By PAUL GOETTLICH
begun 16sep04
Nabolom is an Aztec word meaning fire house or the mythological jaguar. It is also the name of a fantastic cooperatively owned bakery in Berkeley. The image of the Nabolom below is by Paul Goettlich and it is taken from a rubbing done at an Aztec temple. The rubbing is hanging on the wall of the Nabolom bakery at 2708 Russell St. in Berkeley.
rev. 10 Oct 2006
ONE beautiful August day, I was walking in Oakland along Broadway’s expanse of car dealership parking lots — one enourmous area of pavement that’s hot enough to melt the tires off one of the stinking beasts that sit in prey of a buyer — with Hummers, SUVs, lard-ass minivans, fat-bob cruisers and other models of American design ineptitude. In spite of the miserable gas mileage they all get, people come from miles around to pay homage to them and offer up their hard-earned pay for the delusion of grandeur in being the owner and a driver of the one that most tickles their sensibilities. And it isn't as if these piles of dinosaur dung have one bit of the performance claimed in the TV advertisements. One can turn the steering wheel and count to ten before the wheels respond. Heck, they don't even turn off when the key is turned in the appropriate direction.
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Nabolom |
My father used to say he didn’t feel right unless he had a new car every year and a wad of greenbacks in his wallet. Back when he was a young driver, he could speed along the East Coast on Rt. 1 between Boston and New York City at up to 110 mph almost nonstop as there were few traffic lights and no cops. . . that could catch him. He had big fast cars — boats, as he called them. So it’s only natural that I recall him when I see these vehicles. And it’s interesting to note that amongst many synonyms for the word vehicle, one will find “means of expression.” These things are more about fashion than transportation. But again, even as fashion, they fail miserably. They could be seen as similar to the inverted conical plastic collars that dogs wear around their necks to prevent them from scratching themselves above the neck.
The lines of today’s vehicles resemble stealth fighters more than the sexy curves of yesteryear’s models. It’s a fashion trend mimicking our sexual health in that our reproductive capacity as a species is rapidly diminishing. It’s a known in the scientific community that the sperm count in the populations of industrialized nations has been failing at the rate of more than 1% for more than 50 years.
Thousands of these things with glittering chromed hubcaps and polished aluminum alloy wheels decorate the area, recalling the era of chariot races —
ludi circenses — at Circus Maximus and other spectacles such as the Coliseum in Rome in the 1st century. Each massive hulk ruthlessly devours petroleum resources and gives back a wide range of air pollutants including some wonderful greenhouse gases that have contributed substantially to global warming. It was rather disheartening to make my way through this museum of corporate greed that encouraged sufficient public ignorance to support the delusions of grandeur within the minds of all involved. This spectacle is the gift of the two generations before me — that of my father and grandfather, who had studied under Herr Diesel himself in Augsburg, Germany.
These thoughts faded quickly as I came upon a young man with a round area on the top of his that was bare. The hair on other areas of his head and face was of medium length, dark and shiny – very healthy looking. I could have sworn he was an old friend. But as I got closer, it became clear that I didn’t know him and that he was a monk. I followed him into what appeared to be a car dealership. Inside there were three long folding tables with about six to eight men on each side playing a card game. However, there wasn’t a single car or any signs of an ongoing business. Even in an ordinary car dealership it’s hard to find signs of life. But a great many question arose in my mind as to what exactly has going at this store front.
All of the card players were between 25 to 35 years of age and covered with the most colorful and imaginative tattoos I had ever seen. Each had little or no hair. And while each was similarly dressed, anyone could easily distinguish their differences. The messages and images each displayed were unique. The mannerisms of each were also unique. It was easy to see that quite a bit separated them from the people walking by on the streets shopping for cars.
It seemed that this was more than just a dreamy summer day because the colors took on much more vivid tones. Some even seemed iridescent when viewed from the different angles, giving off a rainbow shimmering like oil on water. As their arms moved, the tattoo colors changed. Compared to the tattoos of motorcycle gangs and sailors of the previous century, this stuff was definitely state-of-the-art. They jumped off the skin and into my senses, leaving image trails on the way. I wouldn’t have known they had done this except that there was a sound like faeries singing. And still, only in my peripheral vision did I spy the blurred streaks. Straight on, they could not be seen.
