Lucid Dreams and Saturn Skies The Life and Writing of Andrew Kincaid

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My List. Bucket List, That Is!

This.  But in list form.

This. But in list form.

This weekend, I turned twenty-five.  A few days before that, I was Freshly Pressed.  While one has no relation to the other, I find both fairly astonishing.   I never expected to be Freshly Pressed, while I fully expected to turn twenty-five barring something unfortunate.  As to why they are fairly astonishing, they are that way for different reasons.  Nobody expects to be Freshly Pressed: it just kind of happens.  It’s not something you can really make a goal of, because you can’t really control it–that’s up to the editors here on WordPress.  As for why turning twenty-five is fairly astonishing, well, think about it.  Being a male, my lifespan will be, on average, about seventy-four years.  So, I am about a third of the way through that now.

If that’s a bit of a gloomy way to look at things, well, it is.  That could partially explain the funk I’ve been in for awhile now, although the real reason behind that is not so much age but rather dissatisfaction.  I tend to hold myself to ridiculous standards, and according to those I’m a twenty-five year old screw up.  After all, I barely work part time, I’m single, and I live in my mom’s basement.  You have to understand that by now according to these expectati0ns for myself that I picked up from Lord knows where that I would have a Career (whatever it may be),  be married, and be living on my own by now.  However, the Universe does what it does and for a variety of reasons (including that giant economic meltdown four years ago) none of that has come to pass.

Despite all that, I’m happy.  I wasn’t for awhile, but now I am.  Sure I spent some time wallowing in self pity (I’ve done that a lot over the years, believe me), but one day last week it all just kinda clicked into place.  It was nothing I didn’t already know of course, but every now and then we need a reminder.  Mostly, I realized that continually beating myself up over expectations is silly.  They’re things in my own head, not based on any kind of reality.  I was drowning myself with shoulda, coulda, and woulda’s and thus neglecting the life I have right now. Are there a lot of things that I’d like to accomplish?  Yes.  Sitting around and whining about my life and being all woe is me about things I can’t control doesn’t help accomplish them though!

So, I’m in the process of making some rather large changes.  First, I am on a dating hiatus.  I have spent so much effort looking for that someone special that I am now quite literally burnt out and sick of the whole process.  It’s not like I’m completely bitter and hate women or anything; guys who are like that are just childish, and so are their counterparts among women.  Rather, I realized two things: what I was doing was making me unhappy, and that forming a romantic relationship is largely out of my hands.  If something is voluntary, making you unhappy, and not netting the desired results, why keep doing it?   Dating is quite literally a crap shoot, and although you can slightly weight the dice in your favor (by not being a complete slob, for one),  the results are still basically up to chance (i.e. whether you find a person in the right time in their life to date, whether they meet your needs/desires, whether you meet theirs, etc).

Instead, I am devoting myself to myself.  Now, this does not mean I’m not some completely self centered bastard who is out to screw people over every chance he gets. Rather the opposite, actually. This is a program of self improvement.  I have recommitted myself to the Way, and am practicing better, being more mindful of myself and others.  Second, I am doing everything I can to advance my career (and not griping nearly as much about it!) in the teaching field.  Currently, I’m  halfway through my course work to get my Alternative Resident Educator License.  Third, I am committing myself to my personal projects, such as this blog and my novels.  I have two novels in the works, although the fantasy novel has taken priority, and of course my blog.  To this end, I make a daily list of goals such as “outline two scenes for Calafel Cycle 1″. As for the blog, I’ve begun a new series called “Visions of Hell” about Hell in various mythologies from around the world.  So check out Visions of Hell #1–The Nine Circles of Dante’s Inferno this Thursday!

However, at the same time I am not killing myself for my hobbies.  If something doesn’t get done because the spirit is willing but the flesh is week, I’m no longer going to beat myself up for it.  That illustrates the fourth part, a part of my practice of the Way–being gentler with myself.  That isn’t to say that I don’t have high expectations, but rather it is to say that I’m becoming more mindful of my inner dialogue.  Too often we are way too hard on ourselves, and it is to our detriment.  I know that I personally wouldn’t speak to a dog the way that I sometimes talk to myself in my own head.  Being gentle with oneself is a process of recognizing these negative thought patterns, gently rebuking and refuting them, and replacing them with healthier ones.  Instead of “well that was stupid.  You’re a complete idiot for having done [insert thing here]“, think “No no, that wasn’t stupid.  People make mistakes.  That certainly was silly though, and I should be a bit more mindful in the future”.  And then, this is important, laugh at yourself.  It helps a lot to be able to laugh at yourself, so long as you know when to be serious and when not to be!

