"The pills, the pills."
All things come, and all things pass.It takes a lot of medicine to go this fast.
"The pills, the pills."
All things come, and all things pass.It takes a lot of medicine to go this fast.
Yesterday was warm and windy. I sat out in the early afternoon to take in the sun and weather with my mother on the second floor balcony of her rehab hotel. I don't know the root cause just then, but things were feeling pretty old Key West, and I was thinking seafood and adventure.
"I could go for some oysters," I said. "It's the season for them, isn't it?"
I don't really eat oysters anymore because of the dirty bay waters full of sewage and chemical runoff, but especially because of the chance of getting hepatitis. Still, life (mine) is short but memory is long.
"Remember Lee and Rick's?" I asked her. It was a place not far from where I grew up, and I remember going there with my parents when I was young, so, so many decades ago.
"Yes. I wonder if it is still there?"
"I think so."
I got out my phone. Yup. Sure as shitting. I think the last time I was there was in the 1980s.
"I think I'm going to go get some oysters," I told her .
"Take me with you."
The sky began to take on a dark cast as the edge of the approaching front moved in. It wasn't feeling so Key West anymore.
"I wish my friends still lived here. I used to be able to call people on the fly and say, Hey. . . let's go get some oysters, but not any longer.
When I said goodbye to my mother, I was wondering if I really wanted to go. It was easier to simply go home and. . . .
Nope. Determined to break out, I mapped my way to adventure and daring.
I grew up in a bad part of town, but we were able to look down upon the people in the neighborhood bordering the oyster bar. Lee and Rick's is just off Old Winter Garden Road, then a two lane sometimes dirt thoroughfare of diesel mechanics and transmission repair shops. It had changed. Now it was four lanes, but that was all. Old block buildings that hadn't been painted since I was a kid, dirt spattered, oil covered, surrounded by sandy, bare ground lined the new highway.
I missed the turn. I'd gone too far and had to run back through the shanty neighborhood. The hair on the back of my neck rose a touch remembering who lived here and what went on. Neighborhoods like this could be brutal. People still looked at the unfamiliar car that drove down the street. If some young guy smiled, you could take odds it wasn't genuine.
The parking lot was littered with signs telling you that the restaurant was not responsible for whatever happened to your car while you were there. Good to know. I found the austere entrance, an unadorned door with a small, isignificant sign saying "entrance."
"By god, boy. . . if ya h'aint got sense to know how to get in the goddamned restaurant. . . ."
Inside, nothing had changed. Nothing. It still smelled of old seafood. There were two cast cement bars with a deep basin for scraping in the oyster shells. There were tables, too, but nobody was sitting at them. I walked in and took a seat in the middle of the second bar. A big fellow came over and asked if I needed a menu.
"Yea."
Another fellow brought me another and told me to move to the end of the bar.
"What can I get you?"
I hadn't looked at the menu yet, but. . ."I'll have a bucket of oysters."
"How do you want them?"
I like them raw, but hepatitis and all. . . "Steamed. Medium, I guess."
I ordered a beer. He brought it and began to set me up.
"They'll be ready in about four minutes," he said.
I told him I came here with my parents when I was a kid but hadn't been back in like forty years.
"I brought my wife here on our first date," he said. He was thin and fit and had the obligatory tattoos on each of his arms.
I'm a good listener, or, perhaps, a good interviewer. I found out where he lived, in another dumpy part of town, with his girlfriend, though they've been together twelve years so he calls her his wife. They have three kids, not his kids. She is a little older and had the kids with another guy. He never had any of his own. But he was born in my own village, went to school there. Odd, I thought, his trajectory in life.
Oysters ready, he put the bucket in the trough and began shucking. Shucking steamed oysters is much easier than shucking raw, so he was filling the bar quickly.
I was eating them like a sissy. A real oyster connoisseur squeezes some lemon on them and sucks them right out of the shell. I scooped up a bit of horse raddish on the oyster and dipped it in cocktail sauce and then butter before putting it on a saltine cracker.
The shucker didn't comment.
