Friday, December 27, 2013

An Act of Commerce





Ive been chopping firewood; first time in my life. Im pretty much a suburban guy and Ive worked as a writer, systems analyst, journalist, teamster, drinker, smoker, liar, and my leisure activities have consisted of browsing bookstores, watching videos, fucking off, driving around and bar hopping. Muscles Ive neglected are sore from chopping wood, but Im also more relaxed and Im sleeping well. I had a therapist years ago (Number 4) that said if I found an activity which employed the bodys long muscles, quadriceps, biceps, back, it could help to reduce stress and anxiety. As if. I told him he was an idiot and a fraud, paid him $100 dollars and left to get drunk. Dont try to tell me about stress relief.
I have a friend here in the mountains of New Mexico who lives in a teepee. He grows and sells beans. Special beans: Zuni, Anasazi, Heirloom. They dont look like the kind youd find in the supermarket and I cant imagine that he makes a living, but his overhead is low and he has few needs.
We were talking this morning about the weather and the Christmas holidays and I told him how much I enjoyed chopping wood. Hes a tough guy, physical, dresses in Carhartt canvas, his hands are rough as sandpaper, and I realized that telling him about my recent love-affair with manual labor must sound pretty fucking lame to this dude whos spent most of his adult life outdoors.
He said, Hey, if you have any extra firewood Ill trade you some beans for it.
Blown away.
What? Why?
Well, its been pretty cold and I havent been able to get up into the mountains to gather wood. I have enough in my truck for another night but Ill need some more.
Never in my craziest fantasies have I envisioned myself as a supplier of fuel to off-the-grid mountain men. Jesus. And he was going to give me beans. Beans. This was beginning to sound like a warped version of Paul Bunyan and Jack in the Beanstalk with a little Carlos Castaneda thrown in for psychedelic good measure.
The basic model of social commerce is barter. He needs firewood and I have some. I dont see the great appeal of beans, but they are a primitive and respected food that has sustained populations for millennia. Id give him the wood for nothing, I can chop more, but Im going to take the beans in trade. Ill probably put them in a drawer and forget them for a couple of years until I accidentally come across them and throw them in the garbage, but the historic act of exchanging my services for his goods has a biblical, elemental authenticity and allows me to participate in an honest and ancient system of human collaboration.
And, goddamnit, my old therapist was right. I should send him a letter of apology. When Im wielding my ax I am composed, strong and invincible. And afterwards Im calm. I even vaguely understand the appeal of living in a teepee and of learning basic survival skills. I love my ax, perhaps a little too much, and I chop wood. Instead of sizable and expensive quantities of cocaine and alcohol, I can bring myself to a state of equanimity and self-control after a half hour of hard ax-work. If Id known it was all going to be so fucking easy I could have saved $140,000 on therapy. Now I have to go chop wood to earn my beans.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Sensitive Artists







     Another big article recently about creative people and how sensitive they are. Do you think writers and artists are especially sensitive people? According to many writers and artists they are. Theyre extremely intuitive and thoughtful and insightful, complicated and perceptive. Dont they feel more deeply, arent they more caring and shouldnt we understand that their profound complexity requires that we treat them with extra special respect and admiration?
     Oh, shit no. No, no, no.
     A person I know, who calls himself a writer, does not have cancer, is not living in poverty, doesnt have disabilities, doesnt suffer the burden of children, can afford decent food, gas, heat, appears to be tolerant of his current wife, has plenty of time to garden and travel and take cooking classes at the local junior college. He recently posted a message in which he was passionately lamenting the trials and difficulties of The Writers Life, the literary torments, the daily production of linked sentences composed of correctly spelled words and how proud and blessed he was to have finished his latest story.
     Fuck you, you toilet. Please. There is no Writers Life.
     There is Life, short and confusing and you choose to write. Or paint or sculpt or dance. Or not. There are no special gifts or cosmic sensitivities. Hard work and luck. Those are the often-overlooked necessary components of any real artistic enterprise. Not self proclaimed sensitivity or praise from friends about how well you express yourself in your retarded Facebook posts. Really, everyone expresses himself or herself fairly well and it doesnt make them special or unique.
     Sorry, but there is only one species of humans. Homo Sapiens. Thats us and thats it. Eating, digesting, screwing, dying and some of us do other stuff like painting and writing and juggling and competitive eating. There are not Homo sapiens I and Homo Sapiens II; the first group consisting of everyone else in the world and the other is that special advanced species of writers and artists. Ridiculous bullshit. Bitching about the hardships of an artists life makes one a gigantic whining baby, not an artist. No one is more than a normal human being with varying human weaknesses and abilities.
     Of course, the organism closest to Humans is the Chimpanzee. Perhaps artists and writers are more in tune with their inner chimp than the divine muse.
     Gee, youve written a nice poem and thats a beautiful photograph of your grandchildren in the snow. Moving and profound. Your painting is a wonderful representation of the struggles of the artist in an uncaring society. Heres your banana.
     Now that would make sense.