Tuesday, December 22, 2015

same 'ol same 'ol same 'ol same 'ol same 'ol ........................

 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
"Each of us left the group with the certainty that he still had the best part of his journey ahead of him, the adventurous footpath ending in a home unknown to his fellow convicts. And once, indeed, when on such a day I left the station and cut across the fields to the village, I was accompanied by something in which I saw the Child Saviour announced by the religious calendar. True, nothing more happened than that the spaces between the shriveled cornstalks by the wayside flared up as I passed. These spaces appeared to move, step by step, identical from row to row, empty, white and windy, and I had the impression that it was always the same small space that not only accompanied me but flew fitfully ahead, a puff of wind that flushed like a bird in the corner of my eye, waited for me, and then flew on ahead. A handful of corn chaff rose from a furrow in a fallow field; pale yellow leaves hovered motionless for a time, then in the form of a column moved slowly over the fields, while in the background a train, almost hidden by the fog, seemed now to stop, now to shoot ahead, as fitfully as the airy something beside me. I ran homeward, burning to tell them something which, as I already knew in the doorway, could not be told just then, and not in words." 
Repetition, Peter Handke
Anyone who likes to dance, and he once  counted himself among those, perhaps know the moment when the body seems to fall away under the invitation of intense repetitive rhythm. Energy seems to be supernatually present and a virtual presence takes over. But in ordinary non-dance life repetition can seem like a recurring pain, banal in its insistence, superfluous in its contentless mechanical thrust, the worse of puppet life. Just so the force of holidays, sacred events (from which many holidays sprout), advertising, and the force of the machine.

Repetition forms the cassons which anchor myth throughout all temporal variants--post-, pre-, anti-, and/or the new time of simultaneity. Repetition is the rod that holds everything together. If there is One Law, it is repetition, both overt and covert, like the mysterious dark matter and dark energy of the new physics, existng every where but unseen.

Small towns were once the fertile breeding ground of repetitions of the mystic sort that Handke so beautifully describes above, the mystical spacing of spacing. And he supposed it was still true to some degree, the seasons. patterns of heat, cold wet and dry. But enclosure, much like cities, is becoming more the norm. Perhaps the attempt to devalorize natural repetition amrks the advent of the place of the uncanny in modern culture now, the inside of the unheimlich taking over from the outside of the sublime. Love your symptom!

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Transitions and Thresholds

No onw knows waht the future holds, what is coming. It's not even clear that we know what has already come but we haven't yet caught up with. (even that formulation is problematic: what is the 'it' which we haven't caught up with...'progress?; what is 'it' that is coming?? Precisely...) Unlike much thinking , perhaps small towns can give one a clearer vantage point in some ways.

 Transition



When it comes to change, one of the most often noted comments is “things have always been this way, there is just more reporting.” Or: “human nature never changes, things have been basically the same over the last x-thousand years. Well, yes and so, maybe maybe not.  Such comments are perhaps both benedictions over the current scene as well as wishful thinking; better the beast you ride than the one coming over the hill.



One thing left out of the calculations of sameness extending to the far horizon is a measure of what constitutes human nature. One of the psychosocial processes since at least the Enlightenment (if not well before) has been a constraint of the definitions of what constitutes a stable human, a winnowing of the margins and a strengthening of the central tenets of ‘Humanism.’ The current neoliberal global environment is the inheritance and, if many current thinkers are correct, the result of 2000 years of Judeo Christian culture—and it’s ongoing collapse into the secular world.



Out of that chaotic collapse is a maelstrom of ideas and questions about where we are now, what direction we should go, or, if we should do anything at all. Or if we even have anything to say about it.  Previous cultures have used prophets, shamans (often under the influence of entheotropic substances) to scry the path ahead.



Now we prophesy under the sign of the Machine and stochastic collocations and projections…and then do what we want to do anyway.



So what are some of the more oblique vectors that are coming our way now, what strange new philosophies and visions? As it turns out many of the visions are the ones we have had from millennia ago in our philosophies and dreams, dreams not of men and women but of other creatures.

 
Thresholds


The synonyms for ‘threshold’ say as much as we need to know: brink, dawn, door, doorstep, doorway, edge, entrance, gate, inception, origin, point of departure, sill, start, starting point, verge, portal and probably many more that we could present.

Much now is about portals, possible openings (note the plural) into different forms, times and spaces. And, although it may seem a bit of hubris on our part, into the new, that which may be on the other side of the doorsill. Granted, the term ‘new’ has been leveraged into banality by thousands of consumer ads; it may be time to degrease it and knock the rust off. The one thing that modernism has done is bequeath a patina of ‘been there, done that,’ a patronizing sense of familiarity with the world. It may be that the mechanisms of modernism have turned from excavating to backfilling. Even the very idea of ‘thesholds’ has been set on a wobbling axis by those who believe there is not, and cannot be anything radically new under the sun, and those who wish to bring back a sense of enchantment, of stepping through a portal, into a different world. (Let us just note in passing that the premier contemporary philosopher of the threshold Giorgio Agamben, is not so sanguine about the possibilities of threshold events, in that ‘states of exception,’ ‘zones of indifference,’ ‘bare life’ and a general orientation toward human/inhuman thresholds lead to what some would claim as fascinating and others as  fearful repercussions. But then, a threshold by its nature is also a zone of indeterminacy.)

Whether dream world or drudge world, prison world or paradise world, our technologies are ever on the way to seemingly making both come true simultaneously. 

And the idea of  the Event --or an event, they are somewhat different--is dependent on aspects of transition and and threshold, as would be an anti-event if such a thing be possible. Or for that matter, the question of whether there can ever really be a deadend.
 

Monday, December 14, 2015

"We were born upside down'

Black Star, from David Bowie's upcoming album
strange and spookily beautiful
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kszLwBaC4Sw

Tuesday night: Childhood's End on SyFy channel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3e7aMCIxjY

(something is coming)

Friday, December 11, 2015

fables and useless genealogies ...to Pinelandia! [peat and repeat]

 

neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies, which promote questions rather than godly edifying in the faith, so do!
St. Paul, King James Bible,
1 Timothy 1:4

He or she is a mystic who cannot stop walking and, with the certainty of what is lacking, knows of every place and object that it is not that; one cannot stay there nor be content with that. Desire creates an excess. Places are exceeded, passed, lost behind it. It makes one go further, elsewhere. It lives nowhere.
Michel Certeau, The Mystic Fable

For me, writing means having to deal with the death of others, but it basically means having to deal with others to the extent that they’re already dead. In one sense, I’m speaking over the corpse of the others.
Michel Foucault, 1968 interview

"The only paradises are those we have lost"
Proust

It’s 2015 as he boards Google Earth and levitates from Atlanta. He gains altitude, viewing the whole of the southern United States of America. As he heads west, moving slowly over the thin silver line of i20, he can see the varied marbled green patchworks of farms and small towns. Chartreuse, Mantis, Asparagus, Olive, Pine and more. He knows these names because he briefly looks up ‘Green’ on Google. So many of them, other than the national forests and preserves. Did it look like this decades ago when he made the trip from Mississippi to Georgia with his family? Surely not. Just getting from one place to the next then took travel over two lane blacktop, winding though small towns, maybe ten hours to make the trip.

