Wednesday, September 25, 2019

345. Do Androids...



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Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

By Philip K Dick

Chapter 13 - I caught “Priss” in a previous chapter but just realized that J.R. Isadore, the chickenhead is J.F. Sebastian. This is puzzling, but actually Isadore makes more sense than Sebastian. Sebastian is an odd mix of chess, genetic engineer, and chickenhead. That early SciFi is valuable on Mars, delivered to the black market by drone ships, is really pretty funny on Dick’s part. At least he hasn’t named himself as an author famous in the future. Would have been tempting to have mentioned some other author he didn’t like as being loathed.

Also, William Sanderson did a splendid job of playing JR/JF. While I think the lack of empathy is better and more consistent than the childishness as a trait for the replicants, I can see how this works better visually. Though could someone without empathy be a successful opera singer? I guess if you sing the right notes and copy what other performers have done you could manage, but could you excel?

Chapter 16 - P162 How could the authorities possibly have so much detailed inside info on the replicants? The movie made more sense in this regard. That Priss and Rachel should look the same is interesting. I wonder if they considered having one actor play both parts? Now that would have been interesting.

Also interesting that they changed the built-in defect from lack of empathy (inability to “fuse”) to short lifespan. The short lifespan doesn’t really make that much sense when you consider that they are supposed to be a capital investment. And that goes to the slavery aspect which I haven’t begun to think about. If they can’t breed you would want your replicant to at least have a long lifespan. Would people want a replicant slave that was more intelligent? Maybe. They would actually be more useful on Earth to help the ant and chickenheads.

The seduction is completely different -- and, surprisingly, less problematic (rapey). Though the logic of it from the perspective of the other bladerunner is a mystery to me and possibly more misogynistic. Especially since in the book there is the odd wife. Who now I think of it, reminds me just a bit of Joi. Though Joi is much more helpful and supportive. Are there any other human women in the book?

Chapter 17 - p174 - So I was wrong about the short lifespan being different, Rachel is only two years old and with an expected two more years. But she isn’t surprised at being a replicant the way she is in the movie. And she’s slept with other hunters including the only other one we know. That’s an interesting twist.

Also, Deckard saying, after sleeping with her once, that he would ditch his wife and marry her if he could, tells us something about the hot mess that was Philip K. Dick. What were his fourth and fifth wives thinking? Reading his bio in Wiki makes me reconsider what we are told here about Deckard's wife.

P190 Isn’t “JR’s” experience here a depiction of depression? And Mercer is the “higher power” needed to help lift you out. And Dick is getting to the core of religious belief here in that Mercerism being proved to be a hoax isn’t significant to the people who need/use it to survive. 

Chapter 19 - Hadn’t expected Mercer to intervene. I think I need to re-read the Wiki bio. There’s more “faith” here than doubt about the nature of reality. I guess that paranormal stuff toward the end of his life was not completely new.

Also, the “climactic confrontation” was a bit of a let down. The replicants seemed helpless and Deckard was completely in control.

I have no idea what I’m going to find in the last chapter.

Chapters. They snuck in several small ones. Even stranger. Didn’t expect to go even deeper into the Mercer area.

I have to say the movie did a better job of telling a satisfying story. Obviously Dick doesn’t care much about that. How was Rachel so well informed about the other replicants? How could she have known what Deckard did? Would she have tried to kill him if she had gone along on the raid? What did Dick think of the screenplay? They borrowed a couple ideas and some dialog, but then went off and invented a largely unrelated story. Maybe it’s just as well he died before it came out.

The book replicants were cruel, though I guess that goes with the lack of empathy or only being a couple years old. The new Blade Runner film captured this aspect better. Iran is probably the least interesting character in the book, and the one I least understand. 

Mercerism makes sense as a crafted religion to make people blend better socially. Similar to aspects of Brave New World. But Dick seems to want us to believe that Mercer is real or at least that he is real for Deckard. Is he also arguing that replicants are incapable of religious feeling? In the new film, there is a near religious aspect to the cult around the child. Is it ever said how long replicants are living now? And I wonder if they switched from Rosen to Tyrell so it would sound less Jewish?

I'm glad I read this but for me the movie will always be the real thing.


