Better not to start

I really wanted to write about the attacks on America five years ago today.

It’s probably better I don’t begin. I might not ever stop, and even then I might not be able to do justice to what the events of that day did to me, my friends and family, my country, and the world.

Oops… my rant is threatening to begin. Gotta hold back… See, the twin emotions that arise in me when thinking back on that day are anger and… laughter.

Anger, obviously, for the men (and it was entirely men, I believe) that planned and carried out the attacks. And also anger for the men (this time, only largely men, it seems) who used the attacks as political leverage against their own fellow Americans to further their selfish agendas at the expense of anyone who would oppose them.

The twin towers became a pair of batons, handed off from one group of fundamentalists to another, in a race to the destruction of the constitutional documents of the America I believed in and no longer see around me.

Sure, sure… everyone gets the anger part. Not everyone feels it so strongly; I’ve read elsewhere on the internets pleas that we not give in to the anger, that we honor the dead with peaceful reflections. I don’t really get that, but I respect the desire for peace in general.

But… laughter? What kind of ghoul am I, you must be wondering. Let me see if I can explain it.

On that Tuesday morning, five years ago today, I stumbled in to work having seen exactly zero news of the events that had already taken place three time zones away. I don’t recall anyone on the busses or MAX that gave any indication that they had seen or heard of the attacks, either.

My first knowledge of the attacks was seeing two co-workers, women, friends of mine, sitting, heads down, voices low, whispering in sad voices. When I asked them what they were talking about, thinking it might be personal, my friend Terri looked at me and said “Oh, that’s right; you don’t watch the news. A plane has hit the World Trade Center.”

My first thought was of a small aircraft. I thought this was some kind of accident. My friends were badly shaken by it, I could see that, so I left them alone and tried to find out what was going on myself.

I couldn’t get anything – the ‘nets were slow. I went to see one of the network administrators. Susan was in her office, playing, over and over again, the video of the planes hitting the towers. She was trying to find a better feed, get some more news from CNN or anywhere else. I was impatient and didn’t want to stay and wait so I started to excuse myself and she urged me to stay and watch it. She played it for me.

And my first reaction was to laugh. It was absurd. In that tiny window, in the grainy video, it looked… like a special effect. Like a cheesy Michael Bay movie scene. Some action thriller from a book by Tom Clancy.

That kind of shit doesn’t happen in real life.

Susan snapped at me. “Think of all those lives!”

It was real. People were dead or in danger. It appeared to be a deliberate act.

And yet it was absurd, in the philosophical sense. Humanity’s search for meaning will fail, Absurdism tells us, because there is no meaning.

I stumbled through the day and tried to focus on other, more personal things. I tried (and succeeded) in contacting my one friend in New York, whom I had visited for the first (and only) time in Manhattan only 8 months previously. He was OK, a mile from the WTC center, but that was all the thought I remember giving to the attacks that day.

Until I got home, and for the first time in weeks turned on my television and tuned in to CNN and watched the video again. They had been playing and replaying it all day and would continue to do so for days and weeks (and years, it seems), and the first time I saw it on my television it finally sunk in what had happened.

And that time, I grieved. I cried for the loss of life, and the anger of the men who had taken that action, and the fear and anger and folly of the leaders of our country, knowing that there were few good responses to such an action.

I realized that it is people who give meaning to events. There is no meaning inherent in the universe except what our brains impose upon it. Consciousness provides a pattern to events (even when there is no pattern). But I also know that others do not see that simple truth, and once someone has grabbed a meaning to attach to an event or moment, they can fool themselves into believing that that meaning is somehow existent separate from themselves, that they are just responding to the Truth, being loyal soldiers for Meaning, caught in the flow of History.

Crap. Absurd. It’s nothing but a reflection of a person’s fears and hopes. It’s in your own head, dammit! Wake up and see that your posturing about intangible concepts is just self-worship.

And that’s what I knew was to come. I could see the beginnings of it then, and now, five years later, the “leaders” of our country have made just about every bad choice they could have.

Fuck. I didn’t want to go off on a rant.

I’ll stop here.

Odd

When the dentist’s office calls, to confirm an appointment that I have completely forgotten about, and I must ask to re-schedule that appointment… It seems odd to encounter resistance and surprise from the receptionist making the call. As though the possibility hadn’t even occurred to her that I might not be able to make that appointment.

Maybe both

Automator is a feature of Mac OS X Tiger that allows a user to set up “workflows” – sets of tasks, the kinds of things that a user tends to do over and over again. It’s kind of hard to explain without giving an example… Apple’s website says:

You can easily automate tasks such as renaming a large group of files, resizing dozens of images to fit an iPhoto slideshow or creating iCal birthday events using Address Book contacts, then repeat those tasks again and again.

I haven’t used it until just this weekend… when I set up a workflow that lets me get around the copy protection in a shareware game I downloaded.

I found it would only let me play 20 games without paying for it. But if I delete the Preferences file and the files in ~/Library/Application Support/ – voila! It resets the game!

I’ve done this 5 or 6 times, and then realized I could set up Automator so that I could have a contextual menu item that deletes them all in one step! Easy-peasy!

…so, is that lazy, or cheap?

No reason

I remember, when I was very young, like 4 or 5 or 6, that my sister and I had gerbils as pets.

And I remember that they would get out of the cage sometimes and hide behind the piano.

And as I look back on those ancient memories, I find myself wondering:

Why?

Why did we have a piano?!

My parents didn’t play the piano, at least not that I ever remember.

I remember getting a guitar for a birthday or Christmas present and having a lesson, but I don’t remember having more than one.

I know my sister did go on to play flute and saxaphone in high school and a bit after.

But no piano.

We were not rich, my family, when I was growing up, and so, it seems odd that my parents would spend so much money on… a piano.

The piano in the apartment on Spencer Creek Road will forever remain a mystery to me.

Breaking blogger’s block

If you’re a blogger or writer and you sometimes feel you have no idea what to blog about, I’d like to share some of the tricks I’ve learned over the years on how to combat writer’s block.

  • The first and best trick is to write about not having anything to write about. Just tell yourself you’re going to sit down and write about your current state for a set period of time, like 10 minutes. After a while, you’ll probably hit a groove and be able to transition into some other topic. And if not, you’ll still have 10 minutes of writing that you can post.
  • Almost all bloggers surf, right? Just collect some of the links and other posts you’ve come across and turn a list of those into a post of your own. You give other bloggers links and get karma that way, too.
  • Have someone else give you three random words (or, for the more advanced, three random sentences) that you now have to incorporate into a story or post. I’ve written many a story this way, and I’ve returned the favor for other friends, as well.
  • Post a picture you’ve taken.
  • Post a picture someone else has taken and write about it.
  • Go searching for pictures that match a theme.
  • Make a random list of things.
  • Look through your archives and find a post that needs a follow-up. Feeling down one time? Talk about how you got over it (or didn’t get over it). Digging through your old posts is a gold mine for material.

I’m sure there’s more but that’s all I can think of off the top of my head. Also, my 10 minutes are up.

Feel free to share your own ideas in the comments!

Technorati

This post is all about “claiming” my blog over at Technorati.

It’s a complicated process I don’t quite completely understand but will allow me to have super-powers and possibly become immortal.

Technorati Profile

I said I don’t understand it completely! Stop looking at me like that.

I’m just doing what they tell me.

Note for later – recovering lost websites

Jack Bog’s Blog recently had a traumatic failure. Seems the host for Prof. Bogdanski’s site… lost everything. I don’t know any more details than that, but it seems more like catastrophic incompetence than maliciousness.

Luckily, a friend of the site was able to recover most of Jack’s old posts, along with much of the comments. Those are currently archived here.

The main reason I’m posting this is to simply say, as I did in the comments over there, that on the internets, nothing is truly ever lost. Between Google caches and the Wayback Machine, once it’s on there, it’s there for ever. Well, a long time, anyway.

But the second reason I’m posting this is to remember a piece of software Paul used to reconstruct the site: Warrick, a perl script that searches the various caches and archives for a specific site.

Could be useful in the future… maybe…

Of course, Caleb is almost religious about backups so it would take a very catastrophic event for me to lose this site. But, again, better safe than sorry….

Idea to test

Since it appears, from research (I’m still looking for examples to link to – for right now I’m just making a note for myself) that most organisms, from the simplest bacteria to complex creatures like, say, human beings, modify their behavior more easily when rewarded for positive actions, rather than being punished for negative actions, my goal for myself is to begin training myself to ignore my “bad” actions, to the point of distracting myself and avoiding thinking or dwelling on them… while simultaneously creating a reward system for positive actions.

Harder than it might sound. Still seems worthwhile, though.