He begins to make his virtual descent over Birmingham, following a back road that his family even now takes, over the Tenn-Tom waterway, a fabulously carved straight as an arrow channel which barges ply with goods. Or do they still? None are in sight from above. Passing over the lock and dam, he descends even further but now beginning to be beset with a peculiar double vision. (It is this way no matter which way he goes, whether through Meridian and then onto state route 19 or in taking this back route.)  He begins to be overcome with the sickness of nostalgia and melancholia.  This happens no matter how many times he makes this trip and no matter in what sort of conveyance he makes it in, either actual car or the ethereal and anti-tenebrous sky balloon of Google Earth.  No matter.  A certain darkness still manages to assert itself, a certain uncanniness seems to seep from the very borders of Mississippi as he makes his way in, a feeling which maybe Joseph Conrad would be more disposed to elucidate. O.k., he knows it’s all in his head, right? To him, that doesn’t make it any LESS real, it makes it more real but in the same kind of confusion when you see pictures of ectoplasm : real or not? Or something in between. Yes, he thinks to himself. It’s this something in between, or the thing seen out of the corner of the eye, or those floater things apparently inside the eye. Real but not. Or not but real. Depends on which way you want to go.

He feels like the occupant of some UFO as he passes over Scuba and Decatur and Moscow (Yes!), now hovering over Deemer Road outside Philadelphia, where the old clapboard unpainted farmhouse stood, now long devoured by ravenous Kudzu, pulling down any revenant into the depths of its green wake. Now his ectoplasmic craft slowly meanders up the road, alternating between street level view and overhead view. It was dust and gravel when he used to make that three mile trip on his bike. The sepia-toned flipbook starts up in earnest now, one virtual snapshot after the other beginning to tumble out, lathered up on each arrival. A Proustian disease for sure. He felt himself approaching the edge of a precipice of abyssal memory. Yet at the same time, he strives to find new ones but no, it’s always the same set. And how could that be otherwise? There are no, there can be no new ones, case closed. Or has he lost some and gained others? No way to know. That’s just the way memory is, a volatile superfluid, like ectoplasm oozing its way over everything.  Like the blob in that old Steve McQueen movie, moving at first slowly up the stick then in the blink of an eye it moves all the way to the hand and you are lost in another reality, one you can’t escape from. But wait a minute he thought: that’s the way everything is anyway, always the ooze coming slowly up the stick then it’s all over. Instead of from space though, a preferable option in many ways he thought, it’s from the past, a territory that is exactly equal to what is in front of us, even if it seems like we are gobbling up what is in front of us and disposing of it…or even drawing something nearer. (He wondered: did anybody still believe that Something was Coming? There seemed little dispute that many arcane and mysterious things were now past…but stuff coming toward us? Even that way of putting it many would argue with. The only thing coming was Progress, more good stuff, more Better-ness, the very Best-est of what we have now. But there was no mysteriousness, that opacity which was and is always tenebrous in the eyes of Progress.  What that implied were those ‘endless genealogies and fables’ which so concerned Saint Paul, and perhaps even the bad infinity of Hegel, a road to hell paved with good intentions. Or something like that. He was beginning to confuse himself. But the point here is that you gotta cut bait at some point, move on up stream where the fishing is better and the water is calmer. It was like there was, or is, a weak messianic power coming out from the past but it was so weak that it would take a supercollider of a brain to determine how such redemption would work. Certainly the hailing power of the voice of the technofuture smothered over all other voices. It resulted almost entirely, he thought, from the glorious housing developments on the Shining Hill of modernity and the clear-cutting that was necessary: the faith of the future depended on the eradication of the past.

“Our time, the present, is in fact not only the most distant: it cannot in any way reach us.  Its backbone is broken and we find ourselves in the exact point of this fracture.[….] Contemporariness does not simply take place in chronological time: it is something that, working within chronological time, urges, presses, and transforms it.  And this urgency is the untimeliness, the anachronism that permits us to grasp our time in the form of the ‘too soon’ that is also a ‘too late’---of an ‘already’  that is also a ‘not yet.’  Moreover, it allows us to recognize in the obscurity of the present the light that, without ever being able to reach us, is perpetually voyaging toward us.”
Giorgio Agamben. What is The Contemporary? In Nudities., p 15

The name Mississippi, perhaps the most onomatopoeic of any state. It is known that it is of Indian provenance; but which tribe? It is said that it comes from the French Messip, the French rendition  of the Ansihinaabe , that is Objiwah or Algonquin, name for the river : Misi-zibi, meaning Great River. Another rendition can be traced through early French records to the name Malabouchi, from the Gulf Coast Indians. An early French writer attempted to explain the Indian name, Mechasipi as a contraction of the words, Meact Chassippi meaning ancient father of waters.
My choice would be story of the Choctaw and their kinsmen the Chickasaw, ‘migrating from a far western country long, long ago.’ When the wise prophets of the two tribes first saw and contemplated the great body of water they exclaimed “Misha spokni!” Misha in Choctaw meaning ‘beyond’ and spokni conveyig the idea of something ancient. Yes, an ancient beyond, the pine barren flatness of much of Mississippi, especially along the delta like the Appalachian Mountains, older than the Himalayans, but lower.

Now it thundered and it lightnin'd, Lord and the wind, wind began to blow
Now it thundered and it lightnin'd, Lord and the wind, wind began to blow
Lord there was thousands and thousands of poor people at that time didn't have no place to go
Big bill broonzy


For better of worse, there is no therapy in Mississippi (and very little modern and no 'postmodern' -- or perhaps it’s all postmodern now) and no therapeutic strategy to eradicate Mississippi from memory because Mississippi the state (of mind, of psychogeography) rides the great primeval wanderings of the river bearing its name, a bent, curling, alternately  placid and then tumescent wand of the gods overflowing floridly towards abundance and catastrophe, an unending sentence of destruction and creation, our very own Shiva, puffing out watery alvioli in flooded lungs, first gasping and then shouting, epithets and field hollers, it floods itself then somehow the rest of the state but simultaneously hunkering down and ebullient at the same time, laying waste while sending up/down roots (you forget which in the storm), confluence of red Indian, black African, white European. Mississippi you are Legion.