Tuesday, September 24, 2019

344. More Greening 2019



Opera In the Park
I thought I had written about this but apparently not here. This is an event I work every year so I have it down, but I don't much care for it, even though it is in Golden Gate Park. And the weather was perfect this year. The problem is the music. I;m not a fan of opera. But this year there was a change for the better as one of the opera singers sang a Queen cover: Someone To Love. That was pretty great and the crowd loved it. Maybe, moving forward, we can have more Queen and less opera. I can dream.



This Never Happened
I worked a rave! It was pretty damn dull. Frank Ozawa Plaza in the heart of Oakland was fenced off for this afternoon into evening, outdoor event. It was supposed to be the last day of our little heat wave, and in fact the heat wave was over in SF, but it was still sunny and warm in Oakland.

This is part of the “venue” for Art and Soul, but the audience was much whiter. Still diverse, but primarily white. The music was monotonous -- if you’re not on drugs, anyway -- and I didn’t have a good angle on the light-show projected on City Hall. What I could see were the people dressed to attract. There were enough women who looked unbelievably good to make up for the other shortcomings of the event.

And the main shortcoming from my perspective was that there was nothing to do for the bulk of the time. Nobody was generating a lot of trash. I grabbed the food area, but even there the pickings were slim. And then the event went about ten minutes long, which doesn’t sound like much, but I was supposed to get off at 9pm and they played until 8:55pm leaving me little time to consolidate and collect the bags in my area. I cheated by pulling in early the compost boxes at two stations that also had a regular Oakland can for general trash. I left the recycling in place but did a final sort on the compost and also pulled the sorted recycling so that all my work during the day was preserved. This took a bit longer than five minutes, but, as I said, I had not been working hard all day.

(They just posted a request for three people to help clean up the area the day after. I guess it was a mess after I left.)

The other bad aspect of the timing was that I had to catch the train home with the rave mob. To my surprise, I managed to even get a seat. And when I arrived in SF I remembered that the cable car system is down for the weekend so I caught a bus up the hill. Heaven after working on my feet for eight hours.

One good thing about rave music, no earworms. I still have a song from Opera in the Park I’m working to extract from my ear -- and no, it’s not opera. Or Queen.

Rockridge Out & About
It’s now Monday and they are still trying to pull in people to help cleanup the rave mess. I seriously thought about it but already had a chiro appointment and it sounds really tedious and back breaking work. The main reason I’d like to go is to see how we could do this better in the future. Maybe something in between a street sweeper and a wet/dry vac. I’m sure this exists. But on to Rockridge...

I’ve worked this before and it is dead easy. It’s a street festival in one of Oakland’s nicest neighborhoods. The biggest problem is that the people with all their kids and dogs just move so slowly it’s hard for us to get through. Once you realize there’s no real rush anyway -- none of the stations were overwhelmed and I added an extra compost to the busiest station in my area -- you can calm down and just wait people out.

We even wrapped up an hour early. And since the train station is right above the event, it’s dead easy to get to and to get home from. This was one Oakland event where we follow Oakland composting rules so all the expensive compostable cold drink cups had to go to landfill. This confuses everyone (and is stupid) but we’re not as outraged as you might expect since those bioplastic cups, even if you have a compost facility that can process them, result in shit “compost.” And all the hundreds or thousands of cups that ended up in the landfill yesterday don’t really add up to much in terms of weight or even volume after they are smashed flat. What they do do, at some point in the future, is add methane to a landfill.

And at the end of my shortened work day I again rode the bus up my hill. I am getting so spoiled by this shuttle service. 


Undiscovered, again
This was the second of these events I’ve worked this year. Different crew this time, but I again grabbed the busy area in back where all the food was and spend the afternoon and evening piling up bags of sorted trash against the fence that separated the event from the rest of the parking lot behind the Federal Courthouse. Ended up with an impressive pile of bags. I have to admit I like being able to see the result of my work manifested like that. And someone else came in after the event and hauled all the bags away as I took down the four stations I had been managing.

We were done by 11:30 when my shift ended and I even made it safely through the late Saturday crowd of near-do-wells in SF’s last Skid Row to where I could catch the shuttle bus up my hill. Unfortunately that's the last time as the repairs are now complete and the cable cars are going back in service.

