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© 1999-2002
Ryan D. Pants

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february 1, 2002
my old reliable, last this evening

Leap Month.

I drove home from Bridgewater just now, which I've done before, but suddenly what-the-fuck???? I find myself in New Bedford. It's fairly common knowledge that I don't live in New Bedford, particularly among the people in my car when I'm driving home alone. It seems I just plain old forgot to make sure I was heading the right way. Maybe I was burning all my focus concentrating on extra-safe driving because I knew the roads and skies were glazed of the meteorologist's favorite blend, the so-called Wintry Mix of snow and ice and slush and blah. Maybe the Brian Eno/David Byrne cd was distracting. It was totally out of character. I don't think I felt any more sleepy than usual, either. Eventually I found myself on 195, driving by that kinda-funny-but-mostly-just-erie neon animated cowboy, buckin' and broncin'. I nearly wiped out while heading down a neverending slipperyass offramp. I decided to listen to my two favorite tracks from Ray of Light, for some reason. Then one thing became all at once clear: it must be February, again. Different set of rules than January. This getting lost nonesense never would have happened 24 hours earlier:
january 31, 2002
daniel sankey, with hood and staff.At one am last night, Dan and I took a long drive and ended up in Kingston, in a giant field. I felt silly, because the place is so close to home, yet I've never stopped by there. Vast, pretty and quiet, even at night. We parked, found a walking stick leaning against a stump, and set out across the cool, squishy grass. The place must be popular for bird watching or something. The worn trail we followed wound in and out of woods, eventually leading us right to the edge of the ocean. We perched on an outcropping of rock, stared out into the bay, and talked about political stuff, big dreams and personal plans. The world is sick, we said. We humans should remember that we're still animals, we agreed. There must be so many ways to look at Life, he said, beyond science and technology. It's so easy to feel afraid, I told him, with so many systems in place reinforcing the Big Problems. Right. Small steps in small communities, we said. We tapped on the rocks, chatted about coming and going.

"It's just so important to surround yourself with friends who inspire you to do things," he said. "People who get excited about things you want to get excited about and live a kind of life that you want to emulate."

I thought about it, for a moment, and answered carefully. "Yeah, I hear that," I said. "I know what you're saying. But there are so many different things you can admire in a person and want to emulate. And it's not always that simple... there's a whole other currency, a currency of support. Sometimes it's more important to spend time and give support to friends who have been there for you and given you support in the past. You build a history together."

Such great terrain, there by the ocean. As we walked back through the dark, Dan pointed out large, desirable houses. Houses that I'd desire, anyway, if I was in a house-shopping phase of my life. The South Shore air had cooled, a little, but the car was still warm. Normally I don't bother to go into Kingston, because to me the town has never been much more than gas stations and a shopping mall;
january 30, 2002
we went to the mall tonight, to return a book. the rolling parking lot was dotted with modern monoliths: giant mounds of snowdirt, compacted and piled into mountains by plows after last week's snowfall. they rise out of the asphalt like dirtbergs, melting. from each pile, the sandy water puddles its way down slight slopes. nobody seems to notice the ugly snowmonsters, but then again, nobody seems to notice the mall's exterior either. it's warm out there, i guess;
january 29, 2002
ted digs post holes this afternoon, with the auger.i'm not sure if it's april or october, i just know it can't be january. i'm glad i didn't leave town sooner, because i would have missed this suprise throwback to last spring: corn-muffin coffee breaks, sap-sticky hands, straining muscles, dusty pickup trucks and the smell of hot air freshener. there's something especially satisfying about spending five hours dismantling one hundred yards of chain-link fence in the sixty-degree air, while ted and pru erect a classic wooden split-rail fence to take its place. i took down all that stonewashed-denim-colored aluminum with my own hands, a pair of vice grips, a half-inch rachet and a two-ton backhoe.

a modern eyesore, replaced and reverted. in a fantasy about the rest of my life, i imagine myself making a living by razing stripmalls. a skilled team and i join with the local community to bust up asphalt parking lots, fell steel lampposts, and disassemble cheap concrete spec structures. we take down backlit signs and dig up orphaned plumbing pipes. we save the cheap shelving and suspended ceilings for use in new day care centers and rotary clubs. people come from miles around to break off little pieces of each conveniece store, bank branch, or sub shop, just to remember how things used to look. once bulldozed, the wildflowers slowly return and the treeline inches its way back, if the town doesn't deside to build a baseball diamond.

today, for the first time in my life, i planted a tree in new england january.
january 28, 2002
one a.m. flash: just a flash in the pond, with hand.

goodnight, moon.

 one a.m. flash: blurred grass.  one a.m. flash: inverted branchwork.  one a.m. flash: orange flume.  one a.m. flash: hat with trees one a.m. flash: long bluegrass.
january 27, 2002

What I did during my weekend.

