The Battle Of Troy

Troy Davis is dead.  Executed.  He was convicted of murder and sentenced to death.  That sentence has now been carried out.  It amazes me that some states in America still believe in the death penalty.  The first recorded execution took place in 1608.  403 years later it appears that America still hasn’t realised that the threat of the death penalty does not deter would be murderers.  That number alone is pretty damning.

I am not a lawyer so I do not wish to open a legal debate.  However I do wish to mention a few facts which for me are striking.  First of all 7 from 9 witnesses recanted their testimony amid allegations that they were pressured by the police to make their original statements.  A story which is all to familiar.  Regarding actual physical evidence.  At the crime scene forensic investigators found 0 evidence to connect Davis to the crime.  Another striking number.  Another man named Sylvester Cole confessed to the crime to three people.  However as he was never called as a rebuttal witness at the trial his confession was dismissed as hearsay.  Two witnesses gave statements connection Cole to a firearm in the direct aftermath of the incident.  Another witness placed him at the crime scene.  No murder weapon was ever found.  I don’t know enough about the case to give a rounded legal opinion but as a human being I can say that it sounds a little like reasonable doubt to me.

It’s hard to be completely honest about the death penalty.  As much as I believe it is wrong, if a loved one of mine was directly affected by a serious crime by position would almost certainly change instantly.  I would be a liar if I said otherwise.  The troubling fact about the eye for an eye on concept is that by and large it does not work.  As an example it is fundamentally flawed.  A decent human being should never wish harm onto anyone.  Yet most of us are not decent.  I don’t know what part of this story is the most wrong.  The murder, the dubious conviction or the fact that a seemingly guilty man has got away with a crime scot-free.

 

Beauty On The Subway

Whilst commuting to a meeting today a memory was jogged from deep inside me.  Sometime in the spring I was travelling on the underground when a number of kids, surely no more than 7 or 8 years old got on the train.  It was clear that it was a school trip from out of town as even their chaperones were showing some signs of fear and discomfort.  One of the boys was overcome with excitement from being on an underground train for the first time in his life.  It was a picture of sheer beauty as they kid stood in the middle of the train, ignoring the adults urgings to hold onto something, saying things like wow, cool and brilliant.  The fact that this everyday thing proved to be so exhilarating for this lad was absolutely inspiring.  I was overcome with the urge to let go of the pole and air surf along side him.  Shamefully for me I didn’t.  Instead I watched on with jealousy as the realisation that my zest for life was clearly smaller than his sunk deep into my psyche.

Today like most days, is rather normal.  No one is displaying any signs of having fun, at least outwardly anyway.  Instead people are busying themselves with averting their eyes from the glances of others and concentrating on not showing any recognition of the fact that this speeding death tube stinks to high hell of human sweat and toxic farts.  I wonder what would happen if I air surf in the middle of the train and say cool out loud a few times?  Will anyone make eye contact with me?  Will they all think I am mad?  Or will there be at least one person with a child inside who will want to join in?

Submissions, Projects & Motivation

It’s been nearly two weeks since I first submitted my novel and I haven’t heard a thing.  By appearances the submission process takes a great deal of time.  Almost always longer.  However I selected my target partly on the basis of their shortened submission process, therefore I suspect that no response in two weeks is in effect a rejection.  Therefore I have identified my next target, a literary agency with probably the best name in literature.  The submission process is slightly different here.  They prefer paper submissions so I will oblige.  Also I must write a ‘short’ bio.  Whatever exactly one of them is.

When I first decided to send off my manuscript I decided to take a mark-ably methodical approach.  First I combed through a list of Literary Agencies and produced a shortlist of nine.  It is my intention to work through them one by one.  As I approach the end of the list I will do the same with publishing houses.  I am prepared and I accept that it will be time-consuming.  However I have plenty of time.

In the meantime(notice how many times we use time?) I am vaguely searching for my next project.  Originally I hoped to find a professional project to devote my attention to.  However no such thing has been forthcoming.  Now I am mulling over the idea of what comes next.  My better half is encouraging me to write on.  I don’t know what I should do.  First of all I don’t know if I should continue.  And second if I do, what should I focus on next.  Something unfinished?  Something new?

I desperately need to make a plan.  Many years ago I was diagnosed a manic-depressive.  I have battled with depression my whole life.  One thing which helps me get through this period is having something to obsess about.  Something to focus on and devote my energies to.  When I am left stewing in my own mind I can often return to a cycle of lethargy and inactivity.  Already I can feel my semi-permanent insomnia creeping up on me.  Whether it be the changing of the seasons or other reasons, deep down I know I need to take action soon.

