Why am I so concerned and bothered by certain kinds of change? "Is it being dumbed down, or is it made simpler to access?" "Should I stick with the old way and work on improving it, or should I start all over again as a beginning?" "Am I actually being forced into choosing permanently either a static or dynamic mindset?"
This is really difficult for me to do. And, too:
I have so much to do, and no time to do it all.
I must to learn to wisely a lot my time and follow a plan.
I have too many opinions, and not the time to debate it all.
I must to learn to draw a line, chose a side, and be content.
I have so much to say, and no time to say it all.
I must learn to take my hands from the keyboard and hush my storytelling mind.
All this I have to learn, with no time to learn it all.
All this I must do, along with finding a sense of self-control.
So many people are afraid of or unconcerned with relating their poetry. A lot of poetry is deeply personal and comes from an emotionally vulnerable place. We don't like to appear weakened, how very human of us!
Here's a place to be a poet, there's a place for poetry.
That last sentence, well, the other way 'round's all right too.
A Collection of Reflections
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
A Mystery - Seventh Weekend Uncertainties
I worked on my blog. That's what I did. In fact, I'm still working on it!
Towards the July 21st section of Food of Charleston I managed to get myself over to Papa Zuzu's and define a personally historical dining experience. I had to relate the times!
A bit of thought's been given as to whether I desire strongly enough the effort expended in getting myself over to Monck's Corner. It's a short drive from here to there, only an hour of easy driving. I wonder what I'll find there. The Francis Marion National Forest was a trip to drive through last weekend. Well-defined angles and corners between the blue sky, deep green forest, black-gray asphalt, and puffy white clouds. Sometimes blue cars and silver trucks sped by ornamenting my vision. That was really pretty.
I suppose all that discourse and recount goes filed away in my post about last weekend. But so vivid, I had to relate.
Towards the July 21st section of Food of Charleston I managed to get myself over to Papa Zuzu's and define a personally historical dining experience. I had to relate the times!
A bit of thought's been given as to whether I desire strongly enough the effort expended in getting myself over to Monck's Corner. It's a short drive from here to there, only an hour of easy driving. I wonder what I'll find there. The Francis Marion National Forest was a trip to drive through last weekend. Well-defined angles and corners between the blue sky, deep green forest, black-gray asphalt, and puffy white clouds. Sometimes blue cars and silver trucks sped by ornamenting my vision. That was really pretty.
I suppose all that discourse and recount goes filed away in my post about last weekend. But so vivid, I had to relate.
| Spacetime |
Food of Charleston
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Myrtle Beach Resort - Sixth Weekend Follies
Myrtle Beach is beautiful! High rises, condominiums, apartment buildings, resorts, restaurants, lights, streets, sidewalks, people, and shops. Mile after mile of Fun Land and Sun. Ocean Blvd is the closest you can drive to the water, anymore. "You used to be able to drive to ON the beach," according to my friend Wayne. That's no longer the case.
Saturday night the two of us drove down Ocean Blvd, around down 20th Ave N. This was around 10:00pm or so. Our destination wound up being Bummz Beach Cafe. Is a name any indication? Sure is in this case. Right there, only a short sidewalk's step off the back porch patio is the beach. Going the other direction, as we did later on, you'd head inside. Karaoke was in full swing by the time we finished up at the bar. Began the evening throwing back a shot of Jack Daniels to kick off our tab, then swilling our way through three Red Stripe's apiece.
The discussions were lively and gestures exaggerated. Conversations turned into game of keeping track of which of all the faces around you you'd been focused on five minutes ago. Well, too much talk and. Too much thought about trying to remember too much talk. Time for pictures, we'll pick up the story later.
Saturday night the two of us drove down Ocean Blvd, around down 20th Ave N. This was around 10:00pm or so. Our destination wound up being Bummz Beach Cafe. Is a name any indication? Sure is in this case. Right there, only a short sidewalk's step off the back porch patio is the beach. Going the other direction, as we did later on, you'd head inside. Karaoke was in full swing by the time we finished up at the bar. Began the evening throwing back a shot of Jack Daniels to kick off our tab, then swilling our way through three Red Stripe's apiece.
The discussions were lively and gestures exaggerated. Conversations turned into game of keeping track of which of all the faces around you you'd been focused on five minutes ago. Well, too much talk and. Too much thought about trying to remember too much talk. Time for pictures, we'll pick up the story later.
| Waking Up |
Monday, June 25, 2012
Prelude to New Beginnings
One thing I love to notice in life are all the little and big parallels that remind me of happy memories. It's like a for-sure sign of reference, a "check-in" to my past that I'm still having fun; a kid in a larger backyard.
This parallel really doesn't stretch back that far, just to January, 2009. I was only in my second semester of college, ever. You bet I was homesick. Displaced of my own choosing, fulfilling an expectation, lonely and living alone.
I had had a job in the summer before I began school in August, 2008, but it wasn't anything more than fast food. Oh, yes, it was always something new and not always work-related either. Drama and grease after hours of shifts. I spent a long four months working there until one day I found myself packing my room up to go away to college.
For this part in the story I need to repost and refer. Repost the yards of paragraphs written during those first two years. Refer from here back to there; I'll give you a portal through which to arrive at the first word on the first page of Age 19.
Seek when you can.
Don't get lost. You're here already. You've made it to the other side. You want to guess where you're at? A present day reflection on the opposite piece of the parallel memory. I'm about to take my first job as a student assistant to the Vice President for University Advancement's Department of Advancement Services, Database Administrators team.
