behind me.
I begin to feel fear for the future; fear because this good feeling will come to an end.
I remember the Bene Gesserit mantra: “Fear is the mind killer.”
The fear comes from my ego. When I remember that I am part of all this, the fear goes away.
There are certain words that reassure me. They are often phrases or quotations. Some degree of spirituality, it seems, is just to memorize words, and then, when the right time comes:
(1) Recognize the appropriate situation.
(2) Recite the words in your mind.
(3) Let action flow forth from your body with the realized meaning of those words.
Again, I start to think of the future, and ill feelings immediately follow. Stay present! Stay mindful! This is the heart of my practice.
I fear so much for the future. I fear so much for my ego.
I am concerned for the physical health of my body.
I am concerned from the performance of my financial investments.
Even as a bug lands on my hand, I check to make sure it is not a bee that can sting me. So what if it is?
I am a part of all this. If the bee stings me, it is a part of all this.
It is like the book that I cannot recall the name of. Ishmael, there it is.
He talks of how man was in sync with nature before. This is how it should be. This is the answer.
All of man’s developments have placed him in a position above nature. Many of man’s modern problems would be solved if he would return to his place in nature.
Now, that seems unlikely. It would mean the death of many humans on our overpopulated planet. We have trodden too far down this track.
I hear my friends laughing in the distance. I wonder if they appreciate the deeper power of the trip. Or do they take it all to be just funny visuals?
As they speak with each other, they are kept from going deeper into their own minds.
I think of the time. I do not have a watch. I am fully tripping now.
I wonder how long I have been standing in this place. My legs have held me just fine, but when I look at them, I am unsure of how they operate.
I do feel taller. This is something Sean mentioned he often feels while tripping.
When I misspell a word or scribble, I think, “Don’t worry, they’ll get it.”
But I must realize, they won’t get it. All of THIS, is captured only in my humble words.
I should stop writing and enjoy it.
It occurs to me to draw.
I laugh at myself for thinking I could draw such beauty.
I start to feel ill feelings. I feel them run a familiar track inside of me. I see them, like rushing rivers, encountering the dam of my heavily-fortified ego.
I observe, dangerously at this time, what my ego is built of.
The wind blows. I let it pass. I pick it back up.
My ego is built from who I think I am. My history, my present physical body, what others say about me …
It is hard to keep track of this thought.
I am fully tripping. I have stood in one place for so long, I had almost forgotten what it’s like to move.
I am fully tripping—these exact words occur to me again.
I constantly have these thoughts:
– What should I be doing?
– Is this, what I’m doing right now, productive?
And then I start to think into the future about what will be most productive …
I have to remind myself, that is not the game we are playing.
Stay here. Stay present.
It strikes me how easily I forget. I have an ill feeling, and then I am distracted, and then I forget.
Even control over my body seems to be something I could part ways with, other than for the convenience of my fingers which hold this pen to write.
Things occur to me as being beautiful, and in that moment of occurrence, nothing else matters. My senses are fully immersed in the beauty, like the sight of a crumbling tree trunk, split open and filled with forest debris. So dead, but so perfectly at home.
I think, how will these words sound to the others who read them?
I remind myself, it does not matter. Stay here. Stay present.
Of all the bugs, mosquitoes are the only ones I swat. I do not so much mind the prick and the drawing of blood. I am more worried about disease.
This idea of disease, planted in me by society, affects my behavior towards other living creatures. Again, I think of reading Ishmael.
I cough to spit. It surprises me that I have a throat and a mouth.
I am so at home in the woods right now. The wind blows through my hair, just like it does through the leaves in the trees.
I hear something behind me, a rustle in the leaves. I feel the desire to make myself unseen, to crouch low, to hide.
I feel that I understand my ancient ancestors in this moment. At the same time, I feel the call back to civilization.
I think of my friends and the house, and I smile.
I am surprised to feel my facial muscles smiling.
As the sun shines and the birds chirp, I am filled with so much love for nature.
A moment ago, it was dark. The clouds covered the sun. I was scared of what I could not see among the trees. I was alone.
I am resistant to going back, to have to talk.
I know it will be hard to stay out here for too long. I do not know the ways of the woods. I would lose. I do not want to lose, and so starts the civilization of man.
I was born civilized. At this point, it would take much undoing.
I see a runner on the street through the woods. It invokes a feeling of familiarity.
From where I stand writing in the woods, I feel perfectly balanced between far away from, and still close by, to civilization.
