“The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart.”
“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”
― Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
“The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart.”
“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”
― Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
But the cars of that era, especially towards its exuberant climax, seemed to have been styled by people on drugs, all fins and wings and weird shapes. And chrome. Lots of chrome. They were powered by giant V-8 engines -- the Cadillac offered a 500cid and the Lincoln a 460cid -- that seem like they could have powered World War II fighter planes.
And the music; I mean the music adults listened to, not rock'n'roll -- that was pimple music for teens -- was also far from conservative, but hip and swinging, like the Kirbystone Four's version of "Baubles, Bangles and Beads," rendered in their "go sound" -- new for 1958! -- or Bobby Rydell's finger-snapping take on "Volare!" Somehow, it all fitted together: Bishop Fulton Sheen and Hugh Hefner, Bunny Yeager and Debbie Reynolds, Dwight Eisenhower and Jerry Lee Lewis, Edward Teller and Albert Schweitzer....
Well, maybe it did. Willoughby! Next stop Willoughby!
"I was thinking that I like knowing that a guy complimented your ass.""When I saw that guy trying to pick you up, I didn't get mad, I got turned on. It arouses me to know other guys want you. I can have you any time I want, and they can never even have a cup of coffee with you."
"If I may be honest and blunt, I think your breast size may be ideal. Any bigger and I suppose they could cause some strain and get in the way."
"Even when you are being snarky, you give me a raging hard-on."
"I think when it comes to sex we are very much in tune. We both like the same things. I'm never shy to tell you what I want you to do."
"I used to worry a lot about you when you were in Afghanistan. I kept thinking, no filthy raghead is touching my Wanda."
"I have a stash of pics of you, a lot of them that I took when you didn't know. I just like looking at you. Sometimes when we are out together, even only grocery
shopping, I lag behind just so I can look at you and think I wish I had a girl like that and then I think hey I do and go up to you and slide my hand over your rump or hug you from behind and grab your boobs and you say cut it out! But you smile.""If you were the last person in the world, I'd be content with that. I really do appreciate you, more than words can tell."
"I bask in the memory of our times spent together, as I'm sure I will our future memories."
"The thing is, I care so darn much for you even if at times perhaps it seems like I don't. But God knows I do, and I always want to be here for you."
"Wanda, you don't have to believe me, but there's not a day that goes by that I don't think about you. And whenever I think of you, I ask God to watch over you. You're far too precious to me to simply shun the times we've shared through good and bad, and, well..., I should shut up now."
(A division is four airplanes divided up into two elements of two airplanes):
First combat:
... through others' minds...
“But as God said,
crossing his legs,
I see where I have made plenty of poets
but not so very much
poetry.”
― Charles Bukowski
“The walls of books around him, dense with the past, formed a kind of insulation against the present world and its disasters.”
―
Ross McDonald
“I went to the library. I looked at the magazines, at the pictures in
them. One day I went to the bookshelves, and pulled out a book. It was
Winesburg, Ohio.. I sat at a long mahogany table and began to read. All
at once my world turned over. The sky fell in. The book held me. The
tears came. My heart beat fast. I read until my eyes burned. I took the
book home. I read another Anderson. I read and I read, and I was
heartsick and lonely and in love with a book, many books, until it came
naturally, and I sat there with a pencil and a long tablet, and tried to
write, until I felt I could not go on because the words would not come
as they did in Anderson, they only came like drops of blood from my
heart.”
―
John Fante
“So black was the way ahead that my progress consisted of long periods
of inert despondency punctuated by spasmodic lurches forward towards any
small chink of light that I thought I saw...As the years went by, it
did not get lighter but I became accustomed to the dark”
―
Quentin Crisp
“I wanted so badly to lie down next to her on the couch, to wrap
my arms around her and sleep. Not fuck, like in those movies. Not even
have sex. Just sleep together in the most innocent sense of the phrase.
But I lacked the courage and she had a boyfriend and I was gawky and she
was gorgeous and I was hopelessly boring and she was endlessly
fascinating. So I walked back to my room and collapsed on the bottom
bunk, thinking that if people were rain, I was drizzle and she was
hurricane.”
