What a funny name for "the day after Christmas" but that's what they call it in Commonwealth countries and it does roll off the tongue rather nicely.
And it was wet, of course. Still, I go out and delivered packages to the post office and FedEx. I got wet but it wasn't too bad.
I got some good practice in last night (early this morning) and need to, because to play the version of "Auld Lang Syne" I downloaded, I need to play the C in the staff, which it about 8 pages ahead of where I am now, I guess because you have to press down a bunch of stuff to play it, and there are low notes the writers of the band book felt are more important.
I was wrong about Marvin Naylor stopping blogging. He'd just changed the format of his Wordpress page so that it looked like he had. When you go there you get pictures of his first and second book and only the most persistent will scroll down 2 screens' worth to find the blog entries. But they are there. It's kind of amazing how with the advent of the internet, everyone's forgotten the most simple things that kids used to learn, running a school newspaper, before they were adults.
He certainly know his street characters well. There's an actual "street culture" in the UK that's completely missing in the US. Marvin can get to know various characters because they walk around like the street is their immediate neighborhood and they have the right to walk on it, instead of being a place where they're prey for cars and talking to anyone is dangerous/insane, like it is for proper Americans.
But now it's time I wrote down some other things that have been weighing on me. Between finding out that the one guy who's head and shoulders above all the others in the English-speaking shakuhachi world is an ardent Nazi, Ranban Sakamoto leaving in a matter of months and thus the core of the shakuhachi club going away, and the general unsuitability of the shakuhachi for anything but shakuhachi music. my interest in the thing is just gone. I just can't see myself spending time on it when the clarinet alone is a huge "world" and adding in the soprano sax like Sidney Bechet did, is an even huger "world".
And speaking of whom, I found an excellent documentary on him and the music in it was amazing. It "goes right through me" the same way really good shakuhachi music does.
As a trumpet player, of course my hero was Louis Armstrong. But he and Bechet both had that same bluesy sound, but of the two I prefer Bechet, in the pieces that are not so "commercial". He was not so "commercial", himself. He was smart enough to get out of the US, too.
But this all presents a problem in that, I had a very good reason to retire back in Hawaii because there's one good shakuhachi player who lives there and others who visit all the time, and it's that much closer to Japan, the home of the shakuhachi. But if my interest in that is zero now and I'm playing the clarinet, now I don't have any more reason to live in Hawaii as I would anywhere else.
This isn't to say I shouldn't go back there, it's just down to the kind of pros and cons that have to be considered about any place. Such as,
Pros: It's about 30% cheaper than here, the weather's pretty nice, I grew up there so I am at least to some extent a "local" and I can speak the local patois. I know where everything is and a million little details of how things work and little customs and ways of doing things. I can literally re-live my childhood fishing and surfing and finding seashells at the same places. Music-wise, no one tends to think "clarinet" when they think of Hawaii but everyone the world over loves jazz, and clarinet's a good busking instrument for there, loud enough without being too loud. Japanese tourists would get a kick out of seeing an American playing jazz, as opposed to the probably much more technically competent jazz whiz who's Japanese back home.
Cons: As a white/white-appearing person I'll always be a 2nd class citizen to some, and some of those in positions of power. The couple of friends I still know back there (who are still alive and have not left the place years ago) are useless, likewise the two sisters I have there who hate me in the one case because I'm not a Jesus-freakie, and to the other because I'm not wealthy and didn't go to Punahou School like she did. I could only hope that those two, at best, leave me utterly alone. Oahu is a small island in the middle of thousands of miles of ocean, and not the least "con" is, it's still part of the US. Which is at present putting people into concentration camps and is not even letting people leave who want to (stopping cars at border exits and if your papers aren't in order or you're less than paper-white, you might get disappeared). You'd think Hawaii would be far away enough from most of the US that one could lay low there but it doesn't work that way, and Gestapo raids happen there, too.
Now, I *had* a plan to get out of here. It involved converting to a certain religion and emigrating to a certain small nation in the Middle-East, which has very good P.R. In fact, very-very good P.R. People wonder why this small, well-funded (by the US) nation pumps out so much P.R. when for those who look, there's plenty of info out there to thoroughly debunk their P.R. And the answer is that for enough of the time, at least on some people, it works.
I was one of those people. I actually believed the bit about it being a liberal paradise, and certainly free health care and language lessons and nice beaches and walkable bazaars and all that looked good. Hell I even thought the letters of their language looked cool and this last was good because I was studying that language.
Well, a lot of history happens in a short time these days, and simply by existing through a few years' time, I was able to see that the P.R. debunkers are pretty much 100% right. This small nation gets the US tangled up in all kinds of trouble, probably got our idiot-in-chief elected, certainly re-elected, and this tiny troublemaking nation isn't even a good place for its own people. All that nice liberal stuff, the free health care and women's rights and the big gay festival, will probably be gone in 10 years. Their "Iron Dome" is more like "Tin Dome" and it's only a fire hose of US money that's keeping the place somewhat functional and defended.
In other words, I was every bit as deluded as no doubt a few were who saw "Socialist" in the National Socialists' name and heard about a few of their social programs and thought they were nice people. The branch of that small nation's religion, to which I was in the process toward converting, is the most liberal one, and person to person they are indeed very nice people. It took me a while to figure out that for instance, when ordering food for an event, they'd order from the most right-wing genocide-funding companies possible.
There's only so much I could take. As part of the process I went to religious services and their book is read through yearly, a weekly portion at a time. So one gets a pretty good familiarity with it, and there's really not anything peaceful in it. You'd be hard-pressed to find the few things in there that are not sociopathic and murderous.
So some months ago I told them I'm "taking a hiatus" and "I can tell I'm not going to retire in country X" and that's that.
And that *is* that. In the meantime I'm watching history happen. Major media outlets bought by ... those highly supportive or actual agents of, this small country. The US being told to jump and how high at every turn. The "little guy" finding out, realizing far too late but at least realizing, that they're being utterly screwed over by a president who's our most supportive, ever, of this little troublemaking country. And this little troublemaking country doesn't give a damn if their game is evident, because Hey, they've got the presidency, they've got the media outlets, they've got massive financial power, what's the little guy gonna do?
So yeah, my retirement plan turned out to be utterly horrible and the ABORT button's been hit on that one. But it leaves me in need of a better plan. My old plan was going to have me out of here mid-2027 I figure, and right now the plan I'm telling people is that I'll go back to Hawaii in mid-2027 because I'll be able to go right from Medi-Cal to Medicare and won't have any period where I'm uninsured and any little thing could clean me out financially.