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<p align="right"><font size="6">[[Transition|<font face="Consolas, Courier new">claytoncastle.com</font>  •  T R A N S I T I O N]]</font></p>
<p align="right"><font size="6">[[Transition|<font face="Consolas, Courier new">claytoncastle.com</font>  •  T R A N S I T I O N]]</font></p>
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=[[2019.12.13 Ode To Joy]]=
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Fridays are now my one school-day morning with the kids, so today we all landed at the Chestnut House ready for heading to school.  With about 20 minutes to fill before the expected arrival of their walk-to-school buddies (the Dobratz kids), Simon decided it would be a good time to practice his flute.
So he breaks out his flute and his nifty new budget music stand, spreads out his music book, and starts tiptoeing through Beethoven's <i>Ode To Joy</i>.
My heart immediately clasped and tears sprung to my eyes.  Violet was skipping nearby, and I swept her up into a hug and squeezed her and let my tears dampen her hair.  When he paused to take a breath, I did the same to Simon.  Hell, I had to pause writing this because recalling it made me choke up anew.
This music has always affected me profoundly.  Which is why I had it played as the recessional for S and my's wedding - another layer of the feels to mingle in.  It's good to find the threads of joy in the midst of all the difficulty these days.
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=[[2019.12.10 Simon: "...Hey Dad."]]=
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Simon got sick at school yesterday.  He started feeling not well, and went to the bathroom.  There, he started feeling even worse, and so he called me on his watch-phone.
It appeared on my phone as a number not in my contacts, so I answered with my standard: "Engineering.  Clayton here."
When I heard the sad, timid "...Hey Dad" I immediately knew it was Simon and that he was distressed.  My black little heart leapt up into my throat with worry, especially when he paused to throw up.
I instinctively reassured him immediately.  "Hang on kiddo!  I'll be there as fast as I can!"
Except I had walked to work yesterday.  And I still had a tonne of work to do.  So I jammed my laptop into a bag, and sprinted up the hill to my apartment where Ghost was parked (making record time - should have Strava'd it). 
As I hustled up the hill, I felt a further wash of appreciation for how much I like the fact that he reached out to me in his moment of need.  It settled in a fundamentally certain place in my soul: I will always be there for Simon and Violet.
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=[[2019.11.25 Guess I'm Ready Now]]=
=[[2020.02.14 Violet Valentine Art]]=
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Three months ago I was still not ready to discuss my divorce on this medium. But it's been a long year of discussing all this stuff with people, so I suppose it's about time to open up my processing on this here too.
http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_3628-violetart-web.jpg


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I love how this piece conveys a sense of being a little kid in the woods.  The arch of the trees bending toward the distance and crowding out the sky.  She is so brilliant it hurts my heart.
[[:Category:Divorce|Stories/Divorce]]
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=[[2019.11.18 What The Fork?]]=
=[[2020.02.11 Head Down, Holding On]]=
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[[File:Tianmen mountain.png]]
There is nothing wrong.<br>
 
Worry about losing what is right chases me through the maze of my thoughts and feelings.
Watching the latest Ken Block installment of Hooniganism - [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX2uXBMkO8U Climbkhana 2] - and found myself feeling an extra edge of existential horror.  Generally, Mr. Block does all sorts of driving that I find scary - but my lizard/driver brain wants to do it too. And he's done it in locations that are pretty extreme - but my driver/lizard brain imagines doing that too.  Sure, I've given myself a mental "NOPE" to all the "high edge" class drifts, but there was lots of other twisty driving surface to fantasize about.  This time, though, the road was a consectutive chain of NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE corners.  Particularly characterized by the giant crumbling Hot Wheels™ set of a road glimpsed here.
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=[[2019.11.14 Hey Dad: Don Cherry?]]=
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https://markhamreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/don-cherry-head-shot-e1508297725948.jpg
 
ME: "Hey, Dad.  I know you're dead and everything, but I have some questions about Don Cherry."
 
