that's it exactly

August 17, 2004


QOTD: "Blogs of people who I read years ago when the online writing metaphor was new but now just seem to be rehashing their same old subjects entry after entry: Gone. " -- John Scalzi on losing his accumulated bookmarks

That's it exactly. There's only so much to say about how everybody is blaming the Internet for the end of western civilization when they should be blaming a sudden upsurge in gardening, too many SUVs, and the lack of sidewalks. There's only so much -- even less "much" -- to say about the 10,000 ways the Red Sox will break your heart. And what's left to say about kingbirds, short-eared owls, gull behavior, and the inner lives of bait fish? There's not even anything really new to say about war and peace or the New England weather. The only new thing to say about coffee is how scary it is that now that Brazil has decoded the coffee genome they're working on producing super coffee. There is nothing new to say about art, and furthermore there is no new art to be created.

On the expedition to Lowell (there I go rehashing Lowell) chronicled in the tale of the lucky tires, the Hermit Potter and I scoured the art supply store for the specific art supply that would make us talented. What happens if you do a socialist realism painting or an impressionist painting with Expressionist brand supplies? Does the canvas implode? At least the Hermit Potter has not chosen photographing New England as his mode of expression. You see, it is impossible to take a photograph of any New England subject that is not a cliché. It's quite possible that's why I have been so reluctant to pick up the camera again even though I can in fact hold it steady in both hands now and have been able to for months. An alien from Planet We-Don't-Got-Trees could arrive here in the best October foliage season of all time and yet every photograph the alien takes will be be a rehash of a rehash of a rehash of all the images of New England in October ever produced. Weeping Red Sox fans surrounded by autumn leaves, ripe pumpkins, and jugs of cider standing outside a white church and a red barn and a red brick mill building reflected in the still waters of the no longer in use canals or where the canals used to be... insert standard New England image here...

I encountered my cousin in Stop & Shop yesterday. He asked if I still had my feet on the ground and still lived in the same condo. "Yeah", says I, "I've still got my feet stuck in the mud. I'm having tomatoes for supper." That's probably a rehash of the same conversation with the same cousin who lives around the corner from me but I see less and less. He even plays golf with a former golfing buddy of one of my brothers. When there are onlyl 437 people in the world, you're bound to run into the same ones over and over again but do you have to have the same desultory conversation with them? All 437 of them?

Two barn swallows just flew by outside the window , then two more, then another one. What's new to say about barn swallows?

Online writing is a metaphor for life in New England. That's it exactly.

Today's Reading
Birds in the Bush by Bradford Torrey

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Pedro Martinez


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan