Archive for road trip

Days: Fifteen Years Sober

Posted in Memoir with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 19, 2017 by sethdellinger

Prologue

There were chandeliers.  I had rarely been around chandeliers, and even then, never so many, never so shiny.  In fact, nearly everything was shiny—the centerpieces, the candle holders, the forks and knives had glints and sparkles.  Light seemed to reflect and refract from everywhere all at once, off of balloons and from under tables, men’s wingtip shoes had tiny stars in them, large wire-rimmed glasses on women’s faces beamed chandelier light into my eyes.  The whole ballroom was like a universe.

I should have expected to be dazzled at the first wedding I ever attended.  I’d seen depictions of weddings in some movies, sure, but being only eight or nine years old, I didn’t have a lot to go on.  I knew there would be a ceremony, and they’d kiss, and then I heard we threw rice at them, oddly enough.  I must have expected there to be a party afterward, but if I did, I certainly had no idea what to expect from it.  And all this shininess—I hadn’t been prepared for that.

My cousins were there—some that I liked and some that I didn’t, but we all kept playing together, regardless.  That’s what you do with cousins when you’re a kid, after all—you play with them no matter how much you like them.  Once the pomp and trope of the adult rituals during the reception began to wear thin for us (how many times does an eight-year-old think it’s interesting to watch two grown-ups kiss? Just because someone tapped their glass?) we found our way to each other and began exploring.  We found an elevator in the lobby that we rode up and down and up and down, getting off on random floors, running to the ends of the halls.  We made a game where you tried to touch the wall at the end of the hall and get back to the elevator before the doors closed.  It wasn’t easy.  We also devised a contest to see who could, when controlling the floor buttons, go longest without the doors opening to let a stranger onto the elevator.  Again and again we were tempted to press the Emergency Stop button, but we never did.  Eventually, an employee caught onto the fact that some kids were playing fast and loose with their elevator and we got yelled at and told to stop, and, feeling like we’d just been dressed down by a Supreme Court justice, we ran out of the elevator, through the lobby, and back into the ballroom.

We played under vacant tables.  We made forts under there by using spare tablecloths and draping them over the chairs.  We moved the large potted plants out a few feet from the walls and hid behind them until grown-ups gave us weird looks.  We took M&Ms out of our gift baskets and threw them long distances into each other’s mouths.  By and large, nobody was watching us.  The adults were having a grand old time and we were left to play, to run around.  It was a unique environment for us.  Dressed in our little spiffy clothes—suspenders, skirts, ties—we felt like miniature grown-ups, doing our kid things under the shiny lights.

Occasionally, the action in the grown-up world would halt briefly while they did another of their inexplicable rituals—shoving cake at each other, somebody’s dad dancing with somebody else, and on and on.  At one point, everyone stopped what they were doing for the throwing of the bouquet, which did not sound remotely interesting to me, but my cousins ran to the crowd to watch.  I was thirsty and a little tired, so I made my way back to my family’s table to regroup and hydrate.

Nobody was there, as they were off watching something happen to a bouquet.  I pulled myself up to the table, the empty food plates still scattered around, and my mother’s purse hanging on the side of her chair, and more M&Ms in clear mason jars.  I found my Sprite and gulped it down.  It was nice to have a moment alone.  Then my eye fell upon it: the champagne flute.  Full, bubbles creeping up the sides, mysterious presences.  I glanced around and verified I was unwatched.  I took the glass, using both hands to steady it, and brought it to my lips, surprised by the blast of carbon dioxide as the carbonation hit my nose.  I barely tasted anything as I downed the beverage in one quick movement.  I sat back in my chair, looked around myself again to see if I had been observed.  In a moment, the warmth hit my stomach.  A smile crept at my lips.

 

Days of Nothing

 

It had been a hot summer. Summers are always hot, and Pennsylvania summers get that special kind of humidity working for them, but this summer had just been a rainforest ordeal. We spent every day with a thin sheen of sweat on us almost all the time, even indoors, even in the dark in the basement. It was a summer of Sloe Gin Fizzes, chain-smoking Newports, sitting on the front porch.  It was a stoop, really, but we called it a porch, although you entered through the side door, not the front.

I was staying quite suddenly and unexpectedly with two of my friends who were renting a house in the middle of the Pennsylvania countryside. And I mean Countryside. At least a 20-minute drive from where anyone might consider civilization. The view from that front porch was actual and real rolling Pennsylvania Hills, green as Ireland, constantly sun-dappled, you could see the shadows of clouds as they passed overhead, rolling down the hills like boulders. Cows and sheep on the periphery, small tree outcroppings dotting the very tops of the horizons. I make it sound kind of lovely, but in fact, it was a pretty awful time for everybody.

See, if you are from Pennsylvania, it would mean something if I told you this was in Perry County, and really far out in the middle of Perry County. How these friends rented the house, how they found it, I’ll never know. But there I found myself, immediately after giving up on a semester of college, literally walking away from classes that were over three-quarters of the way done, because I couldn’t stop drinking long enough to wake up in the morning, or do homework or even read Mark Twain books. I simply threw in the towel, and after spending a couple weeks tooling around campus aimlessly, I decided to just jump ship entirely, threw what little belongings I had into the back of my 1983 Ford Escort, and drove an hour from my college out into the middle of the rolling god-damned Hills. I did this in order to spend the summer with two people who were likewise as troubled as I was, but in different ways, and we were miserable as hell together. We’d spend entire mornings out in front of the house with a two-by-four, swatting at the huge bumble bees as they flew past us, drinking 20 ounce cans of Busch beer, trying to kill as many of those bees as we could, for no reason other than there was nothing else to do. We’d sit on our plastic lawn chairs on that porch, with our view of the field, secretly hoping that it was manure spreading day, just so that there was something to look at, something to talk about, something to complain about other than the heat and the damn bees.

We spent our nights inside, in the dark basement, lit only by multiple strings of Christmas lights, the smell of must and tobacco smoke, no television, no stereo. Just imbibing and talking, and sometimes in full silence. I spent the whole summer reading one issue of Guitar World magazine, articles I didn’t even understand, once everybody else was asleep, reading these damn guitar articles in the almost total darkness, falling asleep on a dust-covered couch. It was terrible and wonderful.

One morning, as we were sitting on our stoop smoking our cigarettes watching the distant rolling hills as though something might erupt from them, an Amish boy strolled past on the street in front of our yard, walking his ancient bike beside him. He stood and looked at us, as though he were seeing something for the very first time, some true curiosity. Thinking we were some sort of cultural emissaries, we approached him and struck up a conversation. I can’t remember now what was said between us, what inane questions we must have asked in the name of science, but after a 20-minute conversation, he went his way and we went back to the stoop, thinking we had just crossed some cultural divide. I can’t be sure what we said, but I know who I was back then, so I know I was an asshole.

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In my early twenties there was a short time period when I stayed with my mother in a small apartment she was renting in the small Pennsylvania town of Dillsburg. This was during a time when she went on frequent extended trips for her job, so even though it was a place where I wasn’t paying any rent, I would find myself with my own apartment for a couple days at a time, here and there. Living the kind of life I was living then, which is to say, mildly indigent, alone time was a fairly sacrosanct rarity. On these times when she was gone, I would wake up on the couch, still mildly dizzy from my stupor the night before, find some water to drink, and commence sitting there, absorbing cable television, mixing large amounts of Diet Coke with larger amounts of cheap gin, chainsmoking generic menthol light cigarettes until the whole room was suffused with a haze as if it were packing material. Somehow having that apartment to myself, and enough booze and cigarettes and food I hadn’t paid for to last me through a couple days, felt like I had a luxury a room on a cruise liner. I would crank up the air-conditioning, raid her collection of compact discs, listen to Led Zeppelin’s “Gallows Pole” over and over again at an incredibly high volume. One such night, after a lengthy day of solo debauchery, I found myself inexplicably out in the parking lot of the apartment complex, wandering aimlessly, smoking my cigarette with a gin and Coke in a supersize McDonald’s cup. Suddenly and quite unexpectedly I heard from behind me someone yell my name. It took me awhile to realize what I was witnessing, but it was one of my more lengthy roommates from college, suddenly here in this parking lot, 45 minutes from the town we went to school in. At this point, I must have been out of college for about two years and hadn’t heard from him since (this is pre-Facebook and even pre-MySpace). I couldn’t believe my eyes! After getting over both of our initial confusions, I learned that not only did he live in the same apartment complex, but he lived with a man that we were also roommates with. The three of us had shared an apartment for about a year in college, and now they were living together and working in the town of Dillsburg, while I was mooching off my mother in the same apartment complex! It was almost too much to handle. Excited for the reunion, we both walked into their apartment, and sure enough, there was the third roommate, and he was just as shocked as us! We spent about half an hour catching up on what we had done since school, and then sat there in a kind of dazed boredom. We had nothing to talk about. It hadn’t been that long ago we were in college, pulling pranks, making silly movies, running all over the town like young people who would never die, would never have a problem in the world. But now just a few years later here we were, clearly at different crossroads. We sat in silence and watched a movie, and then I left and never went back there again.

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I don’t really remember how it happened, but I know for a fact that once, stone drunk, I found myself walking down the Carlisle Pike in the middle of night, just past the 81 North entrance ramp, headed away from Carlisle. I had just past the entrance ramp when I saw a tractor-trailer pulled over on the side of the road, presumably for the driver to sleep there for the night. None of the lights were on and the engine was off. I thought to myself, ‘I could just roll underneath a truck right there and sleep for the night. I could just lay under there, be sheltered from view and the wind, look up at the underside of that trailer, let this drunkenness and tiredness wash over me, and sleep there for the night.’ And I did roll under that truck, and I looked at the underside of it. I put my hands behind my head and stretched out in the gravel parking lot. I laid there for a little while, I have no idea how long, but even in my drunken stupor, and as low as I was in every aspect of life at that moment, even I knew this was a bad idea. I rolled back out and kept on walking, and I have no idea where I went.

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Time is a sad, dense fog over a sea, and places are lighted buoys.  The people?  I don’t know, maybe they’re boats, or fishes.  The days stretch out like dreams in a desert.

 

Days of Something

 

Just a few months after getting sober, I found myself living back in Pennsylvania, after a short stint in New Jersey.  I had moved in with a friend of mine who had a spare bedroom. I got my old job back, the same job cooking greasy diner food for a company that kept giving me chances.  I would come home everyday and see some of my friends there, hanging around this house I had moved into. Sometimes playing music, or fiddling with the communal telescope, or playing board games.   A few weeks into this living arrangement, I decided that I was going to go out that night by myself.  I ended up going to a movie, “Million Dollar Baby”, and it was a good movie, I thought to myself, ‘Maybe I’ll start watching good movies.’  I walked out of the theater, and it was a late showing, and it was winter, so it was dark and frigid everywhere, and I was the only one in the parking lot, and it suddenly dawned on me that I could do anything I wanted. I wasn’t a slave to anything like I had been before. Nothing drove me to a bar or a convenience store to get a fix. Nothing told me I had to be somewhere that I could fall asleep anytime soon. I didn’t have to work in the morning. I didn’t have anybody who knew where I was or was expecting me somewhere. I walked across the frigid parking lot to the adjacent Walmart, bought a Butterfinger candy bar and a Red Bull, walked back to my car, and drove into the countryside, smoking cigarettes, laughing my ass off at freedom.

 

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Philadelphia is a great city, but there’s nothing special about it in the winter. It becomes winter just like every place else becomes the winter: slowly, and then all at once. My first winter in the city was also the first winter I’d spent anywhere without a car. During the summer I had learned to get around by riding my bike and walking, and was just getting pretty good at it when the gradual winter hit all of a sudden. It was cold and it was windy, but didn’t snow for the first few months, and then one day, a day that I also happened to have off work, the sky opened up and dumped down about eight inches. It was a very different experience than my previous winters elsewhere, where you might go outside and walk around, do some shoveling, maybe go see a few of the local landmarks covered in the fluffy cliches. In a densely packed urban area that stretches out for miles and miles in any direction, and where local landmarks are a dime a dozen but breathtaking beauty might be a little scarce, I wasn’t sure exactly what to do with myself, other than sit on my couch and watch Netflix. Eventually I decided to just bundle up, put on some heavy shoes (since I never really am in the habit of keeping boots around) and venture out into the snow and see what happened. I started walking through the streets of my South Philly neighborhood, unplowed, unshoveled, the houses squished up against each other like sandwich bread, snow building up in the trashy pedestrian alleys between them, choking the tops of open the trash cans, pawprints sometimes the only sign anyone had been down a sidewalk.  And I kept walking and walking, taking note how it was different than my previous experience, and also ways in which it was similar, compare and contrast, compare and contrast, that is essentially how I Live every moment of my life. One experience must always be similar or different from previous ones; otherwise, how do you measure anything?  Eventually the neighborhood started to change as I kept walking, buildings got farther apart, the roads got wider, the streets were starting to be plowed, cars started moving around, the city seemed to wake up. I started passing people on the street and there was an air of conviviality, of shared experience. Everyone was saying hello, commenting on the snow, and it wasn’t just what people were saying, but the attitude, the feeling, like we were all finally together, not that we were undergoing any major hardship, but just that the presence of something so different, something so sudden, almost held us together like a web. Connection.  Eventually I realized I was closer to Independence Mall, which is the cluster of extremely significant historical sites in the city, than I was to home, so I just kept on walking. I arrived behind Independence Hall probably an hour and a half after leaving my house, still trudging through almost a foot of snow, surprised to see that there were a few people milling around, but only a few, much less than the hundreds and hundreds that crammed into this park in the summer months. I circled the building, taking note of what the roof looked like covered in snow, imagining it would have looked the same to George Washington or Thomas Jefferson when it snowed in the late 1700s. I crossed Chestnut Street, which is directly in front of Independence Hall, my feet not quite hitting the cobblestones, but still feeling the unevenness of the walk, as the snow impacted into the cracks around the cobblestones, as it surely has done to other foot travelers for centuries. I trudged across the open space in front of Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell to my left, taking note that it was still open, the Park Service still there and operating, but I didn’t see a soul in line to see the famed bell. I kept on going, heading towards the visitor center, with its bright glass interiors, newly built restrooms, shiny gift shop and concession stand. I often used to stop at the visitor center in the summer, as I was riding my bike around the city, for its quick and easy access to a restroom and bottled water.  As I swung open the heavy glass and stainless steel doors, it was clear to me that everyone inside the visitor center was surprised to see me, not because of anything about me, but simply because I was a human being. I was literally the only non-employee in this entire visitor center. It’s amazing what snow does to history tourism. Despite the fact that it was winter and snowing, I was sweating greatly, and was glad of the opportunity to take my coat off, breathe a little bit, stomp the snow out of every crease and crevice. I was thirsty and hungry, as I didn’t leave the house with the intention to walk halfway across the city, so I went straight to the concession stand, got me a bottle of water, a hot coffee, and some sort of breakfast sandwich.  I sat alone in the bright, metal cafeteria, my belly growing content as I fed it.  I took note that outside, it had begun snowing again, and heavier this time.  It was quiet in the visitor center.  I was far from home.

 

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This day started very early. I woke up around 4am not knowing what I was going to do with the day, but knowing that I wanted to wake up early enough to have a really thorough day, if you know what I mean. I was living by myself in Erie Pennsylvania, in an apartment, one bedroom, on the second level of an old house that was nearing dilapidation, but still teetering on the edge of respectability. It was smack-dab in the middle of summer, and waking up at 4am, the whole apartment was already laden with a heat, an oppressive second floor apartment kind of heat; a thin layer of sweat somehow on everything you looked at. I rolled out of bed, made myself a latte on my proudly-acquired home espresso machine, and set about pondering what to do with such a lengthy, summery kind of day all to myself.  I took a long, overly hot shower while the local morning news played on the television which I had crammed into my tiny bathroom. I stayed in the shower for the whole newscast, mind mostly blank. After the shower, while air drying mostly to cool off, I randomly selected a DVD from my bloated collection, and came up with “The 40 Year Old Virgin”, a movie that I don’t know how it ended up in my collection and no longer resides there, but at the time, a mindless comedy seemed just the ticket. I laid on my couch and let the Steve Carell comedy wash over me. Having gotten up so early that an immense amount of day still laid stretched out before me, even after my lengthy ablutions. What to do? Living by one’s self for so long, and so far from everyone you know, turns days and 31316_1458245861882_8379455_nmornings into quiet studies of one’s inner mechanics, and if you linger too long without plans, your cogs and belts begin to make a lot of noise. Suddenly it hit me: Niagara Falls. I’d been living relatively close to Niagara Falls for almost a year at this point, and it was always something bouncing around the periphery of what I wanted to do, but I never quite made it there, never quite made that my actual plan. Almost the moment that it struck me, I bounded off the couch, went to my computer to MapQuest the directions, threw on some clothes and some essentials into a backpack, and I was out the door.  I don’t remember much about the drive, although certainly there had to be a drive. It was close but not incredibly close, probably something like an hour and 15 minutes. A decent trip, but then again, much closer than almost anyone else in the world lives to such landmark. I remember having trouble figuring out where to park when I got close to it, the town itself surrounding it not exactly being incredibly helpful with instructions.  Finally I did get my car parked, and walked across a large grassy mall, the sound of the falls quite distinct, just like you expect the sound of Niagara Falls to be: thunderous, droning, like a white noise that comes from within.  I remember hearing the falls, I remember a large grassy area you had to walk across to get to it, but I don’t remember actually arriving at the falls.  In fact, the order of what I did that day and the specifics of how I did it, are lost in the labyrinth of my brain. I did the touristy things, I rode the boat, I walked up and down the path alongside the falls, I wore the poncho they provide you. I took selfies on the boat, all by myself, surrounded by revelers and families and church groups. After doing the requisite attractions, I found myself walking around the grounds, reading the historical markers, interpreting the interpretive maps. I noticed that there was a small landmass called Goat Island, out of the middle of the river, one of the features that gives the Falls that look, where it is divided occasionally, not one big solid Falls. It was accessible quite easily via a pedestrian bridge across the river, so I went out there, reading the Wikipedia entry on my phone as I went, the long and somewhat interesting history of the island, its ownership and various names. I arrived on the island to find a sweltering patch of grass, the heat dense with liquid, the roar of the falls now like a white noise outside myself, like a curtain descending. The island itself was no larger than a small park, and trees lined the northern edge, so that one couldn’t actually see the land fall away at the end.  I had the island entirely to myself. Of course the only thing to do on an island like that is to walk toward the edge. Walking through the grass I was assaulted by bugs everywhere, insects nipping at my legs, bouncing off my knees like miniature Kamikazes. The closer and closer I got to the river, the more amazed I was that there were no protections of any kind in place. One expects to find some sort of railing here, some warning signs, maybe even Park Rangers or something. But no, the island just walks right up to the river, and right up to the falls, anyone with dark designs would be in no way dissuaded.  The design of the island makes it challenging to walk right up to the falls, but instead it is very easy to sit at a clearing about twenty yards away from the actual precipice. I took my backpack off and sat in the grass, and looked out across the Niagara River, just beginning to get a real good head of steam up, just beginning to get its little whitecaps and wavelets, the water not knowing it was about to fly.  The heat washed over me, the insect buzzing began to mesh with the white noise of the falls, it all became a hot buzzing constant, I laid my head on the grass and sunk in, sunk down into the dirt, I was so far from home, and for a moment, I had no idea where I was, or maybe even who I was.

