Category Archives: Uncategorized

Platonic Dilemma

Does it surprise you that life just keeps happening, balanced on the blunt edge of choice? The challenges of life always deepen to match you at every point, and never stop calling you forward onto an ever-lengthening road. No matter what decisions we make, we know that any resulting bliss or agony will be largely temporary, any new human connection will be mixed with alienation, and any new truth will only provide more ground for uncertainty.

Our deepest internal flaws will forever confront us, and are reflected in every moment. In life, we perceive exactly the challenges we’re ready for, and we will never find a situation that provides lasting contentment, by virtue of how we’re built, not how the world is built. The world we perceive is a projection of ourselves.

Brain scientists, Plato, Heidegger and others agree: we create our world. There is a huge gulf between the messy data that we’re exposed to, and the orderly world we experience. Ours is a world of actions and properties and causation, even though these things are not really out there. The things that we perceive do not exist at all. Man is the measure of everything we know, but nothing at all. If you saw the world from a fly’s perspective, or a tree’s, it would be largely unrecognizable. The world no doubt exists in some form, but it is just beyond our perceptions of it.

What if every aspect of our world is explainable in this way? What if everything we experience is just a reflection of our own yearnings, like a dream? The people we sit near on the train, the flies that never leave our food alone, the latest news never actually happened. I meet the women I do because they represent the beauty I’m ready to perceive and patches on the flaws I hide in myself. We are like genius amoebas, experiencing primitive sensations and creating an elaborate story to occupy ourselves.

I do believe there’s something outside of us. There is a potential to do good and pursue love. Our actions in this created world have some effect on the real world. I suspect that the real world is much more inside us than we realize (we don’t think any part of the world is inside us now), and that actions are only proxies for the real work being done internally-and-in-reality. Life is a fabulous and very-serious game, specifically designed by our own minds out of their encounter with a primordial something. We are offered the opportunity to pursue this woman because she represents beauty, or to help this child as an exercise in providing.

Something in this scares me to the core of my being. I believe that the world runs by scientific laws because I’ve been told it does. But my own experiments in school have more often defied those laws than confirmed them. It is as though the world was knocking on my consciousness’s door, asking to let it defy everything I know. If there’s no science, then no biology, no technology, no civilization. My whole life may be like the delusions of a man in a coma, yet littered with clues of its falsehood and the muffled voice of someone trying to talk me out of it.

Time Gone

Where does the time go? I’ve been thinking a lot about the nature of time and the virtues and vices of priority.

I’m in Prague, in a huge two-bedroom, four-meter-high flat. Flame and I have started discovering the hip and eccentric as well as the beautiful and historical.

Since last post, we drove all over the south of France with friends, had adventures on low gas at midnight in nowhere, and attended the most precious contemporary art festival in the world (Art Basel).

The best way to know about my goings-on is to read Flame’s blog on the Travelers Network: http://travelersnetwork.org/johanna.

Leicester Square, London

Here’s the last of three posts I mean to write about recent events.

Flame and I are in London! We didn’t mean to be– we should have been in Marseille, France, by now. But such is the price of weather in Philly.

After visiting a half dozen half-price ticket booths near Leicester Square (Leicester Square half-price ticket booth, The half-price ticket booth, The official half-price ticket booth, and The half-official Leicester-price booth, among them), we got some full-price tickets to see Wicked, the Mists of Avalon of Oz.

In celebration Johanna ducked into a steakhouse for a bathroom. I started handing out Travelers Network flyers on the busy Leicester way, which is populated more with flyer-hander-outers than not.

A young man and woman approached. “Wahnt one?”, the woman asked, holding out a yellow leaflet.

“Sure, want to trade?” I offered her a flyer.

“No, its for a show, for tonight,” the guy said.

“I’ve already got plans, but I’ll take one if you’ll take one,” I explained.

“Waht? Ewe cahnt be seerias.”

“It’s a social network for travelers. Here, look.”

“Oh! I’m trahvelling next month!” To Argentina and Brazil– and Iguazu falls– it turned out. We chatted and she took a flyer, and I got away paper-free.

