
When I do my walkabouts I tend to notice the small things around me. The world is really built upon such things, all connected like the random scattering of straw upon the earth; forming unseen patterns we sense but cannot see. I walk past the toads congregating under the street lights, they having learned the behaviors of winged insects and their compulsive relationship with light. The toads do not think this through as we might; the light attracts the insects therefore we should go to where the light is. That would be too indirect and reasoned. Rather I suspect the toads move to where the insects are and are not at all concerned with causality. Thus they have a different stimulus, a sensory code written long ago in the web of life on earth. Without the light the insects move wherever they will, and the toads will find another spot, and these words will change as well. I wonder about that story and if it will speak to who we are and of our place out there in a sea of darkness on the winds of light.






was and is marketed in small metal tins which you opened with an attached key. Inside would be the actual SPAM surround by a gelatinous substance, giving it the appearance of a mystery organ extracted from a large square animal.
a number of years and someone thought to apply this concept to furniture in the form of beanbag chairs. A purple one is pictured here, looking much like the mutant concord grape from which it evolved. These things were excruciatingly popular back in the 60’s and 70’s, when young folks found it necessary to “crash at your pad man, just till I get my head on straight”. Sure dude, just don’t hurl on my beanbag – that is like real Corinthian leather.
mean you can follow along letter by letter and end up in a place bereft of knowledge, like a ferret gazing at an electron microscope. Perhaps you think that spelunking is a kind of a drinking game one undertakes in Lichtenstein, traveling from pub to pub until you are found under a flickering street lamp, curled into a fetal position and reeking of swill. You’ve been spelunked fer sure. But no, spelunking is reserved for those brave few who explore caves, deep underground in the cold and dark with hundreds of tons of earth and rock above you. Those of you who have seen the movie “Descent” will understand why this is a bad idea.