 

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“Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
Fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way.
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your hometown
Waiting for something or someone to show you the way.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain.
You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today.
And then one day you find, ten years have got behind you.
No one told you when to run. You missed the starting gun!”

‘Time’, by Pink Floyd

 

Days of Everything

 

It was a cold night, but not too cold, which was fortunate, because we had to park very far away from the arena. I unbuckled Boy from his car seat and heaved him into the air, bringing him next to my cheek to give him a kiss in the crisp evening air. “This soccer game?” He asked. “Yes,” I told him. “This is the big building I told you about.” I sat him down and stuck out my hand for him to grab, as we strolled quickly through the immense parking lot together. He had lots of questions. He kept calling it football, which was interesting, I thought, since most of the world referred to soccer as football, but he couldn’t possibly know that, could he? Most of his questions weren’t really about the sport we were about to go watch, but the building it was in. How could a building be so big that you could play soccer inside of it? How tall was it, was it taller than the telephone poles? Taller than our house? Will there be snacks? Soft pretzels? I’ve become accustomed to the constant barrage of questions at this point, pulling from deep within me a patience I honestly did not think I possessed.  Not that this patience is without limits—but at any rate, I seem to have more than I thought.  I suspect a toddler will prove this to be true of most anyone.

I was surprised by the patience he displayed as we waited in a long line to buy tickets. It seems every day, he is making leaps and bounds, growing in things like patience, understanding, and empathy. Which is not to say he’s still not a little ball of emotions that doesn’t know how to act, just maybe a little less so than a few months ago or a year ago. He’s becoming much more of a companion as opposed to a force of nature to wrangle and watch. While for the most part, time with Boy is still all about teaching, there are moments now of truly just being.  And “just being” with a little guy like boy is more magic than I’m accustomed to.

Finally, tickets procured, we entered the concourse, looking for our section. I hadn’t studied the arena map extensively, and had chosen seats in the section on the complete opposite side of the concourse, so we had to walk past countless souvenir stands and snack bars, him wanting desperately to stop at each, and also wanting to enter into each section as we passed, with me constantly trying to tell him that it wasn’t much farther, not much farther. But through it all, he didn’t freak out or melt down or cry, just implored me strongly. Finally we came upon our entrance to the arena, and I picked him up because I knew the stairs were going to be steep and he was probably going to be shocked by the sight of walking into the big room. Carrying him on my side, we entered the arena proper, and although an indoor soccer field lacks the nebulous breathtaking quality of a baseball field, the sudden shock of green and the expanse of a sudden cavernous room had its desired effect on the countencance of Boy, which is to say, it produced a certain amount of awe. After pausing to allow him to soak it in, we climbed up the steep steps, to find our seats. We were all alone in our section, something I had to ask the ticket man to do, in case it did not go very well. Boy was beyond excited to sit here. He was very into his seat, enamored with the idea that the number on it matched  the number on his ticket, and in this enormous room, this seat was his and his alone. He was not restless as I had feared, his eyes trained on the action on the field. I would steal sidelong glances at him, see his eyes glued to the action, his head swiveling as the ball bounced back and forth, his complete concentration and immersion something only possible in the earliest years of life, and during a first exposure to things; the sights and sounds meshing with dawning understanding, realization writ large across his face. He would sometimes stop his concentration to ask questions about the goalies, which he called The Goal Guys, their different colored jerseys causing him no end of confusion. Later, as he was able to again float back into our world, he would watch me for cues whenever the arena sound system would play the tropes of modern sporting events: the “Charge!” song, the “De-Fense!” chant, and on and on. He saw and understood there was an audience participation element and he wanted to learn.  I would raise my fist and yell “Charge!”, glancing over to see him mimic it, his tiny voice bursting forth its own “Charge!”  This moment, especially, nearly crippled me with emotion.

He paid close attention to the game and stayed quite interested for well over an hour and a half when he started to fall asleep on my shoulder. I told him I thought it was time to go, and he protested quite strongly, saying he didn’t want to miss anything. And I kept giving in, saying we could stay, and then he kept falling asleep again, until eventually I picked him up, went up the stairs to the upper concourse, and told him he should get down and walk around and look at all the empty chairs, all the sections without anybody in them. The arena was quite empty, in fact, especially once one got up to the upper reaches. We got to a very high section, a corner section so high up you could almost touch the roof in a few of the spots, and as we emerged into it, it became clear that it had not even been cleaned out or looked at after the preceding weekend’s Motocross event in the arena. Everywhere there was trash, even half-eaten food and some beer cans on their sides. It was an astonishing array of trash and smells to walk into amid what appeared to be an otherwise normal arena. It was immediately too late for me to backtrack and take him out of this section, he was much too interested in the hows or whys this could have happened. I explained as best I could that they assumed they would not sell any tickets in this section for the soccer game, so they must be waiting to clean up from the Motocross. He did not want to walk around the section, but he also didn’t want to leave. I picked him up and we watched the soccer from way high up near the ceiling, looking down on all that old trash and beer cans, until he looked at me and told me he was ready to go home. I felt that I had a companion here, a little guy who I could teach and learn from, who was now going to be interested in things, who was present with me.

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It wasn’t too long ago that we had a little get-together for Boy’s birthday. My Love’s father was there—and let me tell you, I like Love’s father so much it’s nearly criminal–as well as both of my parents and my paternal grandmother. My parents have been divorced for quite a few years, and yet they get along like the best of friends, and there was my dad’s mother, chatting it up with his ex-wife, all while boy ran around and told everyone he loves them all the time, and climbed on everybody, and climbed on me, while I held Loves hand, while the room was full of talk and laughter, while there was warmth everywhere, and everywhere I looked there was future, future, future.

 

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My love and I put on our light spring jackets and walked into the crisp evening. Just the two of us, we interlocked our hands, and headed down the street toward Midtown. It is one of the benefits of living where we do, that usually, given the right weather and the right child care situation, we can walk to some of the places that we like to spend time together. This night it was simple: we were going out to eat. It was one of the last walkable nights of the year, and we knew it. The cold was setting in, soon we would be driving everywhere and stuck inside like prisoners.  So tonight, we knew, was a walking night.

There was a very popular and artsy restaurant in the middle of Midtown, which somehow we still had not made it to. Recently they had started serving a very popular veggie burger, that all of our friends were talking about, and we still hadn’t tried. It had been on our list for weeks.

The thing about taking a somewhat lengthy walk with the person that you love is that it forces conversation you don’t normally have inside the house or perhaps in a moving car. You see things that you don’t normally see, are reminded of things you might only see or think of by yourself, you’re moving at an interesting pace, a different speed. I love holding hands and walking with my love. I love the way her hand feels, I love being connected to her physically in that way, I love being able to look at her face from the side so often. I love being able to point out things, and have her point out things to me, elements of our neighborhood that we only see when we are walking the dog by ourselves.  I love kissing her outside. Many people spend most of their lives in relationships and begin to take things like this for granted, maybe even very early on in life, they assume they will have a companion in this form. Having spent so long single, small things like holding hands, walking down the street, these things never seem anything other than magical to me. My love thrills me.  Literally every single thing about her. It’s electric.

Twenty minutes later we found ourselves the only customers in the artsy eating establishment, it being only five o’clock. We were talking about the art on the wall, the interesting sculptures, the funny man who kept looking at us askance from inside the kitchen. We talked about the interesting ordering system the restaurant used, the haphazard way salt was placed on some of the tables but not others, we talked about our days, we held hands and looked at each other. Sometimes we didn’t say anything and that was lovely in its own way. When you know someone is your true partner, being in their presence is a constant salve.

The food came and it was delicious, just as delicious as everyone says it is was, and it was fantastic to share a meal with someone who shares so many of my worldviews, who has the compassion in the same places I do, love and freedom in the same proportions, to share a meal with a woman who has taught me so much. As I was finishing off my Diet Pepsi, stealing glances at this woman, I kept thinking some of the same thoughts I come back to all the time.  How I waited so long to find her.  How, when I did find her, I couldn’t and still can’t believe how perfect she is.  How my journey to find her wasn’t about me, or even the journey, but it was about her, about us.  How I still learn about her every day and she’s such a delicious mystery.  How she fits so well.  I looked at her as I sat there, finishing my Diet Pepsi, and I said to her the only thing one can say, given the unbearable weight of the world:  I can’t believe you’re finally here.

 

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The days, good or bad, really do just stretch out like deserts, uncountable deserts, again and again and again.  Some, you find, contain nothing: plodding marches under a bored sun.  But sometimes, they are filled up, filled with everything you ever dreamed, brazen neon signs of days, confetti and love love love.  I don’t know about you, but I’m trying to figure out how to keep them filled up.  I want the days of everything, forever.

Days of Something

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on March 7, 2017 by sethdellinger

Philadelphia is a great city, but there’s nothing special about it in the winter. It becomes winter just like every place else becomes the winter: slowly, and then all at once. My first winter in the city was also the first winter I’d spent anywhere without a car. During the summer I had learned to get around by riding my bike and walking, and was just getting pretty good at it when the gradual winter hit all of a sudden. It was cold and it was windy, but didn’t snow for the first few months, and then one day, a day that I also happened to have off work, the sky opened up and dumped down about eight inches. It was a very different experience than my previous winters elsewhere, where you might go outside and walk around, do some shoveling, maybe go see a few of the local landmarks covered in the fluffy cliches. In a densely packed urban area that stretches out for miles and miles in any direction, and where local landmarks are a dime a dozen but breathtaking beauty might be a little scarce, I wasn’t sure exactly what to do with myself, other than sit on my couch and watch Netflix. Eventually I decided to just bundle up, put on some heavy shoes (since I never really am in the habit of keeping boots around) and venture out into the snow and see what happened. I started walking through the streets of my South Philly neighborhood, unplowed, unshoveled, the houses squished up against each other like sandwich bread, snow building up in the trashy pedestrian alleys between them, choking the tops of open the trash cans, pawprints sometimes the only sign anyone had been down a sidewalk.  And I kept walking and walking, taking note how it was different than my previous experience, and also ways in which it was similar, compare and contrast, compare and contrast, that is essentially how I Live every moment of my life. One experience must always be similar or different from previous ones; otherwise, how do you measure anything?  Eventually the neighborhood started to change as I kept walking, buildings got farther apart, the roads got wider, the streets were starting to be plowed, cars started moving around, the city seemed to wake up. I started passing people on the 1975051_10203223839982559_754980658_nstreet and there was an air of conviviality, of shared experience. Everyone was saying hello, commenting on the snow, and it wasn’t just what people were saying, but the attitude, the feeling, like we were all finally together, not that we were undergoing any major hardship, but just that the presence of something so different, something so sudden, almost held us together like a web. Connection.  Eventually I realized I was closer to Independence Mall, which is the cluster of extremely significant historical sites in the city, than I was to home, so I just kept on walking. I arrived behind Independence Hall probably an hour and a half after leaving my house, still trudging through almost a foot of snow, surprised to see that there were a few people milling around, but only a few, much less than the hundreds and hundreds that crammed into this park in the summer months. I circled the building, taking note of what the roof looked like covered in snow, imagining it would have looked the same to George Washington or Thomas Jefferson when it snowed in the late 1700s. I crossed Chestnut Street, which is directly in front of Independence Hall, my feet not quite hitting the cobblestones, but still feeling the unevenness of the walk, as the snow impacted into the cracks around the cobblestones, as it surely has done to other foot travelers for centuries. I trudged across the open space in front of Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell to my left, taking note that it was still open, the Park Service still there and operating, but I didn’t see a soul in line to see the famed bell. I kept on going, heading towards the visitor center, with its bright glass interiors, newly built restrooms, shiny gift shop and concession stand. I often used to stop at the visitor center in the summer, as I was riding my bike around the city, for its quick and easy access to a restroom and bottled water.  As I swung open the heavy glass and stainless steel doors, it was clear to me that everyone inside the visitor center was surprised to see me, not because of anything about me, but simply because I was a human being. I was literally the only non-employee in this entire visitor center. It’s amazing what snow does to history tourism. Despite the fact that it was winter and snowing, I was sweating greatly, and was glad of the opportunity to take my coat off, breathe a little bit, stomp the snow out of every crease and crevice. I was thirsty and hungry, as I didn’t leave the house with the intention to walk halfway across the city, so I went straight to the concession stand, got me a bottle of water, a hot coffee, and some sort of breakfast sandwich.  I sat alone in the bright, metal cafeteria, my belly growing content as I fed it.  I took note that outside, it had begun snowing again, and heavier this time.  It was quiet in the visitor center.  I was far from home.

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This day started very early. I woke up around 4am not knowing what I was going to do with the day, but knowing that I wanted to wake up early enough to have a really thorough day, if you know what I mean. I was living by myself in Erie Pennsylvania, in an apartment, one bedroom, on the second level of an old house that was nearing dilapidation, but still teetering on the edge of respectability. It was smack-dab in the middle of summer, and waking up at 4am, the whole apartment was already laden with a heat, an oppressive second floor apartment kind of heat; a thin layer of sweat somehow on everything you looked at. I rolled out of bed, made myself a latte on my proudly-acquired home espresso machine, and set about pondering what to do with such a lengthy, summery kind of day all to myself.  I took a long, overly hot shower while the local morning news played on the television which I had crammed into my tiny bathroom. I stayed in the shower for the whole newscast, mind mostly blank. After the shower, while air drying mostly to cool off, I randomly selected a DVD from my bloated collection, and came up with “The 40 Year Old Virgin”, a movie that I don’t know how it ended up in my collection and no longer resides there, but at the time, a mindless comedy seemed just the ticket. I laid on my couch and let the Steve Carell comedy wash over me. Having gotten up so early that an immense amount of day still laid stretched out before me, even after my lengthy ablutions. What to do? Living by one’s self for so long, and so far from everyone you know, turns days and 31316_1458245861882_8379455_nmornings into quiet studies of one’s inner mechanics, and if you linger too long without plans, your cogs and belts begin to make a lot of noise. Suddenly it hit me: Niagara Falls. I’d been living relatively close to Niagara Falls for almost a year at this point, and it was always something bouncing around the periphery of what I wanted to do, but I never quite made it there, never quite made that my actual plan. Almost the moment that it struck me, I bounded off the couch, went to my computer to MapQuest the directions, threw on some clothes and some essentials into a backpack, and I was out the door.  I don’t remember much about the drive, although certainly there had to be a drive. It was close but not incredibly close, probably something like an hour and 15 minutes. A decent trip, but then again, much closer than almost anyone else in the world lives to such landmark. I remember having trouble figuring out where to park when I got close to it, the town itself surrounding it not exactly being incredibly helpful with instructions.  Finally I did get my car parked, and walked across a large grassy mall, the sound of the falls quite distinct, just like you expect the sound of Niagara Falls to be: thunderous, droning, like a white noise that comes from within.  I remember hearing the falls, I remember a large grassy area you had to walk across to get to it, but I don’t remember actually arriving at the falls.  In fact, the order of what I did that day and the specifics of how I did it, are lost in the labyrinth of my brain. I did the touristy things, I rode the boat, I walked up and down the path alongside the falls, I wore the poncho they provide you. I took selfies on the boat, all by myself, surrounded by revelers and families and church groups. After doing the requisite attractions, I found myself walking around the grounds, reading the historical markers, interpreting the interpretive maps. I noticed that there was a small landmass called Goat Island, out of the middle of the river, one of the features that gives the Falls that look, where it is divided occasionally, not one big solid Falls. It was accessible quite easily via a pedestrian bridge across the river, so I went out there, reading the Wikipedia entry on my phone as I went, the long and somewhat interesting history of the island, its ownership and various names. I arrived on the island to find a sweltering patch of grass, the heat dense with liquid, the roar of the falls now like a white noise outside myself, like a curtain descending. The island itself was no larger than a small park, and trees lined the northern edge, so that one couldn’t actually see the land fall away at the end.  I had the island entirely to myself. Of course the only thing to do on an island like that is to walk toward the edge. Walking through the grass I was assaulted by bugs everywhere, insects nipping at my legs, bouncing off my knees like miniature Kamikazes. The closer and closer I got to the river, the more amazed I was that there were no protections of any kind in place. One expects to find some sort of railing here, some warning signs, maybe even Park Rangers or something. But no, the island just walks right up to the river, and right up to the falls, anyone with dark designs would be in no way dissuaded.  The design of the island makes it

31316_1458255262117_2141511_n

A photo I took from Goat Island that day.

challenging to walk right up to the falls, but instead it is very easy to sit at a clearing about twenty yards away from the actual precipice. I took my backpack off and sat in the grass, and looked out across the Niagara River, just beginning to get a real good head of steam up, just beginning to get its little whitecaps and wavelets, the water not knowing it was about to fly.  The heat washed over me, the insect buzzing began to mesh with the white noise of the falls, it all became a hot buzzing constant, I laid my head on the grass and sunk in, sunk down into the dirt, I was so far from home, and for a moment, I had no idea where I was, or maybe even who I was.

