Triad

June 23rd, 2005

Something made me smile today… I was updating my color preferences in photoshop, getting ready to recalibrate everything for some printing I’ll be doing in a week or so… when I started to remember how much I LOVE working with images. Not just photography, but images in general. It makes me happy to work an image until it reflects what’s in my head… to make it say what I can’t find the words to say. And now, as I’m sliding rapidly towards sleep with a Unix Shell Programming book in my hands I’m realizing how much I love having technology in my life. I can’t get enough of learning languages, expanding my understanding of unix, linux, lasso, mysql, mac os x, css, and html. Operating systems, scripting languages, oo programming, you name it. And as I’m thinking about all of this I’m wondering how long it’s going to be before I can get my shop put back together so that I can start making frames again.

What makes me the happiest of all though is, first, that I’m excited as hell about anything. Post depression this is a good, good thing. Second… I’m psyched about a pretty well-rounded batch of hobbies (habits?). Art, Science, Craft… Now all I need is a something more physical in my life. I love biking, my camera bag is viciously heavy these days (damn that Mamiya RB67), it’s a workout to carry it when I’m shooting, and when I’m working on frames I’m at least on my feet. But biking is hindered by wicked allergies for the time being and my shop isn’t set up.

Well, three out of four isn’t bad. For now.

Family Ties

June 23rd, 2005

It looks like some kind of fragment bomb went off in my upstairs bathroom. Bars of special soap, cremes, clarifying lotions, organic toothpaste, brushes, curlers, crimper things, files, sanders, buffers, face masks, ear plugs, and q-tips lying strewn about the countertop in disarray. Utter chaos. For someone who is so amazingly well kept, organized and tidy, my sister makes one hell of a mess when she’s getting ready for bed.

Yup, it’s here. The Family with a capitol “F”. Our last few days together as one nuclear unit (minus mom of course) before my dad takes of to Sweden. Thursday. I’m heading to DC on the same day, although from a different airport. Naomi is taking off a day or two earlier. We’re working hard, hanging out, playing, fighting, eating and generally feeling really odd about all of this. I’m petrified that I’m going to get stuck with a house full of junk when my dad leaves. Nomi is worried that she’s going to be stuck without a dad. Dad is worried that he’ll just get stuck here. It’s just weird.

Couple Connect Across Miles And Years

June 16th, 2005

© The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon

By Paul Denison
The Register-Guard

EDITOR’S NOTE: Longtime Register-Guard editor and reporter Paul Denison is taking early retirement to leave the country. At the urging of his editors, he agreed to share the story behind his departure.

Love can lurk in the darkest places.

One year after my wife died - and a week or two after a brief but scary health crisis of my own - I stood one autumn evening on the footbridge at Valley River Center, looking down at a dead salmon in the shallows, thinking that my life, too, might end soon. And not really caring.

Judy died on Aug. 31, 2002, less than a month shy of our 35th anniversary. Her passing came as no surprise to either of us after her long, courageous struggle with cancer. She went away quietly and calmly, at home in her own bed, as she wished.

Our devastated kids came home quickly, my daughter from South Africa and my son from Boston, with their spouses. With them and a small group of close friends, we went to the coast just to spend a day together near the sea, which Judy had loved as only a native Nebraskan could.

Paul Denison and Monica in a snapshot from Kibbutz Gazit, Israel, in 1964. The couple, reconnected over the Internet, will marry and live in Sweden.

That Sunday morning, as we all walked to church together, I kept looking back at the motel, wondering what was keeping Judy.

After a week off, I went back to work. For the next two years or so, I showed no outward signs of grief. I did my work as an arts and entertainment reporter, spent two Saturdays each month as a volunteer exhibit interpreter at the Oregon Coast Aquarium, went to church almost every Sunday. Every familiar thing I did, and the memory-rich house in which I continued to live, gave me both comfort and pain.

Somewhere during this time, I heard a line from a song that seemed to describe my situation: “My life goes on forlornly.” And in a movie that I saw several times, “The Hours,” I also heard Meryl Streep speak a line that seemed to sum up what I was doing: “We stay alive for each other.” In this case, for my grieving children and my widowed mother.

In time, I came to some sense of equanimity, aided by long walks on the beach, resigning myself to a quiet, solitary life. I had a good job in a good community and, on occasional Sunday mornings at a bagel shop in Depoe Bay, an ad hoc support group called the Circle of Abuse.

I had been working for The Register-Guard for more than 20 years, and retirement was not that far off. I could just coast the rest of the way.

I began to renew acquaintances with women friends from way back, and for a few bewildering months even thought I was in love. I read that “grief is having nowhere to put your love,” and my son and daughter helped me realize that I needed to be careful about where that impulse might lead me.

Ever since Judy died, I had been emotionally numb. Now the anesthetic was wearing off.

My co-workers had little or no clue about all this. I’ve always been a private person, and the Howard Johnson of journalists: no surprises.

Then something happened that surprised me and everyone close to me. Blame Google.

One day in July 2004, I typed in the name of a woman I had met in Israel in 1964. We had dug potatoes on one kibbutz, gone on a student bus tour of the country and picked apples at a second kibbutz. We were inseparable friends.

But at summer’s end, we did separate. We corresponded off and on for two years, but we both got married and lost track of each other. But I remembered her married name, and when I Googled, there she was, just like that, after 40 years.

Monica is a scientist, and what popped up was her research group’s Web page. It included a picture of her with an infant in her arms. Beneath the photo was her e-mail address. I quickly sent off a brief message, asking whether she was the Monica I had known at Lehavot Haviva and Gazit.

There was no reply. I figured either this wasn’t my friend, or she had chosen not to answer.

I learned later that when my e-mail reached Monica’s office, she was on vacation. At her family’s summer place, one of her sisters had picked up an old copy of John Steinbeck’s “Travels With Charley” and noticed a note inside: fall 1964 from Paul. “Who’s this Paul?” she asked.

When Monica returned to work in August, my e-mail was waiting for her. She almost trashed it as spam. Then she opened it, read it and replied: “Yes, Paul, it’s me.”

Much has happened since. Monica and I spent two weeks together last fall, and another week together in December, and another week in April. I met her sisters, brothers-in-law, daughter, son-in-law and granddaughters, Mira and Nora.

We have traded e-mails almost daily for more than 10 months, and we talk frequently on the phone. We’re engaged to be married. We have been since Oct. 26, 2004, just a few days after we saw each other for the first time in 40 years.

She was 62, and I was 61, but we made that major life decision in just a few seconds, like giddy teenagers.

Except that there was, and is, nothing giddy about this. Through our e-mails and our visits - including the first one, when we spent hours arranging the letters we had written to each other in 1964-66 and reading many of them out loud to each other - Monica and I had discovered that despite the years and the different paths we had taken, we fit together “like two halves of an apple,” as she puts it. Like twin souls reuniting in the ripeness of time.

Monica and I intuitively knew where our relationship was headed even before we met last fall. To family and friends it may have seemed impulsive; but this was actually one of the most carefully considered, and clearest, decisions of my life.

We realize that we might not have lasted as a couple through the turbulent years of our growing up, but now - now was different. Here were two mature individuals, both alone but strong enough to accept this as a fact of our declining years, knowing without doubt or hesitation that we belong together. Not only because our common interests had survived and deepened, but because the instinctive affection, respect and trust we had so long ago was still there, springing up like dormant seed after a forest fire. And there is fire in this relationship, not just warmth to see us through long winter nights.

There will be long winter nights in our lives, literally if not figuratively. Monica was born and raised in Finland and lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden, where we’ll live. We hope. Since January of this year, we’ve been waiting for the Swedish immigration authority to decide whether they really need another American taking up permanent residence.

That long, slow process appears to be almost over. As I write this, Monica is answering a list of 82 questions from Migrationsverket and gathering photos and documents to prove that our relationship is real.

We’ve convinced both our families - hers instantly delighted, mine initially dubious and dismayed - and we’re confident that the migration board will do the right thing. We obviously need their stamp of approval - but then again, we don’t. We’re sure of our love.

Friends have asked me if I’m apprehensive about retiring, moving to another country, getting married, learning a new language. Mildly so, perhaps. But I’m far more afraid of what would happen if I ignored my deepest feelings and stayed in my shrinking comfort zone. Going forward without Monica has become unthinkable.

