Friday, July 31, 2020

Bye-Bye Blogger

Yesterday was it. Today is the formal farewell.


All good things must come to an end. All bad things, too. Thirty-one July, 2020, after nine years and three months and change, my blog on this platform comes to an end.

This second iteration of my 1988-1997 hardcopy zine has lasted nine years, four months and 20 days, very coincidentally close to the original zine’s lifespan. I didn’t write every day, of course. Sometimes I missed entire months. My output was so sparse and sporadic at points I wondered why I bothered. A lot of times I ended up deleting posts because they were just plain dumb. I was writing for the sake of being active. If you’re writing a blogpost for the sake of making yourself write, you’re doing it wrong.

Over time, I was able to build enough evergreen content to keep an interested reader engaged. Unfortunately, Blogger has become increasingly difficult to work with. Yesterday was the final straw. When every hyperlinked line I made disappeared after saving the post, when other saved changes reformatted with every save, when a simple 15-minute post took two hours to correctly format in HTML because the Compose feature doesn’t work as it should, I realized this was more trouble than it was worth.

I mentioned in my last post that I would wait until my blood pressure went down before I made a decision. My blood pressure thus down, the decision is made. This is my last post on the Google platform.

♫"The road goes on forever/And the party never ends."♫














Mind you, I don’t leave angry. Like everything else this year, it’s a passage that was happening sooner or later. This was the year and today is the day. It’s time I learned a new platform, preferably one that works.

I’ll leave everything up for a while as I copy posts into an archive I’m building in Microsoft Word. But as that archive grows, the post list will shrink. I hope to have everything down and a new blog underway by the end of August. In the meantime, I thank those precious few readers who have followed this most sporadic enterprise.

I’ll announce the third iteration of Rockin’ Roy’s Rage ‘n’ Romance! on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and whatever alternate platforms for social media I get involved in. It looks as if the big Internet monopolies are entering their endgames and it’s past time I started searching for something else.

Lord willing, we’ll talk more about this later. Better still, we’ll talk about other things. Until then….


L. Roy Aiken
31 July 2020
Monte Vista, Colorado, USA
  

Thursday, July 30, 2020

High Summer, Comin’ Down

More Notes on the Current Crisis and State of the Post-Apocalypse.


As of today, the 30th of July, the quack doctor in charge of maintaining the pandemic panic is encouraging the mandatory use of goggles over the eyes. Although we still see no evidence whatsoever of corona virus even being a pandemic — our homeless and vagrant issues would be halfway solved by now if it was — the Powers That Be are doubling down on a “second wave” of phantom flu cases. In the middle of summer, mind you.

Oh, I could go on. I’ll simply sign off on this with the final stanza from the most necessary poem ever written:

Let boys want pleasure, and men
And the servile to serve a Leader and the dupes
     to be duped.

Yours is not theirs.
 
I wouldn’t be at all surprised to learn there is a COVID-20 around the corner, and it’s the gosh-by-golly worst of the worst, and that’s why we need to cancel Thanksgiving and Christmas. And all the bright-eyed fools — and there’s so many of them, God help us — will eagerly go along.

Whaddya gonna do? For my part, I’ve got to finish this book, pray it gets optioned for film, and look for a place even more remote than where I am now. The fewer people around, the better.

This is the hottest its been since we moved here. Keep in mind I'm at 7,600 feet in elevation.



















If nothing else, this has been a breakthrough summer for the last book in my zombie post-apocalypse action-adventure series. Im now at page 330 and Chapter 29, which is the Fun-and-Games run-up to the Darkest Hour. Once I finish these two critical chapters Im onto the Vengeance Trail.

I may very well be finished with Well, this year was a real stinker, but at least I finished writing that darn book.” I have sometimes wondered if there is some deep-seated fear of life without this project in my life that is holding me up. Maybe so. I can see the ending so much more clearly now, though, and I cannot wait to get there.

A final note: I have spent way too much time trying to make this post than I should have. Posting should be as simple as write/format/add images/publish, but nothing works that way with Google Blogger anymore. Imagine formatting for a large font and getting extra-large every time. And then you have to go into HTML mode to fix it, as you must do with all formatting repairs, because Compose mode simply will not do what you ask of it. It was bad enough before with the old interface. The new Blogger is nigh-impossible to work with.

You cant upload photos direct from your machine anymore, though they still pretend you can by keeping the button there. Every photo has to be uploaded into the Google Photos app and transferred from there. Several times in the course of typing, formatting, re-formatting, and saving this post, Ive lost entire lines of text. This happened especially with my trying to link to the Robinson Jeffers most necessary poem above. Creating a link now nukes the entire line. 

How does one screw something like this up? Don’t they hire the best and brightest there? I have spent a full extra hour writing and re-writing and repairing something that should have taken all of 15 minutes to do.

I see nothing getting better and no way out. Im going to have to learn WordPress. The next post you see here will likely be the announcement of my quitting this platform. I’ll figure out what I’m going to do when my blood pressure goes down. Stay tuned.

Monday, July 13, 2020

4th of July After-Action Report and Year in Review

From the Year of the Flu and Race Riots, Too, so you know it’s got to be special. Like Special Education students are special.


First off, I’m sounding off on a peeve of mine, namely, the expression “I hate to say this, but—” Stop lying, dirtbag. You relish this. You can’t wait to see the hurt on people’s faces when you say what you supposedly hate to say.

Such gross dishonesty really grinds my gears. And, now, the news....


















One month after moving out for his new job, our son came down to visit us for the 4th of July weekend. The first night we stayed up and drank and listened and talked about music and stuff. We hit the bar around the corner on the Fourth itself, then walked to the convenience store a mile down the road like a couple of bored teenage dudes on a summer evening’s adventure, then walked home. 

We didn’t shoot off any fireworks. There are at least three houses on my side of town good to shoot off an arsenal each on these occasions. On Sunday, my son changed his oil in our garage before driving to the southeastern Colorado town where he’d be working the next week.

Angel came back to visit for the first time since just after Spooky died. He looked much better than he did the last time I saw him. Angel even came by my upstairs office window to cadge treats, something he hadn’t done since autumn. This whole weekend was one big sunbeam break from the clouds.





















Thus ended the best weekend we’d enjoyed since Labor Day weekend, which marked the last weekend Otis T. Cat could control his bladder and bowels. If 2020 has been nothing but darkness since March — and it most certainly has — the twilight began that first day Otis missed the litter box in September. What might likely have been the Last Normal Autumn of the United States was just the usual stuff in between cleaning up after an aging cat who was not getting any better. There was nothing special about my birthday or Halloween. Thanksgiving went well. Christmas wasn’t quite a disaster, but it would have helped if I’d waited a while before getting into my cups on Christmas Eve. 

Thinking back on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, it occurs to me there was no excitement about that last third of 2019 from Labor Day until then. We were simply marking time. A particularly bitter and ugly irony occurs to me when I realize I should have had Otis put down in October, to spare him the loneliness of not sleeping with us upstairs that was his fate for the last six months of his life. Putting Otis down in October would have definitely “enlivened” (the best word I’ve got) those perfunctory final months of the year.

Instead, we did what we did, and January and February went slow, gray and ghastly, as they are most anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere. At the last of February we realized we could wait no longer. So Otis was put down on 3 March, and when the Great Pandemic Panic and lockdown got going two weeks later, it was just another sad and awful thing in a sad and awful year following a long prologue. 

Ginger Tom took sick and died in late April; I found Spooky dead by the side of the road in early May. I buried three kittens born of two different litters among the ferals. Then my son, who had quit his job sometime back, I forget, decided he was ready to go back to work. As of the first of June, my wife and I were empty-nesters again.

But my son came down to visit last weekend. We’re not alone and forsaken. That’s something. A very huge something, for which I am grateful.

















My forward progress with The Wrong Kind of Dead has exploded entire finished pages at a time since then, in glorious contrast to the depression-enforced writer’s block that crushed my fingers when we left our grown children behind in Colorado Springs four years ago. More on that later. Meanwhile, I’m counting up the blessings and keeping my brave face properly starched and ironed. So far, so good, and here’s hoping you’re the same.


















All photographs Copyright © 2020 by Lawrence Roy Aiken.

Wednesday, July 01, 2020

Random Thoughts on the First Day of the Second Half

My last post was my 666th. Not that I’m superstitious, just uncomfortable. And I really do have stuff on my mind.