A journal--like a therapist, but cheaper!

A journal–like a therapist, but cheaper!

The final point gets us to the titular Bucket List.  This is in conjunction with my new habit of keeping a daily journal  I use the bucket list to mark my place in the journal, so I get a chance to look at it every day, review it, and add to it as I think of things   As for the Bucket List, I really have no idea if there are “rules” to making one and frankly don’t care if there are.  It is a grab bag of random goals, some huge and some tiny.  I have everything from “learn to swim” to “Visit Easter Island” and I am adding more almost every day.  My thought was to put in small, attainable goals alongside the huge, long term goals.  So I can potentially begin checking off some of the smaller stuff in the short term.  For example, I wrote “Read Moby Dick” in there, and as we speak I’m on page fifty in said book.

Finally, and on a related note, I decided that I’m going to start going on mini-adventures on the weekends.  Being a substitute teacher, I have guaranteed weekends off, so might as well make the most of them!  Even if all I do is go to some random town and walk around its downtown a bit, or visit some shop I’ve never been to,  I want to visit new places within about a two hour radius of where I live.  There’s a lot in this area, so that’s not a tall order.  A fun trip doesn’t have to be huge and expensive.  It’s mostly just a matter of getting out, seeing new things, and meeting new people (the latter of which I do all the time during my work week, but still).  Now I do have bigger trips in mind, as I said, starting with one to Gettysburg at some point this summer.  But for now I’m going to content myself with getting in the habit of going out more weekends than not to go run around having random miniature adventures.  The one I had planned for last weekend got cancelled because I forgot my own birthday was Sunday (whoops!) but this weekend, my brother and I are going to see to that one.  We are going to visit Warther Carving Museum…I might put up a post about it (haven’t decided yet).

Call it a pre-New Years resolution.  So far, it is working because I am much happier.  Having a list of awesome things to look forward to and goals to reach is very helpful.  That which was vague before seems more concrete.  While I was skeptical before, now I would recommend everyone at least try to make a Bucket List!

How about you?  Do you have a Bucket List?  Care to share some entries if you do?

Centralia – A Modern Day Ghost Town

Centralia is a small town in Pennsylvania, where a coal fire burns unchecked underground.

A photograph from Centralia, where the coal fires are suspected to burn even now.

“ This was a world where no human could live, hotter than the planet Mercury, its atmosphere as poisonous as Saturn’s. At the heart of the fire, temperatures easily exceeded 1,000 degrees [Fahrenheit]. Lethal clouds of carbon monoxide and other gases swirled through the rock chambers.- David DeKok (1986)

What foul place is Mr. DeKok describing?  Tartarus?  Hell?  The underground of some alien world?

No.  He was describing a very real place, right here in the United States. A place by the name of Centralia, Pennsylvania.

A sleepy little town in rural Pennsylvania, not a lot happened in Centralia.  The residents were a hardworking bunch, many of whom worked in the anthracite coal mines that dotted the region.  Even now, and especially then, the coal industry was one of the biggest industries in the area.

Coal mines were so common and the coal so plentiful that tunnels snaked beneath parts of the town, and there were certainly veins of the black stuff under parts where the tunnels didn’t reach.

Nobody gave the matter much thought, and it was certainly not on anyone’s mind back in May of 1962, when local volunteer firefighters were ordered to clear out the town’s landfill.  The landfill was located in a strip mine pit near a cemetery towards the edge of town.  The firefighters burned the trash, as was their normal practice, but apparently the fire was not properly extinguished.  It smoldered in the pit, and eventually burned down into a vein of coal that lay untapped beneath.

And that, as they say, was that.

