Thursday, March 31, 2005

015: Anyone?

So tonight (oops, now it's last night) while having my dinner, I turned on my TV and Will and Grace was on WB11. Normally I don't watch the show because, well, I think all the characters are annoying! But since there was nothing else on, I kept on watching it.

It was one of the "Barry" episodes. You know, the one when Karen sets up her cousin, Barry, with Will. When Will meets Barry and realizes that he is a newbie, Will turns Barry down. But feeling guilty, Will confides in Jack. Uncharacteristically, Jack consoles Will and gives him a sagely advice.
JACK: Why so sad, big tiny? [JACK POUTS OUT HIS BOTTOM LIP.]

WILL: I just had to let Barry down. The guy just came out and his first real date rejects him.

JACK: What?! He's never been with a man before?! So he's the virgin Barry.

WILL: I feel bad for him.

JACK: Of course you feel bad. You are Barry. Barry is you. Ergo, you is Barry.

WILL: Ergo, you is idiot.

JACK: Perhaps. But I remember another boy who struggled on his way out of the closet. He had a little crush on me. I found him repellent. But still, I took him under my wing. I fixed his hair. Taught him how to dress.

WILL: Yeah, you sent me to job interview wearing leg warmers with Chinese slippers.

JACK: Perhaps. But the point is, we senior gays have a responsibility to the freshmen. To teach them, to bring them along. Why, I helped turn this caterpillar into a chubby butterfly. And now you should do the same for Barry.

WILL: Why? Why is this my responsibility?

JACK: Because that's what we do in the community. We gay it forward.
(By the way, I found the dialogue here.)
Anyways, Will and Jack gay it forward to help a newbie out. Now, I think I need me a Will and a Jack to show me the way, 'cause you know, it's hard, so I'm humbly ask the community to gay it forward, and help this poor virgin out.

Anyone?

Anyone?

Wow, the silence is deafening.

Monday, March 28, 2005

014: Rainy Monday

4:30 pm. It's Monday and it's raining. I've just returned from the gym and I'm soaking wet. Well, not taking an umbrella can do that. As I am drying my hair, I'm contemplating what words to string together.... I'm writing this entry to let you know that I am ... happy. But you may ask, "What's so special about feeling happy? Is it that, Jake, you are an unhappy person and are you, Jake, trying to tell us that feeling an emotion counter to your nature is momentous?" And my reply is, no, there's nothing special about my feeling happy, and no, I am generally a contented individual, so please excuse the banality of my human experience.

You see, the remarkable aspect of my current mood is that, well, generally on days like this, I'm in the foulest of moods, because I hate Mondays and I loathe rainy days; thus naturally the aggregate product of hating and loathing should equal, "I abhor rainy Mondays." The sages of Bangles were correct to wistfully wish for a Sunday, "'cause that's [their] fun-day, an I-don't-have-to-run day." I, too, like the Bangles desire above all for a fun-day in Monday's stead. Like they say, (whoever they may be,) weather can influence one's mood; and rainy days impact me negatively, I want nothing but to remain in my bed with the T.V. turned on and vegetate to oblivion. But today, I had the urge to move!

Move, I did. I made my way to the gym and, besides pumping iron, I pumped my brain to release a heavy load of endorphins. Maybe it was this natural high that made me feel so goo-oo-oo-oo-ood. I walked home in the rain, letting the cool rain drops drench me, the rain drops that beckoned the earth below to awaken from its winter slumber, that contained the promise of new life, that heralded Spring! Even the air of polluted NYC seemed saturated with the earthy, verdant fragrance. The naked tree branches and the rows of bushes swayed and danced in celebration of the impending resurrection. And I joined in. So yes, I am happy.

Friday, March 25, 2005

013: Good Friday

It was on a Good Friday. It happened not quite fifteen years ago … See, it wasn’t exactly fifteen years ago because in that year, unlike this year, Good Friday was in April and fell on the Thirteenth. It was on that Good Friday…

“It’s the first room to your left, and here you go,” and I get handed a plastic bag. Inside it there’s a piece of paper with instructions laid on top of a white gown. Obviously I’m to change into it. I push open the door, walk in, and I gasp … followed with out of control saccadic eye movements, quickening palpitation, flushed cheeks. With my head downcast, I weave through a forest of naked legs to the most inconspicuous corner. It’s not as though male nudity is something novel, yet my mind shuts down, unable to reconcile this strange visceral pang…

