Kronski.blogspot.com

Musings from the poet laureate of frivolity
All Material Copyright © 2008 by Adam Strong


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Location: Portland, Oregon, United States

Observationist. Prone to posting in bursts, then remaining dormant for a few weeks.

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

El Segundo

The port city of Marseille is a sweltering pit of despair compared to the relative comfort of Spain.

The last few days in Barcelona was an end. El Born, Parque de Guello and the extravagance of Gaudi. Just when I was becoming familiar with Spanish, and they go and change the lights on me while asleep, crawling through the muggy air. My dreams are no longer in English, and are ten times more visual then they were before.

The keyboard on a French keyboard is different. One has to shift and hit another key to get a period. The Q and the A are switched around, perhaps having to do linguistically with the alveolar sounds, or it could just be a convenient practice that fits in nicely with the language. Either way, keying on this thing is to cut fish with boxing gloves on.

The train ride was my last gasp of Spanish air, enjoying a bocadillo and a chilled can of Mahou beer. I spoke Spanish for perhaps the last time on this trip.

French for me is difficult, as my French is almost non- existent, yet vital for respect. It's funny; I’d get more respect as a slow Spaniard then as an American.

It's sweltering, and I am reminded of the heat present in Camus' the Stranger. Reminded even further when I think back to teaching it earlier in the school year. Discussing existentialism to 17 year-olds and they not understanding the overall theme of the work is kind of pointless. Without the key understanding of the Existential ideals presented in the work, apart from a somewhat consistent character study what else is there?

An American in Marseille who is tired, sweltering in her dirty ancient apartment. Too many rules to follow, so she stays inside most of the time practising her French by watching documentaries on Canal 5.

It's a great summer to be in Europe; and many things awaiting me when we return home. So many unanswered questions: Where will I teach, how will I do; will I still insist on too many words mashed into too many identities?

Monday, June 20, 2005

Mañana in España, mañana proximo

You´ve probably heard about them, the chain of hotels that wrap a sheer strip of lace across the mountanous Spanish countryside. The Parador hotel chain offers up sincere luxury-- a place where one can read an inscrutable David Foster Wallace text while admiring the scenery in Toledo from atop the generous viewpoint.

Even stranger is the sheer amount of Americans that frequent this establishment, no doubt sons and daughters of the destinguished elite.

Even so my stay was one dappled in the sweet honey of luxury. One day here and already I feel rejuvinated, like a Spanish caballero. The kind of relaxation that can only be bought. We´re driving in a rented Mercedes -- a four-door hatchback which navigates through the barren olive fields of Andalucia well enough not to notice the glaring looks from the oncoming traffic.

The Spaniards are an incredible lot. They always seem to find the time to stop and have a caña, even if that time is in the middle of the afternoon.

My wife and I feel like imposters, travelling through this hot country with all the elan and panache of a visiting group of dignitaries from places unknown. She speaks a bit of French, and I a bit of Spanish, so between the two of us we manage to patch together a sort of piece-meal language, borrowing from our own patchwork frameworks.

Do I feel reborn? Of course I do, how could I not with James Joyce and the aforementioned David Foster Wallace as my compact compatriots. I´m never alone as long as the free tapas come gratis with a caña or jarra, depending on my mood.

My thoughts turn towards America, and my life there, from time to time, mostly at night, when the sleep comes well earned, and full of spices, like the chorizo autentico de Andalucia.

These thoughts of my home place, they are present, but tend to hover over me like the feeling after a day´s travels in a cafe´, tapas, or cervezeria.

The way of life, the jovial desire to let everything go. The certain vivre, gusto whatever you call it, that I somehow forgot I had somewhere along the line. My Spanish makes me wish I had ten more lifetimes.

It´s late here, the sun has long ago shut down for the night, and the prowlers are loose on the streets of Grenada, and the Alhambra beckons from atop another mountian side, egging me on, making me more grounded, young and boisterous than I ever was.

Buen Provecho Señores y Señoras.

Arbusto en Catalan

Friday, June 10, 2005

The unofficial memoir of Stewart J. Kunderman

In order to alleviate this feeling that you have Stewart, you must, in a way, start from the beginning—the baseline of who you were before you started feeling this way. To let all the little failures thus far plague you to the point where you are awake at half five in the morning, letting these unresolved issues come out of the filing cabinet in your head, and flip through the file, even opening a specific one over and over again, staring at the raw data present, this isn’t going to fill one with the necessary sense of efficacy needed to handle this particular position in life.

“To put it simply, the profession you’ve chose doesn’t take to kindly to weakness on a personal level, it was never meant to. To become an English teacher and a writer concurrently is not only difficult, it’s impossible. You couldn’t join the army and become a sergeant at the same time could you? Of course not. You’ll need to make a tough decision, one will suffer, that has always been the case.”

