Northern
Burma, a gang of bricklayers blasting traditional folk music out of an antique
boombox. I stood there, my ears agape. Utter disbelief. Is this…music? It
wasn’t so much the strange stringed and wind instruments but that the sound
lacked what I associated as rhythm or harmony. It was all jangly discord, tinny
chaos, alien tonalities, composed by a mind that worked at different angles and
slants. I was to hear it for months and never quite get it, never
understand it. Once only, hanging off the back of a passenger lorry, did I
catch myself enjoying it, understanding it, and then I realized that it was a
Chinese cover of John Denver’s “Rocky Mountain High.”
Dream:
a boy with flies for teeth.
The
Myth of Hermaphroditic Hyenas “undoubtedly arose when people noticed that
hyenas with large pendulous udders (indicating they were obviously females)
could suddenly develop impressive phallic erections such that they also looked
like males. Interestingly, although a female spotted hyena has a uterus and
ovaries internally, externally she does in fact appear to have “masculinized”
genitalia. That is, the female’s clitoris is enormously elongated to form a
fully erectile pseudopenis through which she urinates, copulates, and gives
birth. “--www.hyaenidae.org
Amygdala:
part of the brain pinged by, say, the word “fuck.”
“The
fact that I myself do not understand what my paintings mean while I am painting
them does not imply that they are meaningless.” –S. Dali
Fiona
Wren’s first day of daycare and she can’t stop hugging the other kids.
Like that part in Jane Goodall’s In the
Shadow of Man, when Jane placed a bunch of bananas in a clearing and two
chimps came ambling up and spied the trove and stopped and broke out in huge
grins and threw their arms around each other and started jumping up and down
and hooting in delight, their arms still around each other, the celebration
going on for a good couple of minutes before they even moved towards the
bananas. But not really like that: the other kids don’t hug Fio back. They just
stand there, and then eventually both of them topple over, and the other kid
cries, and Fio’s like, what?
“...a
woman who was born with only stumps at her shoulders, and yet, as far back as
she could remember, felt herself to have arms and hands; she even feels herself
gesticulating as she speaks…People who for years had been unable to unclench
their phantom fist suddenly felt their hand open; phantom limbs in painfully
contoured positions could relax”—Atul Gawande, New Yorker, 6/30/2008
Sam
Cooke played a Bob Dylan album to Bobby Womack and Bobby didn’t get it and Sam
had to explain to him that it was no longer about how the music sounded or the
singer’s voice but about believing that that voice was telling the truth.
Idiom:
“butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth.”
When
I fish I catch everything but fish. This doesn’t bother me, as perhaps the
catch is not the point, but perhaps I should not call it fishing. Searching,
maybe. Once on the slow brown Chehalis River I caught a river mussel. It had
clamped its shell around my wormed hook. The same river, different day, I
caught a rough skinned newt, though it was just stubbornly clenching the worm
as I reeled it in. Today, as white-bellied swallows skimmed the surface of the
lake, I cast and cast and caught a leaf. A brown, decomposed, soggy leaf that
ever so slowly sank back down and out of sight. Searching.
Chinese
eunuchs traditionally preserved their “bao”—their severed, pickled genitals—in
a jar and carried them in a bag hung on their belt. This way, if a eunuch died
he had his genitals on him and could be buried with them and be reincarnated as
a "full man."
Airplaned
next to a man whose mustache resembled a cumulonimbus cloud.
Barthes:
“the writerly text is ourselves writing, before the infinite play of the
world is traversed, intersected, stopped, plasticized by some singular
system which reduces the plurality of entrances, the opening of networks, the
infinity of languages.”
Listening
to James Brown, Live at the Olympia,
Paris, 1971, good stuff, and just realized that those moments when he is
not gasping, grunting, shouting, or singing, but the band is still laying it
down thick and the roar of the crowd picks up…it’s because he’s dancing. And
it’s wonderful, ‘cause you can’t see it, don’t need to see it, what’s
lacking in the medium is present in your head: James Brown dancing the Buttered
Popcorn or The James Brown, that fancy footwork, that effort, that sweat,
that’s enough, that’s always enough, one of those emissions that is in fact a
universe, an opening…
Dream:
fucked her upsidedown.
Hungover. Something is disturbing the
crow in the bigleaf maple outside the window—the morning light on yellow leaves
against its black feathers, perhaps. It won’t stop screaming. Maybe the dump
truck will scare it away. No, crows know dumptrucks. It barks anew.
Watched
Godfather II again last night. So many classic scenes, but the one sticking
with me this morning was when Vito Corleone is sacked from his job as a
grocer’s assistant because the local gangster wants the position for his
nephew. Vito, confused at first, quickly grasps the situation and stops the
grocer’s hand-wringing apologies with a firm “I understand; you have been good
to me, and I thank you.” No sniveling, complaining, self-pitying: nothing
but calm, gracious, masculinity. Being a man might be confused with giving it,
but taking it is the true measure of a man. Like Jesus. That’s what I aspire
to, even if, every so often, I feel like Fredo whining “I can handle things!
I’m smart! Not like everybody says…like dumb. I’m smart and I want respect!”
Howlin’ Wolf, classic 1950s Chicago
Bluesman, 6’6 and 300 lbs, real name Chester Arthur Burnett. His
childhood idol was Jimmie Rodgers, and it was by trying to mimic Rodgers’
blueyodel that the Wolf developed his howl. Sam Phillips, of Sun Records fame,
said:"When I heard Howlin' Wolf, I said, 'This is for me. This is where
the soul of man never dies.' That’s how I felt when I read Hoagland’s “Learning to Eat Soup.”
This is for me. Like a window thrown open wide. Like, “here, relax.” I didn’t
care what it meant or didn’t. Later I read that Hoagland just selected various
quotes and passages from his twenty-years-in-the-making, 500-page journal. The
soul of a man.
Marx
assumed that the notion of reconciliation was obsolete and added that all we
can expect of our artists today is their acknowledgement of the impossibility
of resolution.
*
Nathaniel
Brodie received his MFA from the University of Arizona. Brodie served as an
Agricultural Extension Agent in the Peace Corps (Paraguay) for two years, and
has worked as a carpenter, farmer, backcountry stone mason, journalist, and
beekeeper. His essays have appeared in Creative Nonfiction, High Country News,
Terrain.org, and other publications. He lives in Corvallis, Oregon.
Damn good stuff, Brodie...
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kirk. I tried to resist touching up the language of my journal entries and I tried to select entries at random, as (supposedly) did Hoagland. I failed, especially with the latter.
ReplyDelete