Some early attempts were made to fight the fire, but to no avail.  It burned on beneath the townspeople’s feet, and outside of their notice.  That is until a local gas station owner checked the fuel levels of his underground tanks with a stick.  It came up hot, so he lowered a thermometer down there.  It came back up reading 172 degrees Fahrenheit.

Then, in 1981, the situation became serious.  A sinkhole opened up at the feet of  Todd Domboski, 12, who was saved by the quick reaction of his cousin.  Had he fallen in, he would have perished in a cloud of steam and noxious gases.

After near tragedy, Congress acted by aiding residents with relocation efforts.  Most residents accepted, but some few stayed behind, despite stern warnings to leave.

Nowadays, Centralia is still a sleepy little town.  Not much happens on her empty streets.  Only about seven people still live in the town, and there is still a church standing which seems unaffected by the fire.  Nature has already begun to reclaim the land, with forests encroaching more and more every year.

Still, every now and then the Earth gives way, belching steam and gas, a not so subtle reminder of the fire that still burns below.

(Author’s Note – Been awhile since I wrote this post. Thought I’d come back and look it over once again.  And I’d like to add that parts of the movie Silent Hill were filmed in Centralia, an appropriate backdrop for a horror movie if there ever was one!)


Serpent Mound

A photo of the Serpent Mound

I took this photo from an observation deck overlooking the mound. It was surprising how much detail you could make out on the ground, but it definitely helps to be up high.

I’ve always wanted to travel, but unfortunately I haven’t had much chance to do so.  I love history and would like to see the places where great events occurred.  I also needed some time to myself, to be able to get away and be on my own for a little while.  So I decided to take a little trip this summer.  I decided to start my travels with baby steps.  I picked the Serpent Mound out by Peebles, OH for my trip.  It’s a quarter mile long Indian mound in the shape of, well, a serpent.  I’ve kind of always wanted to see it, although not as much as places like Stonehenge or the Pyramids.  Since the mound is a lot closer to home (and cheaper to get to) than the Pyramids or Stonehenge I figured why not?

So I requested a few days off, made my reservations, and away I went.  It was quite the drive to get there totaling about three and a half hours give or take.  I must say though the countryside in that area is beautiful!  It’s very hilly since the glaciers didn’t sweep down that far and grind everything down.  I got to my hotel and checked in a little after eleven on Monday.  I took a few minutes to stretch out (it’s amazing how sore simply driving can make you) and headed back out to find the Mound.  Every site I looked at about the place claimed the mound was in Peebles, OH but there’s a little hamlet right at the foot of the bluff leading up to the mound named Locust Grove.  I guess the place is too small to be mentioned.

Anyway, I arrived at the Mound around noon.  I actually didn’t see the feature when I first got there.  I was walking up towards the observation tower thinking the mound must be further on but it turned out it was right there in front of me.  Shows how much I pay attention.  I admit at first I was underwhelmed.  I thought “huh…so this is what I drove three hours to see.”  I walked around the mound for awhile and went to the museum (a tiny hole in the wall place) and afterward decided to hike a bit.  The trails down there weren’t too bad in that they were pretty easy to navigate.  They were just really muddy and grown over in places.  And the bugs…oy the bugs!  Gnats were freaking everywhere and I had a constant cloud hovering over my head.  The constant buzzing was driving me nuts!

Oh..and I saw an Ent at Shawnee

The same thing happened later when I went to Shawnee State Forest to hike a bit.  There were huge swarms of gnats and mosquitoes and some humongous as yet identified fly (I’m thinking it was a blowfly).  I had this constant chorus of buzzing the entire time I walked, occasionally punctuated by something huge flying by my head.  I have a very mild bee phobia.  It came from seeing tons of bumblebees in the yard growing up.  I thought they were flying eyeballs and they always chased me around the yard (or so I thought).  It got so bad I wouldn’t go outside if I saw one and I would run if one flew by me.  I could see bees on TV or in a book and be fine but seeing one up close and hearing the buzzing set it off.