Fast forward two weeks. We're already moving out. Leaving the sleepy fourth floor of the John Peace Library. Edging on an outsource and relocating to a nearby business park we step up shop for the next three years. All throughout that Spring semester I worked hard, harder even than I did in class. I was doing stuff I had always enjoyed. Installing RAM, running Windows Updates, entering data, learning to manipulate it, importing records, building relationships, becoming a database administrator.
But all that didn't happen over just that first semester. Two weeks into that summer my family and I were up in East Texas visiting relatives for mother's day. While I was there the then-secretary of the office called and asked if I wanted to work during the summer. "Of course!" I said enthusiastically. They were going to scale my hours up to full time and even pay me out of the department's budget. This was going to work out very well.
Over the next two summers and six semesters I worked for The University of Texas at San Antonio Advancement Services department. I learned how to handle data and treat it right. How to deploy enterprise-grade software packages and being a project from conception to production. I did these things because I truly enjoyed working with information. Leveraging the classes that fell under the Information Systems degree, I sought to apply the knowledge learned about database theory. How to manage data in an efficient way requires that I think in an efficient way.
This efficiency has lead me to believe that memories can be related in a parallel fashion. Because of our history as humans I have understood that things really do go in cycles. If I pay attention to the past the future never seems so uncertain. This girder in my platform is just one of those beliefs a person has to have.
This parallel really doesn't stretch back that far, just to January, 2009. I was only in my second semester of college, ever. You bet I was homesick. Displaced of my own choosing, fulfilling an expectation, lonely and living alone.
I had had a job in the summer before I began school in August, 2008, but it wasn't anything more than fast food. Oh, yes, it was always something new and not always work-related either. Drama and grease after hours of shifts. I spent a long four months working there until one day I found myself packing my room up to go away to college.
For this part in the story I need to repost and refer. Repost the yards of paragraphs written during those first two years. Refer from here back to there; I'll give you a portal through which to arrive at the first word on the first page of Age 19.
Seek when you can.
Don't get lost. You're here already. You've made it to the other side. You want to guess where you're at? A present day reflection on the opposite piece of the parallel memory. I'm about to take my first job as a student assistant to the Vice President for University Advancement's Department of Advancement Services, Database Administrators team.
Fast forward two weeks. We're already moving out. Leaving the sleepy fourth floor of the John Peace Library. Edging on an outsource and relocating to a nearby business park we step up shop for the next three years. All throughout that Spring semester I worked hard, harder even than I did in class. I was doing stuff I had always enjoyed. Installing RAM, running Windows Updates, entering data, learning to manipulate it, importing records, building relationships, becoming a database administrator.
But all that didn't happen over just that first semester. Two weeks into that summer my family and I were up in East Texas visiting relatives for mother's day. While I was there the then-secretary of the office called and asked if I wanted to work during the summer. "Of course!" I said enthusiastically. They were going to scale my hours up to full time and even pay me out of the department's budget. This was going to work out very well.
Over the next two summers and six semesters I worked for The University of Texas at San Antonio Advancement Services department. I learned how to handle data and treat it right. How to deploy enterprise-grade software packages and being a project from conception to production. I did these things because I truly enjoyed working with information. Leveraging the classes that fell under the Information Systems degree, I sought to apply the knowledge learned about database theory. How to manage data in an efficient way requires that I think in an efficient way.
This efficiency has lead me to believe that memories can be related in a parallel fashion. Because of our history as humans I have understood that things really do go in cycles. If I pay attention to the past the future never seems so uncertain. This girder in my platform is just one of those beliefs a person has to have.
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Beer Fest - Third Weekend Festivities!
On Saturday I went to the Charleston Beer Garden beer fest this weekend! How cool is that? Uh-huh, and I haven't even started in on the details. I had planned to go with my friend Tiffany and her boyfriend Zach. Saturday morning they picked me up and we went to Brittlebank Park, the location of the festival site. It is right on the banks of the Ashley River. It was really hot that day, I think 95 degrees. We all made sure to apply sunscreen to the tops of our feet, noses, and shoulders. It was a really neat deal. For like $25 you get entrance to the festival, a free pint glass with matching coozie, and a sample passport for 10 brews tastings.
Between the three of us we bought two growlers. A growler beer container is used to transport a lot of freshly brewed drink. They come in a number of sizes but, at least regionally, have historically been of half-gallon size (1.89 L). The growlers were $5 apiece, and then each $15 for a filling. We chose an IPA (more bitter) and a wheat beer. The wheat beer was a light wheat lemonade flavored brew that tasted delicious! The IPA was good for a bitter beer, something to check the sweetness of a citrus-y brew.
Between the three of us we bought two growlers. A growler beer container is used to transport a lot of freshly brewed drink. They come in a number of sizes but, at least regionally, have historically been of half-gallon size (1.89 L). The growlers were $5 apiece, and then each $15 for a filling. We chose an IPA (more bitter) and a wheat beer. The wheat beer was a light wheat lemonade flavored brew that tasted delicious! The IPA was good for a bitter beer, something to check the sweetness of a citrus-y brew.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Announcing the Travel Log
You need to check out the Travel Log entry. About fifteen minutes ago it was just a regular old blog entry. Now it's a Page! . And now all sorts of craziness ... it's back to being a blog posting, again. This time dated properly, ranging from Tuesday the 5th through Thursday the 7th.
This entry will be consistently updated and revised to reflect the Travel Log I believe best represents my experience over the first summer I spent in Charleston.
Link to the album on Picasa Web Albums/Google Photo.
Link to the album on Picasa Web Albums/Google Photo.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)