If I were farther into the woods alone, I might feel a more primal fear for my survival.
As I see things on the forest floor, I lean down with my paper and pen, like a photographer with a camera.
I hear trucks on the road. I remember what people have told me in the past.
I just feel so happy, particularly to be inside of my body.
To be contained in a physical being, capable of realizing thought.
The body is a beautiful thing. More than just the beauty of its form, but also of its function—to realize thoughts and feelings.
The importance of yoga, to cultivate this connection between body and mind, occurs to me now.
It is a practice I could spend my whole lifetime learning.
In contrast, I am less interested in certain aspects of my job. There are aspects that seem far removed from man’s natural state. Like keeping the body seated in the same desk chair all day.
—
Woah! A mother moose and a child moose just passed, not more than forty feet from where I am standing here in the woods.
At first, I felt immense fear. I could not tell what was near me in the woods, other than that it was big—bigger than a bird or a chipmunk.
Your eyes play tricks on you between the branches in the trees.
I am being bitten by mosquitoes. I choose to return to civilization, knowing the risks.
I am sad to leave. I must remember the connectedness to nature that I experienced here.
—
I hear my friends and their words. I cannot speak to them. They must come out here into the woods and experience it for themselves.
All around me, the forest floor is alive, mostly with ants. There are also mosquitoes, flying and landing.
There are many aspects. You do not need to fear that it will be over. It will continue. Whether your ego is involved, does not matter. You are a part of it all.
But these mosquitoes are insufferable!
I feel a drop of rain—another element forcing me to return.
My friends talk too much.
They do not wait in silence long enough to experience it themselves.
—
I look back at Marie, I think to talk to her as Marie—she, of the flesh and blood, with whom I share memories.
But she is not the same, as she appears to me now. She is participating in the One. She is a soul, and that’s all that matters.
I think of my own flesh. Am I housed in the bones I would choose? What does it matter, if we’re all the same.
These words are so meager. What art form then? What form could capture this most fully?
There is the question, first, of what art form could capture a lived experience most fully. Then, there is the question of what art form could capture THIS (tripping) most fully.
It occurs to me now that the “come up” has passed. We have arrived at the plateau.
—
I am not sure if any of the others would be willing to participate in this experience in the way that I participate in it.
The woods are a very clear analogy. Deeper in the woods, there is only the sound of wind in the leaves. The only movements are the ants on the ground.
Back at the house, there is music from man-made speakers, man-made words, and even man-made men.
These man-made men are the ones who do not understand.
I think of Ishmael again.
We come from nature, that is where we will find ourselves in order.
Man does not understand himself. Not even the accumulated knowledge of generations of man thinkers can understand one single man.
How then, can we expect man to build himself?
He cannot do the job of nature.
It occurs to me now, how brilliant the book Ishmael really is.
Even as I write these words, I realize that going back to read them will not be the same.
Impossible to achieve the same understanding.
—
I am aware of the ground being alive with ants. I cannot look anywhere on the ground where I do not see an ant.
These ants are like men—successful, relative to other species, and still working to further themselves.
The operations of nature make sense to me in terms of business. An enterprising species will take market share from others and win.
I almost caught a look of myself reflecting in the window, blue bandana. I looked away, not wanting to see my face.
Talking aloud to Marta, my voice sounds inadequate. I wish it were more musical.
—
You have to have your art form ready, before the experience.
When you are awash in the storm of your emotions, there must already be an artistic channel, into which that emotion might pour.
Without a specified channel, the emotion will search for one.
I am an emotional person, I realize now. I always have been. This emotion is my power. It fuels my actions.
—
If I allow it, the economy will engulf me here where I stand in this moment with the skills I have to offer, and my hopes and dreams to be used as motivators to put my skills to work.
The economy does not care where I land. It does not care what profession I choose. It will get use out of me, one way or another. This is management, the business of getting use out of people. And the managers report to investors, and so on.
This is the nature of the economy—investors pushing people to do things (who then push other people to do things) to make more money. It is the investor’s passion for more that sets the whole economy in motion.
It is often difficult to remember after much time has passed why you decided to do what you are now doing. Even if you had written it down in clear detail in a note, that note may have been lost. So it becomes important to trust the decision-making process of your past self.
As an investor, when the market is going through turmoil or your view has become contrarian, you must trust the decision of your past self in order to continue holding your position, as long as your thesis has not been fundamentally broken.
