Sunday, February 26, 2012

The Legend of Pan


A drive towards the ultimate.
The need to produce the inferior...

"Alas, human vices, however horrible one might imagine them to be, contain the proof (were it only in their infinite expansion) of man's longing for the infinite; but it is a longing that often takes the wrong route. It is my belief that the reason behind all culpable excesses lies in this deprivation of the sense of the infinite."

A drive towards the inferior.
The need to produce the ultimate...


A wise man once told me if I possessed amazing intelligence I could learn without the need to suffer the lesson. I am not incredibly smart. I endure.
At least I have that.

"I would that your bosom, fragrant with health,
Were constantly the dwelling place of noble thoughts,
And that your Christian blood would flow in rhythmic waves

Like the measured sounds of ancient verse,
Over which reign in turn the father of all songs,
Phoebus, and the great Pan, lord of harvest."

Both quotes were from Charles Baudelaire,
the second was an excerpt
from The Sick Muse

Friday, February 24, 2012

Laughing at the Darkness:

The Seriousness in Comedic Dissent

      "Comedy, we have to admit, was never one of the most honoured of the Muses. She was in her origin, short of slaughter, the loudest expression of the little civilization of men" (15). So says Victorian-era English poet and novelist George Meredith. Comedy acts as a cultural indicator, as an elevation from stress, a dissenting force from authority, a method of ridicule, a way to highlight an issue and a vulgar expression of personal urges. Comedy, while having very many applications, can be used to incite important change during very dire and trying circumstances. It is because we exist in a world that is filed with strife and hardship that we need a seriously comedic response. All life ends in death- that is to say that there are no lasting actions in this world for a living being and that all struggle is just that, struggle. It is to this challenge that the true comic tries to address through the meeting of polar opposites as seen by the mixture of the always-laughing playboy and the never-laughing killjoy. Howard Jacobson, comic novelist and winner of the prestigious Man Booker prize explains during an interview called "The Return of the Wry" that the birth of comedy is the very same as the birth of tragedy. He explains that we enjoy things because they are invariably linked to their demise. If we (mortal men and women) were locked in a state of constant suspension from suffering, there would be nothing to rejoice and that would be an intolerable experience, somewhat akin to limbo. Therefore, to be successful in meeting these challenges, we must employ a kind of serious comedy that both aims to accomplish a goal and simultaneously ridicules itself and the situation with a dissenting merriment.
      As mentioned before, it is because we deal with difficult problems that we must laugh at them. In "Laughing All the Way to Freedom?: Contemporary Stand-Up Comedy and Democracy in South Africa", author Julia Katherine Seirlis tells a narrative of the struggles of South Africa during a period of racial separation known as apartheid, and the effects on stand-up comedians. Under apartheid, a comedian or any person critical of the government was jailed and/or beaten. Nelson Mandela, a comedian in his own right that laughs in the face of adversity, was part of "the struggle" which ended apartheid and started a new era of democracy in South Africa. Even in a democratic South Africa, it is still a very dangerous place to live. It is from this danger that South African comedians feel they have a right and an obligation to laugh about their situations. Comedian John Vlismas mocks the total lack of danger in Australia:
"Australians have no natural predators. Nothing. I went to a game park and said, 'Show me a vicious beast. In my country, we have savage monsters: rhinos, buffalos, PAGAD. Vicious. Dangerous. I want to see a flatulent fanged foaming at the mouth'- and he showed me a wombat. This isn't a beast. I've got Nigerian friends. A wombat is not a beast. It looks like a Care Bear came home drunk and pomped a slipper."
It's a point to note that PAGAD stands for People Against Guns And Drugs- a popular satiric reference to gangsters who use guns and drugs. This kind of humor is a total deviation from the seriousness of tragedy. During the interview with Howard Jacobson, he explains that when God casts Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, it symbolizes the basic tragic plot line, which is a fall from grace. Just as in many Greek tragedies a person or number of people aspire to rise above the toils and suffering of their low lives and end up having quite horrific things happen to them. In Howard's example, Adam and Eve are tempted by the fruit of Knowledge and because of this, they are cast out of the perfect garden. Comedy, contrastingly, is an acceptance of the world as it is and comedy often expresses this acceptance in it's vulgarity and body humor.