One thing I preferred about Undiscovered compared with the rave last Saturday was the presence of dogs. I don’t think either event was really a good place for dogs -- too loud -- but it was nice to see them last night. Lots of puppies.

Last night I also tried out the recycled, clear backpack I got from a co-worker after having a hard time finding one for sale here. It is a bit small, and was tossed out because the zipper on the main section is broken, but I actually love the way it fits. I’m working on another way to keep it closed. I think it will still carry enough for HSB, which is what I need it for. That it sits much higher on my back actually makes it better for carrying a heavier load of bags and even water. Last year I had to give up on the extra water because my backpack was irritating my lower back.



Random

I just had an odd peak experience. For me, Subway is as good as it gets for “fast food”. I went in the one on Van Ness at Jackson and got my usual veggie Delight, but what actually made the experience special was that, while it was a tad cool out on the street, the interior of the little place was bathed in the heat from the ovens and the smell of baking bread. It was pretty magical for a franchise food shop.

343. The Violet Hour plus



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1989

Making a bank deposit at an ATM just now I was reminded, to my surprise, that I’ve been banking with Wells Fargo for thirty years. Of all the notable things I recall about 1989, switching banks for the last time wasn’t one. While I don’t think as highly of Wells Fargo as I did even eleven years ago -- when they came out of that last banking crisis looking better than most everyone else -- I’ve stayed with them for the same reason I switched -- it’s easier than dealing with smaller banks that are always getting swallowed up or closing down. Also, they are one of the few local banks left.

Of course I’ve had an account with PG&E even longer, forty-three years, and I don’t trust them at all. It’s nice to be a monopoly. I buy my electricity from the city but still have to pay PG&E just as much money to deliver that electricity. 



MCU

I’ve been thinking again about the Marvel Cinematic Universe and how science and magic mix. Harry Potter and Thor are special by birth, the notion of nobility that is surprisingly popular in popular culture. But Marvel characters tend to be average people that something unusual has given special powers to. Superman, like Thor, was born to his power. Iron Man and Batman have power largely due to wealth (Green Arrow, too), but anyone can be bitten by a radioactive spider or get zapped by some strange energy force (Captain Marvel or the Flash or the Hulk). I would actually rather not read how these powers are supposed to work as the pseudo-science would just be painful. As much as I enjoyed the Captain Marvel film, the whole idea of her power is ridiculous. As with the TV show Eureka, I just pretend it’s supposed to be about magic. Magic isn’t supposed to make sense.






The Violet Hour by Katie Roiphe 

The Dial Press - 2016

The Prologue was excellent. I don’t know Roiphe but I like the way she writes.

Susan Sontag

This is really excellent. And necessary. Illness As Metaphor needs to confront this final chapter in Sontag’s life and that’s what Roiphe is doing. I have to confess that I keep thinking of Trump when she talks about Sontag’s self-myth. I completely sympathize with David, but when so many people are actively engaged in pretending that a fantasy is reality, you know something is really wrong. 

On page 51 now and I’m wondering if Sontag will ever admit that she was wrong and that death can be a friend. That is what Sontag’s “courage” and “love of life” has come down to, an almost pathetic fear of death. Not a good look for a philosophy student.

I missed noting the page, but this is after they return to NYC from Seattle. The word that is missing here is Penelope Liveley’s favorite word, solipsism. I’m not sure Sontag truly believes in a reality outside herself. I’ve always thought of solipsism as a problem for Epistemology but if you are a true solipsist, it must become a metaphysical concern. Without you there is nothing.

This is why you have to read a story to the end. I mean the story of a life. The story of the survivor, of the person who always beats death can, ultimately, have only one ending. Just as Napoleon’s story of endless war could have only one ending. I’m tempted to say that she got the death she deserved, but that sounds cruel. She got the death that was true to her nature. She could never come to terms with death. She saw death as the enemy. And that’s fine, better than Foucault, for example, but in the end she paid for this with more suffering than was necessary. Though, of course, suffering is a kind of living. 

Occurs to me that eschatology must have been for Sontag what gynecology is for me, something I think doesn’t apply. Also, Sontag’s “battle” with bone marrow transplant and what followed took about five months. I don’t think I would try this even if I was guaranteed 10 good years.


