Habits are hard to break. Breaking with several at the same time is terrible. Confusing. I began my Dry January yesterday. It seemed a dumb affair from the start. Doomed. It is a mental thing that requires unwavering discipline. Given my life circumstances at the moment. . . .
I'm also trying to give up the gym, at least for Dry January. You would think that would be easy. Rather, I am adopting a calisthenic routine. There is an outdoor gym in a park nearby. There is the sound of birds and plenty of sunshine, but it lacks society. I mean, when I go to the Club Y, I have social interaction. There are the gymroids, of course, but there is a host of secondary players, too. It is fun to be among the amiable.
On the very first day of calisthenics, however, I was doing some bending toe touch things and my inner ear went berserk. I haven't recovered. If I move wrong or roll over in bed at night, I get the spins. I thought it would go away, thought that the the crystal would find its way home, but it hasn't happened yet. I am walking on a stormy ocean, my body incorrectly interpreting gravity.
And so, writing here in a new, more interesting way is impossible today. I can only write my complaint, as dull as ever.
After Christmas, my mother has taken a mental turn for the worse. She is more confused, more forgetful, and more difficult. Her mind is slipping, but her body won't quit.
If my mother had a gas stove, I'd be tempted to turn it on without the flame and sit with her as we both entered the eternal ether.
I remember once telling a class that Sylvia Plath committed suicide by placing her head in the oven. The kids were squirming and one boy spoke up.
"Jesus. . . how could she stand it? That must have hurt!"
I realized then that they were thinking of their own electric ovens. Ho! Yea. . . that would hurt.
Virginia Woolf filled the pockets of her coat with rocks before entering the river.
Such things.
But that photograph. . . oh, that gives me pleasure. Late December on the Boulevard. Tank tops, shorts, and shopping. I love the blur, and I would shoot everything on a slow shutter if I didn't feel it would become too redundant. But I do love the impressionism of the thing.
"What are you doing?"



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