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September 19th, 2009


05:37 am - [Let's Talk About Books.]
I have, maybe, 5 or 6 hundred books that I really don't have enough room to keep them. I got them yesterday and they are out on the back patio where I'm trying to sort them some.

You want any of them?
Tags:

[11 flew over the cuckoo's nest. | Go crazy.]

June 7th, 2008


03:29 pm - [Stupid Saturday.]
When I was younger my family moved a lot and I went to four separate high schools in my freshman year. [Berkeley High School, Hazelwood Central, Hazelwood West and later Central Visual & Performing Arts High School.] The first three were because we moved a lot for various reasons. The last one was because they were testing me for Special School because they thought I was retarded or something and they instead decided that I wasn't being challenged enough and sent me to a school that they thought would. I remember the person sitting in on the classes taking notes and I had no idea that they were there for me. And I remember showing off like crazy at that time too. Just making a real ass of myself.

They tested me in private later that year and I really loved it. I loved being singled out to a degree and I loved being met with low expectations and then proving those assumptions wrong. I always did and still do well on tests and I get excited by the challenge of them. In school the other kids would always comment that I never seemed to study or do my homework but I always killed on tests. And when it came time for the battery of IQ tests I was no different and I did so well on the things that they ended up testing and re-testing me for about a week because they thought that it was impossible that I scored so highly on these tests. The varying results of that various tests placed my IQ at 132 on the lowest end to 180 at the highest and that made them crazy. They even sent somebody in from Ohio even to retest me. [Ohio!] I'm not boasting or anything, I promise, but the lady administering the test told me that she never had anyone test as high as I did in the 20 years or so that she had been administering the tests. [And I don't really want to go into the whole debate about standardized IQ tests and what they do and don't mean. I don't give those things a lot of weight anyway and I don't think they mean much at all. I'm just mentioning it is all.] One of the types of questions I remember having to answer were the vocabulary questions. They'd show you a picture of a grasshopper and ask you to list all of the words to describe it. If, instead of saying simply that they ate grass you called them a herbivore then you did better. And I did better because words were fun to me.

That's one of the reasons that I love the unpublished Salinger story Hapworth 16, 1924 where a young Seymour Glass is writing home from camp and he is seven years old and he uses these 'big words' near constantly. I love that part of the story because I love that kids tend to do precisely that when they learn a new word and they learn how to use that word in context and they try like mad to insert that word into any sentence that they can. They like to squeeze as much mileage out of a new word as they possibly can. And unashamedly so. As adults, I think, we really want to do the same thing but we don't for fear of trying to 'sound smart' or something awful like that.

There were plenty of visual tests as well and they'd ask me to draw shapes from memory after seeing them for a minute or so. I did well at that and have always been lucky that way in that I'm pretty good at creating on paper what I am visualizing in my head. I can draw most anything that I want.

As far as reading went I did plenty of it from the time that I could first ever even read. I'm sure that a lot of the books I read as a kid did a real number on me and I'm certain that I let myself ramble on so much when I write because I read James Joyce when I was nine or so and figured that's just how you were supposed to write. And I'm sure I still to this day tend to ignore most all of the rules of grammar and spelling because of the things that I read pretty early on from Kerouac and his views on writing. And being 'smart' was always an obsession for me too from a very early age and I figured that the more you knew about anything and everything the better off you'd be.

I guess I was thinking about all of this after waking up late this afternoon and watching some documentary from the CBC called The Definition of Stupidity.

[3 flew over the cuckoo's nest. | Go crazy.]

April 21st, 2008


08:31 am - [Siddhartha Says.]
I'm sure I've probably posted this before or something like it or I've at least mentioned it or whatever. [Maybe not.] Still, I've been thinking a lot about Siddhartha and his path towards enlightenment and I really have always found some great inspiration from this lovely little paragraph from Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse:
"How strange his life had been, he thought. He had wandered along strange paths.

As a boy I was occupied with the gods and sacrifices, as a youth with asceticism, with thinking and meditation. I was in search of Brahman and revered the eternal Atman. As a young man I was attracted to expiation. I lived in the woods, suffered heat and cold. I learned to fast, I learned to conquer my body. Then I discovered with wonder the teachings of the great Buddha. I felt knowledge and the unity of the world circulate in me like my own blood, but I also felt compelled to leave the Buddha and the great knowledge. I went and learned the pleasures of love from Kamala and business from Kamaswami. I hoarded money, I acquired a taste for rich food, I learned to stimulate my senses. I had to spend many years like that in order to lose my intelligence, to lose the power to think, to forget about the unity of things.

Is it not true, that slowly and through many deviations I changed from a man into a child? From a thinker into an ordinary person? And yet this path has been good and the bird in my breast has not died. But what a path it has been! I have had to experience so much stupidity, so many vices, so much error, so much nausea, disillusionment and sorrow, just in order to become a child again and begin anew.

But it was right that it should be so; my eyes and heart acclaim it. I had to experience despair, I had to sink to the greatest mental depths, to thoughts of suicide, in order to experience grace, to hear Om again, to sleep deeply again and to awaken refreshed again. I had to become a fool again in order to find Atman in myself. I had to sin in order to live again.

Whither will my path lead me? This path is stupid, it goes in spirals, perhaps in circles, but whichever way it goes, I will follow it.

He was aware of a great happiness mounting in him."


[I thought you'd really like it too.]

[6 flew over the cuckoo's nest. | Go crazy.]


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