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“Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
Fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way.
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your hometown
Waiting for something or someone to show you the way.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain.
You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today.
And then one day you find, ten years have got behind you.
No one told you when to run. You missed the starting gun!”

‘Time’, by Pink Floyd

These Secrets Are Being Recorded

Posted in Prose with tags , , , , , , , , , , on June 30, 2015 by sethdellinger

My love and I just took quick day trip to Washington, D.C. to visit the National Museum of American history.  She, like me, is interested in most anything, although I must admit I funneled our decision toward that particular museum because I find our nation’s history particularly interesting.

There were people everywhere.  In this day and age of technology and immediacy, I must say I was surprised by the size of the crowd; and they were people who did seem to genuinely want to be there and were quite interested in the whole affair.

We started out on the third floor in the exhibit highlighting our nation’s many and varied armed conflicts.  We were tickled by some of the astonishing items on display from the Revolution and Civil Wars (Washington’s uniform!  The furniture from the surrender at Appomatox! Lots and lots of rifles!).  We took our time perusing the extensive collection.  There were even plenty of items from such footnotes as the War of 1812, the French and Indian War, and our conflict with Mexico (including Teddy Roosevelt’s San Juan Hill uniform).  Then a World War I display–tanks, bombs, more guns, and more of the same in World War II, including some amazing photographs of “nukes”.  By the time we got to the Chinook helicopter that flew missions in Vietnam, we looked at each other, seemingly reading the other’s thoughts.  “Do you want to move on?”  I asked.  She replied, “I’m just tired of war.”

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It’s an interesting time in our country, for sure.  Things seem to be getting a lot more “liberal”, which is good.  I recently told a friend I could sum up my political and social philosophy just by saying “I want to make sure everyone is alright”; apparently, this is a liberal ideology, and so be it.  I’m not afraid to put a label on it.  It is what it is.  Whatever that is.

At times when our nation goes through divisive growing pains like this, there is always a very vocal group that just wants everyone to get along.  “Why can’t we all just believe what we want and leave each other be???” they bemoan.  And it’s a lovely notion, even though it’s complete horseshit.  I don’t want anyone thrown in jail for thinking gays can’t get married or for pushing for the continuance of institutional racism, but I don’t want to just let them be.  What kind of complacent, docile, horrific world do these people want?  They’d rather the boat didn’t rock than actually stand for something.  Rock the fucking boat, you motherfuckers, rock the fucking boat.  I’d rather live in filth than in a land of complacent hatred.

And why is it that the people who most frequently tell you to read your history books are the ones who clearly have never read anything at all?  Doo-Doo, Dee-Dee.

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We live next door to an artist.  She doesn’t know we know she’s an artist, but we know.  A little sleuthing and a little circumstance led us to the knowledge.  She has a garage full of huge canvasses that look surprisingly like Mark Rothkos (I thought they were Rothko paintings at first).  Immense color fields, oranges, deep blues, with smaller squares of blacks and browns in the middles.  And a large, unfinished sculpture in wrought iron of what looks like a male ballerina, mid-adage.  I want to talk to her about it.  I want to name-drop Mark Rothko.  I want to tell her I love John Sloan and Auguste Rodin.  But I’m not going to.  But maybe she’ll catch me wearing my Rousseau hat.

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You try so hard at things in life that mostly will never matter.  Will anyone care, after I am gone, how close I got to my ideal weight?  How close of a shave I managed to get, how many points I racked up on my grocery store loyalty card, whether I had all the Arcade Fire albums on vinyl?  (I do).  Holy moly.  It seems so cliché and trite but I just try to be better everyday than I was the previous day.  Nicer and more caring and less selfish.  And it is so hard and it never gets easier.

But still.  I don’t want to gain my weight back, and I do LOVE my Arcade Fire vinyls.  Life, it sure is complicated.

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One thing I know to be true: it was a lot easier to like the Philadelphia Phillies when there are awful back when they had powder blue uniforms.

Philly Journal, 11/19/14

Posted in Philly Journal with tags , , , , , on November 20, 2013 by sethdellinger

I had a truly enormously long day today, but I’m still wide awake, so I thought I’d open up the old blog here and just start typing and see what came out.

As mentioned before, this move from Jersey to Philly was always going to require two moves, with half of my belongings being at my mother’s house in Jersey, and the other half at my father’s house in Central PA.  So we moved the stuff from my mom’s on Friday, and today was the day to go get the stuff at Dad’s.

So I woke up at 6am to leave, with my mother in her car, by 7am.  We drove the 2+ hours to Newville.  Travelling with my mother is always quite a joy, even that early in the morning, so the morning had that going for it.  Sadly, we had some rest stop bad luck and I got zero coffee until well over an hour on the road.  That was not swell.  Long story short, it was a pleasant surprise to find the U-Haul pickup spot was seriously about 300 yards from my dad’s house, so…that was a bonus.  Promptly after arriving, my parents and I set upon loading my belongings into the truck.  It was a little strange, as some of these items have been with me for quite a few years now, all over the state of Pennsylvania, and they’ve been sitting in my dad’s garage waiting for me for about 18 months, but it felt like we had just put them there.  Oh hi, couch.  Oh hi, chair.

 

Mom having lunch at a PA Turnpike rest stop

Mom having lunch at a PA Turnpike rest stop

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then, the long drive back to Philly.  I drove the U-Haul, following my mom.  There were actually quite a few misadventures on this trip, but I am, as I write this, becoming as tired as I really ought to be, so I must cut to the chase.  This is what happens when you begin writing a blog entry just to “see what comes out”.

 

Mom getting me back by surprising me emerging from a rest stop bathroom

Mom getting me back by surprising me emerging from a rest stop bathroom

Anyway, after unloading everything into my house in Philly and mom and I emotionally parting ways, I had to go to work!  It was only for a few hours to count inventory, but I was already bone tired!  Add to that the fact that “going to work” now also means a 15 minute bike ride, and I was NOT looking forward to it!  THEN, add to that some unforeseen complications during said inventory count, and what you have is me just arriving home at midnight.  I am so tired, I feel as though I could poop out an entire, intact feather pillow right now.

 

But the good news is, all my stuff is now here in my apartment.  Thanks again to everyone involved, but most especially my parents…a more supportive, badass, cool-to-the-max and unconditionally loving set of parents, I could not ask for.  And I now have a couch, a dining room table,

My living room with all my crap in in

My living room with all my crap in in

chairs, and all kinds of stuff one imagines when one thinks of…sitting down, and stuff.

 

Tomorrow will be my first real day off of work, with no “moving” to do since moving in, so I look very much forward to the free time to actually start getting this place in order and maybe stepping outside and exploring the neighborhood a bit.  My work schedule during this move, coupled with the move itself and it necessarily happening on my days off, has been just brutal (especially with my legs adjusting to the bike ride at the same time that I was moving boxes up and down stairs and onto and off of trucks in pretty much all my free time).  So I am in a pretty degraded physical state at the moment.  But it’s nothing one good night’s sleep and refreshing day off can’t undo.

This has been a fairly pedestrian blog entry.  My apologies.  I was more tired than I thought when I started.

move1

Philly Journal, 10/30

Posted in Philly Journal with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 31, 2012 by sethdellinger

Life chugs along here in Philly/ South Jersey.  There are quite literally more things to do than I have time for!  The list of ways I want to spend my time keeps growing and growing and I rarely fully check something off of it.  In addition to tourist areas/ landmarks (which my mother and I tick off a list at the rate of about one a week), there are larger projects I can’t seem to get my feet under me for:  familiarize myself with the local rock music scene, find when and where nationally-renowned poets are reading in the area, figure out the local New Jersey history, take pictures of as many Philadelphia historical markers as I can, become familiar with Philly record stores…and on and on.  Luckily, I like doing things.

There was a hurricane yesterday.  Despite all signs pointing to the fact that we should have been, like, directly in the worst part of the hurricane, close to nothing happened here.  Just a whole lot of rain, and a little bit of wind.  For a moment it looked like there might be a flood danger.  Watch this video I took, once an hour from between 1pm and 5pm:

A few nights ago I went and saw the band El Ten Eleven at Philly’s North Star Bar.  It was interesting to finally see a show at this venue, as about two years ago, when I was living in Erie, I had planned to see the band Hey Rosetta! at this location when I was home on a vacation, but those plans got changed, however, I had stayed on their mailing list and have recieved monthly e-mails from them for two years, detailing the bands playing there.  While there are dozens and dozens of venues in Philly, it just so happened that the North Star Bar would end up being the first place I actually saw a band in Philly after moving here.  It was, essentially, a dump.  But I loved it.

This concert was somewhat unique for me because I attended it WITH SOMEBODY.  I went with my friend Bill Hanna, who doesn’t have a Facebook, so it’s almost like he doesn’t exist. But he does have a Twitter account, and I’m sure he’ll hate the fact that I just linked to it.

El Ten Eleven is post-rock, which I reference all the time but you still don’t know what it is. Damn lazy readers.  Anyway, it’s really serious music for really pretentious bastards like me.  But seeing post-rock live is pretty much the most intense experience I ever go through.  It is life-affirming, gut-wrenching, and sorrowful.  And seeing it live with a friend is even more intense.  Kudos to Bill Hanna for making the trip, as I think he still has just one foot into the genre, not yet sure if he likes the temperature, although he is a certified fan of this post-rock band.

Anyway, the day of the show, I spent wandering around Philly before meeting up with Bill and going to the show.  I made this video of footage from that day, set to El Ten Eleven’s “Lorge”, followed by footage I shot of them opening their show that night with the same song:

Other intense things lately: my mom and I saw a show of some of Winslow Homer’s paintings, including this hum-dinger:

Went to the intriguing Franklin Science Center with the sis, nephews, and mom:

I’ve visited the building Thomas Jefferson was staying in when he wrote the Declaration of Independence, the house where Walt Whitman died, four Phillies games, toured a battelship, taken a million (really good) pictures, eaten way too many cheesesteaks, allowed my mother to teach me that, yes, plants are actually badass, recieved multiple cool owl things from my sister, played a seriously challenging game of hide-and-seek with my nephew Ethan, bought a really sweet new record player, went to the damned zoo,  attended a meeting of our development’s Homeowner’s Association with my mom and Brian (formerly known as Pumpkin Latte on this blog, but that would be too weird considering my recent career change, so to my blog readers: Brian is my sister’s husband and also a registered Shaman in Alaska), went to dinner at a fancy schmancy joint with a visiting Michael, became obsessed with the works of this poet and even found a book of his in, yes, an actual bookstore, visited Newville and had my dad take me on a tour of his childhood, oh and this and also this,  and really almost too much stuff to name.

I took a break from the blog for awhile, just basically finding where it fit into my new life, but things have settled into a nice rhythm now, so expect it to come roaring back, with a vengeance. Also, vote for Obama, you bastards.

My 49th Favorite Song of All-Time

Posted in 100 Favorite Songs with tags , , , , , on July 1, 2012 by sethdellinger

is:

“Top Drawer” by Man Man

Man Man is a strange, quirky, totally badass Philadelphia band that is somewhat difficult to describe. (I wrote all these entries in a fevered marathon about 6 months ago.  I don’t mention the Philly thing because I just moved here; they’re just one of those band’s whose city of origin factors greatly in their mythos, like Silversun Pickups from San Diego, Death Cab For Cutie from Seattle, Bruce Springsteen from Jersey, etc) I highly encourage you to read their Wikipedia entry, which describes them better than I’d possibly be able to.

Although they are not my favorite band, the concert I attended of theirs remains (by a small margin) my favorite concert-going experience ever. I implore you to read my blog entry about that experience here; for some reason the embedded YouTube videos have disappeared from that entry, but fear not, for here is a live version (studio Man Man is just kind of unnecessary) of my favorite song of theirs, “Top Drawer”:

You need a haircut. You need a shoeshine. You need aristocratic glow-in-the dark erotic magnet.

I know!

You need a moped. Half-boy half-horse head. You need a black Cadillac so death can drive him or ride in the back

I know!

I am a smoke fire, scared of holy water! People claim I’m possessed by the devil, but Mama, I know, I’m possessed by your daughter.

I know! I’ve been told! I am dancing through.

I am the top dog, top dog. Hot dog, hot dog.

You need a new body. You need a latte. You need the lingering scent of holiday men doing hot Pilates.

I know!

You cry wet cement. You lost accidents. You wonder where true love went cause the breeder in your bed don’t butter your bread.

I know!

I am a smoke fire, scared of holy water! People claim I’m possessed by your daughter, but Mama, I know I’m possessed by a problem!

I know! I’ve been told! I’m passing through.

I’m the top dog, top dog. Hot dog, hot dog.

Self-Portraits in Cities

Posted in Photography with tags , , , , , , on February 11, 2012 by sethdellinger

or, The Continuing Adventures of the Pretentious Traveler.

This one (Pittsburgh) was actually rather difficult (they’re all difficult; if you’ve never tried to take a quality picture of yourself using self-timer from a fair distance on a busy city street, well, let me assure you…it aint easy).  Anyway, my Pittsburgh attempts, difficult mostly by me misjudging distance, I thought were interesting enough to save and can be seen here (remember the Notes From the Fire Appendix?  It makes a trimphant return!).  Anyway, here they are (I just started this tradition recently so some great cities don’t have entries yet.  And remember, if you click on a picture, and then let it re-load, and then click on it again, you get a full-screen version):

Pittsburgh, PA

Erie, PA

Cleveland, OH

Buffalo, NY

You Would Not Survive a Vacation Like This

Posted in Concert/ Events, Erie Journal, Memoir, Photography, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 3, 2011 by sethdellinger

So.  That was a pretty insane trip home (and lots of other places).  I’m not even sure where to begin.  This may end up being a ridiculously long and disjointed blog entry.  I apologize in advance.  If it ends up not being extremely long and disjointed, I will come back and delete this intro, and you will never read it.

First, I should like to thank my family (Dad, Mom, Sister) for their various forms of hospitality and much-needed displays of unconditional love.  Yay human spirit and the familial bond!  I feel pretty damn good about my family.  You guys rule!  And thank you to all my friends who made me feel as if I never moved away.  I am blessed beyond belief with deep, intense, loyal friendships!  In addition, a big frowny face to those who I had to miss on this trip (most notably, loyal blog reader and renowned Muse, Cory.  Little does she know, my next trip home is going to be so all about her, she will have to call the cops on me. And the truly lovely Mercedes, whom I am unabashedly smitten with.   Also, on-again-off-again blog reader Tiff, who I had *promised* a certain something to…well, next time, ok???).  I was stretched a little thin to do and see everything and everyone I wanted, but it was fairly satisfying nonetheless.

My Zany Itinerary

Let me just show you the zaniness of where I’ve been the last week and a half.  I am going to include tomorrow, as I go to Pittsburgh tomorrow for a work seminar.  Here’s where I was, for the most part, the last ten days:

3/25: Erie, PA/ Carlisle, PA
3/26: Carlisle, PA/ Asbury Pary, NJ
3/27: Mantua, NJ
3/28: Brooklyn, NY/ Newark, NJ
3/29: Manhattan, NY/ Mantua, NJ
3/30: Mantua, NJ/ Carlisle, PA
3/31: Carlisle, PA
4/1: Carlisle, PA
4/2: Carlisle, PA/ Erie, PA
4/3: Erie, PA
4/4: Pittsburgh, PA
4/5: Pittsburgh, PA/ Erie, PA

And I aint even tired yet.  Bring. It. On.

My Newville Tour

Early on in my trip, I had a little extra time to kill early in the morning, and I drove into Newville (the small town I grew up in) and walked around the town for the first time in many years (I have been there plenty as of late, but not actually walked around).  I took some pictures of major landmarks in my life, also making sure to get a few pictures of some of the places that have played large parts in some of my blog entries.  Here is a bit of a pictorial tour of Newville:

My first house, 66 Big Spring Avenue. My bedroom was the top two windows on the right of the picture.

The big enchilada….the childhood home.  Most famously portrayed in this blog entry right here.

I have been trying to upload the famous picture of my mother and I admiring my grandmother’s garden, but I am having some trouble, so here is a link to that picture on Facebook. And here is a picture of that back yard area today:

One of my most popular blog entries ever was “The Fruit that Ate Itself“, about me being bullied in a local church yard.  I snapped some pics of that area in current day:

The church yard itself.

The line of trees is where the dreaded swingset and slide had been.

The Senior Center where the "fight" ended. Those are the bushes I flew through in the climactic moment.

If you’ve read my blog entry “Down the Rabbit Hole“, you may be interested to see this cellar door on one of my childhood neighbor’s homes:

OK, so just a few more pics here, but not related to any previous blog, just some Seth-historic stuff:

The very spot where I got on a school bus for the very first time.

This was my corner when I was a crossign guard.

