Wednesday, November 7, 2012



 
--I COULD WATCH THE STARS COLLIDE AND NEVER BE SATISFIED

…I watched the election results eagerly.  It’s pretty clear we have different political and ideological beliefs, but I still find it disturbing to see our nation painted either red or blue, as if we’re either one hue or another, as if we’re just a color.  It seems symbolic, if not idiotic.  It smacks of divide, like The Civil War yet reduces us all down to simpletons.
There were over 1 billion political ads that ran. 
$6 billion dollars were spent on the campaigns.
And now it’s all over and after having felt a little anticlimactic.

…Here are some things I learned this week:

-Kobe Bryant will make $27,849,000 this year, not including endorsements

-Two-thirds of all American adults are overweight or obese

-Former President we would most enjoy a burger with:
Clinton -22%
Lincoln -15%
Reagan -14%
Kennedy -14%

-If you saw a family struggling to cross illegally from Mexico to the US, what do you think you'd do?
41% -Report them
30% -Look the other way
18% -Help them

-How often do you wash your hands after using a public restroom?
70% -Always
29% -Sometimes
1% -Never

-Full-time workers' typical weekday (hours: minutes):
9:12 -Work
7:36 -Sleep
3:24 -Other
2:54 -Leisure, sports
:54 -Household work

-What would you give up to have your child's education paid for?
54% -Cable TV
45% -Babysitters
42% -All my vacation days
27% -My cellphone
22% -Visits to the dentist

-Number of electronic cigarette sales in the US
2008 -50,000
2009 -150,000
2010 -750,000
2011 -2.5 Million
2012 -3.5 Million

Monday, November 5, 2012


 
--THIS IS THE PART WHERE I SAY WHERE I STAND

…Good morning, Monday. 
The sun is shining, almost too brightly, so much so that I’m wearing a Syracuse baseball cap to shield my eyes from the glare.

…I read stories this morning for my editing gig at Metazen.  Stories and poems.  They were all a little average.  Usually 1 out of 10, or 1 out of 12 is what I end up accepting.  It’s fun to find a great piece and to be able to tell the writer you’re publishing them.  I know what a boost that can be.

 ...I had these two stories published today in Silent Stories: http://silentthings.com/fiction/len-kuntz-2-flash-fiction-pieces/

 …Tomorrow’s the election.  I’m excited.  I’ll be one of those few people staying up all night as the results trickle in.

…Here are some things I discovered that might interest you:

…Where Americans say they are in achieving the American Dream:
40% Have a ways to go
24% Have achieved it
21% Don't think about it
15% Unlikely to achieve it

…$3,000 -Cost to air the very first Super Bowl
$3.8 Million –Cost to place a 30 second advertisement in the upcoming Super Bowl

States with the lowest beer consumption per person:
#1 -Utah
#2 -Connecticut
#3 -New York
#4 -New Jersey
#5 -Maryland

States with the highest beer consumption per person:
#1 -New Hampshire
#2 -North Dakota
#3 -Montana
#4 -South Dakota
#5 -Nevada

Which one of the following families would you most want your children to marry into?
37% -The Obama family
22% -Kennedy's
20% -British Royal Family
2% -Kardashian Family

Which of the following awards would you most want on your mantel?
40% -Olympic Gold
36 -Pulitzer
7% -Oscar
6% -Grammy
2% -Tony

Do you consider Scientology to be a true religion?"
70% -No
13% -Yes

What would you rather lose-your smartphone or your wallet?
20% -Wallet
74% -Smartphone

62 -Percentage who voted in the 2008 election
90 -Percentage who say they intend to vote this time
85 -Percentage who watch election results unfold on TV
20 -Percentage who say a political argument with their partner is a turn-on
44 -Percent who get into political arguments at work
32 -Percent who say their political views are veering closer to their parents
32 -Percent who say they change the channel when a political ad comes on TV
9 -Percent who say the First Lady factors into their voting decision
1 in 5 -Number of men who say they wouldn't date a woman whose politics opposed theirs

Due to drought, the apple crop has dropped by 79% this year in the Midwest, 36% in the South

…A recent headline in the newspaper said this:
"Artic Sea Levels Hit Record Lows: Scientists Say We're Running Out Of Time"
It quoted scientists as saying we're headed for disaster.  One scientist said, "I'm shit scared."

