Sunday, 17 October 2010

In Praise of: Beer & Skittles

Though not an optimist in the absurd sense of maintaining that life is all beer and skittles, he did really seem to maintain that beer and skittles are the most serious part of it. "What is more immortal," he would cry, "than love and war? Type of all desire and joy - beer. Type of all battle and conquest - skittles."
(Manalive by G.K. Chesterton) 

Never mind the beer. (Never mind the beer?!? *looks plaintive*) No, never mind the beer. But the skittles. The skittles warrent our consideration.


I had a conversation with my mother this afternoon. About social networking. My argument was that I would welcome my transhumanist future if it would be that I could wander out into the outside world, social-networking-interface portably tucked under an aesthetically-pleasingly-designed metallic door of some sort implanted in my arm (I know: the alternative is called a laptop. Anyone like to buy me one? *note poet-in-garret-jaded-bitterness-here*), rather than kneeling, acolyte-like, before my makeshift "desk" (read chest of drawers). Her argument was that, in offices across the country, workers would be twitching, bleeping, button-pressing mad marionettes, not getting any work done, and that, on roads  across the country, drivers would, focusing on their integrated screens, smash innto each other with wanton imperviousness(one might almost say glee). (I was going to retort with the prospect of the driverless car, but I forgot.) This vision of the apocolypse amused me, but struck me as faintly (or more than faintly) ridiculous. Firstly, people are not lemmings (generally). They tend not to continue doing things which cause (draatic and obvious) chaos and loss of life indefinately. They tend to take note, and make any neccesary changes, and Keep Calm and Carry On (after any initial Human All Too Human fuss). Secondly, if these (somewhat communist-Russia-reminiscent) "workers" want to bleep and twitch and button-press, why shouldn't they? Their work is evidently not being sufficiently interestinng. It should pull its socks up, or be superceded by social networking. (My mother said that I could only say that becuase I was myself "unproductive". I said that unthinking productivity was a Modernist onwardmarch towards the Motropolisesque gaping jaws of Baal. Politics, politics, politics. Stalks my conversations like a predatory elephant.)

Later, I found myself singing this to myself (mockplaintively). (It is my default selfpitying song - and I have a cold, amongst other things, hence it.)


"This game is not a good game." Having a cold is not a good game. One loses horribly and continually for a few days (however surely one's eventual victory, conquest, skittle, is assured...) *restrains self from tangenting about a -further - conversation on The Sensibleness of Phobias Concerning Inevitable Evils, neccesary weevils, copyright A&S-you-know-who-you-are..*


Then I thought, actually, games are really rather useful. They are training for the inevitable banal attacks of the-antagonistic-things-of-this-world on oneself. (Paranoia? No. I am currently being attacked by hundreds? millions? billions? of minor lifeforms who have paraded delightedly into my nose without so much as a by-your-leave and set up camp there, sleepless and mindlessly mauling me. I have been invaded.) One also finds oneself occasionally beset by the higher lifeforms (inevitably, however nice one is to them). Dogs bark, bees sting, Aunts Aren't Gentlemen. Rape murder and pillage may be exceptions rather than rules, but the minor annoyances of wordbullets, ill-clad-shoulder-jostle-ing and objectionableoddness persist undefeated. So. One takes stock of one's inventory, one nervously peruses the subconscious meter labelled "lives" and one dodges the fired pixels, jumps over the absurd hurdles (such as those placed in the way of the bemused pedestrian in the carpark of the train station in Penzance and one hurrahs joyously at the sucessful completion of every level (Happy Birthday! Congratulations! Nothing Killed You!). 






Then there were The Sims. These dollshousedwellers (Ibsenishly?) have given one the oppurtunity to live more lives than one (and "he who lives more lives than one more lives than one must [may?] die"). For our lives, as Shakespeare may have said (he ought to have done) are prisons from which there is no escape except the escape that can't be escaped *see nonexistant tangent*). We can squander lives that are not our own. (Of course, we may squander our own, if we want to... It's our party and we'll cry if we want to... But we may not want. We may want to do other things with them.)

"I want to waste it playing. Spend all our days in a dream."
(Goldfrapp)

Row row row your boat...  *collapses into the absurdity of it all*



Tuesday, 8 June 2010

AN HOUR OF SEMIAUTOMATIC WRITING - OR - SEMANTICS, PERSONAL APOCALYPSES AND THE ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY (OR OTHERWISE) OF BLOOD

