Skip to content →

Category: Random Musings

How we see the poor, of whom I am one

meonbed

ARTICLE:
“Hi, I’m right here”: An open letter to Paul Ryan about poverty and empathy

I recommend the article above about how we see poor people. It made me a little tight in the chest because it describes the way I live. I don’t talk much about my finances, but at this exact moment I have negative $41 in the bank and, with any luck, enough food to get me to payday, one week away.

In 2012 I turned my homelessness into the Jazz Or Bust tour, which allowed me to sleep on the couches of friends and strangers for six months. Without that tour, I don’t know where I would have lived. I haven’t had health insurance in years, and have only been to a doctor (out of pocket) to renew the anti-depression medication I take, which of course I pay full price for each month. All kinds of people fall into poverty, for all kinds of reasons. And often there’s no more belt tightening that can be done, and no family safety net to fall back on.

I’m not writing this for sympathy. I’m figuring my way out and I’m doing OK. I’m just letting you know that you know a poor person. And there are, of course, people with even less than I have, both materially and in terms of privilege. (Thanks to Gina Marie Thompson for sharing this article with me.)

Leave a Comment

I Got A Raise And It Made Me Angry

1899890_269994923160571_1878914592_n

I Got A Raise And It Made Me Angry

Yesterday I got a raise and I left work feeling very annoyed. One thing I’ve been working on a lot in my Buddhist practice is trying to both isolate the part of the body where the feeling resides and also to think about what made the feeling arise in the first place.

Three things bothered me about my raise.

The first was the meeting in which it happened. I make $10 an hour with no benefits, because I can’t afford our benefits at $10 an hour. I asked for $12 and got $11. In the meeting, my two bosses were really pulling out all the clichéd stops to try to devalue my work as much as possible, even while giving me more money. I finally stopped them and reminded them both that I’ve negotiated union contracts with multinational companies, and that the meeting we were in didn’t need to happen the way it was happening. I also pushed back on their devaluing statements. Although I was proud of my stance in the meeting, I still disliked the general feeling of conflict, and also the renewed realization that I work in a nonunion job for people who don’t care about their employees.

The second issue was a negative, but it led to a positive. I was embarrassed to be having a conversation in which I needed to justify to someone why I should make more than 133% above the Pennsylvania poverty line. I’m where I am because of the choices I’ve made and I know that. But it’s 2014 and EVERYBODY is worth more than $10 or $11 or $12 an hour. To be sitting there in my white shirt with my employer’s name on the left pocket asking for $80 more a week before taxes was humiliating. Again, not because I’m above it, but because everyone is. However, it led to this commitment: This is the last of these conversations I will ever have. I already had the goal of becoming a full-time freelancer by the end of 2014, and this meeting renewed my commitment to never justifying my worth for a low-paying job again.

The final issue was more personal. In the meeting, it came out that something I’d told a co-worker in confidence had made it to our boss. However, the thing I’d told her – that I was uncomfortable taking on her duties (she has a broken arm and needs to farm out paperwork) while making poverty wages – had put her in a difficult position, so I mostly felt bad about that. I apologized to her this morning.

So much is bound up in our working lives. I’m going to do everything I can to be the person who controls that part of my life.

/ / /

The photo at the top of this post is of a note I received from my boss this afternoon (about 8 hours after writing this post) because I unclogged the men’s room toilet.

4 Comments

Why I complain about my job online

It was pointed out to me this morning by someone I like and trust that I make many complaint-jokes about my job. So let me say this: My life is OK. I’m quickly rebuilding my relationship with my sons. I have friends in State College. I’m slowly building up a freelance career so I can work for myself. I date people. I have a nice apartment with two cats. I’m very grateful for all of that. Truly.

