It is easier to invent stories than to live in reality.
Monday, February 24, 2025
Friday, February 21, 2025
Certainly One Perspective
"Love is a lie. It is a trick played by the cruel on the foolish and the weak, poisoning your mind. Cast it from your mind. Never let it render you frail of mind or will because in my kingdom there is but one law - do not love!"
Freya the Ice Queen, from the movie The Huntsman: Winter's War
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
Too Much of a Reach, Paul
Paul McCartney closed the SNL special that focused on 50 years of musical guests.
Makes sense. He's a Beatle, for Christ sake - one of four from whom all good music is derived.
The special is excellent, by the way. Find it.
But Paul overreached, he chose to perform a portion of the Abby Road medley - specifically Golden Slumbers, Carry That Weight, and The End.
I know he wanted to close out on a rockin' note, and I don't blame him, but he couldn't pull it off. He couldn't do the power, he couldn't handle the range. The man is 82 years old. His voice was strained, it cracked here and there - it was not powerful.
There are a million Beatles' songs and his own songs he could choose from, songs he can probably sing beautifully - many he can even probably, maybe, still rock out on, but he chose these three.
It was painful to me.
I hate that all these people who I worshiped as a kid, still do, are clawing their way to the grave. I fucking hate it. Because in large part it means I have plenty of dirt under my fingernails too.
You gotta be selective about what you choose to perform as an octogenarian. Especially if you are Paul McCartney, the man with such a beautiful voice over a lifetime.
Paul Simon opened the special. He is 83 years old. He sang Homeward Bound, such a beautiful, atmospheric song. But he sang it with Sabrina Carpenter - they split the load, which was smart. And even when Paul sang solo, he was restrained - he did not overdo it. Even then it was a little painful to listen to, but it was not horrible.
I see a lot of these people perform, and why not? They are icons, they have earned the right, they deserve the respect. But most of them make adjustments - they don't go for the high notes, they don't go for maximum volume. As professionals, they know how to recognize their limits and stay within them.
And still create beauty, still bring tears to your soul.
Broke my heart a bit to listen to Paul McCartney straining. It wasn't pretty. I know I sound like a hypocrite - I have shit on him a lot in here. But I also know that I will wake up one of these days to the headline "Paul McCartney is dead at the age of --. Maybe, hopefully, ---.
And on that day I will be crushed.
Dissembler
I was reading some tasty fiction recently and one of the characters was described in this way:
"She was a dissembler."
Holy shit, I thought - that's me. That's a perfect description of me. And I like it because it's a bit of an obscure word - you never use it, do you? Actually, neither do I.
Google AI (which we cannot live without from now on - how did we ever get by without it) defines a dissembler as " a person who hides their true feelings or intentions, or who pretends to have different ones. Synonyms include: hypocrite, pretender, charlatan, deceiver, impostor, fake, and phony."
Wait, what? That's a bit harsh, don't you think?
I dissemble to survive. I tell you what you want to hear because it takes too goddamn much effort to set you straight. Where's the harm? You walk away happy, and I walk away with some energy left in the tank.
If you are family, you get pretty damn close to the truth. I don't bullshit family. Unless you want the truth about what's really going on in my head - you're never going to get that. Shit, man - if I told you the absolute truth about how I feel about myself and my life, you'd put me on suicide watch.
Wait a minute - that's what I've been doing in here for 14 years now.
Shit, now that I think about it, I feel naked. Although there are only a handful of people who read the effluvia that pollutes this blog.
I think it's safe to continue dissembling. Only a few will know the truth.
You look quite distinguished wearing that cravat.
Friday, February 14, 2025
Perfect Description
On the back of every dust jacket on every hardcover book are the tributes.
"Best story I ever read." "Best writer of this genre." "Best writer of diverse genres." "Best writer in the world."
Tributes from fellow writers, from magazines, from professional book review websites.
I have read a million of them. I have ignored a million of them. I recently read the best one ever.
Vince Flynn on John Connolly: "The intensity of a madman and the subtlety of a poet."
It is how I see myself.
No one else sees it because my soul is encased in lead - nothing gets in, nothing gets out.
Still, there is hope.