Friendies

I had almost too much fun with friendies to try to sum things up here.  I’ll hit some highlights:

I surprised Kate with my presence not once but twice, and she lost.  her.  shit. each time.  First, Michael and I surprised her at her house:

It was also on this visit that this picture of Michael happened:

A few days later, I was strolling through Carlisle wasting a few minutes before picking up another friend, when I came across Kate and her family at the local eatery The Green Room.  As I was leaving them I took this pic of Kate, her husband Matt, and their son Dylan:

Let me just take this moment to say, as I was strolling around Carlisle that night, I was struck by just how freaking cool of a town it is.  Those of you who still live there, please do not take it for granted.  First, it is totally adorable.  And such a great pedestrian town!  And for a relatively small town in central Pennsylvania, it is arts-friendly.  Open mic nights, free music, poetry readings, public displays of photography, and on and on, are quite common.  The area known as the square and the surrounding blocks are humming with a vibrant intellectual life (not to mention some fantastic cuisine).  Please partake of what the gem of a town has to offer!

My brief time with Burke was spent in some fairly intense conversation that may, in fact, make me think about my life differently.  Oh, and Johnny Depp is a fucking sellout.

I spent some truly hilarious time with Jenny.  Jenny is quickly becoming a Major Friend.  (if her name is unfamiliar to you, this was the last woman to be an “official girlfriend”…and if my hunch is true– that I am a lifetime bachelor– she may go down in the history books as the last woman to be an official Seth girlfriend…what a distinction!).  Anyway, I sure do love this woman.  She has the special ability to make me laugh until I am worried about my health…without saying anything. She has a non-verbal humor akin to Kramer.  She can just look at me and I lose my shit.  Here we are, loving life:

Of course, you know I saw Michael, and it resulted in a moment of hilarity that I am pretty sure you “had to be there” for, but we decided that Merle Haggard had at one point recorded the “classic” song “You’re Gonna Make Daddy Fart (and Momma Aint Gonna Be Happy)”.  I still laugh when I type that.

Mary and I had one helluva time trying to find parking in downtown Harrisburg—notable because it’s usually not THAT hard.  Sure, those few blocks in the very center of town are tough, but we were unable to find ANY spots on the street ANYWHERE.  When we finally did park (in a garage) we ended up just hanging around Strawberry Square , when in fact we had intended to go to the Susquehanna Art Museum. I’m still not sure in the least how this distraction occurred, but we had a blast.  But the major news from this venture is that Mary has OK’d some photographs of herself!  You may or may not know that pictures of Mary are quite rare.  She just hates pictures of herself, and of course I love taking pictures of people, so this is a friction.  Plus, she really is one of the most exquisite women in existence, so I always feel as though the world in general is being deprived of some joy by the absence of Mary pictures.  When I take a Mary picture, I have to show her, wheneupon she then either insists on immediate deletion, OKs the picture for my own personal collection but not anyone else’s eyes, or (the most rare) OKs a picture for online distribution.  So here, lucky world, are 4 new Mary pictures:

That's the back of Mary's head in the lower right.

Staying at Dad’s

It is with much chagrin that I realize I did not take a single picture of my papa and me on this trip. *sad face*  Nonetheless, I must say, spending time with my dad just gets more and more pleasant as the two of us age.  It never stops surprising me how we continue to grow into friends (while he retains his essential papa-ness).  He is one cool dude and we somehow never run out of things to talk about.

This also marked the first time in recent memory that I have stayed at Dad’s for multiple days without my sister also being there.  In this sense it was entirely unique.  The last time I stayed at my dad’s by myself for more than one night was way back when I was still drinking and on-again, off-again living there.  So this was new, and really, really great.  In a lot of ways, it felt like a true homecoming, learning how that house and I interact when I’m a grown-up, and sober, and left all alone with it.  Turns out we get along just fine.  And I sleep magnificently in my old bedroom.  But it’s tough getting used to that shower again.

Hey Rosetta!

I’m gonna really have to shrink down the Hey Rosetta! story, or I’ll be here all day.  So, in summary:

Here are pictures from Paul and I’s show in Asbury Park, NJ.  It was a fantastic time, both Paul-wise (Paul, thanks for helping me see that not all my close friends have to be women!) and band-wise.  Really, one of the more satisfying concert-going experiences I’ve had.

Then, I made an audible call and went to see them by myself twice more over the next three days, in New York City (more on NYC later).  Long story short, I ended up basically knowing the band.  But they started talking to me. I suppose when you are a band that is really famous and successful in Canada, and then you come to the states and are playing bars where most of the people are ignoring you, and there is a short fat guy with gray hair jumping around and screaming your lyrics, when he shows up to your NEXT show in a different state, it is worth taking note.  So as I was taking this picture of the chalk board advertising their show in Brooklyn, a few of the band members were walking out of the bar and saw me and introduced themselves.

Because shows like this entail a lot of waiting around (if you insist, like I do, on front row) in small bars with no “backstage” area for bands, as well as lots of changing-out of gear between bands (not to mention trips to very small bathrooms), the two shows in New York would prove extremely fertile ground for me talking to the band.  This went way beyond my previous “thank you, your music has meant so much to me” that I’ve been able to give other bands.  This was basically a getting-to-know-you situation.  Specifically cellist Romesh Thavanathan, lead guitarist Adam Hogan, and violinist Kinley Dowling spoke quite a bit to me and I was definitely on a first-name basis with them by the end of my second New York show, and I’d had a chance to speak to every member of this six-piece band.  Certainly, this was fairly incredible, but also….in some ways, not as great as you’d think.  Parts of this experience were awkward.  I may blog more about this at some point, just because it was pretty intriguing (ever have your favorite band watch you as they are playing?)  But don’t get me wrong, I wouldn’t trade it for the world.  It was an amazing experience.  Here is a video I took of “Red Song” at Union Hall in Park Slope, Brooklyn, followed by a few select pictures of the New York shows:

I also managed to snag handwritten setlists off the stage two of the three nights.  Here are scans of the setlists:

So now, for the benefit of probably just myself and maybe Paul, here is some Hey Rosetta! setlist discussion:  on the first setlist shown, Bandages was skipped.  On the second shown (from my thrid concert, Manhattan) ‘Bandages’ and ‘Red Heart’ were swapped in position (as were the two songs where a swap is indicated, ‘Yer Spring’ and ‘Welcome’…and talk about a way to open a show!  “Lions For Scottie” into “Welcome”!)  Here are all three setlists for shows I went to this tour:

Asbury Park, NJ

1.  New Goodbye
2.  Yer Spring
3.  New Glass
4.  Bricks
5.  Another Pilot
6.  There’s an Arc
7.  Seeds
8.  Red Heart

Brooklyn, NY
(reconstructed via this photograph)

1.  New Goodbye
2.  Yer Spring
3.  New Glass
4.  Bricks
5.  Another Pilot
6.  There’s an Arc
7.  Welcome
8.  Red Song
9.  We Made a Pact
10.  Seeds
11.  Red Heart
12. A Thousand Suns*

*’Bandages’ is on the setlist in the 12 spot, but ‘A Thousand Suns’ was played.

Manhattan, NY

1.  Lions For Scottie
2.  Welcome
3.  Yer Spring
4.  New Glass
5.  Yer Fall
6.  There’s an Arc
7.  I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time
8.  Holy Shit
9.  New Sum
10.  Seeds
11.  New Goodbye

Encore:

1.  Bandages
2.  Red Heart

And now, for the record, the sum total of Hey Rosetta! songs I’ve seen, including the two acoustic shows I saw last year:

1.  Red Heart–5 times
2.  Bricks–4 times
3.  I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time–3 times
4.  Lions for Scottie–3 times
5.  Bandages–3 times
6.  New Goodbye–3 times
7.  Yer Spring–3 times
8.  New Glass–3 times
9.  There’s an Arc–3 times
10.  Seeds–3 times
11.  Seventeen–2 times
12.  Red Song–2 times
13.  We Made a Pact–2 times
14.  Another Pilot–2 times
15.  Welcome–2 times
16.  A Thousand Suns–1 time
17.  Yer Fall–1 time
18.  Holy Shit–1 time
19.  New Sum–1 time

Mom’s/ Sisters

So my mom now lives with my sister, which makes visiting everybody much easier!  It was quite nice to see everybody all at once!  In the same breath, however, I must admit it made me feel as though I did a poor job of paying ample attention to everyone.  When you are seeing a gaggle of loved ones all at once for the first time in a long time, it can be a strain to give equal time.  I think specifically of the nephews, who I love uncontrollably but whom I was not able to give the sort of attention they are accustomed to receiving from me.  When it came down to it, my mom and my sister were the center of my focus (not to mention the antics of Pumpkin Latte).  Don’t get me wrong, I had a lovely time!  I guess I’m just feeling some guilt, cause those boys worked up a good amount of anticipation for my arrival and I almost certainly dissapointed.  That being said, the time with Momma and Sis was marvelous. LOTS of laughs, and a new momma/ son tradition: I claim her and I are going to do the Jumble together, and then I end up freaking out over how amazing she is at it, while I add absolutely nothing to the process (she really is amazing at the Jumble).  Also, I “T”d my sister, which always rules.  A brief but incredibly heartwarming time.  Some select pics:

Sister and Pumpkin Latte, as she was taking their picture

Sis, Me, Mom

New York

The New York trip is another thing I shall have to gloss over, or I’ll be writing this blog entry until next week.  I did what I typically do: I drive right into the city, pay a thousand dollars to park, and just walk around.  I usually have very little plan other than one or two fairly simple goals.  This trip’s goals: see sunrise from inside Central Park, and buy a New York Times from a newsstand and read the whole thing from inside a midtown Manhattan Starbucks during the morning commute hours.  I’m not sure why I wanted to do these things, but once the goals were in my mind, I could not seem to let them go.  I accomplished both, and although being in Central Park during sunrise was magical, it was not easy to get any great pictures of the event, due to the vast amount of:

a) Tall trees, and
b) skyscrapers

These things blocked the view of the actual sunrise rather effectively, but feeling the world come alive from within the park was quite joyous.  Here is the best picture I got of the sunrise:

I spent almost two hours in the Starbucks, enjoying my latte and an incredible issue of the NYT.  I suppose for a moment I felt as hip as I’ve always suspected I am.  It was a quality time.

I spent the rest of the day wandering around, taking pictures, eating, even napping briefly in the tranquil section of Central Park known as the Woodlands.  I also visited, for the first time, the Central Park Zoo, which was a lovely treat.  Here is some video I took of the Sea Lions being fed (and putting on a little show) followed by some pictures:

Sunset, Brooklyn

Me in Central Park

Some Things I Learned

1.  8 months is not long enough to forget how to get around (but it IS long enough to cause some occasional navigation confusion)

2.  When you are a single man in your 30s who moves away from everyone he knows and doesn’t visit home for 8 months, a surprising amount of people from all demographics will just straight-up ask you about your sex life.  This is fodder for an entire blog entry at some point that will be in the form of a “rant”.  FYI, nobody need worry about my sex life, mkay?

3.  You may think where you live is boring, but leave it for a little while and then come back; you may just find it’s really cool.

4.  There are really hot ladies everywhere.

5.  Don’t tell people you got fat.  You may think it will make your fatness less awkward, but it makes it moreso.

6.  Things change.  Buildings get knocked down, businesses change their name, streets get re-directed.  Accept these things as a natural course of existence. (reminds me of a Hey Rosetta! song:  “The schools that we went to have all been closed./ And all of my teachers are dead, I suppose.”)

7.  You can walk further than you think you can.

8.  If you move and your sports allegiances change a little bit, you can just kinda keep that to yourself on your first few visits home.

9.  As you leave places you have stayed for just a day or two, remember to gather all your various “chargers”.  We have a lot of chargers in this day and age.

10.  Family and friends really are the best things in the world, even if saying so sounds cheesy and cliche.  Fuck it, it’s true!

I Almost Forgot…

Today is my 8 year sobriety anniversary!  The original purpose of this vacation was for me to have off and see my loved ones leading up to the big day.  (I just have to complete my anniversary tradition of watching “Dark Days” on the anniversary itself)  So…yay me!  But also…yay you!  Thanks everybody for putting up with my horribleness when I was horrible, and then helping me live such a satisfying and fantastic life in my sobriety!  What a treat, to be able to celebrate the week leading up to it in the way I did.  And how neat is it that I almost forgot today was the day???  That must mean life is pretty good.  I love you, everybody!

You can stop the train. Just pull the brake.

Posted in Concert/ Events, Photography with tags , , , , , , , , , , on March 28, 2011 by sethdellinger

The Hey Rosetta! show in Asbury Park, NJ with Paul was a truly thrilling experience (so much so that I am locked in an intense internal debate over whether to go see them again in Manhattan sometime Monday or Tuesday…I guess you’ll find out via blog post eventually!)  I’d type a longer entry about Paul andI’s experience, but I’m on my sister’s laptop and this keyboard and mouse are confounding me.  This time, the band was fully electric (you may remember the first two times I saw them, they were acoustic) and it was MINDBLOWING.  Paul and I once again got to thank the band and shake their hands, and we both got handwritten copies of the setlist off the stage (I’ll be scanning mine in when I get home).  A ball-to-the-wall awesome time.  The setlist was:

1.  New Goodbye
2. Yer Spring
3. New Glass
4. Bricks
5. Another Pilot
6. There’s an Arc
7. Seeds
8. Red Heart

Pictures:

 

Paul at a rest stop on the way home.

Dispatch from Home

Posted in Concert/ Events, Prose, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 27, 2011 by sethdellinger

Hello folks!!! As you may or may not have heard, I am writing you from the ol’ homestead of central Pennsylvania (and New Jersey and maybe New York or Philadelphia, at some point).  I didn’t give any forewarning on this develppment, as I desperately wanted to avoid having an “appointment” vacation, where I make so many plans with people I no longer seem to posses free will.  I want to visit home but also have an actual vacation.  I mean…I work real hard.

Anyway, you won’t (probably) be hearing from me much in the interim, although before I left Erie I set up a few blogs to post automatically (mostly the recurring blogs with days in their names…Monday’s Song, etc) so we won’t feel my absence entirely.  I just wanted to put that out there in case you happen to know I’m in the middle of a 5 hour drive and an Audio Poem posts, you know I’m not doing that shit from my car!

I had a perfect day yesterday, seeing my dad in the morning, some terrific friends (Michael and Kate) in the afternoon, and then having a near-flawless road trip with Paul to see a mind-blowing Hey Rosetta!  (not to mention getting to meet Paul’s precious brand-new son, Parker).  Paul: we somehow seem to have more to talk about with each other than we did as younger men, plus we laugh even more.  What a rare quaility.  You’re a gem, sir.

I’m off to New Jersey now (I know…I was just there yesterday, but I promise, it’s not the same town) to see my mother, my sister, my nephews, and Pumpkin Latte

Also, it’s really sunny, and 42 degrees (right now that feels like 70!)

And just wait till you see the pictures I’ve been getting!

Ten Mini-Memoirs

Posted in Memoir with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 2, 2011 by sethdellinger

1.  The first concert I ever went to was 80s superstar Tiffany.  I remember being very excited, despite not really knowing who she was or what was going on.  I went with my mother and my sister; it was at The Forum in Harrisburg.  This is one of those memories that consists of just a few details and sensory portraits. Bright, colorful lights.  Standing on the cushioned chair.  So many people. 

2.  I’ve always thought that somehow I got my love of Dr. Pepper from my Grandma Allie, though I do not know where this belief comes from.  I have never seen her drink it, not does she ever have any at her house.  But I have a flash of a memory:  my family, on vacation in Ocean City, Maryland.  Grandma and I, somehow, are alone in the hotel room.  I am very young.  We are sitting at the dining room table together, discussing (to my memory) two things:  how much my allowance is, and Dr. Pepper.  On the table with us is a sweating, lovely crimson 2 liter bottle of Dr. Pepper.  This small, insignificant memory has forever welded Grandma Allie and Dr. Pepper together for me.

3.  I lost my virginity in the Subaru Legacy station wagon that had been passed down to me from my mother, on a dirt road in the far, far out country of Perry County, Pennsylvania, at the age of 16.  The rap album Regulate by Warren G. was playing, and I was 16 years old.  The car smelled of vanilla car air freshener.  I had one of those tree-shaped air fresheners hanging from the volume knob of the radio.  I used a green condom, for reasons unknown.

4.  My dad and I used to go to Harrisburg Senators games all the time.  They are the minor league baseball team for that city.  I remember very little of the games themselves.  What I remember most is the arrival and the departure, but especially the departure.  We’d usually leave early if the result was clear, so we walked past all the seated fans, then out to a largely empty parking lot.  Then, inside Dad’s car, he’d tune into the AM station broadcasting the Senator’s game.  The combination of drying sweat, kicking-in air conditioning, the calming sounds of a radio-broadcasted baseball game, and often gloaming sunset light—well, things don’t get much better than that, at any age, I dare say.

5.  I went on a vacation to Vermont with my friend Brock’s family, when Brock and I were teenagers.  At the time, it seemed like a pretty boring vacation, compared to my family’s beach vacations.  We stayed at a sleepy lake town called Lake Rescue, in a very posh cabin.  It all must have been very expensive.  Nowadays, it’s just the kind of vacation I’d like to take—grilling delicious meat on the stained-oak deck overlooking the sun setting over the lake, lazy days canoeing, hiking the flat trails, falling asleep to the sound of ducks diving for food.  At the time, though, Brock and I were miserably bored, though we did invent a sport called Twizzling, the rules of which I have long since forgotten.