Also, I will continue to make darkly comic jokes about things in my life. I’m a receptionist at a car dealership making $15K a year with no benefits and that is hilarious in the way finally getting to fly on an airplane for the first time only to have it crash midway through the flight is hilarious. And yes, I’m here because of the decisions I made and I’m doing my best to make better ones. But for now, I need to keep making jokes because they help me stay sane. And I make them to all of you because you’re fabulous. Love you all. Need a Buick? Want to hear me answer the phone? 814-867-4444

Leave a Comment

POEM: complexity

atom2

complexity

At the center of an atom
(we learned in school)
is the nucleus, around which
orbit a certain number
of protons and electrons,
depending on what the atom
is an atom of. Groups
of these atoms get together
to form molecules of other
stuff. The trick is to get
exactly the right combination
to make the thing you
want to make. But sometimes,
as simple as that sounds,
you miss your chance. The
atom you want binds with
something else, and you’re
left floating, a single bit
of helium or hydrogen
whirling around, waiting
for a connection.

/ / /

25 January 2014
Oak Street

Leave a Comment

Your favorite fantasy series

LOTR_book_Covers

Yesterday I posted the following message on Facebook and Twitter:

I’ve read Tolkein, Narnia, His Dark Materials, Harry Potter, Chronicles of Amber, among others. What’s another good series?

Many, many people responded with their favorites. I don’t consider myself particularly well read in the fantasy genre, so I was very surprised by how many of their suggestions I’d already read. Admittedly, most of that reading dates back to my teenage years in the 80s. I’ve put an asterisk next to the suggestions I’ve read. Here’s the list, minus the suggestions that aren’t in the “fantasy series” genre:

  • Incarnations of Immortality* by Piers Anthony (suggested by Martin Porter)
  • The Belgariad by David Eddings (suggested by Maiben Beard)
  • The O Trilogy by Maurice Gee (suggested by Carmen Staaf)
  • The Dark Tower* by Stephen King (suggested by JC Sanford)
  • Divergent by Veronica Roth (suggested by Caitlin Wynn)
  • Gormenghast by Mervyn Peake (suggested by Aaron Parks and Nou Dadoun)
  • A Song of Ice and Fire* by George R.R. Martin (suggested by Caitlin Wynn and Josh Poole)
  • Earthsea* by Ursula K. Le Guin (suggested by Dan Loomis)
  • Wildwood by Colin Meloy (suggested by Nou Dadoun)
  • The Chronicles of Prydain* by Lloyd Alexander (suggested by Dale Favier)
  • The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan (suggested by Noah Smith)
  • Kushiel’s Legacy by Jacqueline Carey (suggested by Maiben Beard)
3 Comments

The Lost Library of Harry Potter

harry-potter-libary

Everybody knows the classic books in the Harry Potter series. But have you read these more obscure titles?

Discovered by Jason Crane

  • Harry Potter and the Podiatrist’s Office
  • Harry Potter and the Enlarged Prostate
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Sucrets
  • Harry Potter and the Secret of Whittaker Chambers
  • Doctor Harry Potter and the Legend Of Zelda Trek Wars 2: Judgement Another Day
  • Harry Potter and the Raiders of the Lost Ark
  • Harry Potter and the Bunnymen
  • Harry Potter and the Endoplasmic Reticulum
  • Harry Potter and the Roadside Assistants
  • Harry Potter and the Argonauts
  • Harry Potter and the Book We Had To Retitle Because Americans Are Stupid
  • Harry Potter and That Scene From Ghost That His Last Name Reminds Me Of
  • Harry Potter, and the Oxford Comma
  • …and Harry Potter as The Beaver

Discovered by Jack Wright

  • Harry Potter and Potter Stewart
  • Harry Potter and the Myocardial Infarction
  • Harry Potter and Harry Reasoner
  • Harry Potter and the unicellular organism
  • Harry Potter and the American Indian Dance Company
  • Harry Potter and 101st Airborne Division
  • Discovered by Dmitri Matheny

    • Harry Potter, Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
    • Harry Potter and the Not Ready For Prime Time Players
    • Harry Potter and the Corbomite Maneuver
    • Harry Potter and the Hot Club of Godric’s Hollow

    Discovered by Steve Provizer

    • Harry Potter plays Benge exclusively
    • Harry Potter and John Osborne look back in anger
    • Harry Potter and Mr. Moto meet Frankenstein
    • Harry Potter and the Sons of the Pioneers
    • Harry Potter, Harry Morgan and Radar
    Leave a Comment

    A sobering encounter

    I walked up to the counter at the convenience store and removed my earbuds. As I did, I noticed that this was playing in the store:

    Me to clerk: “Such a great song. I haven’t listened to this album in a while.”