Friday Night: Woke up from a nap on the recliner, in low light. Parents came home form work. Hopped in the car with them and rode to Falmouth, listening to The White Stripes with headphones. We went to my old high school to see my sister perform in a shortened version of The Spoon River Anthology. Pretty good. Made me miss acting, again. Alyssa did good work. Ran into Chrissy, who had helped direct the students, and her friends Liz and D.D. Decided to go down Cape with them for the night. Rode in the back seat as we drove listening to Pink. Ate a Reuben and drank ale at a breweing house, where we ran into Chuck. Chuck reminded me of Good Will Hunting. Seriously. We all went to a bar full of forty-year-olds where the band played covers by Billy Joel and the Violent Femmes. Smoked butts on the patio. Cracked lots of jokes to keep everyone comfortable. Pretended to be at the bar with both Liz and Chrissy, so the two sheisty guys resembling Mario and Luigi wouldn't bother them. Stared them down. Stared some other guy down using a silly look. Talked to Chrissy about respective plans for the future. Drank a vodka tonic. Went back to Chrissy's house along with Liz, where the three of us danced to Lauryn Hill, drank wine and talked real late.

Saturday: Slept until ten. Liz turned on the TV. Called Brittany to tell her I would be delayed getting back to Plymouth to help her mom move. Felt crappy when she told me to just forget it. Ate eggs, homefries, and coffee at the Keltic Cafe. Drove around listening to Natalie Merchant, The Pretenders, Cat Stevens, Blondie, Dee Lite, The Beastie Boys, Soft Cell, Indigo Girls, Sublime. Drove around more. Went back to the house where we all napped until five pm. Sat happily as they drove me all the way back home. Thanked them for good times and hugged good bye.

Saturday Night: Showered and shaved. Read some of How To Be Good. Joined the family and Alyssa's friend Stephanie at the table for chicken and mushrooms in dill alfredo with shallots over linguine, as improvised by my mother. Quite good. Cleaned room. Followed Erik and Steph to her house in Carver, and on to his house in Bridgewater. Drank orange juice and talked with them. We all watched the 20th anniversary DVD of Tron. One of the most underrated films ever. Jeff Bridges playing video games, groundbreaking effects that still stand out for their other-worldliness, imaginative and clever appropriation of computer and network concepts, Matrix-esque interaction between real and virtual worlds, and an anti-corporate plot. Smoked a Winston of two. Spend a little time clicking around the web with Erik. Stopped at Cumby's for gas and a V8 Splash. Rolled home listening to the Gorrillaz. Passed out with the window open, wearing only boxers.

Sunday: Slept late. Woke up and ate french toast with fruit and powdered sugar. Washed all the dishes. Swallowed down my mom's bitter coffee. Spent too much time posting to gangbang. Left the house to discover 55 degree air outside. Drove to Dave's to catc the rest of the Pats championship game. Drove with the window down, listening to Weezer, and it felt like last summer. Drank beer. Managed to focus all my attention on the televised game. Smoked down and played frisbee during halftime with Jonas, Adam and Dave. Jumped and yelled as the Patriots played what was simply a better game of football. Ate pizza. Told ourselves over and over that our team is actually going to the Super Bowl. Hit ATMs and picked up unhealthy chinese food at the Crappy Garden. Ate rice and chicken and spare ribs and bread and felt stuffed. Got the stupidest fortune cookie fortune ever, with something about "behind every good man is a suprising mother-in-law".