I have it under pretty good control and they don’t really bother me much anymore.  I can sit outside and with them flying all over the place and it doesn’t bother me that much.  But hearing all this buzzing in my ears constantly for hours brought it back on.  I began to get anxious out on the trail in Shawnee and that combined with the fact I’m an out of shape nerd prompted me to turn around and head back the way I’d come.  I had hiked the better part of the trail but wasn’t sure where it was going to come out, so going back was a good decision.  Still I enjoyed the hike mostly in spite of the constant annoyance of the bugs.  It is a beautiful place down there and maybe if I ever get the urge to camp I’ll go back down there armed with a LOT more bug spray than I had.

The mound sits atop a big bluff overlooking Brush Creek.  You can see for miles from up there.  The curves of the serpent correspond to different astronomical alignments (summer/winter solstice, rise and fall of the moon, etc).  The mound itself is thought to correspond to the astrological sign Draco.  It is thought that the Serpent Mound is sort of the hub of a wheel of earth works scattered around the area, each one corresponding to a sign of the zodiac.  It’s plausible, but then how do we know the Indians viewed the zodiac like we do?  After all they left no records (they couldn’t write).  No artifacts or bodies were found in the Serpent Mound itself, but they were found around the area in other mounds.  Nobody is quite sure who built the Serpent.  It’s thought the Adena did it (based upon carbon dating of charcoal fragments found on the site) but nobody is positive.  To me that is the appeal of the site.  It is a mystery.

There is this huge feature on a prominent bluff in southwest Ohio, which is one of the longest settled and most populous states in the country, and nobody can figure out why exactly it is there.  Also, it’s a sacred site.  Think about it.  The natives at the time didn’t have writing, or the wheel, or bulldozers or any modern tools.  Yet they transported this vast amount of material up this bluff by hand, coordinated the building efforts, and managed to make everything align perfectly with astronomical alignments.  The amount of effort and ingenuity put into the place is astounding.  Yet no one knows why they did it.  Obviously the site was important to them but no one now knows why.  Realizing all of this made me appreciate the place more.  I went back there the second day of my trip and spent another couple of hours just contemplating the site.

I saw a young woman up on the observation tower when I was on my way back to my car to refill my water bottle.  When I came back she was gone.  I went up the tower and meditated a bit, then decided to walk the serpent again before I left.  I saw the woman again sitting on a blanket in the shade near one of the scenic overlooks.  Being subtle as an elephant in a minefield I startled her when I passed by.  After a bit we got to talking some and it turned out she’d been meditating as well.  We talked about meditation, ancient sites, astronomical alignments and  all of that kind of stuff.  I never did get her name.  It was funny though because she’d parked beside me out in the lot.

Anyway, I left and decided to make one last stop before heading home.  There was a little fossil and mineral shop at the foot of the hill leading up to the mound.  I caught the guy as he was about to leave to do some field work but he was nice en0ugh to let me have a look around.  I bought a little trilobite fossil both as a memento and as thanks for the guy taking time out of his schedule to let me have a look.  It is a beautiful little fossil..the detail is exquisite.  After that I left and headed home.

All and all it was a fun trip.  Nothing terribly exciting but it was nice to get away for awhile.  Now its back to the routine I guess.  I’d like to go somewhere next summer.  Maybe I’ll branch out a bit further and head out to Gettysburg.  Always wanted to see it, so maybe I will.  That’s all I have for today.

5 Places To I Want to See Before I Die

A moai head

An example of the famous moai heads. There’s more to the structure buried underground.

1) Easter Island

Known to the natives as Rapa Nui (which means Navel of the World) this sixty square mile scrap of land lies two thousand miles or so from anything.  This place has always fascinated me, mostly due to the fact that people could find the place, let alone build a civilization there.  The people of Rapa Nui managed to build a civilization that lasted something like five hundred years before they destroyed themselves.  The island used to be covered in forests, but now it looks like a grassy field studded with huge rock monoliths.  Yes, I obviously want to see the stone heads of Easter Island, the moai.  These were largely responsible for the island’s destruction, as it is thought the competition between tribes to build larger and larger moai lead to the depletion of the island’s forests which lead to an ecological collapse.  Now all that remains is silent stone guardians watching over desolate island of ghosts.  Easter Island is a microcosm of what we are doing to our Earth today.  We would do well to heed the warnings of the moai as they watch over the graveyard of the civilization that birthed them.  I have always found this place haunting.  Maybe that is part of why I wish to see it someday.