6.  My first real drink of alcohol—other than a few sips of champagne at somebody’s wedding sometime—was what the kids call a “40” (a 40-ounce bottle of Malt Liquor) and a few Zimas.  I was 16.  It was at the apartment of an adult who I did not know, but who knew one of my friends.  He supplied us the alcohol.  We just sat around, consuming, and it was frankly a little boring.  I didn’t feel much.  After completing my allotment of Zimas, I asked the adult friend-of-a-friend if he could go back to the bar (which was just across the street) and buy me “a beer”, which I thought might put me over some sort of edge.  I didn’t know you couldn’t just buy one can of beer, and I got laughed at.  I wouldn’t have my “a-ha moment” with alcohol until the second time I drank it, though I usually combine these two stories for a more powerful “alcoholic’s first drink” story, but that version is not true.  The bar where the adult frind-of-a-friend bought the alcohol went out of business and recently became a pizza shop, less than a block from my last apartment in Carlisle.  I used to go there for pizza all the time.

7.  I have had sex in the projection room of a movie theater.

8.  While I have never been a grade-A athlete, there were, for a time, things I excelled at, though none of them were of any use to me in organized sports.  I was very good at gym class type things, like floor hockey.  At my high school, we played a lot of a specific type of dodgeball called “bombardment”, and I was freaking amazing at bombardment.  Two years running, it was offered as a ‘club’ (a fun class of your choosing you had once a week) and I took it, along with my more athletically-skewing pals.  We were on a team called the Pussycats, and we dominated for the entire two years it was offered as a club, winning all 4 championships (2 a year).  The only thing is, the first championship we won, I cheated.  I had been hit by a ball, and no one saw it, and I didn’t tell anyone, and I was the last man standing for our team.  So if I’d have been honest, we would have lost.

9.  I once saw my sister fly over the handlebars of her ten-speed bike after she tried jumping a hill I had urged her to jump, and it was one of the most terrifying moments of my life.  I thought she’d die!

10.  My father and I went golfing once, and little did we know that the water in the golf course’s drinking fountains actually had a high level of fecal matter in it.  It was a very hot day, and we drank a lot of it.  The next day, my mother, myself, and my grandma Cohick went to see WWF Live in Hershey.  On the way there, I ate (and swallowed) an entire pack of grape bugglegum.  Halfway through the show, I got very ill, and once we got home, I vomited and kept on vomiting for what seemed days (I think, in fact, it was days).  It wasn’t until later that we pieced together what all happened, after a class-action lawsuit was brought against the golf course.  To this day, I cannot chew grape bubblegum.

Hey Rosetta! weekend, 11/12-11/13, 2010

Posted in Concert/ Events, Photography with tags , , , , , , , , , on November 14, 2010 by sethdellinger

So after raving and annoying everyone for the better part of a year about Hey Rosetta!, I finally saw them twice over the weekend, and boy howdy, it did not disappoint!  I’ll sum everything up lickety-split:  had an awesome time seeing Paul and Davey, saw two great sets of music, met and had conversations with two members of the band (Tim Baker, lead singer and main songwriter, and Romesh Thavanathan, cellist), had those two members sign one of their vinyl albums, spent a relaxing and spiritually fulfilling day on my own leisurely driving from Ithaca to Buffalo then meandering around Buffalo, eating lots of food and taking artsy pictures, then had an even longer conversation with Tim Baker the second night (he came over to me after their set while they were still tearing their equipment down and talked to me from the stage, then asked me to stop by their merchandise booth and talk to him before I left!  Then we had a 5 minute conversation before I left which bordered insanely on “friend-like”.  It was like walking in a dream.  Granted, I’ve only been a fan for a few years, it’s not like this is a major band from my history like Pearl Jam or 7m3, but I don’t think I can deny they’ve vaulted to “favorite band” status, so it was beyond cool!).  So there’s a really quick rundown of the weekend.

There was, I suppose, a minor dissapointment.  Because Hey Rosetta! was opening for a schmaltzy singer-songwriter lady named Sarah Harmer whose fans aren’t really hard rockers, Hey Rosetta! opted to play sort of “Unplugged” sets on this mini-tour.  Parts of this were really cool—the arrangements of these songs like this are actually really, really cool and coupled with the fact that these shows are now very unique in the Hey Rosetta! universe gave these shows a very special and intimate feel (and probably gave Tim Baker much more reason to ask me questions about the show than he normally would have; it was quite clear he wasn’t exactly sure how the whole thing was coming off).  However, I can’t deny that there were parts when I wished I could have jumped around and lost my mind.  A few of these songs are real blood-pumpers and even though the slow, quiet versions were beautiful, I wanted some loudness!  Here is an example of the changes.  This first video is the studio version of one of my favorite songs of their, “I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time”.  You just have to hear the first 30 seconds or so to get an idea of how it goes:

Now here is video I took at the Buffalo show of the “unplugged” version of the same song.  I have no idea why it’s so damn dark, it wasn’t that dark in person!  Also my damn batteries ran out halfway through the song (did you read that, Mom?) so you don’t get to see the extremely interesting way they end this version.  But still, you can see the extreme difference in the arrangements:

So, you can see it’s a very cool version.  I feel pretty special having seen these versions, but now I just need to see the electric set!  here are the setlists:

Ithaca setlist

1.  17 (new song)
2.  Red Song
3.  Brick (new song)
4.  I’ve Been Asleep for a Long, Long Time
5.  Lions for Scottie
6.  Red Heart
7.  Bandages (new song)

Buffalo setlist

1.  17 (new song)
2.  I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time
3.  Brick (new song)
4.  Red Song
5.  Lions For Scottie
6.  We Made a Pact
7.  Bandages (new song)

Here is video I took of “Red Song” in Ithaca.  This is not a different version of the song; this is the studio version:

I need to thank my buddies Paul and Davey for making the weekend so special; we’ve agreed to have a similar outing once every 6 months.  It’s good to rekindle things. Anyone else want to rekindle?  Oh and I now have a new codename.  It’s no longer Wise Guy in the Backseat, but M.R. Science.  That’s not mister science, but the letter M and R, like the M.R. Ducks t-shirt.  I dig it.

Anyway, I had a much more artisitic and heartfelt blog entry in mind, but I am just burnt out, so this will have to do.  Here are a bunch of pictures from all phases of the weekend.  (I originally posted about 3 times as many photos but WordPress is being weird.  This will have to suffice; also a few of the captions are acting weird, my apologies.)

Me with Tim Baker at Castaways in Ithaca, NY.

Paul with Tim Paul and Davey at Castaways in Ithaca

 

First attempt to get a picture of all three of us. My head looks like a peanut.

Success! My head looks like a peanut.

The vinyl that Tim and Romesh signed for me. That's Tim who wrote the sentence.

Hey Rosetta! in Buffalo

 

“Wrap Your Busy Head in Sound”

Posted in Concert/ Events, Photography with tags , , , , , , on November 14, 2010 by sethdellinger

Here’s some pictures from my big Hey Rosetta! weekend.  It was a totally freakin amazing weekend in lots of ways.  I’ll have a bigger blog about it tomorrow but thought I’d put some pics up now.  *yawn*  I am so totally sleeping 14 hours!

 

Me with Tim Baker, lead singer!

 

Oh yeah, I got all artsy when I had time to kill in Buffalo

 

 

Found some interestng sights on the drive from Ithaca to Buffalo

  

First picture of me, Paul, and Davey together at the same time in many years. My head looks like a peanut.

Way too much information about my upcoming Hey Rosetta! concerts.

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , , , , , , on November 9, 2010 by sethdellinger

I know most of you are probably sick of hearing me blather on about the incredible amazing fantastic band Hey Rosetta!  And it looks like, very soon, I may be able to rein in the salivating.

Barring any unforeseen craziness, (read: snow) I should be seeing the band live TWICE this coming weekend:  Friday in Albion, NY and Saturday in Buffalo, NY.  They’re opening for a singer/ songwriter named Sarah Harmer who I haven’t heard of before and who I still haven’t been able to really familiarize myself with, although most of her music seems to sound like this (click ‘preview track’).  In short–not bad, but not exciting.  Having read her wikipedia page, it seems she may in fact be rather famous in some circles.  I just aint in dem circles.

ANYWAY, the mondo super exciting element of this New York excursion is the fact that the first concert, in Ithaca, will be being attended not only my myself but by two of my longest-held dudefriends, Paul (codename:  Mr. Turnpike) and Davey (codename:  Nature Boy).  It’s been yeeeaaaarrrs since the 3 of us hung out at the same time, and even longer than that since we went on an exciting road trip together (it should be noted that the three of us essentially invented the “exciting road trip”, so this is really like a comeback tour for us.)  Paul and I will be spending Friday night in a hotel in a town close to Ithaca (the town of Painted Post, NY), with Paul leaving early the next morning to head back to PA to play in a championship game in his flag football league (Davey will just be going home Friday after the show, as he lives in upstate NY and Painted Post is the opposite direction from his house.)  While Paul drives home to play in his football game, I’ll be driving to Buffalo, NY, to see Hey Rosetta! a second time on Saturday night, this time by myself!  If this all seems confusing (and you for some reason give a crap) I am prepared to provide you with maps of all three of our movements.

First, on Friday afternoon, I will be driving from Erie to Painted Post, NY, to meet Paul at our hotel.  Here’s what that looks like.

Likewise, Friday afternoon, Paul will leave from central PA to Painted Post, NY, to meet me at the hotel.  At the moment I can’t remember where his work is located, so I’ve got him leaving from Carlisle.   

Around this same time, Nature Boy Christopher Davey will be leaving his home in the city of Oswego, NY and heading to the town the concert is in–Ithaca, NY.  This is Davey’s trip.

After meeting at the hotel, Paul and I will travel together from Painted Post to Ithaca.

Then the three of us are meeting, having dinner, and going to the show, which will look kind of amazing, like this:

Then following said amazingness, Davey will go back to Oswego, while Paul and I head back to Painted Post.  Then in the morning, Paul heads from Painted Post back to Central PA  whereas I (after enjoying having the hotel room to myself for a few hours) will head from Painted Post, NY, to Buffalo, NY.    I’ll probably get there fairly early, so I’ll have some time to futz around, much like I did earlier this year when I saw Ed Kowalczyk there.  Then after the show, it’s back home for me, from Buffalo, NY, to Erie, PA

That might sound overly complicated to you, but I think maybe I’ve just over-explained it.  The point is that I am really, really excited about this trip.  I am more excited to see Hey Rosetta! than I have been to see a band since the first time I saw Pearl Jam in 2000.  Add to that an excursion with two lifelong pals–well, it might be awesome, but it also sounds like the beginning of a movie…

So, barring it turning into “Judgment Night” (and if it meant we got to hang out with Jeremy Piven, I might even be OK with that), it’s gonna be a great two days!!

(for the record, my codename is Wise Guy in the Back Seat OR Wise Man in the Back Seat, depending which one of them you ask.  You can imagine this is the kind of nickname an alcoholic comes by.  Luckily it’s too damn long for anyone to ever really call me it!)

The blog post where I mention everyone I know who already has an existing “tag” on my blog, so I can tag them again and insert a useful or ridiculous link to them.

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 23, 2010 by sethdellinger

1.  Oh hi, billhanna.  I see you ‘liked’ goatees on Facebook yesterday.  Our adversarial relationship about facial hair will continue to the grave.  THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE!

  2.  Anyone who knows Tasha, check out the link, she just got a radical new haircut!  I love it!

3.  I have quite few friends who are talented musicians—one of them is the great Bootney Lee (real name Ryan Straub).  I double-dare you to click on the link and check his music out.

4.  Guess who I’m going to see next month, as the three of us meet up in central New York for a Hey Rosetta! show???  Well that would be none other than my life-long buddies Paul and Davey!  (he’s Chris Davey, but we call him Davey).  This is going to be exceptional as it’s been a few years since we were together, all 3 of us.  And did I mention it’s a Hey Rosetta show???  I still haven’t seen them live–the shows I was supposed to go to awhile back had to be skipped because life is like that.  I am uber pumped for this!

5.  It has been way too long since I tagged my friend Amanda.  I mean that just like it sounds, too. 

6.  You know who rules?  My mom!  She just quit smoking!!! Raise the roof!

7.  I’m still tickled pink about the Doctor Strange drinking glass that Tony Magni gave me as a going away present when I moved to Erie.  Thanks Tony! 

8.  My friend Denise has a very under-appreciated photo blog.  Click to link to check it out!!!  She’s way talented!

9.  The lovely Sarah P. has just had a baby! Huzzah!  She doesn’t have any sort of online presence so I’ve linked to a picture of Big Ben, which is in England, which is where I met her!

10.  My dad is one cool mofo.  What’s my evidence?  Every single day I become more and more like him, and I am most definitely one cool mofo.  Dad, we are some cool dudes!

11.  I tag Ron all  the damn time, I aint saying anything about him!

12.  Big days for my buddy Burke, who has just started going back to school while also remaining a steadfast David Hasselhoff fan.  Kudos, wanker!

13.  I could probably talk about Mary all day, but I’m pretty sure she’d friend-disown me.  She dislikes scrutiny.

14.  My dear, dear friend Michael (that’s a lady named Michael) sent me the most lovely letter in the mail yesterday.  She sure is a freaking great friend!!  It was quite touching, it brought a tear to my eye.  Everyone should have a friend like Michael!

15.  California buddy Kyle is finally off the unemployment and working at a bank!!! Yay Kyle!  Now:  no more excuses for sneaking into movies, you heathen!

16.  My freaking cool-as-shit sister just got a job working at a law firm!  What what!  Dellingers can do anything!!!  Click the link to read her badass blog!

17.  Also in the world of talented musician friends of mine:  Duane, who records under the name DreamlandNoise.  Click the link for just a small sampling of his superb “space funk”.

18.  What to say about my girl Cory? She recently moved back to central PA, like, RIGHT after I left it.  *frown face*  She’s just the shiznit in every way, and is quite a talented artist.  I’ve linked to some of her art but you might not be able to see it if you’re not FB friends with her.  Which would be your loss.

& the Click Boom Boom

Posted in Concert/ Events, Photography with tags , , , , , , , , on September 11, 2010 by sethdellinger

So I had a really, really amazing time seeing (and, yes, meeting) Emily Wells last night!  My heart is still all sorts of aflutter!

First, although you may percieve my fandom of Ms. Wells as being brand new, allow me to direct you to my 100 favorite bands post from January of this year, where I list “the Emily Wells trio” at #43 (I even linked to a video!).  Of course, this is kinda a cheat—the trio is only a touring band, Emily records as a solo artist, but I really wanted to get her in there!

Anyway, she’s been circling around the periphery of my favorites for a few years now, and has really been climbing over the past year as more and more new songs started to hit YouTube (a new album is coming soon).  Also, I follow her more closely than a lot of artists because her Facebook is actually HER, and she responds to comments and actually interacts with you.

In short, I am totally in love with her, which is very rare for me.  I’m not the kind of guy who goes gaga for women he hasn’t met and/or famous women.  But Ms. Wells is just amazingly talented, adorable, cool as shit, and has a huuuuuuge sex appeal.  So when I saw she was coming to within a few hours of me, I jumped at the chance to see her live.

The show was at an on-campus “coffee shop” at Oberlin College.  It was a nice drive there–it took me right through downtown Cleveland.  I’ve been to Cleveland before but not for many years, and never sober or by myself, so it was a cool experience.  Then I arrived at the coffee shop, called The Cat in the Cream.  The doors were locked, as I could hear Emily and her trio still soundchecking inside (I arrived at 7, show was slated for 8:30).  What I found interesting was not just a lack of anyone else milling about waiting for the doors, but the generally deserted nature of the campus in general.  After wandering around for awhile, I overheard some students mentioning that this was the first Friday evening since classes started; no one was really into hanging around campus, and despite Oberlin’s reputation as a hip arts and music school, Emily Wells just might not be famous enough yet to keep kids from going to off-campus keg parties.

So around 7:45 I went back to the Cat in the Cream.  I could still hear Emily soundchecking, but I tried the door anyway, and it opened.  Inside was a tiny coffee shop with about 20 tables and a stage that was clearly built for singer-songwriter open mic nights.  The trio was soundchecking a song I’d never heard, but I didn’t look at them right away–for some reason I was “playing it cool”.  I walked to the counter and bought a coffee (they didn’t have espresso drinks; some coffee shop!), walked to a table in the front, center stage, and experienced my first ever bout of star-struckness at a female (I’ve been star-struck a few times at male artists, but this female thing was very very new to me).

The first thing I noticed was she was short; at least as short as me if not shorter.  This rules.  And she is just so, SO adorable.  No pics or videos properly convey her level of adorablness.  Here is some video I took of her talking to the sound guy during the soundcheck:

At this point, it was just myself and 5 other people in the coffee shop.  The trio ended their soundcheck and left.  The lights went down as we waited about 20 minutes for the show to start.  During those 20 minutes, the number of attendees swelled from 5 to approximately 30–most of them on a few couches in the back.  As bad as I feel for artists playing to half-empty rooms, this is even more cool for me, as I get more eye-contact time from the artists.

