Gedankenexperiment

That’s German for “thought experiment”.

Which refers to this here little link I found on the Twitternets (via @pdxjoe).

If you didn’t have to worry about work, bills, cleaning, feeding your family, etc., what would you do instead? With the condition that you have to try something you’ve never done before, and you have to focus on what you want to do, rather than what you should do.

Assuming money was no object, I’d drive cross-country, spending time in every state I can drive to. Maybe take a trip like William Least Heat-Moon described in Blue Highways. That’s the first thing to come to mind. That’s always been the “when I win the lottery” dream for me.

Other things that the blogger suggests are things I’m already doing: getting fit, writing a novel, getting in touch with old friends. Or things I’ve already done: skydiving, racing cars, talking my way into an illegal bar in Spanish Harlem where I drank and smoked Cuban cigars and danced until dawn.

What about you? What’s your dream?

New things

It appears I’ve added some items to my new year’s goals.

Robin @mizd Catesby and her boyfriend are trying the One Hundred Pushups challenge. I met Robin during 30 Hour Day. Since running takes care of my lower body and cardio-vascular system, I thought trying to do the pushup challenge would be of benefit to me for my upper body strength, which is sorely lacking. And it’ll give me an exercise to do on my off-running days.

Since that wasn’t enough, I added the 25 Chinups challenge, too, which I found when I went looking for an iPhone app to keep track of all this, and since I have a chinup bar I don’t really use.

For the record, I did the “initial test” for these two challenges last night. I was able to manage 4 perfect pushups before I had to rest, and was not able to manage even a single chinup, either with palms facing me or facing away (I got confused). Here’s hoping their training program helps me significantly improve those numbers.

Also, as a side note, Rick and Cami have announced the date for the next 30 Hour Day: 2 July 2010, beginning at 6:00 PM. I’ve let them know that I am definitely in on that one, too. Save the date! Now I just have to come up with something to do…

I used my new Shopping app for iPhone (link opens in iTunes) to do some price comparison today. I’ve always assumed that QFC, because it’s basically Fred Meyers (both owned by Kroger) is cheaper than New Seasons, in spite of the New Seasons store being closer to my house. Well, I compared a few of my normal items and there’s a significant difference, and New Seasons is cheaper for me. Go figure. And the quality of their produce seems better, too. Since I’m doing more cooking at home, that will help me save money over the long term.

I’ve continued my LOST rewatch, and have just started Season 5 this weekend. I have plenty of time to finish this before Season 6 starts on 2 February 2010. This show rocks, although watching it all start to finish shows that J. J. Abrams, Damon Lindleof and Carlton Cuse, the series creators, have not always been successful in crafting a long narrative in the face of normal TV constraints, like the writer’s strike, the vagaries of actors and the network, and their own impulses. Before Season 6 starts, I’d like to sit down and make a list of my hopes for what mysteries get wrapped up and what will likely be left behind. For now, though, I’m enjoying a terrific sci-fi action show.

What have y’all been up to?

That inner negative voice

Everyone’s got one. An inner critic. The downer. The inner negative voice. The bad friend in your head that you can’t get rid of.

I used to listen to the negative voice all the time. He’s always there, even when I ignore him. He’s always telling me what to do. Or, rather, what not to do. Which is whatever I’m doing, or planning on doing, at the moment. If I am planning on going for a run, for example, the negative voice kicks in with all the reasons I shouldn’t run.

“It’s too cold.”
“It’s too hot.”
“It’s raining.”
“It’s snowing.”
“You’ll injure yourself.”
“You look stupid and fat in these clothes.”
“You need new shoes.”

…and on and on, an endless loop of negativity. Don’t do this now. Sit down. Tune out.

Way back before I started exercising regularly, I didn’t even notice the negative voice. I just gave in to his demands and assumed I couldn’t, or shouldn’t, do anything else. He wasn’t negative; he was just the voice in my head. He was the people who would point and laugh at me for trying and not doing it perfectly. Of course, in my life, there have been few actual point-and-laughers, though the few I remember have had an effect far out of proportion to their actual importance.

When I finally started exercising, it was in response to the stress of dealing with my parents; mom’s cancer, dad’s drinking and affair, and both of their expectations for me. I found an apartment that I could afford, was working a temp job, and looking for permanent work. The apartment was in a great neighborhood, although the building itself wasn’t very posh and the neighbors were sketchy. But there was a gym just two blocks away, and my friend at the time, Jake, was almost spectacularly active, so I figured I would try working out as a way to relieve stress.

And I began to notice, and began to identify, that voice in the back of my head as toxic.

He sounded like my father, sometimes. He sounded like my mom at other times. Or like Kelly, the bully in high school who actually made fun and laughed at the way I put on my underwear after gym class. Or like the group of older girls in the library when I was in 3rd grade who asked me if I was new and laughed amongst themselves.

Even as I stood there on the elliptical trainer, working away, sweating, feeling better by the moment, he was talking to me, telling me to slow down, that that was more than enough, that I should go now, that people were staring at me, that my fat belly was jiggling, that I was making too much noise, that my heart was going to explode.

Sometimes I gave in.

But more and more often, I just ignored him.

One day, I can remember this quite clearly, as I was walking the two blocks to the gym, I was listening to some music, and of course he was trying to shame me into not going. I responded to him. “Fuck you!”

I said it out loud, although not very loud. Loud enough for me to hear it over the music in my headphones. Loud enough that I immediately worried that if someone heard me they’d think I was crazy. Or maybe that worry was him?

I thought back at him, “Fuck you. I am doing this. Fuck off, you fucking fuck. You don’t get a vote.”

And, briefly, the voice quieted down to just a feeling. A nagging, I don’t wanna feeling. While I still felt that, I mentally shouted “Fuck you!” over and over while I kept walking to the gym, while I said hi to Noel, the owner, and walked up to the machine I wanted to use by the window, and got on and started running.

It may not be the most positive way to deal, but that’s how I manage the inner negative voice. I notice him, I tell him to fuck off, and I keep doing what I want to do. It doesn’t matter how many times I’ve worked out and felt great afterward, it doesn’t seem to matter how much positive feedback I get from friends and strangers, he’s always there. Sometimes he’s quieter, but he’s always there.

If anyone knows a way, short of heavy medication, to make him go away for good, I’d be all ears. I just assume he’s part of me, though, and try to reinforce the idea that I don’t have to listen to him or do what he wants.

Sadly, I still have trouble noticing him when he’s blocking me in other areas of my life; social situations, work, friendships and family. Oh, man, family brings him out like nothing else does. I need a lot of work in that area, for sure. What’s that they say about why it’s so easy for your parents to push their buttons? Oh, right, it’s because they installed them.

I’m a work in progress, of course.

What tips do you have for dealing with the inner negative voice? Who does yours sound like? What’s he/she preventing you from doing?

Starting today

I like making new goals. I like taking a look at my life, seeing what works and what doesn’t work, and then making plans to change the things that aren’t working. Waiting until New Year’s Day to make a resolution, though, just seems dumb and wasteful. If you know what you need to do, why not do it?

It’s one thing to “have one more for the road”. Believe me, I’ve done that. A lot. But putting something off for weeks or months just so it coincides with an arbitrary date of January 1st is a bit much.

OK, I lied. I just went back to check, and it turns out I have made New Year’s resolutions in the past, at least twice. First, here’s a list from 2007 that I started, but never actually published. Let’s see how I did:

  • Learn to trust myself
  • Work on trusting others
  • Own something “real” (condo, house, stocks… anything)
  • Run a 5K in under 26:24
  • Run a 10K in under 52:48
  • Run a half-marathon
  • Weigh under 165 for at least 6 months (hopefully permanently)
  • MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC
  • Write three more novels
  • Finish and publish my second novel

Leaving aside what some of those even mean – “MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC”? …the Hell? – I didn’t even come close to those, at least in 2007.

I did run a half-marathon, eventually, last year.

I haven’t written three new novels, I haven’t “finished” or published my second novel 1.

My fastest 5K time to date is the Race for the Roses 2007, at 27:12, and my fastest 10K time to date is the Cinco de Mayo 2007, at 58:40, so I was definitely working towards those goals that year.

My weight records for that year are lost to me now (note to self and others: don’t use tools that don’t allow me to extract my data in plain text) but I’m pretty sure I didn’t make it to 165 lb that year – or since.

Owning something “real” (in the financial/legal sense of “real property”)? Nope. Not yet. Except for my single, symbolic share of Apple common stock, which will never make me rich because I don’t intend to ever sell it.

In 2008, I posted a “goals” list that covers much the same territory as the previous list: run faster, weigh less, write more and get my writing out in front of the public, get out of debt, and work on my socializing skills. Those are definitely my long-term goals.

Are these goals too difficult? Are they too far off? For example, I weighed in this morning at 194 lbs; getting down to 165 would be 29 weeks away, at one pound per week. That’s late July. My strength of will varies on a much faster schedule than that. I have good days, and bad weeks, is what I’m saying.

I like what Penelope Trunk has to say about keeping resolutions: start with small steps, work in increments of three weeks at a time, set specific goals, and most importantly, start right now.

Starting today, here’s my goals for the next three weeks:

  • Wear my running clothes for an hour every other day – by simply making an effort to put on running clothes and wearing them for an hour, I’ll be inclined to go for a run. That’s why I have exercise-specific clothes in the first place. I never wear my running shoes for anything except running, so just the act of putting them on signals to my brain “I’m going running”.
  • Track every dollar I spend – simply by tracking my money, I’ll be more aware of what I spend, and hopefully by measuring it, I can make changes.
  • Weigh in every morning – again, what is measured, can be changed.
  • Write a blog post every day – easy-peasy, right? One post per day. If I’m really ambitious, I’ll start writing ahead. But for now, one post per day. I have to have something interesting to say every day, right?

The social skills are, to me, the hardest to visualize and set a daily, recurring goal. “Talk to someone new every day”? Too easy – if I buy coffee, does that count? Reply to someone on Twitter? Send out a response on Craigslist?

I’ve had, in my mind, a new blog idea, of documenting my thoughts and progress in becoming more social. In the meantime, though, I’ve put myself out there a lot more than I have in the past; especially in 2009. Dating, going to Tweetups, volunteering for 30 Hour Day, getting involved again in my union at work (AFSCME Local 88 represent!), interacting on Twitter, playing D&D and starting my own group that meets monthly, reconnecting with old friends… seriously, 2009 was a banner year for me, socially.

When I figure out how to make that a daily goal, I’ll post it.


1 If that “publish my second novel” confuses you, because I haven’t published my first novel yet, here’s my explanation: my first novel is not going to be published, at least in my lifetime. I’m glad I wrote it, I learned a lot about writing long form fiction, but it’s just not something I want to share. I may change my mind in the future, but don’t bank on it. But I’ll be happy to mine it for ideas I can turn into other stories.

Ten Years Ago

New Year’s Eve

There’s a meme going on Twitter right now: #10yearsago. I said that I can’t remember exactly what I was doing for New Year in 1999 earlier.

But, wait, let me try to reconstruct it.

I had just started my job with Multnomah County that previous September, so I was still on probation. Didn’t have much vacation time. My family had been doing their Christmas vacations since ’96 or so, though, so they probably went somewhere. Is that the year they went to Aruba? I think so!

I couldn’t afford to go with them, which meant I stayed in Portland.

At that time, I was also a depressed, angry man; in the previous few years I’d reached for, and lost, what I thought was my dream job at Apple, by running afoul of Steve Jobs Himself. I’d felt forced to move back to Portland to live under my angry fathers’ roof for three excruciating months earlier that year. My mom was, unbeknownst to me, having a relapse of her lung cancer, and my father was carrying on an affair with my aunt, who had moved in to help my mom during her “recovery”. Let’s just say 1999 wasn’t the best year for the Moon family. But I had a job that promised, once my probation was over, to give me what little job security one can have these days, and I had a friend in Taij.

Taij was an angry redhead geek. He had been a contractor in the same group I worked with, and was always arrogantly proclaiming how much more technical knowledge he had than anybody else. He was a more dominant forceful personality, so it was inevitable that I would fall into his orbit. He drank hard, and partied hard, and worked hard – well, sometimes he worked hard. He had a lot of contempt for the basic “reboot your computer” type support that was needed at the county, so he often passive-aggressively slacked off, claiming he was too good to do that shit.

Seeing this now, it’s no surprise that he got let go, his contract wasn’t extended, by management. The timing was a bit of a kiss-off, too: mid December.

Already an angry man, Taij became even more sullen. His false confidence at how fucking good he was became depression that he would not find a new job soon. His girlfriend (a bartender at the Roseland) left him. He got hit by some drunk drivers one night when he and I were out drinking, too – and no one had insurance. What a surreal night that was, and worthy of a post all by itself. I admit, I was making bad choices. A lot. Not least of which was hanging on to the friendship of Taij, drinking all night on a weeknight, and going to work the next day smelling of booze.

I know, intellectually, from piecing all this together, that I must have spent New Year’s Eve drinking downtown with Taij. Our usual haunts were the Virginia Cafe (in its original location on SW Park Ave.), the Commodore (which was conveniently in the building Taij lived in), the Kingston, or the Roseland (until his girlfriend dumped him).

We had a lot of “haunts”.

But details of that night are fuzzy. I’m pretty sure we started drinking at his apartment, then walked down to the Virginia for a while. I vaguely remember wandering down to Pioneer Courthouse Square, which was fenced off, and a giant screen announcing the oncoming year, and that’s where we must have been at midnight. The Y2K scare was, to Taij and I, a big joke. We laughed about it, either way: if nothing failed, then technology won; if everything (or some things) failed, then it would be up to us techs to fix it. Win/win. But as was saw video reports from the east coast, three hours ahead of us, and nothing was blowing up, we knew it was a big fat zero.

I may have kissed a random girl at midnight. I’d like to think I did, and Taij, being a student of the “fast seduction” techniques, was always trying to get me to try them.

After New Year Day, though, I started to realize that if I stuck around with Taij, I was going to end up dead, or at least broken. More broken. I’d had a lot of angry people around me up to that point, and I saw a glimpse of more healthy friendships in people like Jake, and (eventually), Tracy.

One foggy morning in January, after having crashed on Taij’s couch from yet another all-night drinking binge, I walked out and took the bus home, and never spoke to him again.

Happy New Year’s Eve, and here’s to a better 2010.

Best. Birthday. EVAH.

I don’t have an idea for a long, ramble-y, writer-ly post just yet; may have one later.

For now I’ll just thank everyone who wished me a happy birthday yesterday! The first list is everyone online. This is how they came up in search, so don’t read anything into the order. I just didn’t want to forget anyone!

Many many Thank yous to:

And I spent my lunch with Kevin (whose birthday yesterday also was):

Birthday pic

and spent dinner with:

Birthday dinner

Ken “@celticnorse” C., Terry “@landmind” M., Shawn “@terpmeister” T., (me), Tracy “@erraberra” H., and Gina F.

Man, I hope I didn’t miss anyone! That’s a lot of love and friendship. Thank you to all of you! It was the best birthday I’ve had in a long, long time.

PS: Is it amazing that everyone has a URL I can associate with them?

The Birthday Post

It’s hard to come up with a topic for the blog on my birthday, since last year I did 10 posts, one per day, in the days leading up to my birthday. For some reason I thought that was a good idea, when it was the 44th anniversary of my birth. Who celebrates at 44? We have 10 digits on our fingers, and so we celebrate most in the years that are evenly divided by 10. It’s a function of biology. If we had 8 fingers total,1 like cartoon characters2, we would celebrate in base-8.

It’s my inclination to spend a birthday looking back, but because I blew my nostalgia wad last year on the top 10 birthdays I remember, I feel the pressure of not having any material for today. Do I talk about the day my nephew and good friend Kevin was born and that we share a birthday? Done that one. The birthday I spent in New Orleans, my favorite city in the world? Yep, done that one, too. Legally able to drink? Yes. The actual day of my birth? Oh, yeah.

So what’s left to talk about?

How about new memories?

There’s some kind of taboo in American middle-class society against setting plans for ones’ own birthday. Is that just me? It’s seen as some kind of hubris, overweening pride, to plan your birthday party. That duty is typically reserved for your close friends, significant other, brothers or sisters. But I’ve got to tell you, because of the calendrical3 positioning of the day, mid-way between Christmas and New Year’s Day, my friends and family can be excused for not having the energy or attention to make big plans for me. They’re busy celebrating their own holidays.

This year, though, I wanted to spend with my friends. The past year has had its ups and downs for me (and others, of course), but one thing I’m very happy for is that I spent more time with the people I care about. I reconnected with old friends, and strengthened bonds with the friends I have. So a week or two ago, I bucked the possibly-only-in-my-head taboo about planning my own party, and began inviting my friends out for dinner. No presents needed or requested beyond their attendance and friendship.

And every one of them, everyone I asked, said they’d be there. How awesome is that?

Was it that easy, all along? Did I just have to ask? Was my own piggish pride in the way? I feel like a dork for not doing this sooner.

Tonight, at a little Italian place in Sellwood, there will be a gathering of folks, and at the head of the table you’ll find me, happy and smiling and, for the first time in a very long time, spending my birthday with my friends.

Here’s hoping my 45th year is the best one yet.


1 This includes thumbs.
2 Some cartoon characters have only 6 fingers total. See Bender, for example.
3 My spell-check recognizes that word. I can’t recall if I’ve added it, or if it came built-in.

Cornbread for breakfast, and an omnibus catch-up post to get me back on track and blogging again, hopefully.

Things I’ve been doing lately:

  • Learning new recipes for home cooking. Last Thanksgiving, I tried a recipe for crock-pot pork chile verde, along with cornbread, as my own personal way of celebrating. The cornbread turned out well, but the chile verde wasn’t what I was expecting – a little bland and too soupy. The flavors intensified after a day or two, and I ended up making four or five burritos from it, by combining with an easy Spanish rice recipe I found, but I wanted to try some other recipes. I want to duplicate the chile verde I find at the Iron Horse or Maya’s (no website).Yesterday, I tried this pork chile verde, and it’s less soupy and more flavorful, though still not the same as the ones I consider my favorites. I’ll keep trying. Oh, and I cooked up some black beans this time, too, which turned out perfect and spicy.

    Overall, I’m really enjoying cooking my own meals. It’s cheaper and gives me something new to learn. How can that be bad? And having leftover cornbread with my bacon and coffee this morning was awesome.

  • I’m still stuck in Season 3 of my LOST re-watch, even though the 6th and final season is due to start in about a month. Not sure I’ll get all the way through Season 5 by the time it restarts, either. But I’m enjoying seeing the whole show as a slowly-unfolding novel, full of great characters and some interesting ideas. I still think Desmond and Penny stories are the best, though Claire and Charlie make an interesting couple, too. Feh on the whole Jack/Kate/Sawyer/Juliet quadrangle, though. Feh, I say. And I still don’t buy that Sayid fell for Shannon.
  • I started sketching out a slightly-new design for my website last night. I love the simple design I have now, but I want to change it up. I also want to make it all validate as CSS 3.0 and XHTML, and I’ve had complaints about the tiny font size – I’ve got some ideas on how to fix that, but still maintain the clean layout (can you say fluid grid?) And I have to incorporate the moon in there, somewhere, too. The new design, though, will likely switch to a black font on white background, though, for better readability. Or maybe that will be an option. I don’t know, it’s in the early stages yet. It’s one of the projects I’m working on during my vacation. Also, I’m still mulling over moving this blog to WordPress.
  • I’ve been collecting and posting on Twitter some random things I overhear my coworkers say. There are some interesting political and social viewpoints – and by “interesting” I mean “weird, crazy and a bit scary” – and because of the response I got on Twitter, I’ve started a new Tumbleblog, Shit My Conservative Coworkers Say. You can follow that blog, or follow the Twitter account @WingnutsSay, to keep up. I’ve got enough material to post at least one new crazy thing every day, 5 days a week, and that’s my plan for the future, until I either run out, or get in trouble. Note: the descriptions of The Palinite and The Paulite have been fictionalized. Slightly. Just enough, I hope.
  • Speaking of websites and domains, I now own six. At least three of those are separate blogs/sites. If you throw in my Facebook profile, my (primary) Twitter account, and my Flickr page, not to mention several other forms of online presence, that’s a lot of updating. I feel the need to consolidate them, maybe keep some of them separate, but come up with one Brian “Lunar Obverse” Moon Mega-site, your one-stop shopping for all things Lunar Obverse related.
  • Then there’s a side project that got put on a back burner around last March, when I took an enjoyable detour into the land of couplehood. Now that I’m single again (no, I’m not going to talk about that in public – it’s personal), I can pick up where I left off, and proceed again. And that’s all I’m gonna say about that for now.
  • Another project has been my Dungeons & Dragons game. We’ve been playing once per month since it started, and hopefully everyone is enjoying themselves. They keep coming back for more, so it looks like they are (no, really, guys, I’m not fishing for compliments). I’m having fun, too, although sometimes I focus more on the mistakes I make rather than the fun I’m having. My game-running skills are rusty, and way back in the day, I don’t think I was that good a gamemaster in the first place. One thing I’ve improved upon, I think, is the action. Way more action in my new game. And the story has, mostly, held up, although it’s early yet. But the characters are on the verge of 3rd level, and they’re still gelling as a team, and, well, it’s been a fun escape for me.
  • I’m still running, although lately just on the treadmill at work, and far fewer miles and a bit slower than I used to. And I’m working to control my weight, too, with diet and such. As a matter of fact, I’ve made it from Thanksgiving to Christmas and lost 3.5 lbs (so far) with some effort. Sure, cooking more of my own food has helped, and so has running, but mainly it’s mental – planning my meals ahead of time as much as I can, and learning to say “no” to larger portions. My goal is to hit 185 lb by the time next year’s Shamrock Run, which works out to ~1 lb per week. I’m right on track.
  • I’m also on track to pay off all my current debt by the end of 2010. It still seems so far away, and lots can happen between now and then, but I have a plan, and if I stick to it, I’ll get there. Better late than never, right? Since summer, I’ve paid off two credit cards so far, and I have a small bit of savings, too. I’m using the debt snowball method, which is championed by J. D. Roth and Dave Ramsey, which just means I pay off the smaller balances first. I like it because it gives me a psychological lift to see me crossing off debts sooner than I would if I paid off the higher balances or higher interest rates first, or paid them all off proportionately. I could do it the other way, but this way is working for me now, so I’m not eager to change. Time will tell how close I get, but it feels good now.

And that’s what I’ve been up to. Well, some of it. Which still seems like a lot.

How have y’all been?

War is over (if you want it)

This one’s for our men and women in uniform, far from home. And it’s also for those they live among, and the ones designated as their enemies, too. Just because they don’t celebrate Christmas doesn’t mean I can’t wish them peace and goodwill, does it?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hb2YSAVHmIE&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&color1=0x3a3a3a&color2=0x999999]