Fast-forward three years. It’s past midnight, I’m sure of it; standing on a hilltop facing the Summer night sky, I tip my hand to thank my guide, the quarter moon, for lighting my way, and my guardian, the constellation Orion, for being my heroic companion. While everyone in the cabin slept, I’ve escaped. I had to. The touch, his hand caressing my bare leg, his cooing voice telling me how sexy I am… I had to escape. I know it was all a joke, a gag performed in front of his friends, for a measly laugh, at my expense. Ha ha ha… But still, I had to escape. That little joke stokes a fire, waking within me a desire, a wanting I’ve identified as evil, a longing I’ve learned to suppress. That little gag, also, sends a cold shiver running up my spine, freezing my mind, stunning me into a dark silence. And again, I am back in the changing room.

The door slowly opens letting in a shaft of light to illuminate our way up the staircase. As we ascend, the sweet sounds of Amazing Grace, played on the organ, sung by the congregation, growing louder and stronger, enter my ears, filling me with a warmth so reminiscent of a mother’s embrace, so reassuring, and calming. One by one, we walk through the doorway, crossing the darkness into the light. Before me faces of witnesses stare back at us, at me, and I am exposed. My foot touches the water, it’s warm. I wade over to the pastor. He faces me to the congregation, and speaks,
“Do you accept Jesus Christ as your personal Savior, believing that He died and rose for your sins?”
“I do,” comes my reply.
“I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.” He covers my face with a towel, and slowly he dips me into the water, and I am fully submerged.

I’m sitting down, up on a hilltop with my head turned up towards heaven, praying for some wild animal to strike me down, to devour me into oblivion. Have I not promised Him purity—purity of body, mind, and soul? Yet, most nights the urge, the pull, the throb throws all restraints aside, and the beast inside demands expression and reprieve. In the aftermath of sublime resolution, I feel the taint dirtying every inch of me. Like their touches from so many years ago, however much pleasurable, the lingering uncomfortable awkwardness, needing to be hidden, requiring to be unspoken, I feel the same taint. Still. And tonight, this boy, his hand, the soft caress… I am spinning for the shear sensuality of the moment, the pleasure unleashed by his fingertips, my body singing in response, for there can’t be anything wrong with it, for once everything is right, and I am frightened.

As I break the boundary of water and air, resurfacing, taking in a new breath, I am said to be reborn.

Sunday, March 20, 2005

012: 第二部:二六〜七十

The complete list can be found here. (04/28/05)

Monday, March 14, 2005

011: hyphenated non-IDentity, Part 1



The alarm blares. The arm jerks and thrashes about searching for the source of the annoyance—it’s reflexive. Once the high-pitched, Japanese-anime voice—just too cute to be tolerated—has been silenced, the arm quickly retreats to the coziness found beneath the comforter. But the Kawaii Tiger’s done its job: the mind feels the veil of slumber lifting. Somewhat alert, the body senses a command telling it to rise. Though, unlike Lazarus who heard the sweet voice of Jesus inviting him to rise from the dead, it’s less spiritual and more physiological the need that compels the body to rise…

…The hand reaches over to the faucet, turns it; and the water dwindles down to a drop. The hand again reaches, this time over to the towel rack, grabbing a lime-green towel; and the body is dried. Across from the fogged up mirror, an opaque image of a person stands. The hand wipes away the fogged up mirror revealing a clearer image of a naked torso and a familiar face.

I know him. I know everything about him. He hates his widow’s peak, the bump on the bridge of his nose, his thin eyebrows, the red scars populated on his neck and face forever left behind to remind him of the cruelty of adolescence. But more than the topography of his skin is known to me; I know his heart. It trembles when shadow of rejection creeps towards him and mourns when he’s cast aside. It dances when glimmer of acceptance shines on him and rejoices when he’s embraced. Though lately the heart believes, as surely the end of days in upon us, the shadow hauntingly corporeal. And it fears. The heart fears that it’d no longer be able to protect him from a fall, and in turn, itself from getting shattered into many pieces. Yet buried deep within fear, his heart is struggling, each beat yearning for him to dig out of despair, to seek the ray of hope. It’s calling out for him to rise.