What secrets does Stonehenge hold? We might never fully understand the mysteries of this megalith.

What secrets does Stonehenge hold? We might never fully understand the mysteries of this megalith.

2) Stonehenge

Another ancient megalithic site makes my list.  There is something almost magical about this circle of giant stones standing alone on the Salisbury Plain in southern England.  Where did they come from?  How did they get there?  Who built them and why?  From what I’ve seen we have some answers but many have yet to be found.  These stones are older than the Great Pyramid at Giza.  They were erected by a civilization using little more than copper tools and human muscle.  These things are simply amazing, and haunting in a way.  These stones have stood longer than almost any man made structure on Earth, and will continue to stand long after I am gone.  There is a sense of age, of permanence to them, that I certainly would like to experience first hand.

The Colosseum of Rome, site of bloody Roman spectacles.

The Colosseum of Rome, site of bloody Roman spectacles.

3) Rome

All roads lead to Rome, as the old saying goes.  Rome has been the center of the Western World for over two thousand years now: first as the heart of the Republic, then as the seat of the Emperor, and finally as the spiritual heart of Catholicism.  I have always been fascinated by Republican and Imperial Roman history.  These people were able to build a civilization that lasted for more than a thousand years and fostered a standard of living that was unparalleled until the last two hundred years or so.  They conquered almost every threat that stood before them.  When Rome fell civilization was set back probably a thousand years and has only really recovered in recent times.  Imagine if Rome had survived, what would the world be like?  Who knows…we could have had the Industrial Revolution a few hundred years earlier and I could have been sitting on Mars or something writing this.  It seems fantastic, but as I said civilization was set back a thousand years when Rome fell.  The Renaissance, which is considered by many the start of the modern world, was simply a rediscovery and expanding upon old Greek and Roman knowledge.  So…who knows?

The Great Sphinx of Giza, with the Great Pyramid in the background.

The Great Sphinx of Giza, with the Great Pyramid in the background.

4) Egypt

If Rome could be said to be the center of the Western World, then Egypt could be said to be the birthplace of civilization itself.  One of them at least.  It is believed civilization began in four places: the Yellow River in China, the Indus River Valley in India, the Fertile Crescent between the Tigris and Euphrates in modern Iraq, and along the Nile River in Egypt.  Egyptian civilization spans from the very birth of civilization until Cleopatra around the beginning of the Common Era.

So for over five thousand years Egypt existed as a continuous culture.  The only culture longer lived are the Chinese, which has existed continually right into today.  Egyptian culture is one of the best preserved of ancient cultures, in addition to being one of the oldest.  When ancient Rome was new, Egypt was ancient.  When Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey were being written, Egypt was ancient.  The sheer age of the place and the fact that their relics and buildings are so well preserved has always amazed me.  From mummies to pyramids to tombs and temples: all of it has fascinated me since I was a child.  I would love to climb the Great Pyramid, to explore a tomb in the Valley of the Kings, to walk the ruins of the temple city of Karnak, and to see mummies of rulers from long ago.  I guess what I’m trying to say is I want to channel my inner Indiana Jones. What better place than Egypt?

The Union Jack, flag of the United Kingdom.

The Union Jack, flag of the United Kingdom.

5) England

Okay this is cheating since I have already mentioned Stonehenge.  Still, England gets mentioned on its own because I feel a deep connection to England.  After all it was English people who gave rise to the United States in the first place.  Also, I am of English and Scottish heritage.  I’ve always loved medieval things, and what better place to see that sort of thing than the English countryside?  London is both a modern city and an ancient one.  They have preserved their medieval and even Roman heritages very well.  To me there is a romance to England.  I have always wanted to just wander the English countryside.  There have been people in England since at least before the erection of the Great Pyramids.  It is an ancient place, full of history.  One almost gets the impression if you sit long enough, if you sit quiet enough, the ghosts of long past may just come and sit with you and tell their secrets.  That is the feeling I have always gotten from England.  I’ve never been, but I would love to go.

There you have it.  Do you want to see any of those places?  Or do you have a list of your own?  Feel free to share either way!

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