Sep 14 2008

Catchall

Wow, it’s been a while since I last updated, hasn’t it? I blame school. Not the massive amount of schoolwork I’m doing, but the massive amount of procrastinating on the tiny amount of schoolwork I’m not doing, which leaves me completely distracted and twitchy all the time. Not good blogging weather, in other words. Not good anything weather, really: I’ve been having trouble sleeping again, and the last novel I read took me a few weeks to finish. It’s almost like my attention is divided. Like there’s something I should be doing . . .

Two days ago I went to a party (my ex’s birthday party, to be exact) where half of QUAC showed up, and I got to see most of the people I swim with a) clothed and b) drunk for the first time. I’ve avoided QUAC-related social events because I’m not really comfortable around crowds of people I don’t know, and that goes double for crowds of gay men. (My old therapist was working with me on that, but we never entirely resolved the issue.) Maybe I will go to more of these parties in the future, now that I know I won’t come home dead drunk, naked and/or crying. And maybe I’ll actually get to know some people from QUAC on more than a “Uh, hey, what’s up?” basis.

Anyway, we worked on the breast stroke today. There are a group of people who coach at QUAC, on a rotating basis, and this was the first time I had done breast stroke with this coach. As usual, her description and instructions were completely different from every other coach (this reminds me strongly of the challenge of being taught dance by different people), but the main difference was: I GOT IT. “Her” way of doing breast stroke was much more physically demanding than what I was used to, but it also made complete sense to my body. For the first time, I felt like I was actually swimming when I did breast stroke, instead of floundering in place. So that was nice.

My Twitter followers may have noticed that I attended something called “The 5th Annual People’s Summit on Poverty” a week ago, and one of the reasons I’m so late in posting anything is that I’m working on a post about that. Specifically, about the issues that were discussed and the statistics that were presented.

One of the things that drives me the most nuts about right-wing rhetoric in this country is how blatantly selfish and punitive it is. Even if the words used are conciliatory or loving (though usually they are not) the tone and the implications scream

“Help yourself. It’s your fault if you have problems. It’s your fault if you aren’t middle/upper-middle class. I worked hard for my money. You need to suffer the consequences of your actions, even if it means you die. I’m against any government action that doesn’t unilaterally condemn behavior I disapprove of, even if it means people die or get deadly diseases and remain uneducated about how to help themselves. . . . etc., etc.”

So I am very interested in counteracting this kind of thinking both through public education and through political/legal activism. Which is why, when I noticed that my cousin Bill was organizing the Summit, I immediately put it on my calendar, and that morning took two buses to get to there. Everyone involved in anti-poverty or anti-hunger initiatives in Salt Lake knows Bill, so at these kinds of functions I almost feel like I’m related to a celebrity. For a few hours I become “Bill’s cousin,” an identity I’m proud to claim. I only wish I were as quick to devote my time and talents to social justice as he is.

Expect a post on poverty and hunger initiatives in Utah. If you aren’t into that sort of thing, you can skip it. It won’t hurt my feelings. Just know that God loves those who help others. Think about it.


Jun 29 2008

Now in Theaters!

Despite the fact that I am perishing daily, hourly, minutely from the heat and from dehydration, I’ve had the time to take in several movies and a great deal of television over the past few days.

Friday I watched WALL-E, Pixar’s newest computer-animated tour-de-force, a hilarious and amazing film, right up there with Finding Nemo and The Incredibles. WALL-E is the name of a tiny, mobile trash compactor/robot, left behind on a deserted Earth to clean up the mountains and avalanches of garbage humanity left behind. He spends his days creating neat skyscrapers out of trash cubes, and, in his free time, he collects interesting items (bras, sporks, lighters) and learns about love and dancing from an old, ailing videocassette tape of Hello, Dolly. When a sleek, white, ovoid probe named EVE shows up on a secret mission, he instantly falls in love with her, and ends up following her back to one of the massive spaceships mankind is now living on. There, he inadvertently uncovers a seven-hundred-year-old plot, becomes the leader of a rebellion of broken robots, wins EVE’s heart and saves humanity from itself.

Friday evening I went out on the town with my friend Craig, listened to live music at a dueling piano bar, sang along to ’80s music, ogled hot guys and got drunk. That was the first time I ever had to spend the night on a friend’s couch because I was too inebriated to get myself home. The next morning, which saw me shambling through downtown Salt Lake with greasy hair and sweaty, slept-in clothes, was also a first.

Saturday afternoon I went with Craig to see Wanted, a film about an ancient fraternity of assassins, starring James McAvoy, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie . . . and Angelina Jolie’s Scary Scowl of Death. (Watch for it 24 seconds into the trailer.) The movie got mixed reviews, which is easy to understand in retrospect: the premise is interesting, and the effects are mind-blowing, stunning, unreal. On the other hand, the story lies somewhere between “Huh?” and “Meh,” which is a really good way to piss off the critics, who are forced to watch movies even if they don’t want to.

Saturday night I had my own little Doctor Who marathon, with the first of the “new” series—the season with Christopher Eccleston and a blonde I keep thinking I’ve seen somewhere else but don’t think I really have. I don’t like it as much as its spin-off Torchwood, mainly because there’s no sex or swearing [too wholesome!], but apparently I like it well enough to watch several episodes end-to-end.

This morning, while I was stumbling around getting my morning coffee, I dropped a mostly empty glass container of coffee granules on my left foot. It hurt a lot, but I didn’t really pay attention to it. After I was done swimming with QUAC, I noticed that I had a nice lump and a livid bruise on the top of my foot. So now I’m at work, hobbling around with my left shoe untied, trying not to bang the lump into anything. In my T-shirt, cargo shorts and untied Skechers, I make such a dignified librarian.

Tonight: more Doctor Who?


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