DAD: "Hey Sport.  It's kind of an inconvenient time.  There's a hockey game coming on."
 
ME: "That excuse won't work any more, dad.  Partly because of how we watch things now at our own convenience, but mostly because I doubt time works like that when you're dead."
 
DAD: [scowling] "When did you start questioning my hockey time?"
 
ME: "Well, honestly, since always.  Just maybe not out loud.  And that's kind of the point, maybe."
 
DAD: "Are you sure this is about Don Cherry?"
 
ME: "Um... yes?  Because the thing is how much you and Don Cherry were similar.  The idolization of what life was supposed to be about, mostly in terms of a very narrow cultural viewpoint."
 
DAD: "Sport, you come from the exact same cultural viewpoint that I do, so I'm not sure what it is that you think you're see so differently."
 
ME: "Yeah, Dad, I know.  I'm a lot like you in a lot of ways, and we both belong in the mountains.  But the cultural piece - that small-town BC dynamic had a lot of problems bundled up with it.  There was a lot of good stuff - it was mostly good stuff.  And maybe you couldn't see it, because of how well you fit in, but the problems really sucked when you are someone who doesn't fit in.  I definitely came from the same cultural place as you, Dad, but I feel like I had to crawl out from under it.  A bit."
 
DAD: [huge eyebrows ripple] "I know you mentioned that you didn't tell me about how you got bullied in High School.  Is that what you mean?  Because I can't help but wonder if you would have gotten bullied less if you just figured out how to fit in better."
 
ME: "Maybe."  [I take a long breath]  "But maybe that wouldn't have been a trade I'd want to make.  I really like how I am, even though it's different and didn't fit in with the tribal standards."


DAD: [eyebrows softening into a steeple of worry]ll
I am loved.<br>
My ability to access the people and activities that bring me joy is harshly circumscribed.


ME: "And maybe that's why I had such a hard time believing that you liked me. I think I knew you did, but I couldn't understand it in a way that let me trust it.  It was so easy to imagine you being disappointed in me."
The future looks good.<br>
 
Any sense of control or choice slips through my fingers with every grasp.
DAD: "I've always loved you, Sport.  And I've always been proud of you.  I couldn't be prouder of how you've turned out."
 
ME: "I know that's the correct answer, and it's what you've always said.  But it's hard not to remember your frustration with my aversion to team sports or anything social.  And I can't help but recognize a certain similarity to the assumption that fitting in is required with Don Cherry's racist assumptions about who decides to wear poppies.  There weren't a lot of opportunities for overt racism when I was growing up, simply because of how very un-diverse it was where I grew up.  But even so, every time there was a rare instance where race was actually a factor, you generally managed to say something racist."
 
DAD: "So, you think I was racist to you?"
 
ME: "No, Dad.  I mean that your drive for me to fit in has the same basic source as racism.  And that the way you actually love and accept me is the way we should try to treat everyone."
 
DAD: [skeptical look] "I'm not sure if I'm up to loving and accepting everyone..."
 
ME: "No, me neither.  I'm an asshole; probably a genetic condition.  But I do really think that it's important to try, even though we might fail.  Hell, [i]especially[/i] because we're probably going to fail.  Because we need to keep trying to be better, and not just accept that how we're currently shitty is acceptable forever.  Like Don Cherry - he was acceptable back when his humour / bullshit ratio was mostly funny.  He's not sufficiently funny any more; maybe hasn't been for me for a long time."
 
DAD: "Genetically an asshole: funny boy."
 
ME: "Exactly."


It's not that anything bad has happened, or is happening.<br>
It's that I have mostly doubts instead of ready coping mechanisms.
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=[[2019.10.27 Shared Reality]]=
=[[2020.02.03 My Fears About Violet]]=
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So, I recently hurt S's feelings by saying a true thing that I thought was trivially true.  It hurt her feelings because she did not know it to be so, and had even been thinking the oppositeMeanwhile, I had not been saying the obviously true thing purely for the sake of kindness, assuming that the obviousness of it was sufficient.  Human perspective is funny like that.
I think know how to parent SimonHis talents and pitfalls are very much in line with my own, and I am confident in our ability to navigate them together so that he will be able to succeed in life.


