Feeling Ways about Drake, Gojira, and Drinking Too Much

Two pints of Guinness was enough. Three would have been one too many.

I had taken a few weeks off drinking (and a few months off writing) after some tough times, and a friend asked me to join her in writing at a San Francisco bar called Vesuvio. Jack Kerouac wrote there. They had coffee but it just felt like a place for a drink. Or two.

A buzz for me is a sweet spot. The edges of life smooth out. Everything feels less messy. Until it doesn't. Until the good times roll off the road and I blackout.

It's not complicated. Let's call it what it is - binge-drinking. And it's not just the drinks; it's that two or three turns into a question mark. It's a subconscious decision to chase the feeling.

That's the big secret at the core of Napoleon Hill's Think and Grow Rich. Commissioned by How to Win Friends and Influence People author Andrew Carnegie, Napoleon Hill made it his life's work to drill into what makes successful people just that. And, spoiler alert, the answer sits comfortably right in the title. Our minds bring thoughts into reality, and if you have a burning desire to make money, you'll find ways to make it appear in your life. Hill notes:

“The subconscious mind (the chemical laboratory in which all thought impulses are combined and made ready for translation into physical reality) makes no distinction between constructive and destructive impulses. It works with the material we feed it through our thought impulses.”

Like Austin Kleon wrote in Steal Like an Artist, "Garbage in, garbage out." Of course, when it comes to the drinks, I'm not subconsciously aspiring to be a drunk. But I had to admit to myself that my buzz is a dangerous turning point. I'm feeding my mind the idea that alcohol gives me one feeling when the tipping point shows it'll give me another.

In Drake's song "Feel No Ways" he tells a different story with the same concept - a split with a heartbroken lover. And when Drake sings, we can see he too has a choice to make about whether or not to accept it:

I had to let go of us to show myself what I could do
And that just didn’t sit right with you
And now you’re trying to make me feel a way, on purpose
Now you’re throwing it back in my face, on purpose

What's more interesting is what video essayist Evan Puschak, or The Nerdwriter, highlights in the production of this song. It is quintessential Drake, not just in lyrics, but in a sound The Nerdwriter describes as "Toronto-cold, 80's electro/R&B/rap/pop hybrid". If you listen to the Top 40 at all, you'd probably recognize it as well as I do without ever experiencing Toronto cold in the 80's. It feels a certain way without words and Drake accomplishes it with just three basic elements in the song: his voice, an electric piano melody, and a breakbeat drum pattern. The Nerdwriter makes clear that this sound is the result of Drake's subconscious mental diet. Drake's producer Noah "40 Shebib said Drake largely nailed down his particular sound after being influenced by Kanye West's album 808s & Heartbreak (another R&B/rap hybrid). Drake took West's first track "Say You Will" and made it his own, rapping and signing over the beat and calling it "Say What's Real". While Drake deals with his ex making him feel a way (on purpose), the track is a crystal-clear decision to make us feel a way too.

We often think pain and suffering is a bad thing but Drake has made a career off the pain and transformation inherent in break-up songs. Mark Manson noted this powerful strategy in The Subtle Art of Not Giving A Fuck when he said, "Pain, in all of its forms, is our body’s most effective means of spurring action."

And as Drake is to break-up R&B/rap, Japanese cinema is to the creature feature. You probably know the King of the Monsters as the giant lizard Godzilla, but Gojira, the original Japanese film, was a sneaky cinematic revolution. Propaganda films were criminalized in post-war Japan and the Japanese were left to deal with an incredible array of feelings about the world after a bomb like no other was dropped on their home. Another great video essayist, Kaptain Kristian, explores this creative struggle in a video called Godzilla - The Soul of Japan. The Japanese took action and hide their pain in the creature feature. But, if you're looking, you can see the horror in the details - Gojira's skin is not scales, it's the charred, deformed flesh akin to that of an atomic bomb survivor.

And where the Japanese tried to understand and interpret their feelings a certain way through cinema, America did just the opposite by transforming the Japanese Gojira into Godzilla, King of the Monsters. American actors were added to the original film and Japanese dialog was barely translated. It became more a natural disaster film than a cultural thinkpiece. Americans were left to feel a different way about the whole thing, on purpose.

Everything we experience makes us feel certain ways. The choice is still ours to make but it can sit deep inside us. You better believe I feel different about Drake's music and Gojira's origins now that I know what I do.