    Clerk: “Yeah, it’s great.”

    Me: “This is what I grew up on. Genesis, Yes, ELP, King Crimson.”

    Clerk: “Yeah, I remember my parents listening to this.”

    Me: “You remember your parents listening to this?!?! Sweet weeping Jesus.”

    And I dejectedly walked out of the store. Picked up my AARP letter from the mailbox on the way home.

    / / /

    This is a humorous piece that in no way reflects my real views on aging. I say that because people keep reading it and comforting me.

    2 Comments

    A comment on the most recent Louis C.K. video

    Some folks I really respect have had negative reactions to the Louis C.K. video, saying, in essence, “there’s nothing noble about suffering and if we can use technology to distract us or lessen suffering, we should.” For me the video was less about the observance of suffering in particular than the observance and experience of emotions period. I can’t speak for Louis C.K., but my take on it was he used sadness as an example, not as the point. He wasn’t saying, “Let’s all suffer more,” but rather “Let’s all spend more time actually experiencing our emotions and surroundings and less time posting about them.” And I completely agree with that.

    Leave a Comment

    POEM: late at night

    late at night

    is when I start to think
    of everything that could go wrong
    my heart speeds up
    the blood rushes to my face
    a thin layer of sweat breaks out
    I ride it out like a squall on the ocean
    holding on to the sides of my little boat

    2 September 2013
    Detroit MI

    Leave a Comment

    Which podcasts are you listening to? (UPDATED)

    podcast_ctap_small

    (UPDATED: November 10, 2013) Back in early July, I asked on Facebook and Twitter for a list of your favorite podcasts. Here’s what you said back then. I also included my own list at the end. I’ve made changes to it since I posted this originally. The first update was in August 2013, the next in November 2013. Feel free to add more in the comments section at the bottom.

    And here’s what I’m listening to. A couple notes: I listened to WTF for about the first year or so, but after a while I stopped. To my ear, it was too much focused on Maron and not enough on the guests. I listened to This American Life until this happened. Jen Kirkman’s podcast was getting too relentlessly negative, so I skip that one now, too. And as of October, 2013, I stopped listening to Le Show because of some disparaging and sexist remarks Harry Shearer made about labor reporter Sarah Jaffe.

    If you’ll allow me a bit of a plug, I’d like to recommend my own show, The Jazz Session. Even if you’re not into jazz (or don’t think you are), I think you’ll find something to like in these conversations with artists about how and why they do what they do.

    Here’s my list. New shows (as of November 10, 2013) are in bold type, and shows I’ve stopped listening to look like this. Other than the shows noted above, I’ve stopped listening to the others mostly because there aren’t enough hours in the day.

    One Comment

    POEM: mirror

    Hunt_Hamlet_jpg3

    mirror

    we argued about beauty
    primarily yours
    me trying to convince you
    you saying it wasn’t true
    after a while I started to worry
    that perhaps you believed
    what you were saying
    despite all the evidence
    to the contrary
    it had never occurred to me
    that the idea of beauty
    being in the beholder’s eye
    could be applied to oneself
    not just to the external world
    that two people could look
    at the same exquisite face
    and see such different things
    Hamlet counseled the players
    to hold a mirror up to nature
    I don’t carry a mirror with me
    but I have my eyes
    and this page
    and these lines

    28 July 2013
    Auburn AL

    Leave a Comment

    Which podcasts are you listening to?

    podcast_ctap_small

    I asked on Facebook and Twitter for a list of your favorite podcasts. Here’s what you said. My own list is included at the end. Feel free to add more in the comments section at the bottom.