Freud

p80 I may be with Freud here. People forget that morphine doesn’t suit everyone. Just as Sontag would cling to life (and Annie would photograph anything) I don’t see the point of living if you are not able to think clearly. Also, I’ve not had to deal with much pain. My opinion is subject to revision.

Wow! The bit about Lun not coming near him. Now here’s an aspect of my belief in Dog that I hadn’t anticipated. Dogs do have the wisdom to go off and peacefully die. This also suggests the idea (from Pullman) that our death is always with us and the dog can see it. Or probably smell it. This book is so exceeding my expectations.

P85 Lou Andreas-Salomé, I don’t know why I’m surprised to find her here. Roiphe seems to be hostile to Freud’s Stoic attitude toward death.

P89 Okay, now I see what she’s doing. And I completely agree. It is one thing to say that we have nothing to fear from death as when it arrives, we shall be gone. It is another to seriously face the end of your self. (And this would be true even if your body would continue to live.)

(Princess) Marie Bonaparte is yet another interesting women in this story.

P90 “In taking on a personal physician, Freud entered into a personal relation with death. He was beginning what could almost be called a negotiation. He asked Schur to promise that when the time came he would help him die, which Schur did. He also asked Schur to promise to be completely honest, which he did as well.” Quite a deal.

P91 “...Freud took up what he called ‘the sweet habit of smoking’ when he was twenty-four... he... was soon smoking twenty cigars a day...” I am reminded of Hans Castorp. 

“... he wrote, ‘For six days now I have not smoked a single cigar, and it cannot be denied that I owe my well-being to this renunciation. But it is sad.’ ” 

P92 “...Life without cigars was unbearable, a misery. From very early on he linked smoking to his imaginative work, to his creative side. It seemed to him impossible to work, to concentrate, to envision without a cigar, almost, to live. Something vital, crucial, was tangled up with cigars, something akin to identity.”

P93 Schur: “ ‘I asked myself repeatedly whether I was entitled, or even obliged, to insist more strongly on the enforcement of abstinence... I could not, and in retrospect I realize that I should not regret this fact. It’s questionable in any event whether such an attempt would have been successful.’ ” I am reminded here that my own father could not stop smoking until getting his rib cage cracked open threw off his golf swing... and by then it was too late.

She covers how he saw his passionate smoking as being opposed to his otherwise “petit bourgeois correctness.” His identity as an intellectual. 

P94 “His smoking... is crucial to his biography, to understanding his life and times. Freud is interested in this other story, this story written out in smoke. He is not careful. He is not correct. He is not the punctual, controlled, financially responsible, bourgeois Freud. ‘The fellow is actually somewhat more complicated.’ There is the wildness of his passion for cigars: it is the fire, the fuel, the fruitfulness. Elsewhere he calls it his ‘sin,’ which is an interesting word choice for a man of science, a man so naturally disinclined toward religious frameworks. The word ‘sin” endows the habit with a glamour, a richness it might not otherwise have; it is his taboo, his vice, his irrationality, and as such it is crucial to him, it is animating.”

P95 ...”Smoking, he suggests, is a substitute for the sexual; it is the expression of the libido.”

P97 “In... ‘Beyond the Pleasure Principle.’ which came out in 1920, Freud raised the possibility of a silent drive toward death, a secret desire for annihilation animating each of us. He wrote a line many analysts would resist, finding it too extreme, too sweeping, too unsettling: ‘The aim of all life is death.’ And in this strange, speculative work, he began to address the irrational draw toward death, the desire for it, the mysterious attraction of undoing oneself.” 

I need to refer here to other people interested in this at the time from my Foucault work. And of course Hans Castorp comes to mind again. Here is a quote from The Passion of Michel Foucault by James Miller, he is writing about Foucault’s time in California exploring “limit experiences” in the Gay bath houses of SF and knowingly exposing himself to AIDS.



p 34
Foucault’s work was drawing to an end; and his life... was ending in an ambiguous gesture, as if he had finally grasped the full significance, too late, of the fatal temptation he had first identified nearly ten years earlier, long before AIDS had become a tangible threat: “The Faustian pact, whose temptation has been instilled in us by the deployment of sexuality, is now as follows: to exchange life in its entirety for sex itself, for the truth and the sovereignty of sex. Sex is worth dying for.”