But at this very moment the man reflected in the mirror turns his ears away from his beating heart as he has always done. Yes, he chooses yet again to set aside each heartbeat that commands him to live freely and rise truly as Lazarus has. Instead as he continues on with his morning routine his mind recites today’s to-do list. He needs to go to the dry cleaner’s to pick up his coat, he notes, while brushing his teeth. He muses, while fixing his hair, whether he should call her to see if she’d want to lunch together. Adjusting his Windsor knot, he remembers, the check his mom gave him needs depositing…

…Now, you see him on the street heading towards the subway station. You note that he’s stepped out to a brand new day looking spiffy, dapper even. But look around, look at the masses in motion, the law of entropy in action. Take a look even at this queue of people: here, one’s taking a look at his watch as he’s shifting his weight from one foot to the other; there, one’s busily recounting to her attentive friend, as she flings her arms about, what adorable thing the apple of her eye did the night before; oh, there, one’s about to keel over—the poor man sure didn’t get a good night’s sleep. Oh, but do make sure you don’t lose him. There! here’s him passing by the bus queue. Yes, he’s still headed the same direction. See him weave around an oncoming group of Catholic school kids, deftly executed. But turn around, look at that man, the man who’s equally dapper if not more so than him, closing in from behind, nimbly swerving to the left, avoiding a near collision with a school kid—a graceful save—and ultimately catching up… and then, the man, passing him by.

In this little slice of life, a life that’s urban yet isolating, remarkable but mundane, a life that he is a part of, in it, he is neither a lone diamond lodged among coals in a mine, nor a single pebble mixed in among rice grains in a bowl. Although he aspires to sparkle, for recognition’s flicker, perhaps as brightly as the ancient heroes immortalized in the night’s sky, to remain a glimmer in the eye of posterity, for the beauty he hopes to create, for the gift he yearns to give—even though he aspires—he knows the loftiness of his dreams. Mediocrity has always been his curse. And although he dreads the likely possibility of being spat out, to erosion’s indiscrimination, perhaps as to drift like a dust in the wind, to remain only a forgettable irritant in no one’s mouth, for the gift he has taken, for the beauty he has hoarded—even though he dreads—he knows the silliness of his nightmares. Ordinariness has always been his blessing. In this little slice of life, he is just average.

But of all oddities, in his mind, he is a nail, sticking out, sorely needing to be hammered in; he stands out, not as a diamond of his dreams, nor as a pebble of his nightmares, but in forms he deems unworthy. Though he may not like it, in every way, they identify him; these forms have shaped the man he is today. As a photo that sits on a bookshelf reveals, like a fossil evidence supporting evolution, a boy of seventeen, a boy in transition. A boy, whose mirthless smile shrouds frustration, whose vacant gaze conceals anger, a boy, slowly suffocating under frustration and anger—flailing his arms wildly, he is getting buried, deep beneath the cascading sand of an hourglass.



Frustration, stemming from simple acts of ignorance, such as the one, two years before he’s frozen inside the frame… A car screeches, pulling up next to him and his friends sauntering towards the subway station. The windows, of the driver and the passenger behind her, slide down, exposing the faces of four, well-groomed women. An uneasy silence. Then suddenly, as their red lips part, a barrage of cacophony spews out, each meaningless morpheme, a bullet cartridge, formed with a bullet head of the “ch” consonant, on a casing holding gunpowder of all the many vowels in the English language, comically inflected, supported by a rim of the finishing “ng” consonant. With an uproarious sound of laughter billowing out, the car quickly pulls away, ending the assault, leaving behind the carnage. The boys were the victims of their form—and he wishes, once again, for nothing more than to shed his skin.

When his mother, drunk and crying, unveils a secret she’s hidden from her only son, on the eve of his pubescence, she tames his rebellious bent, replacing it with sympathetic obedience—all for the sake of being rescued, this shunned woman rests on him all of her life’s hope; also, when his mother unleashes the truth, she sows in him anger—bottled up, restless, and growing. Indeed, anger, directed towards his sinful father, but tempered and locked up for his mother’s sake, only festers—the wounds never healing, the disease ever spreading. So whenever his mother, noticing a disagreeable behavior in him, something as insignificant as how he sighs, compares him to his father, it is like a scab being picked open, exposing the raw flesh to new pathogens of anger. He’s angry that he has retrograded in his life journey to be nothing like his father; he’s angry that he can’t ever seem to grow into his own man. He is a failure, who is ultimately incapable of breaking away from the form he inherited.