I thought about a lot of things on the way home from Professor Gladney’s office that afternoon, one of which was the main catalyst for the pounding in my brain that resounded failure clear across the chest cavity.

I internalize things, always have. When I lost my virginity, I threw up stale Meister Brau beer all over the interior of a Caprice Classic. When I was first accepted into the teaching program, I collapsed after experiencing a sensation not unlike having your chest stepped upon by a crazed, jack-booted fascist.


So dropping out of Graduate School so far, had compounded in my stomach, and it needed a way to get out. This could get disgusting. Failure is rife with bodily fluids.

I had been up until five this morning, banging away on a new draft of my continuously morphing first novel. Self-Doubt had plagued this particular round to the point where it spent most of the time tucked away in a secluded cedar drawer, in the upstairs of the shabbily rented apartment above the international building. Time shifted, and for a moment I felt twenty again. For a moment I inhabited the body I lived in when I was twenty, and it came with all of the wheezing, the rattling cage of a brain I possessed along with an adroit sense of word choice.

Thinking on that for awhile still standing outside of Professor Gladney’s office, I stared at a poster for a study abroad opportunity lacquered to one of the reoccurring posts that dotted campus like mini police boxes, like the Tardis.

Dr. Who references had a way of sneaking up on me, as removed as it was from the situation, it gave me time to take in the information he presented to me as a realistic challenge, one that Gladney may have never dealt with. He might have just gone through life mastering challenge after challenge, never halting due to resentment on his own, albeit more driven, educated self.

Olympic athletes train hard, rising at five am to a colon-cleansing breakfast of soy powder and raw drive. Failed graduate students wake up at five the following morning, sip coffee and stare at the black and white checkerboard flooring in the kitchen wondering where it all went wrong.

My little upstairs apartment felt the weight on what happened yesterday. Making my way back last night was riddled with catatonic stops, at the bridge I sat watching the sun come down, and at the groups of undergraduates creeping across campus. Walking closely together, their energy seemed to coalesce at a certain physical point, and I felt a desire to go back and do it all over again, angry at myself for the time I had wasted.

But I was nothing if not of a survivor, so I went into the campus bookstore and was hired on immediately as a buyer, the proprietor impressed with my fetching combination of education and experience. So my inevitable breakdown would not be visiting then.

Walking back from this surprise success, I took the scenic route, and periodically stopped at reminisced about my first time on campus. I’ve been here for twelve years here, between pick up degrees and temporary assignments working in every sordid nook and cranny here. I’d sold rancid pizza as a freshman, pushed mountains of paperwork for the registrar my sophomore year, took a year abroad working in an Irish Pub my Junior year (another day I’ll tell, too many leather clad motorcycle jackets, pork pies, heart-stealing redheads and sadness) and went on a spiritual journey my senior year. Thinking that I’d never return to university, I signed up for a campus marketing career which had me visit every University Campus within a three state radius. It was my job to pump the students full of enthusiasm, so they’d have enough of it left when they signed on the dotted line, got the tshirt, gaudy pink coffee mug, delicate bear that fell apart two days later, or any number of throw away sacrifices to the altar of undergraduate first-time credit card reception.

My deal with the devil now clearly accomplished, I returned for graduate work and hid out in the library, working as a shelver and clerk for the remaining two years of graduate school. When the time came to return to graduate school, this time as an educator, I held out on employment, spending most of my days as a student teacher outside of the University system.

James Monroe High School lies on a two hundred mile peninsula just south of Oxnard, CA. It’s somehow strangely inner-city, as students from far away as Los Angeles are bussed in due to a slick combination of budget shortfalls and No Child Left Behind.

It’s some would say eclectic mix of students meant that I dealt with severe behavioral issues almost every day. What was even stranger was how closely their behavioral issues mirrored mine, albeit in a more violently reactionary way.

I loved these kids for the way they expressed themselves, the way they would just come out and say whatever was on their mind. As a stark contrast to the Academic world, where professors offered semester-long courses disguised as answers to how much your work resembled that of a petulant child and that you really shouldn’t think about becoming a writer.

These guys shouted out answers. If they felt like shit they’d say it, using the same nomenclature. For the first three months, I wrote referrals daily, and felt the burning heat of a thousand suns each time I taught a lesson.

At the same time, I had started work on my first novel. “The Graber Tapes” It was about a radio DJ in the 1970’s, living in Big Sur. I took too many liberties in borrowing from Play Misty for Me and it showed. What it lacked in originality it made up for in the ridiculous, as plot structures would come from the most contrived sources: Midnight callers would end up driving off of cliffs in cars manufactured by the father of the DJ, Michael Graber,-- a character’s name that could have only been formed out of the fires of 1970s police detective shows, like Banna or Mannix—which led to a high stakes lawsuit, after which Michael Graber would be forced to track down his father, a retired soap-opera star hiding out in the hills of Laguna Beach, CA. What made things worse than the lack of actual hills in Laguna Beach, CA was the way in which these plot structures would come, immediate. At the end of it all it read like a bad headache. And while I was still certain that there was something left of the scrap heap of “The Graber Tapes”, my teaching career was suffering.

When one is ensnarled in the business of writing a bad, yet engrossing novel, or writing any sort of novel, everything else suffers. I awoke forcefully most mornings, ripped from dreams of literary grandeur to the glaring reality that I had just completed two and a half drunken half-awake hours of sleep and I had my University Supervisor visiting my classroom that day, expecting detailed lesson plans, expectations, and a post class interview that always left me feeling hollow.

So, as stories like this often go, I was forced to make a decision. And being the sort of slight maniac who systematically makes the wrong choices, I chose the novel. With subplots worthy of One Life To Live, I spent the rest of the school year on the Graber Tapes and watched from a luxurious distance the slow, submerging death of my teaching career.

Standing in front of thirty students throwing paper airplanes and realizing that you just came to after falling asleep in the middle of a lecture is one the way to go down in the hallowed halls of history of educational fuck ups.

Groggy after my rude awakening, I eyed the furrowed brow and enraged pupils of my principal who, after a series of dramatic lines that had to have been scripted previously, promptly called my cooperating teacher into the room, and after a few rapid-fire one liners I couldn’t help but inject for dignity’s sake, I was on my way out of the building.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

New Coat of Paint

"It's like a movie, or a Tom Waits song I once knew."

She says this to me over drinks, at our local bar, The Refectory.

It's a place where conversations takes a back seat to the swarm of business-driven chatter that frequents this place like an old drunk, shouting out daily profit expectations like pernicious cat calls, speaking out about shitty bosses, denied advancements, and the eventual feeling that someone will come and whisk them away from their careers, placing them in the ivory towers of upper management.

We're in the corner though, where the din of yapping is relatively low-key.

"Grapefruit Moon?"

"New Coat of Paint"

Listening to it now, it's playing in my brain now, reminding me of that second year of college, when I lived upstairs from an international buidling, and I'd watch the students smoke cigarettes, look up at me looking down at them, feeling like the odd man out at the UN building.

I worked at the University Library, a cavernous affair, built underground with seven floors drilled into the subterranean limestone. I'd get back late at night after hours of cataloguing volumes of microfishe, and I'd stare into the reflecting pool at night, while "New Coat of Paint" echoed in the recesses of my brain. I could hear the rasp in Tom's voice, and it took me back there, but now I was staring at Stacy, knowing that one of us would have to break the silence.

"I'm moving to Paris, next year, and I dont expect to be back for at least two years."

Up early, awake and spry

Thoughts bubble to the surface: An employer is trying to get your number, but your'e too submerged for him to hear you. Go on, try, and hear the gargled mess that is the result.

"Five Oh Three, Nine Seven Four," And it all comes out with too much reverb.

A forest of bamboo trees lies in between you and your new wife, and you have to navigate through this with little but your own experience of bamboo, which is limited to a smattering of overly-produced kung fu movies that diguised themselves appropriately as art, and the knowledge that the plant is a menace.

Next you find yourself on top of a chair, being held by four large men, all of them relatives. You try to act like you've got it all together and that this will all be over in a few seconds.

Your'e next to the cloud factory when they drop you, falling through miles of bamboo, teaching strategies, students hurling obscenities at you.

Your'e in Spain on your honeymoon, and the heat a paltry 113 degrees farenheit as you stare out at the Terazza, and the azure sea beyond it, the sky, land and sea has been burned.

You awake covered in sweat, newly-married and nowhere near close to a teaching job next year.

But the bamboo is nowhere to be found....

It's from a student you had, but he's graduated by now, and still at his job operating on Cats and Dogs. He's cleaning out a cage, scrubbing the corrugated steel floor of a cage while you walk down the street at night, listening for the howl of a local band playing in their basement.

Old friends have been in town all week, and now they've gone home.

Your family left days ago, but you have a new family to start.

It's the beginning of summer and the heat is on, literally, it just turned on in your house as you sit at your laptop, and tug at dry coffee. The chapped lips sip the befuddled brew, that dribbles down your chin as you finish your post on blogger, sigh and hit the bright orange 'submit' button. In more ways than one this week, you have.