The Power You Wield
An everyday order belies the incredible weirdness of life. There are phrases and words and compliments and mannerisms and womannerisms and made up words and single and double and triple entendres all like a giant raging river and it’s dammed and controlled by whatisit? our language or our God or our culture or our wommanerisms or our nationality? I won’t even venture a guess. But it’s controlled – only slightly, barely, as if a tiny hole would bring the whole thing crashing down. It’s controlled and harnessed, as best as can be expected by the things we take for granted. The power of language and ideas and conversations and arguments and confusion and boredom. It’s all important. This video plays with language the way today’s child plays a video game. It’s sure-footed and quick and it comes out of a place apart – let’s call it the shore of the river that’s dammed by God. Was that a pun? Dammed by God. Damned by God. Does that even have to make sense? Remember the river is life or truth or something I probably didn’t clarify because I never claimed to know in the first place.
The things I don’t know are probably not answers to questions. They are things though, I can tell you that – they are items that can be quantified and probably stacked like books. But books are filled with more things listed on pages. Those pages are counted and numbered and then read and turned-over. The aggregate of those things leads to less things but bigger things. Bigger things are probably more important things; things with weight. What is the thing of a book?

2666 is 900 pages of things that I’ve read and loved and when you ask me what is the book about? I answer back that it is probably…… probably about life – life like living, the verb part of life, the noun. It’s a documentation of many things that are semi-related but man, they are barely semi-related. The only thing linking them is the beating heart and blood and raging stupid sweaty hormonal thoughts of the characters involved. God are they stupid. God, did I love this book. What was it about? It’s about that god damn river. Did we even get to the part where we wonder where the river originated and to where it leads? Do metaphors have myths and origins?