Sunday, February 28, 2010

Like a Moth to a Flame

Last night I watched a movie called District 9. It was surprisingly good. In fact I'd rate it as one of the best sci-fi movies I've ever seen. But this isn't about the movie, but rather the effect of the movie and the larger picture beyond.

District 9 was both disturbing and touching, and after I finished watching it I felt stirs of emotion. I felt sadness for all the bad things people do to each other, and I started feeling guilty about all the bad things I'd ever done or even thought about doing to other people.

But I didn't get carried away. I'm a philosopher, remember? I just think about crap. It doesn't mean anything. Normally when a movie stirs something in me I dwell on the emotion. This time I extracted myself from the emotion and tried to examine why this movie made me feel this way.

In the movie there was lots of betrayal, misunderstanding and resulting violence. The story played my emotions in such a way that it caused me to start feeling guilt, to start comparing myself to the "bad guys" or at least the people with the really screwed up priorities. Why? How? What is it about that series of images on the screen that stimulated the flow of some chemicals in my brain and completely altered my mental state? It's just a movie. It's just a story. Yes, there are strong parallels between the movie and reality, but it isn't my reality, it isn't reality for anyone I know, and there's nothing I can do about it anyway. So why should it bother me? And why should it make me start comparing myself and my own deeds to fictional characters who've done far worse than I ever have?

I suppose the spiritual side of me would say something about my repulsion for things that are "wrong" or "evil" or my "connectedness" to doing "good" and "right." I'm full of love. I have a heart. That sort of thing.

But perhaps the scientific side of me would say it's nothing more than chemical reactions. Like all primates and most animals, we're visual beings. We see something, and we've got a biologically programmed response hard coded within. An elk sees a wolf, or anything that looks like a wolf, and it instantly goes on the alert. It'll probably run. Like other primates, we're social creatures. We "care" about each other because it's beneficial for the survival of the group. Even in modern society where much of the reason for our actions has been obscured, the programming is still there. For example, humans are so easily seduced by junk food because, in nature, foods that contain fat, salt and sweet, and that's easy to obtain, are highly desirable because they occur so infrequently. Extra calories are good when starvation looms around every corner. But our programming didn't account for being surrounded by sweet, salty and fatty foods at all times, and as a result we're fat. Very fat. Unlike every other living thing, we have to go against our programming and choose fresh vegetables over McBurgers, and make ourselves run and lift heavy things in order to stay healthy and lean. Every other species does exactly the opposite, just as they are programmed to, and it works well in the wild. When we do as we're programmed, we become this guy.

It's known that in many animal species, the presence of babies produces a chemical change in adult males to make them more docile, even protective, of the offspring. Do they "love" the babies or is it merely beneficial for the species if dad doesn't eat them?

This interests me because of my tendency to internalize things. I'll visit a historic site where some great tragedy occurred, and then for days I'll be seriously bummed about it. "How can I go about living a happy-go-lucky life when so much tragedy lives in the world?" That's the summary of my thoughts almost every time. But why? There has always been tragedy in the world and there always will be. My being down about it isn't going to change any of that. This isn't a great revelation, but there's a difference between knowing something and knowing something. It's the difference between knowledge and wisdom. A brain full of facts doesn't make one wise. It's knowing how to use what's in the bucket that makes one wise.

I've been applying all of this to different aspects of my life with interesting and so far pleasing results. Is it wrong to say "I don't care" and then act like you really mean it? Where does one draw the line? Does there even need to be a line and why? According to who? In the end, how much of this matters?

I had brunch this morning with an extremely liberal friend of mine. We had some lively debate at the table. I find myself more and more disagreeing - quite strongly, at times - with the ultra-left. It's not that I'm agreeing more with the ultra-right; they're nutcases too. I suppose I find myself drifting somewhere near the middle, though arguably my "middle" is still very much hugging the left. I'm just not subscribing much to extreme views these days, no matter how happy or optimistic they may sound, partly because I'm less certain of them, and partly because I don't think it really matters. I guess if I were to summarize my attitude lately, I'd put it like this: "I'm going to do what makes me happy, and do what I know I must in order to increase my happiness. The rest of you can go to hell." Though of course that's not entirely true. I may be eating some bananas now, but I still believe in the myriad benefits of eating local and haven't abandoned doing what I think is "the right thing" for my body, my community and my taste buds. I guess the real change has come from me pretty much losing hope in "saving the world" and asking myself why I ever cared at all about the perpetuation of the human race. Do I really care if people are still walking the earth in 500 years? Nope. The Universe brought us here, and it will do with us as it sees fit. All of the craziness, all of the good, the bad and the ugly are not of my design and not within my control. Oh sure I don't want to bring unnecessary suffering to my fellow human, but it is a dog-eat-dog world. Nature set it up that way, not me, and I've found some level of comfort or acceptance with that which works for me.

And I'm not done with trying to give something back to the Earth. Some people think they're giving back by not eating animals. Others like to recycle or drive hybrids or write books about global warming. Yet others just like to make the rest of us feel guilty for being alive. As for me, I give back in my own way too. The greatest way I know to give back is to never have kids. No disrespect at all to people who have kids or plan on having kids. Thank God my mom had kids. But for me, I just want to have some fun and extract more joy out of life, even if it isn't maximally green. I mean, why not? Being "green" only delays the inevitable. Even if we all became model "green" citizens, the earth simply cannot support ten or fifteen billion people. I can't see the future, but maybe it's our lot in life. Viruses don't worry that they're going to kill their host. They just have a field day until the lights go out. Introduce rats to Hawaii and they go nuts, with no regard for how many species they wipe out or what'll happen when they eat themselves out of house and home. Maybe it's right, maybe it's wrong, but that seems to be how nature designed things. I suppose our real curse, unlike the rat and the virus, isn't our eventual demise, but our ability to see the consequences of our actions without actually being able to stop ourselves from acting.

So if you're one of the 2% of all humans alive at this moment who has a safe, comfortable place to sleep, fresh water to drink, enough food to eat, a government that can't totally oppress you and enough of your faculties to realize it, then let's toast. Drink to the good times and celebrate your incredible good fortune, because as far as we can tell you are indeed a rarity in the Universe.

Cheers.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Homesick Blues

Today is Go Texan day. I never appreciated it until I moved from Texas.

Sometimes I get a little homesick and today is one of those days. It's gorgeous and sunny, and I wore short sleeves for the first time since last summer, though it's still only in the 40's outside and there's plenty of snow on the ground. Maybe I'm just missing the Texas heat.

I'd like to just hop in my F350 right now and drive to Austin. Take a walk around Town Lake. Have a beer at The Ginger Man. Get nekkid at Hippie Hollow. See McKinney Falls. Hug a few friends.

Then you know what I'd do? I'd hop in my truck and head west again. I'd like to lose myself at Big Bend for a week. I'd like to sleep under the stars next to a giant saguaro in Arizona. I want to wake up with the sun on the edge of the Canyonlands in Utah, with no sign of another human being. I just want to wander and roam. That sounds good. That sounds real good.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Mailbox

It's always a tense situation, checking the mailbox. Sometimes I'm excited, expecting a package. But always I have this little fear that something's going to show up and just piss me off. It happens every now and then. Years ago I got a letter from an insane ex's lawyer, threatening to sue me for breaking up and, apparently, stealing his socks. You'd think that after being in a relationship with me for five years he'd know I don't wear Wal-Mart socks.

Right before Christmas, of all times, I got not one, but TWO letters from the IRS within a month of each other. One said I hadn't reported some income from the previous year. The other said I hadn't reported some income from THREE years ago. They were right, and both were honest mistakes on my part, but it still sucked.

Today I had another double whammy. Apparently I was caught by one of Boulder's mobile cop-in-a-box cameras driving 30 something in a 25 through a neighborhood. Forty bucks. I also had a letter from the City of Milford Texas, telling me there was a warrant out for my arrest because I owed them $139.50 for a speeding ticket I got in February, exactly TEN YEARS AGO almost to the day. I clearly remember that incident. I was driving to Dallas on a rainy night. I was 25 years old and speeding and probably deserved the ticket, but that was the most Godawful little hell hole of a one-horse town to get a speeding ticket in. I had to drive all the way back out there to see the judge. I waited for about 3 hours in a dirt parking lot with about thirty other people, wondering if he was even going to show. None of wanted to leave because no one could have possibly lived within 100 miles. The judge finally showed up in his jeans and hat, driving a beat up old pickup. The "court" was a little shanty, the shell of a house probably 100 years old. After an absurdly long, rude ordeal that ended up consuming an entire day of my life, the judge wouldn't let me off. He didn't let anyone off that day, and something told me he never did. Speeders were undoubtedly their only source of revenue. Whatever happened after that, I apparently never finished paying off the ticket, or if I did the memory and records of it are lost to time. I guess they decided that after ten years they might aught to try and collect their money. I paid it. I got a confirmation number this time.