But I can't help but think that if Alan Watts sat down to hear the stories of Gojira's transformation or Drake's sound, he'd probably offer his wise chuckle. Watts considered choice "a mental wobbling". It is the illusion that we can understand the fractals of the far-reaching consequences of every decision. We just can't take everything in.

Instead, Watts suggested we consider ourselves as clouds. He explained, "Did you ever see a cloud that was misshapen? Did you ever see a badly-designed wave?" There is no right amount of wobble; Watts would suggest you just be.

Easier said than done, right? Life can get incredibly complex even beyond rap artists and monster movies. But if we think the world is complex does that make it so? If you think you're overthinking, how does that work? Or is it just a feeling we can decide to accept or not?

Wanting What You Need at 30

In I <3 the Huckabees, existential detective Vivian Jaffe (Lily Tomlin) is interviewing Albert (Jason Schwartzman) about his life. Albert wants to explore some coincidental meetings with an African guy, Vivian is interested in everything else. She asks Albert, "Have you ever transcended space and time?" Albert responds immediately and frequently - "Yes. No. Uh, time, not space... No, I don't know what you're talking about."

I'm 30. And if existing on this pale blue dot for three decades isn't transcending space and time, I don't know what is.

But being 30 today feels a helluva lot like being 29 yesterday. This is no surprise. Deepak Chopra articulated the cycle on The Tony Robbins Podcast - "It's estimated, for example, that we have 60,000 thoughts a day. That's not surprising. The disconcerting thing is that most people 95% of the thoughts they have today are the ones they had yesterday. So we become bundles of conditioned reflexes and responses constantly being triggered by people and circumstance into very predictable biochemical outcomes, behavioral outcomes, and ultimately physical outcomes."

I'd prefer to see it differently. Your birthday is a chance to celebrate, to recognize and appreciate a brand new year existing in this life. And celebrating a new decade, that's extra special.

Sometimes you need that jolt. Futurist and philosopher Jason Silva calls it cleansing our perception. Whatever it takes to shake off the familiar certainty that we've been here or done that. We've seen so much. We think we know how stories end. And as youth begins to burn off, it can get worse. We need to stimulate ourselves with novelty and hunt down the "ever-present rapture of the now". We need to remember that everything is still awesome. 

Looking back, so much happened in my twenties. Before California, I bounced around every year between Brooklyn, Queens, South Plainfield, and Lyndhurst. At age 20, I hated people who drank, and now grabbing a beer with friends is one of my favorite things to do. I discovered life-changing books, like How to Win Friends and Influence People and The Four Hour Work Week. I began my professional life. I started a blog and wrote for years. I had the chance to see America, Ireland, Amsterdam, and Iceland up close. My family grew bigger. I fell in and out of love. 

Looking forward, it's easy to just want more. More money, more friends, more time. Author Ryan Holiday writes about this problem in his latest book, Ego is the Enemy - "If you don’t know how much you need, the default easily becomes: more." Just by existing, more is possible, but what is the need? I believe connecting with the experience is what matters most. 

The doors are closed on my twenties. That's okay. There are limits. But this is only the beginning of a brand new trip.
 
What can I say? Let's go.

I Don't Go to Sleep to Dream

Uprooting my life to California definitely changed my mind. Not on a particular decision, it was a full-tilt shift. I had to start just about from scratch, finding new friends and food, understanding the weather, and remembering what I came out here to do. Even if I wasn't sure in the first place.

I've learned there is no perfect place. Only your mind makes it so.

And I've been having trouble with mine. 

If only you could party in the heart of Manhattan and take a taxi to the quiet of a Midwest farm or a desert in Arizona, I thought!

The challenge is slowing down to notice the voices in our head. We all have them. And they want more better now.

Dream Leaf feeds into that need. The company claims to offer a supplement to strengthen the activation and recall of lucid dreams. Abigail Moss wrote about the supplement for Vice. She came to the quick and simple conclusion that taking a pill to alter your brain chemistry is just a sad, general shortcut. The pill tries to hack the most complex network known to man. You can't blame them for trying.

What works is practice. But people don't want to be alone with their minds. Meditation might be a thing in Silicon Valley but it's not exactly "taking off".

The irony is that your mind can deliver so much more than the worst. Instead of talking shit to yourself, you could be dreaming about flying so vividly you think it's real. And can you argue it's not?

I'm guilty of listening to the voices too. My mind can quickly catastrophize my life. Without a better job than the East Coast one I left, I start to assume I'll never find a better one again. I'll be working in retail until a horrible stomach pain turns out to require gall bladder surgery. Medical debt will pile on top of college debt, and I'll end up being a money-suck for the people I love. Until I die. Quickly.

