Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Sitting in the corner of a smoke-filled coffee shop, watching in silence as life slips by once again, my heart beating with the vapors of meaning evaporating into the endless play of images, people, and memory. Watching grown-ups pretend they aren't children, as we careen through the rubble of what was never simple, or sensical. Writing thoughts that reflect the cynical and semi-hopeful feelings of a pretender trying to make sense of the mystical, the commodified, and the inhumane. Drinking caffeine laced thoughts to get through the night of logos, slogans, and ads. Dancing to the beat as our existence floats--no, crystallizes--into photos, videos, and tattoos that will define the illusion that is to become our memory and existence.

And, then, it happens. While the smoke still in the air--floating in waves of creativity never before seen, never after repeated; while aimless conversations go on, perpetuating the endless flow of endless information; while lurkers sit as open-air voyeurs, watching others to make sense of themselves; while cosmopolitans desperate for attention sit legs crossed, face shiny, physique seductive; while workers work; while consumers consume--the lights are turned off and it is time to go home. The neon doesn't even dim--no, it just disappears. The buzz of the flourescence doesn't simmer, it simply ceases.

And, then, it happens. The identities created in this lit interior--this 'dimly lit place'--go dark. The endless play is revealed to be nothing more than . . . ending play. The 'people', now unabel to see one another, have no means to make sense of what was always non-sensical. The 'people' recognize in one moment that they have no memory of what existence was like in the light, and in the same moment, forget what they were thinking of. Yes, the surface disappears and there it is not time to go home, not time to move on, not time to try something new. No, the surface disappears and there is nothing more. The dancing is not even a vapor. The smoke not even a memory. The images not saved on a hard drive. The tattoos obliterated along with the body.

Where to now? Not home. Not here.

4 comments:

JoMo said...

Hi Brad,

Just saying hey. I ran across your blog. Long story. Was on my friend Peter's blog, and he for some as yet unclear reason posted a link to Kyle Potter's blog. I don't think he knows Kyle, but they share a mutual Anglican thing (Pete's an Anglican priest over near St. Albans). Anyway, I scanned Kyle's blog, very bemused, and ran across your blog. Call it blogsurfing (as if I didn't have enough else to do!), but thought I'd let you know that I dropped by!

Blogspot has me signed in as "JoMo" which is actually my son's blog. Yes, he's been blogging since he was 8 months old. Puts us all to shame. But ever since Blogger changed over to Google, it combined the two blogs (mine and my son's) into one log-in, so now I no longer have a separate identity! Hmmmm..... could that somehow be symbolic of the general blurring of identity boundaries that comes with motherhood? Analyze that! Yikes!

See you in the MCR. I'm signed in to lunch today and tomorrow actually.

Susan Griffith

dancebarefoot said...

b-rad,

you have a unique way of expressing what is already in our minds...and rather poetically at that. you seem to describe a fairly vicious circle where we discover this amazing newness and hope and fall into cynicism and nothingness as our minds become numb to what once was beautiful. alas, how to escape this? forgive my misinterpretations

life is insane

Onietzsche: Droppin Knowledge said...

dancebarefoot . . . who this be?

dancebarefoot said...

sound like yoda you do...i just knew you at rdf. (hint: the name starts with an a and ends with ndrea (previously ndy)).

life is still insane