―
John Green
“One existence, one music, one organism, one life, one God: star-fire and rock-strength, the sea's cold flow
And man's dark soul.”
― Robinson Jeffers
“I looked and looked at her, and I knew, as clearly as I know that I will die, that I loved her more than anything I had ever seen or imagined on earth. She was only the dead-leaf echo of the nymphet from long ago ― but I loved her, this Lolita, pale and polluted and big with another man's child. She could fade and wither ― I didn't care. I would still go mad with tenderness at the mere sight of her face.”
― Vladimir Nabokov
“Someday no one will remember that she ever existed, I wrote in my
notebook, and then, or that I did. Because memories fall apart, too.
And then you're left with nothing, left not even with a ghost but with
its shadow. In the beginning, she had haunted me, haunted my dreams, but
even now, just weeks later, she was slipping away, falling apart in my
memory and everyone else's, dying again.”
―
John Green
“Lost, yesterday, somewhere between sunrise and sunset, two golden hours, each set with sixty diamond minutes. No reward is offered for they are gone forever.”
― Horace Mann
“The world is very lovely, and it's very horrible--and it doesn't care about your life or mine or anything else.”
― Rudyard Kipling
“Don't you know who you love, Pudge? You love the girl who makes you
laugh and shows you porn and drinks wine with you.”
―
John Green
“I was weeping again, drunk on the impossible past.”
― Vladimir Nabokov
“The past was filling the room like a tide of whispers.”
― Ross Macdonald
“No one but Night, with tears on her dark face, watches beside me in this windy place.”
― Edna St. Vincent Millay
Well, it was fun while it lasted. All good things come to an end. But we can remember them all, at least for a little while longer. Just a little while longer.
There will come soft rains and the smell of the ground, And swallows circling with their shimmering sound; And frogs in the pools, singing at night, And wild plum trees in tremulous white,
Robins will wear their feathery fire, Whistling their whims on a low fence-wire; And not one will know of the war, not one Will care at last when it is done. Not one would mind, neither bird nor tree, If mankind perished utterly; And Spring herself, when she woke at dawn, Would scarcely know that we were gone.
~ Sara Teasdale
A couple of responses:
"F" wrote:
If you believe in nothing, you have nothing, no goal, no ultimate purpose... no life.
I'm
sure that you will make a great mother, and will raise a beautiful and
well educated human being to be kind, decent, intelligent and respectful
to the values of life and nature itself. Whoever the father may be will
be a very fortunate person.
All of the things that you wrote
about yourself in this entry, and a lot more, are the reasons of why I
consider myself blessed to have known someone like you, and more
importantly, to be able to call you my friend... a real friend! :-)
"D" wrote:
I wanted to say thanks for this blog entry. It is very uplifting and
it’s wonderful to hear that you have found happiness in your life. That
is a precious thing.
The thing that intrigues me about your
intelligence is that many people with high IQs use their
intelligence to belittle others, whereas you use it to help people and
even sometimes go out of your way to hide it. That is something quite
special. By the way, if you want a good example of irony, the British
headquarters of Mensa is based in a place called Wolverhampton; a city
of people with possibly the lowest IQ in the country!
Cómo Han Pasado los Años
How the Years Have Passed
"... and that's why I went to jail wearing a carbide lamp."
When I was crossing the border into Canada they asked if I had any firearms with me. I said, "Well, what do you need?"
Q. What did Jeffry Dahmer say to Lorena Bobbitt?
A. Are you going to eat that?
I'll tell you the meaning of life,
but first you have to promise not to laugh.
“In America, anyone can become president. That's one of the risks you take.”
—Adlai E. Stevenson
A black guy and a gorilla go into a bar together. He says to the
bartender, "I'd like a beer, and a gin and tonic for my girlfriend
here."
The bartender says, "Oh come on, pal, we don't serve no gorillas in here."
So
the guy figures he'll fix them, so he takes the gorilla home, shaves off
all her hair, gives her a nice wig, lipstick, red dress, etc. He takes
her back to the bar and says, "I'd like a beer, and a gin and tonic for
my girlfriend here."
