Friday, January 05, 2024

The Month That Was - December 2023

Nostalgia: remember when the changing of the year meant you would mis-date the checks you wrote for a couple of weeks?  Now our electronic payments, and even our clocks, know what the day and time is with us telling them, like we're billionaires or something.  

I still wear a lovely mechanical watch that requires winding and resetting the date for months that are shorter than 30 days and it loses about 30 seconds a day so I have to adjust the time every couple of days.  I know it's off because of all those fancy-schmancy electronics.  A TAG Heuer Carrera if you must know. It was a very expensive gift from a very dear friend.  I have been tempted to get a Google watch for activity tracking and such but I would only wear it on my right wrist, the TAG will always retain its place of honor.


Years increment, time passes, memories recede.  Some things should endure.


[Rant] Holiday Ruminations 

[TV] Toob Notes: The Smart and The Stupid

[Good Links] Year-End List


[Rant] Holiday Ruminations

Like many, I struggle with the holidays.  Not with getting depressed, as many do.  It's that my feelings and approach to them just don't seem to mesh with most other people's. I suspect a great deal of this has to do with not having a family in any conventional sense of the word.  Oh, yes, I was in a family growing up and I still have a brother today, but my family was not a family in the sense of deeply shared familial bonds.  For the most part, my family members didn't really want much to do with each other.

Every holiday has a larger, more noble purpose, typically remembrance of some event or some virtue.  We are supposed to pause and pay respect to something we presumably neglect and leave unappreciated the rest of the year.  Now, for those of you who read regularly, I hope you've picked up on my dedication to gratitude.  That makes me think of the holidays as superfluous.  We should, and I try to, appreciate these things throughout the year.  


But that's me being smug, isn't it?  Or perhaps it's just me being a loner.  Maybe for most people the days off or work and/or school are just the thing they need to re-ignite their gratitude.  Or maybe the key thing is that time off is synchronized with their friends and family, although as we know extended time with family is not necessarily healthy.


Whatever the case, I remain a bit of a fish out of water during the holidays.  For a few decades I spent both Thanksgiving and Christmas alone. Many people react to that with pity, but I was completely fine with it, and even preferred it in a certain sense.  There were ten years or so where I happily spent every Thanksgiving in Las Vegas gambling on football games and hiking in the nearby National Parks.  (In this I was ahead of the fashion.  Vegas used to be empty on Thanksgiving, now it's packed.)  Christmas was a point of calmness -- I was not running around buying last minute gifts, or putting on the mask of familial bliss or answering intrusive questions about my life.  Honestly, I didn't feel like I was missing anything.


Things are different now, and I am working to adapt.  I have been adopted by the S.O.'s family which includes a pile of children and grandchildren and a number of Christmas traditions. The first change was in gift giving.  My broad plan when needed has been to give one gift of either known usefulness or a gift certificate.  The new family takes the opposite tack of many small gifts; enough to fill up the space under a tree and a stocking hung on the wall.  This along with a full-on, multi-course, homemade Thanksgiving dinner and a traditional go out for a movie on Christmas afternoon, takes me well outside the realm of familiarity for me.


But there are benefits of being with loved ones, essentially having more opportunities to do the most important thing there is, which is enhancing the lives of the people you care about.  And the grandkids are a blast -- they basically use me as a combination jungle jim and punching bag. So I will take it, and adapt, and improve at doing the Holidays in a new way.


I don't want to give the impression that I miss my old Holiday freedom or that I have suddenly come to Jesus on the meaning of the Holidays.  It's just different.  There will be plenty of times in the future when I am frustrated with obligations and long for my former freedom.  There will also be plenty of times where I will be delighted to be watching some inane Christmas movie for the fifteenth time because it is the first for one of the grandkids.


In the larger picture, perhaps the real blessing is that I am still changing and learning and appreciative of what I have.  And, so, still living a rich life.


Related: Tanner Greer makes the compelling case for the greatness of Christmas.

[TV] Toob Notes: The Smart and The Stupid

I've been keeping up with two shows that have some similarities, and similar problems. 

  • Fargo is a new season of the highly stylized series that grew out of the successful movie of some years ago.  As typical, it is set in the frozen north of Minnesota and North Dakota.  Conflicting groups of evil people, motivated by either greed or pride or some other deadly sin, mesh into a web of destructive behavior with a clever protagonist just trying to survive having been fated into the shenanigans.

  • Fall of the House of Usher is loosely (very, very loosely) based on Edgar Allen Poe writings.  The Usher's in this case are a family whose success came about from the discovery and sale of an opioid that has caused a horrible epidemic, a rather blatant ripped-from-the-headlines effort.  And now the family is apparently suffering for it in truly gruesome ways.


Both of these shows are very skillfully done. They maintain a tricky tonal balance which says a lot, tone being a key dark art in film and video.  The cinematography is compelling.  Pacing is solid.  The acting is excellent.  Plots are coherent.  Just overall great quality productions.  


The problem is both these shows indulge in episodes of infantile moralizing.  In …Usher there is constant scolding about how if instead of profiting from the opioid, they just spend money on charitable causes they could solve the world's problems, and the only survivor of the horrors ends up doing good by starting a charity.  These are the beliefs of a child.


In Fargo, we are presented with a hyperbolic strawman of a libertarian as one of the bad guys.  Then, in the middle of this sharp and entertaining show, he gets into an extended exchange with another antagonist and takes a righteous beatdown from arguments worthy of a Reddit comments section warrior.  Honestly, it's adolescent level snark.


It's jarring, in both these cases. You are cruising along in these series, enjoying the quality and appreciating the thoughtfulness and obvious talent behind them, then suddenly you are hit with a dose of inanity.  It really just makes you second guess your affinity for the show. I guess it just goes to verify the well-known notion that politics makes you stupid.


In contrast, the other show I've been binging accepts its own stupidity.  That's harsh.  I should say, it has no ambitions other than to entertain its target audience.   Season two of Reacher is what it is and that's all that it is. 


Reacher is pure formula. A stoic, loner hero connects with some companions from his past the exact revenge for the murder of their friends.  Two seconds thought will rip any plot developments to shreds.  So you don't give it any thought.  It's fantasy.  It's a superhero film without the cape.  You enjoy the action and camaraderie and knowing that the good guys will win in the end.  Same reason millions have read the Reacher books.


I couldn't take a steady diet of this, but it's nice to have a simple and purely unpretentious show like this now and then.


[Good Links] Year-End Lists

Nothing too important but if you're passing the time scrolling, you'll find some interesting stuff here.