The default preferred state for many people is to live in reality¹, even though it is difficult to know truthsWe pile up required assumptions in order to make sense and try to make progressBut there are things that can be known that we can't guess well, but can easily know if they are shared.  I strongly believe that all of us fare better when we cooperate in our experiences of this shared realityEspecially with the things that we can know, but others cannot².
But I am unsure about how to be the best parent for VioletHer talents are alien to me, and the strengths I leveraged to figure out my life are not her strengthsI see others like her struggle, and suffer.  I want to trust in her, and that our family will be able to help her find her path to a good lifeBut I am wracked with fears of her having things go so wrong as to be regrettable.


¹<small><font color="grey">
Tutoring is the obvious next step, but I have associated fear that this might lay foundations of resentment in her.<br>
Despite, you know, many many <i>many</i> examples to the contrary.
Medication has also occurred to me, but I am horrified at the idea of smothering her joyous spark.
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²<small><font color="grey">  
This is an allusion to feelings.  Just to be clear here, in this shared reality.
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=[[2019.10.26 Pomplamoose]]=
=[[2020.01.24 Why I Do This]]=
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https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0015/2602/products/POMP_SEASONTWO_COVER_0f01cb92-9361-4b3e-a894-f9cc53fb43eb_720x.jpg
A recent scientific journal discussing a possible [https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.018101 "Fundamental Law of Memory Recall"] is a rare piece of mathematical application to a neurobiological function. The formula of:


Been really enjoying a [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmLBSCiEoas mashup of Sweet Dreams and Seven Nation Army] by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomplamoose Pomplamoose].
<big>R=√3πM/2</big>
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It's a prediction for the average number of memory items recalled (R) out of M items in (human) memory.


=[[2019.10.15 How Fast?]]=
To have the experimentally-verified performance of human memory based on theoretical neuron function is, for me, reason to pause.  Partially for the sense of uneasiness I have with it being that easy or deterministic. But more for the reinforcement of the grave limitations of human memory.
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940 MB/s


That's spitting distance from 1 GB/s.
This article is purely about simple recall.  But it is also probably true that every time we remember something, we are actually re-writing those memories.  It makes for a worrisome loss of fidelity.


That's 10 times faster than Comcast at the Chestnut house - on a good day.
Coincidentally, I have had reason to do a lot of re-reading portions of this blog/wiki.  The mostly-stable artifice of what I manage to set into these writings have some very keenly-feel importance to me.  There is a lot of my experiences that I would have never been able to summon well any other way.  Even though - and this is a crucial discovery for me today - the sense I had when I was writing some of them was that they were just time-filling expressions near-apathy.  The way I was oblivious to the value of some of those moments in my face at that time is interesting.


That's 100 times faster than Comcast on a typical game night (using Skype with Dave for [https://nastidyne.com/index.php/Main_Page AIF]).
Of course, even more cherished are the times I did have big feelings - and I wrote them down as best I could. The vivid detail that they bring back to life is... priceless.


For 2/3 the price.<br>
FUCK Comcast.<br>
Now I just wish that fibre-optic connection was available at the Chestnut house.
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=[[2019.10.03 Old Wounds]]=
=[[2020.01.20 D&D Family Time]]=
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In the midst of all the ongoing processing, the recent resurgence of a bitter pessimism about my fate with respect to intimate partners is the most pernicious problem. It has a barb of ego, in that I get to "be right" about how I will always ultimately be betrayed and abandoned. I suppose that makes it particularly hard to assuage with my general philosophical tactic of assuming that I will be brave - and offer up my heart to the pain - because living life to the fullest is worth it. Ego tends to reinforce ego.
https://www.lcps.org/cms/lib/VA01000195/Centricity/Domain/29342/DnD%20logo.jpg
 
It was different before, though.  Because it wasn't that I was left, but instead recognized how they were never really with me to start with.  Because they were with a projection of me, because I was difficult to actually know.  But S knew me.  More than that, I worked really hard and became eminently knowable.  And she un-chose me.
 
