Category: Landmarks

Listen: going to see it early is like quicker and easier HAVE YOU NOT FIGURED THIS OUT YET

Come, Internet, see for yourself. From here, you will witness the final destruction of the trilogy.

You want this, don’t you? The hate is swelling in you now. Take your keyboard. Use it. I am unarmed. Strike me down with it! Give in to your anger. With each passing moment you make yourself more my servant.

It is unavoidable. It is your destiny.

Oh no, my young Internet! You will find it is you who are mistaken, about a great many things.

The new movie… will suck.

Good, I can feel your anger. I am unarmed. Take your weapon. Strike me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the Dark Side will be complete!

Bee and Graham are here! We ate some tremendous meals and toured our favorite parts of Bardstown, which entailed me buying a lot of crap. One of those meals was my second time eating the Tierra y Mar, now called the Beef and Shrimp Diablo; I also talked Michael, Lisa and Graham into trying it. We unanimously agreed that it did not put the lie to my earlier ravings. If you are in Louisville and looking to find maybe the best single meal in the city, you need to go to the Mayan Gypsy and order the Beef and Shrimp Diablo with corn cakes and fried plantains. Get the goat cheese and black bean empanadas, too, and try the exceptionally rich chocolate mousselike cake.

I felt expanded in more ways than one after that meal: as if my consciousness were enriched, my senses stretched out and switched on. I felt taller. I felt really, really full.

Obligatory reflection

Thanks for everybody who called, wrote or commented to send me birthday wishes, and to all the people who showed up at my partylike entity. You’re all great! And I am made happy by material possessions: DC gave me more of the awesome restricted-access Actors Theatre notebooks, and Maria gave me about a jillion books and DVDs and an ice cream cake and apparently something else that hasn’t arrived yet, and Lisa gave me–exclamation marks!–my first-ever illustrated story! (Of Fortado.)

Despite my inexplicable knee-jerk belief of the past several months that I’ve been 26, I’m 24. Tonight I sent off the third-to-last thing I have to do to graduate. Almost done.

It doesn’t honestly feel like I’ve lived in Louisville that long. I feel so much more competent now, in so many areas, than I did two years ago: working with humans, writing code, writing, traveling, using public transportation, applying the principles of aikido to solve nonphysical conflicts–all the things I want to spend my whole life doing.

Also, I think this is the year my brain starts dying!

Pookie

He was a canine Houdini, absolutely brilliant at escaping whatever fences, gates or other barriers we could set up to keep him safe. He was brick-stupid about everything else: glass doors, bigger dogs, cars. Those two things in combination don’t make for a long life expectancy; it’s kind of surprising that he lived to be eleven.

Pookie was always nominally my dog, although Ian took care of him more often, and after we moved out he was really my mom’s. She found him, Friday afternoon, on the wrong side of the fence around Kelly Ridge. There wasn’t any real evidence of what exactly happened. Could have been a car, or another dog, or some unknown medical problem.

He was a shih tzu, the kind you see like little furry hovercraft on shows: glossy, legless, gliding. Pookie never looked like that. His fur was short, tangled and dirty; he smelled like a dog. He lived outdoors, and always seemed satisfied with that.

After Mom sold the house, Pookie spent much more time with Joe and his giant antisocial dog, Greg Brown, out on the ridge. I don’t know how Greg and Pookie first behaved around each other, but by the time I saw them together they were inseparable. Pookie was already nine, but he acted like a dog finally growing up: his body got thicker and more muscular, and he seemed more reserved, less goofy. Greg never let anyone he didn’t trust near his protege.

When he was wet he looked like a rat, but when his hair was just the right length he looked like those Chinese statues of lions. I’ve never met anyone more confident, or more trusting, or who spent his entire life in such a happy mood.

Pookie, leonine

Nobody in the church actually calls it “the last rites,” you know, although nobody had any doubt what it was when the Pope received it. The sacrament is most commonly called the Anointing of the Sick, and it’s performed in many cases of serious illness that incur the danger of death, not just terminal conditions. It’s a ritual of enlightenment, comfort and cleansing, not a funeral rite. My father received his Anointing while he could still walk and feed himself.

Maria brought it to my attention some time ago that I tend to assume everybody knows the story of my family in the early part of the last decade, when in fact I know a lot of you only through the interweb, and I’ve never actually written it up here. I’m correcting that omission today. I’m not entirely sure about all these dates, but I’ll change them if I’m wrong.

My dad, Ivan Wayne Adkins, was born on January 4th, 1950. He joined the Navy after high school, and was an engineer; he served and worked on both cruise ships and nuclear submarines, and was a noncombatant in the Vietnam War (his service was mostly in the Mediterranean). He and my mom went to antiwar rallies together during his shore leave.

When his time in the service ended, he earned a technical degree in engineering at DeVry University. He and my mom were married in August of 1975, and they moved to Georgetown, Kentucky, in 1978. I was born in May of 1981, my brother Ian in October of 1982, and my sister Caitlan in August of 1984.

The house we lived in was called Ivangrad, pronounced like a Russian city (although everybody called my dad “Wayne”). It was a big old place with an ancient well on one side, lots of stovepipes and no working chimneys. It was falling apart when they bought it; my extended family rebuilt it from the inside out before and during my childhood. Some of my earliest visual memories are of heat shimmering off the paint strippers held by my uncles and aunts, and of watching my toy cars disappear as Ben McBrayer and I dropped them between the studs where the drywall was missing.

In 1987, my dad was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He pursued several avenues of treatment, including both traditional and holistic medicine. I think it was also around this time that he became a vegetarian. I don’t remember a time when I wasn’t aware that Dad was sick, nor do I remember any particular disambiguation on the subject, so I assume that my parents told me from the start what was happening–not that I, at six, had any solid grasp on the concept of metastatic cancer.