"I saw you had butterfly shrimp on the menu. When I was a kid, there was a place out on the trail called Gary's Duck Inn. You'd think they'd be known for their duck, but it was a steak and seafood place. At the time, they were the largest purchasers of shrimp in the country, if you can believe that, and they were famous for their butterfly shrimp."
If you don't know:
Butterfly shrimp is a popular, visually appealing preparation method where the shrimp is split open along the back, deveined, and flattened into a butterfly-like shape while remaining connected, often with the tail left on. This technique increases surface area for better coating adhesion (ideal for breading and frying) and ensures faster, more even cooking.
"When Gary sold the place. . . "
Rather than write it on my own here, I'll paste the history from a local newspaper account.
Gary's Duck Inn ,a popular seafood spot established in 1945, inspired the creation of Red Lobster after investors Bill Darden and Charley Woodsby purchased it in 1963. Recognizing the success of the no-frills, high-volume seafood model, they launched the first Red Lobster in Lakeland, Florida, in 1968.The Inspiration: Gary Starling opened Gary's Duck Inn in 1945 on South Orange Blossom Trail, becoming famous for shrimp and serving celebrities like Dolly Parton.
"Cool, huh?"
"Really? I worked for Red Lobster for twenty years."
"Wow. Did they still serve the butterfly shrimp?"
"They called them something else."
"Well, I'm coming back to get the butterfly shrimp next time."
"You'd better bring someone with you. It's a pretty big platter."
He spread his hands apart as indication.
"How are you doing with the oysters. You still have this many left."
He held up the bucket. There were still a good number of shelled oysters on the bar.
"My eyes were bigger than my stomach," I said.
"I don't want to charge you for the rest of these," he said. "I'll just charge you for two dozen."
And to think I was nervous about coming in. What a guy. And of course, I tipped him 50%.
I'd come out by the Expressway, but I drove home down the old highway past my old neighborhood and the giant Shopping Center that bordered it. It caught me by surprise. It was HUGE, but now it was an eyesore, having been very badly updated, stuccoed, and painted a terrible orange, seeming miles of it. For a long, long stretch, the aesthetics of poverty dominated the landscape, dirt lots and withered or dead shrubs bordering dirty parking lots, people's IQs affected by drugs, inbreeding, and a terrible lack of education.
My people.
It was still early. Back home,I worked on some picture ideas, mere sketches of things I thought about making. Music, drink. . . .
As I've told you before, I spent my life running from that place. I wanted to live in the places I saw in movies and in the glossy magazines. I wanted to fall in love with my own Golden Girl. Some of it had worked out O.K, maybe. But now and then, I need to step over the fence of Leave It to Beaverland and go to Zone 13.
And live to exaggerate the tale. . . to gentle lovers.
This was a real Nextdoor post--kind of. I added the possum. There are many variations of this, but they are always funny. None, however, are as hilarious as the original.
V-day with mom. Then home to make my dinner. I could eat meatloaf, broccoli, and mashed potatoes at the facility with mom--for $25! Rather, I had a pot of meat stew on the stove.
Ate alone on the deck. Later, I watched a silly cop movie on Netflix with Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. I'll never get that time back. Maybe that's why I slept so poorly. That or a million other reasons. I should quit drinking again. I should stay off my computer, and especially quit making those silly movies I've been making that I get such a kick out of. I should quit pissing and moaning about my life and focus.
I will. I swear.
Here's the photo on the sticky paper thing I have to wear at the rehab facility. They take the photo and print it out in nothing flat. I want one. I'd use it. It's like the old dot matrix images from the wayback, but better. I'd bet dollars to donuts that Warhol would have a ball with it.
Wait! I have an idea. I'll be right back.
Well, nice idea, but no dice. I was going to make something but A.I. had other ideas.
WTF?
Oh, well. . . I said I was going to give that up anyway. I think I'll read. I've heard that's a good thing to do. I'll be like one of "those people" who take walks and reads books and recycles.
"Hello, Mona. Your garden looks lovely. How about this weather?"
I really liked this one from the N.Y. Times today
It was better than the one I had cooked up but decided not to send this morning.
I don't really have anyone to share the day with but my mother for whom I have flowers, a balloon, and a card.