NOTES ON THE CURRENT CRISIS: It’s interesting how much the events of this year have made so many of us appreciate the changing of the months. It’s as if we’re all hoping that this will be the month everything gets back to normal. Naturally, they don’t. Things seem to loosen up on one side, then things get stupid-weird on the other.

As far as this Panicky-Demic Lockdown mania goes, the people making these stupid and arbitrary rules aren’t giving up their power. Fourth of July is canceled and so is the rest of the summer. If you think the snickering-smug authoritarians are going to let you have your Christmas shopping and parties this year, I advise you to think smarter, not harder. Thanksgiving family dinners will be discouraged, if not outright prohibited before that. Whatever happens in the November U.S. federal elections will only serve as further excuse for tightening the screws “for public safety.”

For those sniffing about for Socially Unacceptable Political Thought on my part, I remind you that the will to power uses ideology as fig-leaf, a beard to distract from its primary purpose, i.e., acquiring and exercising more power. It was the Big Lesson of George Orwell’s 1984, that the power to be able to spout any kind of nonsense unchallenged — say, “2 + 2 = 5” — is the ultimate goal. 

Everyone seems to have missed that point, but I’ll say it anyway, if only to be able to say “I told you so,” and if only from beyond the grave. Despite repeated proofs of inflated infection and death statistics, despite empirical, see-for-yourself proof that the big scary virus has turned out to be a nothingburger used as a boogeyman to frighten and intimidate and control, people are still playing along with this second wave thing. 

As I say, I don’t make human nature. It is what it is. Whaddya gonna do?


That no one on the Internet believes the official 9/11 narrative, that most even suspect an inside job, says much for lost public trust over the years. That said, the Internet is not the world. The fact that so many people are going along with this is discouraging.




















“CAN WE PLEASE COMPLAIN ABOUT SOMETHING ELSE?” DEPT.: I’ve managed to find workarounds for the increasingly unworkable Google Blogger. So far I can still switch easily between “Legacy Blogger” and “that mess they’re forcing on us now” so I can make the smart quotes work. 

However, I am unable to load my photos directly from my computer onto a blogpost in either version. The workaround for this is to upload the photos to the Google Photos app — yes, it took ‘em from my PC folder just fine — and “Insert” the photos from there. I suspect this was something done on purpose by way of forcing people to use that app, but that’s just me, and so what? Nothing’s changing until it does.

There is one bright note to all of this. It used to be that I had to go into HTML to fix how any word I italicized became twice as large as the text around it. This bug endured for years. Someone finally thought to step on it.

That said, New Blogger still doesn’t get its own font sizing commands. Large text becomes medium-sized text and captions are illegibly small, however many times you highlight and hit the “Normal” button. As always, it’s fixed in HTML or not at all, and you still can’t count on what you saved to stick. You’ll come back to an already published post and see all kinds of haywire formatting. Why? How? I don’t know, I don’t care. I just wish it would stop. 

It won’t, of course. This is on me for not following through with my Wordpress account. Moving along, then....


Like I don’t have enough on my desk already.













TEN YEARS GONE: This morning as I fed the cats I was impressed by the autumnal quality of the air, and on the first of July, at that. Then I remembered walking out from my house in Colorado Springs on the first of July ten years ago. It was sunny and hot, the clear blue sky of another world because this was the first day in 20 years we were not getting paid and taken care of by the Department of the Navy.

My wife had officially retired the day before, just in time for the Great Recession to hollow out the IT industry I was hoping to break into with my MCSA and CompTIA certs. We had both hoped to land GS jobs on the Air Force Academy but abused wage-slave NAF was the best we could do. 

All that, and I was Class II obese. I was still two years from figuring out how to write a novel, and three years from being published. It would be five years before I finally gave up on temporary work, as the gigs were only getting worse on top of so few and far between that I might as well not bother.

So I wrote and published two novels, lost 50 pounds, then another 30, moved 200 miles from where I’d been living for nearly ten years, got cancer, got over it, and here we are now, 308 pages deep into the last novel of my series.

What a ride, is all I have to say. Hands down, my 50s have been the most inspirational and productive decade of my life. I thought I should say something about it.


It really is like this, For me, it describes mid-2012 until now, so, whoa. Eight years.






























Curious Customs of a Faraway Country: Cussin’ in the ‘70s

Another transmission from that tricky, shimmering horizon called “the past.” As in, “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.” (L. P. Hartley.) Also, “[F]or time is the longest distance between two places.” (Tennessee Williams.) 


