age: 36 (Sep 11, 1975)
MEMBER SINCE: April 2003
occupation: Those who can, do... apparently I can't, so I teach.
body mods: Arm tatts and a pair of piercings.
makes me sad: Forgetting. I have a good goddam memory... but if it ever falters, Sad City.
makes me happy: When the Giants win, when Jonah sings, and when I smell pumpkin pie.
crush: This space used to say
most humbling moment: Humble? Me?
into: Live music; cold, foggy nights; comics; really, really hot, black coffee; road trips; ballparks; David Mamet; running up hills; non-musical theater; properly faded t-shirts; waffles; question marks; black, white, and grayscale; and... (I keep adding to this as things occur to me... check back!)
I'm lost. I know it's an increasingly popular sentiment in modern culture to feel at once distant and connected; the dichotomy of shrinking-planet interconnectivity and impersonal digital relationships has fractionated many an able psyche, mine included. Black Francis has been looking for twenty years now. What chance do I have?


I've been GPS-navigated to every corner of the state and haven't struggled with the endearing frustration of re-folding a Rand-McNally in years. I get every baseball broadcast on XM, basketball scores in a Google text, and temper snowboarding expectations with an hourly weather update on an iPhone. A month ago I was in a library and shivered in its obsolete silence. The friend I would ask, "What was the name of that artist who..." is now named Wiki, substituting presumed accuracy for the warmth of follow-up conversation. Little pieces of my digitized soul drift aimlessly online, trapped on social networking profiles I established years ago and have forgotten existed. For every avatar I've befriended and every old school chum I've recovered, a piece of my memory is auctioned off for cyborg replacement.
We can all be reached in an instant. Cell phones in our pockets like Spider-Tracers on our getaway personae. But I can dimly remember when life was very different. When I knew the location of virtually every payphone on Geary and Clement, and had many of the numbers memorized. Wait on the corner of 8th Avenue outside the Radio Shack; I'll call you when I get off the bus. Meeting people took on a since-forgotten sense of anticipation -- both from the uncertainty of arrival and the true sanctity of personal communication, unaffected by prior emails or cellular status reports. I was in middle school. What the hell did I know about conversation?
The school-age me is a distant creature from the students I deal with on a daily basis. I would have embraced this world of mp3s and handheld gaming devices;...
I've been GPS-navigated to every corner of the state and haven't struggled with the endearing frustration of re-folding a Rand-McNally in years. I get every baseball broadcast on XM, basketball scores in a Google text, and temper snowboarding expectations with an hourly weather update on an iPhone. A month ago I was in a library and shivered in its obsolete silence. The friend I would ask, "What was the name of that artist who..." is now named Wiki, substituting presumed accuracy for the warmth of follow-up conversation. Little pieces of my digitized soul drift aimlessly online, trapped on social networking profiles I established years ago and have forgotten existed. For every avatar I've befriended and every old school chum I've recovered, a piece of my memory is auctioned off for cyborg replacement.
We can all be reached in an instant. Cell phones in our pockets like Spider-Tracers on our getaway personae. But I can dimly remember when life was very different. When I knew the location of virtually every payphone on Geary and Clement, and had many of the numbers memorized. Wait on the corner of 8th Avenue outside the Radio Shack; I'll call you when I get off the bus. Meeting people took on a since-forgotten sense of anticipation -- both from the uncertainty of arrival and the true sanctity of personal communication, unaffected by prior emails or cellular status reports. I was in middle school. What the hell did I know about conversation?
The school-age me is a distant creature from the students I deal with on a daily basis. I would have embraced this world of mp3s and handheld gaming devices;...






















Kay