      Harry Levin is an emeritus professor of literature at Harvard University. In his essay "Playboys and Killjoys: An Essay on the Theory and Practice of Comedy" he asserts that the character of the killjoy is "the figure who seeks to block sex, youth, ... in general to arrest life's self-renewing autonomies. He is the potentially frightening but, in comedy, always futile agent of repressive authority, sterile formalism and legalism" (51). The playboy, the antithesis to the killjoy, is youthful, highly sexual (with emphasis on recreation over procreation), and celebrates folly, bodily functions and other sorts of "pointless" recreation. Levin and Jacobson simultaneously point out that neither by themselves are capable of understanding true comedy. It follows then, based on Jacobson's argument that comedy shares a source with tragedy, that neither the playboy or the killjoy could properly understand tragedy either. As Jacobson draws the comparison between living in the Garden of Eden and an intolerable life (similar to limbo without anything positive or negative about the world they live in), it would seem that a true comic must temper comedy with tragedy. Levin makes an important note that "The propensity towards ridicule seems to have been at it's strongest among the satirists in the Age of Reason" (50). This seems to be a strong support for the need of balance between reason and absurdity, that when one becomes prevalent, the other naturally rises to suppress it, to seek a natural harmony and to correct the system. Often, when the ruling favor is tipped towards rationality and structure, the laws that are enacted actually give power to dissent. A prime example of this is in "On the Uses of Obscenity in Live Stand-Up Comedy" by Susan Seizer. She asserts that the ban of foul language by the FCC changes certain language into a transgressive act, giving it power "in direct proportion to the extent to which they are cordoned off as taboo" (210). True and proper comedians, as outlined in this essay, must use both forces in balance while retaining both within themselves. Levin explains this balance where one side "generates satire, the latter alliance tends towards romance. Comedy is compounded of the interaction of the two, varying in its emphasis from one mode to the other" (96).
      We see, then, that comedy, proper comedy and not the playboy lightheartedness, as it's explained previously, doesn't aim to merely entertain or make light of the situation. Quite contrary, it seeks to address the dire and possibly life threatening circumstance with a balance of spritely wit and hard-nosed determinism. George Meredith sums up this balance by saying that "Genuine humor and true wit, require a sound and capacious mind, which is always a grave one" (15). It is with both of these tools that we, each of us true comedians, have the possibility to laugh at death and overcome overwhelming adversity. For without both, you have neither and are destitute in an unbearable world. Simply, to utilize merely foolishness or merely sternness would mean unsuccessful attempts towards one's aspirations. Levin highlights true comedy further with "The most protean aspect of comedy is its potentiality for transcending itself, for responding to the conditions of tragedy by laughing in the darkness" (132). The transcending properties of comedy are due to the "gestalten" nature of utilizing polar opposites towards a single goal. Gestalt is a German word that basically means the shape or figure of the whole with the important note that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. The representation of the playboy mixed with the killjoy produces something that is beyond either of them individually. This is because individually neither is functional while both together are the near-definition of what it means to be functional. All things said and considered, in order to face off any great challenge of overwhelming proportions, we must meet, within ourselves, a balance of these two factors. Harry Levin called the combination the "Comic Spirit", which could almost be read as Cosmic Spirit because in the world of Nature as well as the work of man, there must be a balance of polar opposites. Cold and warm, up and down, black and white: none of these properties are capable of existing by themselves- none are functional alone and that would be the larger significance. This is a concept that is followed much farther than that of the South African comedian or the 17th Century English page. Without one, we can't have the other because each opposite is part of the same balance that all other life is held in, and that is truly something to laugh about in the dark.

Jacobson, Howard. "Return of the Wry" Sydney Writers Festival 2011: Web, Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Levin, Harry. "Playboys and Killjoys: An Essay to the Theory and Practice of Comedy." New York: Oxford UP 1987. Print.
Meredith, George. "An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comic Spirit." The Pennsylvania State University 2003. Web.
Seirlis, Julia Katherine. "Laughing All The Way To Freedom?: Contemporary Stand-Up Comedy And Democracy In South Africa." Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 24.4 (2011): 513-530. Academic Search Premier. Web.
Seizer, Susan. "On the Uses of Obscenity in Live Stand-Up Comedy." Anthropological Quarterly 84.1 2011. 209-234. Academic Search Premier. web.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

I can see my house from here!