"Time stands still in the Delta. But
the dead go on opening doors in our mind"

Taking the back river road out of Vicksburg somewhat parallels the river, meandering for a bit before it begins to stretch out and straighten, shotgun level for miles and miles and miles, even as the river itself coils through bayous and oxbows; at one point early on out of Vicksburg it even turns into a one-lane road, elevated around 30 feet above the cotton and corn blooming into the distance. This back road ride down state route 453 is intense: high heat, no cars, passing through small 'towns' (scare quoted because even though they are on a map they consist of nothing more than a church, a gas station, a couple of houses and a row of new stainless steel grain silos) in which not a single soul can be seen.

In 1932, Walter Benjamin wrote (and read on-air) one of his radio plays for children, his last surviving radio play in fact, on the great flood of 1927 ("Der Mississippi-Uberschwemmung 1927")



The county of Philadelphia called Neshoba, gray wolf in Choctaw. And outside the township of Philly, the ancient mound called Nanih Waya (Inholitopa iski), meaning productive mound or mother mound. “When they emerged from the mound, the first Choctaw were still damp from the Underworld. Aba iki, the Father Above, who had brought them forth, laid them out along the ramp of the mound to dry. The scene unfolded ages ago, according to one origin story, deep in a Mississippi wood. In other versions, the Choctaw and Chickasaw entered the world from a cave near the mound. Yet another variation tells of a prophet arriving from the west followed by an entire people.”  From limited archaeological evidence it is likely that the mound was part of the very large mound culture consisting of many sorts of mounds and mound related structures numbering in the thousands in the Mississippi valley and that the Indians were late comers and simply made use of the area. The Cheatham clan most immediate to him had its start though Dick Cheatham in a community nearby, emerging wet as far as he knew, laid out to dry in the southern heat, maybe not completely dry due to the southern humidity; it was often said by the elders of MY tribe that there was Indian blood in the clan and I have reason to think that true. I’m still waiting for my ‘indian money, ’ as my grandfather put it, to come in. however the Indian money came in another way in the form of casinos bilking the white man the Chata preference for an unbrokened language flow now transferred to dollar bills.

The last of the eight sibling Cheatham clan died recently, a life for the last one, Bobby, lived almost entirely in Mississippi but not the case with the other four brothers and three sisters, all but One sister and Bobby having lived just about there whole life in Ms (The abbreviation not only for woman but also manuscript), the others fleeing to Georgia and Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee I think Bobby lived in California for a year or so he always wanted to go visit his cousin there mainly to go to Disney Land which had just opened when they were there, due to his Sunday night viewings of the seven pm appearance of Disney’s Wonderful World of Color but now Florida has one and things are different anyway and that ALSO is where my uncle Willard, who looked just like a real Indian moved to Fl and who, when he had returned with his family from Ga, abbreviation of which looks like sound for throwup, would always go on every holiday up to the “house on the hill’ where momma and daddy cheatham lived  and was greeted one time by Willard with “Well, if it ain’t the Yankee and his hermaphodite son” I guess because they were wearing Bermuda shorts and his hair touched his collar but now that he thinks on it his uncle Jack never really left Mississippi either but since he was the most educated and smoked cigars (which he could always smell from a distance) and seemed more sophisticated because he seemed to be always eating out in Jackson) and did something at the University of Mississippi and was superintendant of schools for awhile, being known for shooting a hole in his front driver side door and then claiming his opponent did it but was found out somehow and discredited, causing the diaspora of the teaching Cheathams, Willard, Norman, Bennie, Jack to other states but come to think of it Jack stayed and moved to the delta, a little town called Rosedale, almost not there I’m remembering now and from Google looking down on Rosedale it seems perilously close to the great twisting serpent Itself, flooding looking like it is all too probable, swirled, all the surrounding lands swirled wildly like the bleeding Madras patterns on those shirts and fabrics popular at one time, there in one of those swirls in 1964 was where his cousin Ricky was killed while camping out and frog gigging with a companion, shot while his companion was mutilated (I never knew what that meant exactly: where? How? No details were ever forthcoming but lurid and impossible comments made the rounds about the family, which even to this day he can’t articulate and even the FBI came down to investigate but never at least known to me, ever left any word as to what happened) although he will never forget or forgive the time that, much later, on a visit back to the home place where Jack had moved after retiring from whatever he was doing in Rosedale, caused his father to sputter incoherently in his rage while Jack, who always smoked cigars and always reminded him of Edgar G. Robinson, continued to goad him, like he did generally at Daddy Cheatham’s but this time he was older and all he could do was sit in amazed and embarrassed stupefaction and silence, he still feels the pain of that moment and in fact the stories of the whole lot of them continue to swirl around his head with least provocation, an eight headed hydra or Medusa maybe pulling him backward, the stony face of the dead dragging back to the set-scenes, a primal grittiness of reality holding forth over all of it, yes maybe Ricky was gay he remembered a time when all the boy and girl cousins were herded by Ricky outside to the side of the house where their pants were pulled down and amidst cheerful threats that their penises ( or what was it then surely not cocks, maybe dicks since I remember we made fun of cousin Richard for having the nick name Dick so yes it must have been dicks that were threatened)  but did this happen or did he imagine it there was no way of knowing it but it seems real enough---and what is the south anyway but some engorged memory chamber from in fans-without voice- to muddled piece meal adult recollections, starling in their juxtapositions to where-ever in the hell  we are now, even now in remembering this, in putting the members back together he feels himself sinking into  an almost swoon, back to the ur-years of ’63 and ’64 when national and local collapse together into a syncope, dead faint—or feint maybe, tumbling bodies of Kings and Kennedys, omnipresent hysteria rising on the gorge, on the verge of something; revolution?)) and oddly enough he remembers two Cocker Spaniels owned by Jack that was frozen outside and around the corner from the dick threats but surely that is some kind of fabrication but he swears he remembers it like  giant dog sickles  while the little white Cheatham house, built in 1946 by all the brothers, the ‘dick wall’ was less than forty feet from the Methodist church where Daddy Cheatham was a deacon for many years and where from his house down below the hill old man Brennan’s voice could be heard bellowing out Rock of Ages on a Sunday morning, the same church where Daddy Cheatham’s final service was held  but the year is still 1964 Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman the first casualties of the civil rights movement, killed by the sheriff and buried in an earthen dam outside of town and his grandfather is still lying in wait to this day he can see now The pews of the small church  packed with relatives and friends The preacher coming forward at a certain point and allows that Richard 'Dick' Cheatham had a special friend Willie who would like to come view the body  Dick Cheatham worked in the sawmill a few miles from his house, some sort of foreman and Summer nights I can remember Willie, a black man, coming by and sitting in the back yard with my grandfather, talking till the fireflies came out on soft honeysuckle evenings but now all the fireflies have gone out permanently and Willie is visiting again Was he not allowed to sit with the others his confusion is rampant and then some peculiar sort of rage as he sits there in the stone silence, maybe a little organ music, Willie walking down the isle with his hat in hand This image haunts him to this day, not knowing what to do with it and what does one do with ghosts anyway And what are memories but ghosts, hauntings that can't be exorcized except by penalty of losing part of one's self The deep well of remembrance sears and scars us simply by its diaphanous nature, it's inability to be easily pinned down, constrained by what we want, what we desire, what we think is best  The ectoplasmic stuff of remembrance never quite getting frayed into nothingness, but slayed into somethingness this weakness its very strength, it hangs on though its own externality, posing as pure internality ... but who is to say about that, about what is purely inside and what is purely outside?  Surely there is no purely, but an enfolded complexity, various types of Mobius strips, Klein bottles that ceaselessly shuttle back and forth, in and out, matter becoming conscious becoming memory becoming matter becoming earthworms becoming plants becoming energy becoming life, becoming face, maybe to the ends of the universe -- and back  Who is to say Ghosting knows no limits  It simply shifts and squirms in its liminal constraints to another form, another race, another gender, another life, another species, the traumatic gossamer crinkling of its edges perhaps simply threshold phenomena, portals signifying other entrances and exits These halos, thresholds the very epitome of Benjamin's description of aura as the inchoate perception of the greatest distance in that which is closest to us.