Even as I metabolize the un-choosing, and I slowly assuage the childishness of my old pessimism, how do I deny the truth at the root of the pessimism?  How do I let myself feel trust at being chosen ever again?


Maybe I just fucking don'tAnd I'll just have to live with it.
Simon has been playing Dungeons & Dragons for about a year now, and it has been a hoot to watch him flourish in these imaginary realmsBut now we have been playing a D&D adventure to include Violet, since we have frequent bouts of Dad+kids time and there's only so many walks through the neighbourhood they're willing to take me on.
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The shining hope has been to give them a setting that rewards cooperation, while letting Violet transition her massive imaginative play into a more interactive mode.  Plus the bonus of there being reading, writing, and math for her to practice.  All while getting to share some exciting times together and bond.


=[[2019.09.15 Emotional Amelioration]]=
The reality has been a bit more challenging. Simon gets impatient and wants to do everything, which drives Violet to slump back and let the game happen to the point where her mind wanders off into her own imagination.  We're still managing to have fun, and Violet is gamely tackling the math thrown her way, but attention span is definitely limited.
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When it comes to feeling better, it's hard to beat building a giant LEGO™ Star Wars space ship set with your kids, then catching up on the feature-length Steven Universe goodness.


https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/25/Tantive_IV.JPG  
Additionally, Simon's strong feelings still overwhelm him regularly. While they are disruptive, it is definitely an opportunity to engage him about them, away from the shaming exposure of his usual gaming cohortAnd as long as we manage to keep things fun, I think Violet seeing her has-it-easy older brother working on things will help her feel emboldened to work on her things too.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/85/StevenUniverseTheMoviePoster.png


What I forgot about was the way in which role-playing opens a window into your fellow players which allows a kind of understanding not normally accessible through usual social interaction.  I really love being able to keep a relevant insight into who my kids are, and I hope I can leverage this for a long, long time.
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=[[2019.09.13 Worst Oldness Ever]]=
=[[2020.01.12 Thoughts On Iran]]=
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Back through most of my 20's, I did not celebrate my birthday outwardlyNobody around me really knew when it was, or were sufficiently ill-equipped socially to remember it.  It was a day of reflection for me; a private ceremony of selfish narcissism and a secret grudge against the world for my sense of otherness and not belonging.
Just to state up front, I recognize that Iran's leadership is arguably one of the worst actors in the globe with respect to supporting acts of terror and violenceBut a people is not it's leadership, especially in a mostly-totalitarian theocratic regime.


That changed in my 30's with the advent of pernicious social media reminding everyone, friends who care about that shit, and starting a relationship with someone who is dedicated to making every occasion specialIt was awkward and at odds with some of my fundamental drives, but loving and kindAnd it helped me recognize my growing role in the world - no longer a selfish youth, but a sharing and supportive adult.
In the wake of the seemingly-arbitrary US missile attack to kill Qasem Soleimani, there was worry that the main effect would be to galvanize the progressive segments of Iranians into supporting nationalistic anti-US jingoism.  And indeed they did swear retaliationBut that retaliation came in the form of 6 hours of advance warning, and resulted in no loss of human lifeIt struck me as being incredibly, well, civilized.


That's why today was so hard.
Then there's the horrific shooting down of a civilian airliner with anti-aircraft missiles, killing a bunch of CanadiansIf this had happened in another country, (like, for example, Russia) it would have been denial layered with no response at all.  Instead, after a small delay, Iran admitted to the act and apologizedEven though it may make them lose some internal political coherency, and give fodder to their enemies propaganda machinesBut it is the act of a coherent member of the world stage, and I think it will serve them better in the long run.
 
