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Thoughts That Come Unbidden Department

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NaBloPoMo

Three hour tour, with feeling

In addition to getting me to write more, and more often, part of the NaBloPoMo odyssey has been about getting me to reconnect with the people I consider to be “my community” which, in turn, has gotten me to thinking a lot about the meanings of words like community and family.

I’ve been reconsidering my Blogroll (down there, on the right, that list of blogs that I think worthy or important enough to link to). I started out using the blogroll for a couple of reasons: 1) it was an easy way to keep track of the little corners of the blogsphere that I think are worth visiting that might not make it to Technorati’s most popular list) and 2) it was convenient; I never had to remember where I could just go one place (clearly this was in the days before del.icio.us).

It started out as a way for me to keep track of things for my own sake but then I realized that other people were linking to me so I added them to my blogroll.

And while the blogroll does help me keep up with what is doing in my little ad hoc community including:

  • Jim being ahead of his word count on NaNoWriMo this year (go Jim! go Jim!);
  • S. doing a week long meditation retreat;
  • QCTester making me wonder why they don’t all weigh 400lbs over there;
  • Ella going back to school; and
  • STB being all giddy and hopeful about the Dems taking over Congress

it also makes me question what my commitment is to this community, and just how in the larger scheme of things we define community and family.

I’ve got a couple of blogs in my blogroll that are simply just dead; indeed, one hasn’t updated for over a year. I’ve got a couple that I thought were dead but have suddenly sprung back to life, one of those through the graces of blogger’s inability to actually run servers during an election. So what is my obligation to those blogs that have been abandoned or in which I have lost interest or grown past what their authors have to say? Do I link to them simply because they still link to me? That seems too transactional a view of the relationship, as sketchy as it may be, to suit me, yet where in a relationship does it stop being a relationship and start being an obligation?

My family is readjusting the holidays this year. After 16 years of Thanksgiving dinners at my aunt’s house – instituted because that first year after my grandmother died no one could face the idea of dinner up the street from the dark, empty, as-yet-unsold house – both my mother and I finally drew the line and said “I’d rather just stay home.” As a group we’ve also finally admitted that the typical family Christmas practiced for decades (and marketed to you heavily by Hallmark) where we get together in a loud, noisy bunch, open well-suited presents and then have a sumptuous meal has degenerated into obligatory giving of items that are given just so everyone has the same number of boxes under the tree. Not only has it become awkward, it’s also a gigantic waste of money. Christmas, then, will become gifts to the immediate family and dinner with the larger group. This is, I think, a good thing.

The impending holidays and some other recent and not so recent events have caused me to take a really, really hard look at how we define family. In America family has a huge number of shifting, socially acceptable definitions.

Somewhere between the turn of the 20th century and the end of World War II family went from meaning the big, sprawling, multigenerational model we’re all oh so familiar with from every movie about immigrants that has ever been made (see The Godfather and Avalon for Italian-American models) to family meaning Mom, Dad, and two kids (witness the small screen exemplars: Leave It To Beaver and Father Knows Best). The reality is, family is more complex than that.

One of my coworkers lives in a near suburb that has always been a haven for crunchy, hippie types. Her sprawling extended family includes several other single parents, both moms and dads, and functions the way any “normal” family would: they do chores together, they go to Home Depot on the weekends, they have friends over to view Lost, except they all live in their own houses with their own kids on the same block. If they consider themselves a family, what makes them any less of a family because they don’t meet someone else’s definiton?

And definition is really the issue. I used to think that family was about blood; that blood relations were dependable, strong, and could always be relied upon in times of need. As I have reluctantly absorbed this year, this sadly is not always the case.

Gay and lesbian people throw the word family around as both a code (“oh, him, he’s family definitely”) but it also has a larger meaning in a community where your actual, blood family is almost as likely to erase you from the family bible as they are to accept you for who you are. It works off the concept that family can be chosen, formed from the ether by a group of similar souls lucky to find each other.

So, if family isn’t always defined by blood and can be defined by chosen committment, how, exactly, did with end up with the non-existent nuclear family as the model, particularly in a day and age where people are divorcing, remarrying, adopting, and otherwise incorporating people into their families that, well, just don’t fit?