Skin: the thing that is closest to us, yet betrays the most distance, distances of galactic proportions (but even the word galactic sustains this duality of skin, meaning from the ancient Greek, milk, as if the stars were poured out into a thickening skin in the sky, white on black)  Skin as boundary marker and threshold delineating, separating, folding together; even a sacrament which opens the inside to the outside in Eros as well as in wounding even a sacrificial threshold the only one a person ever has really, a singular offering, continually deferred even while daring all others to avoid the breach of the skin.

And what is more ghost-like than skin Never announcing itself (except when it becomes visible at the borders of the socius, of races -- still, visible but invisible), yet subtly holding together, holding out for,  but surreptitiously so, an invisible boundary between self and others ---and when it comes visible trouble starts, just as ghostly manifestations announce their own traumas, delays, deferrals, returns of the repressed, the mobiating of black to white and white to black and the sacrificial halts in between, the black and white stills from back then, alternating with technicolor, then technical color, then nothing.

Ezekiel 37:7-9 (New International Version)
New International Version (NIV)

 7 So I prophesied as I was commanded. And as I was prophesying, there was a noise, a rattling sound, and the bones came together, bone to bone.

8 I looked, and tendons and flesh appeared on them and skin covered them, but there was no breath in them.

 9 Then he said to me, "Prophesy to the breath; prophesy, son of man, and say to it, 'This is what the Sovereign LORD says: Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe into these slain, that they may live.' "


The Koran
Ha Mim

1.             [41.20] Until when they come to it, their ears and their eyes and their skins shall bear witness against them as to what they did.

2.             [41.21] And they shall say to their skins: Why have you borne witness  against us? They shall say: Allah Who makes everything speak has made us speak, and He created you at first, and to Him you shall be brought back.


3.             [41.22] And you did not veil yourselves lest your ears and your eyes and your skins should bear witness against you, but you thought that Allah did not know most of what you did.

TWILIGHT

Sitting in dark in the yard 'out back'. No one home, lights out, door locked. Still stiff from driving. There, etched by moonlight, edge of woods, beyond which the 'ancestral shack' as he had always affectionately called it, of his grandparents--a small white asbestos sided 2-story house with two small gables in front and back, stairs. A banister. At the top of which as a kid he watched, uncomprehending, family dramas and squabbles unfolding... Cousins, aunts, uncles, moved on, died. And now it was filled with an unspeakable event, Something which made its presence known even through the copse of trees, vague glimmer shifting past the window he could barely make out. And that smell again.

But now, a strident, stritchy thing in the oak tree to his right pulling regularly on some demented violin, rising to a crescendo then sawing down to a rasping stop. Then the response from things in the other trees...silence...then sawing in the far distance, then building again nearby. Some crazy sonata by Xenakis maybe, called 'Chorae'. But contained in that seasonal, rasping echoing call-and-response spoke the whole history of a world, constant and consistent in its choral inevitability and commentary on the doings down below, the tablature of the trees providing the appropriate genealogy: a few pin oaks but mostly pines. Pine trees. The other signature effect (and affect is the landscaped truth if it could be told which it can't, only alluded to) vertical lines for the cleft and treble, wind soughing, giving way to stridulating bugs. A life lived--did everyone here not see it, hear it? --In an electric soup of communicating trees, insects, and wind. (And god knows what else. Maybe it wasn't all a one-way street, nothing but bulldozers, pulpwood trucks, mowers at dusk. Maybe these things, this landscape, was orchestrating it, flowing, seeping into the unconscious, pullulating thoughts, like those large white eyeless grubs hidden in the old rotten tree he saw yesterday, blindly pawing through the soft fibrous wood till the Energies overcame them and they began to stiffen, harden, darken, becoming other than what they now were, becoming another life connected by only the slenderest thread of DNA to life in the dark. A new creature. Maybe there was such a beckoning here (and not only here): human grub embedded in a giant fallen log, etheric signals passing wraith-like through the great Body of the world, into the flesh, time spans measured in millennia condensing in the DNA, precipitate of falls and pupae of catastrophes, signals passing though the amber of flesh, dammed (maybe even damned) at the flesh for a spell in the wood, then gushing forth--O great glamour of spells cast! Cast in resin, bug spit long since hardened (stritching passing over how many millions of years?) then bursting free, frothy expirations condensing yet again for another ride through time: worlds composed of nothing but condensations and explosions falling as debris on the great Plain of the Now and suckered through with runners --kudzu like--penetrating it with this cosmic collapse, this darkness at noon, unceasing, against which the Machine toils endlessly, itself not capable of being so penetrated being rather nothing BUT this penetration, the pure form of the wood grub, the grubbing of the grub minus the grub.
Nothing but burrowing through the debris, grub turned to angel flapping furiously, backward...





