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January 9, 2007

Why I Can't Call Myself a Blogger Anymore

by Joshua Minton

I don't know what happened but at some point in the ln the last month or so, I have been unable to complete the phrase "my blog."3

It sounds so pretentious to me anymore and my constitution will only allow me to be pretentious in deeply subversive ways and the phrase "my blog" seems very superficial to me anymore.

Maybe its just a phase I'm going through.

I'm back to being a writer instead of a "blogger" and I'm back to having "my site" instead of "my blog."

I'm probably just splitting hairs here but long before I started using a cascading style sheet platform that catalogs web pages chronologically with the most recent page on top--I was a writer publishing his work online in an electronic format.

I'm still that guy...but I'ill answer to blogger also.

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January 7, 2007

Mother Night and Letting My Eyes Go to Shit

by Joshua Minton

I've been told I'm smart all my life but the truth is that I am a total idiot sometimes. In the past year, I have spent many white man dollars upgrading the visual quality of the technical components in my house. I bought an HD-TV, an XBOX 360, got HD cable with an HD DVR and an HD-DVD player.

All the while I've let my eyes go to shit.

I wear contact lenses, the two week kind. And while I take them out each night; I only change them about once every three to four months. Well, after a month or so, bacteria builds up on the lenses and its like putting a plastic cess pool in your eye every day.

I've noted a consistent degradation of my visual quality over the past year and its because my corneas were acutely inflammed. They were so bad that the optomotrist couldn't even complete the eye exam and had to prescribe me expensive steroid/antibiotic drops to be administered four time a day until next week.

I've spent hundreds on upgrading technology and let the visual biology of my own body sink into poverty. See what I mean? Dumb.

But while waiting for my eye exam, the woman next to me asked me what the best novel I ever read was. People ask me weird literary shit like this all the time. I guess I look like a novel reader. There are people who read far more and far less than I do and most of my reading is supplemented using audio books on CD in the car on my morning commute.

But I had an answer for her--Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut. Here's the hook, as they say in the publishing business:
An American spy living and working in Nazi Germany becomes a radio talk show host who communicates his state-stolen secrets to the Allied Forces through anti-semitic rants over the radio which fuels the German fervor to carry out the most despicable mass murder in human history. So, while the secrets he was able to smuggle out were invaluable in helping the Allies win the war; doing so came at an enormous price.
You can do far worse than reading Vonnegut--like letting your eyes go to shit while you spend hundreds on new technology to help you see the world better through your television.

LINKS:

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January 1, 2007

Looking Forward to 2007

by Joshua Minton

I don't make predictions because I never received my crystal ball in the mail. But in this armchair mystic's opinion, 2007 is going to be one hell of a year for us all. For me, personally, I feel stars aligning this year, clicking into Keplerian place as the orbits of the planets start humming in harmony again and shit starts getting right in the world.

Like my man reverse_vampyr, I too have been working for well over a decade on a story. His is a comic book, mine is a novel but you get the similarity. I've written this story a dozen times on paper and countless hundreds of times in my head. Snippets have come to me through dreams, waking revelations and insights brought on through personal relationships.

And now I've got an outline, bitches! That's right--I finally sat down and thundered out a rough outline that I'm in the process of turning into a smooth one. Plus, I've already written a few dozen pages to get the feel of the story and I likey-likey how it feels under my fingertips and the keyboard gets more and more battered and the page number and word count grow higher.

I learned a long time ago that good writers write all the time and great writers only touch the pen when inspiration calls them. My mind goes silent for weeks and months but I never complain because when the neurons fire up, it's like a lightning storm in Texas, Jack. And when the floods come roaring down the valleys of my mind, I never go for high ground--I grab a log and go where the river takes me.

And this river is going somewhere very special, my peeps. I will be revealing more and more about this novel to my readers as time goes on this year but know that if I go a couple few days without blogging--chances are I'm working on the goody good stuff.