The is always the first word, isn’t it. The first word to enter the consciousness when the tips of the fingers, poised like a pianists, brush, ever so lightly, across the tops of the gray old clunky keys of the halfdecadeold computer’s keyboard. The preposition is a proposition, a suggestion that something should be typed. That something should be typed about. Of course there is never any warning about what WILL be typed about – and sometimes there should be. And sometimes there shouldn’t be. And sometimes there should be simply because it has decided to be unbearably, consciousness-defying dull. So that the head slips onto the coffetable on which the decadeoldcomputer is perched and ever so softly and imperceptibly through the glass, cutting slowly through the eyes, until only the interior of the mind, of the skull that is, of the brain itself, is left, unglassed, within the box, bnever ever to be outside the box, encased and imprisoned and thinking while the blood ebbs slowly away. For the man in the bath will be luxuriating there for some time, so he says, an explorer of the regions of froth and foam, bath and coffe, and sinking into the warmth of it away from the too-natural warmth of the thundering air. And so she slips through the no longer illuminated glass – has, indeed, slipped. And what to think while she is there, dying, knowing that she is dying, and wishing she had consumed that last cup of coffee a little quicker, allowing its caffeine to rush into her brain, the caffienechemicals fizzling along the slumbering synapses – synapses, that is a word she will miss – so that she would not now be dying – thus. However. With that last hour. What will she think? The possibilities stagnate her even more than she is already stagnated in the increasingly congealing little pool of her own blood. Well, let me bleed – less blood, less blood to the brain, less blood to the brain, less thought, less choices, less choices, less wastage of time, in this overgrown jungle of dyspraxicbrain, stormed like athe doodle of a child with a biro on a magnolia coloured wall. She imagines herself typing. She imagines the quickness of the fingers she will never see again. Lasments the loss of movement. Wonders if this loss of movement will be lamented when fingers become pointless things we lose like fins, things superceded by directly-connnected computerisation, heads in vats, like hers, but not, hopefully, bleeding quite so much. She stifles a laugh. It hurts. The movement and the idea. Physically and emotionally. Can anything hurt intellectually. Probably not. The realm of the intellectual is an inviolate mountain peopled by Greek gods and autists (who after all transcend quite a couple of the ordinary human weaknesses).As do flautists. Such as lack of breath. Lack of breath being a thing she had gasped at often and humiliatingly. Like someone by Jane Austin. Blushing, gasping, fainting fool. The future was what she was losing. Not the past – that (sometimes unfortunately) is not something that can be lost. Not the present, any more than people are always losing the present. The future. The thing we are stretching our arms out to, or recoiling from, but ignoring (like Super Mario on a moving screen) at our peril. She wondered, listening to the radio drifting in from the kitchen, how much of what people claim to think and to feel is posturing. Whether, actually, she was just as clever as the people on the radio – only didn’t frame it in the same frames. She wondered if that had to do with class. The endless question of class. The distasteful question of class. Something inescapable given the past but unthinkable given the present, unless one wishes to find oneself bloodsmattered on a barricade. Of course, if was a little late for the flinging of oneself onto barricades. Considering she had already flung herself through a computerscreen. Stories of love as though most people really love other people. Anyhow she had been happy. She would no longer be happy and… She could not think of that and if she did she would cry and she would be electrocuted, her head being, as it was, in an electrical appliance. The awfulness of people, hundreds of years ago, not being able to see each other because of the awfulness of society. The awfulness of anyone allowing that to happen when society no longer has that power, in any concrete sense. Concreate sense? Perhaps it never did. But it is only now, perhaps, that anyone realises that, can imagine that, things only becoming imagineable when they are on the verge of being possible. Someone spoke of a composer who, as a woman, “bore comparison” with those of her contemporaries who were compsers and men. The horrificness of this made her heart pump a little harder once. To think that this could possibly be thought to make a difference is awful. To die away from a world like that might not be so bad… So bad as what? The delicacies of language run away from time. The blackness in there, the blackness in the fatal square of plastic, was the last thing she would ever see. A series of pictures marched past, tableux after tableaux, possessions – because, that is the thing, isn’t it, that the thing we really possess, more perhaps than ever the body, is the mind. It is a truism, but a true one. A true truism. A truetruism. The wave, like something by Rapheal (was it really Raphael? She wasn’t sure) or his hair. Like an angel, anyway, one of those beautiful pouting angels people paint. The strange difficultness of jazz, weaving in and out of patterns, never really coming to rest anywhere unless the ear zooms out, like the eye can. That word again. The. She would never be married now. She wasn’t sure if that was good or not. “A lot of people get married without wishing to at the time.” How awful! To imagine running away, screaming, wishing one had not weaved oneself in to a spiderweb. The awfulness of the confusion of marriage and reproduction. The sickening awfulness at the base of the subject. Of, indeed, the stomach. Which is, presumably, the subject. The container. The idiocy of the idea of having children and then not wanting to do anything for them. WHY NOT JUST NOT HAVE CHILDREN? That came out in capitals. As, I suppose, children do. Death would save her from that. Though death might be a step too far away from reproduction. How about balancing out the scales between addonehumanbeing and subtractonehumanbeing. “It’s finding the magic in the day-to-day.” Yes. Perhaps. Feeling wrong thinking about that – when dying, particularly. The awfulness of the cynicism. The thumbsup. The fakesmile. The awfulness. The vortex of the inane. Why make statements? “We live in a witness culture.” How horrible. The darkness was delightful. The envelopingness of the darkness. Wrapped in unseeableness. Although, of course, the rest of her was visible. Would have been visible. Had anyone been there. Of course – they might have been. But had they been they would have been watching her bleeding to death. Which would have been rather horrible of them, surely? No more coffee. No more, indeed, anything. Apart from, perhaps, Nothingness with a Capital N. Drifting bodylessly through Space – “Out of SPACE, Out of TIME”, Poe knowing everything, of course, and going mad because of it (or too sane, far too sane for comfort, comfort being a Pragmatism of the highest order – or possibly not, not too sane for comfort, too insane for comfort – how can one possibly know until one is floating through the Nothingness or not). Or a flickingthrough of radiostations. Zooming along airways. Not like White Noise one hopes. No point in wondering, really. You’ll find out soon enough. OR NOT. If the notfindingout is the findingout. The idea of politicians teasing each other. The extreme silliness of it all. The extreme silliness out of which she was drifting into what one could only assume would be a drifting towards the solemnity of the deathmoment (to go all German linguistically). One is only the outer tip of a pencil, pressed onto the paper of time, gotten out of the way for the next lot. One has to stay legible. One has to avoid delirium, dementia, unconsciousness for very much more than 8 hours… But all that is over, or will be, soon… The darkness was thickening, Drifting in through the nostrils like treacle (if ever she had experienced treacle drifting into her nostrils – which is unlikely). Through the mouth. Pushing out the air. Pushing out the blood. All very grisly. DEATH speaks in CAPITALS – certain writers know that. So the darkness pushed its way in, a last violation it would be written were this a vampire story, but it is neither a vampire nor a story nor a vampire story, so it won’t be hereafter, erotic as the image of a woman bleeding to death with her head thrust through a computerscreen is no doubt to the vast majority of you (no?) – it filled her lungs and the air didn’t. And so she died. THE END.

