new one

There's a hand that works the land"

he said it and he meant it.

He didn't say it with respect,

he said it with a quiet contempt

all the world could spot it.

 

You see this is the kind of lad

that never worked a day by hand.

that knew exactly the minutes in an hour

and all the worth that could accumulate

and all the loss in the minutes late.

 

this is the kinda of fella that could sit and tell ya

how "our lads could kick a ball"

up and down and over the wall

but would look surprised if you said to him

what time the sun was going to go dim

and that the rain was about to fall

only by the smell that rises above all.

 

This man would think you were on the brink if you challenged his opinion 

on how a bit of land was worth nearly all that he could muster.

 

A bit of road, a wet ould wall. Sure it'd be up within a week.

Well

Isn't it a fine thing too, to have the intuition

The respect and sound and taste and touch

of the inherited tradition.

 

On Procrastination

Procrastination is a terrible thing. I suffer from it greatly.

Almost dearly.

For me, I tend to get very sentimental when I procrastinate. It's an
excuse of course, almost Freudian, except I figured it out. I'm
smarter than my subconscious self, see.

Generally, I’m a sentimental person anyway. For anybody that wouldn't
know me very well, that would come as a surprise. I keep a box of
items that have certain meaning to them. Pertaining to certain events
I like to remember and whatnot. For example, it's without question
that I keep all concert tickets. This is waning however, as concerts
are getting more and more like sponsorship junkets.

I fell in love with procrastination when I did my Leaving Cert in
2002. I'd neither intention nor inclination to study. For me, school
was another institutional thing that we all just had "to do", until
the next thing we had "to do". It was at this point that I also found
that it was possible to be creative in life and thus subvert the
institutional way of life. So, during my Leaving Cert, I started to
teach myself music.

Like most teens who only wanted to find a lady (cough) and rebel, I of
course picked up the guitar. In 1991, my brother bought a classical
Spanish guitar, because his teacher told him to and they were going to
learn music. Now it was later found that he was of no way shape or
form musical - he was actually found to be autistic - so that died a
death and the guitar went to the "spare room" (read: personal rubbish
dump of items with a sentimentality rating of 0.01). Several years
later, when it was my time to join the same music class, I eagerly
rescued the then-beauty of an instrument and went on my way to future
musical stardom.

I went to school in Tuam, the Christian Brothers. Grand place, never
had any problem with it. I started school around the time Capital
Punishment was abolishing (I think), so all my teachers were young,
upwardly mobile, fresh out of Uni' and probably some form of drama
person/arts student. There was one nun, but we'll leave her alone. She
was grand once you wrestled the lump of a sellotape ring from her. Or
as we called it, Brass Knuckle Junior.

First guitar class, grand, we learned G, C and D and was sent off with
Leaving On A Jetplane to learn for the next week. It was a fitting
song, since me trying to learn that was nothing short of a plane
crash. Grand, my brother was a bit slow so maybe I was too - I’d hope
in myself - I’ll stick it out.

Second guitar class, a wet Wednesday in 1994 when I really just wanted
to go home and eat my fish fingers and beans and watch the Turtles, we
had all failed miserably, and were told to try the chords again, this
time with E and A to lump on top. It couldn't be done. It wasn't
either, since The Den was probably especially good that day.

Third guitar class. Somehow the other lads had received some miracle
over the week and excelled in their chord structuring skills. It must
have been my latent, ten-year-old concept of atheism, but no dice for
me. I'd blame lambing season, but it was April and I was a lazy
farming son anyway.

I think I managed a D and a G, but week 3 brought the major F. This
was like asking to join in with Man United with a broken leg. There
was no way. What was the song? It was Tuam. We know all the major
chords now lads, so let’s go for it. The Saw Doctors - I Useta Lover.
Fast, familiar, c'mon, ye'll have to know this lads, right?

Besides the fact that this song (other than mentioning the town, the
school, and a vague but growing concept of a girl), was completely
irrelevant to 10 year olds. Never mind learning the chords, trying to
remember the lyrics while my mind is stuck on Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles (and, how crap Biker Mice From Mars is), I had no hope.

And so, my earliest and therefore most sentimental memory of
procrastination is this: I'm sitting on the side of my bed at home.
I'm miserable. I'm 10. I'm getting this feeling I’ve never felt
before. Do I sit, and push myself, and learn this song if it breaks
all the fingers in my little left hand, and the skin of my fingers is
coarse and bleeds; or do I quit. Will I go and ignore what I have to
do, or will I just go and do something else and forget about it for
now.

And quit I did. I wandered around in the woods for a while and said
nothing to nobody. I think I even "lost" the sheet into the fire.

I walked into the class on the Wednesday, 4pm on a Spring day in 1994.

I try to take the teacher aside, but no dice. We're a small group, its
casual - sit over on the bench there with the lads. Now, are ye ready
to play. No. Why not? I didn't learn it. Why not. I just didn't. Is it
too hard for you. I dunno.

