Thursday, July 01, 2010

I Apparently Have Emotional Scars

The memory of this conversation always makes me laugh. Then again, I suppose I shouldn't be surprised being a fairly bohemian individual, employed by a highly conservative firm. I know some of these guys don't always know what to think of me with my paisley shirts, ever-changing facial hair and cowboy boots, but that's okay. I don't mind. I do my job and they're pleased with what I produce, so it's come to be accepted. Great.

A few weeks ago, fully bearded (think Zach Galifinakis or Robinson Crusoe) and shaggy haired (it's about at my shoulders now), I poked my head into one of our sales director's offices to discuss a charitable project I was helping him with. Let's call him Ned. My boss was in there with him. Let's call him Boss. The conversation went something like this.

Me: I need to go over these designs with you. Give me a call when you guys are done.

Ned: Wait a minute.

Me: What?

Ned: Get in here. (I do.) Stand right there and look at me. (I did.)
(This is followed by about 10 seconds of awkward silence. ... I don't like it.)

Me: This is weird.

Ned: What the hell is wrong with you?

Me: Huh?

Ned: What are you hiding?

Me: I don't understand what you're...

Ned: You're hiding something. I want to know what.

Me: I'm not hiding anything. What the hell? Boss, I--

Boss: Nope. Leave me out of it.

Ned: Do you know what my dad did for a living?

Me: No idea.

Ned: He was the police commissioner for the city of Cleveland.

Me: Okay.

Ned: He taught me how to read people. After decades of service on the Force, he had this theory about men who grow out their beards.

Me: Yeah?

Ned: He told me, "A man with a beard is hiding either a physical scar, or an emotional scar."

Me: I don't have any scars, Ned.

Ned: Well, not any physical scars, obviously. You're a very good-looking young man when you don't look like Ted Bundy.

Me: Thanks. I don't have any emotional scars either.

Ned: And yet, you have a mass of hair covering your face.

Me: I just felt like growing it out. I like it.

Ned: Men don't just 'like' beards. It's like a big, dead animal. A big, dead animal right on your face.

Me: I do. And no, it's not.

Ned: Nope, you're emotionally scarred. I can sense it. So let's get to the bottom of this issue. Right now.

Me: I'm not emotionally scarred.

Ned: Is it because of a girl?

Me: No, there's no girl. I'm not emotionally scarred.

Ned: Do you have Daddy issues? Mommy issues?

Me: What? No.

This dialog, question/yes & no answer format, went on for another ten or so rounds. My boss, standing silent to the side of us, shifted his neck back and forth, as if he were at Wimbledon. Finally, I cut Ed's little questionnaire clean off.

Me: Okay, do you want to know why I like growing out my beard?

Ned: I already know, but go ahead. Enlighten me.

Me: Sure. When I was little, like five, I saw my grandpa shaving. I thought it was the coolest thing. So I say to him, "Grandpa, I can't wait till I get to shave too."
He looks at me with the most grave, dire expression on his face and tells me, "Kid," because he always referred to me as Kid...never Brian...not once, "Kid, don't ever say such a thing again. Do you hear me?" he warned. "Never."
At this point he puts down his razor and kneels down in front of me, clasping his hands over my shoulders to desperately accentuate his point in a most dramatic fashion. An uncharacteristic gesture for him, I might add.
"Shaving is the bane of my existence," he continued. "I hate it. I despise it. If society and your Grandma would let me, I would never shave again. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, Grandpa," I replied.
"Kid, promise me you'll never again look forward to the day you start start shaving," he desperately concludes to me. "Because once that day comes, you'll be at it nearly every single day for the rest of your life. Enjoy your pre-pubescent freedom while you have it."

(Ned is looking at me, confidently unconvinced.)

Me: And with that, I decided that I didn't like shaving. To this day, I've grown to hate it. Even when I shave, I don't really shave; I clip. It's just me. He was right. In addition, I don't have a wife and I don't really care what 'society' finds acceptable in the realm of facial hair, so I let it go. And I have fun with it. I can trim it into fu-man-choos and Wolverine chops. I can grow it long, or I can buzz it to scruff. Hell, I could cut my sideburns into a profile of Alfred Hitchcock if I wanted to. I. Don't. Care.

Ned: So you have Grand-daddy issues. Got it. Now go shave your beard.