 [ro1]in.gh Dick Cheatham in a community nearby; it was often said by the elders of MY tribe that th

Forever is a Long Time

Jacques Callot: Bohemian Camp: The Fortune Tellers

The stationary and the moving have been ancient categories as well as the newest of the new. Every since the rise of the agricultural perhaps when the nomadic have had to hunker down and take care of the crops, become domestic or homed (heimlich) forming small communities, close to the soil and the immediate beasts. But the walkers were probably always skulking about, bringing news from outside the range of the home fires---and probably much else besides, both bad and good. Perhaps they even moved in a different time sense and hence becoming fortune tellers, scryers of fortune....and probably chased away from the regions of stability for that very reason.  Perhaps 'artists', functioning as shamans, witches. the damned were in this mobile category, a category of the uncanny above all else (unheimlich). Nowadays whole nations seem to be on the move, perhaps forming camps of the saints to come, inside and outside of cities. (already the city itself seems to often consist of life styles formerly associated with hardcore bohemians.) And also the etymological kin of 'Egyptian' and 'gypsy,' which I had never considered, perhaps more of a conceptual link with the dark arts than anything else....but still...

He had started thinking about this after reading an article on the origins of Bohemia "bohemian' long being a name for artists) and its relation to things messianic. (Messanic Thought Outside Theology edited by Anna Glazova and Paul North. The article is Migrations of the Bohemian by Joshua). The entire article is worth reading and had caused him to give rise entertain many thoughts, most of which can only be glanced off of here. An excerpt:

"The messianic is for us a thing of the past, inscribed as such in the Western calendar and memorialized each time we register day, month, and year.What is thus marked is both an advent and an end, the end of messianic expectation, and so the end of the messianic as a thing of the future or, better, the end of the messianic as the form of the future. When I was a child, I was taught that Christians believed the messiah had come and that Jews were still waiting. But is this "still waiting" not the melancholic form of "no longer waiti11g," the shadow of a hope on which the sun has gone down but that, unable to be relinquished, has becomes its own object? And would this not be the structure of the "weak messianic power . . . given to us, like every generation before us, . . . on which the past has a claim"the weak messianic power of which Benjamin writes in the "Theses on the Philosophy of History"?1 What follows is a reading of the fortunes of the bohemian, a figure with a long and wandering past but entering modernity via the straits of its sojourn in n1i<l-nineteenth-century Paris and its involvement in the failed revolutioniary hopes of 1848, as bearer of and claimant on this weak messianic power, the telling image of a postmessianic history.

Consult the l 798 edition of the dictionary of the Academie Francaise
and you will read that its entry for "bohémien'' in no way refers to ('those
people who live in the part of Germany !mown as Bohemia" but solely to "a class of"vagabonds who roam the countryside at large, telling fortunes and tealing with craft."2 By the sixth edition, in 183 5, the rise of bohhnien as an equivalent of Egyptien-i.e., Gypsy-is already designated a "former" usage, something that "se disait autrefois." And by mid-century, Henry Murgercan declare "axiomatically" in his introduction to Scenes de la boheme (the novel on which Puccini's opera is based) that "Bohemia is the artistic stage of life" and that "it exists and is possible nowhere but in Paris."' Indeed, for Murger's Bohemians, it is "a natter of honor to differentiate themselves" from "the classes long given that name."4"

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Fragment...lost incanabulum



All true, all lies. From a long dead conversation:

...to do something. Either you go to Mississippi and get him back or you forget about it. That's all there is to it. No big deal.  Just do it and get it out of the way. You don't have any performances coming up after this do you?

Which question do you want me to answer?

What?!. She fumbled with the windshield wiper but no fluid was squirting out. The war of the whorls.

You asked me three questions. Which one should I answer?

What?! She fumbled with the windshield wiper but no fluid squirted out. The war of the greasy whorls.

You asked me three questions, which one should I answer?  

He leaned into the windshield to look at the sky again. It was still there. Now there were also some steady purple lights, much lower down.

They passed through the perimeter defense and the car clucked to itself as it was queried and passed in two seconds. The small terminal screen lit u and Joan punched both their ID numbers in. He could see other small cars across the eight lane expanse. Occasionally their interiors would light up with wan blue light from their vidscreens as they were questioned by city computer.  They looked like a new form of firefly. He wanted to tell Joan about fireflies, how he used to catch them as a kid and release them in his room at night. Early on in the evening they would be close to the ground. By midnight they would be close to the tops  The firefly cars were rising to the city. He wanted to tell her but he couldn't. It was like he was held with some mysterious new form of gravity. A gravity that made the space between people dense with meaning but by virtue of that very denseness it became impenetrable. He wanted to tell her about giant metallic firebugs, to create grand schemes of analog and metaphor, of catachresis and paraphrasis but he couldn't. The gravity was too strong.

Occasionally a long black form would rustle by them, the insignia of the New Theocratic State beaming out the front.....

Not to be continued.

Something Is Coming.



Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Delenda est Cathago

The phrase in this post's title was used during the Roman empire's tenure in the 2nd century BC during the Punic wars. It was an abbreviated form of a phrase which meant essentially, 'Carthage Must Be Destroyed,' Carthage being that Phoenician city-state in North Africa which kept rising from the ashes to remain Rome's most intractable enemy.

It was used widely in Roman circles as a catch phrase, with Cato the Elder being famous for concluding all speeches with the phrase no matter what the speech was about. Rome finally succeeded in extirpating the threat by capturing the city and making slaves of the whole population of Carthage.

It was perhaps inevitable that the tables turned on Rome finally. I'm sure the phrase 'Rome Must Be Destroyed' was used many times as the so-called barbarian populations moved in as Rome spread itself into a thin web encompasing the world from the toe of the Italian boot to the blue skins of England.

It might be said however that the Roman Empire never really disappeared but rather got sublimated into the various forms of Western empire. Philip K. Dick said in one of his novels (Valis I believe), "The empire never ended" referring to the hegemony of empire as having one form in the Rome-Greek tradition...Certainly an intersting thing to think in the current world situation. In a way, within empire itself there are no small towns since they are extensions of empire in many ways..