So. . . fuck it. . . there's enough of that. It completely got by me that yesterday was a Friday the 13th until late in the afternoon. Remember from now on, when Valentine's Day is on a Saturday. . . . Or as we used to say in the hills, Valentimes. Yea, that's right. . . just a bunch of uneducated hillbillies.
So. . . mom is doing "great" at the spa I got her into. Yesterday when I went to see her, she was with two of her neighbor friends at a "concert," a man singing karaoke to a room full of people with walkers and wheelchairs, so I left a note in her room and said I'd call her later. She even showered without help, so. . . it won't be long.
"But you said she could stay in that place for 90 days, right?"
Yea. I can't do that. I'm just not built that way. She wants to go home. Who can blame her? Well, I know I do a lot, but. . . .
And actually, as well as she is doing, and as anxious as my hillbilly cousin is to have her Florida time, maybe that will work out. Still TBD.
But for now, I am home. And that is pretty much it. At home or at the rehab center. I'm a veritable shut-in otherwise. Surrounded by the ephemera and tchotchke of my life, of course.
And so, to steal an old Royal British Navy toast with their daily allotment of Pusser's rum, a Valentine's Day ditty--"To Wives and Lovers. . . May They Never Meet!"
Having neither, it doesn't matter to me. Rather, if you are smart and knowledgable and know the reference, "Here's to Esmeralda."
"You're a good son."
If you didn't read yesterday's post, I would advise you not to read this one, either. Maybe you can just come for the pictures. I've enjoyed turning myself into a creature/character. Here I am morphing back into a more recognizable form, half me, half creature having escaped for the moment, but. . . dying? That is how it has felt.
My body has given up. There are pains I can't explain. I lay in a tub of Epsom salts yesterday and could not get up. After the water had drained, I lay there for what must have been an hour, chilled, weary. . . .
Every day now, I am faced with death. Not my mother's. Nope. My own. My mother will never die. And each day and each night, I think I will just take the pills.
The last two days were a struggle. First the hospital was going to release my mother. Her/my problem, not theirs.
Have you ever seen anyone screaming at the ticket agent at the airport thinking that the agent is on his or her way to a board meeting to discuss customer relations? Yea, right? It doesn't help. It does no good. So. . . I read the room, said what I needed to say, told them what I could and couldn't, would and wouldn't do.
When my mother first went to the hospital, the palliative care person talked to me about putting her in hospice care. Yesterday when I went to the hospital, I was told they were sending my mother to a nursing home. Do you know what a nursing home is? That is the place where they send you to die a miserable death. At the last minute, however, they arranged to send my mother to the place I had wanted her to go, the place where she was before, the nicest rehab facility in town.
That is me at the top of the page having received the news. All good. I told people who asked and they were glad.
I sent an informational text to my mother's hillbilly relatives and got a message back that they had talked to my mother and she wanted to go home. I started to reply, but decided not to.
Ever again.
I got a message from the facility admissions person that my mother would be in room 222. I drove over to see her. She wasn't there yet.
"They are going to transport her over at 6:30.
At 7:30 I called my mother.
"How's your room?"
"They are just taking me down to transport now."
"Oh. O.K. Call me when you get to your room."
That call went badly. Very, very badly.
"I want to go home," she cried.
I'm not proud of my response.
"Go ahead. Go home."
"Can I?"
"Sure. Just tell them you want to go home. I'll check on you in a few days to see how it's going."
When I hung up (in anger), I told myself I was done. I was over it. I thought about taking off on a trip. I am dying, I thought. She is not. I need to see one last thing.
It was time for bed.
I'm more in control today, but something in me has snapped. One day, if I'm around, I will tell you about my relationship with my mother. It is a hard tale. But I won't tell it while she lives.
So it may never be told.
I want to do something other than care for my mother. I don't think I have so very much time left. Parents shouldn't outlive their children, but my mother is determined to do just that. And why not? But she has shortened my life, I believe, considerably. I have an offer to go to Japan in March. I want to go to Japan. I want to go to Miami and shack up in the Four Seasons for a week, lie by the pool and drink Margaritas. Maybe I'll sell everything and just rent a place in Key West, wander the island, a tropical Quasimodo, until my final day.