Saturday, November 3, 2012


--I'M A BOOMERANG

…As I mentioned, I’ve been watching “Homeland” (and you should be, too.)  One of the things I’ve learned from watching it is that it is teaching me how to be a better writer.  (I’ve always believed you can learn from almost anything, if you allow yourself.)  For instance, when I’m writing a scene now, where the character’s face is basically telling the story non-verbally, I think back to the show, and remember Brody (the lead actor in “Homeland”), and how his eyes, his sweat, his twitches, the motion of his mouth…how all or any of it could convey a million more meanings than words could—and I try to write my character that way.

Not to sound preachy, but I think to grow, we have to learn, and we have to keep ourselves open enough to do so.

…Next week at this time I’ll be in Las Vegas.  It’s my second trip there this year.  I’ll be with my brothers.  They’re all army vets.  One is a war hero from Viet Nam.  Another is a Lieutenant Colonel.

When I was a boy, about ten or so, my brother was in Nam.  I’d seen TV coverage of combat there and was pretty aware of what was going on.  I remember feeling guilty that my brother was over there and I wasn’t, so to punish myself, I’d walk shirtless in the cold rain for hours.  I know that’s a pretty stupid thing to do, yet that’s what I did.

Once, my parents got their hands on a ration packet.  I can’t recall if my brother had sent it to them or what.  It came in a small cardboard box, about the size of what you’d get if you didn’t finish your meal at a restaurant and they boxed it up for you.  Inside was a can of some nasty tasting juice, stale bread and a tin of something that resembled –both in sight and taste—cat food.  It was dry, chunky, and somewhat pink.  I don’t think I’ve ever eaten anything so awful.

We passed the tins around and took little flaky bites.  I remember trying not to vomit, then feeling bad that I was considering puking.

“You think you’ve got it bad,” they’d say.

But I never thought I had it bad.  I didn’t know one way or another.

…Over 4,400 soldiers have died in the recent Iraqi war.

…Over 2,000 have died in Afghanistan.

…A staggering 58,000 soldiers were killed in Viet Nam.

…It’s all a little bit daunting, and has been on mind a lot lately.  A year and a half ago, the son of a friend of mine died in Afghanistan.  His platoon was clearing a roadside area when he stepped on an IED.  This is the story I wrote for him that appeared in Troubadour 21:

 
                                                                            Improvised
                                                           

                                                                   for Eric Ward

 
            We took turns stealing, little things at first, then larger items as the day progressed.  “I think I can get the cooler,” Clay said.

“Don’t be stupid,” I said.  “You’ll get busted.  We’ll get busted.”

When he came out of the 7/11 he not only had a cooler but two six packs of light beer and a bag of crushed ice.  I expected him to be grinning but he looked disappointed. 

 

My brothers kept dying.  That’s the way my mom put it when she described her half dozen miscarriages.  “God takes care of his mistakes,” she said.  I wondered about that, questions springing up like leaks.  “But I got you,” she said.  “You’re more than enough for any mother.  And you, you’ve got Clay.”

Clay lived next door to us.  His dad sold life insurance and had tried to kill himself twice.  Clay never talked about his mother and she was not around. 

He liked to hunt and used just a bow and arrow.  He got elk and could skin and gut them himself.   He got a black bear once.  He got a dean’s wife, too.

He was blonde and tan with eyes the color of sea glass.  He drove an old Willy’s Jeep and wore ratty shirts and puka shells.  He liked to start fires for no reason other than boredom.  Once a field fire got away from him and we spent two hours hopping on weed flames until our tennis shoes melted into fondue.  He never apologized because we never got caught.

Another time we ate mushrooms and went to the Asotin County Fair.  The colors were liquid and streaky like squirt gun sprays of neon shooting through my corneas.  Then everything was funny, even the sad, overweight ticket taker with mustard on the knees of his pants. 

There was a bluff where the end of the Fair trailed off into field and we climbed it.  A few times I thought I’d fall and for some reason the idea didn’t scare me at all.  I expected to fly or be caught by the ever-present hand of God.  I had a lot of thoughts. 

At the top we gasped, my lungs blazing, thirstier than I’d ever been in my life.  We spotted a couple rolling around on top of each other beneath a tree.  They were all skin and hair and limbs and sounds.  It felt wrong to look, to listen.

Clay couldn’t get enough of the pair, only he was crying.  I’d never seen that before.  It made me queasy.  “Hey, what’s going on?” I asked, but he didn’t say.