Who decided these things? You can’t tell me it’s about the biological imperative and procreation; marriage and monogamy (theoretically they go hand in hand) are, in fact, counter-intuitive to furthering the continuation of the species.

I’m questioning a lot of “shoulds” these days, a lot of the old standards. But no matter what standard it is that I question it still boils down to the same basic thing: Who is deciding these things and how to we get the power to make those decisions for ourselves back from them?

For Your Consideration

Christopher Guest (Waiting for Guffman, A Mighty Wind) uses a big, broad brush to paint this satire of virtually all things entertainment. Employing his usual motley cast of regulars, including Catherine O’Hara and Harry Shearer as aging has-beens, Guest creates a film within a film (something I’m really not fond of) that should be taking on Hollywood’s obsession with self-congratulatory awards ceremonies.

Shooting Home for Purim, Marilyn Hack (O’Hara) is that actress whom everyone thinks was in that movie, you know, the one with that other, more famous actress. Her role as Esther, the dying matriarch of a Jewish family in the South during World War II, is meant to be nothing more than another job, a little film, until someone reports a rumor found on that “interweb thing,” as the internet is called by the film’s clueless publicist Corey Taft (John Michael Higgins), that Hack’s performance is good enough to warrant an Oscar nomination.

Taft is the catalyst the parlays a two line blurb from someone on some web site into an appearance on a local Los Angeles morning show for Hack and Victor Allan Miller (Shearer) which through utter stupidity gets spun into a potential Oscar nod for Miller as the family’s patriarch which gets taken to another level when Variety picks up that rumor and turns it into gossip about a nod for Callie Webb (Parker Posey) who is playing the black-sheep, lesbian daughter. What ensues is an uproarious indictment of celebutainment and people’s ability to buy into the rumor that they want to be true, particularly if it is a rumor that tells them they are valuable.

Guest and co-scripter Eugene Levy, who also makes an appearance in the cast as a slimy, not very convincing agent, spend more time poking a sharp stick in the eye of the industry that has sprung up to cover Hollywood, movie review shows, night time talk shows, entertainment reports, and the like, than they do dissecting that fact that Hollywood’s denizens believe they have a right to this sort of coverage. He’s none to kind to actors, portraying them as vain luddites more concerned with appearance than what’s inside.

Sprawling and with only the vaguest sense of structure, the film feels episodic. Still, if you’re even vaguely tapped into the culture of celebrity and the massive spin that surrounds it (pictures of Katie Holmes’ and Tom Cruise’s wedding anyone?) you will not be at a lost for laughs both broad and sly during the course of this film. For that, for the fact that all roads lead back to This Is Spinal Tap and for the complete irony that this film is probably just as worthy of anything that will receive an Oscar this year I’ll give this film 3.5 popcorns out of 5.

3.5 popcorns out of 5


For Your Consideration poster
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Fuzzydumb

I had occasion to write my first ever letter to a columnist last week. Amid his jumping up and down for joy, in his haze of excitement, Mark Morford wrote this column Eleven New And Happy Things Antrum dead, religious right imploding, Bush whimpering in the corner. Can we all exhale now? on the election and its outcomes.

Eleven stupendous things about the Democrats retaking both the House and the Senate. A moron like Rick Santorum, who supported drilling in Alaska for oil, who equated homosexuality with pedophilia and bestiality, and who tried to play doctor-god off video tape stalling poor Terry Schiavo’s slip into the big sleep for nothing more than his political benefit, gone. Out of a job. Fabulous.

True, too, that Californians got rid of Pombo, a man who would probably have been just as happy cutting down Muir Woods as walking in it. Finally, California’s crunchy side, you know, the side north of Carmel, asserts its power.

And yes, voters in South Dakota recognized that they really didn’t want to be the most back-assward state in the union and rejected a complete ban on abortion in all cases.

I’m so glad, too, that the rest of the world can heave a sigh of relief now that Dubya has been made toothless (they don’t have to deal with the ramifications of his complete buggery of the American political and judicial systems for the rest of their lives; I’m so happy they’re relieved, though).

All these are good things, I wrote to Mr. Morford. Yes, we’re all doing the Snoopy dance now that the neo-cons and the hypocrites from the right are out; you’re correct about that.

