Still streets
posted: 03 April, 2009
Ive been enjoying the Felt albums that were recently posted on Map Ref 41 93W, and during some web-based procrastination I read that Lawrence named the band after the word specifically as it is emoted by Tom Verlaine in Venus. Television stirs in me a whirlwind of adolescent feelings, managing to catapult me back to the late 90s every time I listen to them. Venus in particular conjures visions of roaming the streets at night, though for me I perhaps mis-associate it with empty, late-night solitary experiences rather than something alive that flap[s] / like little pages.
I just tried to attack my weird sleeping patterns (not insomnia, as Im getting my full quotient, but in randomly-spaced chunks) by going for a 4 AM bike ride. I forgot how much I love doing this. I didnt think to bring my good camera and turn this into a sappy blog post so the usual shitty mobile phone pics are presented here, but without apologies.
One
night when i was nineteen, I rode my bike around Pittsburgh for a few
hours in the middle of the night with this guy Chuck. He is one of
those acquaintances from college that I havent thought about in years
until right now; and now I would love to find out what happened to him,
though I dont remember his surname. Im not sure how the ride started
but it ended up being one of those simple experiences that continues to
resonate with me, a decade later.
That
ride felt like some missing jump into adulthood. Although I had been
living on my own for awhile I never really felt the power, or rather
the freedom, of living in a city. Moving, silently, quickly, through
sleeping urban areas has a magical effect on me. Without having to
worry about running into people or cars, its like being invisible.
Rows of darkened houses and apartments suggest a million individual
narratives, all paused, while the occasional lighted window indicates a
secret companion.
I had a
dream once a few years ago where i was with several random people and
we were competing to invade the private residences of strangers. Or
something like that; of course its vague - but in the dream I broke
into a strangers house at night while they were in their living room
watching TV and silently crawled behind them, lying on my stomach in
the shadows of the room, undetected. This concept has stayed with me
for years. I dont have any interest in voyeurism or ever actually
doing this, but Ive since thought it would be good to exploit the idea
of pointless, conceptual privacy invasions in some literary/art context.
Tonight
was a shadow of the great 1999 bike excursion. Perhaps another part of
that was how I saw my city in a new way, venturing into neighborhoods I
had never been in before, and other places that were familiar but not
at 3:30 AM. It certainly has stuck with me more than all subsequent
late-night rides, though there have been few (until tonight) that were
rides just for the sake of it. I still have a lot to explore about my
new surroundings; theres no better time to do it than the middle of
the night, where I can take my time and find parts of the city I might
not notice otherwise.
This
already-sleepy city is like a glacier at 4 AM on a Thursday night.
Though I did pass a few cars, there were no pedestrians. All of the
traffic signals were switched off, even at the most confusing
intersection of
Nordenskiöldinkatu/Topeliuksenkatu/Mechelininkatu/Linnankoskenkatu
(pictured). I rode down to the edge of Kesäranta and looked at the
bay, still frozen, and thought about how insane it is that I live a
block away from the Prime Minister and I can just ride up to the edge
of his property. I can feel sleep coming on, where perhaps I will
dream again of silent, meaningless espionage.
I just tried to attack my weird sleeping patterns (not insomnia, as Im getting my full quotient, but in randomly-spaced chunks) by going for a 4 AM bike ride. I forgot how much I love doing this. I didnt think to bring my good camera and turn this into a sappy blog post so the usual shitty mobile phone pics are presented here, but without apologies.
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The Human Garden
26 March 2009
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Icewhistle travel report: Athens
17 April 2009