He is a product of the forms—uncontrollable and immutable. So as he descends down the stairs into the subway station, while an echo of angry voice, piercing through the murmurs of shoes clicking and clocking against the concrete, fills the cavernous hall, he, with the white, iPod earphones snuggly nestled in his ears, the volume turned high up, silences the on-folding drama between an irate customer and a fed-up MTA agent safely tucked behind her booth. Like her, he must have a glass wall, because by separating himself from the world, the world that has everything he wants and nothing he needs, by divorcing himself from that world, he can be free from the oppressive hold of frustration and anger, and be left numb. Detachment has become his only weapon of choice.

To be continued...

Sunday, March 13, 2005

010: Me Is Couch Potato






I'm glad to see Uncle Jesse's return to the small screen. Tonight ABC brought Uncle Jesse back! When the show moves to its new time slot, Thursdays at 8, it'll give Joey a run for the money. Besides I like the title; if I hadn't named my blog what it is, I'd've liked to have called it Jake in Progress.



Also, ABC's installment of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition was two hours long. Two hours of Ty...urgh! But, anyways, Kassandra Okvath (8) and her family deserved the home makeover. I'm such a sap for tear-jerkers. I'm drawn to stories where someone who even after suffering so much can give of herself to help others in need. A brief synopsis: Kassandra contacted the Makeover team to ask that they re-paint the hospital ward she stayed at while fighting cancer, to make it more kid-friendly and cheerful. Ty and the gang, telling the Okvath family that they couldn't do the hospital because they had to go to another family, sent the Okvaths to the hospital instead, with a simple charge, that Kassandra give the hospital a makeover as the team leader to a group of Disney artisans. It was a ruse by the team, so that Ty and the gang could give the Okvath residence an extreme makeover secretly. It was touching. Like I said, I'm a sap.

Saturday, March 12, 2005

009: Charity

You gain power by pretending to be weak. By contrast, you make people feel so strong. You save people by letting them save you.

All you have to do is be fragile and grateful. So stay the underdog.

People realy need somebody they feel superior to. So stay downtrodden.

People need somebody they can send a check at Christmas. So stay poor.

"Charity" isn't the right word, but it's the first word that comes to mind.


Chuck Palahniuk
"Choke"

Friday, March 11, 2005

008: 第一部:一〜二五

The complete list can be found here. (04/28/05)

Thursday, March 10, 2005

007: ...He, a Boy, Could Perform Miracles

The boy turned to the hand that wrote all. As he did so, he sensed that the universe had fallen silent, and he decided not to speak.

A current of love rushed from his heart, and the boy began to pray. It was a prayer that he had never said before, because it was a prayer without words or pleas. His prayer didn't give thanks for his sheep having found new pastures; it didn't ask that the boy be able to sell more crystal; and it didn't beseech that the woman he had met continue to await his return. In the silence, the boy understood that the desert, the wind, and the sun were also trying to understand the signs written by the hand, and were seeking to follow their paths, and to understand what had been written on a single emerald. He saw that omens were scattered throughout the earth and in space, and that there was no reason or significance attached to their appearance; he could see that not the deserts, nor the winds, nor the sun, nor people knew why they had been created. But that the hand had a reason for all of this, and that only the hand could perform miracles, or transform the sea into a desert ... or a man into the wind. Because only the hand understood that it was a larger design that had moved the universe to the point at which six days of creation had evolved into a Master Work.


The boy reached through to the Soul of the World, and saw that it was a part of the Soul of God. And he saw that the Soul of God was his own soul. And that he, a boy, could perform miracles.



Paulo Coelho
"The Alchemist"

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

006: Power of One

Why isn't the world made up of more people like him? Here's an article from NYTimes that gives an example of how one individual can make a difference. Coming across a story like his makes me wonder if I can be that kind of a person: one of influence, of conviction, of passion. One can dream....

But didn't someone say once that something is "1% inspiration and 99% perspiration?" If that something is to make my dream come true, then, ladies and gents, yours truly is screwed!

Sigh.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

005: Currently Loving, Part 2

MUSIC
Pixeltan: Get Up / Say What (dfa 12" Remix)
Kid606
The Postal Service: We Will Become Silhouettes (We Will Become Silhouettes - EP)

BOOKS
Alan Hollinghurst: The Line of Beauty
Chuck Palahniuk: Choke

DVDs
Zack Braff: Garden State