• Chapter 133: Stuck in the 3AM doldrums

    It’s sometime past “late” and before “really late”, but apparently not yet “late enough”.

    The Internet dances and sings to me through blog posts, YouTube clips of political gaffes and rambling counter arguments. I read narrow-minded opinions regarding things I don’t care about. reddit.com hasn’t changed at all in the last fifteen refreshes, not that it really ever does anymore. The computer games are boring, the book I’m reading is in a dull spot, and my buddy list is filled with idle icons.

    Eventually I try again. I pause the music, close the lid to my laptop, turn off the lights and lay down on my bed. The memories of the momentary distractions fade away until my bedroom grows quiet. It’s just me, the darkness and the absolutely insanity that occasionally roars inside my brain.

    It’s not always the same insanity, and it’s not always there. It seems to come and go with the moon, or some other celestial body of insanity. Sometimes I worry about the heat death of the universe. The distinct possibility of nuclear war and the shortsightedness of our foreign relations. Other times I can’t stop thinking about what happens when you die. About whether or not I’m a failure in some ‘meaning of life’ sense. The normal methods to change the channel rarely work once the lights are out. The insanity is enough to keep me awake, and I lay there until a miracle happens and I actually fall asleep.

    I used to think the 3AM doldrums only struck when you were alone. Once in college I was asleep on my futon, my girlfriend snuggled up on my arm, and for the absolute life of me I could not mentally get past the meaninglessness of existence. I’d try to think about other things, about school, or work, or her, but I kept coming back to the idea that we’re all pushing around dirt on a poisoned planet that will be gobbled up by a supernova long after we’re all dead.

    Eventually I woke her up and asked her to tell me a story. She looked at me for a moment, but must have understood the scared look on my face. I don’t remember what she said or what story she told, but I remember laughing and falling asleep.

    I don’t chalk it up to actual insanity. We all have demons or thoughts that inhabit the dark corners of our brain. The insecurities and fears that lurk just beneath our conscious thoughts, just waiting for that quiet hour of the night when there’s absolutely nothing left to defend against them.

    Being alone with nothing but your own insanity is important from time to time. All the little ways we hide start to fail, and we’re forced to confront what we’re really worried about. When I worry about the meaninglessness of existence I’m occasionally worrying about why I can’t find much meaning in my existence. Sometimes it’s simply related to having a shitty day.

    Some people watch movies or TV to escape the 3AM hour. Some drink until they pass out. Some stay up playing games or reading on the internet until their brain just shuts off. Others refuse to ever let themselves be alone in a bed, reason and good taste be damned.

    It’s useful to find some peace within yourself, because you can’t hide forever; everyone’s alone at 3AM.

  • Chapter 132: What portion of the night sky have you never seen?

    At many points during my road trip this summer I had the opportunity to lie on my back and stare at the unpolluted stars. After spending a minute to find the Big Dipper and follow its handle to the northern star, Polaris, I realized I had never seen the southern star (some punk upstart named Sigma Octantis). For that matter, I hadn’t seen an entire portion of the night sky, merely by virtue of being a resident of the Northern Hemisphere.

    Assuming a clear night and an unobstructed view to the horizon, you can see half the sky at night. Part of that sky doesn’t always change depending on what time of year it is (Earth revolves around the sun on a fixed rotational axis), and for us Northern Hemisphere dwellers that includes Polaris.

    If I’ve spent my life in the Northern Hemisphere, how much of the sky have I never actually seen?

    The answer works itself out nicely if you abstract the nights sky to the inside of a near infinite sphere and calculate the surface area of the cap of the cone carved by your horizon over the course of a year. If that explanation isn’t clear, just spend a little time staring at my diagram and equations. It’ll come to you.

    The equation to calculate the portion of the night sky you’ve never seen is on the bottom right, with the only input being your latitude.

    That is, to calculate the percentage of the night sky that has remained forever hidden to you by Earth’s mighty bulk, plug your latitude in for theta and get ( 1 – cos ( latitude ) ) / 2. If you prefer Lisp notation, (/ 2 (- 1 (cos latitude))).

    The closest I’ve ever lived to the equator for more than a year was hurricane prone Galveston, Texas (latitude 29.28). That means the percentage of the sky that remains unseen to me is (1 – cos(29.28 degrees))/2, or a tiny 6.4%.

    A lifelong resident of Wasilla, Alaska(latitude 61.58) who only got their passport last year would have missed out on a full 26.2% of the night sky.

    You can use the handy dandy form below to calculate just how much of life you’re missing (needs javascript):

    Latitude (in degrees):
    Portion of night sky unseen:

    There are a lot of reasons to travel around the world, but up until that night of looking up at the cosmos it had never occurred to me that stargazing could be one of them.