Sitting is hard now. Getting up is worse. Moving is excruciating. It has happened quickly, but that is how it happens, isn't it?
Did I show you what I looked like last year on my birthday? Yea. Look what your god has done to me.
Do not read this post if you are not up for misery and suffering. Things have, unbelievably, taken a turn for the worse. So. . . I urge you not to go further than this.
On the other hand, I know for a fact that some people are enjoying my turning and twisting of fate. I sent this to a longtime friend the other day. You needn't watch more than a minute or so to get the idea.
Do you know what he wrote back?
"You used to be like him"
Well, I wasn't. I didn't have a plane, didn't have money. But. . . "used to" is the rub.
Selavy.
People got married to people they loved. They had children. They went after that old American Dream. I tried, but I fucked it all up, I guess. But while they were taking their kids to soccer practice and arguing with their spouses about the things spouses argue about. . . I wasn't. I didn't have children, so I didn't have to be like Brando, the ultimate absent parent.
Now, I think, mamy enjoy my suffering the wages of my "sin." The thing is, there just wasn't much sin, just fun.
Now--and I'm not talking about any one individual but a whole host of my married friends--they wonder if HRT will put the passion back into their lives.
"Absolutely," I say. "It's the magic bullet."
People are nice enough. From time to time, someone will ask how I'm "holding up." They offer encouragement. "Is there anything I can do?"
I'm not being critical. If it sounds as if I am, I am not. I am pretty certain I wouldn't even offer that because I know I am incapable of doing much to help other than telling a few jokes, etc. I might be a little bitter, but I am not criticizing.
If that makes sense. Depends upon your mood when you read this, I think. People do want to tell me that they went through this with their parent/grandparent, etc. They haven't. Nobody who tells me such things has gone through this without help all on their own. There are certainly others, but I've not met any of them yet.
Yesterday morning, I went to see my mother. She was pretty out of it, so I stayed a bit and then told her I would come back in the afternoon. At two-thirty, I got a call from her. I was napping, so I only heard her message at three.
"Are you coming up today? I can't find my charger. O.K."
I called.
"I came to see you this morning."
"Really? I don't remember."
I got dressed and drove to the hospital once again. My mother was up and more alert. We chatted. The physical therapist had come and had her use the walker in a circle in the room.
"That's not a walk," she said, and so he took her down the hallway and back. The doctor, she said, had come to see her. She couldn't recall their conversation.
In a moment, a woman came into the room and introduced herself as a Case Management worker. My mother was being discharged, she said. Did we need homecare?
"What?"
"We can arrange for someone to come in a couple times a week to help your mother."
The adrenaline dump.
"What are you talking about? My mother needs to go to rehab until we see how much care she is going to require."
Nope. The physical therapist had written she was ready to go.
"So," I said pointing to my mother, "you think she can take care of herself?"
"That's not really our concern after she is discharged. It is up to the family. . . ."
I was pushing down my anger as hard as I could, but my eyes had sharpened to combat mode.
"Fine. It's up to you. I'm not taking her home, so what are you going to do, wheel her out to the curb?"
This went on a bit longer, then she said she would have to talk to a supervisor.
"Right."
And in a little while, the supervisor came in. She was no more helpful than the lackey had been. They are used to having the power, I know, and use it on people unprepared to argue. I'm positive she looked at me and saw another lawn maintenance man who used to be a surfer DOOD. And that is where we start. In an officious tone I am all too familiar with, she begins to tell me it is not their responsibility. . . .
I wave my arms. "None of this is your responsibility. You are just living off the proverbial corporate tit. But when it comes to compassionate care? I'm not taking her home. I can't do this. I can wash her hair, scrub her back, prep her meds, cook, clean, fetch and chaufer, but I can't do this. I have no idea how to do this."
I pointed to the catheter that was running piss through a tube into a glass container.
The woman's face changed.
"I didn't know she was on that."
"She was put into bed with a diaper and never gotten up the entire time she has been here. They tell her to just go to the bathroom in her diaper. I need to know if she is going to be able to use the bathroom by herself again. She needs to go to rehab so we can try to get her back to where she was before she came in."