This ties in so well with what Freud wrote above about smoking and the libido. Neither man could resist their personal temptation.

And Freud’s self-image that required smoking is in a way similar to Sontag’s survivor self-image.


While talking about dreams,


P78 ...”In the depth of his dream,” writes Foucault, “what man encounters is his death, a death which in its most inauthentic form is but the brutal and bloody interruption of life, yet in its authentic form, is the fulfillment of his very existence.”


Foucault got some of his ideas about death from Georges Bataille and the Surrealists. But I’m not ready to work out if they were getting ideas from Freud or the other way round. Or if it was a Jungian thing and the ideas were just floating in the collective unconscious at the time.

P100 “He would write later, ‘Only the collaboration and the conflict between both primal drives, Eros and death drive, explain the colorful variety of life’s phenomena, never one of them alone.’ ” Again I can’t help thinking of Foucault.

“...He wrote... ‘What we are left with is that the organism wishes to die only in its own fashion.’ ”

P102 Bonaparte makes up the following response to her from Freud, “Fr: Why sad? That’s what life is. It is precisely the eternal transitoriness which makes life so beautiful.’ She was making this dialogue up... but he had often expressed this view -- in a short essay on Goethe, in his letters; it was a recurring theme in their conversation.”

P103 ...”So the work he is doing now is the work of dying: He is doctor and patient, subject and writer, analysand and analyst.

“Freud seems, at times, to be studying his own relation to life: the subtle and nuanced fraying of the connection... ‘The change taking place is perhaps not very conspicuous; everything is as interesting as it was before; neither are the qualities very different; but some kind of resonance is lacking.’ ”

P104 “When in 1904 Lou Andreas-Salome wrote a floridly sentimental poem about how she would like to live a thousand years, even if those years contained nothing but pain, Freud commented wryly, ‘One cold in the head would prevent me from having that wish.’ ” (Amen.)

P109 “Freud finishes the last page of the Balzac novel and closes the book. He is not working anymore. He is not reading. He says, ‘My dear Schur, you remember our first talk. You promised me then you would help me when I could no longer carry on. It is only torture now and it has no longer any sense.’ ...
...

“At first Anna says no, and then Anna says yes.

“Schur gives Freud a third of a gram of morphia. He drifts to sleep. Later, Schur administers more morphia when he becomes restless.

“A quiet falls over the house. Freud is quiet under the mosquito netting.

P110 “...he died in the manner he chose to die, at the time he wanted to die. He chose and controlled something most of us are not privileged to choose and control. He imagined for himself this death. It looked to others like he had fallen asleep... Anna wrote, ‘I believe there is nothing worse than to see the people nearest to one lose the very qualities for which one loves them. I was spared that with my father, who was himself to the last minute,’ ...

“‘We cannot observe our own death,’ Freud wrote so authoritatively, so convincingly, and all the while he was trying his best to do exactly that.”

I have to say I can’t imagine a better death than this. And yet... it is also a death he didn’t learn anything from because he was in complete control. 


John Updike -

P117 “legerity” - le·ger·i·ty. physical or mental agility or quickness; nimbleness.
When "legerity" first appeared in English in 1561, it drew significantly upon the concept of being "light on one's feet," and appropriately so. -Merriam-Webster 

Very well written. His death is in some ways even better than Freud’s -- the one and done approach to chemo. But he doesn’t get to control the timing as Freud did. Interesting that I found this moving and yet I still have no desire to read him.

To return to sex and smoking and limit experiences, it would seem that that Krishna-like Updike had died long before.


Dylan Thomas

And this one is about his marriage. But also about drinking and the “metaphor of being sick.”

Oh, Roiphe tricked me. She played the crime procedural game on me and I fell for it. It isn’t those earlier, obvious subjects but the loss of his talent that is the root of the problem. Perhaps.

