"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Emergence

Going through the Burn was a politically affirming experience for me. It refreshed my feeling that better things are possible, and reminded me how many Good People there are who just need a little nudge, a little taste of starry connection in order to catch fire themselves. There's an amazing amount of good work being done now by an amazing amount of people. I might be joining the fray full time soon (crossing fingers double-time), and won't that be something if it happens.

In the mean time, the web continues to provide a place for decent people to express quality things. Here's a brilliantly written, very well researched, often hillarious dissection of the right-wing's attempt to smear Cruz Bustamante for his college-days involvement with a Latino student group. Bustamante is the top Democratic candidate running in the California recall. Hopefully the recall itself, which is a sham and a hack, will fail. Even if it does, this man is going to be the next governor; and it's about time.

Read More

Tags: 

Decompression Notes

Words are still failing; I have a book (journal) which I wrote a lot of little things in. I have some audio tape I recorded as well. I haven't reviewed anything as of yet, but i will sometime soon. Expect more complete reportage in the future. Here are my notes on the re-entry, the "decompression" as the parlance of the event would have it.

You feel a little bit like a subversive, coming back from Black Rock City; covered in dust and sun and sweat, rambling suburban California with a head full of dreams, like a free radical, a catalyst, something strong and sexy. You have a tan and are comfortable with your body. Your smile is infectious. You walk tall, high in spirit on a deep speedball of fatigue and human possibility. You are an emmisary from the future and the feeling is good.

I'm almost tempted not to tell stories; it would sound like a freak show... which it is, but that's not the point, that's not why I'll be going back. Burning Man is like anything else in life. It's what you make of it. The value is in what you take away, what sticks with you, what lands. Some people make it a lifestyle, neo-tribal hippy gypsy fasionistas in wild painted buses with stripper poles and disco balls and flaming tailpipes. People get married. All this and more I saw.

I saw. A certain level of spectatorship -- a dirty word on the playa -- is inevitable your first time. It's hard to understand how to be there, hard to believe that there's nothing stopping you from being completely honest. So you look around. You look for your people. You look for a place to fit in, somewhere where the forms are set for you.

I read some of my text at the center camp cafe; pretty well-received, but too general to really feel like a scene. The place where I was camped wasn't really my home groove. It was a journey for me to understand my own responsibility in finding my way; a lot of solo ranging and self-discovery.

Eventually it all came though and I became something of an instant veteran, looking down my nose at the clueless ugly americans, rolling my eyes at frat boys and candy ravers. Not that I intend any kind of exclusion, but by Sunday evening I think people should Get It already. Judgmental, sure, but honest.

Now that I'm decompressing, I'm much more magnanimous. On the way home, stopping off outside Reno and answering questions from locals I was positive and encouraging; so what if you need new teeth? That don't mean you spirit can't soar.

So it's a process, finding your niche in Black Rock City. I'm in progress for sure, but it's a positive thing. I'm glad I was there and I'm glad I'm back in the square world straddling the gap, fulfilling my role as a middlegrounder, taking the mojo out and sewing the seeds of new and better things.

Read More

Tags: 

Fire Retro Rockets

This eagle has landed. There's more to tell than can be told, and the peaks of the experience are at the moment off the chart; beyond belief indeed. I now have 700+ emails to sort, so if you need me you'd better call or have another bottle of patience. It will take some time.

Read More

Tags: 

Blast Off

Ciao for now. I'm here for a week.

In a bright ray of hope, Tom Friedman (who I've been loathing for being a jingo bitch) is finally starting to get it, talking about the war in Iraq as The Big One. "We may fail because to win The Big One, we need an American public, and allies, ready to pay any price and bear any burden, but we have a president unable or unwilling to summon either." Maybe that's why it really wasn't a good idea in the first place, natch.

Read More

Tags: