Republican MSNBC Debates (Not on the Elliptical/On the Elliptical?)

Posted September 7, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: 9/11, news

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

After I stopped exercising

I worked out today, not while writing my blog on the elliptical machine, but while listening to the elliptical debate of the Republican presidential candidates.

Two of the meanings of “elliptic” according to the Free Dictionary (okay, not the most authoritative source but good enough) are:

“a.  Of or relating to extreme economy of oral or written expression.
b.    Marked by deliberate obscurity of style or expression.”

These two meanings seem at first contradictory.  As someone whose tends both to run on and muddle, I would normally characterize ‘economic’ expression as clear/precise.

And yet, as I listened to the Republican debaters, the two meanings of elliptic meshed.  Almost every candidate tried to pepper his or her answers with catch phrases–lines that were short and memorable–but hopefully not clear enough to alienate.   (Economic ideas, that is, solutions for the economy–other than “fix it,” “grow it,” “trust in Amex,” and forget about anything green, except for cash, seemed especially obscure.)

A few odd juxtapositions: Governor Perry, when attacked for his executive order requiring young girls to get vaccinated against HPV, claimed that he will always err on the side of life.  Later, Perry said, however, in a voice that grew more gun-smokey as his answer went on, that his sleep was never troubled by the high number of executions in Texas. v Romney talking about poorer non-taxpaying Americans as not supporting the troops.  (Ahem, Mitt, who makes up most of the troops?)   Bachmann inviting Ronald Reagan into the no-raising taxes pledge group.

Those juxtapositions could probably be labeled as trivial.  But one, which was particular to me, seemed more serious.  This arose not from what the Republican candidates said, but from my particular day.  With all the emphasis on 9/11 here in NYC, a friend had me listen to a very sad clip about Welles Crowther (the “man with the red bandana”), a young Boston College grad, fledgling securities trader, who led two groups of people down from the 79th floor of the South Tower through the only usable staircase to the safety of ascending firefighters on the 62nd floor.  On his third time up to see whom else he could help, Crowther was caught in the Tower’s collapse.

Catastrophe–disaster–emergency often seems to bring out the best in people.  In contrast longer-term hardship, a state of emergency that becomes the norm,  seems sometimes to wear down those generous instincts–that desire to help others, to step into the brink.  (Perhaps not in extraordinary people like Welles Crowther but certainly in many others. )

In the end, it was a kind of brittleness, a worn-down hardness, that I found most troubling in some of the candidates–a hardness towards the Ponzi-profiting elderly, FEMA-depleting disaster victims, uneducated children, and even towards that old conspiracy-promoting inconveniently-warming Planet Earth.

 

 

(PS – in interests of disclosure, I missed beginning half of debate in which I understand there were a lot of very odd juxtapositions–Perry/Hilarycare/jobs under Dukakis, etc. etc.)

Back to the City And Gym, i.e. Elliptical Machine

Posted September 6, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Blogging, elephants, writing

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

20110906-103308.jpg

Back in the City and my good old multitasking ways, i.e. writing this blog while on the elliptical machine.

There are some great benefits to writing at the gym:

1. Your expectations of both your physical and cognitive performance are automatically lowered the minute you pull out your pen–not only do you not have tea and a madeleine but you are actively pumping your legs. Also, who can be Usain Bolt while writing longhand?

2. No distractions – fellow gym rats tend not to talk to someone scribbling in a composition book.

3. Low cost entertainment – a notebook and pen are substantially cheaper than an iPod.

4. A really great idea (which has not yet come to me) is a perfect reason to cut short your work-out.

5. The need to exercise your upper body is a perfect reason to cut short your blog.

6. The sound of that energizer bunny guy on the Stairmaster (which, when trying to write, bores into your eardrums) makes you feel completely unmanic.

7. The sight of that other guy staring blankly into the air in between nautilus reps (you can’t help staring at him as you try to come up with something to say) makes you feel amazingly prolific.