I tell him I can't, that his wife told me she loved it last night. He laughs and flicks me off. I turn around and walk back to my desk. He still tells me to shave nearly every time he sees me. We're still friends. I still have a beard.

Good to know you, Ned. Because of you, I apparently have emotional scars.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Facelift

What was once the Conti Contemplative (a name I still regret creating to this day) is now the Journatorium. Is it better? Maybe. As a title, to me it reflects a collection of random thoughts and obscure observations that I make on a daily basis, all gathered together under one roof. However, it's also about the journey one takes in the midst of that collection. The, "Where am I now," and "where will I be then?" So, I've basically come up with a more complicated way of saying 'blog.' ...yeah, that sounds about right.

Gone is the awful silhouetted image by the lake, replaced by a collage of meaningful aspects of my life...my house, my dog, my introspect, my vision, my love of the water and the impressions my travels have left upon me. Gone are the oppressive twilight blues and grays, exchanged with the light sandy off-whites and tans to present a more meditative atmosphere. It's easier to read and as I said before, that layout just never set well with me. Maybe that's why I abandoned the blog so quickly and started Jack Traveler...I just didn't know what to do with it.

I have however, kept the previous articles, solely for archival purposes, the last being my re-discovery of the Hidden Bridge in Mill Creek Park. I suppose that one event led me to re-purpose my life, as pointed out by a good friend when I first shared that story with her just after it happened. I feel it's appropriate to serve as both a transitional account and a memory of where things started...well, started over. From here forward, it's all about the journey to discover where things will lead.

Friday, December 26, 2008

The Hidden Bridge

A small stone footbridge, hidden deep within the ravine. I had a glimpse of it then, what could've been close to 20-25 years ago. My dad was taking me for a drive in Mill Creek Park, a huge expanse of trails and Washington State-like wilderness buried in Youngstown, Ohio. It's the city's gem, really. A maze of steep ravines, waterfalls, lakes, and hemlock groves where one could get lost among the many twists and turns within a variety of trails.

I remember it vividly. He was driving me along a road alongside one of the many gorges, showing me the spot where he used to park his car and give it a good wash. A little odd, I know, but he was reminiscing, and it made perfect sense at the time. I was after all, barely in elementary school. The park was enormous to me. It had no end, and offered nearly limitless opportunities of exploration. We were heading around a curve when I saw it: the bridge. Trees and the surrounding hills had eventually overwhelmed it. It was fairly dilapidated, even then. The small stone footbridge lay isolated and buried between the walls of the gorge. It came out of nowhere and before I could realize it was there, it was gone. I asked my dad to stop and turn around, but he had an agenda. I had never seen the bridge again since that day, often wondering if it was nearly a figment of my imagination. If maybe I had seen something else and pieced it together as an image that didn't really exist. I had spent years searching for it, learning that park backwards and forwards, but had never again caught a glimpse of it again. Until today.

Ruins fascinate me. As a kid, I had explored Mill Creek Park thoroughly for the treasures that it hides. First with my grandpa, who did the same thing when he was a kid, and then with my friends, whose love of rock climbing and the outdoors had gotten us into many, many memorable situations. The Park is old, founded by a man name Volney Rodgers. He bought the land in the mid-1800's and set it aside, untouched, with the vision of exactly what it is today: a wilderness preserve. Walking through the park is in a way like traveling back in time. Gone are the sounds of the nearby city and churning steel factories, traffic and the bustle of everyday life. As you walk through the park, it's not uncommon to come across a building, pavilion, or ruins of a house that could be close to 200 years old. When Rodgers bought the park, he didn' purchase it uninhabited. There was a hydraulic flour mill on the property (which still exists as a working mill to this day) and local pioneers had already started building on bits and pieces of the land, remnants of which you can still find today. This environment enthralled me throughout my childhood and well into college. In fact, I still go down to the park to just walk around, soon finding myself off the trail and clamboring my way through an empty ravine, just to see what comes up next. Today, was one of those days.

I was walking Kino in the park, along a trail known locally as the East Cohassett trail. It begins by the famous Silver Suspension Bridge, and follows the eastern rim of Lake Cohassett all the way to Pioneer Pavilion. About 100 feet above the trail is an all-purpose trail, a seasonal paved trail that is only accessible to hikers and biking enthusiasts. It used to be a road at one point, but closed down due to frequent landslides. Kino and I were about a mile in on the trail when he darted off and up the side of the ravine. He was following an old staircase that hasn't been really used in years. It's one of the many unkempt trails in the park...there are dozens.

