Wednesday, March 14, 2007

The Best Cigarette

I notice that there is usually a scene in my short fiction where the character shares a smoke with a wiser one. Usually, this is a point in the character's life where she stumbles on an epiphany. The irony is, I have never been a smoker. I am just really bad at it.

Billy Collins, former US Poet Laureate and one of America's best-selling poets,
reads his poem "The Best Cigarette" with animation by David Vaio of
FAD.

There are many that I miss having sent my last one out a car
window sparking along the road one night, years ago. The heralded one, of
course: after sex, the two glowing tips now the lights of a single ship; at the
end of a long dinner with more wine to come and a smoke ring coasting into the
chandelier; or on a white beach, holding one with fingers still wet from a swim.
How bittersweet these punctuations of flame and gesture; but the best were on
those mornings when I would have a little something going in the typewriter, the
sun bright in the windows, maybe some Berlioz on in the background. I would go
into the kitchen for coffee and on the way back to the page, curled in its
roller, I would light one up and feel its dry rush mix with the dark taste of
coffee. Then I would be my own locomotive, trailing behind me as I returned to
work little puffs of smoke, indicators of progress, signs of industry and
thought, the signal that told the nineteenth century it was moving forward. That
was the best cigarette, when I would steam into the study full of vaporous hope
and stand there, the big headlamp of my face pointed down at all the words in
parallel lines.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Short Cafe Mocha, With a Shot of Raspberry




Here's an interesting blog for marketers, especially those who just have to start their day with Starbucks coffee. Two ex-Starbucks associates, Paul Williams and John Moore, still "think and blog about Starbucks (which) ... played a major role in (their) lives."




Sunday, March 04, 2007

Dear -------,

It's been a while since my last vacation. Maybe I could consider this my first in many years, even though, technically, this *is* a business trip. I'm in Krabi, by the way, writing on a dark wooden table. The sun's just come up, and it's Monday.


You always ask me what I'm reading now. Just to let you know I brought this book with me called "The Martian Chronicles." Typically I won't read sci-fi, but the cover had Ray Bradbury's name on it, and they said he's peerless in the genre. Anyway, it only cost 40 bucks at Book Sale, so I didn't have to squeeze my head too much. I don't know yet if I like him.
I couldn't tell sometimes if the sun was setting or rising. The sky had the same hue at dawn and at dusk.

Maybe the bleached wooden bridges could make a good sundial.
Yesterday, I had to make an important decision.
Guess which one I picked.
Of course, it wasn't all fun and games. My planner and I spent the yesterday afternoon surveying the geographics of the market...

... and brainstorming.

There were some distractions, of course.

Funny that I feel homesick everytime I fly out. But not too long. I find fellow Pinoys even in a place as farflung as Krabi. They're quite nice.
Thailand continues to surprise me. It's as if it shows a different face from time to time, and I wonder where I am at all. I catch myself asking, "Doesn't this remind you of fall in Munich?"

"This is probably how California looks like." Or...
"Isn't this from one of those Japanese movies?"
Anyway, I hope you're doing whatever it is you've wanted to do your whole life. You told me to keep in touch. I'm glad we've kept our doors open.

Once in a while missing you gets so bad. After spa, I had to stop myself from crying when they served green tea for two instead of one. You've always liked green tea.


Do write. I miss your letters.