Friday, May 07, 2010

Confessions of a Clifton Boulevard Drain-Raker

At about eleven fifteen tonight I was driving home from having spent the evening with several friends. During our gathering a storm broke out, complete with hail, a momentary power failure, and three of our number on a walk outside without their phones. These three did return safe after the worst of the storm was over, having taken shelter with some friendly nuns, and as I drove home in a light drizzle I thought the night's adventures were over.

That was when I noticed that a new river had formed between me and home, flooding more than one lane of the street and I couldn't tell how deep. When I had steeled myself to cross the stream, there was a moment when I envisioned my car swept away and unable to get traction, but then I was across and a moment later was parked and walking inside. My mother greeted me at the door and mentioned that she had been clearing debris from the storm drains to lessen the flooding, but apparently more debris had collected since then and the rain was still falling. I put on hold my plans to change my clothes and settle in to bed, and instead went back outside, rake in hand, to clear the drains again.

I spent the next half hour wading from drain to drain for three blocks, putting my arm elbow-deep into the opaque water to clear leaves, branches, and other debris that had washed down the gutter from downed trees to the west of us. A neighbor joined in, and we traded sympathy and encouragement while coordinating our efforts. Twice the streetlights flickered or went dark above our heads while we blindly groped in the rushing water. Cars continued speeding down the road, but one man in a pickup truck managed to slow down long enough to shout "You're fucking crazy!"

When I could no longer see any massive flooding, I made my way back, re-clearing the drains I saw on the way that had already accumulated more leaves and sticks. But I was seeing and hearing sirens, and wanted to change out of my pants that were soaked to the knee. I could have done more.

Tuesday, May 04, 2010

Voyage to Earth

Starting four weeks from now on June 1st, I'll be starting a science fiction serial; one chapter a week will be posted on http://voyagetoearth.blogspot.com/ on Tuesdays.

This story will take place a few hundred years in the future when humans have colonized some of the solar system and made some new friends in the universe. Voyage to Earth chronicles the journey of an interplanetary bus as it transports two crewmembers, an astronomer on the brink of insanity, and a young alien diplomat on a classified mission to Earth. Meanwhile, an interplanetary summit is stalled out as some delegates have become mysteriously silent, and one of the human colonies on Mars is entertaining revolt.

I hope you'll come read the first chapter on June 1st, and if you like what you see then I hope you'll come back each Tuesday for more.

A rough timeline

Two months ago I interviewed for a job I wanted but didn't think I was qualified for. Two weeks after that, I found out my new employer thought differently, and four years of unemployment ended.

28 days ago I went to my friend Jasen's place to watch Mythbusters. We sat on opposite ends of his couch and contemplated the gap between us, but didn't close it. The following Wednesday I came back, and the Sunday after that we watched the new miniseries "Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking." On that day the gap closed, and six months of solitude ended.

One week ago I fulfilled a promise I made to myself five years ago and saw Faith and the Muse perform live.

Four days ago I joined forces with some close friends and some new acquaintances to celebrate all that is possible, and all that we wish to make possible. I also bought a pair of sandals that I had been searching three years for.

Tomorrow, according to what I've heard, my uncle leaves his wife and children to move in with another woman. He remains my favorite uncle, and his wife, my favorite aunt.

Nine days from now my third godchild is due to be born, but it could be sooner.

Four weeks from now I begin posting a chapter a day of my science fiction novel (more on this later).

Two months and six days from now, two of my best friends are getting married to each other, and more than three years of planning will come to fruition.

***

Life is governed, it seems, by the principle of punctuated equilibrium. Change is slow and arduous but inevitable; our solitudes and our personal famines last excruciatingly long and then, in a moment so fast and unexpected it hardly reaches our notice sometimes, they're gone in the flood of new direction. Sometimes it seems you need only close your eyes for a moment and you wake up in another life, an unfamiliar one, one you never expected and never hoped for oftentimes only because you didn't know it was possible. And then, sometimes before we even notice that it's happening, we habituate to it and begin to think that it was always this way, just as a river that bends so slowly that it appears to be straight until viewed from above.

Where is the river going?