The bartender gives them the drinks and they go
off and sit down and chat. The bartender turns to his buddy at the
bar and says, "You know, that drives me crazy: it seems like every time
a good-looking Italian girl comes in here, she's with a black guy."
"In Starbucks my dawg and me sat,
’Cause dat where de white womens at.
We’d like to drink lattes
While watchin’ de hottays,
But a n—– just cain’t affode dat."
~ Desanex
"In my sex fantasy, nobody every loves me for my mind."
~ Nora Ephron
Just because he's deployed doesn't mean I'm single.
“She was trouble looking for somebody to happen to.”
― Ross Macdonald
“People are strange: They are constantly angered by trivial things, but on a major matter like totally wasting their lives, they hardly seem to notice.”
― Charles Bukowski
"When God created you lying naked in bed
He knew what He was doing
He was drunk and He was high
and He created the mountains and the sea and fire at the same time
He made some mistakes
but when He created you lying naked in bed
He came all over His Blessed Universe.”
― Charles Bukowski
Watching the ships sail away, Yokohama harbor, 1966. |
The Evangeline in the early 1980s. |
The women did not defer to men, as far as she could tell, and it astounded her to see women order men about and get promoted above them.
She had to get back to America. She worked a few more years at various jobs, saving every yen until she had enough to pay for study in the United States. She flew to Los Angeles and found a room at the Evangeline, a women's residence near downtown and began studying English at Evans Adult School.
The world she entered was harsh and unforgiving, with no second chances. For example, at the Evangeline, meals were served at certain times and if you wanted to eat, you couldn't be late. Five minutes after the dining room doors were opened, they were closed and locked. You could eat as much as you wanted, but you had to clean you plate completely. You were not allowed to take any food out of the dining room, not even a cracker. Proctors with hawk eyes watched everything that went on. You couldn't even talk too loudly without being chastised. She recalls another Japanese student who tried to take a boiled egg out of the dining room after eating breakfast, slipping it into her pocket to eat later. She was caught and expelled from the residence. Gone by noon.
Absolutely no alcohol was allowed on the premises and anyone who tried to smuggle any in would be kicked out.
No men were allowed to enter the Evangeline beyond the lobby. And then only if they had business, the mail man or UPS driver.
The women who lived at the Evangeline were either foreign students or old white ladies, each of whom had a story of why they had ended up there at the end of their lives. None were good stories.
The Evans Adult School was equally harsh, the teachers demanding that you perform at your best and unwilling to accept less than that. She particularly recalls a Miss Rosen, a bitter woman who had failed to earn a Ph.D., and now taught ESL to a motley collection of foreigners she made no effort to hide her contempt for. She was constantly reminding her students that if she thought they were not sincerely trying, she would have them expelled, their student visas revoked, and they would be deported. She hammered into them the fact that Evans was support by the taxes of American citizens who expected them to work hard and be successful in return for their education.
She remembers that two Chinese (perhaps Taiwanese) students were expelled at the order of their teacher, a Mrs. Yamamoto, because they had, in Yamamoto's words, "betrayed her," presumably by cheating.
After completing her course of study at Evans, she attended Pasadena City College, intending to get an AA degree in bookkeeping. She didn't think any higher than this.
She left the Evangeline and moved to South Pasadena, becoming an au pair girl for a well-off family. They put her in the laundry room, next to the cat's litter box. She slept on an inflatable camp mattress on the floor. She cooked and cleaned, did laundry. She also did the grocery shopping, being given a limited budget to do so. Many days, the family ate all of the meals she prepared and she had nothing to eat. Her weight dropped from 107 lbs to 95 lbs during her time with this family.
She had difficulty with her classes at PCC because her English was not up to college reading levels. Sometimes she would spend two hours on a single page, going back over each sentence again and again, dictionary in hand, trying to grasp it's meaning.
But eventually she improved, so much, in fact, that one of her instructors told her she should not settle for being a bookkeeper, but should get a four-year degree in accounting and become a CPA.
He recommended the accounting program at UCLA. Unfortunately, just at that time there was some kind of professors dispute at UCLA and the entire accounting department left and joined what was then called Pierce College (now Cal State Northridge). As a result of this, there was a waiting period of more than a year before new accounting students would be accepted.
She was, however, able to be accepted into the accounting program at USC. To pay for this, she took a job as a book keeper for a Japanese firm in Little Tokyo. Her hours there were very long, and she often didn't return home till after 2am. Then she would do her au pair chores and prepare meals which the family could heat up for themselves. This arrangement was not accepted and she was discharged.
She found out she was no longer the family's au pair when she came home from work one night and saw her belongs piled on the front porch and a note telling her to collect them and go.
For the next few weeks, she lived at her place of employment, keeping her belongings in a pay locker at the downtown LA Greyhound bus terminal.
When her boss found out he put an end to that. She moved into a room at the Rosslyn Hotel next to skid row in downtown LA. Initially, she paid $100 a month for the room, which swarmed with cockroaches and had no bathroom -- that was down the hall. But then she got a job working the front desk and her room became free. So she was working two jobs plus going to USC full time. Her weight dropped to 92 lbs. She developed a chronic cough.
She did not own a car, in fact did not know how to drive, so walked or took the bus everywhere. She shopped for clothes at used clothing stores, but usually nothing fit her; everything was too big. So she would alter them herself, cutting and sewing while she manned the hotel front desk.
Despite all, she managed to graduate from USC with an accounting degree and also passed the state CPA licensing examination. She applied for work at the Big Eight accounting firms, as they then were, one of which was run by a self-described USC mafia -- everyone on staff was a USC alumnus. They hired her at a good salary -- a fabulous salary as far as she was concerned. She was able to move into a studio apartment in a decent neighborhood, learned to drive at a driving school and bought a used Toyota Corolla. She spent almost all her waking hours at work, the demands of her clients and bosses were brutal, but she was happy to have a real job working as hard and appreciated as much as her male colleagues.
After a few years, she bought a house in Burbank and a new Camry. Then she was hired by one of her clients at a substantial increase in salary. She had an expense account that was not closely monitored and a company car, a Buick Park Avenue.
The company owned a number of restaurants at which she and her guests could dine for free -- Il Fornaio, Norwood, Johnny Rockets and several others.
She gained so much weight that she had to go on a diet.
As a weekend getaway, she bought a condominium in Avalon on Catalina Island, and a 27-foot Neptune sailboat.
After a few years, with a thorough knowledge of how to make money in business, she started her own company, which became quite successful. She bought a house in Palos Verdes, drove a Lexus, sailed a 44-foot Pacific Seacraft yacht. She traveled extensively, developed an interest in opera and bought season tickets to the New York Metropolitan Opera, vacationed in Europe to see operas there. In short, she was successful, well-off and enjoying the good life.
As an example of how well-off she had become, her last business venture, something involving a Brazilian company, resulted in a personal loss of $4 million. She was flat-out cheated by the Brazilians, as she tells it, and has nothing good to say about that country or its people. "All they have is credentials and pride!" she says, though I'm not really sure what that means. She says she was robbed seven times on trips to São Paulo and had to ride around in an armored limousine.
She was able to sell her investment in the Brazilian company and recover her loss, but then decided it was time to retire.
So these days she tends her flower garden at her home, enjoys the view across the ocean to Catalina Island, and talks about her life with interested visitors.
She loves America and thinks it's the greatest country in the world -- "this country is so generous!" she declares with honest emotion -- and is contemptuous of anyone who has a bad word to say about it. She despises American blacks and thinks they should be "dealt with in some way." She says they should be ashamed to behave as they do and doesn't understand why they are not embarrassed by their criminality and parasitism. She likes Mexicans, admiring their hard work. She acknowledges they aren't all that bright, "but that doesn't matter," she says, "because they are not ashamed to work at whatever job they can do, no matter how hard it is. They will be successful in this country."
She doesn't like Chinese, saying they cheat and are dirty, but her best friend is a Chinese born in Japan, who now lives in Monterey Park in Los Angeles. She points out that although this person was born in Japan she is still regarded as Chinese by Japanese and she could never become Japanese, but had she been born in America she would be considered just another American.