Up he ran and then down into the gorge. I bounded up trail after him, skipping every other step along the way. As I reached the top, I saw what he was following, a spry young doe that had absolutely no intention of letting him get an inch closer than he was already. She bounded around another corner of the ravine, where Kino followed, as did I...sliding down the loose shale walls of the gorge, across the stream at the bottom, and into a side gulley where I last saw Kino turn. By this time he was trotting back to me, well aware that the doe was well out of his range. That's when I saw it, the hidden bridge, just...sitting there, exactly as it was 20 years ago. I had a different perspective on it now, being underneath it as opposed to driving well above it, but...I immediately knew it was the bridge that I had seen during that afternoon drive in the park, just by the way it was nestled in between the hills, by it's dilapidated state, and by the very stone it was molded from.

Without wasting any time, I was gripping my way up the side of the ravine, away from the trail and towards the edge of the bridge. The soil was loose and muddy, the effect of a day's worth of rain and sleet. After some effort, I made it to the edge and finally got to take a good look at the bridge that I had been casually searching for since I had been allowed to explore the park on my own. There are many footbridges just like this in the park, but most are still in fairly good condition, and actually connect two paths, or two sides of the ravine as a footbridge is supposed to do. This one...well, it was different. The distinct difference that I remember from my first sighting of it was that it seemed to lead to nowhere. I wasn't sure if that's just the way I perceived it to be, but now I know that it was true. This bridge lies smack in the middle of a ravine, halfway down into the gorge, with all traces of a trail on each end being completely absent. Its rails were rusted and half hanging off the side, a "no tresspassing" sign attached to the southern end. I climbed up the rest of the side of the ravine to see where I had seen the bridge from before and upon reaching the top, immediately realized why I hadn't found it before now. The road I was standing on was the All-purpose trail, the very trail that had been re-paved and re-routed after a series of landslides back in the late-80's. I had always been looking for an existing, functioning road, not one that had been closed to traffic for the past 20-some years. On top of that, since the trail had been re-routed, you're not able to see the bridge from the paved trail, but you can see where the road used to wind, and on that one missing curve is a direct view into the gorge, and of the hidden bridge itself.

I know, I know, big deal. I found a bridge. Let's have a parade over it and move on. I get it. But this was a really cool experience for me today. That one sight from the car so many years ago had stimulated years of imagination within me. I'm not sure why...maybe because it was so surreal...like it didn't belong in our time, in our world. I can't help it. It was fascinating. And what's even better? It exists. I didn't dream it up. I didn't piece together random memories to create something that wasn't actually there. I looked for it for a long time, years even. And at the single point in time where I wasn't looking for it at all, there it was. Funny how those kinds of things work.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Missing Homecoming

Each year I run into a problem. No matter how much I prepare for it, there's always some issue or conflict that comes up keeping me from the one thing I look forward to between October and October of the following year: Homecoming at UC.

Since I've graduated, I've been able to attend one. Yes, one. I graduated six years ago, and as far as I'm concerned, that's an unacceptable ratio. This year, I'm attending the wedding of my old next-door neighbor, Scott. He's a few years younger than me, but we pretty much grew up together since before kindergarten (for me). It'll be a reunion of sorts, because everyone from the old neighborhood is supposed to be going, and I'll get a chance to see his brother for the last time in God knows how many more years, but there'll be that nagging thought in the back of my head. ...Homecoming.

Let me give you a quick background on my relationship with Homecoming. Yes, it is a relationship and at this point, if Homecoming was a beautiful woman, I'd be out on my ass by now. Actually, I would've been out on my ass four years ago and would now be demoted to the sad, pathetic crooner who wants what he simply can't have.

When I was in college, Homecoming was the biggest, most exciting day of the year. Every fall season I helped work on constructing the float and most times ran the simple machinery behind the scenes during the parade. Friends whom you haven't seen all year come out to partake in the festivities, as do people who normally wouldn't attend a campus function at all. We drink, we laugh, we have Kegs & Eggs, we catch up, we watch UC get smacked in football by some half-bit team and we go out and drink some more. It's a big kumbaya, and I look forward to it every year. ...and every year my schedule says, "NO! No, Homecoming for you this year! It's not allowed." So let me retrace the past six years to illustrate further my bad luck with attempting to make it to Homecoming...an event only three short hours away from where I live now.