8. Work those thighs.

9. And fingers.

10. Too late for the abs though; i.e. lost cause.

Hard Landing in Downtown NYC

Posted September 5, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: 9/11, iPad art

Tags: , , , , , , ,

20110905-094435.jpg

One bummer of living in downtown New York City is that any return home, after time away, necessitates a confrontation with a grim political past, i.e. the old World Trade Center site.

When walking past Ground Zero on a daily basis–late to work, late coming home from work–it is easy enough to pay little attention to it. There are the windows of Brooks Brothers, for example, a store I never seem to enter, but always think I should. (I have this belief–never tries–that if I would just buy a few quality pieces that, unlike all the clothes I get online, really fit, I would never be late for anything again.)

Then there is Century 21 whose sidewalk is jammed with people carrying large bags.

And the fire station. Which is distracting because New York City firemen really are quite good looking. (The calendar doesn’t lie.)

Then there are the streets down by the excavation of the old Deutsch Bank building–they are distracting because I once saw a rat in broad daylight/twilight. Right on the sidewalk.

So on a normal workday, there is plenty to think about other than 9/11.

But on a return from a trip, carrying stuff that makes you walk slowly, it is hard to avoid the sight of all the tourists and, worse, the many cameramen. (One reporter was getting his face powdered today). I am being unfair, I suppose, but the energy feels remarkably like rubbernecking. (The powder-faced reporter had a very ostentatiously curled plastic cord snaking behind one ear.)

I will be very happy when this week is over.

Menace then glow.

Posted September 4, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Country weekend

Tags: , , , ,

20110904-101647.jpg

Earlier tonight, the sky turned menacing.

Not more rain! We could hear the heavy machines still working down below on the damage from the last storm (Irene.)

Soon water rifled the sky, punctuated by a couple of huge booms.

The distant growl of machinery cut off; men shouted. Inside the house, the dog stepped from her small bed, tail down.

As suddenly, it stopped.

Inside, the dog lay down. Outside, an afterglow of storm lit up the grass, the trees, the sky, even my socks.

20110904-102004.jpg

Not just my socks.

20110904-102123.jpg

Not stranded in Catskills Anymore. (Darn.)

Posted September 4, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Country weekend, iPad art

Tags: , , , , , ,

20110904-093047.jpg

20110904-093101.jpg

20110904-093120.jpg

20110904-093943.jpg

20110904-094107.jpg

20110904-094132.jpg

Reconstruction in Catskills Post-Irene (Stream-Cleaning?)

Posted September 3, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Country weekend, news

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

The above video may only be really interesting if you are a child (probably male) who really likes the 1939 classic Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel.    I am not such a child.  Even so, seeing (live) the machines working on the stream up here in the Catskills has been pretty extraordinary in the last few days.  The crews are working with speed and good humor, and seem almost as enamored of their big machines as fans of Mike Mulligan.

Disaster conditions apparently allow for a lot of tugging and pulling.  I told the two guys above that their coordination was like a ballet.  My husband, who had noticed the large Harley-Davidson tattoos on the workers’ forearms, thought that was not perhaps the most appropriate compliment, but the guys seemed to like it just fine.

P.S. – the little shriek in the middle of the video is me being surprised (stupidly) by the possibility of flying debris.

A Small Dog Is To A Large Zucchini

Posted September 2, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: dog, poetry

Tags: , , , , , , ,

20110902-081617.jpg

A Small Dog Is To A Large Zucchini

A small dog is to a large zucchini
what a bungalow is to a road (six lane),
what a tadpole is to a Peach Bellini
made from a magnum of Champagne,
what a thimble is to a Fred Fellini
and miso soup was to Charlemagne–
the nexus, to some, seems very teeny,
to others, perhaps, it’s simple, plain.
All I know is that my large zucchini
and my small dog just aren’t the same.

(As always, all rights reserved.)

Working remotely Post-Irene. Normalcy of new milk.

Posted September 1, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: news, Uncategorized, Vicissitudes of Life

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

20110901-102326.jpg

A greater sense of normalcy was felt by this particular evacuee in the Catskills post-Irene today. (For those who have not been following this blog, I am a “Zone A” resident who was evacuated from New York City six days ago. With remarkable foresight, I went to a part of upstate New York that turned out to be a center of flood damage.)

