21.11.21
Invisible Graffiti (dreamtime)
11.11.21
Remembrance
I have a difficult relationship with Remembrance Day. The only member of my family actually involved in WWII was my maternal grandfather, who was from a small village in northern Germany. He wasn't involved in the Nazi Party. There was no Jewish community in the village. Given his age at the time, I have a suspicion that he didn't really have much of a choice about whether to enlist or not, regardless of his feelings about Hitler and the Fatherland. But still.
They sent him to the Eastern Front. Not Stalingrad, but just as horrific, from what my mother has told me secondhand. He never talked about his time in the military to anyone except her and my aunt, towards the end. No food, inadequate supplies, scorched earth - an endless slog of frozen mud and blood and murder. When their commanding officer died (whether by a Soviet bullet or mutiny - he never said and Mum never asked), he and the surviving members of his unit fled the advancing Red Army and went looking for the Americans so they could surrender and maybe eventually go home.
He spent the better part of a year in a POW camp, went back to his village, sold the farm, and emigrated to Canada, sending for his family once he'd found a job and a place to live with the help of the Salvation Army (my feelings about them are for another post and another complicated set of feelings). He never talked about the war again, and once he retired from his job, was never sober again until the day he died. Whatever wound he carried - the shame and grief and guilt - took 45 years to kill him.
So that's it. The ceremonies here are all about how our side fought for freedom, paid a terrible price, and prevailed. What ceremony is there for when you come back and realize what you fought and paid in blood for was something unworthy - a vicious, contemptible lie, propagated by men unfit to lead?
9.11.21
The Party Must Continue (Dreamtime)
[NB: Transcribed from audio notes made this morning]
This morning's dream was located in the hotel. There are a number of consistent geographical features in my dream, for lack of a better word, city, although their positions change relative to each other, largely dependent on which of them seem to be required for narrative purposes. So, the hotel. It's large, and old, and layrinthine in complexity. Kind of like the Banff Springs Hotel (or any of the other former CP Rail hotels) but scaled up to a ridiculous degree.
S. and I were there for either a wedding or a really elaborate LARP. So a good portion of our room was taken up by costumes, props, prosthetics, etc. Ze boy wasn't there, so I assume he stayed back home with my folks. There was also a howling blizzard going on outside, which wouldn't have been a problem except the power lines kept icing over, so the lights would go out and we'd be getting ready by candlelight. I had some sort of official role, so I was also trying to memorize a script, and S. was lacing me up in a corset and kept asking me if it was too tight and whether I could still breathe. So I got a little pissy and shouted that if I was still capable of yelling then yes, *clearly* I could still breathe. And then I realized I'd forgotten to put on my boots and got even more annoyed.
S. finally got tired of the drama and went to get ready. He seemed to be going for the Raul-Julia-as-Gomez-Addams look, which is a pretty good look on him. It had the added bonus of him having to lose the hobo beard, which, yay.
By the time we got downstairs the lights had come back on, and the party was in full swing. I was carefully trying to make my way over to the stage without stepping on my skirt (or someone else stepping on it) when I ran into J. It's been a good 20 years since I last saw him, but he looked exactly the same. We saw each other at roughly the same time, then awkwardly pretended not to have.
8.11.21
Summer 1992 (In Search of Lost Time)
A Slight Case of Hamster Brain Parte the Second
5.11.21
Winter 1992 (In Search of Lost Time)
I'm 20 years old. It's a bastard cold Friday night in late March and I'm sitting on W's least questionable sofa waiting for something to happen. Half an hour ago, K, a mutual friend, had given me a tiny square of paper and told me to put it under my tongue. Fifteen minutes ago, he had stuck a tape into W's stereo and turned it on. Five seconds after that, I had nearly jumped out of my skin when the speakers let out a frankly horrific noise.
W. glared at him.
"You know, 'Last Rights' is not what most people would pick as a soundtrack for someone's first fucking acid trip. What the hell is wrong with you?"
"Yeah, but I just got it, and I really wanted to listen to it tonight..."
"Is it supposed to sound like that?"
"Okay, fine, I can turn it off, what do you want to listen to instead?"
"W, I think something's wrong with your tape deck. Or me."
"No, you're fine. Fuck, put on Sisters or something, Jesus. You goddamn lunatic."
Another fifteen minutes in and I start finding the whole situation hilarious.
"Yeah, there you go. Hey, you want to see something cool?"
He turns off all the lights in the room and closes the drapes. The stereo's digital display wobbles slightly. K lights a cigarette and starts waving it around, and the ember leaves behind a jittering curve of fading red.
"Ooooooh. Hey, where's the flashlight? I want to try."
[Later]
We order a pizza. I carefully put the correct amount of money, plus a generous tip, right next to the door in order to avoid having to talk any more than absolutely necessary. W assures me that the delivery guy has probably dealt with people in much worse states. I learn firsthand about temporal relativity when the clock stays stuck at 11:15 for the next several hours.
[Much Later]
We go outside. It's snowing and I'm staring dumbstruck at the sky watching the snowflakes streak downward like the slowest, tiniest shooting stars ever. I start talking a load of pretentious shit about the molecular structure of ice crystals and fractals and walk face-first into a lamppost.
[Very Early]
Saturday morning cartoons, I am convinced, are created primarily for people coming down and only incidentally for children.
3.11.21
For Beatrice
Lady of the Perfume Jar
Devouring One
Daughter of Ra
Come to us
Lead your child to the sunlit lands in the West
May She who walks in the silent places
Guide your feet to make no sound
May She who hunts in the hidden places
Bring forth prey for you to chase
May She who sleeps in the warm places
Prepare a soft bed for your comfort
May She who sees in the dark places
Light the shadows as you pass into her lands
Let the sistrum ring for you
Let incense make the air sweet
Lady of Bubastis accept these offerings
Take your daughter home
2.11.21
Hamster Brain
1.11.21
Summer 1991 (In Search of Lost Time)
I'm 19. It's my first co-op work term, in Ottawa. Because I've never lived anywhere else and because it's close to downtown and reasonably cheap, I move into the YWCA. It's a lot like how I imagine living in a dorm would have been if I'd not ended up going to university in Calgary and living at home. My parents, overprotective even when I'm at home, insist I call every night. I tell them about my job (revising pamphlets for Health & Welfare Canada), the city (lots of museums and galleries, especially near Parliament Hill), and assure them that I'm taking my medications, that I have enough money, that I'm having a good time. I don't tell them that I spend most of my free time when I'm not at work or sleeping riding around on random OC Transpo buses deliberately getting lost; that I'm subsisting on noodle packets, fruit, cereal, peanut butter straight from the jar, and coffee because most of my kitchen stuff got nicked and I can't be arsed to cook anyway. I don't tell them that, alone, unchaperoned, and with no friends here yet, I've never felt so deliriously, incredibly *alive*.
After about 3 weeks, I've got a pretty good idea of where everything I want to see is, how long it'll take to get there, and that I *really* fucking hate the Y. It's not the communal kitchen or bathroom facilities that bother me so much as the fact that I've already decided that I'm going to be spending all my time near the Byward Market, and also the punk girl in the adjacent room keeps bringing her boyfriend round for noisy, enthusiastic sex on work nights and I do actually need to sleep for at least 6 hours a night. So I start looking for a new place, and find what appears to be a walk-in closet in a shared house 5 minutes from the Rideau Street bus mall for $250 a month. The other girls in the house are tolerable, the landlady only shows up to collect the rent, and I don't really intend to spend much time there anyway, so it suits me fine.
I start experimenting with becoming someone else.