Friday, September 23, 2005

A Journey

Time to get lyrical.

Last night, as I returned home after shopping after work, the light was beginning to change and I forbore my customary read to observe the way from the bus. It had been a wonderful cusp-of-the-season evening that had even suffused the quotidian and guilt-ridden act of supermarket shopping with the apricot luminance of the westering sun.

Now, as we headed into open countryside, the eastern sky had turned that full and limpid shade of thick grey-blue that only occurs on such evenings. The farm buildings captured the remains of the salmon-grey light and coruscated almost painfully to the eye. Thoughts and feelings seemed to float, easily juxtaposed without conflict. We passed the lay-by where, early on a perfect May morning last year, returning from a disastrous night's clubbing, I had sadly observed my friend needing his next fix of crack, unable to drive the remaining four miles without, and where, in a pointless gesture of solidarity, I grimly took my own.

But the bus had moved on: a village pub, so welcoming with its outside coloured lights, and further yet, a young man of ordinary appearance caught the bus and sat down gratefully. Something within me seemed to try to reach out and get into his head, to be him and understand his current hopes and fears. Another running for the bus, between stops, and parting from his girl at the same time. The driver, mock-angry, "Come on, I haven't got all night", but he stopped anyway. The blue light in the bus echoed more brightly the intensifying colour of the sky outside.

By the time I alighted, the darkness was beginning to assert itself, but the walk down the lane continued the magick. My soul was brim-full-to-bursting, and if correctly struck would have, as Douglas Adams so aptly described, "chimed". The final words of Umberto Eco's 'Foucault's Pendulum', as the narrator sits at the window of a Piemontese farmhouse watching the dawn light, awaiting his fate, recurred with a particular resonance: "It's so beautiful."

Then the comfort of reaching home on such an evening, the welcoming light of inside.

* * * * * * *

It was amazing too, this morning: the sky a ridge-and-furrow of pink and pale turquoise, the feeling of magick, never quite absent since last night, returning in a glorious refrain.

Proust would have made a long and exquisite vintage of all this; I have attempted an alchemical distillation of the experiential to a shot of verbose eau-de-vie. We should all treasure such moments, such journeys of our consciousness guided by the phenomenal, the merely contingent: there are few enough in a lifetime.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

52 Weeks to Make the World a Better Place: Week 39 - Change those fast food habits

Most working people reckon they just don't have time to prepare their own packed lunch to take to work and besides, it's so infra dig, dahling! Whatever the validity of this, there are still many ways to reduce the negative environmental impact of the fast-food substitute:

- do you really need to arrive at work with a carton of hot drink? Try having one before setting out or when you get there
- use your lunch break properly and eat at a café/pub/restaurant rather than the burger joint
- if you really must eat at your desk (and it's so much better to avoid this), locate an establishment that prepares its food freshly and purveys it in minimal packaging

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Latest fractal: "Blue"

See Blue at deviantART

Subtitled "A Deeply Mystical Trip into the oceans of inner space", aficionados will no doubt enjoy the Beatles-inspired wordplay ;-)

Absolutely requires full view and it's a big file (to preserve maximum detail), so be patient!

52 Weeks to Make the World a Better Place: Week 38 - Take care when recycling II

You get to the recycling bin and it's full. What do you do? I've seen countless bags of recycling just dumped there, presumably in the hope that the recyclers will put them into the newly emptied bins when they arrive... but they won't! Yes, in true jobsworth-style, it isn't in their job description, so they won't do it.

So, please, if you've brought your stuff in the car, just take it back home and bring it again on the next visit. It's not much to ask.

52 Weeks to Make the World a Better Place: Week 37 - Take care when recycling I

OK, I've got well behind here, so I'll issue a 2-parter in rapid succession.

Most people, when they recycle, feel they've pretty well "done their bit" for the environment and leave it at that. But sometimes, that "bit", when not fully considered, can turn out to have an element of negative impact.

Read the blurb on the recycling bin carefully: are all paper-based products accepted, or does it ask for no staples or catalogues?; does it ask for tops to be removed from plastic bottles?; or perhaps metal bits to be removed from glass bottles?

Failure to comply or even notice may result in a great deal of extra work at "the other end" when all it takes is a little more effort from each individual. Wake up and do that extra "bit"!