Thursday, 14 January 2010

Insomnia



Tonight Tonight Times New Roman will be the lucky font to convey The Thoughts of Carrie Gooding (IN CAPITALS). Because ... the cause being ... newspapers are all about time/Time are they not? The only picture on the cover should be the chap with the hourglass ... considering of course the sudden rush to the shop to buy The Thing/The Time/The Times/The Guardian before the day is done. Saving the day! Saving time! Like a person in a cartoon flicking from picture to picture and the past pictures burning into indeterminate blackness as they fall through the seive of the memory/of my memory/for your memory may not be a sieve...

...things fall out of the net of Time ... those words so carefully aligned to those times in those diaries ... they hide in the nebulosity of the ink-blot of information, and then they are behind rather than in front of the YOU ARE HERE on the time-line ... it is mischievous of them ... they must be hunted like snarks with railway shares, with railway timetables, with little lists ... the dot dot dots are tick tock ticks ... they are footsteps down 

I am "drifting into the arena of the unwell". It is so often "four in the morning". I am so often playing that, very quietly, very badly, on my boyfriend's Spanish guitar, at "four in the morning". For that is when my mind runs like a newly-bought T-shirt - onto everything else, turning my life an Aesthetic and highly impractical shade of pink ... like a ketamine-lobster ... ever turning the corner like Sartre's ... The Pierrot of the Minute is evading me. "Here comes a candle to light you to bed! Here comes a chopper to chop off your head!" "Utopia... Utopia..." Insomnia... Insomnia... This is Plato's transcendent and static realm and the crackling of the static/stasis is deafening me. Hands over ears! Hands over eyes! Hands over mouth!





(Illustration: by Gustave Dore for Edgar Allan Poe's poem 'The Raven')

I wake at 5PM. I think until 9AM. I sleep until 5PM. I wake at 5PM. I think until 9AM. I sleep until 5PM. I am stuck on a carousel and it is accelerating ... if I jump off it will be as though I jumped from a train ... and the chuggachuggachugga chuggachuggachugga of my thoughts is running away until I look at them from a dazed distance and dive into the ink of the sky while the stars sear into my pinkening reddening eyes ... the owls ... the owls of Gormenghast are becoming and consuming me at once.

Witless of how his death by owls approaches he mourns through each languid gesture, each fine-boned feature, as though his body were glass and at its centre his inverted heart like a pendant tear.


HEROD
 . . . wherefore do I hear in the air this beating of wings? Ah! one might fancy a huge black bird that hovers over the terrace. Why can I not see it, this bird? The beat of its wings is terrible. The breath of the wind of its wings is terrible. It is a chill wind. Nay, but it is not cold, it is hot. I am choking. Pour water on my hands. Give me snow to eat. Loosen my mantle. Quick! quick! loosen my mantle. Nay, but leave it. It is my garland that hurts me, my garland of roses. The flowers are like fire. They have burned my forehead. (He tears the wreath from his head, and throws it on the table.)

They are not long, the days of wine and roses:
Out of a misty dream
Our path emerges for a while, then closes
Within a dream.

The inevitable realignment to The Time of the Masses stands in from of me and points at its watch ... I will have to dive into it and lose myself ... a sketch of a person into the ink of the crowd ... but for now I stand differentiated, one of the strange few who wander 24-hour shops in search of sustainance forgotten and a rememberment that Humanity endures.