Theses young men came here, to play cards for 10 or 20 hours a day. This seemed entertaining for them, but I couldn’t help thinking that they were avoiding reality. Had they become computers that were merely running through an extremely limited set of chaos — randomness acting as a narcotic? At that moment, it seemed to me that I should observe and not judge. And as it turned out later, they had other more serious things in mind than avoiding reality. Or put differently, the reality they were aware of and experiencing was not one the passers by were aware of. And indeed, they may never experience it.
Across from me as I entered the room was a wall with 2-foot-high clerestory windows at its top. The window mullions were painted red, white, and green in a manner that had an Italian feel to it. Don’t even ask me why I feel this way. It’s just a feeling I have about them. Leaning against the glass were letters cut out of wood and painted with the same colors as the mullions that framed them. It looked as if they were painted while resting against the glass because there were brushstrokes emanating out three inches from the letters in all directions. They spelled something — some word that I cannot remember as I am writing this and probably will not in the future. Still looking up at the letters behind the windows, my hands touched them. I was able to be on both sides of the glass at one time — my hands on one side and my eyes on the other. They were painted months ago, but the red paint was still moist and I could smell it.
[So much action, color, smell, reality. Will I be absorbed into it?]
Then I found myself on the outside looking in at the players through painted glass. I wonder how long they had been playing cards. I could hear the cards. Other than the sound of the cards, the room was silent. Nobody was smoking there were no drinks on the tables, only the sound of the
machine. . . the computer. . . the players playing cards. A hard disk tapping out the
cards...+,-,-,-,+,+,-,+. . . ad infinitum.
As if previously choreographed, the young men all got up in unison, put down their cards, and filed out of the room, out of the building, and went running, jogging for exercise in military fashion. They were tattooed, computer, card-playing, anarchists jogging militarily, merrily down a soft pebbled path. It was in military fashion that they jogged, but with thought, life, feeling, love. They had no order and rightly so. The bonds of life —— real life, not anger or hatred as
present in the military. . . makes men become macho, butt-fucking, mad dogs, out to kill whatever moves, in Abu Ghraib style. But don't get in their way, or I should say, don't be an enemy of LIFE.
They jogged on down the path. Part of my mind — a very small part — went with them. I walked back to the building that had become a safe place to hang out. But since my friend the monk had gone with them, I decided to follow.
E. L. Lutyens Transformations

The path went through a country neighborhood designed by E. L. Lutyens. I was surrounded by English gardens and country villas with paved walkways winding between magnificent stone houses. Permeating the air was the scent of fermenting crab apples lying in a field of matted tall grasses. The screech of a rusty gate hinge intermittently blocked the barking of dogs off in the distance, fading in and out. The heavy gate slammed shut after each person passed through it, revealing its true machine character.
These images are from remembrances of when I was but a lad of perhaps 8- or 10-years-old. During the late summer sunsets of Connecticut, I would lie in bed with my head on the window sill, gazing out.
The gull's day had already ended and the bat's was just beginning. The sill was at the same level as the top of my bed and low enough that I could effortlessly see life in the dark green shadows mixed with the rapidly fading deep reds of the sunset. On some nights, once the sun had been long gone, the stars would come out and I’d listen to a small
hand-held Motorola transistor radio using its earphone so that my parents would not notice me awake long past my bed time. On that radio, I could hear WKBW in Buffalo, NY, one or two stations in Montreal, Québec, and as far west as Chicago, Illinois or even Kansas. I’d listen for a while, and then try to find one even more distant than the last. Before I
would realize it, I was well on my way to dreamland. I'd shut it off and fall back into my dream once more.
On other nights I would simply listen to distant sounds carried by the wind from miles away into my bedroom. The wind’s directional changes created a Doppler effect — a shift in
pitch like the sound of a train going by. I needed to listen very intently as
the sounds would come and go in soft waves accentuated by other sounds such as motorcycles or cars with little or no active muffler. One of the most enjoyable times for me was when the carnival set up near Route 66 at the north side of town. I vaguely recall a small hamburger shack out that way where my father and I would stop, have some fries and play the pinball machine a couple times. It was right next to the field where the calliope music would emanate from. I’d kneel on one of the red, padded soda fountain seats and watch the owner cooking French fries. They’d bubble and hiss in the deep fat fryer. He wore a greasy white apron and hat. And the cigarette dangling from his lips made his eyes tear so much that he needed to turn his head and watch the fries cook sideways out of one eye. Here it is about 45 years later and I can still smell the grease and cigarette smoke combination. It's also easy to recall the hissing and crackling of the fries, as well as the thumping noises and bells of the pinball machines. Sounds, aromas, and taste are deep-seated in our memories and conjure up all sorts of meanings and memories along with them.