Today is my last day at The Register-Guard, after 21 years as a reporter and editor. On Friday, I’ll leave for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, not to review plays this time but just to spend Father’s Day and my daughter’s birthday with my kids in a place that’s special to our family.

In a magazine just the other day I ran across a quotation from Martin Buber: “Every journey has a secret destination of which the traveler is unaware.” I’m not sure exactly what that means, but I like the sound of it. Could this late love of ours be the secret destination of a journey that began 40 years ago in Lower Galilee?

On June 30, I’ll board a plane for Helsinki, Finland, where Monica and I will spend the summer in her family’s summer place by the sea, waiting for the green light for me to enter Sweden and begin a new life that neither she nor I expected, or even knew we wanted.

Monica and Paul

June 16th, 2005

As most of you know, my father is moving to Sweden at the end of this month. Unbeknownst to me there was an article today detailing the entire affair published on the front page of The Register-Guard. Here’s the link to the full article. I’ll republish in it’s entirety after I get permission from the Guard.

Needless to say I got a little choked up while eating my breakfast. My dad is such an understated and quiet man, to put this on the front page of the paper at his editor’s request seems a rather big deal. I’m glad he did it. And I’m glad he didn’t tell me before I found it on my own.

Friend or Foe

June 15th, 2005

I’ve got this friend who loves to tell me all about her day, career, beliefs and pretty much everything else in in her life… in great detail. Not only am I told about all of this fun stuff but I’m expected to remember quite a bit of it in detail. I’m often asked about specific things at later dates. This afternoon, while talking about her career I notice a moment when my particular career can possibly be of use to help her out. I brought it up. The funny thing was, she didn’t remember or even know what my career is. Forget that we’ve talked about it previously in detail. How lame is that? Gave me of a bit of a gauge on just how one-sided things can be in friendships.

It was frustrating, and disappointing. It hurt a little bit and bummed me out. People can be pretty selfish and expect a lot out of others while being very unwilling to give a damn thing themselves. I’ve been on the wrong end of this type of friendship too many times. So when I invest my time, attention and friendship with someone I expect that they match the effort. Actually I demand it. I’ve had too many energy suckers and attention suckers in my life. What really bums me out right now is knowing that this is actually enough for me to end a friendship. And that’s just what I’m going to do.

Running MySQL on Mac OS X and Linux

June 15th, 2005

This is a follow-up to an older blog entry of mine about installing MySQL on FreeBSD, Linux and Mac OS X. After some time working with MySQL on both Linux and Mac OS X I have definitively settled on a preferred platform for running MySQL. Linux.

There is a substantial speed advantage in running MySQL on Linux. If you want to know why MySQL is so much faster on Linux than Mac OS X, follow the link for a detailed explanation. For me this speed advantage means that I can either run databases much, much faster while spending the same amount of money for hardware, or, I can run it at roughly the same speed for vastly less money.

Take for example my very informal tests… I ran a series of identical queries against identical databases on three installations of MySQL. Each installation used the mysql_huge conf file and version 4.1.12 of the MySQL server program. Queries were run using the standard mysql client application from the command line.

Testing Machines

  • xserve. 2GB RAM, 2x 1.33ghz G4 processors. Mac OS X Server 10.4
  • G5 Tower, 2x 2.0ghz 64bit processors, 3GB RAM. Mac OS X 10.4
  • AMD Sempron 2200+, 2GB RAM. Centos 4.x

As you can see, the G5 and Xserve are fairly powerful machines. The AMD machine is pretty wimpy with the exception that it’s got 2GB of RAM.

In my queries the AMD machine running Centos beat the Xserve by small but consistent margins and either tied or matched the G5. Pretty amazing considering the $179 cost of the linux box and $2000+ tag for both of the macs.

I am generally a die-hard mac os x fan, but I’m quickly warming up to Linux in the database and server environment because of speed and cost factors. If you’re an OS X fan looking for a superior platform for deploying MySQL I would seriously investigate finding a Linux distribution that fits your tastes. I’m a fan of Centos myself. I don’t find one platform or the other to be any more challenging to administer… you just have to learn the differences between the systems.

