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Cheers for reading Mary, and glad you enjoyed this one :)Everyone's put in the same universe, with the same inherently unanswerable questions that they constantly need to find their own answers for, and again, and again—but there's no one solution to the problem (the traveller, the thinker, the drinker etc :P)
It's good to have your beliefs shaken up every now and then but I don't think there's necessarily anything wrong with working in an office or travelling all over the place either. And I'm quite happy where I am, doing what I do, as I have every right to be :D
Well, you gotta remember where Henry comes from--that judgmental Straight Edge punk thing populated by underage misfits trying to have a different kind of strength to oppose the sex, drugs culture that was contagious in the 80s. That group tended to be very unsubtly judgmental , especially of middle class life and the parents. And Henry always seems to have a bit too much testosterone. If you see pictures of his scrawny teenage, longhaired self you know he's done a lot of work on himself to build his macho, quasi-military muscular aggressive persona. It played well to his audience at the time. I've seen him live--he's a crazy sweaty ball of energy, and his spoken word things are equally intense. I think Rollins just plain doesn't know how to do subtlety--restless doesn't even cover it. (He wrote an whole album called MY WAR. Underneath it he's pretty intelligent and thoughtful, but if you read some of his (self-published!) books, you know there's a lot of torment in his soul. No need to feel rebuffed--it's him not you.
Here's sample lyrics to illustrate--definitely directed to a male teenage audience.
"Family Man"
Do you want the family man or do you want the swingin' man?
Family man
You get the family man
Family man
FAMILY man
With your glances my way, takin no chance on the new day
Family man, with your life all planned;
Your little sand castle built, smilin through your guilt, family man
Here I come
Here I come family man
I come to infect; I come to rape your women;
I come to take your children into the street;
I come for YOU family man, with your Christmas lights already up,
Your such a MAN when your puttin up your Christmas lights,
First on the block;
Family man
I wanna crucify you to your front door with the nails
From your well stocked garage family man;
Family man;
FAMILY MAN
Saint dad! father on fire! I've come to incinerate you
Ive come home
I kinda like Pink Floyd's more wistful " Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way.." When I was younger I thought this was a criticism. But now I think it's just a coping mechanism for life.The line that comes before is about plans that come to naught, and half a page scribbled in a book. Then this:
Home, home again
I like to be here when I can
And when I come home cold and tired
Its good to warm my bones beside the fire
Far away across the field
The tolling of the iron bell
Calls the faithful to their knees
To hear the softly spoken magic spells.
For Henry, your WEAK character is the enemy. For Syd or whichever Floyd wrote these lines, it's Time. Not you--you have to hang on. We all have to do our bullshit, which takes way too much of our time. Then we get the respite we need--home by the fire, to recharge, and start listening to what's going on around us. That's the tolling bell, the faithful, the softly spoken magic spells. That's where the creativity flows. Modern life affords you little of this, but it's not your fault--it's time's.
Along with this i just watched the most lovely movie that is related to this: Jim Jarmusch's PATERSON. The guy in the movie, played by Adam Driver, is a soulful dude who has managed to create a beautiful life for himself sculpted out of ordinary moments. He's a busdriver, but he does his work listening. He lives in a pretty run down town. He has a very routine existence but he finds love and poetry in it. (Did I mention he's also a closeted poet?) I suppose what we all need to yell back at Henry is "It's not what you do, it's how you do it."
Juan and I loved PATERSON! The poems are by Ron Padgett and I've been meaning to buy his collected poems but I had more pressing things to pay for in Stavanger D:!I just read this wonderfully sneering review of Ed Sheeran's new album because it seems he's pulling his own version of the same shtick:
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/2...
What are these artists gonna do when they discover some of us went to university, don't boast about it (I've never heard anyone do that) and are nice people? "OMG this straw man had a brain the whole time!!"
Leo wrote: "Juan and I loved PATERSON! The poems are by Ron Padgett and I've been meaning to buy his collected poems but I had more pressing things to pay for in Stavanger D:!I just read this wonderfully sne..."
Poor Ed looks like he's on his way down, at least in the media's eyes. Playboy did a hit piece on him too, about how he's the ultimate cuckboy, etc. Can't play the loser when you're winning, you'll be heading for a fall. Artistic growth has to be a bitch when it's made artificially by the industry.