 

I was pretty angry that he’d joined up without telling me.  When I asked why, his dad shrugged through the phone, saying “It’s just something he had to do.”  I hoped I’d be a stronger man than Clay’s father when I had a kid of my own, but I wasn’t sure.

Like everybody else, I forgot about the wars.  They were starting to put out movies about the conflicts, none of them really blockbusters.  I went to one by myself.  It felt so real, which is how I knew the director had made it all up.

They call them I.E.D.’s, Improvised Explosive Devices.  They’re homemade bombs, booby traps.  Your boot heel catches on a wire in the dirt and you end up a mush of dust and blood.

So I’m not sure what they buried in his casket, maybe mementoes—his puka shells, yearbook photos.

After the funeral I drove to the old store and parked in the lot and sat there wishing I smoked.  I tried to conjure up a spark of nostalgic fear but my nerves had short circuited.  Instead I thought about the things we’d stole, forgetting where we’d put them.


Thursday, November 1, 2012




--IT STARTED WITH A WHISPER

...Rabbit Rabbit.

…Today is the start of NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month whereby a viral community of writers attempts to complete an entire novel in the month of November.
I’m going to take a swing at it.  We’ll see.
Yesterday I wrote a few pages.  It begins with a drunk teenager hitting a girl with his car.
“Shattered” is the working title.  I’ve started this novel before and got 165 pages in, then gave up.  I keep coming back to the characters—orphaned twins, Eve and Eddy, and so the pull is there to move on with it.

…I live in the boondocks, as I have said many times.  Not a single Trick-or-Treater has ever shown up in the last six years.  I miss that.  I love kids and like seeing them dressed up and giddy.

...It seems like everything is getting bigger and more intense.  Events, I mean.  I thought it was just me—thinking Halloween was being made into this extravaganza, but then I read that Americans spent $80 million on the holiday this year, compared with $48 million in 2005.
Football—the NFL—is the same way.  Just watch Monday, Sunday or Thursday nights.  Each game is replete with some celeb singing the national anthem, fireworks, pageantry, and then the shows themselves have elaborate (and ridiculous) theme songs.
We are a nation, like Texas, that likes oversized things.

…I’m watching “Homeland.”  If you aren’t, you should be.  It’s a smart show, going the opposite way you think, which is an important ingredient when it comes to plotting.  The acting is most excellent, as is the direction and writing.  “Homeland.”  Go watch it now.

…Here are some things that make me think:

-"What's real is if you do your scales every day, if you slowly try harder and harder pieces, if you listen to great musicians play music you love, you'll get better."
-"On a bad day you don't need a lot of advice.  You just need a little empathy and affirmation.  You need to feel once again that other people have confidence in you."
-"I think this is how we are supposed to be in the world--present and in awe." --Anne Lamott

“Never mind. The self is the least of it. Let our scars fall in love” Galway Kinnell

"There are two ways of exerting one's strength: one is pushing down, the other is pulling up." Booker T. Washington
 
"A champion is someone who gets up when he can't." Jack Dempsey

"How do you thank a person who saves your life?" Doug Crandell, "The Flawless Skin of Ugly People"

Monday, October 29, 2012


--IF YOU'RE NOT GOING TO USE THAT, YOU SHOULD GIVE IT BACK TO ME


...Good moring.  How is your week starting?  Hopefully you are safe from the storm.

Where I am it's windy also.  Gusts keep slamming my windows and it feels as if the glass might burst.  That would be an upleasant way to die, being sliced with shards.

...Here's a story I wrote two years ago that appeared in Apocrypha Abstractions:

 

                                                            Facts about the Moon


He wanted to tell me facts about the moon.   When I didn’t have time, he wrote them down for me on sky blue construction paper using chalk and diagramming solar systems that had once looked familiar but now seemed bizarre, like a picture of one’s self in the distant future when they are saggy-skinned and brown-spotted.

We were young then, my boy and I, though it didn’t feel that way at the time.  Still, now I remember once we ate bananas and stuffed our gums with large chunks of the fruit and something got into me because I made shrieking monkey sounds and scratched my arm pits and hopped all over the couch dancing.  My boy, my boy he laughed so hard he almost choked to death.  When he finally caught his breath, he said, “That would have been a fun way to go,” and I think he meant it.

Tonight when I pulled into our development and saw the long limos and the strapless gowned teens with their wrist corsages and spearmint smiles I wondered what he might have looked like wearing a tux, a rash of acne on his cheek, nervous as all hell but handsome I bet.  She’d have been blonde like Mary, sweet yet sassy, too.  And I would have liked her.