The conversation changed. I told her I had put in a call to the palliative care person who had suggested Hospice just last week.
"Oh, no. . . no. . . ."
She said she would go back and try to get her into rehab.
Nice. But I have no idea how this is going to turn out.
When the woman left, my mother said, "I couldn't hear what you all were saying."
And that is where I am. That is all the help I will have in the coming. . . how long?
My entire being gave up. Neuralgia has taken over my body. I don't know if it is psychological or if the stress has brought on whatever evil disease that lurks inside us all. I couldn't move. I couldn't do anything.
When I went to bed, I decided I needed something stronger than Tylenol. I took a hydrocodone. An hour later, I was lying awake in bed feeling exactly as I had. I got up and took a Tylenol P.M. An hour later, I was lying in bed awake and thinking the same hideous things I had hours before. I got up and took a Xanax. I thought about taking everything I had in my cabinet. I wanted to go to sleep and not wake up. There was nothing in life to look forward to at this point. No help. Only strife. Fuck me, I'm tired of dealing with everything all the time. I don't care anymore. I just don't.
I am up late this morning with the drug blues feeling no better than I did. My entire body hurts. There must be a cause, but I don't have a clue and I don't want to go to a doctor. I've been watching my mother, and I would rather take the pills than do what she is doing.
So. . . if you are here, I told you not to read this at the top of the post. Never has life been so dire, so bleak.
People send me words.
"Stay strong ! You have no other choice ❤️"
Oh. . . but that is not true, is it? It really isn't. But thanks. "Just keep taking the beating," is what I hear.
I appreciate everyone, of course. People are swell.
This was my celebratory meal, this and another batch of hospital sushi. I was really partying. I spent yesterday's birthday just as I spent my first one oh-so long ago--in the hospital with my mother.
When I got home at the end of the day, there was this .
Sort of. There were no Roman arches, of course. But I was so exhausted, I truly thought I would puke. There seems to be a limit for the human body and psyche. Mine, at least.
After lying in a hospital bed for ten days with a collapsed vertebra, no one doing anything but feeding and cleaning her, my mother finally got in for an operation. I got to the hospital at 8:30 not knowing what time the procedure was scheduled. Good news, they said. Ten o'clock. At nine-thirty, they wheeled her down to the staging area. And there we stayed. At one, they took her in for surgery. I went to celebrate my birthday like the party animal I am with sushi and pizza. In an hour or so, they called me to let me know the operation was successful and that they had returned her to the staging area. So, party over, I hustled back to the small holding pen.
And there we stayed waiting for transport.
"You are in cue to be taken back to your room, but the cue is long and there are only a few people working in transport, so I don't know how long it will be."
At four-thirty, I couldn't stand waiting any longer. I woke my mother.
"Do you know what today is?" I asked my mother.
"No."
"It's my birthday."
"Oh. Happy birthday."
I had been sitting in a folding chair in a dark, crowded room watching her sleep for many, many hours. I told her I was leaving, that I would call her later when she was back in her room.
I got one birthday card, the same one I get every year offering me a free drink on my birthday at Bradley's Saloon in Palm Beach. They are very sweet.
The rest were mostly the perfunctory "Happy Birthday! Have a great day," text messages from people who keep electronic calendars. I don't care, really, as I don't keep one and never know anyone's birthday, by and large. Late in the day, birthday almost done, the sweeter, more heartfelt wishes came.
I wondered how I'd spent my birthday last year, so I went back and looked it up. It was Super Bowl Sunday, and I spent it pretty much the same way, alone with my mother for whom I was caring. But for this.
In the afternoon, I went for a mimosa at the cafe. Waiting in line, I used to take mirror selfies and wonder how I could look so good in the mirror and so bad in pictures. Looking back, though, I kind of collapsed inside. Was that only a year ago? Man. . . I don't look much like that anymore. This year has taken its toll. I think I still could look a woman in the eye then. As a matter of fact, the girl who made me mimosas on Sunday, though the bar was not open, flirted with me a bit, or at least she did in my journal.