    And here’s what I’m listening to. A couple notes: I listened to WTF for about the first year or so, but after a while I stopped. To my ear, it was too much focused on Maron and not enough on the guests. And I listened to This American Life until this happened.

    Also, if you’ll allow me a bit of a plug, I’d like to recommend my own show, The Jazz Session. Even if you’re not into jazz (or don’t think you are), I think you’ll find something to like in these conversations with artists about how and why they do what they do.

    One Comment

    Maybe I should become a priest, or, an unlikely turn of events

    164897_10151398140838597_1765163042_n When I was kid, we had a family friend who was a Franciscan monk. His name was Father Edgar, and he was a big presence in our family, even though we didn’t see him all that often. He knew us because my Aunt Linda had been a religion teacher in a Catholic school and, if my memory is right, Father Edgar taught there, too. Or maybe served as an administrator.

    In any case, every once in a while when I was very young, this guy in a priest’s collar would show up at some family event. He was very impressive. Smart and funny and good with kids. He called me “jaybird” (I went by Jay rather than Jason back then) and always made me feel like one of the adults. He was also the first person I ever met whose job I thought I might like to do. Of course I didn’t quite know what it meant, but I thought it would be fun to be a guy like Father Edgar.

    Years later, for non-religious reasons, my parents and sister and I switched from the Catholic church to the Methodist church in our town. We instantly became very close to the church’s two pastors, David and John. They were good men — very different from one another but both committed to building a loving community in our church. John had been a steel industry executive until deciding to enter the ministry. David was a genius — he spoke several languages, read several more, and collected Swiss stamps. Once again, I thought their job would be a good fit for me. I even went so far as to attend seminary classes with John at Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School so I could see what they were like.

    Then in 1988 or ’89, at the age of 15, I realized I didn’t believe in God.

    I realized this mostly because I’d finally made friends with people who were atheists. I’m honestly not sure that option had even occurred to me before I met these people, but once it was on the table, I knew quite quickly that I was one of them. It was a real problem for my family. Luckily I graduated from high school not long afterward and my lack of faith stopped being an issue because I no longer needed to go to church.

    Here’s the thing, though — nothing in American society can replace church. It’s the one place people go where they’re at least ostensibly prepared to receive some sort of moral instruction. And it’s a place where you can talk about building a loving community — or just talk about love, period — without everyone running away screaming. Many churches, of course, don’t focus on that kind of thing at all. American churches are also focal points for intolerance. But when it’s done right, a church community can be a beautiful place, and I’ve never found anything quite like it.

    In my 20s I discovered Buddhism and developed a meditation practice that continues today, albeit with many breaks over the years. I tried several times to become a regular member of a sangha (the Buddhist version of a congregation), but I’d usually run away because of the formality and ritual and, well, religiosity of it all.

    But the idea of serving as some sort of community leader never left me. I ran for office, I ran political parties, I worked as a community activist and broadcaster and performer. I tried in many different ways to create the kind of communities I’d loved back in my religious days. I did a lot of fulfilling work over the years and, I’d like to think, left some of the places I lived better than I found them. But there was always something missing.

    I applied twice to Naropa University, a Buddhist university in Boulder, CO. I was accepted both times but couldn’t go for financial or family reasons. As recently as last fall, I was accepted as a staff member at Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, where I hoped to work and eventually qualify for their chaplaincy program. (I don’t have a Bachelor’s degree, so the obvious route of some sort of divinity school isn’t open to me.) I ended up canceling my Upaya plans, though, when I decided to stay here in Auburn, Alabama, for a while.