2002: Down in Cincinnati for a huge freelance project, staying at my (now ex-) girlfriend's house just off of campus. Was able to attend the first hour of the parade when *BAM* I get a call from work that one of the servers crashed, the one with all my work, and what wasn't lost was corrupted. I had to leave the parade and work the rest of the weekend on redoing EVERYTHING that I had done in the week before the crash so as to make the Monday deadline. So long Homecoming 2002.

2003: Living in Cleveland. Had plans to leave on Friday and spend the entire weekend with friends and the celebration of life. Was told on Thursday by my boss that he scheduled us to fly to Memphis to take pictures of a car accident. I told him that I had plans to go out of town, that it was on the office calendar. He said that he didn't care. I tried to plea bargain. It didn't work. I spent the most miserable weekend of my working career watching him take pictures of a car accident in Memphis.

2004: The date of Homecoming was switched from mid-October to mid-November, the week before Thanksgiving. Due to family conflictions that entire week, the last minute re-schedule ruined the day for many people. Frustrations ensue.

2005: UC didn't feel the need to release the date of Homecoming until mid-September for whatever odd reason. It happened to fall on the one day that my Cleveland friends and I were planning a white water rafting trip in West Virginia...the one weekend I had a conflict in the entire month of October, which was actually at the beginning of the month, earlier than UC had ever held Homecoming throughout the entire time I've been affliated with the University.

2006: In California for one of my best friend's weddings. For the record, that one was worth missing.

2007: Able to attend for the first time since graduation and I got to catch up with friends I hadn't seen in over five years. Yay.

2008: UC's calendar stated that Homecoming was actually scheduled for Monday, Columbus Day. I flipped, questioning why they would actually do that. Turns out their calendars were wrong. My mom overheard me complaining about this and told some distant relatives that I could attend their wedding. When I found out that Homecoming actually was on Saturday, it was too late. The RSVP was already sent in. Once again, I have to wait until next year to see what kind of creative slap from kharma keeps me from heading down to Cincinnati once again.

And now, because of the time I took to type this, I'm running late for the wedding. Brilliant.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Hollywood Comes to Cleveland

So it started with Spiderman 3 as the first high-profile film to use Cleveland's streets and available warehouses as studio space. Now, it looks as though Cleveland will once again be used for the production of one of the more fascinating legends to ever have taken place here: The Torso Killer.

In 1934, the first of a multitude of decimated bodies started showing up in what is now the flats of Cleveland, an area known by that time as Kingsbury Run. Just around that time, Eliot Ness, organizer of the legendary Untouchables, came into Cleveland as the new safety director. As he was unable to solve the mystery of the serial killings, his career plummeted, and he left Cleveland in shame. The murders were thought to continue over the next 20 years, only not in Cleveland, but over 70 miles away towards the swamps lining the Pennsylvania border.

In a few short months, as it's currently planned, David Fincher and Matt Damon are supposedly arriving into town to start filming the movie Torso, based off the graphic novel of the same name, which was partially based on the events of the serial killings in the 30's. Damon will portray Ness, which i'm interested to see as the two have absolutely no likeness of one another.

This will hopefully lead to more productions coming into the city over the next few years. Cleveland's landscape, although industrially rustic and worndown, would be fascinating to film. There's a lot of forgotten history here and what better way to start displaying that, than to start with one of the areas' most intriguing legends.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The New Idea

So it's been awhile, and I've been lazy. Go figure. Between a broken shoulder and two bouts of pneumonia, I probably should've had enough time to write, but I didn't, and I'm the first one to accept blame. The whole idea of starting up the Conti Contemplative was to get back into the writing fix, something I've long abandoned for way too many years.

But today, something came to me. I was fiddling around on devientART.com and came across an image that sparked my imagination, leading me to a new idea for narrative. It was of three children, very gothic in appearence, as if they'd come straight from the seed of Billy Joe Armstrong. They were standing in a tree and each had a peculiarity to them...the small girl had a ragged teddy bear that seemed itself to be alive. Little Billy Joe had an arrow going through his head, Steve Martin style. And the older girl had a very long heart-shaped yo-yo that hung straight down from the branch she was resting against.