In choosing projects to work on, jobs to take, or relationships to enter into – it is the same. Because you cannot constantly be re-evaluating your “why.” Once you have made a decision you must be focused on the “what” and the “how” entirely, in order to succeed. In every moment you are so focused on the execution of the task, you are trusting that your decision to enter into said task was, and continues to be, a correct one.
What speed goes so fast
As I head off
Hurtling downhill
Into the afternoon
And straight past 5
With my fingers in my hair
Trying to shampoo out
My thoughts in the shower
And wash them down the pipe
With hot tea to relax
I can’t stop going lately
And part of me loves it
Like an object in motion
Happy to stay moving
Having gotten to this speed
Seeming almost
Not to require energy
To maintain the breakneck
Though I fear the force
That will halt my hurtle
And possible break everything
At some point down
The non-now worry road
In the backyard of houses in the Marina neighborhood in San Francisco, I see tiny plots of grass that are hundreds, maybe thousands, of dollars per square foot, in terms of real estate cost. When there are plots of grass 100 times larger occurring naturally in nature, completely for free.
the one with my sweatpants
wasn’t working
two washers going
side by side
one clearly working
wet water splashing
suds bubbling
while the other
its brother to the left
spinning uselessly
waterless
wasting
four dollars
and seventy five cents
all these people
waiting in line
for their $5
cup of coffee
when down the street
a half block
is a deli
that will sell you
a cup of coffee
for 50%
of the price
albeit 80%
of the quality;
but math is hard
in the morning,
i understand
i wonder if
a machine
could make the art
that i do
i think as far
as appearance
it would look the same
or better
but the point of art
is not that
it merely
be produced
but rather,
that it be born
from a genuine
human experience
otherwise,
what’s the point
I keep having this recurring dream that I have missed a flight that I have paid a lot of money for. It upsets me and I wake up in a bad mood. I think it is because I am so conscious of being frugal and saving my money recently. I want to make economic progress for myself and for my partner. I am also worried about my job. I have worked hard to get into this position and I don’t want to lose it. I feel conflict with my lifestyle outside of work, both my social life and my artistic life. I struggle to maintain these other lives that are important to me but could be detrimental to my professional reputation. Like my friend Lake said, everything seems to matter more now. There is more at stake and more going on at once, and everything has to be balanced in relation to one another.
needing it all to be productive even wanting my leisure time to make more for me having gotten into this bad habit of looking at everything in terms of its value and looking at myself in terms only of what value i can produce and this value system being minimally investigated though i suspect it is based on monetary american capitalist fear-based material systems and i have let them get hold of me in an effort i thought some time ago to lean into it for a while so that at some point i would have enough to live comfortable and be released and able to build my own value system with enough “free” time — yet that time has not come and i am getting antsy but know that if i break early before my money is made then i will return to the same problem having not enough money to survive and slipping below the standard of life required for the value system i would build based on non-monetary tenets so i realize the two worlds are linked by the ends of the world’s monetary system and the means of my own idealist world i cannot yet surmise that a complete break is possible especially with the lingering suspicion that a human being animal may not be able to release from his nature whereas the monetary pursuit is an advanced version of the primal pursuit for food and shelter so really wanting to split from my nature and remembering again that this is not possible – which i would not forget except for the ethereal moments when the sky opens up and shines down on the earth in a way i want to look at the world forever or a feeling for a person i love overwhelms me in a moment which i wish would last forever such that i could exit time in that moment and have that be all there is, yet it is this trade, which we do not necessarily choose to make though i think we would choose it if given the option, where the barter for more space is always to endure more time. if you want to see, feel, hear or otherwise sense the world differently than you are sensing it right now then you must endure more time. and this goes on whether we like it or not more time always coming and brining with it subtle changes in space that sometimes you don’t notice, when you’re sleeping for example, and other times you notice very second, like the final seconds in a football match. and in those moments, in a small amount of time, we reach up to the ethereal opening in the sky, but then are pulled back earthward by our animal needs to eat and otherwise care for our bodies that might die if not cared for correctly
takes time what i want to blast all at once in one big surge like a dam holding back the largest river which breaks at only one point and the jet stream that comes forth from that small crack the force of a whole river coming through that one point but even more than that because the whole river must still wait patiently for that small opening so i want the same small opening but the whole river at once rushing through with a blast that could destroy planets the same as a thousand taxis through the entrance of one roll bridge or a thousand camels through the eye of one needle which is the same impossibility i suppose i am asking for in this case that which jesus said was impossible for the rich man to pass into heaven with all his belongings but i care not for my belongings but rather do not want to leave this earth here to pass into heaven which is what i suppose i really am trying to bring all at once the whole word into the ethereal much along with me and still be able to display it to the world as art making me realize now that the belongings which i am most burdened by are not my possessions but my attachment to others and to myself
a little cheap art
that doesn’t mean much
but is still pleasant
enough to make
an economic invalid
worthwhile
at the gallery
wanting to buy
expensive art
but having to
compromise
our artistic
preferences
for what we
can afford
I only care about work because of the money. I only care about money to buy back my time.