Being divorced against your will is hard enoughAnd reaching out in the world to try to grasp some new connections, only to have them reject you, is painful in a way I'm struggling to endure.  Then the recent revelation that I will be losing my full-time access to my kids has been almost too much to stand; it feels like my footing in the world is lost.  It all sucks so very much.
 
But then today... today...<br>
Today was the world's way of making sure I felt all of that at the same timeEvery fragment of pain had a renewed trigger; every aspect of loss was flaunted before me to not have; every insult was re-uttered by realitySo many of the fundamental ways in which I have belonged were burned before me today.
 
And it's not over yet.  The parade of horrible feelings gets to continue for another couple daysTomorrow is the wreckage of more hopeful plans and the gasping of fresh holes in my soul.  Then the day after tomorrow is my 12<sup>th</sup> wedding anniversary, by which point I'm probably going to be contemplating seppuku with a rusty spoon.
 
Fuck this shit.  How much more processing do I really need to do?  I know the plan is to allow myself to feel all this, so that I can integrate it in a mindful way and move on while feeling complete.  Which sounds super fucking enlightened.  But in this moment, I definitely see the allure of temporary chemical oblivion and denial.
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=[[2019.09.10 Oh, Wow]]=
=[[2020.01.03 "I Know"]]=
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I've discovered a new well of pain to fall into.
Went and re-watched <i>STAR WARS: Rise Of Skywalker</i> with Simon, this time in IMAX 3D, and saw a bunch of new detail with this watching.  But one piece of dialogue stands out.


Gosh, I'm special17 years to come full circle[[2002.11.26_Emotional_Meaning]]
Way back in <i>EMPIRE</i>, Han Solo famously responded to Leia's "I love you" with "I know"A bit of dialogue that was later reversed in <i>JEDI</i>This tidbit makes me think that it was being directly referenced in <i>RISE</i> when Han Solo appears to his son, Ben Solo.
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=[[2019.09.04 Iconography]]=
The moment when Ben says, very uncharacterstically, "Dad..."<br>
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Then there is a pause and Han Solo says, "I know."
I'm wrestling with whether my avatar of extreme friend-zone-ness is Jorah Mormont (noble and vulnerable) or Snape (dignified and accepting).


Either way, I'm a fucktard.
I like to think this means that, in the idiom of their family, Ben told his dad that he loved him.
 
Hi Bubbles.
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=[[2019.08.26 Litany Against Fear]]=
=[[2020.01.03 Hello 2020]]=
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I must not fear.<br>
Fear is the mind-killer.<br>
Fear is the little death that brings total obliteration.<br>
I will face my fear.<br>
I will permit it to pass over and through me.<br>
And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.<br>
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.<br>
Only I will remain.
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<pre>Frank Herbert - Dune</pre>
 
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=[[2019.08.24 Not Ready Yet]]=
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There are stories.  OH so many stories.<br>
I've already made the pun to Simon about 2020 being a year of improved vision; he was not impressed.
And there are thoughts.  Wallowy have-to-extrude-them thoughts that should not be left to foul up my mind.<br>
Plus there are plans.  Yes, plans for how the thoughts and the stories should all be rolled out and expelled and dealt with and celebrated for the healing power of sharing and remembering.
 
Except I'm not ready yet.


I'm not exactly sure what I'm waiting for, but there's something in the mix about letting them marinate a bit morePlus unresolved issues of privacy that I have yet to give up on.
But it is certainly true that after the Great Sorting of feelings and directions in 2019, the holiday season has allowed for a great deal of peace to be unfolded over most of my lifeAnd nurtured in that space there are many plans unfolding, with a certain sense of optimism.