When I am working on something I feel something akin to electricity running through my veins.  The buzz is narcotic like.  The insomnia remains as I find myself ironing out various plot issues at inappropriate moments.  The lethargy disappears.  In part its the mental challenge of building the tale and trying to tell it in the right way.  In part its the race to the finish line.  When you pass half way in the journey and the end is in sight.  Most of all its the feeling at the end of the journey when you hold the pages in your own hands.

By trying to get my novel published I am not seeking riches, awards or fame.  I am seeking validation.  I have a need to prove to myself that I am good enough.  In order to do that I need to find someone who believes in my story as much as I do.

Party Like It’s 2011

By and large parties fill me two urges.  The first is to vomit.  Violently.  The second is to spend the night played sociological games with the attendees.  It’s very difficult to explain why I detest the party going experience so much.  I don’t know whether it’s the false expectation that everyone should have a good time or the statement it makes on your age.

One type of party which is often the most infuriating is the over enthusiastic host party.  This is when the host gets tipsy and starts trying to introduce everyone to everyone else and tries to make every guest dance.  The older I get the more it makes me want to commit murder.  First off dancing isn’t fun.  For men it never is, it’s something we have done to please women.  If a man does enjoy it, they are often either Billy Elliot or Boy George.  Where as with women it’s an age marker.  When they were younger it was fun.  As grown adults they do it to have that same feeling again.  The trouble is the closer you come to the middle-ages of your life the more absurd you look.

Eventually there comes a time in your life when you are invited to parties where nobody dances.  And that is even worse.  Everybody stands around brushing elbows in previously established groups.  As the night wears on these groups will slowly integrate, in the meantime topics will range from work, stuff my kid does and the importance of the third revolution of the Pompadours to the time we live in.  There will be at least one baby at the party, stuffed in a corner with an antsy mother and a father who wants to stay longer.  There will be at least one man drinking wine from a glass who will almost certainly be wearing spectacles.  All the while the only genuine bonds which are made are between the smokers as they grab strangers to accompany them outside, to the garden or the balcony.

I often struggle at these social gatherings.  I hate dancing and I steadfastly refuse.  I don’t have an interesting job to blather on about.  I don’t have a child to use as a subject every time a conversation drops into silence.  I quit smoking half a year so I have no reason to extradite myself from the mundane conversations which make up a party.  Inevitably I am the idiot who ends up on the receiving end of an explanation as to why fedora hats  were vital in the Spanish revolution.  Often I feel as though I should oblige the other person by debating whatever obscure theme happens to be the subject of the day as if I know something about it just for something other to than dance, talk about work or children.  Therefore I have gained a truck load of absolutely useless knowledge which I can fall back on an either look like a nerd or a complete arsehole at any party I attend.

Yet still it is not enough.  When I look around at a party I see rats in a science laboratory.  I see a mass of humans which I must study and investigate.  I am fascinated by humans.  One of my favorite pastimes at parties is a game named after the French film ‘Amelie’.  For those who have not seen it, every new character is introduced by the narrator, using their name and then three things they like.  It can be absolutely anything.  So I will look at someone and try to hazard guesses about this person.  For example they may bite their nails, they like going on bike rides and they like walking around their home with their pants on their head.  To conclude the game you must approach the person and try to introduce these topics into the conversation to see if you are right.  You can play this with friends too, it’s actually much easier to approach the person with someone alongside you.  Most people are surprised about how after you play it a few times it is surprisingly easy.  I have played it in bars, cafes, clubs and many other places.  Only once did it go wrong, when my partner in the game had alleged that one man liked to wear women’s underwear.  After much discussion about how to approach the subject I decided to go back to school.  I stealthily approached him and gave him a wedgie, my friend was wrong and the poor guy was quite angry.

Tonight I am going to a party.  I don’t know how many people will be there.  I know maybe 5 of the guests.  I have an incredible sense of foreboding which is often right.  I know if we are to have any fun tonight, mischief is the key.  It’s ironic how when I was a teenager and I went to parties I would do my best to be mature and grown up.  Now I am attending adult parties I do my level best to be immature.  It’s as if I haven’t evolved in my life, like I am clinging onto my youth by my fingernails.  And that’s alright by me.

The Humble Cold

If you were a human you would be the little weasel like man at a party who begins every sentence with one time I…

If you were food you would be celery.  You are destined to remain unwanted and untouched on the buffet table of life.

If you were a music album, you would be pan pipe moods.  You are not a proper disease which is why your victims plight garners no sympathy.  Your hideousness is only truly appreciated in confined spaces.

If you were an actor you would be Kevin Bacon.  Your performance can be melodramatic, however you bring an intensity which is uniquely your own.

I ask only one thing of you, old friend.  Please vacate my body.  You are the mosquito of illnesses, a bearable irritant.  Your presence annoys me, for you are terrible company.  Surely there is someone more worthy of your presence than me?

(12/12 – I am sick again.  And have a busy week ahead.  I thought I would take the opportunity to remind you of the prayer I repeat at times like these.)