True, the cynic in me says the smart money is on the Dems pissing away any advantages they have, giving just as many corporate giveaways, albeit to different parasitic organizations, and providing more tax cuts for the rich while the middle class gets squeezed harder than a 15 year-old’s acne and the poor get even poorer with no health care and a “poverty line” that is too ridiculous to mention. Still, there is something to be celebrated about the sanctimonious twerps getting their comeuppance. Except…

Anti-gay marriage bills passed in every state in the union where they were on the ballot except Arizona (based on the number of extremely kinky folks I know in Tucson, I’m sort of unsurprised by this).

So…I should be celebrating having to sit, still, at the back of the bus and have no rights?

Wake me, I told him, when the hedonists are in charge, perhaps then I’ll dig out my good Oregon pinot noir and go sky clad. Until then I’m still planning for the apocalypse.

Then Thursday he comes up with this

Then you get down to it. You get past these half-baked and rather childish notions and, well, something odd happens. You drill down to the real reason given by just about every conservative with an actual brain who is still willing to speak about the subject of gay marriage.

What would happen to the nation were it to become legal? Real answer: They really don’t know. Probably nothing. So why is gay marriage so wrong? Because, well, it just is. What was that again? It. Just. Is.

And there you have it.

This is, I believe, the last remaining detestable thing. It is a vagueness of mind, of spirit, a tepid sort of oatmealy hate that knows no real reasoning or heat or nuance. It just is. It is the banality of evil, distilled into a single phrase, a fuzzydumb but yet weirdly powerful mind-set that means nothing but which still lashes out at the world.

This is my guess: Most Americans, even if they voted to ban gay marriage, really have no clear answer as to why they did it. Deep down, if they really looked, they would know: There is no threat. There is no danger to children, the economy, sunshine, puppies. They are merely scared to death of change, of the Other, of their own buried impulses.

In other words, they don’t like gay love because it’s not what they do and it’s not what their neighbors do and therefore it must be evil and wrong and bizarre, and, being Americans, if we don’t understand something we either kill it or ban it or poison it or vote against it about 1,000 times until we exhaust every possible angle of idiocy.

Did I have anything to do with this column? I doubt it. It’s probably just serendipity, or the fact that he has to produce a column twice a week. If I get an answer back, I’ll be sure to post it here.

Isn’t that every day?

We have dial-the-weather in DC. Any time of the day or night you can dial 202-936-1212 and our local tel-monopoly will provide you with both a “get out of the door” and a more extended weather forecast for the DC metro area. They’ve been doing this for as long as I can remember (we also have dial the time as well). I have no idea of this is something that is available in any other city or not <makes note to self to check the next time I travel> but it’s something I take advantage of on a regular basis.

There are three meteorologists who do the forecast at our dial-the-weather line: there’s the one I think of as “bland guy” because he is, well, bland. His delivery is as featureless as an all white room with no windows. Just the facts of the prediction.

Then there’s Eeyore. They usually put him on for rainy days when his “nothing is going to be alright; you’ll probably get soaked, catch pneumonia and die on the way to work” delivery suits the skies. I know it isn’t the guy’s fault that he’s got a really deep voice but he could certainly do something about the delivery.

And finally there’s my favorite, “happy guy.” No matter what time of day you call he’s cheerful, upbeat, and willing to enthuse about whatever weather might be on the way. If you call in the morning he’ll also inform you if there’s anything “special” going on that particular day. This is how I learned initially that September 19th is Talk like a pirate day and that in addition to being National Coming Out Day October 11th is also Take Your Teddy Bear to Work Day. This morning in his usual chirpy way “happy guy” told me that today was National Coping With Uncertainty Day.

If it is true as Messrs. Densmore, Krieger, Manzarek, and Morrison tell us that “the future is uncertain and the end is always near” wouldn’t every day be coping with uncertainty day?

One of those Wednesdays

Definition: DC parkjob
Double parking next to a parking space that, with little or no effort, the double parker could actually park their car in.

Double citizenship points for doing this on a one way, two lane (that is, one lane full of parked cars, the other for moving traffic) street during the height of rush hour.

Triple citizenship points acrue if you stayed late at work the previous night, got hungry, and ate out of the communal refrigerator someone else’s lunch which had her name and the next day’s date on it.

Hey, it could have been worse: at least it wasn’t raining.

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