So, yeah.  Disregard this whole entry.  It's just me venting by virtue of the action of writing more than by the substance.<br>
Life is good.
Sorry.
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=[[2019.08.07 7 Years Of Violet]]=
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http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/Violet%207.png
The localized distillation of pure imagination and concentrated joy that is my daughter had her birthday today.  To mark the occasion, she had her first sleepover with one of her oldest friends, Ruth.  An uninterrupted stream of dragons and faeries and warrior princesses and other magical beings have delighted our home (and a local restaurant) in giggling playful forms.
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=[[2019.07.29 Hiding]]=
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The simple truth is that there is too much going on, and to do my usual processing here in the open is inappropriate.  So, instead, I hide.
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I hide my thoughts.  The details of which should not be shared.
I hide my feelings.  They are complicated and improbable, but even worse than their humiliating privacy are their grisly impossibility.
I hide my dreams.  Every night, after too little real sleep, I succumb to as many nightmares as I can stand.  They impress with their simplicity and their subtle reach.
I hide my hopes.  They are too fragile for daylight of any kind.
I hide my fears.  Like any proper shadow government.
I hide my self.  Because I can't bear to witness what's left.
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=[[2019.07.22 Kintsugi]]=
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The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintsugi philosophy] is my hopeful path.
The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintsugi_(album) album] speaks to my lived experience.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/94/Death_Cab_For_Cutie_-_Kintsugi.jpg
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=[[2019.07.15 Today Was A Day]]=
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It was a thick day.  Burdened by heavy draping obligations and smothered by impossibility.
It was a funny day.  Paradoxical in the dance of struggling with what is wanted versus what comes easily.  Ironic in seeming to fail at my strengths, but gifted with success at my weaknesses.
It's a long day.  Objectively starting way too fucking early, and dragging on way too long.  But more than that, the individual moments stretching out ponderously.  And probably memorably lingering for a great deal longer.
It was a day to be alive.  Life is good, complications and all.
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=[[2019.07.14 Castles at Jewel Lake]]=
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[https://photos.app.goo.gl/2bRwu4BfH3MAz9ey7 Castles at Jewel Lake 2019]
S made a related comment about what happened as 'a lot of water under the bridge'.  That feels like it applies pretty broadly.  Facets of that might follow...
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=[[2019.07.03 10 Years Of Simon]]=
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http://www.kvankii.com/gallery/Simon10.png
Quintessential Simon birthday: bike ride on a well-equipped mountain bike, plus a couple big LEGO sets.  Topped off with ice cream cake, and a pending D&D party with his crew.
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=[[2019.06.27 What Can I Do?]]=
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<p align="right">Maybe nothing.</p>
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=[[2019.06.23 OCHOCO 2019]]=
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[https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipMGOLEwKSv-sFTw8W0TW8JIGmpGa7K5omCFog8Q4OVfWFPpAZfajIrF-hxcBGpQHg?key=MmJVenRlWUM2V2ZYZkU5MXBxNVh2VktuNHBMRm13 #OCHOCO2019]<br>
[link to a Google drive full of images]
This year was a father-son bonding odyssey, and gave us grand adventuring spectacle as a background for having lots of time and space to contemplate existence.  Laughing and joking for hours and miles really does help build souls, even while the cold and smoke and pests and injuries build character.  Simon had an OK time too.
Nobody managed to quite capture decent images of the horses we came across running free through the woods of Ochoco Forest, but they felt very emblematic.  Were they wild?  Were they just pretending to be wild for a little while?  Something like that.
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=[[2019.06.19 So Many Feelings]]=
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More Amygdala talk?  Maybe sort of.  Except cryptic in a different way.
# <big>Gasping Joy</big> - From the soul nourishing magic carpet rides down Johnny Royale.
# <big>Warm Completeness</big> - From the Father's Day time spent with family at the Pride Parade.
# <big>Tickling Exhilaration</big> - From pending adventures and planned work project attempts.
# <big>Shivering Inadequacy</big> - From facing the family changes that cannot be undone.
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=[[2019.06.11 I Feel Mad]]=
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http://kvankii.com/gallery/IMG_2071-web.jpg
Violet has demonstrated a precocious ability for representational artwork, drawing things realistically.  But even her symbolic artwork shows a clarity that can be striking.  This recent one really is great.
I hear you Violet.  By the way, I stole this, and I'm keeping it forever.
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=[[2019.06.10 Regarding My Amygdala]]=
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Being a human is often surprisingly difficult for no other reason than we experience the world largely through a filter of emotional response. 
Senses do their level best to report what's going on.  Similarly, our rational minds make the best of what they can manage to lift with their few dedicated neurons.  But it's all really a bit much, so evolution made the pragmatic venture into applied heuristics by not needing us to have either a clear sensing of things nor a complete understanding of anything for us to get some sort of directional suggestion.  These suggested interpretations of reality, let's call them "feelings", are legitimate members of reality themselves by virtue of a Descartesian flourish - <i>I think I feel, therefore I'm sad</i>.
One of the lessons I've learned reasonably well is to not to try to deny feelings.  That just makes them angry, and cruelly manipulative.  But even as we acknowledge our feelings, that doesn't mean that we need to let them control us.  Having a thought or a feeling is not what we're responsible for, those are just things that happen.  What we are responsible for is our actions, so what we do with those thoughts and feelings is what really matters.
Today my feelings conspired to make it a multiply-difficult day for me.  Vaguely negative feelings about my career started early on, which set the stage for my vulnerable and hurt feelings about the confusion that is my marriage-like relationship with S.  Finally this was capped off with feelings summoned by a sad song on my commute home that reminded me that I still miss my dad.
Sometimes the only thing we can do with our sad feelings is to have a good cry.
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Disclaimer: not everything posted on this Main Page is kept in the Rants section.  But continuing to scroll won't bring them back.  Sorry.
Some people need to find the edges of things, instead of assuming what they might be.
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Revision as of 16:58, 15 February 2020