Anti-Troll

June 14th, 2005

Maele is awesome. Totally out of the blue she writes a glowing tesimonial for me on Friendster. I haven’t heard from this girl in a long time and out of nowhere, this… so cool. Always full of surprises.

Maele and I have been friends since college, and housemates in Boston for a short period thereafter. The girl is awesome and I miss being able to bitch ferociously with her about dumb people while riding the B line trolleys back home to our apartment. Those were some fun times. 6 Burner Grill? Culture concert at the club behind our apartment? That dead bum in the alley? That extremely sketchy video store one street over. The gay guys who stabbed each other down the block in a lover’s quarrel? Ah, Marty’s Liquor on the corner. Our exploded steam heat issues. The painting contractor who loved to threaten us with bodily harm? Lovely. What a fucking neighborhood we lived in…

But damn, even Maele’s dad is fun. We’re meeting up at a mutual friend’s wedding in July. It will be fun to see her and her boy, John, again.

Allergy Hell

June 14th, 2005

It pretty much feels like someone shoved a thin plastic bag into my lungs and inflated it. That’s how it is when I go out in the evening by the river. There’s something about the trees down there, or the flowers at the base of their trunks… or the grass. I have no damn idea. All I know is that it takes a relatively normal guy and kicks the living crap out of him. It takes me 45 minutes in my room with the air-purifier on high before I stop wheezing. This sucks. I’ve never had allergies like these in the past. One or two days a year usually. This has been a month of house-arrest. I hope this stuff lightens up soon. I’d love to leave my bedroom and get back to having a life.

Ah ha ha ha ha ha, that’s funny. Me, a life! LOL. Oh boy…. yeah, ok… I’d at least like to be able to go out and walk by the river to enjoy a nice sunset. You know, watch the bats scoop up bugs from above the water.

Blog Trolls

June 14th, 2005

To the anonymous and barely literate cowards who keep leaving stupid little hate comments on my blog entries… I will continue to delete your comments until the day I take this site offline. I will continue to block your IPs each and every time you post one of your pathetic little comments. I will continue to fart in your general direction whenever my bowels gurgle up some stinky gas. I will continue to stick pins in my blog troll voodoo doll (primarily in the crotch region) and will continue to curse your annoying and cowardly existence until you find something better to do with your useless waste of a life and time. Eat shit and die.

You just annoy, and should the day come when I have the inclination to track back your ip address from my logs, find which ISP you are with and then call said ISP from another ISP, identify your cowardly ass personally, and report your pathetic self as having made threats to our customers, mention a few words like bomb, terrorism, and jihad, thus getting your ass flagged and monitored by the feds compliments of our lovely patriot act, and then sell your fucking identity to someone creative enough to really make good use of it… I’m quite sure I will. Or perhaps I’ll report your IP as being an open relay for spam to every black-hole list on the globe, thus blocking all outgoing mail from your computer by most of the mailservers on this planet. Or perhaps a combination of all of the above would do the trick best.

If you have something to say to me you should include your name. Otherwise you might as well just fuck off. It’s a lot less trouble for both of us.

Flies

June 7th, 2005

It would figure that there’s a housefly buzzing above my head right now. Tonight is that kind of night.

I nearly got in a fight tonight. Maybe I was looking for it. I don’t know. But this idiot young guy in an SUV nearly hit me as he was slamming on the brakes at the red light. He stared at me from behind the glass and looked at me like I was in the wrong to be in the crosswalk on my green light. I’m not sure if he even saw the red. I stopped, turned around, squared myself with his window and just stared back at him until the light turned green. It was stupid. He might have had a gun or something. But I was millimeters away from putting my fist through his window. It took all of my strength not to do it. I suppose he had no idea what he could have been getting himself into tonight either. I could have had a gun. The way I looked tonight I’m not sure he would have assumed otherwise. I don’t think I had my friendliest face on. Steel toed boots, long black carhart coat with hooded sweatshirt on underneath and X’ed up fists, I probably looked like 200 lbs of dude-who-just-got-out-of-county-jail and is rather pissed about it. He drove on and we went our separate ways.

Some of my nights are like that. Just full of anger and frustration. I never know quite how to burn it off. I usually just stomp around the city with loud music in my headphones. Tonight was definitely one of those nights.

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