The steam calliope was once pulled in parades by horses. It was atop a brightly colored wooden cart that had tall wooden wheels held together by steel bands, just like on an old West. By itself, the calliope had a sort of drifting effect as the steam pressure that powered the pipes varied. That in combination with the Doppler affect of the wind changing direction made a most interesting addition to the music. While lying in bed, I would attempt to discern which effect I was hearing. My interest in that would last just long enough to put me to sleep. I am not sure, but I think that the only place that steam calliopes come to town is in my memories.
Back then, the carnival still used horses around the grounds to do some work. And they played a big part in my visions with the music. So did books that my grandmother read to
me such as the story of Pinocchio. It used the image of a circus or
carnival that bad little boys were lured into where they playing all day, smoking cigars and drinking beer, never noticing that they were being transformed into donkeys as a result of their indulgences. And by the time they did notice, they’d be carted off, sold as work animals, and spend the rest of their lives in the servitude of a cruel master. The moral was that we should be good little children or suffer for the rest of our lives. But the attraction of the circus life remained strong for me in spite of those stories. I’m not saying that it only had good images for me, but that the bad ones had only a minor effect in tempering my behavior.
Now amidst the intermittent trickling sounds of rainwater from the previous day’s storm dripping off the bottoms of roof drains into puddles below, a mighty woman — the embodiment of a powerful, sorcerer and
witch — appears before me. Her body was beautiful in so many ways — strong
legs and stomach, small and well-shaped breasts, curly red hair, . . . a natural
salty smell of sweat from hairy armpits, and sweet cinnamon thighs, a glowing
face with alarming eyes, whole body strong, not bulging muscles, but tough, sharp, strong, and warm. She looked exceedingly competent with the spear and whip, and quite aware of every movement about her. I was caught by surprise when the razor-sharp tip of her spear reflected the last ray of the sunlight directly into my eyes. It had a crescent tip. The thought came to me that all of the men I thought were monks were actually warriors, keepers of life, believers of life, and that we should remain alive, with life...LIFE...and not become machines as the technocrats and transhumanists so frantically crave.

I followed her closely in this country setting. We stopped at the corner of one of the villas. There was a chain hanging from one of the rain gutters. It seemed to come
alive as a mechanical snake.
Instantaneously the warrior was also alive and aware of the chain's movement. With her own chain/whip she attacked the
snake vigorously. Then it really came to life with the flow of electricity and
light — capable of defying gravity and able to direct itself in any direction instantaneously. It darted straight up the wall and began transversing the slated roof. The warrior through her crescent-tipped spear at it and it fell to the ground lifelessly.
This noble warrior was also elegantly tattooed on many parts of her body. I couldn’t help but to gaze at them, the power of each held my attention. One across the midpoint of her upper arm spelled "rEVOLUTION." And the moment I looked at it I was spellbound. I actually felt as if I had been transported into the future, into the actual battle time, when the workers finally joined together to gain in control of their own lives and put down the corporate greed heads, as Jim Hightower would say. Seeing the colorful empathetic on her arm was a wake-up call.
The Western Way
While those in cushy positions in Western society feel that there is no bloody revolution happening at this moment, it
most certainly is for many millions who remain invisible in spite of being under
foot many times in a day. They don't look down at the homeless person begging on
the street. They see something that they know is uncomfortable, unhealthy, and a
long list of other negatively charged labels. However, they have not thought for
more than a moment about what homelessness is and how it affects people. For the
homeless, the ultimate challenge can happen in any moment of any day. Or it can
be one long and miserable lifetime, from beginning to end as they get shuffled
from one sidewalk to the next. And homeless shelters can be just as bad when one
considers that there's absolutely no privacy.
