Reflections In A Flubber Room

What you perceive is what it is.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Day off today

And I managed not to stay home and stew all day. I actually got a couple of things done--bought some dog food, paid the electric bill, dropped off my cracked wheel rim at a nearby welding place so I can finally have a real tire on the back right of my car again. Speaking of which, I still need to make a car payment. Dammit. It sucks being poor. But it could be worse: I could be destitute.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

"Ein Himmelblauer Trabant..."

A YouTube tribute to the Trabant 601, the iconic East German automobile, featuring a great, upbeat, hip-swinging vintage theme song (sung in German, no less, by a girl named Sonja Schmidt).

Also, check out this video of a couple of Trabis in a rally race, which ends with one of them crashing. And another...the guys on the sidelines have the thing up on its wheels and on its way again in about 15 seconds!

If you're curious what's the deal with this ugly little car: it was built from the late '50s or early '60s until about 1991 in Zwickau, East Germany and served roughly the same function that the earliest incarnation of the VW Beetle, that is a state-sponsored, cheap, standardized car for the lumpen-masses, but on a more cut-rate level of quality. I always thought it looked like a miniaturized, super-deformed caricature of a '55 Chevy; I love those clunky-cute little tail fins. After a wait of maybe two years, the Trabant customer would receive a little car made of Duroplast (plastic reinforced with wood pulp), powered by an air-cooled 2-cylinder, 2-stroke engine, and fueled by gasoline/oil mix...a car which was just like the one that each of his neighbors also waited two years for. Except the color might be sightly different--light blue, light green, or white. Possibly salmon. Or you might have ordered the wagon version instead of the standard sedan. The last couple of production years the Trabant received a VW Polo engine.

That may sound like a harsh assessment, and what business have I, a wicked Westerner, to criticize the beloved Trabi?

Actually, I think the Trabant is way cool. Not necessarily a good car, but cool. Lovable. You know.

Monday, January 19, 2009

The new Electric Company

Just caught a bit of this on Channel 13. Interesting...seems almost like a young person's version of MadTV, mostly from the 24p video look and the hip-hop influenced snotty attitude.

But is it The Electric Company? It is whatever the Sesame Workshop says it is, I suppose. Call me an old man, but for me The Electric Company is Rita, Morgan, Judy, Skip, et. al., on a videotape soundstage accompanied by primitive electronic graphics and funky Joe Raposo songs. But after all, the show was never intended to be nostalgic entertainment for culture-starved 30-somethings. It was for the kids, before all else. And above entertainment, it was to teach them to read. Will today's second graders look back fondly on Electric Company 2009 while we, their parents' generation, struggle to look back, fondly or otherwise, on anything, in between doses of Geritol?

Yuppiewear

And meanwhile, I've gotten to the point where I get physically sick of the sight of the North Face logo on someone's jacket while I'm at work. Or worse yet, some couple's jackets. Some clean-cut couple. With matching jackets. Both with the North Face logo.

Matching jackets with matching logos. Clean cut good looks. A vague sense of smug superiority exuding from them like some expensive fragrance. Oh yes, and usually paired with matching Ugg boots.

This soup has rather unpleasant, even sinister connotations.

It's homesickness, that's what it is

The problem is, everybody, at least online, seems to only associate it with either kids at summer camp or freshmen at college, only mentioning in passing the fact that adults--good heavens!--can suffer from it too. Yeah, loads of helpful advice out there.

Well, at least I'm calling it what I think it is. Yes, it's probably mixed in with the undertreated depression I already suffer from, but the hallmarks are there: I'm constantly and obsessively thinking about good old Columbus and all the people who I left behind, and I'm having just a terrible time adjusting to New Jersey. I feel isolated and anxious and shut-in and vulnerable. I've described it to Cherie and others as feeling frightened of everything, and it wouldn't be so bad to deal with if only I were home, near my mom and dad and brothers and friends and High Street and the good old north campus area and Clintonville and...

I dunno. Since I've been gone I hear that they tore up High Street to make improvements; that Larry's, the iconic OSU campus bar with the green neon sign which Rod Serling used to frequent when he worked for WBNS-TV in the '50s, shut its doors to make room for a Chipotle or Baja Fresh or something; that the old Woolco department store building, the last vestige of the old Graceland Shopping Center that I fondly remember from my childhood, which has been sitting vacant for several years, has been torn down to make room for some multi-floor modern health club or something; and that the walkway spanning High Street downtown between the old Lazarus department store building and the City Center mall is being or has been dismantled, probably because neither of those two entities is really alive in any capacity anymore. Medary Elementary School, my alma mater, is already closed for good, and I wonder how long that beautiful old building will last without teachers and children to occupy it. South Campus has been paved over by the Gateway for a few years now.

Sometimes I wonder what if anything, besides my family and friends and places immediately related to me, I'd be coming back to if I ever did move back to Columbus. I think that's part of what drove me away, that feeling that the city was changing in a way that made it feel more like an alien environment every day, a playground for suburban yuppies and future generations of spoiled college kids from elsewhere who will have never heard of Larry's or Papa Joe's or the South Heidelberg. I suppose I felt betrayed by Columbus, and the New York area seemed like a bastion not only of relevance/importance in the grand scheme of American society, but also of a certain timelessness--a sense that it offers stability and its own set of traditions and institutions that I would be proud to be a part of.

But it ain't home. That's the thing about it. It ain't me. I'm like young Pink in The Wall, hopefully tagging along with the unresponding father of another little boy, both strangers, until they finally go away without him, leaving him just as lonely as before. (Or was it just a man? I forget.) The NYC area is the father figure I dream of, provider of security and mentorship through the much-vaunted "real world", but he's not my dad.

Fortunately, my dad--and mom--are both still with us. I talk to them for at least an hour every night. Of course, I fear for the day I call and one of them is not there, or the phone call from one of my brothers to inform me that something terrible has happened to one or both of them, and that there's nothing I can do about it, and I will have to live with the guilt that I was not there to see them off, or to thank them one last time, when their time to go arrived. Why? Because I decided so emphatically that I wanted to live away from home--far away from home--when I was younger and perhaps more foolish.

I'm blabbering on here. You'd think talking about it would be therapeutic, wouldn't you? Maybe it is. Maybe all that a therapist would add is the occasional "I see", or "How so?", or "Sure, absolutely", or "And how would you explain that?" At least I'm giving verbal shape to the things that make my whole soul ache.

Wow, that last sentence was a pretty neat little bit of rhyming lyricism, wasn't it? Parsed appropriately, it could almost be a few lines in a poem, or a sensitive song accompanied by plaintive acoustic guitar that music critics say "heralds the arrival of a major talent in the singer-songwriter genre"...except that I want to play neo-psych indie space rock.

Boy, I'm actually being funny. That's got to be a good sign.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Hi there! I'm Still here!

And hoping that my internet connection doesn't get cut of before I can make a payment, indeed before I get back inside from my smoke break on this cold, less-snow-than-predicted-thank-God Sunday afternoon. More in a bit.