P182 About “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night”: “When you hear him (in these last readings) reciting the familiar line, ‘Rage, rage against the dying of the light,’ the cadence is so mesmerizing that it seems to be a poem about acceptance; it lulls you into a feeling of goodwill toward the workings of the universe. Its emotional effect is in fact the opposite of the meaning of the words: It is a paean to the natural order. When one hears the last soft, caressing ‘Do not go gentle’ one can’t help but be lost in the loveliness of the lines, seduced. When Thomas stands up onstage, incanting it in his unnaturally beautiful voice, ‘Though wise men at their end know dark is right,’ it is a lullaby, drained of violence, drained of anger. You can suddenly hear in his voice what you cannot see on the page: This is on some very peculiar level a love song to death.”

That was amazing.

P186 “...They brought him to St Vincent’s Hospital... His medical records show that he had suffered ‘a severe insult to the brain.’ ”

Dear God, we are all doomed as we’ve suffered nothing but insults to the brain since 2016.

What an ass. I hope Caitlin did well after his death.


Maurice Sendak -

P241 “Maurice viewed artistic influence as an active process. He picked an artist to borrow from for many of his projects. As he put it, ‘The muse does not come pay visits, so you go out stalking, hoping that something will catch you. Where do I steal from?” ... ‘He had a way of swallowing an artist whole, but what he came out with was wholly his own, unmistakably a Sendak drawing.’...”

This reminds me of Martha Grimes and Faulkner.

P243 “After Eugene died, Maurice wanted Lynn to take photographs of his body. He held on to these photographs and liked having them.”

This seems to be a call back to Annie and Sontag.

“Eugene was cremated and his ashes were buried in the garden with Jennie...” Okay, that line got me. 

P247 “This seems to be key: Staring into something you have always been terrified of [death] and finding it beautiful.”

P260 So like my father’s death. The time of day when we seem to be least tethered to life. 

All but one of these deaths were hospital deaths. Even the great have a hard time avoiding that fate.

Thinking about deaths in The Brothers Karamazov -- as one does -- the two deaths that Dostoevsky uses to show Christian values and attitudes and possibly a connection with the Perennial Philosophy, are completely unlike these modern deaths in that there is so much less fighting and intervention. Only Sendak seemed to enjoy a degree of peace and transformation in his final days. Sontag certainly didn’t. 

It is curious that Christian civilization, which has traditionally denigrated this life, has spawned a medical system that fights death as though it were sin. Freud may have been aware of the appeal of death and he did decide to go out on his own schedule, and yet up until then he had fought it as tenacious as had Sontag. Really it was only Thomas who was not ready to do nearly anything to avoid death -- though there is Freud’s smoking to consider. 

If I were to write a book like this, I would try to find subjects who had had time for a more contemplative death. I think that is possible, though increasingly rare with our medical system.

It amazed me how many things I recognized from my father’s death (and life) in this book. His death was exactly like Sendak’s. I held his feet in the hospital just like Updike’s first wife when he was having congestive heart failure. And the discussion of how painful a heart attack is reminded me (thanks a lot) of how, when he had his first heart attack when I was 16, I drove him to the hospital (mistake number one) and dropped him off at the front door so that he had to walk through the hospital to the ER, because I didn’t know where the ER entrance was. Of course one could make a good argument that, in fact, my Id was throttling my Super Ego until it passed out and then gleefully convincing my Ego to avoid the ER entrance. Bad Id!


James Salter -

I was unfamiliar with him but I love his way with words. I need to read this section again.

P283-4 This is why I’m grateful that my mother in a sense betrayed my father, by calling 911 when he went into congestive heart failure the night after his 79th birthday, giving me time to attend his actual death four or five unpleasant days later. I haven’t experienced death coming for me, but I have been around death at work and it is strangely natural.

I would like to know what happened with some of the incidental people after the deaths of these famous people. The helpers who were a little more than servants but not quite family.

I have some things I would like to ask my parents now, but they are just about random things in my childhood that they might remember. Confirmation of what I think happened.

With not smoking, it’s not so much wanting to live forever as not wanting to die in that particular way. 

And shouldn’t the subtitle be “Great Authors At The End?”


There was an element of finding and needing meaning in life in all these stories. The meaning of their art (or self-image) sustained them. But when it failed, as with Thomas, they fell apart.