Normal is what you are used to. I am getting more used to the rearrangement of the streams around here. Just as the water is endlessly deepening its new channels, so the sight of those new channels is becoming less shocking to me.

Even working remotely– emailing myself documents to work on, walking out beyond the back porch for calls to my office (the small field there is one of the few places where my cell gets decent reception)–is getting less cumbersome.

A lot of this situation is frankly pretty nice. The days since the flood have been beautiful; doing office work in the open air is lovely.

Then too, there is the wonderful fact that someone made the long roundabout trip of just-opened detour road and the short hike on foot to bring us fresh milk today. (Meaning that my very strong tea with same is assured for a while longer.)

One misses the cameraderie of co-workers. The group groan and grunt The (more or less) set hours. It is easy, working remotely, to start very early, and then because of interruptions–the need of one’s dog or one’s own hind legs to take a walk–to feel pressured to go quite late. (Maybe one doesn’t, in fact, go quite late, but it is certainly easy to feel pressured.)

And yet, of course, it’s all so very lucky–to have options, milk, a dry place to sit. At the other end of the short hike and long roundabout detour, in our nearby Catskill town, many are enmired in dried mud, wondering what comes next.

While, of course, down even longer roads, life goes on as usual. More or less. Until the next crisis. Normal.

Wasting Away Margaretville

Posted August 31, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: news

Tags: , , , , , ,

20110831-094643.jpg

The above is a piece of road outside of Margaretville, New York, post-Irene.

I have not yet been to Margaretville since Irene, largely because of sections of road like the one above. However, I heard two very disturbing bits of news today: first, that much of Margaretville will be demolished given the hazardous conditions created by buildings damaged by Irene. Two, that some Republican congressmen such as Eric Cantor have discussed mounting an effort to withhold funds for FEMA assistance to disaster ravaged areas in the absence of further budget cuts.

The village of Margaretville had the distinction, prior to this demolition, of being a true town. The historically difficult economic conditions of Upstate New York have, perhaps, discouraged the abundance of Walmart’s. As a result, Margaretville was an actual center, with a grocery store, a couple of pharmacies, ice cream parlors, a cheese store, a sports shop, a library, a jewelers, antique store (in an old movie theater), a relatively nice restaurant, greasy spoon, bar, liquor store, thrift shop, children’s/art and clothing store, and (occasional) hair cutters. There was even the “Department Store”–a place where you could (at different times in its history) buy work pants, boots, and rare coins. Canning jars!

Everything was in walking distance, connected by sidewalks. There were a couple of parking lots, one near a stream that sported ducks! (One of them bit my daughter’s finger.) There was an old and somewhat grandiose school building built, I think, from WPA funds.

Huge ice cream cones. (Perry’s.)

Winters are long up here and there is no legalized gambling. This may be another way of saying that it was not a tremendously prosperous town, although lately, owing in part to a popular farmers’ market, local farm businesses and dairies seemed to be coming back.

Not only is Main Street being demolished, but the local trailer park (in Arkville, the adjacent town) has washed away. People who lived there have lost all they owned.

The local road crew has been working very hard, filling in crevices, removing rubble, redirecting new creeks and stream bits, arranging for milk and food to reach families still cut-off. One worker mentioned, when we spoke to him today, that he hadn’t been able to sleep even when he’d finally gotten home each night. If we wanted to donate clothes or food to those in Margaretville, he said, we could take them down to the local fire station. (This assumes we had a large vehicle that could get through the still-ravaged roads. We don’t, but still it’s a big improvement on being stranded.) I didn’t get a chance to ask him what he thought about protecting tax breaks for private jet owners.

Double Yellow Lines Mean “No Passing” – Strips of Road-stripe Catskills Post-Irene

Posted August 30, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: news

Tags: , , , ,

20110830-092131.jpg

20110830-092255.jpg

20110830-092447.jpg

20110830-092603.jpg

20110830-093027.jpg

20110830-093111.jpg

20110830-093209.jpg

20110830-093245.jpg