LINKS:

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December 28, 2006

5 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Me

by Joshua Minton

  • I didn't learn to ride a bicycle until I was twelve years old

  • I am an ordained minister licensed to marry people in the state of Ohio and I will be marrying one of my best friends this coming Spring to his fiance

  • The first book I really remember reading is Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls

  • I often tear up while watching movies especially if they are about animals that die

  • I have met and been inspired by both Sherman Alexie and Rick Moody
And now I get to tag five bloggers to create their own five things list and I am going to name: JD, Antimedia, Reverse_Vampyr, PurpleThink and Infidel753.

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December 26, 2006

Christmas Aftermath

by Joshua Minton

I remember Christmas being a hectic time as a child. I would be rushed between several homes to quickly open gifts and then off again to the next (I know, life is hard right?). Well, things haven't changed.

My wife and I have three homes (including our own) to spread ourselves out over from Christmas Eve to Christmas dusk and while the traveling is never more than 45 minutes away from our house at a time, the traveling and lugging packages tends to take its toll on one's constitution.

But we made it and Christmas was a bonafide success this year giftwise. My son got everything he didn't know that he wanted. My daughter is too small to even know or care what she got (but she appreciated it all immensely) and my wife was spoiled by my mother and me as usual (and like she deserves).

Me, I'm always spoiled.
  • I got Gears of War for the XBOX 360--the best game I've every played on the system thus far

  • I also received the XBOX 360 HD-DVD player which has 6x the resolution of normal DVDs and comes with Peter Jackson's King Kong (it looks amazing in 720p, I could just imagine what 1080p looks like)

    Six Feet Under: The Complete Series Gift Set on DVD (this is arguably the best dramatic series ever on television and one of the few I consider to be a complete work of proper art)

  • And my wife gave me the best gift--the Easton Press first printing of Shelby Foote's incredible trilogy The Civil War: A Narrative which has been sold out of its second priting now for a few months. I have been wanting to read this series since the second time I watched the Ken Burns masterpiece The Civil War on DVD when I got it for Christmas a few years back. Foote's down-to earth method of speaking carries through into his writing and he conveys the entire lunacy of the Civil War in the guise of fictional narrative and he pulls it off in a way that even Michael Shaara doesn't pull off (and I enjoy his books as well). These are a very valuable set of books and I will tteasure reading them (of course any series of books from The Easton Press are valuable and worth investing in if you're a bibliophile like I am)

  • I got my annual desk calendar from my grandmother, a gift I always look forward to because it is one of the few gifts that really do last all year round. This year, she duplicated her success of choice last year with the "Word of the Day" calendar. I actually keep a list at work with my calendar of all the words I didn't know from each day and go over it periodically, tryign to use them in context in a normal discussion
And I was a lottery winner this year, tacking in at $40 worth of scratch off victories.

Sure, Christmas in the richest nation in the world is a bounty of excess and a ritual of adding debts many of us can't repay in a sensible time frame but there is still a lot of magic left in the world at this time of year and the proof of it is that there aren't more deaths from "Wrap Rage" as parents try to un-twisty-tie the toys they bought for their children which whose packages were likely designed by a bitter lonely old man somewhere in Taiwan.

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December 21, 2006

The Ten Best Things I Did Since October 1st, 2005

by Joshua Minton

  1. Had a baby girl: It's been said that you're not a true parent until you've had two kids. I was raised an only child and I would never level such a charge against my mother who enjoyed assistance from my entire family in raising me. But another phase of life began the day I first met my baby girl and I revel in watching her and my son grow inches from minutes each day. Life would hold little meaning without my family; they allow me to charge the world following the angels of my better nature.

  2. Told my wife and children that I love them at least once a day: Sappy, I know but the fact is that you never know when your last breath is going to take place and the first order of business in making sure your affairs are set in order should be to express your emotions to the people you care the most about. For me, that number one is my wife and children, although it may not seem like that to them.

  3. Got a great promotion at my new job: I took a gamble and even turned down more money to come in at an entry-level position at my new company and was promoted to a pretty prominent role in less than a year. I look forward to continuing my upward professional climb.