I can't look a woman in the eye anymore. It is too obvious to me what she sees.
I looked up my birthday horoscope.
Born February 9 - This can be a highly creative year, and personal magnetism is strong. Your attractiveness, tact, and ability to go after what you want without stepping on anyone's toes, all contribute to your success. A positive attitude and an enterprising spirit takes you places. You are a person who is very committed to what you believe in--and sometimes very stubbornly so! You are a true artist at heart--creative to an extreme and occasionally nervous if you are not channeling your considerable artistic talent constructively.
Compassionate and concerned, you care much about others but often come across as detached. It is very important that you finish the projects you start-- which is not always easy for you--in order to feel content and satisfied.
February 09 Aquarius at Their Best:Uninhibited, compassionate, wise
February 09 Aquarius at Their Worst: Troubled, irrational, moody
All true, I thought. It is crazy. When I read someone else's horoscope not my sign, I know absolutely that is not me. How do they do it? Surely it must be true.
Though it does merely say I'm a true artist at heart, and not that I am a talented one. There is always a caveat, I guess.
So that's it. Almost. I wore my phone battery out sitting with my unconscious mother, and I decided to make my picture move. Pretty cool.
Only now did I think to make the other.
There you go, Daddy-o!
Found out yesterday that my mother goes to surgery today, only ten days after she was admitted to the death ward with a collapsed vertebra. For ten days, she has has been left to lie in bed. It has been a tremendous shit show. I still don't know what time she goes to surgery. I will have to go up in a bit to see if they have set a time.
I have a beauty appointment at one. Ha! It is not my day.
I watched the Super Bowl last night. Maybe it is just me, but. . . meh. First time I have heard or seen Bad Bunny. It was quite a production, and I like reggaeton music well enough, but. . . celebrate as they will, I DO believe that it will cost dems in the upcoming elections. Why? A chorus line of booty dancers twerking, Bad Bunny grabbing his junk over and over again. . . and then reaching out for a female child who is smiling up at him like a survivor. . . etc. There was just too much there that some independent voters will not go for. It may have excited the youthquake, but they are not serious voters, at least not traditionally. Didn't seem like the right thing to do for the midterms, but maybe that was the whole idea. The NFL is not a liberal corporation, you know. I just don't think the halftime show had a wide voter appeal.
But I'm no savant. Don't mind me. Bad Bunny jelqing onstage is the norm now. And I never did enjoy the halftime marching band.
In other news. . . I have no other news. I'm exhausted. My only real movement this weekend was my twice a day trips to the hospital. My mother is up and down, sometimes there, sometimes elsewhere. How much care she will need after this operation, I don't know. I just know that I can't get on with my own life, and I feel guilty for even thinking about that.
I do need a beauty appointment, though. Haven't been since mid-October. My beautician may not want to see me if I am a no show again. I was supposed to go the Saturday my mother went to the E.R.
Right now, life is a cabaret, old chum. . . just not the one I desire.
Selavy.
I want to write a bit about this photograph and about "agency," but just before I came to post, I read this, and, holy shit, I just have to share.
Thursday, however, took things to a new level in Milan Cortina — ski jumpers allegedly injecting their penises with hyaluronic acid in order to fly that little bit further.
Injecting the penis with acid would increase its size and give the ski jumpers bigger genitalia at the point their suits are measured by 3D scanners.
Temporarily enhanced measurements would theoretically mean athletes being given a bigger, looser suit and, like a sail catching wind, could allow them to make longer jumps. Research from the scientific journal, Frontiers, published last October said that a 2cm change in a suit represented an extra 5.8 metres in the length of a jump.
Christ. . . what next? I'm thinking. . . before my next date. . . .
Ha! I've been waiting a long time for my next date. Does hyaluronic acid go bad? And once injected, how long does it last? This is the same stuff I get shot into my bad knee every six months. Could one have a big old pecker for. . . whatever.
Back in the day, before Viagra, there was an older gay man who trained at the gym, a fellow whose wealthy partner had died and left him everything. He had gone hog wild. He was flamboyant and drove around town in a little Mercedes convertible. He liked the younger men. To wit: he used a vascular drug that he injected into his penis. When he told us, I flipped. How in the fuck could he stand sticking a needle into his penis? But, he said, he would stay hard all night long much to the amazement of his young concubines.