claytoncastle.com • T R A N S I T I O N



2020.02.14 Violet Valentine Art

IMG_3628-violetart-web.jpg

I love how this piece conveys a sense of being a little kid in the woods. The arch of the trees bending toward the distance and crowding out the sky. She is so brilliant it hurts my heart.


2020.02.11 Head Down, Holding On

There is nothing wrong.
Worry about losing what is right chases me through the maze of my thoughts and feelings.

I am loved.
My ability to access the people and activities that bring me joy is harshly circumscribed.

The future looks good.
Any sense of control or choice slips through my fingers with every grasp.

It's not that anything bad has happened, or is happening.
It's that I have mostly doubts instead of ready coping mechanisms.


2020.02.03 My Fears About Violet

I think know how to parent Simon. His talents and pitfalls are very much in line with my own, and I am confident in our ability to navigate them together so that he will be able to succeed in life.

But I am unsure about how to be the best parent for Violet. Her talents are alien to me, and the strengths I leveraged to figure out my life are not her strengths. I see others like her struggle, and suffer. I want to trust in her, and that our family will be able to help her find her path to a good life. But I am wracked with fears of her having things go so wrong as to be regrettable.

Tutoring is the obvious next step, but I have associated fear that this might lay foundations of resentment in her.
Medication has also occurred to me, but I am horrified at the idea of smothering her joyous spark.


2020.01.24 Why I Do This

A recent scientific journal discussing a possible "Fundamental Law of Memory Recall" is a rare piece of mathematical application to a neurobiological function. The formula of:

R=√3πM/2

It's a prediction for the average number of memory items recalled (R) out of M items in (human) memory.

To have the experimentally-verified performance of human memory based on theoretical neuron function is, for me, reason to pause. Partially for the sense of uneasiness I have with it being that easy or deterministic. But more for the reinforcement of the grave limitations of human memory.

This article is purely about simple recall. But it is also probably true that every time we remember something, we are actually re-writing those memories. It makes for a worrisome loss of fidelity.