  4. Got hired at the greatest company in the world 7 days after #5: I don't name or talk about the company I presently work for so I won't go into detail. It is sufficient to say that not only am I proud to work for my company, every day brings a new and welcome challenge that I feel advances me in a worthwhile way.

  5. Got fired from a douche bag company in 7 days: Remember this? I'm going to use a bad word now. Eff health insurance; eff shitty overhead health insurance jobs and eff United Health Care in particular. The boweevil faced corporate twat that I worked for was a slimy slug wallowing in the bowels of the hell she has made for herself, a great bloody field of mistrust and animosity that the entire health insurance industry has become. We have allowed health insurers to conglomerate around Congress and create an entire middle man industry out of a post-World War II loophole that provided a tax shield to companies who offered health benefits to their workers. This industry is literally sucking the life out of our economy and our pocket books and for my money is a far greater threat to our democracy than Al Queda or Saddam Hussein. When I see United Health Group caught up in a scandal, I smile because those bastards deserve to go the way of Enron and I would have quit if the douche's hadn't fired me first for surfing the Internet (Monster.com coincidentally) on my break. Assholes.

  6. Bought a 42" HD Samsung DLP television: I love my television and refuse to watch any television show that isn't broadcast in High Definition. Call me a snob if you want to but if you're still watching 480 lines of interlaced resolution then you may as well be listening to Little Orphan Annie and The Shadow on the radio.

  7. Bought an XBOX 360: The best game system out there, hands down. Don't give me the puss-boy PS3 blue-ray argument because the XBOX 360 beats Sony's overpriced gas bag at every angle. Video games are the best way to unplug, unwind and recharge that I know of besides getting into a really good book.

  8. Got digital HD cable with an dual tuner HD DVR: Nothing beats being able to record all your favorite television shows in high definition even when two of them are on at the same time. Civilization isn't worth a squirt without DVR--without it, it would feel like living in trees and caves again.

  9. Attended the OSU Michigan game:Quite simply the best college football game I could ever hope to attend. My buckeyes came out on top but Michigan still put up one hell of a fight, making the Big Ten look all the better. The pre-party festivities were barely describable and an experience that everyone should make a pilgrimage to come see.

  10. Saw Tool play live here in Columbus: Maynard James Keenan is one of my favorite artists in the world, whether it's A Perfect Circle or Tool and this was the second time I saw Tool play live. While the entire performance was a knock out, my favorite song of the night was "Pot" from the new album 10,000 Days.


LINKS:
  • Why Gears of War Cost $60
  • Seinfeld fans can now give the gift the gift that keeps on giving: Make a Donation in Someone's Name to the Human Fund "Money for People" (hat tip to Fantastic Bastard)

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December 11, 2006

Did I Ever Tell You About the Time at Jesus's Dentist

by Joshua Minton

When I graduated from college in the Spring of 2000, I hadn't been to see the dentist in over five years. And I still hadn't gone by the time I settled in with full time benefits at Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield in Cincinnati in the late Summer of said year.

Since cleanings and checkups were free with my insurance, I figured what the H? And I did the dumbest thing I possibly could--I opened the yellow pages and picked the first cool ad I found that was near to work and home.

The lucky dentistry practice was named Kingdom Family Dentistry and it was right around the corner from my work and on my way home at the time. I made my appointment for a Friday afternoon.

When I got there, nothing seemed out of the ordinary--it was a standalone ranch building that housed only the dentist office. The dentist was a beautiful black woman, mature but still classy. The office staff was nice enough.

I had to get x-rays with those insufferable frigging bitewings where the plastic cuts into your gums and you smile like a damned fool while high intensity power waves ripple through your gray matter.

As an aside, how safe does it make you feel when the hygenist goes around he frigging corner to push the button to avoid being hit with the rays herself.
I got into the chair and the hygenist started poking around and scraping inside my mouth. I always thought there should be a superhero who was hit by gamma rays and mutated in the dentist chair--perhaps The Molinator like in The Santa Clause 2. But I digress.

After the x-rays, the hygeinist starts poking around and scraping. She finds two cavities that she says the dentist will fill during that visit. So, she finishes with her cleaning and the dentist comes in and pokes and scrapes some more.