Trip and Space and Time

I don’t trip very often, but the sometimes are usually incredible, and a week ago I had perhaps the best psychedelic experiences to date. What made it incredible was not hallucinations but realizations– about the nature of reality and time and relationships and helping the world.

The story is long, but it deserves it.

A very intense trip

Get Your Own Personal Chef

My beautiful and talented girlfriend, Johanna, wants to cook your dinner!

Johanna was a personal chef in NYC, taught at French cooking school, and has worked in myriad cafes and bakeries. She enjoys combining flavors in inventive ways, and has the best food sense I’ve ever met.

And she has free time, being underemployed! The deal is you pay $50 an hour, from which she’ll buy food, make it, and clean it up. That’s for a family-full of people, and other situations are negotiable. The best nights are Tuesday or Wednesday. She’s vegetarian, so her experience with meat is limited, but she knows fish.

Reply to me if you’re interested and tell your friends!

Writers Anonymous Group

I want writing to be a much bigger part of my life! I’m mainly interested in writing non-fiction: essays, analysis, persuasion, particularly after reading the excellent On Writing Well. But I suppose that the absolute mastery of the English language is found only in traveling all its paths, so I’m forming a…

Writers Anonymous Group!

This was ‘s idea, but she’s busy and gave me her blessing in starting my own (while reserving the right to start her own later).

Here’s what I wrote to a list:

Want to improve your writing style and practice the mechanics and art of writing? Want more people to read and comment on your work?

Join the Writers Anonymous Group!

Writing pieces would generally be 2 - 12 pages, submitted every other week or once a month. The other members in the group will review them, and then we'll meet (on IM or Skype) and discuss the work.

People of all backgrounds and levels of experience are welcome! You can focus on short stories, poetry, journalism, essays, plays; pieces of a long work or different projects every meeting.

If there's interest, we can include readings-on-writing and different challenges to write particular kinds of pieces.

If you're interested, email me and tell your friends!

I’m leaving Boston again soon– looks like June– so this will be a distributed support group for people who want to write, meeting online (hence, anonymous). I think it will be really fun, and good incentive and feedback for writing. Let us make words!

So tell me you want to join and start writing!

No Oxford this year!

The development studies department was late with their letters, from the onrush of applicants this year, so they attached it in email: Don’t come. Tudo bem! Now I can try applying to grad school the way I tell other people to try– make correspondence with the people you want to advise you and go wherever they are. But that’s a whole year away; it’s time for me to make plans for this year!

I wanted to wait for whatever imminent news from Oxford before posting– Flame got hers a week ago (not this year)– but I suspect that my application got shuffled into the later-applicant pool after a snafu with my transcript. So, moving on!

I’m back in Cambridge! It’s fascinating to see what’s changed in seven short months, what’s remained, and what was already history before I left it. But I’ve gotten back into the rhythm of the land, quickly enough, and the sweet and salty of it is not much different.

I now have a beautiful apartment, Bluehouse. It’s on Highland Ave., a ways after it’s forgotten its Davis roots, but not far from Porter. The other residents seem really cool, and the whole place– from stairway to bathroom– is filled with art.

I have a new cell phone. Ask me for the number.

I am going to Burning Man! I hope to stay with Auto-Sub and help with their preparations! I have a plan for an art installation, if I can get the equipment together!

Outside of A.I. work (which I adore), my big todos for the season include documenting my Brazil experiences, expanding the Travelers Network, authoring an O.C.W. course, writing on work revolutions, developing my Forum Projects, and taking a driving class. And, I’m building a mailing list for virtual seminars– information in the next post!

Coming Back!

I can barely believe it, but I have ticket to prove it: I’m coming back to Boston! Not for more than six months, but for more than a visit. I’m tired of traveling, I’m in love, and I have jury duty– it’s time to come home.

Anyone know of rooms available for six months? If I get into Oxford, I’ll be heading there around September. Otherwise, I’ll probably go live in San Francisco for a while, and maybe head there early to prep for Burning Man. I can’t wait for the next bite of life!