"He’ll write reductive revenge songs that are low-key misogynistic while slurring in interviews about all the women who’ve been kind enough to fuck him." Ahaha!I once noticed a hopefully accidental trend in Pitchfork album reviews where they'd go 8 something, 8 something, 6 something 6,5,5... like they can make artists and decide when everyone's allowed to be tired of them. Unless you're Radiohead or Animal Collective :D
On my bike ride into work this morning, I was thinking how different a planet it would be, if we stopped judging/criticizing/blaming others. Maybe just start with ourselves. A little more critical introspection. If your "enlightenment" suddenly means everybody else is wrong than I don't think that word means what you think it means...
Marc wrote: "On my bike ride into work this morning, I was thinking how different a planet it would be, if we stopped judging/criticizing/blaming others. Maybe just start with ourselves. A little more critical ..."Interesting point, Marc :)
I think of everything in terms of an arbitrary balance. Some people like to travel loads and there are advantages and disadvantages; some people like to stay put, and likewise there are advantages and disadvantages. We just need to choose the advantages we like and I guess we use the disadvantages of what we don't like to comfort us. And it's this that we do too much. Just because I'm right, doesn't mean you're wrong. As long as I'm right for me and you're right for you :) But what that constitutes is always changing, at least for me! Ahhh, life!!
The pop world seems like an absolute thresher to me. You gotta be a survivor to make it through that crap, Tracy.Arbitrary balance seems like a useful approach, Leo. When you say the life you are "supposed" to be living, who is defining that (you, society, your family, etc.)? It almost sounds like an external pressure.
Marc wrote: "I guess it's all relative, too. I think of you, Leo, as a frequent traveler."We Europeans are super lucky :) Hey!! I was thinking that while I was shopping recently—I've been called old by a handful of folk and young by a handful more. I was talking to a woman at work who's a new mum and I said I thought I was old at 25 and now that I'm not even that much older, if anyone tells me they're that age or younger, I'm like, 'Where is your guardian? Do you require assistance?!' Also most people are idiots and can't be trusted to evaluate anything properly—that should never be discounted!!
Hey looking forward to reading youse guyses pieces by the way :) :) Nice work!!
Marc wrote: "I guess it's all relative, too. I think of you, Leo, as a frequent traveler."Me too! I mean, you've lived in three countries! None of the rest of us have, I think??
Tracy wrote: "Marc wrote: "I guess it's all relative, too. I think of you, Leo, as a frequent traveler."Me too! I mean, you've lived in three countries! None of the rest of us have, I think??"
Well remembered! If it were America though, distancewise it's the same place xD!!
Leo wrote: "Tracy wrote: "Marc wrote: "I guess it's all relative, too. I think of you, Leo, as a frequent traveler."Me too! I mean, you've lived in three countries! None of the rest of us have, I think??"
W..."
But it's got the same fuckers everywhere....
Tracy wrote: "More Ed Sheeran downers:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/w..."
Hahaha. You're right, Tracy! The fame is applied artificially and then, God forbid the kid Ed be a 26 y/o idiot, ya know? But also, Ed, just because you didn't go to uni and became a world-famous musician, doesn't make that path a good idea in general.
http://www.popbuzz.co.uk/internet/you...




I don't know Rollins at all but what I deduced from your account is that he is a very interesting (and restless) fellow, good for him, he has my admiration, but the 'cubicle' point he makes infuriates me and takes kudos away from him. Actually the fact that I have to conform and mould myself into stereotypes of 'free spirited-ness' makes me rather queasy. For Christ sake the stereotype of the office worker being a boring person living a slow death has been done to death. Usually the person is also furnished with attributes such as pathological need for cleanliness and order and flat lonesome existence. Enough! Mercy! Has Rollins ever heard of K-a-f-k-a, or the Greek poet Karyotakis even?
Like yourself I don't like traveling a lot. Perhaps because I was forced to travel a lot as a child. My Dad was in the Air Forces and travelled the hell out of me. 10 schools in 12 years. Later on being in relationships I was mercilessly dragged into 'romantic' city breaks by restless partners where I was secretly trotting like a stubborn sheep.
So, no I don't buy the 'death by cubicle' bit. A counter argument could be that excessive restlessness and need for renewal of visual stimuli PERHAPS portrays someone with little or weak imagination.