Sunday Night: Played Hydro Thunder on Dreamcast and drank Red Bull with vodka. Watched the Simpsons and Malcom with Dave and Adam and laughed a lot. Drove home to Mogwai.. Posted to sixfoot6 until midnight. Planned to take a headphone walk out on the course under the full moon, shoot some spooky flash photos, post one, and read myself to sleep.
 



let's rock!
+ 13

as the rain tap taps against my windowpane, i discover the hard way that chapstick is no cure for a bloody lip.
+ 1

bryant gumbel gumbel gumbel.
+ 8

my room smells like chewing tobacco, but i do not chew tobacco.
+ 1

Awol formally leaves us.
+ 10

put on your black dress.
+ 3

James Brown is one plastic looking soulful dude. You can see his lips twitching, itching to start screaming out into that old-timey court microphone.
+ 1

a fine lunch: seafood chowder and cornbread, made by mom.
+ 5

The Small World Research Project: a sociological study using the internet to test the "six degrees of separation" theory.
+ 0

new habits for Franciscan monks.
+ 2

freezing gusts of rain
tossing my ride about
like a shopping cart running
from an empty
parking lot
+ 3

the cool hum of wind, blowing.
+ 0

Dr. Zig redesigns in the 25th Century.
+ 0

Is Hollywood really this dumb? A great review by the Bill Simmons (the Boston Sports Guy) of Rollerball, a movie he calls thoroughly "reprehensible". The best review of a horrible film that you could ever hope to read, quirky and critical.
+ 3

chunky peanut butter is way underrated.
+ 13

So I spend St. Valentines Day doing my taxes. Which is fine. Dates never give me a refund.
+ 4

From the WTF? file: "Queens Unversity students spin out of conrtrol while taking part in the Great Northern Concrete Toboggan Race in Winnipeg, Manitoba on Saturday Feb. 2, 2002. Engineering students from across Canada raced the toboggans with the undersides made from concrete and weighing 300 lbs." Man. That's safe. Just imaging how much momentum we're talking.
+ 3

Ahhh! Oh. God. That scared me. And... ahhhh! A sabre-toothed mountain lion is eating his giant head!
+ 8

NO, I DO NOT WANT A TINY WIRELESS VIDEO CAMERA.
+ 18

According to the Boston Globe, teen drug use remains the same, but ecstasy use is up 71% since '99. But "use of inhalants, such as glue" is still more common than use of E.
+ 1

 



February 25th, 1988

I am tired of walking. I wish someone would give me something. I never did like to walk. Maybe someon would give me somthing that can get me from place to place fast. That would be neat.
+ 9

February 24th, 1988

I like school alot. I learn lots of things. I eat lunch and go out for recess. I like to go home too. I like it at home.
+ 0

February 23rd, 1988

Today we had a sub bus driver. We were late getting in. I a hurrying my Journal. I hope I finish in time. I can't belive I did
+ 1

February 22nd, 1988

I went to New Hampshire. My whole family went, except for my sister. We went skiing, and stayed in a hotel. The rest of the week I played outside. Boy did we have fun.
+ 4



:2002:
       01/13/2002 - 01/19/2002
       01/20/2002 - 01/26/2002
       01/27/2002 - 02/02/2002
       02/03/2002 - 02/09/2002
       02/10/2002 - 02/16/2002
       02/17/2002 - 02/23/2002

:2001:
Dec. 14.
Nov. 26. 18. 11.
Oct. 23. 16. 10. 1.
Sep. 26. 21. 18. 16. 13. 11.
Jun. May. Apr. Mar. Feb. Jan.

:2000:
Dec. Nov. Oct. Sep. Aug. Jul. Jun. May. Apr. Mar. Feb. Jan.

:1999:
Fall. Spring.

 



Whatever floats your boat or finds your lost remote / and this is for the ni**as working at the airport / who got laid off / I take my shades off / if you look straight it my eyes, you still might see a disguise/ 'Cause the whole world loves it when you don't get down.

OutKast,
The Whole World
+ 1

in a town so small, there's no escaping you. in a town so small, there's no escape from view. in a town so small, there's nothing left to do.

belle and sebastien,
dirty dream number two.
+ 1

It is the act of reading itself I miss, the oppurtunity to retreat further and further from the world until I have found some space, some air that isn't stale, that hasn't been breathed by my family a thousand times already.... And when I've finished it I will start another one, and that might be even bigger, and then another, and I will be able to keep extending my house until it becomes a mansion, full of rooms where they can't find me.

Nick Hornby,
About a Boy, page 303.
+ 4