The trio came in and opened with a song I’ve never heard (Emily kept telling us they were playing mostly new stuff, and she was right.  I only knew about 5 of the probably 15 songs they played, but it was all really incredible).  Anyway, here is video I took of the show opening:

In all seriousness, I am not just in love with Emily’s personality and looks.  Her music is fucking incredible, and I honestly can’t imagine a more talented single musician I’ve ever seen live.  What she does with looping and multi-instrumental songs is beyond anything you’ve ever seen.  If she were a man, I’d be just as into him.  This is addictive music that takes a few listens to completely fall in love with.  The fact that I think her and I are perfectly matched as a couple only adds to the allure.  :)   Here is some video I took of some between-song banter of hers:

As I said, most of the songs were new but incredible, but they did play the best of the already established songs, all of which I was way too into to spend any time shooting video.  Of the “symphonies”, they played 1, 2 and 6, and they were OUT OF THIS WORLD.  Especially notable was “Symphony 2: The Click Boom Boom”, which was one of the most satisfying live experiences I’ve ever witnessed.  There appears to only be one video in all of YouTube-land of this song being performed live, and the quality os not great, but here it is (NOT from the show I was at):

So, after the show, most everybody just filed out of the coffee shop.  After seeing a truly incredibly performance from an incredible woman, my usual fearlessness had been replaced by a tiny amount of nervousness, but I did approach Emily as she was packing her stuff up.  “Emily!”  I said, and she looked up from the wires she was…doing something with.  “Great show!”  I extended my hand and shook hers, which was miraculously smaller than mine!  “Thanks for all the great music.”  She smiled and said I was welcome, and thanked me for coming.  I wanted to gush more and perhaps ask for a picture with her, but I was not getting a “say more” vibe.  I also wasn’t getting a “leave me alone” vibe, but I was pretty content with the interaction I’d gotten.  I also told the drummer, who was right next to her, that he was amazing (he was, too).

After meeting 7 Mary 3 last year, and now the incredible Ms. Wells, I am fully addicted to meeting and thanking my favorite musicians.  And it’s that thanking part that’s key; I have rarely been as happy in my life as I am when I get to tell the artists who bring me joy how important that is to me.

Emily, if you read this: marry me?

Everything Was Fantastic and Nothing Hurt

Posted in Memoir, Prose with tags , , , , , , , , , on August 27, 2010 by sethdellinger

I had never had to break up with a girl before.  I had been slow in figuring them out–or they had been slow in figuring me out.  Either way, I had never imagined that once I actually had a girlfriend (and one who let me have sex with her, at that!) that I would ever do any breaking up with her.  I figured I’d always be so happy just to put my hand on a boob, or my tongue in a mouth, that the first one who agreed to it would be enough forever.

It was this kind of thinking that kept me with my first “real” girlfriend for 3 years, despite the fact that we were obviously as mismatched as possible.  Looking back on it now, I can’t even remember what we must have talked about.  We did spend a lot of time together, and I have many memories that are not unpleasant (and more than a few that are unpleasant).  Three years is a long time, even when you spend 8 hours a day in school.  So there was a lot of shared history by the time I realized I had to break up with her–but I still don’t know what we talked about.  (not to mention we were each other’s first everything, if you get my drift.)

But I did realize, eventually, that we were a bad fit.  I probably realized this because having been with her for three years, I had finally learned a bit about women and was at that point recieving some other very tempting offers from girls a bit more like me.  I spent weeks agonizing over how to break up with her.  Have you ever had teenage sex with a girl whispering I love you in your ear, knowing full well you are going to break up with her soon?  Well, it’s not as fun as it sounds.

I don’t remember much about the day I did it.  I remember it was in my bedroom, sitting on the bed, and I said it’s time for us to part ways.  It did not go well.  She cried and I was stoic.  I drove her home that night and it was a long drive.  When I got back home, my dad was in the living room watching TV.  I sat on the ottoman and made some small talk as though nothing had happened.  Then I tried to mention off-hand I broke up with her but my voice cracked and a tear jumped into my eye.  It was so hard, I said, as I started crying for real.

**************************************************************

Two and a half years earlier….

The greatest thing about finally having a girlfriend was it finally gave me reasons and methods to be some sort of badass. 

My friend Mike (I haven’t changed his name because everybody is named Mike) was dating her best friend, so we were a little group, the four of us, double dating, driving to and from school together, the whole bit.

The biggest problem in Mike and I’s lives, however, was that we were still virgins, all four of us.  I doubt it was such a problem for the girls, but it devastated Mike and I daily.  Then one day at school, the girls announced to us that tonight would be “the night”.  My girlfriend would be staying at Mike’s girlfriend’s house for the night.  This house was reachable by both my house and Mike’s house by bicycle (Mike and I were both driving by this time, but not our own cars, and we had curfews that missing cars would belie), and so it was agreed that Mike and I would both bike to the house in the middle of the night and somehow or other, all four of us would lose our virginities.

Mike and I made our own specific plans.  We chose a good spot about halfway between our own houses where we’d meet up on the bikes at precisely midnight and then go the rest of the way together.

Around 11pm, I opened my bedroom window, climbed out and walked around the house to where I’d laid my bike that evening, so I didn’t have to get it out of the garage.

Biking down country roads, alone, at night, in the silence that accompanies said action, is fucking scary.

It was a longer ride than it seemed in my mind to get to the meeting spot.  Since my family had moved out to the country a few years before, I hadn’t done an extensive amount of biking.  I grew up in the small town of Newville, where everything you could imagine was reachable by bicycle.  My brain was not equipped to deal in country miles.  After what seemed hours, I finally arrived at the spot.  No Mike.  I didn’t have a watch (and no, you bastards, this is way before cell phones) so I waited.  I checked the drainage ditches along the sides of the road in case he was laying there, hiding from passing cars (in the country when you’re a teenager, you somehow assume all passing cars are somehow going to tell your parents or the cops that you’re out late), but he wasn’t there.  I waited what I can only say was “a long time”, but I couldn’t tell how long.  It felt like at least an hour.  I couldn’t call out for him, because we had chosen a spot right in front of a few houses.

The thought of biking all the way to Mike’s girlfriend’s house–which I just now understood was really far away–all by myself just seemed like too big of a task.  I assumed he’d missed me, too, and gone on ahead, but if he hadn’t, I’d show up alone, and it would be awkward.  I got on my bike and rode home, climbed into bed sad that I was still a virgin, but somehow relieved that I hadn’t had to go through with the plan.

The next day, Mike told me he’d been hiding in some grass alongside the road and that he never saw or heard me.  It didn’t occur to me until years later that he’d been absolutely lying and he’d never even left his house that night.  Lord knows if the girls were even waiting up for us.

*****************************************************

One year after the bicycle night…

Her and I had been driving for hours in what seemed like a circle.  Why I even ever thought the two of us could navigate Philadelphia was a mystery to me.  I didn’t even bring a map, I kept thinking.  If there’s one thing I learned about traveling from my parents, it was to always bring a map.  Did I somehow think we were adults who could do things like drive around cities?  What a fool.

I didn’t want to fight.  I had seen couples who got lost start fighting and it always seemed foolish.  It accomplished nothing.  And so the more tense we got, the more calm I forced my exterior to appear, and the more I love yous I said, and before I knew what hit me, there was the sign for the Turnpike–always a surefire way home.

Once safely on the Turnpike, after smoking a few relaxing cigarettes, she turned and said Seth, you’re a good man.  It was the first time anybody had ever said that to me, and I’ll never forget it.

****************************************************

One year after the Philadelphia trip…

It was a Friday night.  I remember that for certain because we were coming from a high school football game (she was a cheerleader, so I attended every single game, and carried all her gear to my car afterward.  This provides a serious high for any teenage boy, to be seen carrying his prominent cheerleader girlfriend’s things to his car after a game).  It was October and she wanted to go to the “haunted house” that is put on in Newville every October, and which is walking distance from the football field. 

I did not want to go. 

I’d be in my mid-twenties before I even started watching horror movies, and even now I don’t like things like “haunted houses”–though I do now love horror films.

Back then, I was scared of everything but trying my best to learn how to hide it.  This is Central Pennsylvania, home of tall corn, taller trucks, Joe Montana, and Three Mile Island.  Five-foot-tall men who scare easily are not the preferred type, and I knew that, and so was consistently doing things like this that every fiber of my being told me to turn from.

We got in line for the haunted house.  I remember she was still in her cheerleading uniform which I–surprise–found very sexy, even after 2 years of having sex with her while she wore the damn thing every Friday night during football season (and after home basketball games, too).  It’s amazing how long a 17 year old boy can stay transfixed on a detail.  So even then, that night, I tried to stay transfixed on the uniform instead of what I assumed would be the bone chilling terror inside the haunted house.

She noticed how I was looking at her and backed me against a wall, slid her hand down my pants.  She wanted to get me off right there, in line!

But I wasn’t aroused.  After a minute or two of attempting to get me going, she asked what was wrong.

“I’m just a little…scared,” I said.

“Of the haunted house?” she asked.

“Yep.  Just a little.”

She withdrew her hand from my pants and, looking me square in the eyes, said You pussy.

That’s another thing she said to me that I’ll never forget.

 

******************************************************** 

Eleven years after the haunted house…

i was out shopping about a week ago with a close close female friend of mine i didn’t need anything we weren’t shopping for me we were shopping for her so of course it stands to reason we were spending alot of if not most of our time in clothing stores i like shopping for clothes with women at least if it’s a woman i like i like to be just honest enough that they believe me about how things look on them and besides if i’m spending a day shopping with a woman chances are i find her deliriously attractive to begin with and have on immense blinders and truly think everything looks good on her anyway so i rarely get bored while clothes shopping with women except for when they are a woman who takes forever trying clothes on and this particular woman friend of mine happens to be the type who takes forever trying clothes on so about two hours into the shopping excursion while she is in a fitting room i wandered out into the mall and spent about five minutes looking at this kiosk that was all about some homeschooling-over-the-internet thing and they had a nice display and i picked up some of the books children’s books and educational books and felt the heft of them paged through smelling the smell of them remembering when i thought books were like shiny little stars with worlds in them like ameoba in a toad’s pee-puddle and i would feel the pages the coarse roughhewn pages like they were an heirloom quilt and when i had had my fill of standing at the kiosk reminiscing i wandered back into the store and halfway to the back i saw her.  Not the friend i was there shopping with but the first girlfriend the first one ever she still looked like she was 17 although a bit more like a woman now in fact she looked very good–not as good as the friend I was shoppign with but very good nonetheless– and although i immediately turned my head and pretended i hadn’t noticed her it was like i could smell her hair and the minty basement smell of sex with her and could see from a distance the way her lips aren’t lined up right and the sad swing of her braless breasts and i wanted to turn to her from across the store and say ‘i never knew you and you never knew me and that’s pretty much all there ever is to anything but we tried’ and then promptly turn and leave.  but i didn’t.  i meandered around the store at a safe distance so she could see me, so she could remember, too.

 

**********************************************************

Fourteen years before the shopping trip…

We sat at the back of the bus, my friends and I.  We had finally graduated to that level of bad-assness.  We were the big kids on the back of the bus, though I was of course never “big”, but I had some major seniority on bus #10. 

Lately, though, things had been all about our friend John, who had recently become the first of us to lose his virginity.  Each and every bus ride now, for the last week, had been filled with tales he’d tell us about what it was like.  We all wondered what this girl would be like.  John was an athlete and not unpopular, so she must really be something (I’d learn later that John had made up every sexual encounter with the girl; he ended up being a virgin longer than I was).

We were sitting in the school parking lot in the morning, waiting to be let off, when John said There she is, and he tapped on the window as a young girl passed by.  She stopped, grinned ear-to-ear, tapped back on the glass and blew a kiss to John.

That was the first time I ever laid eyes on her, and I remember thinking I was slightly unimpressed.  If only I knew how good she’d look fourteen years later while shopping in a backwater mall.

How Freakin’ Excited Am I?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on July 15, 2010 by sethdellinger

How freakin’ excited am I????

Those of you who’ve been reading my blog consistently for at least a year will surely recall a time not so long ago that I simply would not shut up about a band called Hey Rosetta!  (exclamation point is theirs, not mine).  I really, really love this band, but I ended up shutting up about them when I was unable to convince anyone else to like them.  But I mean, I REALLY like them.  Their songs touch me in ways that no other band has EVER done—yes, even Pearl Jam.  Really I’m just waiting for them to have more albums before I crown them my “all time fave band”.

Anyway, they’re Canadian and not at all rich and famous, so they actually spend most of their time in Canada.  Since I’ve been a fan, they’ve only played two shows in the US, neither of which I could get to.  Well, you guessed it, now they are doing a full tour in August and September (as openers for Hot Hot Heat, a more famous and thankfully not-bad band) and I was able to get off for the weekend that they are playing shows in Baltimore and Philly, and I just bought tickets to both, and I have not been this excited in a looooooooong time.  Like, I am going to cry my fucking face off when they take the stage. Tim Baker’s lyrics belong in a textbook.  And musically, oh geez, you just don’t get better than these guys (and girl).

And hey, to my friends in California:  looking for a cheap, enlightening rock show?  They’re playing all around you and tickets are usually between 10-15 bucks!  Check out www.heyrosetta.com, I implore you!

Got a few extra minutes?  Sure you do.  I beg of you to check out at least one of the YouTube videos I’ve posted below.  It may  just change your life!

OK this first one, I know at first you’ll be like “wtf?”, but I SWEAR TO YOU, if you watch it till the end you’ll be like “OMG”.  This is a very unique rendition of the amazing song “There’s an Arc”.

Here’s their one “official video”.  It’s badass and this song is so good I almost punch stray dogs when I hear it:

Here is a crappy video presentation of my absolute favorite Hery Rosetta song, “I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time” (read the astounding lyrics here).  Like I said, the video sucks but it also feels like a real rock show:

And here is a really neat acoustic version of “I’ve Been Asleep For a Long, Long Time”:

LML

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , , on July 2, 2010 by sethdellinger

I just had a really awesome day.

While I’d love nothing more than to write a lengthy, detailed narrative of said awesome day, I don’t really have time, so I’m just gonna tell you about one moment that was a really knockout moment for me.

I was in Buffalo, NY to see an Ed Kowalczyk show (he’s the former lead singer of LIVE).  The show was a free show in a small park in a square in downtown.  I arrived around noon (first openng act was to go on at 5) and parked about 20 feet from the park.  I spent awhile scoping out the venue (the stage was up and there was ‘staff’ milling about, but the park was otherwise empty) and then I commenced wandering around the city for a bit.

(quick side note:  I love Buffalo.  Why?  It’s the most pedestrian-centric city I’ve ever been in.  Wider sidewalks than Manhattan, soft music piped EVERYWHERE.  You can’t even see the speakers, they must be hidden in planters, etc…just a great city to walk around in.  I’ll post a full entry about this sometime)

Anyway, after about two hours of wandering I ended up just a block from the stage a Lafayette Square, sitting at an outdoor table at a coffee shop, drinking a really delicious, piping hot caramel latte.  The sun was shining, it was about 80 degrees with a gentle lake breeze, I had nowhere to go, the quiet light jazz was being piped onto the street from somewhere, and life was just really freaking nice.  (this was when I Facebook-statused “LML”).   It was an incredibly simple, beautiful moment, and it’s magnificence was not lost on me. 

After sitting and enjoying the moment for a few minutes, I was jarred to reality by the thought that an Ed Kowalczyk song was playing down at the square (this was still only about 3pm).  I thought, It’s quite odd they’d play an Ed song on the day of an Ed show, as I thought they had simply started playing music through the massive speakers set up for the concert.  but after a few minutes I realized the sound was too “live”.  Ed was soundchecking!  I got up and walked (did not run) down the block to the park.  Ed and his band were playing one of the new songs off Ed’s solo album (which I did not hear any of until I bought it at the merch table after the show, so I fear I’ll never know what song I hear them soundcheck).  There were about 6 people in the park watching Ed’s soundcheck, and I suspect all of them just happened to be in the park.  I’m pretty sure I was the only Ed fan there.  I stood in the center of the park and watched Ed Kowalczyk play a song just for me, while still sipping my latte and enjoying the sunshine and breeze.  This was an incredible moment. 

After they were done playing, I took this video of Ed talking into the mic to prove how alone I was in the park:

Erie Journal, 5/5

Posted in Erie Journal, Photography with tags , , , , , on May 4, 2010 by sethdellinger

The pictures did not cooperate with where I wanted them placed in this entry but I don’t have time to fix them.  You’ll just have to figure out where they’re supposed to be.

Naturally, when you have to wait days and days to post something that at one point seemed of note, or especially interesting, once you sit down to write it, all those terribly interesting details begin to fade away and it seems much less important to dpcument what happened a week ago.  So the super-interesting blog I teased about the last week isn’t really going to matrerialize.  I’ll boil that week down for you like this:

1.  Computer breaks on my only day off in 13 days, the day I was going to begin searching for apartments online.

2.  Work 6 straight days (of dayshift…the worst) following computer breakage. Order part my buddy Duane thinks may fix computer.  Wait.

3.  Crazy stuff going on at work.  Often too tired to pack when I get home at night.

4.  Part comes in.  Duane installs.  Doesn’t work.  Have to go to Best Buy, buy a new computer, set it up at night between dayshifts.

5.  Call my mom to do an online apartment search for me as I can’t do it myself.  Then call the numbers she gave me the next morning from work.  Set up 6 apartments to look at on Monday, May 4th.  Was trying really hard to split them between the 4th and 5th, as I was going to Erie those two days (my ONLY two days off in a row since I found out I was moving), but all the damn landlords insisted on Monday.  So, starting at 2pm, I had an appointment an hour to see apartments up until 7pm. 

Maybe it doesn’t sound so complicated and stressful to you now, but try living it, assbrain.  The whole week I would just occasionally stop to think, I’ve gotta move in a week or so.  I guess I’ll do something about that in a week or so.  It was a very unpleasant thought.

So now, yesterday:

A fellow EnP manager, marci, has already moved to Erie, so the idea was that I’d get to Erie a little early (1pm, which meant leaving around 7am), meet her at her EnP where she was working a dayshift, I’d go to the first few appointments myself, then after Marci got off work she’d come to the last few appointments with me so i could get her 2 cents.  Then we’d have some dinner or something, then I’d spend the night at her place, then Tuesday I’d decide which apartment(s) I wanted, fill out applications or whatever, and hiopefully maybe finalize something.