Friday, September 20, 2019

342. Greening 2019



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AIDS Walk 2019

Yesterday was AIDS Walk, which went really well again. For one thing there seemed to be an over abundance of us. I only worked four hours because we were done early. I reminded everyone of the factors that can make this event go sideways -- an abundance of “free” mixed stream boxes a producer of lube always gives the event, and overly enthusiastic volunteers who will pull bags too quickly that still need to be sorted. 

I arrived just as the walkers were returning and the entertainment was starting. I quickly determined that the Chevron area was creating the most mess so I worked there until it was time to start taking down our eco-stations. The problem here was that Chevron was mixing plastic flatware and lots (LOTS) of little condiment packages with the paper plates of food. So I was pulling out the plates -- with some food and a few cups -- after knocking off the plastic items. This resulted in a bunch of bags filled with my usual nearly 100% compost while the contamination built up at the bottom of the containers. But this was a nearly perfect event for me as I got to sort down the four stations in the Chevron area myself.  After getting out as much of the good stuff as I could reach, I would pull the bag and add it to the next station, slowly getting more and more of the food that had fallen to the bottom. By the final station there was just a mess of plastic and some food that I was happy to toss into the landfill. Then I moved on to shut down other stations that I had not been maintaining.

This was in Golden Gate Park’s Sharon Meadow. This being July, we didn’t get any sun until almost the end of the site cleanup. Typical summer in SF. 


One interesting, and surprising, thing happened yesterday. The new woman last year, who at this event was annoyed by my pulling out compost she had just sorted, praised my method. Either she finally noticed how it works or she finally noticed that I have “special” status with our boss as the oldest employee (who remembers details like the lube boxes from hell from year to year). Don’t know which it is. Don’t really care.



Undiscovered 2019

Surprise! (for me) they moved it two blocks west. Luckily you can just catch a glimpse of the new location down Jessie. 

The new location is a little harder to get to but also more secure. And the event is now more like a baby La Cocina event. If it gets any busier we’re going to need more than 6 yards for the compost. 

I trained the new guy, who seems to be a quick study. Since it was already busy when we started, I was in sorting and pulling mode, so he, to my surprise, copied that as well as just the basic sorting. I was prepared to cover one of the eco-stations in the entertainment area, as well as the ones in the food area, but the first time I hit it he was already there doing what I would do. Happy day.

Because it was so crowded at my end, dropping my sorted bags in the toter at the south edge of the event worked well. It might have been easier for E___ to use the toter, instead of the wheeled round, for hauling, but that would have left the bag stash more visible -- though I’m not sure anyone would have cared.

The only problem at the end of the day was that my head-lamp batteries had died so I had to improvise to do the final sort of the station bags. That and the mess left by some vendors.


I pulled a single blue glove from the compost -- just to mess with me, I’m pretty sure. And the event staff put a stack of pizza boxes in the compost without removing the plastic spacers or foil condiment packs because, of course they did.




Art & Soul 2019

Another greening season, another Art & Soul Festival in downtown Oakland. What I like about it is that it's the first of the Oakland events I work with James, who supervises another crew that does mostly hauling and grounds. That and that it gives me a chance to get warm in the middle of a cold SF summer.

What I don’t like is the amazingly consistent resistance of A&S goers to what we are trying to do. They insist on throwing their food and plates into the landfill, and if you call them on this some will tell you they do it on principle because sorting the trash isn’t their job. It, apparently, is the job of the Man. The food vendors are also total assholes, but that never really changes. I only had three vendor eco-stations to maintain this time so I would go in, sort them all out, work the street and concert areas for an hour, return and find the most ungodly and unlikely messes. Which took much longer to sort out than if we just collected their damn bags and sorted it and kept them away from the sorted bins. I’ve actually sent out an email suggesting we drop the pretense of “vendor self-sorting” but I doubt that will fly since people would rather believe that we are slowly educating the public and vendors. After twelve years of greening work I can attest that there is no change, especially with vendors. Though to be fair, every year at this time I have to ask what the Oakland bin colors mean because gray for recycling and burgundy (brown) for landfill makes absolutely no sense.