The illustration was very dark in tone, with moss green undertones amidst the foggy background. It was eerie, but it was fascinating. And that's when my idea came to me.

So, I've been trying to come up with an idea for a comic. Not so much a super-hero kind of comic, though that would be fairly cool, but a very intimate graphic novel comic, pieced together in strips, or vignettes. There are a few things that inspire me towards this...Calvin & Hobbes for one. I was addicted to that comic as a child, and that's had a heavy influence on not only my illustration style, but my sense of humor as well. Another source of inspiration for me is King's Quest, an 80's-era action-adventure series that I couldn't pull myself away from. I spent hours, if not days behind the computer as a child playing these games. Even looking at them now, brings me back to childhood.

So what's the idea? Expect in the upcoming week or two a few short stories with some possible accompanying illustrations. I want to try and develop the idea before I bring it too far, but I need to start somewhere and I figure this'll be a fun way to do it. It won't be long before you meet Kinook the Traveler, and his friend Jack. Hopefully they'll have some great adventures in store for you in the times to come.

Monday, February 04, 2008

The Superbowl TV Spots

I haven’t spoken to one person within the last 12 hours that has said that this year’s Superbowl spots were interesting. In fact, I’d go so far to say that for the first time in recent memory, I actually enjoyed the actual game more than the highly anticipated commercials that annually fill the void in between plays. Although there were a few highlights, it was painfully obvious that the FCC’s growing strangle-hold on our 1st amendment has produced a somewhat more cautious and tame approach to Super Bowl advertising. While they’re at it, why don’t they yank away our 5th, 6th, 7th amendments as well, or maybe even the repealment of amendment 18. That’d be awesome.

Regardless, the strong-armed tactics forcing media into working within the constraints that have been established since the infamous “wardrobe malfunction,” shouldn’t have hindered the advertising agencies from coming up with something that could be catching, witty, and follow a coherent narrative. Instead, we get a Bud Light Fire-Breather, a Budweiser Clydesdale ripping off a Rocky montage (a poor continuation of the
Donkey-who-becomes-a-Budweiser-Clydesdale storyline) and Carlos Mencia trying to convince us that he’s should be giving out pick-up advice. I don’t want to even get into the CareerBuilder commercials that were, suffice to say, plain creepy. Bud Light was particularly disappointing, especially due to their high record of winning commercials during the game. A guy who hides a six-pack of Bud Light in a block of cheese so that his wife won’t know he’s drinking in the other room? C’mon…

The 2008 Super Bowl Spots – Advertising Age
The 2008 Super Bowl Spots – MySpace.com

I will admit there were a few good ones out there that made me laugh a bit, but nothing that I thought was Super Bowl quality. Specifically, the FedEx Carrier Pigeon commercial and the Bridgestone commercial with the screaming squirrel were favorites of mine, as were the Cars.com spots and the Doritos ad with the giant mouse. I also enjoyed the new take on the consistent heart-warming campaign that Coca-Cola tends to follow, with Stewie and Underdog the balloons, battling it out for a giant inflatable Coca-Cola bottle amidst the skyscrapers of New York, only to have it lost to none other than Charlie Brown. Honestly, I would love to see this continue in a battle of wits between the three iconic characters, whether they stay in balloon form or not.

However, I’m not going to lie to you. My most anticipated spots among the game were mainly saved for the first half…the movie trailers. As a movie junkie, and more specifically a comic-book movie junkie, finally seeing new footage of the recently released Iron Man movie got the blood moving again. The imagery from the film seems to be everything that a fan of the comic could ask for, along with the inspired casting of Robert Downey Jr. in the role of Tony Stark and Jeff Bridges as Obadiah Stane, aka Iron Monger. The new Wall-E spot only further convinced me that Pixar is near perfect when it comes to character animation, and the Prince Caspian trailer was nothing more than a new edit of old footage, but enjoyable nonetheless.

Basically what it comes down to is that when Super Bowl time rolls around again next year, and the first spot airs, I’m not going to wonder if they’re going to outshine this year’s ads, but instead pray that they’re simply less forgettable, and that maybe next time that Audi will actually hit Richard Simmons instead of turning to avoid him.