some would say the good steak is what melts like butter in your mouth, but i like the tough stuff that you can chew like bubble gum and savor the fat; they say it’s for peasants, but bah, what good is a steak that melts and is gone? what other luxuries do we misinterpret?
they say the good cheese stinks and the good wine tastes like metal, but bah, i want a cheese i can eat and a wine i can drink.
they say the good life is sitting around doing nothing all day, but bah, i’d be bored in the first second. give me the yolk; let me work up an appetite.
they say the rich sit way up high, but bah, put me in the dirt where i came from.
think of how much in the city is man-made. surely at some point we were god’s creation. now, if we assume that our environment influences what we become, how is man affecting the creation of each subsequent generation. especially for those who grow up walking in paved cement, surround by steel buildings, and street lights and planes overhead. the city creates a whole other species.
living in san francisco, there is a tension between: not wanting to leave the apartment because you’re paying so much for rent, and wanting to leave the apartment to go out and experience the city that is the reason you’re paying so much for rent
At the grocery store at 10:41 in the morning on a Thursday I wonder about who is here and who isn’t and who is being prodded along on the trodden track. I’m one of those normal. Look at all the open space and quiet here in a place designed for the heights of the mad rush after work or on a Sunday evening when chores are done according to the norms. But what a place built for so much with so little.
Standing in line at a coffee shop, I watch the barista take orders and talk to customers. Her hair is dyed electric yellow and she has her septum pierced. Her eyes are glossed over like she might be high. She is perfect to me, in this moment on a Saturday morning when everyone is still a little sleepy and waiting for their coffee. She is not really that attractive. In fact, she looks like a boy, round in the face, and dresses like one too, with a long-sleeve cotton button-up. Still, I wouldn’t take anyone else in the world in her place right now.
It makes me think about our standards for people. We require them to be sexually attractive or economically productive or otherwise useful to us in order to deem them worthy of our approval or admiration. I wonder what would happen without those standards. I wonder what would a human being turn out to be. If we could be whatever we wanted, err, not even “wanted,” because that want is subjected to those standards.
So what I really wonder is what a human would be if we could be whatever, whatever at all. For one generation, it would be a fantastic display of art. But then for the next, sexual selection would be all disordered and economic progress might stall and even violence might break out. So the price we pay for our safety, progress, and order is to select some people and not others. On the whole, everyone seems satisfied enough with this. As for me and a few others, I want to run around congratulating and complimenting and loving those others.
My economic ego tries to squeeze out and run dry every other part of me. I stop, shocked, and question myself, who is who here? Who is sacrificing what to whom, and why? I have an idea that the mob has caught me and fitted me into a cog, albeit with handsome reward, but this is not the Self at work here; this is a social trick born of a mass of animals, no single one of which knows why he participates, other than that he is satisfied in some way by it.
The social man, seen to be with people. I wonder why they love him. Why they hang on his arms and laugh at his jokes. whether it is superficial or genuine; either is good enough reason apparently. The lights get bright and conversation gets louder when he walks into the room; they either want to impress him subtly or to get his attention outright. The social man is attractive, if only by virtue of being attractive to others. If seen alone, it would ruin his whole persona.
Seamus says, “Just working in between times like these.”
Krys says, “Marking off the days in my calendar.”
We laugh jaded laughs, morbid about some things, but soberly, and knowing the things we have to do are well worth times like these.
The aesthetic of having things: I am attracted to a person, a man especially, who seems to generally have things—things which we need, in particular. For example, when we are hungry and he says, “Ah, here have a piece of fruit.” Or when there is something to be paid for and he steps forward with money as if his pockets are full of it. Or anything at all where something is sought after that I or everyone we’re with would otherwise have to go out and get ourselves and he says, no matter what it is, “Ah, yes, here you go, no worries.” And never expects repayment.
Aesthetically, he is seen to carry things that he owns, like a backpack on his shoulders, the coat he was supposedly wearing at one point now in his hand, glasses on top of his head that serve a dual purpose to keep his hair out of his eyes. He is a demigod working towards either omnipotence or omnipresence—I am not sure whether it is power or presence that his possessions convey; either, godly in some way.