At any rate, I began thinking about Rome after I had ended many posts with the phrase Something is Coming. Perhaps the feeling comes from absorbing too mcuh sci fi as a youth (and still!) because one of the primary affective facets of a scientific technological society is a feeling of something new coming down the pipeline, a release date, an eminent arrival of something connected to the pace of life and a need (or necessity really many feel I think) to be there for it, to catch up with the
New Wave' (as adventurous jazz was called  the sixties) to be in with the movement, with the very core of progressivity itself. Yes, Revolution! Perhaps that has not gone away but that sort of a crytpo-milleninalism (or maybe enrypted-millenialism) survives and pulses steadily underneath, in full view of, and with the assistance of, the West's pop products. In some ways so-called post-modernism was a verification of that peculiar apocalyptic which cam only be had through Kitsch and the banal and which small towns often embody
and where the profound, the ob-scene of kitsch,
 goes to sleep at night
anyway.
Something is Coming.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

The Piper At the Gates of Dawn

If the medieval concept of Humours was still available, Mississippi would undoubtedly belong to the one which indicated wetness, from the mighty river itself to torrential rain to fog. This morning the fog was so thick you couldn't see past fifty feet, a sodden gray haze even after the sun was well up in the sky. (The Wikipedia definition of the associated watery temperament, the phlegmatic has it thusly:
"The phlegmatic temperament is traditionally associated with water. People with this temperament may be inward and private, thoughtful, reasonable, calm, patient, caring, and tolerant. They tend to have a rich inner life, seek a quiet, peaceful atmosphere, and be content with themselves. They tend to be steadfast, consistent in their habits, and thus steady and faithful friends.
Pedagogically, their interest is often awakened by experiencing others' interest in a subject.
People of this temperament may appear somewhat ponderous or clumsy. Their speech tends to be slow or appear hesitant.")
The day started with some odd coincidences starting with last night. He had been re-reading Don Delillo's fabulous novel White Noise again for some reason (after having read it when it first came out). He had planned to write a entry today on periodicity--styles, fashion, just the need to change in seemingly ten-ish year cycles  more so perhaps in the city than in The Town (as opposed to the city) when he came across the Delillo passage below:
"It is the nature and pleasure of townspeople to distrust the city. All the guiding principle that might flow from a center of ideas and cultural energies are regarded as corrupt, on or another kind of pornography. This is how it is with towns.

But Blacksmith is nowhere near a large city. We don't feel threatened and aggrieved in quite the same way other towns do. We're not smack in the path of history and its contaminations. If our complaints have a focal point, it would have to be the TV set, where the outer torment lurks, causing fears and secret desires."
Yes, he thought that was the way it was for sure more at one time than now...but still. Although the point of contamination was more the World Wide Web now and maybe Mcluhans's idea of a coming paganism or tribalism due to the electronic soup we are creating is more pertinent.

But that leads him to the second, more interesting coincidence (the first one could hardly be called that).  As he lay tossing and turning last night around the magic hour of three pm, an inchoate train of thought began. As was often the case these late night/early morning jumbled thoughts often had to do with the anxiety of having taken a wrong path, made bad decisions. He began to think of the sixties, when the train began to leave one track and head for open field. He thought maybe music was responsible in some way. He certainly had an intense interest in it, all consuming in some respects. He began thinking of the pied piper of Hamelin, the old fairy tale. He wondered what 'pied' meant in that case. This morning as he was going though his net chores and web site checks, he clicked on the EsoterX site where this was the current entry. And then he remembered his book The Doll Universe and the Arthur C. Clarke book Childhood's End.
And he woke up
and it was foggy
and he didn't know where he was.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h99WP2KUvLA

Monday, November 9, 2015

Sweet Home Mississippi

Robin S. sent this over and I thought I would repost for obvious reasons:
folks coming to roost in MS. From the New York Times,
Sweet Home Mississippi

Way Station

The one persistent fantasy he had over the early years was to have an observatory on the side of a hill. He found something achingly romantic in the notion. Was it the sequestering from normal life, the telescope and the shack which contained it acting as a conduit to the stars in some esoteric way? He knew from hard experience that it wasn't the science of astronomy per se that was so attractive but some form of mystical kenosis, not being filled with a divinity but being filled with the excruciating and ecstatic sense of infinity and strangeness, even a pagan sublimity of otherness, something radically different. 

One of his favorite science fiction writers then was Clifford D. Simak, Simak's specialty was a certain wistful pastoral melancholic setting for his stories and even a sort of domestication (a modernist might say kitschy) of the most far out themes by locating the action in farmland or forests or some other sort of pastoral setting. A favorite was the now largely forgotten (although can anything be forgotten now that we have the megabrain web?) Way Station. the story rotated a farmer Noah Wallace, whose small farm house was used by aliens as a transfer point for aliens to travel between worlds. In return the farmer, who had been on the land since before the civil war, would be given immortality as long as he stayed in the cabin most of the time (which, given his perpetual youthful appearance, begins to raise concerns with US of A intelligence agencies). The aliens provide for his needs and the farmer educates himself with a steady stream of books and subscriptions to scientific journals. He is an ascetic devoted to otherness and fluidity, like a tube connecting the furthest points, a relay. But even here one can see Misissippi seeping underneath the seal of the spacecraft's door. The texture of time and space crossed with Kudzu and Wisteria as autumn begins to edge around the seasons again, burnt umber and pine straw, under overcast stars...
Something is always coming, bypassing law and kith and kin

Thursday, November 5, 2015

'The Stars My Destination'



He had been a fan of speculative fiction for as long as he had been reading books. For as long as he could remember thoughts of the 'vast cold and indifferent' (from the opening words to H.G. Wells War of the Worlds) spaces had been a tonic and security blanket for him. (And actually such writing then was called science fiction, in retrospect a gray collar genre that filled the thoughts of many young men in smsall towns allacross the country during the fifities and early sixties with dreams of going to technical colleges - like the Georgia Institute of Technology - and becoming the one to make the mythical First Contact with an alien species or at least to come across mysterious alien ruins like the Hee Chee or the just as mysterious worlds of Arthur C. Clarke, especially Rendezvous With Rama and the just as equally astonishing - in terms of deep time anyway -The City and the Stars. And there were hundreds more exploring similar frames of referencle, certainly enough to give Claude Levi-Strauss enough to draw up a structuralist study of scifi. And he thinks back to perhaps the first 'sci-fi' book he ever read which had to have been Margery Cameron's The Flight to the Wonderful Mushroom Planet.  But first there was the incredible The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester as the New Wave of science fiction burst upon the scene and the site of speculation became any and everything. And now we iare in what could be called the Third Wave of science fiction where speculative intensity has spread throughout moder culture, especially but not limited to Western modernism. Fueled by the entertainment industry, and the academy to some extent, given all the cultural studies programs extant, the absorption into mainstream technical culture has been nothing short of astounding, with pop music and visuals taking the 'alien' as a baseline of departure. All of these tropes are now rocking many established sciences)

No wonder then that the net has triggered a deluge of items dealing with liminal, eldritch, chthonic, or just weird as lived uncanny circumstances. Yes we have gone from the sublime to the uncanny in a mere 100 years.