As I suppress myself less (all good things in time), I become more sensitive. I'm 1,000x more creative- I've taken up sculpting, charcoal drawing, pastels, pen and paper- I write more. I've even rearranged my furniture so it gives me more space to do these things. I'm happier. I've got a million times more energy but I've noticed something else...
I'm unsubscribing from most of my friends on facebook. I've got much less interest in what other people say. I've got far less tolerance for people who've got particular kinds of hang-ups. I'm actively shutting out things I've already learned from. Moving on.

Fan-fucking-tastic. I dig it. I dig it soo good.


I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell. —Harry Truman

Friday, February 17, 2012

Handwriting

I was going through an old journal and came to this...
On defying gravity: There is an idea out there that if you believe in something enough it will happen. No one has been able to prove this because no one actually believes it.
Fuck, my handwriting is messy. Hasn't gotten much better since, but fuck if it was messy before! I've heard that very intelligent people have sloppy handwriting and are prone to drinking. You know who else has those characteristics? Sloppy drunks. Anyway...

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Go

I've suppressed my personality for so long, I forgot what it was like to really live. I forgot the feeling of wildness. It's coming back, albeit slowly. Daily things are getting better, but at the same time, more difficult. I've forgotten the sensitivity- the way things just flood in, overwhelmingly. The fact that I need to be incredibly selective of who I spend time around- what kind of content I let in, what I watch, listen to, eat... It doesn't do any good to explain what it feels like. Either you don't need me to explain it or it wouldn't help. Talking doesn't help. Not about this.

A demand for training. A demand for discipline. It feels good to rev the engine again. A little basic maintenance- clear the cobwebs... I'll take a drive on the highway to really clear the engine. My god, how I look forward to that. A return to that which is most awesome. The demand for balance.

That command. I live for that feeling. To stand in the breeze and know exactly what I've got to do- and why. It's simple. Go. Right there. Do it. Simple, but fuck if it's easy. The most challenging thing I do. The most worthy thing. The most deserving.

Fuck, this feels good. I'll shut up now and just show you.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Fool




I'm a fool,
This much is true.
But I'm not so fatally ignorant
As those who outwardly
Chase the Carrot
But inwardly
Hope for the Stick.
I'm not as diminished as
Those who think that
Class begins at the Bell.
I'm not as neglectful as
Those who believe Work
Is done always in a Suit.

I'm a fool,
This much is true.
But I'm more alive
Than those who drink from the bottle
Instead of from the gnarled streams.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Because Fuck You

So I've been hanging out with a lot of old people. I've been taking care of my grandfather and when he's not chasing tail that I think is too young for me, he's hanging out with old folks. Sometimes his friends can be real bastards. One will make a snide remark towards me and I'll smile and chuckle. They might say something about me not standing up for myself or being a little slow or something like that but you know what?

Fuck you. You're going to die before me. You could spit and curse and poke fun- I'll still be there to mop you off the floor or remind you about your pills.

Because fuck you.

I will survive all you old fucks. It's my duty to continue on after you're all disgusting and buried, which means you're the least of my problems. If what you're saying doesn't help me do my job, you can eat a dusty cock. That goes for just about everyone. No matter what I do, correct or incorrect, I'm going to fucking do it. I'm going to fucking do it strong.

Because fuck you.

I don't recognize whackness.

Because fuck you.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Do.






It is a biological, sociological and historical fact that Man must aspire to something greater than himself. When one does not have a worthy endeavor, muscles atrophy, the spirit goes slack.
The gathering of early man for the purpose of survival, the grouping of a city-State, the Nation built around principals- having to overcome things such as differences of personal histories- working towards that worthy endeavor.

The Work. The Great Work.

So I sit here and wonder, how is it, knowing this, that I'm able to sit in the sun like I do, to loaf around as I do? How is it possible that I'm content with FEELING like I'm accomplishing something when I KNOW I'm not.

I'm a fan of good questions. Worthy questions. When answers come too quickly, they aren't often worthy. I've got to dig for it.

One of the most basic human problems. The paradox between wanting to FEEL well and wanting to BE well. Let's examine a related paradox to shed some light. "Change is the only constant" and yet we seem to gravitate (as a species) towards something to hang on to- some kind of constant we can lean on. A source of comfort.

How do we resolve this paradox? Become comfortable being uncomfortable.
Of course you can't actually do that, things that suck... well, they suck. That's why they call it that. The suck. Because it sucks. Get it?

I'm not going to write what I plan on doing.
I'll tell you when I've done it.