For most people’s lifetimes they remember their parents cussing, and profanity everywhere except maybe the Disney/ cartoon channels and the teachers at school. Up until somewhere in the 1990s this wasn’t so pervasive, even among some of the working class.

I’m old enough to remember when cussing in front of a girl shut you down forever in her graces. She’d have nothing to do with you ever again. You were common, and despite a few popular songs on the radio glorifying “the street” (urban peasants and their ways) or “the common people,” there was not one atom of dignity to being common. Just as there were “the kind of the girls you diddled and the women you married,” there were “no-account men you have nothing to do with and eligible bachelors.” Common men used coarse language among women, and were thus dismissed. 


Then, and now. Res ipsa loquitur.






























Cussing among the upper classes had its place inasmuch as men would cuss around men. That was why it was called “man talk.” Neither women nor children were in the vicinity as they must not, under any circumstances, be permitted to hear such speech, let alone participate. For that matter, the language was shared among only the tightest of a man’s clique. He rarely spoke “frankly,” as the euphemism went, to outsiders.

Again, a man who cussed in front of women and children was common, and while that was certainly disqualifying, a woman who cussed was pure-T trash, no better than a whore. A man who married such a thing brought his own status down if he wasn’t already a no-account.


Calm down, ladies, I am fully aware that what passes for manhood these days is emblematic of our decline as a culture. It says much about the times that the men’s self-improvement movement which involves lifting weights, eating well, abstaining from pornography, reading classic literature and philosophy, etc., is condemned as “toxic” by men who look like this in a (largely futile) effort to bed women who look like the lower part of the previous image.























This began to change with my generation, we late-boomers born in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Some of this may be blamed for the increased use of profanity in the movies, and, to a lesser extent, television—few appreciate just how serious it was to hear so much as “hell” or “damn” even in the movies until maybe 1967—and while I appreciate the influence this loosening of standards may have exercised upon people, I put a lot of the blame for the (much deserved) erosion of respect for authority occasioned by that meat-grinding money pit that was Vietnam. To rephrase one of my favorite lines, what good was all this propriety in language and manners if all it led to was young men in body bags in a southeast Asian jungle no one knew existed until so many years ago?

I must emphasize we were not griping over the war, per se. We weren’t getting drafted; we didn’t care. (It was the height of cool in the 1970s to affect an attitude of “don’t care” about pretty much everything.) It was the lesson of Vietnam that guided us, namely, that our elders, these people we were supposed to respect, even love, lied to us. They would always lie to us, waste our money, send us away to be killed while their children avoided service and were never held accountable, because, well, that’s the way of the world and you better learn your place in it, boy. 

That these hateful, hard-faced oldsters, doing Moloch’s work with Jesus on their lips, would dare tell us how to speak...yeah, well, ya know what? @#$% those smelly old hypocrites. And so it came to pass that a man who used “hell” and “damn” in casual conversation was no longer a common vulgar peasant, but a brutally honest guy tellin’ it like it is.



A play on a vulgar expression popularized among the hip-hop community in the late 1980s. The humor is in the ironically anodyne translation. Not cussing to be funny. What a twist!


One-half century later as we enter the third decade of the 21st century, we are long accustomed to adult cartoon shows in which the cartoon children drop that once most-dreaded of epithets, the legendary “f-bomb,” like it was nothing. At this point there’s no shock value to children using foul language anymore. It’s the way people talk. I’m impressed there were some people dismayed at how coarse language is celebrated on the current Star Trek series, as if that were some kind of modern artistic breakthrough. Of course, they’re dismissed as old and irrelevant, which is funny considering the star of one of these series is almost 80 and reprising a role he hasn’t played since the last movie bombed out of theaters at the turn of the century.

I used profanity quite freely in my writing, as well as real life, throughout the 1980s, 1990s, and up until about 2012, for all of the reasons described above and more. I’m not proud of it, but at least I understand why. Even now, I struggle to get the reflexive obscenities out of my speech. I have found it more difficult to quit than cigarettes. Fine. Challenge accepted.

It’s been said that if you want to be a rebel these days, don’t get a tattoo. The same can be said for what we used to call coarse language. I’ll stick it to the Man by making mine nice and smooth again.