I could have played along just as easily. I just wasn’t built to. No harm or foul if you are. Pros and cons to fitting in, and the same for not fitting in. Just so interesting that progress and economics are primarily owned by one, and love and spirituality are primarily owned by the other. Like two armies with different types of soldiers, one with archers and the other with swordsmen. Both could potentially win the battle, each by completely different means.
In a city full of people, such steel so straight up to support an industrial flow of life above on the streets and in the buildings where bodies come in contact all day and some stay supple and human while others become like the steel and a part of the foundation; even for these I am thankful. For in one way they have forfeited their humanity. In another, they have made a great sacrifice for those of us who choose to remain human. Without the steel, those of us truly human would work up our appetites until we eat each other. The economic Apollonian steel offers the skeleton and checks and balances for the all the emotion and passion of the overwhelming Dionysian human.
Woe to the poor man who cannot find his place in the economy. Though he may have many great skills, his misfortune is that they are not the ones for which people pay.
It’s a working world. You can pursue art, non-profits, love and anything else that doesn’t pay. But on the front lines someone is doing hard work on a farm, in a factory, or at a desk to pay for your essentials. If survival is human, then so is work. It is important to remember and be thankful for those who keep us alive.
There is always a trade-off between spending time in the present and investing time in the future, just like spending money now or saving it for later. If you only spent your time in the present, then you would ignore needs of the future. You might still find food and shelter in the present but it likely would not be as good as if you spent time planning and growing to find better food and shelter in the future. On the other hand, if you spend all your time investing in the future, you’ll likely have no joy in the present. And there’s great risk, in the case of unexpected death, of losing all your investments all at once.
Money turns play into work. Truth turns life into work.
If you are really going to maximize a day, you cannot just head off at hurtling speed in any direction. It is just like a lifetime; there is a balance between present and future, between pain and pleasure.
I have some capitalist values, like the inclination to break things because I can get more of them.
Even those with social mobility don't move side to side; instead, they go up and to the right, where instincts and social pressures guide them.
I have a plant, that sets on my bookshelf, in my apartment. I believe, whether it is true or not, that it makes me healthier: to have some nature, inside my industrial apartment. Only that, some mornings, when I leave for work, I forget to open the blinds for my plant to get light. And some nights when I get home, I’m so tired, that I forget to water it. So that, the plant may be healthy for me, inside my apartment; but my apartment, is not healthy for the plant.
One day, I opened the glass door to my balcony, and set the plant outside, to get sun all day and water from the rain. I planned to bring it back inside the next morning, but have now left it outside on the balcony for several weeks. I can still see it through the glass door. And so receive any health benefits from “seeing” plant life, but cannot smell it, nor receive its oxygen from my carbon dioxide.
That glass door—between the inside of my industrial apartment and the outside of sun and rain—is a line in the sand, and the human species is drawing near to a point where we must decide which side we’re on.
No it’s not popular, but must it be, in order for you to like it? Must you be marketed to? Do you have any values and powers of evaluating on your own?
Capitalists claim individualism when the economic heights we’ve reached were and will continue to be necessarily collectivist. Any one wealthy man owning companies and interest-bearing investments: he has many of the working class to thank.
Markets are motivated by human utility monsters; the rest suffer myriad negative externalities. All of economics will change when the supreme value is no longer man’s utility.
There came a point when we began to be together in this. Together, is a part of who we are as individuals. If we wish to maintain these heights, we cannot go back.
Something between the Randian obsession with american industrialists and Hessian obsession with eastern ascetics; Hesse was closer to the balance of the two, but Hesse focused more on a philosophical exactitude rather than an economic.
I like to keep a job so I stay pinched in a world of angles and boundaries and numbers; if I’m an artist all day I float away.
I’m living this weird romantic lifestyle where I’m so well cared for that I float away from my body and its needs. Comfortably within the system carried along by my genes and upbringing—this is how I float up and away from myself.
The greatest problem is to see how much we can consume without getting sick. And that is not just food but also art and books and knowledge. They say an immortal man has already been born.
I met this guy named Tommy. He said, “Let me guess, you’re from the midwest.” And later in the conversation he said, “Also, are you in sales?” This made me quite smug. It lets me know I’m playing my role well.
Those of us born into this modern generation without firsthand experience of our animal past sometimes take for granted how close we have now come to living like gods.