Fuck that. The reality is I took a chance to wake up on a new side of the world. It's not perfect but I'm working to make my mind make it so.


Getting Back on the Bike

I fell down a YouTube black hole of street bike gangs. Waves of riders doing wheelies down public highways in broad daylight. It felt like a surreal version of Mad Max. Oddly dirtier because it's real. A snapshot of another side of the world. Like Florida or something.

What really had me scratching my head was what would happen when a rider would crash. The gang would huddle around him until he caught his bearings and jumped back on the mangled bike. They kept momentum. No hesitation. Just ride. 


I've zipped by the crossroads and fallen off my bike.

Where am I? In the Land of the Occasional Blogger. And I hate it here. As hard as it is to dive deep and write something meaningful every week or two, writing about not writing is leagues worse. 

My great idea for sending out weekly emails didn't work out. I think I meant for it to be easier and more fun, but it ended up being too easy and not done. It didn't stir me to hunt down new things to share, and I don't think I was contributing more than anyone else does on their social networks. 

The truth is I need to get back on the bike.

Like Kevin Smith. The Jersey-born writer/director almost swore off filmmaking altogether. He polarized people by making an indie horror movie like Red State after being known as the silly goose who made Clerks and Jay and Silent Bob. But the truth was Smith found a new platform - podcasting. He started smoking weed when most adults stop and Silent Bob became talkative Kevin Smith. 

And then there was Tusk. Born out of that cloud of weed smoke on Smodcast episode #259, Smith jumped back on the bike with a vengeance. He wrote the dark story of a man maliciously turned into a walrus against his will. Yeah. 

Better yet, this is just the beginning. Tusk is the first of Kevin Smith's Canadian trilogy. Yoga Hosers, the second film of the trilogy, is set to rock the world soon. The new trailer gives you everything you need, including mini Nazi bratwurst soldiers.

You might be concerned for a critically-acclaimed comedy director turned podcaster and wacko B-movie maker, but it makes perfect sense for no one other than Kevin Smith. The truth is when you're making something genuinely your own, you're flexing the hardest part of creativity: you're asking someone to see you, completely. Personally and professionally. Will you hire me? Will you read me? Will you hear me? Will you get me?

Lead signer of The Dresden Dolls, Amanda Palmer once said, "Asking is fundamentally about connection, and so is art. When you boil everything down to its simplest components, little protons and neutrons, art is about people connecting with people at a really, really basic level."

As hard as it was to ask everyone to sign up for weekly emails, it's even harder to admit I don't want to do that anymore. While writing something original might be difficult, it's worth it. I realize that now. It might suck up my brain on Sunday afternoons, or get me out of bed in the morning, but I'm willing to do it again.

Louis CK put the final nail in the coffin. The comedian inspires me with every single email he writes. Because they are so few and far-between, they feel important and personal. He doesn't feel the crushing need to stay relevant by bombarding your inbox and attention. He just offers himself. He writes in plain text and says thing like, "Hello donut eaters and those who don’t eat donuts (I think that covers everyone)."

The fear has always been that people would be annoyed or disappointed in my infrequent posting or jumping around, but that's part of my life and my creative process. Shit happens.

And all I'm left to ask is will you get me?

The Simple Pleasure of Throwing a Pizza


When your life flashes before your eyes, I'll bet there is one moment that you didn't realize made an impact. 

If I had to guess, mine might be Jared Leto as the Joker, dressed in an all-white tux, slamming the roof of his purple super-charged sports car in the new Suicide Squad trailer. 

Hyper-stylized cinematic moments give me goosebumps and sometimes you just need to gawk and appreciate the super-cool details. 

I'll need to remind myself of that the next time an old, grumpy man walks into my job and replies to "Good morning" with "What's so good about it?" Oh, I don't know, you're breathing and you could be filling your face with ice cream!

It's easy to forget. If you're like me, you're often trying to sprint toward success with the running question "What's next?" But then you're training your mind to think life is a series of tasks and not everything else.

It is a whirlwind of things. Relax. Breathe. Enjoy.

Avoid the 5 Regrets of Dying

No one wants regrets on their deathbed. But Bronnie Ware heard plenty of them first-hand working as an end of life caregiver. She wrote a book called The Top Five Regrets of the Dying. I'm sharing Aubrey Marcus' review here for that and one simple phrase - "Win small battles". Life doesn't need to be so serious. Or else you might end up regretting it.