Coincidentally, I have had reason to do a lot of re-reading portions of this blog/wiki. The mostly-stable artifice of what I manage to set into these writings have some very keenly-feel importance to me. There is a lot of my experiences that I would have never been able to summon well any other way. Even though - and this is a crucial discovery for me today - the sense I had when I was writing some of them was that they were just time-filling expressions near-apathy. The way I was oblivious to the value of some of those moments in my face at that time is interesting.

Of course, even more cherished are the times I did have big feelings - and I wrote them down as best I could. The vivid detail that they bring back to life is... priceless.


2020.01.20 D&D Family Time

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Simon has been playing Dungeons & Dragons for about a year now, and it has been a hoot to watch him flourish in these imaginary realms. But now we have been playing a D&D adventure to include Violet, since we have frequent bouts of Dad+kids time and there's only so many walks through the neighbourhood they're willing to take me on.

The shining hope has been to give them a setting that rewards cooperation, while letting Violet transition her massive imaginative play into a more interactive mode. Plus the bonus of there being reading, writing, and math for her to practice. All while getting to share some exciting times together and bond.

The reality has been a bit more challenging. Simon gets impatient and wants to do everything, which drives Violet to slump back and let the game happen to the point where her mind wanders off into her own imagination. We're still managing to have fun, and Violet is gamely tackling the math thrown her way, but attention span is definitely limited.

Additionally, Simon's strong feelings still overwhelm him regularly. While they are disruptive, it is definitely an opportunity to engage him about them, away from the shaming exposure of his usual gaming cohort. And as long as we manage to keep things fun, I think Violet seeing her has-it-easy older brother working on things will help her feel emboldened to work on her things too.

What I forgot about was the way in which role-playing opens a window into your fellow players which allows a kind of understanding not normally accessible through usual social interaction. I really love being able to keep a relevant insight into who my kids are, and I hope I can leverage this for a long, long time.


2020.01.12 Thoughts On Iran

Just to state up front, I recognize that Iran's leadership is arguably one of the worst actors in the globe with respect to supporting acts of terror and violence. But a people is not it's leadership, especially in a mostly-totalitarian theocratic regime.

In the wake of the seemingly-arbitrary US missile attack to kill Qasem Soleimani, there was worry that the main effect would be to galvanize the progressive segments of Iranians into supporting nationalistic anti-US jingoism. And indeed they did swear retaliation. But that retaliation came in the form of 6 hours of advance warning, and resulted in no loss of human life. It struck me as being incredibly, well, civilized.

Then there's the horrific shooting down of a civilian airliner with anti-aircraft missiles, killing a bunch of Canadians. If this had happened in another country, (like, for example, Russia) it would have been denial layered with no response at all. Instead, after a small delay, Iran admitted to the act and apologized. Even though it may make them lose some internal political coherency, and give fodder to their enemies propaganda machines. But it is the act of a coherent member of the world stage, and I think it will serve them better in the long run.


2020.01.03 "I Know"

Went and re-watched STAR WARS: Rise Of Skywalker with Simon, this time in IMAX 3D, and saw a bunch of new detail with this watching. But one piece of dialogue stands out.

Way back in EMPIRE, Han Solo famously responded to Leia's "I love you" with "I know". A bit of dialogue that was later reversed in JEDI. This tidbit makes me think that it was being directly referenced in RISE when Han Solo appears to his son, Ben Solo.

The moment when Ben says, very uncharacterstically, "Dad..."
Then there is a pause and Han Solo says, "I know."

I like to think this means that, in the idiom of their family, Ben told his dad that he loved him.


2020.01.03 Hello 2020

I've already made the pun to Simon about 2020 being a year of improved vision; he was not impressed.

But it is certainly true that after the Great Sorting of feelings and directions in 2019, the holiday season has allowed for a great deal of peace to be unfolded over most of my life. And nurtured in that space there are many plans unfolding, with a certain sense of optimism.

Life is good.











































































































Some people need to find the edges of things, instead of assuming what they might be.