    Math errors are best reported with smugness in the comments. Thanks.
  • Chapter 131: The making of an American Mutt

    “I’m writing a new book,” he said as I sat down.

    “Is this what the e-mail was about?”

    “Yep. I need your help. You’re good at this. I need a main character, and not just any main character either.” He looked around the cafe, and took a sip of his coffee. “I need a sink.”

    “A sink.”

    “Yes, a sink. The opposite of a source. I need the ultimate steadying force, the cool, calm center of the universe. I need a man with no battles to fight and absolutely nothing to prove.”

    “Well,” I said as I stirred my latte, “you’ll want a white guy. There’s not much left for them to prove. Already conquered everything.”

    “Okay.” He pulled out a notepad and started to scribble.

    “You’ll probably want an American too. They’re pretty content with the status quo, and a bunch of them aren’t really proud to be American anymore than they’re proud to be human. Maybe make him a bunch of European ethnicities to the point where the only real history he carries with him is the Internet provided entomology of his last name. Plus with the American angle you can put him in a nice and healthy nuclear family, make it a happy one, and then he doesn’t even have a reason to rebel against them.”

    “Hell, make him an atheist, then he can’t even rebel against his religion. Move him around a bunch as a kid so he doesn’t have a hometown, but make it for some reason other than being a military brat. He could be homeschooled through middle school, so that way he doesn’t hate humanity too much.”

    “Don’t make him the best at anything, but don’t make him the worst either. He’ll go through life thinking he could do anything, but without actually doing much. Give him the triumvirate of relativism, rationalism and pragmatism. That way he won’t get in any fights but he’ll also be single basically all the time.”

    His notepad was filling up. “You meet this guy in real life or something?”

    “No, I can just picture him.”

    “If you had to give my sink a name, what would you call him?” He flicked his pen to the top of the page.

    “Oh, I don’t know, it doesn’t even have to be a strictly masculine name. I might go with a name that doesn’t come up very often, but isn’t exotic at all. A name that everyone knows at least one of. ”

    “… like …?”

    “Sam. I might call him Sam.”

  • Chapter 130: Index of the Great American Road Trip

    All of the following applies to the Great American Road Trip, an adventure undertaken by myself and Mark.

    1. Distance driven between July 8th and August 6th: 7,697 miles
    2. Amount by which this increased the mileage of Mark’s Civic: 20%
    3. Difference between this and the Earth’s diameter: 229 miles
    4. Number of loops around the Capital Beltway the trip represents: 120
    5. Length of time this would take a Segway if it never stopped: 27 days
    6. Total amount of money spent on gasoline: $894
    7. Highest price paid for gasoline, and location: $5.50, Yosemite National Park, California
    8. Lowest price paid for gasoline, and location: $3.50, Iowa
    9. States driven through, in order of first appearance: Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland
    10. Total new states bagged for Mark (his rules, not mine): 9
    11. Number of nights spent in hotels, campsites and homes, respectively: 10, 8 and 10
    12. Number of prior acquaintances with whom we visited: 24
    13. Portion of the nights we spent drinking: 59%
    14. Number of consecutive winning Craps rolls thrown by Sam at Casino Royale, Las Vegas: ~12
    15. Maximum speed achieved, and location: 106 MPH, Bonneville Salt Flats
    16. Maximum temperature recorded, and location: 120 °F, Canyonlands National Park
    17. Number of chain eateries we ate at more than once: 0
    18. Number of songs on the iPod we listened to more than once: 0
    19. Outstanding legal issues that will possibly lead to an arrest warrant being issued by the state of Texas: 1
    20. Judgement of the trip as being surprising, boring, dirty, exciting, straining, memorable, lonely, frightening, repetitive, (philosophically) romantic, noteworthy, stressful and unbelievably fulfilling: totally

  • The Great American Road Trip

    America is big. Really, really big. Even adjusted for inflation, gasoline is more expensive than at any point in the last 90 years. The western United States is mostly desert, and the desert gets unbearably hot in the months of July and August. My friend Mark and I live AND work together. All of these facts combine to make taking a road trip to the West coast a fairly miserable idea.

    Fuck it. We’re doing it anyway.

    Mark and I are driving to California. We’ll be gone from around July 8th until August 3rd.

    The map below has what we hope to be some of the highlights of the trip (click the icons for pictures). The exact path remains flexible, but in general will involve a clockwise motion through the mapped locations, heading down to the Gulf of Mexico before heading west and returning via a massive slog along Route 80 (~7500 miles).

    “Wow, Sam, that sounds horrible. Why would you do such a thing?”

    Because it’s long, surprising, boring, dirty, exciting, straining, memorable, lonely, frightening, repetitive, (philosophically) romantic, noteworthy, stressful and unbelievably fulfilling. In other words, everything life is supposed to be.

    P.S. If you want a sweet postcard, pop me an e-mail at sam@taoofsam.com.

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