Here Comes A Pizza! 

A minute and a half of guaranteed laughter, or I'll give you your money back. A fan interferes with a foul fly ball at a Red Sox game and another decides to punish him for it - by throwing a slice of pizza at him. The commentators review the footage like it's an actual play and lose their minds cracking dad jokes. They ask the only possible question - "Why did he do that?"

Defining Privacy

Everyone has their own thoughts on what should and shouldn't be private. Technology is making those waters muddier every day. Two interesting details made it more interesting this week: The FBI Director admitted he puts tape over his webcam and the terrorists responsible for the Brussels attacks were found to have had a file folder on their laptop marked Target.

Adult Swim - The History of a Television Empire

Adult Swim defined my college years. Saturday morning cartoons as a kid became late-night hangouts as an adult. Under the influence or not, Family Guy, The Boondocks, Tim and Eric - they were all just fun. Kaptain Kristian clipped together a gorgeous presentation of the significance and defiance of the television channel. More than show after show, it was the details that made it special. It was an experience.

When I Was Done Dying

Want to experience a quick hit of Adult Swim? Watch Dan Deacon's music video "When I Was Done Dying". The song is melodic and catchy, and the video flows through the styles of multiple animation artists seamlessly. Your mind will be melting, sober. Sometimes the detail is just a tease for more.

Honorable mentions:

Like the idea of surviving the apocalypse?
Check out Michael Reynolds' off-the-grid Earthships.

Like absurdity? Like throwing a pizza at someone? Watch Kurt Braunohler explain 3,000 Things Absurdists Love.

Like mind-bending music? Did you know the patriotic anthem Yankee Doodle was originally a diss track? 

Learning Mind Control with Manson, Supermodels and the Barkley Marathons

A mind is a beautiful thing to waste.

Yeah. People say that and they really mean "use it or lose it". But we're always using it. The big mystery has always been how.

I've been told more than once in my life to "get out of your head". And more than once I've imagined my body collapsing into a pile of bones because my head forgot to send the orders to stand up straight. 

Getting out of my head makes me think I'm wasting my beautiful mind. How can I figure this shit out if I don't think about it?

But I'm starting to see it differently. It's not about ignoring my thoughts or escaping my body, it's recognizing the stupid stories I'm telling myself, the stupid stories we all tell ourselves.

And to do that I've found some stories about using your mind beyond the normal and possible.

Manson's Two Minds

Blogger Mark Manson says there is a Thinking Mind and an Observing Mind. Your Thinking Mind is uncontrollable and lightning fast. Try not to think of a pink elephant and you're thinking of a pink elephant. That's the Thinking Mind. But Manson asks, when we sit down to quiet our minds and ultimately fail, what part of us is observing the thoughts bubbling up? He explains, "It was your mind watching your mind."

Barkley Marathons

Nicknamed the Race That Eats Its Young, I'm shocked I've never heard of this. This documentary shows the 100-mile, ultra-marathon through the Tennessee woods. The entrance fee is $1.60 but few finish. It's amazing anyone finishes. It is a gritty example of how our limits are often mental and we can benefit from more pain in our lives. 

Beauty is NOT in the Eyes of the Beholder 

The School of Life made this video with a captivating title. I disagree. It's more an argument against property managers and using the phrase to silence debate over what's beautiful. But it does make me wonder, what does it mean when women recreate Sports Illustrated covers? Are you uncomfortable with the idea that most people prefer looking at supermodels? Is beauty in the eye of the consumer?

Swiss Army Man trailer

An incredible answer to every single "if you were stranded on an island" question - use a dead Daniel Radcliffe as your best friend. Life would certainly be more trippy.

The Myth of Multitasking

There is no such thing as multitasking and this article is the best explanation I've ever read about it. Short version: Your brain is rapidly switching focus. Multitasking is the illusion. And meditation is training your mind to switch much less and focus much more.

Chess prodigy and martial arts master Josh Waitzkin once said, "We obviously live in a world that bombards us with information, and we feel the need to respond to stimulus as it comes in. The problem with this is that we get stretched along the superficial outer layers of many things. I believe in depth over breadth in the learning process."

Pair that with Derek Sivers - "If information was the answer we'd all be billionaires with perfect abs."

Honorable Mentions
Like Mark Manson? He has tons to read. I'm a fan of The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck.

Like the Barkley Marathons? Listen to the RadioLab episode Limits and try not to shit yourself like Julie Moss did.

Until next time...
I explode into space.

-Dan