Now I’ve got a drink in my hand and I keep studying my son’s galaxy picture.  There are spindly stars, rockets and oval planets, but the moon dominates.  Luna is a warbled jawbreaker hovering in space, yet drawn with curved edges so that it appears to be spinning right out of its own orbit, its trapped dimension.  I don’t know what any of it means.  I should have asked when I had the chance.

Right as I’m folding the paper up, I notice on the back side something he’s written in pencil at the base, the font a nine year old’s unsteady scrawl.  The lead is faint and smeared.  I hold it up close enough that I can smell the dusty wheat smell.  “Facts about the Moon,” it says.  “Fact One: even when you’re not aware of it, the moon is always there, waiting for you to look up over your head and notice it.”

That’s all it says.

I get up and walk to the window, draw back one of the blinds.  It’s been clear all week but now the night is so stuffed with clouds that nothing else is visible.  I stand like that, looking, waiting for the light to break through, not worried about how long it will take, just waiting.

 

 

Friday, October 26, 2012



--I LIKE TO HEAR YOU LAUGH

 
…I cut my hair.  It’s the shortest it’s been in decades.  Normally I am the shaggy, long-locked type.  A friend told me I had “wacky writer hair.”  Now I have John Ham hair and I don’t necessarily like it.

…Did you know, aside from Christmas, that Halloween is the most commercial holiday we have in terms of consumer spending?  Kind of weird.
For Halloween, Americans spend:
$370 million on costumes for PETS
$1 billion on costumes for kids
$1.2 billion on costumes for adults
1.1 billion pounds of pumpkins are bought

As a kid, Halloween was always my favorite holiday.  Growing up poor, in a large family without snacks or candy available, it was a special kind of enterprise and I’d take a pillow case and run door-to-door collecting as much as I could, then back home, I’d sort the booty by category and ration it out so that it would last as long as possible.

My costumes were always homemade, simple and undeniably non-threatening.  Once I dressed as a female but couldn’t handle the high heels and so I threw them off to expedite my Trick-or-Treating.

Once I was a dishelved pirate.

…I’ve been thinking a lot about the notion of friendship and how important friends are.  I’m at a place in my life—a writer who sits in a space all day alone—where subjects such as friendship percolate readily.

It’s hard to live alone, without any connections.  When you get to a certain point, you realize that friendships require effort and so I’m trying to be the best friend I can be, whenever I can.

…I like these things for the weekend:

"A friend is one who sees through you and still enjoys the view." Wilma Askinas

"And I think, that's what we should all leave behind.  Faucets that work.  That don't drip." Alex Pruteanu

”People tend to think of happiness as a stroke of luck, something that will descend like fine weather if you're fortunate. But happiness is the result of personal effort. You fight for it, strive for it, insist upon it, and sometimes even travel around the world looking for it. You have to participate relentlessly." Elizabeth Gilbert

 "A crooked road, a road in which the foot feels acutely the stones beneath it, a road that turns back on itself--this is the road of art." Shkolovsky

"Every man has his own courage, and is betrayed because he seeks in himself the courage of other persons." Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Writing is one hard slog, and those who practice it, need all the help we can get." Carol LaChapelle

"I think that's how we leave, signaling our impostors to replace us." Erica Wright

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

--GIVING THE ACADEMY A RAINCHECK

 
…It’s a good morning, a great morning.

I awoke to find my story, “Homebound” was one of only two nominated for The Pushcart Prize at MICROW.  (The piece is below.)

Also, I have a new story, one of my favorites, because I love he narrator’s loyalty and diligence, up at Pure Slush:

http://pureslush.webs.com/onegreatlove.htm
 

                                                                     One Great Love

           

            She was a constipated mail-order bride who had yet to arrive.  So he sent her emails and texts in her foreign language, sometimes misspelling words.  Eventually, he even reverted to old-fashioned letters.

            After a while, he wondered if she was real.  The advertisement claimed she was and he had had those initial contacts with her.  He’d sent money, too, via his credit card over the internet.

            Afterward she, or the website, kept updating her life.  New photos showed she’d gained a little weight and now had an adorable muffin top.  She wore less jewelry and had cut her hair in a choppy bob.  He adjusted his computer settings so her images could be magnified, yet the closer he looked the less he could tell if she was happy or content.

            His friend told him he was being played, that he’d be best off calling The Better Business Bureau, yet he didn’t want to spoil his chances of meeting her by looking flakey and indecisive.