    The other day, though, I was walking to work when this happened:

    / / /

    devotion

    I can’t call it a struggle
    not in the sense I would wish
    I’m sure I don’t believe
    in fact it’s hard for me to imagine
    I ever did, except as obligation

    and yet this morning again —
    while walking the quiet sidewalks
    of this Southern college town
    listening to a priest read Herbert and Jarrell —
    I imagined what it would be like
    to say goodbye to all this day-to-day
    to wrap my body in black
    stand in the glow of stained glass
    say the words I can still recite from memory
    nearly thirty years after

    I picture their faces, lost as I am
    looking to me to make sense of
    what cannot be made sense of
    what a gift that must be
    to sit at the center of so many lives
    to reassure them that it all means something
    that today is more than another spin
    around an axis most of them
    must also take on faith

    I want to be the one the grieving family calls
    the calm presence at the bedside
    or the smiling face to those whose days
    contain few smiles
    I want to wear the uniform of compassion
    to speak with the voice of righteousness
    to say to the strikers, the protesters,
    the homeless, the jailed:
    you are not alone
    and in that moment to see in their eyes
    their silent response:
    we need you

    / / /

    And ever since, my insides have been jumping around like oil on a hot frying pan. I just can’t get that walk out of my head, or the sense that I desperately need to get back to the business of serving people.

    Several of my friends have asked why I don’t just do that kind of work without any religious trappings. That would certainly be my preference, but as I said, I’ve tried that and found something lacking. I tried to describe it in an email to a friend who’s both a community organizer and an ordained minister:

    That experience yesterday was one of the strongest emotional experiences I’ve had. These last months I feel like a need to serve has been building inside me. It’s always been there, but these days it’s like a physical manifestation in my chest, in my heart, in my thoughts. If I thought I could hack it in a Christian seminary, I’d go today.

    I doubt I could, though, and I don’t have a BA, so I’m just not sure what to do. I think I belong in “the ministry,” whatever that term could mean for a guy like me. But I’d need to do it honestly and without telling people things I don’t believe.

    I’ve been talking to two local friends in the past 24 hours and describing how when you show up at a strike, a protest, a meeting, a bedside in your collar, the entire atmosphere changes. People listen to you, accord you respect, assume your righteousness and compassion. (I know this isn’t universally true, but I’ve seen you work enough times to know it’s generally true.) It seems so right, so good … and so much who I want to be.

    I look at people like you, or like the Berrigans, or like Thich Naht Hanh, and so many other examples, and think that’s where I want to be. Who I want to be.”

    Again, I really am an atheist. I don’t think what’s happening now is God speaking to me or anything like that. I truly don’t believe in any of that stuff. But I do believe in the power of the trappings of religion to change people’s way of thinking. I know they’ve changed mine in various ways over the years. And I feel strongly that whatever is going to happen next for me needs to involve service and the building of an intentional, loving community. As John, the minister mentioned earlier, told me a couple years ago: “You need to get paid to love people.”

    So that’s what I’m trying to figure out these days. How does a hardcore atheist who is suspicious of organized religion answer an internal calling to serve in a capacity that most closely resembles the ministry? If you’ve got thoughts — theoretical or philosophical or practical — I’d love to hear them in the comments below.

    [Photo by Amanda Vita.]

    7 Comments

    You’re gonna need a bigger…

    Last night, for reasons I can’t explain, I started riffing on Twitter on the famous line from Jaws, “You’re gonna need a bigger boat.”

    The results:

    • You’re gonna need a bigger goat. (from Jaws On The Farm)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger moat. (from Medieval Jaws)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger float. (from Mardi Gras Jaws)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger throat. (from Jaws, Hot Dog Eating King Of The World)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger stoat. (from Jaws, Mousehunter)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger toke. (from Cheech & Jaws) (submitted by Sean Doyle)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger gloat. (from Insufficiently Snarky Jaws)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger coat. (from Overprotective Jaws)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger note. (from Nearsighted Jaws)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger tote. (from Jaws, NPR Pledge Drive Host)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger quote. (from Jaws, Newspaper Editor Trying To Fill Space)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger mote. (from Jaws, Misunderstander Of The Bible)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger cote. (from Pretentious Jaws On The Coast)
    • You’re gonna need a bigger epitope. (From Jaws & It’s Antibodies) (submitted by Chelsea Maher)
    • That’s it. Good night, everyone. *drops mic, is eaten by shark*
    Leave a Comment