I had a step-sister that was a junkie and an alcoholic who was married to
another. Once I was with the family and she was given a long warm coat to wear
in the harsh winters of Boston. Then a few months later, I passed by her on Boylston
Street in Back Bay. I had just come out of a jazz club after seeing Mose Alison.
It was late — maybe about 12:30am — and she had on that long, warm coat and
dark sunglasses. Her hair was straggly, disheveled and dirty. The coat was in
tatters. I didn't recognize her at first. When I finally did, I turned around
and stopped her. I said, "Hello," and "What a pleasant surprise
to see you here!" She looked at me — I think she did — and kept walking
out of sight. Several months later I was attending her funeral with the rest of
the family. She drowned and had been found face-down in Jamaica Pond. I had
never been told about her until the funeral. But how she lived in sewer pipes,
begging for nickels and dimes so she could get one more hit of something.
I wonder just how many people live like that. The federal government doesn't
tell us. And the municipal governments, especially ones with lively a tourist
business, don't really want anyone to know. During the last count of homeless
people in the City of San Francisco, the process was short-changed and mostly
faked in order to make it possible for the mayor to say he had reduced
homelessness. I am sure he wanted to tell these uncounted unfortunates, withy a
smile on his face not to "take this personally, it's only business."
So yes, a bloody war is being fought at this time. It grinds up those at the
bottom and spits them out.
But in another way, there is also a revolution underway. Thousands, hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of people have left the grid.
Many never joined it. And many more will leave it as the days go by. I wonder
how they make the transition or if they ever needed to. Where did they start
from and where will they end up?
The grid society — a.k.a. the society at large or mainstream society —
in Western cultures drive SUVs, sitting high above the homeless and the disenfranchised
— those totally forgotten about by the so-called social safety nets. They who
drive these stinking hulks think that they are somehow insulated from the storm.
They think there's a great difference between them and those who have nothing,
and that they are somehow better people for not finding themselves down there on
the street too.
Have you ever imagined being homeless for more than a moment? Have you wondered
where you'd sleep on a wet, frigid night in a city? How would you stay dry? How
would you protect yourself when you went to sleep? You'd surely need to because,
while you don't have much, there's always someone else who has less and needs
your stuff — whatever it is — more than you.
I hear the jets outside my windows, as well as the helicopters, cars, and SUVs, weaving in and out of traffic, endangering the lives of others on the streets, with the music in their vehicles turned up so loudly that one can hear them coming from a block away.
If you asked them why they have such a vehicle they would look at you as if you are crazy for even asking. They may even become belligerent and insult you for your ignorance.
But don't put doubt in their poor little heads because they might lose track of
gravity and fly off the face of the Earth. They want to believe that this stuff
will make them happy. They want to believe that if they work hard, ignore
naysayers, and hoard ever last dollar they can, that they will find Nirvana. But
not one of them has done the math that shows that the game is rigged from start
to finish.
One must have faith in the concept of perpetual motion in order to believe in
the American way. It is also required that one believe in the oxymoron of
sustainable development, the recyclability of plastics, the Easter Bunny and
Santa Claus as well. While I am at it, I might as well throw in that the
government is here to help us. But I am actually wondering when the
transnational corporations that now occupy the place of government will drop the
pretense that we actually have a government because it is just too darned
expensive. It's not such an unreasonable thought, now is it?
Forest of Chimneys
Each household in this city has a chimney rising up some 300 feet into the sky so that
the smoke from fireplaces doesn't drift into their neighbor's home. This carries the smoke many miles away, into another neighborhood where we don’t know the
people and it's OK for them to breathe our smoke. Our guilt feelings are
alleviated and the economy is better off for it as well. Masons are kept busy.
More forests need cutting and that employs woodcutters. Window washers are in
high demand. Every kind of air filter for every purpose needs replenishing
regularly. Buildings need to be painted more often. People need more medical
care and the expected life is shortened enough to make room for more people to
do all those jobs.
Since some of these residences are on hilltops, the elevation at the top of the stack can be thousands of feet above sea level. In coastal area, this situation creates a hazard for low-flying planes and helicopters. There have been incidents where one or two have gotten stuck on the top. Seeking to avoid rebuilding the chimneys, the wreckage is left in place.
develop...
Elevator in a Forest
to be continued . . .
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