            Even though the flights sometimes arrived late, he showed up at the airport each Monday an hour early.  He knew many of the TSA agents and, for fear of being thought a terrorist, he was always overly polite while waiting as close to the exit gates as allowed.  One of the uniformed women was nearly a granny and she often greeted him with a sad little pouch of a smile, as if she was disappointed or depressed for him.  But she couldn’t possibly know, could never understand.

            This was the great love of his life.  His father had told him we only get one of those, and his father had demonstrated as much, waiting by his wife’s bedside as she struggled, then withered, then died.

            While driving to the airport, he played mix tapes of songs he thought his future wife would enjoy.  He constantly rehearsed his greeting.  He was going to make a good first impression if it killed him.

            One day she sent a Friend Request through social media and his heart soared.  She was so glad he hadn’t given up on her.  She missed him, too.  Times were very rough in her country and her mother had grown sick.  He told her he knew what that was like.  Be patient, she said, and he told her would, no matter how long.

            Then they started talking on the phone.  For hours they spoke.  As incredible as it was, he fell even more in love with her.

            Their impasse went on for months, years, decades, and still they kept communicating.  On his death bed, a very old man now, he imagined what their life would have been like if they’d ever physically met.  Almost every married couple divorced, often in bitter dispute, and so he realized they’d been spared all that.  Smiling as he passed away, he said her name aloud, said, “I love you,” and whether it was true or not, he believed that somewhere, wherever she was, she heard him.

 

                         
                                                                      Homebound
 

            We watched it smolder.  Water cannons shot arcs over the remaining flames and the weight of water combined with the charred cinders collapsed the building, sending plumes of smoke across the lot where we once lived.

            Magic, black or otherwise.  Hell opening up from underneath the earth.    Hell, it was, or had been.

            I took Tina’s hand.  It was small as a dog paw.  I said, “It’s okay,” and pressed hard for reassurance.

            I patted my back pocket.  The money I’d taken was a thick wad.  It didn’t make me any less nervous, but it provided spurs of hopefulness.

            We walked in the opposite direction of the commotion, well away from the fire trucks and gawkers.  Our Foster parents wouldn’t be back for several hours unless they’d been called.  The firemen would search for us and find no bones, but it’d be too late anyway.

            Tina and I went through the wooded greenbelt.  Eventually, we came to an abandoned church. 

            The window glass was stained in grape juice and berry colors, gems that made me think of sucking candy.  When you put the pieces together, they made up a medieval woman praying while two angels hovered over her shoulders.

            We went in through the back door, down the hall.  My heart was probably beating as hard as Tina’s, but the place was empty of people.

            Inside the main sanctuary, ceilings reached up sky-high and there were more glass murals of saints and whatnot.

            Tina said we should leave, but I held her hand tight and tugged her until we got right up to the front row where the good seats were.  When I turned, I saw three aisles and quickly counted 36 long, mahogany pews.

            “Sit,” I said.

            Tina did, but she asked a penny for my thoughts.

            I was a big reader because The Fosters wouldn’t let us watch television.  There weren’t many novels around The Foster Home, so I read whatever was handy—the Bible with its contradictions, road maps, an atlas, The Yellow Pages.  One book I’d found was called “Alienation Nation.”  It had this particular passage that got me thinking.  It said something like a house is a building, while a home is a house where love exists among families.  I knew that was true without having to be told, but after I’d read those words, they settled in me like grout between tiles, and quite frankly, they were the reason I started plotting the fire in the first place. 

            Tina asked were we going to live here, in the church.  I said it didn’t matter, didn’t matter where we lived because if she and I stayed together we’d make a fine enough life for ourselves.  I could tell she didn’t believe me.  Her confidence lacked because I let Mr. Foster call her names and punch me around whenever he started scratching himself.

            A selfish urge in me prodded that I explain about arson and what I’d done and how I’d done it.  Everyone wants the gratitude of others, even if it doesn’t make you quite a hero.

            Instead I said, “Let me tell you something you don’t know yet.”

            I went on and on with the story of our lives and the wonderful things that were going to happen. 

            I started it on Christmas day in the far future.  I was a grown man and she a woman with a husband and two great kids.  I described her youngins and the gift exchanges, how the food tasted and how the room smelled like cinnamon and turkey gravy, but when Tina asked for me to detail the house and the way the rooms were outfitted, I said it didn’t make a difference.  I said it wasn’t a house she lived in, it was something much better.