Thursday, June 23, 2005

They will try to fix you



When you try your best but you don't succeed
When you get what you want but not what you need
When you feel so tired but you can't sleep
Stuck in reverse

When the tears come streaming down your face
When you lose something you can't replace
When you love someone but it goes to waste
could it be worse?

Lights will guide you home
and ignite your bones
And I will try to fix you

This is, presently, my favorite song from the album I'm all over these days. That album is X&Y, which is much touted while being much maligned, and I'm on my fifth listen. By the third, I was starting to wake up to its intricacies and beauties, and now I'm just pleased and invigorated. A musician buddy of mine blasted them since the first single, "The Speed of Sound", sounds just like their other stuff. I just gotta say, I don't (yet) hate them for painting in the same palette as 5 years ago. The Beatles did the same thing for like 10 years before they morphed. U2, also. Rolling Stones? Aerosmith? I just think the Coldplay gang is doing it well right now, so I'm in no hurry with them. Thanks Chris!

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

It was 10 years ago about two weeks ago


It just struck me that the Rockets won their second championship a decade ago.

That means that, if I'd had a child out of wedlock when I was living in England, where I watched the games live at like 2 a.m. on Phil Rawnsley's 9" teevee in his bedroom, seeing Akeem take it down a young Shaquille's throat, that child would be looking to go into the 6th grade. That's junior high. This kid would be wearing Umbros, for crying out loud!

This means that Life Is Passing Me By, and I am old. It feels that way because it's not like when you're just 8 and Reagan goes into office or something. I was 22. I was an adult (in some respects, anyway). I was fairly self-aware. And that was 10 years ago. A couple of weeks ago. Wow.

The Clarion Call Sounds!

Once upon a time, a new breed of short roamed the earth, conquering entire junior high schools with terrible ease. It came in like a bandit, claiming entire drawers of the pimply and unsure. It made a nest amidst Vans, Twist-a-Beads, and Garbage Pail Kids Stickers, jettisoning even the pocket space for Big League Chew. It rode alone, daring challengers.

But those days are long gone. This once proud blend of nylon and other non-natural fibers now sits neglected, relegated to foreign countries and Goodwill BRAND resale shops. The flag has fallen.

So who will take up the cause of this maligned clothing? Who will say "I will be counting among the Faithful Few, who snub the fashionistas and don the old and jettisoned?"

I will. I will WEAR my Umbros, loud and proud, as if these last 15 years were no more than a blip of a Donkey Kong oversized wooden sledgehammer.

The New Face of Phariseeism


I have a serious question to pose to whoever, and it's something that I'm going to be investigating for the next period of time (let's leave it at "many moons"). When I read Jesus going BERSERK about those damned Pharisees, and I ever feel the pressure of his comments, I can tend to relegate his comments to my past. To wit: I know EXACTLY what Phariseeism looks like in my parents' generation--we all do. Men who are organization-centric, who want to build themselves an empire, who are all about looking righteous for other people, who are unable to peel back the moral facade and just be their real, often-unspiritual, messy, inconsistent selves and have relationships with people. Yes, yes... this is all old hat. We Xers are all apt at throwing stones at this type of man, and do so with grave regularity. So what. That's not my question.

My question is linked to the fact that Phariseeism is endemic in people who've got a hold of some good 'ol religion, and that includes me, regardless of my age. So what, I ax myself, does Phariseeism look like for MY generation? How do MY people get vain, shallow, and clean-on-the-outside-but-dirty-on-the-inside? It's far too simple to say it has to do with suits on Sunday mornings and reading written prayers. Phariseeism is much more insiduous. I know it has, at the very least, opportunity in me. Where are its openings?

I think this is a good question to ask. I will keep my eyes peeled.

Friday, June 17, 2005

ENews Quick Hits


-Russell Crowe and Tom Hanks have both built entertainment empires around themselves and their loved ones by playing noble everymen, guys who were at the wrong place at the right time and came out on top. Neither of them is unusually handsome, nor blugeons you with his "acting" (hello, Sean Penn), though Crowe threatens sometimes. The main difference between them: one of them is a genuinely likeable person.



-Late night review, for those who start waking up about 11:30, long after our spouses have been wound in sleep's cocoon:

Best part of Jimmy Kimmel's show--without question, his opening monologue, which often includes videotaped bits, and the wonderfully sophomoric "this week in unnecessary censorship" on Fridays. Delightful.
Best part of Conan's show--the part between his stale, lame opening monologue and when the guests come out and he freezes up. This is when they do daffy things, like the endless matchbox car remakes of Michael Jackson's entourage, or Frankenstein taking us to a light switch.
Best part of Dave's show--the interviews. Dave is himself an entertainment landmark, so he doesn't kowtow and giggle the way some do. And he always appears to know more than about anybody on the show, so he's a steady source of interest.
Best part of that Scottish guy who took over Late Night's show--closing credits.