We moved to Richmond in the fall of 1989, in part because it meant a shorter commute to Dad’s job at the Lexington-Bluegrass Army Depot, in part because it was also a shorter trip to the hospital where he was undergoing outpatient chemotherapy, and in part because my parents wanted a newer home where my allergies to dust and mold wouldn’t be as much of a problem. The new house was called Two Trees. It was the only house with any trees at all in our subdivision–a huge, beautiful sycamore and a smaller catalpa.

Dad joined the RCIA program at St. Mark parish not long after we moved, and was confirmed Catholic at the Easter Vigil mass in 1990 (he’d already been attending Mass for years). He received his Anointing of the Sick near the end of 1992, on his feet, at the university’s Newman Center in Richmond–none of us can remember why it was there instead of at St. Mark, but we’re sure of that.

He entered St. Joseph hospital in Lexington as an inpatient in January of 1993, where his condition steadily declined. He’d been bald for some time by that point, but his facial hair was growing back, which seemed to bother him. He wasn’t allowed to shave, of course; the chemo kept his red cell count very low, so any nick would have been dangerous. He had my grandfather sneak him an electric razor, so he could surprise us with a smooth face. It worked, but his skin was so tender that he cut himself anyway.

He lost the ability to feed himself, and to speak clearly. He was always hot and thirsty. There was a cup of chipped ice next to his bed, and when I came in to sit with him I’d feed him from it with a plastic spoon. My mother taught me how to let it melt a little first. One chip at a time, she’d tell me. Be careful. Go slow.

It’s little surprise to anyone, I think, how much my siblings and I hate the smell of hospitals.

My father is very large in all my memories. He was quiet, and spoke most often with his great strong hands, which knew perfectly how to hold tools and keyboards and children. It must have been heavy irony to see me, small even for eleven, feeding him with a spoon he couldn’t lift anymore. I wasn’t conscious of it.

Dad died on February 17, 1993. Other than the normal blankness, I don’t remember any strong symptoms of denial, though I certainly made my share of mental bargains. My sister, more classically, spent some time after his death believing that Dad was a heroic covert agent, undercover and far away, on secret missions. She was eight. It’s not hard to guess that she’s always been a person of tremendous faith.

I’ve only ever had three dreams about him that I remember: one in high school, one in college, and one a couple of months ago. The first two times I was suspicious of him, untrusting; I knew he was an impostor.

I had a comic-book biography of the John Paul II when I was younger. Its most affecting part was its description of his life during and after the second World War. He had a great deal of contact with the Jewish community-turned-ghetto in Krakow, and he worked with underground resistance to the German occupation.

Hitler wanted badly to eliminate the literate and cultural power of Krakow. He failed. I didn’t understand the symbolism of this image when I read the biography, and I’m sure now that it’s not literal. It’s remained with me anyway: Karol Wojtyla, postulant priest, stealing into a bombed-out library to pull books from the rubble. Covert. A hero.

Embarrassment is anticipated

I finally did what I’ve been threatening to do for over two years: there is now a navigable archive of every single IdiotCam©. I did some horrible things to NewsBruiser’s theme system to make it an image gallery, but it works. You can view things by their post dates or their categories (including the entire Plastic Mullet Series), and you can search for the title text and some other keywords. There’s even an RSS feed, so I don’t have to worry that humans who only subscribe to this site are being deprived of me putting stuff in my nose!

Joe died very early Wednesday morning, in his sleep. The first report from his autopsy hasn’t established a certain cause of death; his heart was greatly enlarged, and he had a little cardiovascular disease, but was otherwise healthy. They’ve established that it wasn’t a heart attack, a stroke or an aneurysm. His sister Laura, a nurse who specialized in cardio, believes it was a rhythmic irregularity that could not have been predicted: he had no risk factors except that he was a male in his fifties with some family history of heart disease.

Ian, Caitlan and I are here in Richmond with my mom now, staying nights at Joe’s house near Lancaster to take care of the dogs and keep the fire going (it’s heated with wood). Caitlan flipped her car twice on the way to see Mom that morning; the car is probably junk, but Caitlan is okay aside from some whiplash. She’s attempting to incorporate her neck brace into various turtleneck ensembles.

Weather and other delays have moved things to after Christmas. The visitation will be at Spurlin Funeral Home in Lancaster from 3-8 pm on Sunday the 26th. The funeral will also be at the home, at 10 am on Monday the 27th. After the funeral we’ll proceed to Blue Bank Farm in Casey County, where Joe will be buried in our family cemetery, next to my father and my mother’s father.

Thanks to everyone who has sent condolences and well-wishes. I appreciate all your words; I don’t have time to answer you individually right now, but your kind thoughts mean a great deal to me and my family.

Donations may be made, in lieu of flowers, to three things Joe loved: the Garrard County Humane Society, Kentucky Educational Television, or St. Mark School.

I have a much bigger mouth about free culture and copyright reform lately, which requires that a bigger amount of metaphorical money be put where it is.

I’ve loosened the Creative Commons license on Anacrusis. It was previously Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivs, or basically “rip but don’t sample.” I’m pretty big on sampling, so it only makes sense that I should allow it of my own work, musical or not. Anacrusis is now under an Attribution-Sharealike license, or “rip, sample, mash, share, sell, as long as you say the same thing about the results.” (So is NFD, for the record.)

This will probably make very little difference for anyone else–I believe the Anacrusis fanfic community is fairly small–but it’s a difficult and powerful step for me. They’re not just my characters anymore, but then they never were, really. I took the pieces of them from the world and put them together, and now I’m putting them back.