At the very end of my shift on Sunday I was scheming the pickup of a bunch of leftover food from the caterer in the VIP area behind the big concert area near me, while trying to wind down the vendors. Some had already left so I pulled the properly sorted compost and recycling toters and put them out in the street to be taken to our dumpster location. A bunch of MEN were sitting around the other eco-station talking and drinking while the women took down their setups. I couldn’t even get to the station because of the lounging men so I said screw it and headed for the VIP area. Which turned out to be a good decision as they managed (how?) to not know that their Sterno cans didn’t belong in landfill. So I collected them for reuse while my crew chief showed up for the food pickup I’d been scheming since the previous night, when we composted all the leftovers. (I was really hungry and they looked delicious.. But getting them home on the train is just too much bother.)

There was at least one funny thing that happened on Sunday. We have a worker who admits to being OCD and, while much better lately, has a tendency to be too perfect when sorting trash when it gets busy. But she’s the perfect person to sic on a dumpster that is obviously too contaminated. 

Anyway, the first time I worked with her and noticed her problem was at A&S many years ago. I was working the same area (around half a dozen public eco-stations plus the vendor stations) and she was supposed to be covering for me while I took a lunch break. I left her working a particularly vile BBQ place where they were giving away small, but free portions of ribs. Most of the ribs were going into the landfill, because Oakland, and she was trying to sort that out. I took my half hour break and returned to find her still at it. She had never left to cover the other stations she was so focused on getting this one perfect. Sisyphus had nothing on her. I was so pissed, imagining the state of the other stations, that I left her at it and rushed to clean up the mess she had inadvertently made.


Anyway, her soul sister was working Sunday and she too was focused on the landfill bags. It is hard to let all the good compost at the bottom of landfill bags go at A&S, but it’s a war you can’t win unless you stay at one station all afternoon. But at least I was keeping the four eco-stations in order (by quickly pulling out the bulky paper items on top) so she was actually helping, but in a way that doesn’t make any long term sense. This time I was just amused. I probably should have talked to her about it, but I’m not sure that’s really my job. And, except when she wore out the bottom of one landfill bag and left it leaking it’s contents onto the street, she was making my job a little easier.




Outside Lands 2019

I arrived an hour early at the usual service entrance but they wouldn’t let me in there. I walked miles -- around the event -- to the entry closest to where I was supposed to be working but they weren’t letting anyone in there. I finally tried the main entrance for concert goers but they didn’t like my backpack and water bottle. So I left. First time I’ve ever not managed to work my shift.

That was Friday and I’m next scheduled for Sunday. I will go in without my backpack or much of my gear and with little enthusiasm. This is my least favorite event anyway and now they’ve made it even worse.

Sunday
Well I did finally get in and to my work area, but it was a pain and took about an hour. I also managed to have my phone die on me -- for the first time -- so I couldn’t contact anyone when I was stuck short of where I needed to go. But then the coolest thing happened. While sorting bags of trash I ran into a brand new cable, still in its packaging, so that I was then able to recharge my phone. And it’s a neat little cable, much smaller than mine. So I ended up coming out ahead there. Of course I did have to pay $4 for a bottle of water since I couldn’t bring mine into the event.

As before, we got caught-up before the last set and they stopped bringing us more bags, so we had nothing to do until almost time to quit. 

Oh another cool thing happened: Almost at the end some people from a bar booth started bringing us their trash on a golf cart. There were bags full of beer cans -- and unusually for a vendor, they was nothing but beer cans so they could go directly into the recycling. I went to grab some more of the bags so I was too late to catch the woman tossing the entire, unopened bag into the dumpster. You have to open them up and dump the contents. Fortunately, I had a younger coworker to send in to get the bag. And he found a bunch of other bags that had no business in there. We had no idea how or when they went in. But the point is that, if not for the woman tossing in her bag, we would not have noticed the others. It SO worked to our advantage. Or at least my advantage since I wasn’t the one who had to jump in and fish them out.

Unfortunately there was no upside to the guy I helped dump a large toter of “recycling” into the recycling dumpster only to then discover it was completely mixed trash. We had to fish out all the trash and compost. The same guys had a toter full of compost that we opened the compost dumpster so they could dump it directly and they managed to do that in the worst way possible, so that stuff was draining out under the doors. Aside from those two idiots, it was a pretty good shift.