-I saw Batman Begins, which was a good show. Disturbing things include:
*Christian Bale's ridiculous vocal transformation when he's in the outfit
*Christian Bale's ridiculous vocal ineptitude thanks to a lisp (! Hello! Casting directors! This man has a lisp! Hello!)
*Katie Holmes lameness
*Katie Holmes screwed-up face. Her eyeline, which slants down, right to left, meets her mouthline, which slants down left to right. She could conceivably suck her right eye into her own mouth.
*Michael Cane and Morgan Freeman, who have been sharing the same "how to get in every third movie made" notes for years, are now in the same franchise. Well, okay, as long as they both retire right after this. Don't bet on it.
*The new cowl looks dopey.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Rockit Man

Remember the kooky video from the 80s with the disturbing break-dancing robots (all the legs and what not)?

That was from the very dated "Rockit", probably the biggest mainstream hit from jazz marvel Herbie Hancock. This guy played with Miles Davis during the 60s, and has scored tons of movies, his first being the monumental Blow Up. Anyhow, like I said, I saw him last night. He brought John Mayer along for the ride.

Admittedly, I couldn't for the life of me figure out why he'd bring a pop face along as a "guitarist" (not that John stinks as a guitarist--I'm impressed with him. But does he belong on the same stage as Herbie Hancock and his team of jazz virtuosos? Um, no.), but at the show, I found out. Herbie's gone the way of Elton John, Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Santana, etc. etc. and done a "duet" with the young star so that he'll connect with a younger audience. This is a great move, of course, but it was kinda sad to see John struggle to throw down riffs to match Herbie, Kenny Garrett, Roy Hargrove, and Munyungo
Jackson. These guys are MONSTERS. While I'm on the subject, I'd like to mention that Herbie's rhythm section, Teri Lynne Carrington and Marcus Miller about blew my brains out.

So anyway, there. I went. These people are musicians in a way that I will never be, and maybe don't even aspire to be. As you can see, their musical genius has addled and befuddled me. It was a good night.

Thursday, June 09, 2005

THIS is what it feels like

Two bad, bad things have happened to my technology, chewers:

1) you know the greatness of that call-in blog message thing I did? Yeah- it doesn't work. I can't get it to work. I call in, and the phone guy says this number is no longer operable. And that--well, that rips. Because 1) I've been "in the studio" working on a new CD and I wish I could post some bits. I can't. 2) Tonight, I'll be hearing Herbie Hancock live. I would like to put a blurb of that stuff up. 3) Tonight, I will be meeting Herbie's resident guitarist, a young John Mayer. I would like to have his speaking voice on my blog. Oh well.

2) you know the greatness of my new kickin PowerBook? It melted all over my face. It's now at the Apple Store ("a safe place for dweebs and snobs, and snobby dweebs"), where they tell me that data recovery is highly unlikely from my (new, but bad) hard drive. This hard drive (which is <90 days old, but has defectived on me, and for which I'll be recompensed in no visible way) had a whole lot of songs and poems I writ, hundreds of photos, about 1500 songs, etc. blah blah. It's... well... it's not good.


So the posting, well--it's going to be awfully sporadic for a while. Suckbag.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Rapper or Toiletry?


1. Suave
2. Volume 10
3. Nice N Smooth
4. Dimension
5. Soft & Gentle
6. Cool Breeze
7. Shyne
8. Smooth Appeal
9. All Fresh
10. Q-Tip
11. All Natural
12. Remedy
13. D-Flame
14. Cream Silk

Toiletry: 1, 3, 5, 9, 11, 13
Rapper: 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 12, 14
Both Rapper and Toiletry: 10

Friday, June 03, 2005

It Used to Be My Playground

I thought I'd close out this NBA season (since it looks all but done for the Spurs, who're a very good but pretty boring basketball team, except when Manu Ginobili, the Argentenian Nasal Passage, goes a little nuts and gets funky) with some photos from the past. This first dandy is of one of our favorite whipping boys, back when Mr. Davenport got us some awesome seats in Houston. I am not sitting down. Shawn told me, and I thought this was incredible, that they had surgically transplanted an elephant's trunk into the space between his shoulders and skull. Wow. It looks just great, and he can also extend it when he wants to block a shot but his arms aren't long enough.