It went on like this. I eventually just left the room. As anyone with
a memory of their childhood knows, it's the worst feeling in the world
to be sitting, waiting for the teacher to come check your copy, when
you haven't the homework done.

So back to 2002. I'm doing the Leaving Cert. I'm not studying; I’m
arsing around killing time again. I pull out that old guitar on a
Saturday night and sit on the very same bed on which the last time I
held this guitar in this seat, I decided for the first time that i'd
quit. And I played a G chord. And then a D chord. I looked them up on
the internet (not an early adopter - I'd won a Unison box in a draw
some time before). I found a song - a personal favourite - Nothing
Else Matters by Metallica.

E minor - D - C - G

Repeat.

I'm playing a song for the first time, and I was never as proud.

What to remember

We're all moving through history. Individually, it's meaningless. Altogether - we are history - we create history. We define history, now.

So be careful nobody sees you when you steal your neighbour's magazines. Someday your grandkids might get famous and end up on "Who Do You Think You Are".

Meandering on making plans

I went through a period of disregarding all future plans, and embracing a form of life that I thought was completely free, unpredictable, interesting, and refreshing. 

Is it feck. 

I'd completely no idea what to do with myself. I'd hate to say it was intended to sound bohemian, since i'm as "bohemian" as beans on toast. I just thought, if I expected nothing of life, i'd get more out of it. I'd appreciate things more. Open to all instances. All experiences.

No freakin' way!

What I found was maybe my true self, at least at this point in time. Quite boring, quite lazy. A barstool philosopher. At times, it's like looking at a life from the outside-in.

Not always a great feeling to "find yourself". Maybe you needed finding though.

Anyway, what i'm enjoying now is planning a trip to the US later this year, hopefully before the summer. Never been to the states, so why not?! Damn Hell Bitch! 

Initial plans, New York, Boston and Chicago. A while back I got somewhat interested in Irish emigration in history, and the effects on local history (abroad). I don't know how I got to like this topic, maybe I just like to see the impact we had as a somewhat nomadic race, abroad. That strain has somewhat died though. Now we seem to just blot the beaches of Australia and Thailand. 

I wonder if the people of Australia and South East Asia are absolutely sick of us?

What I do be reading...

Thought i'd shtick up a few more links to blogs i've been following for the last while. I never said I was interesting enough to write about myself.

http://johnsmyth.ie/blog/
Been following this for a few months. The shots are absolutely stunning. Must get a few prints of them for the house.

http://www.headrambles.com/
"Rambles around the head of an Irish Grandad" is the masthead for this one, and it's certainly fitting - sure what else would it be? Interesting, funny, refreshingly honest and therefore often insightful. A favourite.

http://kottke.org/
I've pointed to kottke before, but I still love it for a random link when i'm bored. 

http://www.mentalfloss.com/
More random articles. I always find these kind of sites are really good for starting you off on a tangent of researching (I use that term very loosely) something you'd never had looked up before.

http://www.pixel2life.com/
Loads of tutorials, from programming to graphic design to animation. Very useful.

http://www.thegoodmoodfoodblog.com/
Great for simple, cheap and tasty dishes.

http://www.ted.com/talks/browse
Finally, TED talks. Interesting people, speaking about interesting topics. Plain and simple.

Thought of the Day!

I was thinking about living and dying and all that fun stuff, and was considering the mind from a biological viewpoint. The mind - as a consciousness - has to be biological, since I remember nothing from before I was born? Hence, when I die, who is to say any of my consciousness is to go on to another state? 

No. We'll live and die and that's the end of it.

This week i'm watching Twin Peaks and finally going to actually sit down and make myself finish The Road.

</object>

I love nutters

Seriously, the fact people like these exist brighten up my existence. Just to offset the massive amount of God-botherers and politicians in the world who are supposedly "right".

We all know it's 99.9% likely he's wrong. But I always wonder, at what point do conspiracy theories become conspiracy theories, rather than just being theories? 

Boards.ie Conspiracy Theories board

Links post

Random links!

Nathan Sawaya is a Lego Artist...

Famous movie quotes that are also the movie title. Bit of an overload on first viewing.

Via Kottke, a NY chef who wastes none of the meat.

I recently met Peter Mathews who has some great views on the issues within the Irish economy. Recently he's discussing NAMA in realistic terms - no spin here.

psychological review of Twitter...

Sandwiches

Life less than slow motion, moving as fast as it’s pushed.
A sedentary Atlas has fallen
Under his globe.
A world behind a door that opens inwards,
But the doorstop’s wedged tight.
Thick jam blood moves through these walls.
Crooked picture frames, shelves of ornaments.
Shirt buttons.
Cups of tea swirling.
Thick jam blood moving slowly.

Christmas

Christmas is apparently just around the corner.

What do I want?

Jesus back.

:'(

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