First, the drive:  it is long.  Very long.  No matter how you slice it, it si a five hour drive.  I found that even a five hour drive is not long enough to bore me or make me stop dancing in my seat.  However, it was quite rainy and that was annoying.  I had the interesting experience of driving through areas of my state I had never been to.  That who upper-center area was completely alien to me and seeing all the new place names and the new geological features was quite intriguing.  It’s odd.  I do a lot of travelling but it’s always to, like, the same 10 places.  And now that I’ll be living in Erie there are a whole new slew of options within reach…I like this revelation.

After about four hours I finally saw my first sign for Erie:

Eventually I arrived at Erie.  It does not have the look of a city, really.  It’s size and population appear to derive mostly from an epic sprawl, though it does have a concentrated downtown area with a tiny bit of skyline.  On the way to Marci’s Eat ‘n Park I saw this and got excited:

That’s right folks:  public transportation.  I’ve never lived anywhere that I could take the bus.  (I hear you:  Harrisburg has public transit.  True, dickballs, but I’ve never actually lived there, either!)

I got to Marci’s restaurant right on time and she showed me around and introduced me.  (this is not the restaurant I’ll be working at).  I was quite impressed.  It’s a really nice building, the employees are super nice, and they were REALLY BUSY.  On a Monday afternoon!  And the one I’m going to be working at is BUSIER!

After a brief stay, I had to leave to go to my first appointment, with the plan for me to call Marci after each of my appointments to see if she’s been able to get out of work yet and could meet me for the next one.  I left the restaurant (the weather was now really beautiful), set my GPS for the first appointment’s address, and off I was.

Ten minutes later, I was there.  The area is quite residential and if you hadn’t just driven past a thousand warehouses, you’d have no idea it was in a city.  I took some pictures of the street it is on:

Looking down the street from my apartment

The house my apartment is in. I have the top floor.

A seemingly abandoned baseball field at the end of my street.

Long story short, I met the landlord, really liked him.  Looked at the apartment and LOVED it.  It is seriously about twice the size of my current apartment.  I have an entire attic, use of a shared basement, two bedrooms and a dining room and a large living room, the kitchen is really nice as is the bathroom.  I even have an enclosed balcony!  As you may have already guessed, I told him I wanted it and I asked for an application, and he’s all like…”really, to be honest, I don’t do applications, you seem trustworthy.”  So the landlord and I shook hands, and it was mine!  I took a few pics.  Not many and not good ones but here’s what I have:

Dining room looking into living room

Pic taken from in the dining room looking into living room

The smaller of the two bedrooms

So the landlord and I were all gaga over each other and the apartment and all that, and he asked if I’d like to return to the apartment later that night to sign the lease rather than wait until the next day.  I said hell yes cause then I could just go home that night and have an actual day off tomorrow (even though I’ve been doing tons of shit ALL DAY).  So I drove off, driving aimlessly around Erie while calling the other appointments I had and cancelling them.  Then I met back up with Marci and she gave me the grand Erie tour.  Quite honestly I don’t have enough time right now to write a satisfactory description of everything on the tour, though I’m sure I’ll be exploring those things at a later date, but of course the biggest attraction is the lake itself, and Preque Isle State Park, a peninsula jutting out into the lake.  Now, Marci just gave me a quick tour, moslty via her car, but I can assure you I am going to love this place.  Here are the limited photos I was able to get:

a crappy view of "the bay" at the beginning of Preque Isle...this isn't quite the lake yet

Presque Isle out a car window

Lake Erie

Lake Erie

If you’ve never seen any of the great lakes, folks, may I strongly suggest it.  These are the largest freshwater lakes on earth.  The pictures do not communicate the gravity of things.  Sure, it kinda looks like your looking at the ocean…no big deal, right?  But it’s not the ocean.  It’s a lake, and it has a palpable presence.  Honestly, I felt kinda freaked out by it, and Marci knew exaclty what I meant.  More about that when I have more time.  I really must run for the time being, but there are many more interesting blogs coming!

Erie Journal, 4/19

Posted in Erie Journal with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 20, 2010 by sethdellinger

As many of you know, I’ll soon be moving from my home in lovely Carlisle, Pennsylvania, to the further-away-but-still-in-Pennsylvania city of Erie.  I will, of course, be documenting the process right here on the ‘ol blog.  The process hasn’t really begun yet, but I thought I should start out with some preliminaries.

First, although Erie is in the same state I’m in, you should know it is just about as far away from Carlisle as you can get while remaining in PA.  Here are the mapquest directions from my apartment to Erie.  As you can see, it’s over 5 hours away, so really, truly, I am moving away.

Another point of interest:  if you’re not from PA, chances are you’ve never heard of Erie, not any more than you’ve heard of Carlisle.  But the fact is, I’m moving to a much, much larger city.  In fact, Erie is the fourth largest city in the state of Pennsylvania.  Have a look at this chart here.  Erie is only behind Philly, Pittsburgh, and Allentown.  And you’ve at least heard of Allentown from the Billy Joel song.  So this may just be a new kind of experience for me.  Sure, I’ve spent plenty of time in and around cities, but I’ve never lived in one.  Is it possible I may get to go to concerts without a road trip?  Or see the coolest indie movies the week they come out?  Or get food delivered after midnight?  The possibilities excite me.

However, I will sincerely miss Carlisle.  At the risk of sounding hokey, a big piece of my heart belongs to Carlisle.  I really really love this town.  I shall try to list reasons Carlisle rules (perhaps to be continued in future entries as I think of more):

Reasons Carlisle Rules

1.  A Civil War battle took place here (it’s even called The Battle of Carlisle.)

2.  Carlisle is home to the Army War College.  This is a kind of badass thing.

3.  It is perfectly positioned for day trips to Washington DC, Baltimore, Philadelphia, NYC, Pittsburgh, and parts of Jersey and Maryland.

4.  There are two used book stores and one independent new bookseller that are walkable in town.

5.  One of the best American poets, Marianne Moore, spent many years here, and most Moore scholars believe she actually began writing poetry while she lived here.  Badass!

6.  Although its first-run indie films are usually a few months behind, we boast a beautiful, architecturally stunning, and frankly, enormous independent movie theater—walkable from my apartment.

7.  There’s also an 8 theater Regal within city limits.

8.  We have a quaint but useful, economically sound downtown shopping district.

9.  There are 13 parks within the borough.

10.  There are more street fairs than there are streets.

I feel as though there are many more points like this to come as these blogs progress.  I’ll keep everyone updated as events related to my move unfold.  In the meantime…someone find me some golden ginger ale.  I’ve just recently found out about it.  Turns out all I’ve ever had is “dry” ginger ale.  Anyone know where I can find some golden?

Seven Mary Three, 3/25

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , , on March 26, 2010 by sethdellinger

What a show!  I’m not sure if I’ll ever get the setlist up (I have a really good feeling no one else is going to post it for me to copy it and I have very little faith I can do it from memory).  but highlights:

–“Roderigo”.  Period.  I had never seen it live and I don’t expect to ever again.

–A re-tooled “Dislocated” with an AMAZING jam session in the middle.

–“Sleepwalking”!!!!!!!  my first time ever seeing it!!!  LOVELOVELOVE!!!

–“Cumbersome” in the middle of the set!  Craziness!

–They debuted a new song called “Out For Blood”…great song!

I think I’ll probably have a full-length blog on the experience tomorrow.  Oh, also, I got to talk to Jason after the show and get my pic with him:

Notes From Pittsburgh

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on March 8, 2010 by sethdellinger

1.  Being stuck in traffic on a bridge in a windstorm which is undergoing structural contsruction?  Not so much.

2.  I could not have had a better day for a 3+ hour solo drive.  Beautiful.

3.  Having not smoked for almost 6 months has really improved my ability to sing very loud and obnoxiously while I drive.  This may be the best side-effect yet.

4.  Why is it always 10 degrees colder in the west of the state than in the east of the state?  I mean, like, always.

5.  I can now officially drive from Carlisle to the Eat ‘n Park corporate office in Pittsburgh without any directional help, either printed, written, or GPS.  This may sound like a not-big deal to you, but navigating to a specific point across an entire state without aid is not a trait usually attributable to me.

6.  This hotel’s computer is slower than my computer at home.

7.  The Monongahela rules because it’s so obviously shitty.

8.  Seriously…why are they still letting Dianne Rehm be on the radio?  I am not exaggerating to say she can barely speak.

9.  I am definitely swimming in this hotel’s pool within the hour.  I just walked past it and there was NOBODY there.

10.  Free USA Today.  Score.

Snow day! or, How I Watched Three Bad Movies in One Day

Posted in Concert/ Events, Prose, Rant/ Rave, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on December 19, 2009 by sethdellinger

In one fashion, I am extremely unfortunate that this huge snowstorm came this weekend, as I had awesome—awesome—plans with my sister and mother to go to New York.  It would have been GREAT!  (we are totally rescheduling for January).  In another fashion, however, I am extremely fortunate that it came this weekend, as I have off work, and I don’t have to get into my car until 11am Monday.  In my line of work, where we work 3 out of every 4 weekends, this could only be seen as extremely fortunate.

The extremely sucky event of canceling my mom/sister trip did however lead to a fairly sweet event, in that I could now attend the Soulgrass Freedom Junction show that took place last night (friend Kate is the singer of the band, and she friggen rules), and a bizarre amount of people I knew ended up being there.  Platonic soulmate Michael was also celebrating her graduation from graduate school (she’s gonna be a counselor!), so it was a pretty incredible night all around.

Duane, Burke, and Michael at the Soulgrass show

Kate belting out "White Rabbit"

So anyway, long story short, I didn’t get home and go to bed until 4am, which put my waking hours that day at 23–I had gotten up at 5am the previous day for work.  Regardless of this really long day, I woke up with a shot at 6am, only 2 hours after falling asleep.  I went to the window and saw a SHIT-TON of snow out there.  I suppose it was the prospect of an entire weekend off with a major snowstorm happening that got me even more awake.  I’m not sure why this was exciting to me, but it was.  I was jazzed!  So far, I’ve had an amazing day:

7am:  I leave the apartment, dressed very inappropriately, with no plan whatsoever.  I end up walking essentially all over town, ending up at Wal-Mart (all told, about 3 miles one way), as well as stopping for a nice breakfast at Fay’s Country Kitchen.

Breakfast at Fay's

What really amazed my about this trip was how absolutely desolate the world was.  I mean, sure, there were some people around, but for the most part, all was silence (and it wasn’t 7am the whole time…all was silence at 9am, too).  By the time I got home, I estimate my travel distance at 6.5 miles, on foot, in the snow…and I somehow had more energy than when I left?!?!  This has been happening to me alot lately.  I’m starting to get worried that I have bi-polar disorder, but I only suffer from the manic periods.  I seem to have almost no need for rest.  I’m not gonna complain until I end up in the hospital.

9am:  Return home and finished watching The Orphan, which I had started when I got home from the show the night before.  It sucks.  Then watched the majority of Angels & Demons.  It sucks too.  Shower.

Noon:  I leave the apartment again, walking back to Wal-Mart (that’s where the movie theater is, my destination wasn’t actually Wal-Mart).  It was a little colder this time, and the snow seemed a bit more wet.  There were more cars on the road than there were in the morning, but less pedestrians.  I am still loving being in the snow and seemingly all alone in my town of Carlisle.  I get to the movie theater around 1pm and watch Invictus (it sucks).  There were 6 other people in the theater, which you might think is a lot of people for a blizzard day, but is actually very few people when you consider it’s 1pm on a Saturday.  After the movie, I walked around the Wal-Mart plaza, quite blown away by the amount of businesses that had closed early (Applebees, Subway, Holiday Hair, Game Stop and even the Chinese Buffet were closed!!!  Other than the big box stores, the only thing open was Panera Bread).  Then I finally headed for home.  Took this largely boring video on this leg of the journey:

The only really interesting part of this video is when I look at the ground, you can see how deep the snow is.   Here’s another picture from this leg of the journey, looking at the ground.  You can see my foot is entirely covered:

I stopped at Vinnie’s pizza (formerly Genova’s) and had a few slices.  I was all alone and it seemed there hadn’t been anyone there pretty much all day.  The guy behind the counter and I had a pretty good conversation about the storm and how many places were closed, and he ended up sitting with me while I ate.  I must have been burning immense amounts of calories all day, because I ate the three (sizable) slices like they were jelly beans.  I chugged the rest of my large Dr. Pepper, bid adieu to my temporary Vinnie’s friend, and set out to…um…find more food.

5pm:  Arrive at the Hamilton.  Devour two Hawchie Dogs and order a Blockbuster to-go, so I have something to eat later.  As I leave, it’s getting dark and the snow—now very wet—is very unpleasant blowing directly into my face.  Finally arrive home around 5:30.  After about 10 minutes of rest, I find that I am now not tired at all, and in fact, am considering going back out soon.

Somebody stop me!

The Title of this Blog is a Kramer Entrance

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 12, 2009 by sethdellinger

Oh hi.

1.  I have this pesky head and chest cold that kind of refuses to become “fully realized”.  I cough about 30 times a day but not really really badly. My nose is stuffed up but not terribly. I’m sneezing like a madman.  Now I have a *minor* fever.  It has been this way for about four days and I’m starting to get pissed, cause I KNOW it’s going to get worse before it gets better….why don’t you just get on with it, cold?

2. Have lost my Philip Larkin Collected Poems.  Am freaking out.

3.  If you like documentaries, and/or amazing, enthralling stories, may I recommend Deep Water, a truly incredible story about a round-the-world yacht race (it’s alot more interesting than the description sounds).

4.  Did you know Abe Lincoln was colorblind?!  It’s true!

5.  Going to New York with my sister and my mom in a week…how friggen exciting is that?

6.  Great nonsense from Deep Water: “New Equal Footing Mermaids Stop”

7.  How many ways do I hate winter?  593.  And yet, I am somehow managing to be as happy as I can remember in years recently.  How do I account for this?  My body slowly stopping dying.  Quitting smoking and getting in shape is an incredible experience!  I almost feel like I’m back on that “pink cloud” you experience in early sobriety.  Life rules.

8.  A man enters a restaurant.  He gives the waiter his order of eggs benedict, but before the waiter walks away, the man says “Wait, wait…can you have the cook put that on this hubcap?”, and as he says this, the man reaches down into a bad he’s brought with him and prodices a very nice, shiny hubcap.  “Sure,” the waiter says, clearly baffled.  Shortly thereafter, the waiter returns with the man’s eggs benedict, served on the hubcap as requested.  Before he walks away, the waiter says, “Excuse me sir, but can I just ask why you wanted your eggs benedict on a hubcap?”   “Sure,” the man says.  “There’s no plate like chrome for the hollandaise.” Christmas rules!

Our Day With Dave

Posted in Concert/ Events, Photography with tags , , , on November 17, 2009 by sethdellinger

Today, Mary and I went to New York to see the David Letterman show live and in person!  And it was awesome!  I’m not going to bog you all down with too many details, so I’ll just hit some of the main stuff:

Me in line outside the Ed Sullivan Theater, Mary's head behind me

There was some waiting in line, but in actuality, not as much as I’d expected.  Mary and I showed up outside the Ed Sullivan Theater at the appointed time–1pm–waited through various ID checks and other checkpoints–and by 1:45 were given our tickets and told to be back in front of the theater by 2:45pm.  We then meandered around Broadway for an hour and made it back to our appointed line at out appointed time.  As we waited in line, some Late Show dudes–probably interns–came out to joke around with us and tell us the “rules”.  The rules were thus:  no photography, cell phones off, clap and laugh alot, and, strangely, no “woo”ing.  You know that sound you make most frequently

Mary enjoying a frozen beverage outside the Ed Sullivan Theater

when you are in a crowd and you are cheering…. “woooooo!”  Yes, well apparently, the mics in the Ed Sullivan Theater don’t like that.

So, by 3pm we were ushered into the theater.  Unfortunately, we ended up getting seats in the balcony, which would greatly decrease our chances of being seen on television, but really, there isn’t a bad seat in the theater.  It is MUCH smaller than it appears to be on TV.  Even up in the balcony, we were no less than 30 yards from Dave, and even closer to the band and Paul Shaffer.

One of our tickets, which we unfortunately were not allowed to keep

Interesting tidbit:  Dave infamously keeps the Ed Sullivan Theater quite chilly, but I was perfectly comfortable the whole time, not cold at all.

It was truly surreal seeing the set in person.  I just couldn’t get over how much smaller it seemed in person.  For instance, when you’re watching on TV it seems like Dave and Paul are really far apart, but really it’s no more than two people on opposite sides of a living room, and the audience is right up on Dave.  Everything is just much more condensed than it looks on TV.

We weren’t in our seats for more than five minutes when warm-up comedian Eddie Brill came out to “warm us up”.  He was a funny guy, but I was honestly surprised by how brief it was.  He really just kinda talked to us for 3 or 4 minutes (though it truly was funny stuff), then we watched a “classic clip” from the show, probably a few years old, where Dave messes with people at a Taco Bell.  This is the clip:

We were all laughing our asses off.

Then Eddie Brill introduced the announcer, Allen Caulter, who just sorta ran into the theater and then quickly out of our sight-line, and then he announced the band one-by-one (except Paul).  The band then proceeded to play a horn-heavy rendition of The Rolling Stones’ “Brown Sugar”.  After about five minutes of this, Eddie Brill announces Paul Shaffer, who comes out to thunderous applause and joins the band, who have now moved on to an instrumental version of some other song I couldn’t quite identify. After a few more minutes of that, Brill quite suddenly announces Dave, who actually sprints into the theater (notably, without his suit jacket on) and runs the whole way across the set.  Then he gets a mic and talks to us for about 4 minutes, very funny off-the-cuff stuff about how groggy and weird he feels after the weekend and how one of these days a weekend isn’t going to “get away from” him.  Then he says he’s gotta go, he walks behind the set, and immediately the band starts playing the theme song and Allen Caulter begins his introduction to the show, and then moments after he disappeared, Dave is introduced and re-appears, this time with his suit jacket on.