Other than this, I got a few of my regular bills and the usual junk mail. See, I really have no choice but to shop online at Williams Sonoma so that going to the mailbox won't always be such a drag.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

To Everything There Is a Season

A few tidbits of news, for what they're worth:

1. I'm lovin' the gym again. Since I've officially become a philosopher, I've also rediscovered my burning desire to have my arms rip the seams of my shirtsleeves.

2. I buy bananas and I don't care. Yeah I'm still mostly local, but you know, whatever. It's just a banana.

3. I'm taking Mom on her once-in-a-lifetime dream vacation for her birthday in April: Washington, DC. I know it's not all that exotic but she has dreamed of this her whole life (she hasn't gotten out of Texas much.) I've got the tickets, the hotel downtown, and a rough agenda scratched out. I told her tonight and she screamed on the phone. It took her an hour to calm down enough that I felt comfortable letter her hang up. I'm really looking forward to it.

4. I've stopped competing at work. I'm still going to learn some programming because continuing ed is a good thing, but I'm an analyst, not a programmer. I'm not the top analyst, but I get my work done and they're paying me well so I've got nothing to bitch about.

5. I'm buying a new truck. But not yet. The car is great and all, but I'm a truck man. I've already set up a financial plan for getting the ultimate truck, the wet dream of every cowboy or Texan who needs to feel like he's got a ten inch dick. Picture it: 2012 F-350 Super Crew long bed 4x4 Lariat in sterling grey metallic. The new super-clean burning 6.4 liter V8 Turbo Diesel engine (to be introduced next year.) Power everything. Heated leather seats. Navigation system. Towing package. Telescoping mirrors. Cab lights. Heavy duty bumpers, brush guard, fog lights, toolbox, and a whole lotta hell yeah! It's like my last truck, but with no expense spared. Why? Because I can, and because I want it, and that's all the reason I need. Watch out, because when I come home to Texas for Christmas in 2011, daddy's comin' Texas style!

6. Vegans annoy the caca out of me, God bless 'em.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Hints of Spring


There are no tulips yet (outside of the Whole Foods floral department) but signs of spring are in the air. The early bird trees such as the cottonwoods have already put buds on, and the snow levels and temperature are both on the rise. It's been snowing lightly for days, and we're supposed to get up to 8 more inches by Monday night. I shoveled the sidewalk this morning and the snow was heavy and wet, a sure sign that spring is coming.

But the most exciting signs are the return of the northern flicker, which sings every morning and has already started hammering on the chimney, and tonight's annual Red Party, the first social gathering I ever attended in Boulder, and where I met my first Boulder friends.

Yeehaw! I'm ready.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Eureka!

The other morning I woke up, sat straight up in bed, and said, "Holy crap, I'm a philosopher!"

Just to make sure, I did a little research on exactly what a philosopher is, and I'm pretty satisfied that I fit the description. I don't know why this never seems to have occurred to me before. I also don't know why the label helps, but it does. My favorite thing to do, it seems, is think. My blog clearly demonstrates how tortured I often am by my thoughts - not that they're so terrible, but rather that they're so voluminous. It doesn't have to be anything that means anything, though a lot of my time is consumed by thinking about things that I believe are important. "You think too much!" I've always been told. I guess having a label for it helps me shrink it down, put controls on it, manage it. It's not so mysterious when it has a name.

I've found that I've been lighter of spirit since that little "aha" moment. I went to the gym and worked out. I completed 10 more chapters in my ActionScript book and didn't even complain about it - and as a result I was able to talk some ActionScript with my co-workers which felt kinda cool. I ate at a restaurant and didn't worry that it wasn't local or organic. I watched some PETA demonstrators downtown and didn't even get angry. I had a few beers and didn't go to that dark place. I've even laughed a few times. I've kinda felt like my old self, like the person I was before I despised society so much.

I've just kinda felt like, what's the point of being so dark and brooding all of the time? The world is what it is, no matter how happy or grumpy I may be. Just roll with it.

Of course I'm not just going to dump all of my beliefs. But maybe I can quit internalizing so much, and just let the world be.