Week in a day: Maybe
not quite a week's worth of thought in a day; but of course there are
just too many thoughts, most are tedious, most quickly forgotten, or
so we think, some secret and only a few worthy of recording. I'd be
fine if those were the ones that I did remember but no, that's on
some other clever dick's web pages and it's providing a regular
income stream.
Crisps
for breakfast: What is the bizarre body requirement or function that
cries out for two early morning bags of crisps to be consumed as an
early morning breakfast and then leaves a legacy dry and salty mouth
for the rest of the morning? I don't know and I don't get it but some Scottish people do suffer from this affliction.
Love
and guilt: Everything anybody ever did anywhere is driven by one of
these two things. I thought that briefly for a while this morning
while I was reflecting. Then my reflecting grew dull and I wasn't so
sure. Then I dropped the mirror. I did wonder why young female adults
feel the need to drink entire bottles of wine, straight from the
bottle before heading out for a night out. The girls in the flimsiest
of clothes, tottering on impossible heels like swaying flamingos and
giggling and chatting incessantly. Unaware of their curious
vulnerability and potential to suffer from hypothermia despite the
warm alcohol. Then the boys, tanked up on foreign beer and
testosterone, swaggering in a uniform of sportswear, all stocky and
muscular and herding in circles like confused buffalo. The two tribes
meet at a certain point in the evening having been denying each
other's existence and presence for a while, then illicit cigarettes
and grunted bravado breaks out and shatters the evening's ice as the
shrill and pounding music consumes conversation and...they’re off.
Folie
a Deux: There is scientific proof for life after death. There I've
said it. Of course it's that kind of abstract, awkward kind of
quantum proof that the Daily Mail and the top floor of the BBC will
never quite believe in. That does make me question my own conflicted
position as I consider the “shared psychosis” theory that all of
(uninformed) humanity unknowingly suffers from, all the time. Anyway
it centres around the theory of biocentrism, the evidence lying in
the idea that the concept of death is a mere figment of our
consciousness. So when we die our life becomes like a perennial
flower that returns to bloom in the (quantum) multi-universe. Life
being an ongoing adventure that transcends our ordinary linear way of
thinking. When we die we do so not in the random billiard-ball-matrix
(?) but in the inescapable-life matrix. I'm taking that for
conventional eternal life we should read “inescapable life”.
That's really a different concept altogether which most western
religions seem to have missed out on. Fate, you might say.
Sympathy for Rob Ford – by Charlie
Sheen: An almost comical sense of senselessness and high scoring
negative axis self awareness leads to... survival I'd say. When the
going gets tough, no matter how absurd the protagonist's position is there comes a point where people just stick their heads down, batter
on through and survive, coming out the other end as heroes (or more
likely anti-heroes). Maybe this is they key feature of modern politics or
modern anti-politics and anti-business and anti-religion and so on.
It really doesn't matter if you're a complete horse's arse, a
criminal or a proven liar. If you choose to be obstinate then the position you occupy is almost
impossible to challenge and you can't really be deposed until your
wife (or partner) tells you to stand down via pillow talk or some
cold and withering public stare. So everybody else can go to hell as far as
Rob Ford's concerned and about a quarter of the good folks in Toronto
would agree with him. The opera is here.