Would she, herself, have liked to have been born in America? "Yes!" Why? "Because then my English would be good."
Those days at Evans and the Evangeline still live in her mind. As do her days as an au pair. She can't stand the sound of a washing machine and has her laundry sent out. She visited Japan recently to claim her Japanese social security benefits, a pitifully small amount but she earned it and would have it, and visited her brother, who lives in a modest apartment in Chiba. To her, everyplace was crowded and ugly, everything was small, even yogurt cups, overpriced and not as good as anything in America. She left earlier than she had planned to because everywhere she went reminded her of why she left. Her only regret that she wasn't able to leave when she was 10 years younger.
One of my older relatives was what he called a “newsman” for 40 years, working on a city daily. He never went to college let alone got a degree in Journalism or English. He planned to be a printer, eventually have his own print shop, so he learned touch-typing in high school.
After high school, he took a job as a printer's apprentice during the day, and worked the night shift at a local gas station. There was a cot behind the register and he dozed there between the infrequent customers, usually long-haul truckers. He ate midnight pie-and coffee at the diner across the street and became friendly with the night waitress, who had gone to the same high school, but quit when she was 16 to go to work. On her break she would walk over to the gas station and they would entertain themselves on the cot.
His first published news story., |
When he was 19 he got his draft notice. Because he could touch-type, the Army made him a clerk/typist and shipped him off to Viet Nam, where he was assigned at first to typing up assorted paperwork, then assigned to the division newspaper, a job he found interesting and enjoyed. Also it was perfectly safe. He spent his off-duty hours smoking Park Lanes, a heroin-laced local brand of cigarettes, and hanging out at the local steam-and-cream, a sort of massage parlor/steam bath staffed by pretty young local girls who gave expert handjobs and, I assume, provided other services as well. He went on R&R to Australia and spent most of the time there in a brothel. All in all, he had a great time, and was glad to have served in the army and been sent to Viet Nam.
When he got back to the States, he saw a help-wanted ad for a printer at a newspaper and applied, but while he was waiting a harried-looking man asked if he was there about “the job” and he said yes, and after a brief look at his resume, from which he only seemed to have noticed that he had written for a newspaper and served in Viet Nam and apparently assumed he was a stone-cold killer, he was hired — but not for the printer job, rather as a police beat cub reporter, the man remarking to him, "You've learned what the world is really like so you can handle cop world." He was a bit surprised but took the job because he needed one. He did, however, explain to the editor who hired him that he didn’t know the first thing about being a reporter, going out and getting news. He had only written up information provided to him. The editor replied, “Kid, you can learn everything you need to know to do this job in three months. If you can’t, I’ll fire you.”
And he did learn — nut graphs, pyramid style, knowing no one reads past the jump so put favors to sources back there, have at least two independent sources for every statement of fact, have a fat Rolodex full of reliable sources, snitches, gossips and blackmailers that you keep in a locked drawer, share your opinions with your bartender not your readers, never use a two-syllable word when a one-syllable word will do, Democrats are corrupt, Republicans are naive, cops don’t give a shit about anybody…and so on.
He discovered that covering the police beat was far more exciting than what he had been doing in Viet Nam. He had a police scanner in his car, which prominently displayed a "Working Press" decal on the front windshield. He was right on the scene at accidents, fires, crimes of all sorts. One of the first crimes he covered was a bank robbery. He interviewed everyone he could think of and put together a good, fact-filled story that his editor complimented him on. But an FBI agent called him, curious and somewhat suspicious about how he had gotten so much detailed information. Apparently the FBI, supposedly specialists in bank robbery, had only a copy of the police report and hadn't done any on-scene investigation.
And so it went, year after year, as he moved on from police reporter to political reporter and columnist. For a while he even had a commentary slot on the TV station owned by the newspaper, discussing local politics. When he retired, his last column was a thank you to the local draft board for tapping him on the shoulder. Being drafted, he wrote, was the greatest thing that ever happened to him except for marrying the night waitress across the street from the gas station, which he did when he was mustered out of the army. They were married for 50 years.