Path: typhoon.sonic.net!not-for-mail Message-ID: <40DDF528.593F83FF@luckymojo.com> From: catherine yronwode Reply-To: cat@luckymojo.com Organization: Lucky Mojo Curio Co. X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.7 (Macintosh; U; PPC) X-Accept-Language: en,pdf MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: alt.magick,alt.autos.artcars Subject: dwelling place as a marker of ... ? Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Lines: 65 Date: Sat, 26 Jun 2004 22:04:16 GMT NNTP-Posting-Host: 209.148.120.170 X-Complaints-To: abuse@sonic.net X-Trace: typhoon.sonic.net 1088287456 209.148.120.170 (Sat, 26 Jun 2004 15:04:16 PDT) NNTP-Posting-Date: Sat, 26 Jun 2004 15:04:16 PDT Xref: typhoon.sonic.net alt.magick:377068 alt.autos.artcars:225 I had a dream last night that siva and i were visiting some folks we know from the art car world (we have never been to their home in real life, only met them at various Bay Area art car events over the past several years). In the dream i was disappointed that they lived in a suburban style tract home in the South Bay (i have no idea where they live in real life, of course). In describing the dream to siva this morning, i realized that this sense of confused disappointment over where creative people live has occured to me several times in real life in relation to people i know through the comic book industry, through art and artisanry connections, and through the magical community. In every case the people in question projected a complex and fascinating print / screen / art / party persona as comic book creators or art car artisans or magicians but were either found to live in a dull, nondescript tract house on a block of similar homes in an area with few mature trees or in an apartment block in the midst of many other apartment blocks with no access to nature. The flatness of the land may be a factor too -- The South Bay tract home flats are my prime local example, but you can fill in the blank as you please, considering your locale -- the flats around Queens and Brooklyn with those endless rows of apartment block fulfill the same criterion. The effect is one of a "Matrix"-like vista of endless small, niche-like human cages. My disappointment has nothing to do with the presumed financial status or economic attainment of the comics creators or mages who live in these places, for i have been vastly inspired by visiting folks who live in poverty-blighted inner city walk-ups or in rural farm squalor -- no, it is the deadly dullness, the cubicle-like regularity of the housing plan, with the postage-stamp front lawn and the inevitably fenced back yard that disappoints. How could an anrtist, mage, conscious being select such a middle-of-the-road neighborhood, cut off from the best that nature offers (vistas, wildness, beauty) and the best that human invention offers (elaborate architecture, parks, gardens)? I realize that this viewpoint springs from my own intensely aesthetic orientation. I realize that it is neither transferrable as a meme nor will it be easily understood by many. Those who know where and how i live will understand better than others what i am taling about. Some whom i have visited, like Poke Runyon, probably even share my feelings in the matter, if i may judge by how and where they live. I bring this forward today because there has been some recent talk about what exactly constitutes magical attainment. The trolls perpetually ask, "If magic works, why aren't you all rich?" This is not about wealth, though. Wealth is only a marker of one kind of aspiration. Realizing that riches may not be everyone's goal, i am asking "If someone is a creative person -- script-writer, artist, screenwriter, magician, author, lecturer, teacher, magister templi, art car artist, root doctor -- why would he or she dwell in the prefabricated, repetitive housing units of the Matrix?" cat yronwode