I don’t know if the monologue was an especially funny monologue, or if being there in person makes everything funnier, but Mary and I were laughing our asses off!  Then after the monologue, Dave and Paul proceeded to have a very funny give-and-take about the usage of the word “douche” on network television.  We were cracking up!!!

During commercial breaks, the band played a long version of a song, while about 8 guys crowded around Dave’s desk, for Lord-knows-what purpose.  Dave took his jacket off almost every break, and would often get up and walk around and talk to his staffers (while Dave was walking around, the crowd of men remained around his desk).  I was also surprised to see that warm-up comedian Eddie Brill seems to play a large role in the show–throughout the show he stood directly in Dave’s eyeline (under the spiral staircase, if you’re familiar with the set) and was often the only man in the crowd of men around the desk that Dave seemed to be talking to.

I did see Biff Henderson briefly right after we took our seats…he was wandering around the set as Brill did his warm-up, but I never saw him after that.

I found it really strange when guests started coming on.  Like, all of a sudden, Sharon Stone is in the room.  WHAT?!  I didn’t feel star-struck per se, just weird. By that point, it kinda felt like we were just haning out with Dave and Paul, and now here’s Sharon Stone?? Bi.  Zarre.

I found it interesting that through most of the commercial break with Sharon Stone, Dave mostly ignored her and looked at the copy of the New York Times he had used during the douche discussion earlier.  They only started to chat moments before they came back from break.   Dave then showed the cover of a French magazine that Sharon Stone appears on topless.  I just saw it on the broadcast and they of course blurred out her tit, but rest assured, it was clear as day to us in the audience!

I also thought Sharon Stone was a bit cold and bitchy.

Seth Myers was funny and him and Dave seemed to have a nice report.  Seeing this in person kind of pointed out to me how truly brief these interviews are.  No sooner was Seth Myers there than he was gone–4, 5 minutes?  And how long do you suppose he spent getting ready for that?  But I really did enjoy his interview, him and Dave were making Mary and I crack up again.

In the break between Myers and the musical act (Wyclef Jean featuring Cindy Lauper), stage hands miraculously pushed out a whole musical set-up for them in less than 4 minutes.  Wyclef appeared early on and actually did some jammy vocals with the CBS Orchestra (that’s what Paul calls his band), which I thought was pretty neat.  Cindy showed up a little later and her appearance got a decent round of applause.  During this time, a camera cruised by us (though this footage would later be shown earlier in the show).  The footage is used as background while Allen Caulter announces the guests coming up later in the week.  Mary and I tried our hardest to get on that camera, but alas, it was not to be.  :(

They came back from break and Wyclef and Cindy played their song, which I thought was “OK” but Mary liked it.  Now that I’ve seen it again on the broadcast, I think it is a stupid song.  But it was unique entertainment, for sure.

Mere moments after the recording of the show ended, Dave grabbed a mic, thanked us for being a good audience, and bid us adieu, and less than 3 minutes later, we were outside again.  The show airs for an hour, and we spent just about an hour and 15 minutes inside the studio.  They really don’t fuck around!  They got us in and out lickety split!

It was a serious amount of fun.  I can see getting addicted to attending television shows.  It’s a strange, unique form of entertainment, and a cool look “behind the curtain”.  If you’ve ever wondered anything about what goes on at shows, or The Late Show in particular, and I didn;t address it here, feel free to ask in a comment!

Seth’s Favorites of 2009: Concerts

Posted in Concert/ Events, Rant/ Rave with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on November 12, 2009 by sethdellinger

Other favorites of 2009:

Magazines
Poetry
Television

I made it to a few less concerts in 2009 than I do in most years, mostly due to my decision to see less bands multiple times.  Despite the fact that I ended up missing epic, once-in-a-lifetime Pearl Jam shows, I stand by this decision.  It allowed me the time and finances to see more unique bands in more distant locales, resulting in not just some incredible shows, but fantastic all-around experiences.  My only big regret of the year is missing Kings of Leon on their first big arena tour; although I’ve seen them once before (opening for Pearl Jam in ’08), I’d have loved to see them on a grand scale.  Without further ado:

5.  LIVE, New Jersey

I saw two consecutive LIVE shows in New Jersey with a slew of awesome people, including my sister, Ron, Billhanna, and Bootney Lee Pharnsworth.  (half of you were supposed to come to one of these shows with me, but you are bad, bad people who all bitched out at the last moment).  I’ve seen LIVE lots of times now–I’m not even sure how many–but it never, ever stops being awesome.  Both shows this year were identical setlists, though they both had great energy, and the band pulled out a few hum-dinger rarities (“Gas Hed Goes West”, “The Distance”) as well as playing scorching versions of old favorites like “Lakini’s Juice” and “I, Alone”.  But the biggest deal, at least to my sister and I, were the opener and closer for each show.  Opener=”Purifier”.  Closer=“White, Discussion”.

Here are the final, amazing moments to the version of “White, Discussion” myself, Adrienne, and Ron saw the first night at the Starland Ballroom:

4.  Silversun Pickups, Virginia

My first time seeing this band, one of the more recent additions to my “favorite bands” list, and the show did not disappoint at all!!!  I had front row and was able to make pretty steady eye contact with lead singer Brian Aubert and bassist Nikki Monninger, as they played, basically, every single one of my favorite songs, essentially in the order I’d have asked for them to be played.  I mean, c’mon,they opened with “Growing Old is Getting Old”–mind-blowing!  A very tight, rehearsed band.

No YouTube exists of the the show I was at, but here’s a video from another show where they opened with “Growing Old”.  It’s a song that requires some patience to really get to the payoff:

3.  Seven Mary Three, Reading, PA

There is a huge blog entry about this show here.  There’s not much more I can say about it that isn’t already there.  I should just say that although it was clearly an amazing experience for me, concert-wise, nothing could possibly come close to touching the experiences I had with the #1 and 2 entries here.

2.  Man Man, Washington D.C.

There is also a pre-existing entry for this concert here.  But allow me to just re-iterate that I have never seen anything quite like this show.  I have never felt so compelled to move, never felt so much energy in a room that my skin shimmered with the excitement, never smiled so big and wide for so long after a show.  If you ever get a chance, you MUST see these guys.  There’s no YouTube from our show, but watch this anyway:

1.  Explosions in the Sky, Central Park, New York

Mary and I had a fantastic (yet I must say, truly adventurous) time getting to and seeing this show.  (original blog viewable here)  When I think back to this show, I still feel a spiritual uplifting, a true movement of my soul–whatever you think that means.  This sort of feeling is what seeing live music is all about for me, and it happens all too infrequently.  Do yourself a favor if you have an extra 20 minutes:  listen to this song here, and then watch the YouTube video below.  Once again, this is a band that requires patience, but your patience will pay incredible dividends.

Here’s the same song again, but from the Central Park show Mary and I were at.  The first video I posted has such superior audio and visuals I couldn’t in good conscience post only the Central Park video:

SevenMaryThreeHolyShit!

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , , , , on August 15, 2009 by sethdellinger

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So, it’s really late at night, and I don’t have time for the kind of entry I want to write here, but I can’t go to bed without putting something here, so I’ll give a quick rundown, mainly for Paul’s benefit, since I won’t be able to tell him about this until tomorrow afternoon.  I’ll have a more detailed blog about this tomorrow night.

1.  Met the entire band except for drummer Giti Khalsa, who isn’t touring with the band this tour–though I didn’t meet his fill-in, either.  Talked to bassist Casey Daniels and guitarist Thomas Juliano at length, mainly about a few of my favorite songs of the moment, but also about Casey’s shingles (the illness, not the roofing), the upcoming 7m3 live album (which I did not know about!), Thomas’ salt and pepper hair, etc etc.  I’ll have more on that tomorrow.  Met lead singer Jason Ross inside the venue.  He was in quite a hurry so I didn’t bother him for a pic, but I shook his hand and thanked him for everything and he was quite gracious, despite being in a quite obvious hurry.

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2.  The band played the two songs I had talked to Casey about, and they were definitely put in the setlist for me!!! (“Headstrong” and “Shelf Life” back to back); Casey pointed at me and grinned during both songs (I was right in front of him) and after the show he walked over to me and simply said “I hope you liked that.”

3.  I know I always say something like “The setlist was amazing!” in my post-show blogs, but really…I honestly can’t believe that set just happened and it wasn’t a dream.  I follow their setlists online and nothing like this has ever happened.  The setlist isn’t online yet, and I’m not sure I can re-create it from memory, but (this next bit will probably only interest Paul)…they opened with “Times Like These”!  They weren’t going to but they had to improvise..full story tomorrow.  The show ended with “Strangely at Home Here”!!! Can you say HolyShit!!!  Other songs in the set:

–Southwestern State
–Roderigo
–Was a Ghost
–Joliet

…and alot more!!!  But I’m having trouble thinking right now!!! Full blog tomorrow.  More pics are already up on my Facebook!

Whatever There Is

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , , , , on July 1, 2009 by sethdellinger

Wake up at 8.  Drive for hours.  Sunny.  XM Radio and Red Bull, menthol cigarettes.  Her, black and blue sheer pants, hair up, speaking over the wind from the windows.  Park in New Jersey, train into Manhattan.  That rushing air from nowhere in the tunnels.  Panhandlers.  Pretty girls. Men in suits.  The East Village.  Coconut Milk bubble tea.  Slow shadows over the pavement.  Spotty cell reception.  I sweat into my t-shirt, a drop falls off my nose.  Subway.  Suddenly air-conditioned.  Uptown Manhattan.  The horns, the bustle.  Central Park.  A Pepsi from a street vendor; her, a Snapple.  Find Summerstage but walk past, searching for a bathroom.  Fountains.  Statues.  Rickshaws.  Horses.  I sweat into my t-shirt, a drop falls off my nose.  Use a bathroom by a tunnel.  Take pictures.  Only one of her–all she’ll allow.  Back toward Summerstage.  Place ourselves in long line, in a cattle chute.  Sun hides.  A bowling ball in the sky.   A flash.  The sky opens, a thunderstorm.  Us, no umbrella, no cover.  At first, this is refreshing.  I like rain; I am not scared of water.  Over time, however, this philosophy changes.  T-shirt and corduroy pants, soaked through like a sunk washcloth.  Shoes, filled with water.  Not just squishing: filled.  Wet is everywhere.  Her pants body-clung, hair disarray.  I like it though she doesn’t believe me.  Line moves, we enter Summerstage.  Rain constant. Astroturf flooring like a thin full sponge.  Somehow we find front row, stage right.  Sheets of water, mini-Niagras, cascade off the roof of the stage, make puddle-pits five feet in front of us.  We cannot speak through the rain.  People dressed in black fill in behind us.  We are allowed to smoke but it is hard.  A security guard gives her a free cup of coffee when he sees her shivering, goosebumps.  I am happy for her but I am cold too.  An hour passes.  A smartly-dressed, attractive hipster twentysomething brunette walks onto stage, takes a microphone.  “Rain or Shine!”, she yells.  Crowd cheers.  But I do not cheer.  First opening act–Castanets–comes out to play.  Horrible. Not even music.  We consider leaving once or twice.  Actually angry at this band.  Torrential rain plus terrible music. We stay.  Castanets finishes.  Rain stops.  Solitary patch of clear blue sky.  Second opening band–Constantines–plays. My ears and eventually my heart likes them very much.  Big pumping rises.  Low heartfelt falls.  Authentic.  On their last song, sun peeks out, catching on leaves behind the stage like hints of a Promised Land.  Cheesy to say but that’s how it felt.  Clothes still soaked, feet miserable, but happy now.  I don’t smoke weed but I smell someone else smoking it and it makes me glad.  Annoying but endearing security guard (of the free coffee fame) chats us up, insists Pennsylvania is six hours from New York.  Explosions in the Sky come out.  It is dusk.  The sky is blue, clear, tiny islands of white clouds drifting over the blue.  “Yasmin the Light” opens the show.  The rising chords.  The flurried hand movements over shiny guitars.  The booming, March Militaire thwack of the drums.  And then into another song, and then into another song, rarely pausing between, a constant rise and fall, an uplift, a pull-back, a wordless sentiment perfectly stated.  Whatever there is within me stirs (I hadn’t noticed how long it’d been stilled)–whatever it is connected to reaches out.  I heave, I shudder, I leak by the light of it’s touch.  What a relief to feel it still move, to upturn my streambed rocks, to get a crawfish to rise, to see it sparkle in the light of my clear-blue day.

A Day in DC, and the Best Band You’ve Never Heard Of

Posted in Concert/ Events with tags , , , , on May 4, 2009 by sethdellinger

Yesterday, good buddy Ron and I spent the day in DC. And you may know, I love spending the day in DC. So, it ruled, despite:

A. Cold and constant rain.
B. My budding chest cold.
C. My own slight confusion with a few of the transfers on the DC Metro system.

Despite these factors, it still ruled. Here’s why:

A. Ron rules.
B. I rule.
C. We capped off the night by seeing an amazing concert (more on this later).
D. Did a bunch of DC stuff I hadn’t done in a few years. Went to the Museum of American History, after it had been closed for two years for renovations. There, saw The Puffy Shirt, Kermit, George Washington’s military uniform, a section of the Twin Towers, a Ninja Turtle costume from the first (and I still say good) movie, the original C3PO, and just oodles and oodles. Walked past the White House (haven’t done this since I was a teenager) and it’s still bizarre to stand in front of (and behind) that building, having seen it’s image so often in media. There are of course pictures of all this on my MySpace and Facebook accounts; I’m still a holdout as far as photobucket goes.
E. I just straight-up love being in cities, I don’t care if it’s raining, snowing, or whatnot. Would temperate sunshine have been better? Of course, but what are you gonna do?

Also, before we left for the day, Ron and I stopped by Paul‘s house to give him the poster I bought for him at the recent Presidents of the United States of America concert which he was not able to attend.  It’s signed by all three members of the band!  it was a belated birthday gift.  It was great to start our day by seeing Paul’s disshevled early-morning face.

So, around 6pm Ron and I made our way toward the outside of town, to the Howard University/ Cardoza area, where the show was at, in a small, shitty club called The Black Cat.  The band is called Man Man, and they’re probably never going to be famous.  Ron and I first saw them two years ago, when they were the opening act for Modest Mouse.  We were just completely blown away and, quite frankly, probably talked more about Man Man after the show than we talked about Modest Mouse.  There is no way to actually describe what this band is like.  They’re incredible, but also certainly not for everyone.  Check out this youtube video of them playing live.  It is one of their more laid-back songs.  I implore you to watch the whole way through:

After seeing them open for Modest Mouse, Ron ordered one of their CDs.  I’m not sure how Ron feels about it, but I found the studio Man Man music to be a bit of a let-down after the live experience.  I didn’t feel the freneticism, energy, and profound wackiness that I felt when seeing them live.  So I never did “get into” them as recording artists, though I would frequently listen to a song or two on their MySpace page.  Ron and I did, however, follow thier career, watching as they keep coming oh-so-close to hitting it big in the U.S., only to have it not quite happen.  Spots at Coachella, SXSW, and the Austin City Limits Festival failed to ignite a sizable fanbase, and eventually they go back to playing tiny shithole clubs like The Black Cat.  Mostly because, probably, the band is really fucking weird.  Thier lead singer calls himself “Honus Honus” and their main drummer calls himself “Chang Wang”.  But I had always vowed to Ron that the next time it was possible, we’d be seeing Man Man again.  And so we did.

We got front row, and at The Black Cat, that really means something.  There’s no barrier, so you are touching the lip of the stage, and the stage is very low, so that even on a man as short as I, the stage was at my waist.  The stage is also not very deep.  Chang Wang’s drumkit was about 3 feet from me.  It was like watching a band play in your living room–if your living room was incredibly tiny.  I have never been witness to such an intimate show (and not intimate like singer-songwriter-y intimate, but like watching two of your closest friends have a fistfight and then fuck.)

Here is the song they opened with, “Engrish Bwudd”. (the YouTube user spelled it wrong). There are no YouTube videos up from our show, so this is from a different show:

Here is a different version of “Engrish Bwudd”.  The sound and video are horrible, but it gives you a good idea of the energy and insanity that is being front row at a Man Man show:

Honestly–and this is not just post-show euphoria here–I really think this may have been the best rock show I’ve ever been to.  The band was fully committed, and quite passionate–both emotionally and physically–about every song they played.  And they can work up a head of steam unlike anything I’ve ever seen–sometimes without even a bass or a guitar!  And the crowd, though it was relatively small, was enthusiasticto a point that bordered on hysteria (some even showed up with Man Man-esque white war paint on their faces…and let me tell you, I might be 31 years old, but the next time I see them, I’m considering doing face paint as well); I like to dance and jump around at shows, but this crowd was so gonzo that at some points I was physically forced to jump in time with the seething masses, their combined inertia moving me in time with them.  I turned to Ron a few times and saw the big lug just wearing the world’s largest grin.  There was a feeling everywhere that something truly special was taking place–something that can’t happen just cause some guys or girls strap on guitars and put up microphones; it was a communal energy and a life-ravishing performance.   If you’ve liked any of the above videos, I invite you to partake of this one more.  This song was one of my favorites of the night:

OK wait, one more. This one’s called “Big Trouble”.

I’m not exaggerating when I say that I truly feel that Ron and I, and everyone else in that room–and anyone else who’s ever been at a small-club Man Man show–may in fact be some of the luckiest people in the world.

Man Man’s official website is http://www.wearemanman.com.  Their myspace is http://www.myspace.com/wearemanman