All of this is on his mind as he reads the latest news of a star scientists have discovered that is some 1480 light years from the earth which and which seems to have an orbiting mega-complex. Astronomers call it Tabby's Star after the researcher who discovered it but it's nomenclature is KIC 8462852. Some researches have a tagline that leaves open the gate to words like extraterrestrial civilization and Dyson Sphere.  

All we can do is wait, as culture and life become even more saturated---and uncanny.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Murghana, the Coming

Living in The Town produces satisfactions and recriminations, just like living everyplace nowadays. Every place seems much like every other place. And of course the general banality of every place is filtered through the spectacularity of the Screen, either smart phone, tv or computer, acting as 'chips of messianic time', the very nature of the technical, slowly but surely becoming what amounts to 'self-awareness'. It has to be put into scare quotes because of the problematic nature of both the self and awareness now, as we becomes dumbed down while the global machine is becoming smartened up. It becomes another question as to whether we are becoming more alienated (that is, sundered apart from any sort of 'authenticity', the bete noir of the current election cycle with the hunt on for the authentic politician, a politician, in other words, who is wholly what she/he is, all parts available for all to see), or whether a field of transparency is opening up, the possibility of outing anyone about anything, no secrets allowed, which means basically no privacy allowed, since dark weeds can grow in private, better to have done with it (at this point the dividing line between pornography and its other becomes imperceptible).  After all, when it comes right down to it, from a demographic sense we are pretty much interchangeable generic comsuming units. Historians can look backward from here and see that where we are, is where we were always coming to. Nothing to see here folks, move on.

 Even if one were to say that such a creature is improbable now, the world wide telecommunicative smart system we are building is busily creating 'systems of tranparency' to fit into an infinite plane of Now, a place where the only thing coming is the next new app, or techno gadget but meanwhile odd pieces of one's self becomes sequestered in equally odd places, stuffed around in odd memory holes, archives for the haunted dead, bequeathed to various libraries that no one reads anymore, the various identities split in non-localized spaces, dualities not only not going away but coming to fruition as amulets, tokens, hidden visibilities, fetishes, waiting  for reanimation and/or quantum superimposition, the Coming Community lying in wait in plain sight probably at the clawed feet of Benjamin's angel, a 'pileup of debris, futility and failure.'

"Sanco Panza and Odyssseus have this in common: both saved themselves using 'inaadequate, even childish means.' But [....] Don Quixote was a puppet. It wasn't he who spent years reading chivlric romances and losing himself in feverih dreams. It was Sancho Panza, who quickly grasped that those stories, with all the demons they roused, would soon have killed him. So he concocted the figure of Don Quiote. [....] Once he had found a name and it had become a character, it could be oberved from a certain distance rather than simply endured. And above all he'd get a chance to think about other things."
Roberto Calasso, in chapter 5,, Powers,  K.

But if the only thing which is Coming is one's self writ large...how boring (unless the self, and body, is much much more than we currently think it is, viz; Spinoza).
How much more pleasurable, exciting, mysterious is the Acheiropoieta.  No wonder we are suffered to view continuously unveiling of odd images on Mars and every new stellar discovery! The only place that such confoundingly contrary images can appear is though the aegis of the super machine scopes, electrical and optical, and in outer space, inner space being rapidly foreclosed through other machines, the only thing left to the human is a perpetual Waiting.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Fehta Murghana

Somewhere along the timeline of 1963, He walks into the old house into the lions' den of uncles. Willard comments "Well look a'here what we got, it's the Atlanta yankee and his hermaphroditic son wearin' Burmooda shorts." The boy's hair was touching his collar. He never forgot and he never forgave. Until just now. Come to think of it where WAS Willard buried? As far as his hermaphroditic nephew knew it wasn't in the Cedar Lawn repository. Didn't matter, long gone, nothing but the start of one of those quaint bitter sweet southern stories, baptism by fire. But was that where the nom de net came from? Production of phantasms have to proceed from the most un-occulted materials, but drawn out from the most trivial of materials, Elijah's dry bones resurrecting phantom of life which leads me back to grandfather's comment, deacon in hardshell baptist church then, written in notes he found later, and concerning Schwerney Chaney and Goodman that 'they got what they deserved'...closing the pad in shock and dismay. Things hide in open sight everywhere. Fehta Murghana mutates into all.

O. cannot be held back as he breaks from the shadows cast by the fireplace: " Do not despair brother, here:
 
'The only things that appear are those which are first able to dissimulate themselves. Things already grasped in their aspect or peacefully resembling themselves never appear. They are apparent, of course, but only apparent: they will never be given to us as appearing. What then is necessary for an apparition, the event of appearing? What must happen just before appearing closes itself within a presumably stable or hopefully definitive aspect? There must be a unique and momentary opening that will mark the apparition as an apparition. A paradox bursts forth because, in the very moment that it opens itself to the visible world, appearing is destined to be something like dissimulation. A paradox bursts forth because, for but a moment, appearing gives access to the here below, to something that suggests the contrary or, better yet, the hell of the visible world—the realm of dissemblance.' 
The Paradox of the Phasmid, Didi-Huberman
"See brother, nothing is as it seems. The relays between your skirts, your glasses, your penis, your vulva, your mouth from your words, all hasten to close up even as they open. You can't leave the lights on continuously; who will pay the psychic bill for the insanity? The common space demands that we make law-like negotiations. But you chose the Androgen, perfect and miraculous alchemical child as the pawn to play. The impossible generic that hides fantastic divisions within itself, the apparition of the distance no matter how near it may seem to be, as Walter Benjamin had it for the aura, the subtle body which certain one's are forever trying to surmount, only to cause the eruption of the creepiness of the uncanny as the can of worms on the mantle, the new form of the rapture/rupture, glamorous enchaining of soul to body..."

all this, this...APPARATUS you are surrounding everything with O. is disquietening. I feel nothing but cracks forming for me, under me, around me. It feels as though a localized singularity is engulfing me. Personal anecdotes lead nowhere, examples don't serve any exemplarity, stories terminate before they start up, all conventons nothing but sophisticated nets, dipping in an invisible ocean to catch invisible fish.

"Yes Brother, everything does seem to be an apparatus, a catchment to prevent eruptions. Here:
'I will call an apparatus literally anything that has in some way the capacity to capture, orient, determine, intercept, model, control, or secure the gestures, behaviors, opinions, or discourses of living beings.'
Giorgio Agamben, What is an Apparatus

This is depressing O; I don't wish to carry forward right now. 
It feels like Something Is Coming.

 


'

Thursday, October 22, 2015

...1948 pt 4



Last we met, he was discussing the amniotic fluid of nostalgia for place of birth, the peculiar mix of hope and catastrophe, the fatigue of living that the faint musty odor of nostalgia gives off, a sort of reverse osmosis.  Does it exist every where and every when? Surely not. Although it did seem endemic to certain sorts of philosophies and poetics, a keening notification of homesickness for 'homes' that didn't exist anymore. The impact on prehistoric and deep time cultures like the Egyptian and those cultures which, having constructed cyclopean ruins in praise to whatever, found that they had to travel in the same footsteps for countless millennia, surely a hideous thought for the modern human where instantaneousness is not soon enough (one reason why we will definitely develop time travel to get there BEFORE the event happens, the message is sent, the information is coded if it is at all feasible---and maybe even more fervently so if it is NOT possible.) But what tropic modalities of the mind develops in such a grip of monumental stasis? It seems as if the figures which have been left for us have to do with death and abandonment, disappearance. For that matter, even now we know not what chthonic grip the outside has on us in our contemporary (apparent) fluidity so best to pave it over or look where the light is best near the closest streetlamp. Even though the obscene doubling of culture and life with uncanny technical döpplegangers may make it harder to make hay while the sun shines.

Meanwhile the Old Homeplace still glints and moans beneath the overgrown foliage (resembling nothing so much as a faery hill fort waiting patiently to take away the unwary), away from towns folks, who are preparing fresh coats of paint downtown to freshen up.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Law pt 8

Law resides everywhere and nowhere, a 'coercive vacuity'. All the more efficatious working on and against those who are far and against (sic). There is really no such thing as being for or against since it is always on both sides never losing any where it shows or even (especially) in those places it doesn't show--like childhood. psychoanalysis is foreever getting pole axed down the middle with law as a topological tar and feathering. Perhaps intensity of experience comes from the intensity of the law.

Whatever wherever the Law never loses.
This strikes me as being too far north and not enough south.
Let the law decide!

some quotes:
….experience as an intensity that takes up the full space of the senses. The takeaway is that the valuation of one pole over another will always be ideologically motivated: are we oriented toward the cards that have been dealt us, the wreckage of past fates bequeathed us by history, and the failed hopes detected there? Or are we oriented toward internal states, duration, the awed absorption of flux, the authenticity of feeling, and the affirmation of impersonal forces?
Ben Parker, review of Jameson’s The Antinomies of Realism
and:
One day humanity will play with law just as children play with disused objects, not in order to restore them to their canonical use but to free them from it for good.... This liberation is the task of study, or of play. And this studious play is the passage that allows us to arrive at that justice that one of Benjamin’s posthumous fragments defines as a state of the world in which the world appears as a good that absolutely cannot be appropriated or made juridical…
Giorgia Agamben quoting Benjamin on Kafka

Without beginning, without end,

Without past, without future.

A halo of light surrounds the world of the law.
The Hui Ming Ching

...1948: brood pt 3





He had always thought of the year 1948, as well as to a lesser degree, the sign-in year of 1947 to be seminal years for the current state of the world. The first monkey astronaut went up. The United States recognized the state of Israel. President Truman started the Marshall Plan to rebuild war torn Europe. The world's largest telescope, the Palomar Observatory, was built in California. Claude Shannon wrote the first paper outlining information theory in 1947. And much more such as the ten best film noir movies like He Walked by Night, I Walk Alone, Key Largo, They Live By Night, The Night Has a Thousand Eye and many more. The troops were back home and had brought a contagion with them: global conflict, suburban capitalism, mass death. Film noir encapsulated an existential dread, presaging Panic In The Year Zero, as not just a 1962 film but  a legacy and a concept. (The same feel he got when he watched the Walking Dead.) Most memorable line in ...Zero: "there are no more civilians, we are all soldiers now." Thus was inaugurated the sublimated march of American modernity (and hence the world); the human brood that hatched then and around that fateful year would bear the brunt as well as the pleasures of what was to come and the 'progress' --toward what?--that never ceases to come. (In the background then and increasingly so now) are always two options given: the messianic saving in one form of other, machine or tyrant; the other being existence in a catastrophic landscape of nihilism. The one of Law and nothing to either side of that: a coercive vacuity or..just vacuity.  Chaos generates the law, but only the law will allow us to gain access to chaos. Roberto Calasso.  The subtle body began to shimmer on screens worldwise but all in search of an alchemical perfect body, perfect fusion.

He could say that well, he was stored away in a little southern hamlet (like thousands of others in the brood) but he and all others were locked away in the grip of the image (what is it?!! What is it??!  'can't tell, too diaphanous') becoming more solid.  And like the Magicicada periodicity they all came out together. and like the periodicity of certain bamboos flowering cycle of up to a hundred and thirty years (where they all flower and die at the same time no matter how differentiated in locale or climate, no matter how far apart they are.) No one knows the exact mechanism.

Thus the perfect body of childhood is locked in. Looking back, O how sweet it felt to him; watching his son only intensified the sweetness, a nectar that seemed to ooze from everything, every memory, every section of the street, the hill,the storefronts, even those long gone he easily glazed past what is into what was, giving a bitterness, no, he guessed it was reality that was so bitter, the minefield and perpetual power struggles of what it was to be a sane functioning adult having moulted into at least some hardened shape to withstand the blows.

But if O. were here he knew what he would say:
quit your hypomystical mooning!
Tell colorful stories of bb guns and boomerangs
of back dirt roads, of moonshiners and uncles gone bad,
  dying of liver failure, vignettes of crazy aunts, of race, sing kum ba yaa,
tell stories of pink '57 Chevies, of ramshackle farm houses, 
of twins with green teeth, digging up ants and putting them in jars,
of flowing around on soft summer nights 
with cousins, hard at war,
of despicable dry summer afternoons, the deadness so palable you could snap the day in two like match sticks, tell stories for god sakes, not this misrable rumbling around, sniffing the air like that mad dog...for all that just tell mad dog stories.
SOMEthing ANYthing 
,
But no one knows the exact mechanisms.