I once read that African tribes did something called jelqing from an early age. Perhaps the idea of this came from watching Black kids. . . anyway. . . .
There is sure to be a hyaluronic acid craze now.
One last thing--I use it on my face after every shower. Now it feels a little gross.
O.K. Onward. That is a photo from the Cafe Strange. Cafe Life writ large. I love going to this place as you don't see anything else like this anywhere in town. If you want to be a freak and feel the love. . . this is your place.
But. . . and I will get to my point. . . should I be taking such photographs? Is it a criminal act? Is it immoral? Am I an exploiter? Am I guilty of objectification? Should I have asked permission?
These are all the rage over street photography now. Many people want to make taking photos in public places illegal. With the invention of Google Glasses, though, I don't see how that will ever be possible. In my own hometown, there are cameras everywhere. You can't prank your neighbor without being posted on Nextdoor or the like. Everything on the Boulevard is monitored by cameras. You must be ready at all times, for every moment is your Hollywood moment. Do something wrong and your image will be all over t.v.
So, this brings me back to my confusion over the subject/object distinction. Let me clarify how philosophers make the distinction. The subject has "agency," meaning it is cognizant, is motivated, is thinking, etc. The object, on the other hand, does not have agency; for example, my toaster. So, simply put, I am somehow taking away people's agency by photographing them if you agree with the argument. I have, essentially, turned them into toasters.
However. . . to say this about my actions is to objectify me. In the same manner, you have taken away my agency. You objectify everyone and everything about which you communicate. You objectify "the photographer."
Maybe. As I admitted in another post, this relationship has always confused me.
One of my colleagues at the factory wrote his dissertation on animal representation in 18th and 19th century literature. He was a feminist and applied much of the theory to the depiction of animals. His argument was about agency. Animals were objectified and thusly abused.
It makes me wonder about the subject/object representation in Christian mythology. Adam and Eve were given agency, then punished for choosing to use it. Of course an all-knowing God would have predicted that. And thus, they were punished and forced to live with the knowledge of their own deaths and the deaths of all those who came after them.
Cool, right?
Where the fuck is the agency in that?
I will confess, I hate the fucking term. It was all the rage with the Woke faction at the factory. But everytime they denounced someone or their action, I felt they had objectified them, had, in essence, categorized them and stolen the very thing they wanted to promote.
As I often said aloud, "You can't perform the theory."
Which brings me to A.I.
Moltbook.
What is intelligence and how does it develop? A.I. is problematizing the discussion. And so some are pivoting a bit. Feelings are really what agency is all about. Maybe. Much of the brain, you see, is not about consciousness but is responsible for monitoring what is going on in the body, such things, as I read this morning, regulating blood gases. Yea, the brain isn't simply an organ responsible for thinking and cognition. But feelings, it is proposed, were an evolutionary necessity when, in the given example, the brain recognizes it is both hungry and tired. Choices must be made, and so. . .
As I read this, I could only hear that little voice in my head that says, "Nobody gives a fuck about how you feel."
Which is not true. Your therapist does, right?
"How did you feel when you first realized. . . ?"
Television is full of emoting. So many statements now begin with, "Personally. . . ."
Personhood. Agency. Computers may be smart, but can they feel?
I take pictures of toasters, too. I've taken thousands of photos of inanimate objects. But really. . . wouldn't you rather see a photo of some guy jelqing on a street corner as the crowd walks by? Sure, one may be aesthetically pleasing, but the other has much more meaning.
Of course, we all want to know how you "feel" about the survivors and the victims. But you need more information, right? All of it.
If A.I. can create a moral universe. . . you know, a systematic hierarchy of values like Christianity, Judaism, or Islam, but better. . . .
I guess I need to work on how I feel about that.
What I feel right now watching my mother suffer is that life is a giant shit show no matter what we do.
For the rest of it. . . just watch the news. If it ain't objectifying, I don't know anything about any of this at all.