Then the drill came out and shit got crazy. Just after I was novacained up and before she put the drill in my mouth; she hit play on one of those little tv/vcro combos posted in the upper right hand corner of the office. I thought, this lady is going to watch soap operas while she drills my teeth.

I couldn't have been more wrong.

All of the sudden, this church shit starts up at full, surround sound volume. It was like being front row in a Billy Graham revival. And the worst thing was that the preacher was Rod fucking Parsley.

Those of you who have read this blog for years, know of my eternal and infernal disdain for this gruesome specimen of humanity and if you don't, feel free to catch up here.

Apparently, the word "Kingdom" in the practice name had more metaphyiscal applications than someone's last name (come to think of it, I've never heard of anyone with the last name of Kingdom so double dumb ass on me). And now I've got this crazy religious dentist lady drilling my teeth while Rod Parsley rages and sweats and ear splitting volume.

People, I'm telling you--I was in the fourth circle of Dante's hell (the fifth is reserved for Parsley himself and the sixth through eighth is for Haliburton and Enron execs whose sins have impelled God to evict the Devil back up to the slums of heaven, finally answering Tupac's immortal question of whether Heaven has a ghetto too).

Now, don't get me wrong--if you're a devoutly religious person and being esconced in the middle of quaint second through fourth century Middle Eastern metaphor and ritual get you through the day--more power to you.

If giving yourself over to the belief that you are inherently better than other human beings because of the direction that your thoughts flow as the electrical impulses spark and jump the gaps between neurons in your brain--I say, "A Salud!"

But don't fucking strap me down with a drill in my mouth and subject me to what would be construed as torture under the Geneva convention because I was too stupid to read the fine print in your yellow pages ad.

Needless to say, I did not schedule a follow up visit six months later. But, oddly enough--my teeth never felt cleaner. Go figure.

LINKS:
  • Reverse_Vampyr has a health issue and needs your prayers and kind thoughts--help a brother out and wish him well

  • WKRP is finally coming to DVD (with some substituted music, of course)

  • Infidel753 left a comment with a blog link here the other day. Check his blog out here--very insightful and pithy commentary on social issues there. He's earned a probationary spot on the BWP blogroll (don't worry Infidel, I'm not as viscious as JD is with cutting his blogroll--he cleans house frequently!)

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December 1, 2006

A Listless Christmas

by Joshua Minton

When I was a child, I used to create detailed Christmas lists. I can't remember if I addressed them to Santa Clause or not but I'm talking detailed descriptions, catalog pages and pricing columns which had a sum at the bottom. I have never been at want for something at Christmas time (or any other for that matter). I am a consumer to the core of my being.

I was not raised under the Protestant work ethic where it is taught that it is a sin to spend and a nobility to save. I was taught (or learned at an early age) that it was far better to have desire for things than not to. Not to have a desire for the newest best thing still feels like a big step towards the lonely coffin.

And I continue to create lists even in my Methusilian old age. But this year, I thought I'd try something different. I told my wife that I wasn't making a list and that she had carte blanche to buy me what she wanted for Christmas.

This sounds great in theory but the practice has already hit a major snag. She knew I wanted the Shelby Foote Civil War Narrative series from Easton Press. It's the first time the book has been back in print for a number of years and as my loyal readers out there know--I LOVE any book from the Easton Press; they are the finest made in the world.

Well, guess what? My wife gave the brochure to my mother who chose to sit on her hands and wait until last week to order the series. When she went to purchase them online, it said they were sold out. She called the customer service line and it turns out that they decided that they would only do one printing of the book in order to make it more valuable.

Doh!

So my mom gets on E-bay to see if she can find a copy for sale. She found one that was a couple hundred bucks more expensive than the list price and ordered it. But then they were stolen from the guy's shelf and he had to cancel the order. I imagine he found someone else who wanted to pay more and lied to my mother but that's just my cynical side talking.

So, I'm heart broken over losing the opportunity to own these books but life will go on.

We'll just have to see what becomes of my listless Christmas.

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