And here's a photo of me with the richest, most petulant under-formed man since Howard Hughes.


Finally, here's me with Scrappy, our league's 2005 Littlest Leaguer. A couple of things to notice: I matched Stevie's sideways smile with one of my own. We're like a tandem see-saw. Also, you'll note that, on my left stands Juwon Howard, a team or two ago. He was just as ineffective back then, though.

It's the old fashioned food craze that's sweeping the city!

The Rod recently called me twice in a day (! hello! we're boys. You know that, right?) to sing the incredible praises of "that Bible diet I keep going on about." He'd finally gotten hold of the book, and is just juiced to overflowing about its potential in his modern urban lifestyle.

Trouble is, THIS is the book I recommend:

And THIS is the book the Rod got so fizzy about:

These are not the same book. Same principles, I guess, but here's another classic case of mistaken identity, assumptions made, and dubiously placed enthusiasm. I tell ya, it's a story as old as Jacob and Leah, or at least as Three's Company. In any case, I support young Rod, and his quest for a healthy innard.

I will say, though, that the illustration on this book's cover absolutely wears me out. This isn't a creative, provoking, or even helpful cover. Is eating high-lycopene fruits (such as a tomato) likened to touching the hand of the Almighty? What's the significance? Oh well. I forgive you, Guy Who Wrote A Knock Off Of What The Bible Says About Healthy Living But Is Probably Raking In Much More Dough Because Of Your Highly Touted Foreward And Recognizable But Lowest-Common-Denominator Book Cover. As the good book says (and I'm referring to Mr. Russell's, not Mr. Rubin's), "Go ye and get hepped up on omega-3 fatty acids and plenty of whole grain fiber."

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Better--by design!

This is a photo of my hand. I recently drew this design all over it, planning to semi-permanentify it with that fabulous Henna that the Indian people seem to be so fond of. I've had quite a bit of trouble finding henna, though--more than I thought I would. I wish I could find some, because my superduper design is fading fast, and I hate to see it go. It was so sweet when I first made it! Ah well.



ps- Peb, are you down with the colon cleanse? Is this an okay idea? I want it cleansed SO BAD!

Cleansing every inky spot


I have a deep conviction--and I say this just because I have a deep-seated belief in the honesty and integrity of the common human (*giggle!*)--that if the girl in the car in front of me WAS, in fact, a cartoon, aged approximately 6-8 years old, with shoulder-length blonde hair, she would indeed get right on her knees in front of that cartoon cross, bowing reverently to her cartoon lord and savior. I have to believe that he didn't just die on that cartoon cross, but that he rose again from a cartoony grave, conquering cartoon death and that little cartoon girl's cartoon sin. No, I'm not crazy. I'm just a wild-eyed BELIEVER.

In the magic of cartoons. What is up.

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

The nearness of God is my good

I had the singular privelege of talking with Karen yesterday, who is a mid-40s woman who is most probably going to die fairly soon of cancer. She wanted to talk to somebody about how to get things straight with God, and she came to me (it's part of my job... yeah, it's a good job). I talked very frankly with her, and she with me, and it was fascinating.

Karen told me how angry she was at God, and how disappointed she was, and how unfair He was being. She said that she'd tried very hard to take care of her body, thought of herself as a good person, and tried to do things the right way, all the way around. Now she not only has to deal with a body that she feels has somehow betrayed her, but she feels consumed with guilt that she's rapidly becoming a burden to her friends, and a source of grave concern for her family. On top of all that, she doesn't even look pitiful--she looks fine.

I felt sorry for Karen, and sympathized with her that feeling put upon is pretty understandable. But internally, I was stunned by how myopic the human perspective is. You tried to take care of your body, so you deserve to live until you think it's a reasonable dying age...? Wha?? You want God to justify to you why he hasn't chosen you to live the life you deem most desirable? Excuse me?

Please hear me: I'm not saying I don't do the same thing all the time, and I'm not saying Karen is despicable. I'm saying that, in that moment, I was given some clarity. When God goes off on righteous Job, he's getting at the same thing that He was saying to me while I was talking to Karen: HEY LITTLE HUMAN. YOU'RE NOT EXACTLY IN A POSITION TO MAKE DEMANDS. YOU'RE A LAWBREAKER, AND MY IRRATIONAL GRACE UPHOLDS YOUR BREATH EVEN NOW. BE THANKFUL YOU'RE NOT BEING TREATED FAIRLY.

I've said this before in this space (but never with such a wing-dinger of a template as this. My goodness!), but I just have to say it again, if not for your sake, then for mine: OUR ONLY DEFINITION OF GOOD HAS TO BE GOD HIMSELF. We are absolutely hopeless at making judgments about what is good or bad. WE HAVE NOT THE CAPACITY TO CARRY THIS OUT. If God is in cancer, making it happen, it is Good with a capital G. If God is not in your offer for a promotion at work, it is Bad, straight from hell.

"The nearness of God is my good." That's all we can say. Amazingly, though, we are often woefully inept at evaluating whether or not God is near us! Ha! Paul tells us in Acts 17 that he is very near each one of us, and for those of us who've received Him, he has said "I am ALWAYS with you." So I guess we could be like Paul and give thanks for every situation we're in, knowing (by faith! not by sight!) that God is with us, so what we're in is good. Read this from Romans 8:


26Meanwhile, the moment we get tired in the waiting, God's Spirit is right alongside helping us along. If we don't know how or what to pray, it doesn't matter. He does our praying in and for us, making prayer out of our wordless sighs, our aching groans. 27He knows us far better than we know ourselves, knows our pregnant condition, and keeps us present before God. 28That's why we can be so sure that every detail in our lives of love for God is worked into something good.

29God knew what he was doing from the very beginning. He decided from the outset to shape the lives of those who love him along the same lines as the life of his Son. The Son stands first in the line of humanity he restored. We see the original and intended shape of our lives there in him. 30After God made that decision of what his children should be like, he followed it up by calling people by name. After he called them by name, he set them on a solid basis with himself. And then, after getting them established, he stayed with them to the end, gloriously completing what he had begun.

31So, what do you think? With God on our side like this, how can we lose? 32If God didn't hesitate to put everything on the line for us, embracing our condition and exposing himself to the worst by sending his own Son, is there anything else he wouldn't gladly and freely do for us? 33And who would dare tangle with God by messing with one of God's chosen? 34Who would dare even to point a finger? The One who died for us--who was raised to life for us!-is in the presence of God at this very moment sticking up for us. 35Do you think anyone is going to be able to drive a wedge between us and Christ's love for us? There is no way! Not trouble, not hard times, not hatred, not hunger, not homelessness, not bullying threats, not backstabbing, not even the worst sins listed in Scripture:



36They kill us in cold blood because they hate you.

We're sitting ducks; they pick us off one by one.



37None of this fazes us because Jesus loves us. 38I'm absolutely convinced that nothing--nothing living or dead, angelic or demonic, today or tomorrow, 39high or low, thinkable or unthinkable--absolutely nothing can get between us and God's love because of the way that Jesus our Master has embraced us.



Let's push this, shall we? Truth will always stay true in extremes, so let's consider "the nth degree". I just finished reading Tortured for Christ, Richard Wurmbrand's 1967 groundbreaker about underground Christians being imprisoned and tortured in Communist countries. I hadn't read it before, but I previously read The Heavenly Man, about Chinese Pastor Yun. It's incredible to hear about the immediacy of God with these precious people, and how much grace and passion is lavished on them. God is their refuge and present help. These are people, if you've never read these books, who are undergoing incredible cruelty, to this day. Wurmbrand says, face-slappingly, that he would not choose against what he went through if he were given the choice now. He says that knowing God in that place made it allllllll worthwhile. What sweet, life-giving, soul-settling words. Yes, knowing Jesus is enough. I guess that's how Paul could say "I've learned the secret of being happy in every circumstance." That's because Paul had learned that, if you want to be in the Light, you don't look to circumstances for happiness! You hang onto the fact that "the nearness of God is my good." And there's nothing else! Not ease in relationships, not an understandable career path, not "security" in finances, not a "successful ministry", not great reputations, etc. etc. etc. None of that stuff is good at all, unless God is in them for you.

So Karen was very helpful for me. I shot her straight, and she responded beautifully to God's Godness. She laid down her demands, her spirit of entitlement, and her pride before God. It was really awesome. I want to be like Karen someday.

Why should the devil have all the good music?

Whistling is dead.

Used to, everybody whistled. Burl Ives, Jim Nabors, and Woody Guthrie all whistled. Even Steamboat Willie! Everybody was playing checkers on the back porch, wittling, shucking fresh-picked produce, and whistling. But no more. So let's go to Lukenback, Texas. Maybe it's time we got back to the basics of love, you hear? Today, whistle a little for the old days.