This is an archive of daily observations written by my friend Tom Bridwell. I am not the author, merely a facilitator for Tom, who lives at the edge of the grid. He notices a lot of things and these are his posts, written from the vantage of a ridge top in the hills of Southern Ohio.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Sidetracked
Last week, Barb, former owner of the pub, was at the store, and asked me what was up. I told her my body was wearing out (she's had a hip replaced) and she knew just what I meant. She has some remodeling at her place she wants to talk with me about. Work I could do at my own pace. For now I just want to take time off, think about things, be quiet, read, take walks, listen to the blues. I'm often the most fully engaged when I seem completely disconnected. I was listening closely to Anthony, observing his body language, thinking about how oblique that stage or screen we assume as reality, in the moment, really is. Ephemeral. Jesus, I was vacuuming some cob-webs recently, it had to be done, there was a fire danger, and I had the thought that major cob-webs could serve as a method of factoring time. That if we went deep enough into the caves, into the nooks and crannies, where the cob-webs were thick and undisturbed, we might piece together a time line, a history. A record trapped in a filigree. Something about that interests me, that we could be dated by crap that accumulated in the corner. I think it's probably Friday, not that it matters, but I had decided, days ago, that I'd go down and get the mail on Friday or Saturday, maybe go into town, pick up a few things, just because I could. I'm operating here as a free agent, worth almost nothing on the open market.
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