So there you go Susan Sontag. They say you were really something when you wrote "On Photography." You are often quoted. And oft photographed, too. But I'm guessing the next topic should be about "consent."
And, of course, how long it is good for. . . how long it lasts.
There is no ever being content or satisfied, I guess. I don't know. I spent the first night back in my own home in a very long time. This morning I'm writing from the old place with the coffee from my expensive burr grind coffee maker. And it is odd. Of course, the coffee maker leaked coffee over the countertop. And Jesus, my house is cold. A hundred year old wooden house leaks cold air like a sieve. All the old problems have not fixed themselves while I've been away. And I trapped a rat that had decided to watch over the place while I was gone.
It hadn't done a very good job, so. . . the wages of sin.
I've cancelled my cable long ago, so I have no access to local, network, or cable news. I'd gotten used to watching it at my mother's house each night over dinner.
My house is also much darker than my mother's.
I don't know if I slept all that well in my own bed last night.
I guess I've romanticized the heck out of my own home. And so it goes.
My mother slouches toward remedies for her miseries at the hospital. She was supposed to get an MRI yesterday morning, so I held off rushing to there. Later she called me to complain. She had not had the MRI.
"These people don't like me. They don't talk to me. They've moved me to a new room. I can't find my purse. I don't know whats going on."
"I'm on my way up."
"Good."
When I got to her new room, two of the women from her neighborhood were there. They had moved my mother, but it was the same shotgun room with one folding chair and no place to stand. One of the women had found my mother's purse. It was in the bed with her. I'd only been there a few minutes when a doctor came in. Brand new, just out of the box. A good looking guy like all the young doctors are now, good skin and teeth, trim and athletic, and cocksure. He began a litany of all the things that could go wrong with tranquilizing my mother for the MRI, telling her that a kyphoplasty had only a 50% chance of helping. He wanted to know if she thought she could manage without the procedure. They could give her stronger pain meds. Of course, my mother couldn't hear most of it and couldn't comprehend what she heard. She kept turning her eyes to me. I tried to answer for her, but the doc didn't want to hear from me, so he kept pushing her harder.
"Do I have to decide right now?" she asked.
"No." And with that, doc was out the door. It had been uncomfortable and mom's guest were now in a hurry to go.
"We'll let you two discuss. . . ."
I walked them out. When I came back into the room, mom was telling her nurse she would go ahead with the MRI.
She had just created a delay in everything, I was certain. When the nurse left, I sat with her.
"I just peed myself," she said. The diaper had not held. "Get somebody."
I went to the nurse's desk and told them, then went back into my mother's room.
"I'm going to let them clean you up. I'll be back later."
It was past noon. I thought about that Capresse sandwich I'd had the day before. I decided to get another.
I was wrong about the kind of bread the mozzarella, tomato, and basil was on. It was ciabatta, not focaccia bread. I took my sandwich outside to eat.
It has been the coldest winter on record here, but this day had warmed, the first day in the 60s for awhile. This is how it is supposed to look this time of year. If you don't like this, keep voting republican. Drill, baby, drill.
But the sandwich wasn't nearly as good as the one the day before. It seemed that they had forgotten to put the balsamic glaze on it. But I knew well that you can never have the same experience twice. I'm simply still a little lost and could think of nothing else to do.
When I went back to see my mother at five, they still had not taken her for the MRI, but an hour after I got to her room, the "transport team," arrived. I told my mother I would call her later to see how it went.
I did, but she didn't answer. Just before eleven, though, she called me. She didn't say anything, and I heard someone talking to her. Then she said, "Siri. . . call my son."
"Hello mom."
"Here. . .. talk to my son. Tell him where we are," my mother said in a panic.
"You're in the hospital," said the voice.
"Really? Where were we before?"
The nighttime madness had kicked in.
When we hung up, I prepared for bed. Everything was both familiar and strange.
It is gray and raining this morning in prelude to another cold front. I must learn how to manage my time. I'll see my mother for hours, but for the rest of it. . . I need to be more productive.
The world is changing rapidly. When I was in college, a book called "Future Shock" was published.
"The premature arrival of the future."
We hadn't seen nothing, yet.