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Archive for November, 2008

(She’s A) Reptile

Posted by heretic on November 29, 2008

I met her at the sleaze-pit on Lagrange
Fell for her moves, though they were mighty strange
As she mixed pleasure with sweet pain
I poured all my money down the drain

She’s a reptile, she’s a reptile, she’s out to get you
Oh, my little reptile and her sweet stranglehold

Mercilessly she walked out the door
I had to go after her though I was pretty sore
Caught up with her by the drugstore
With an evil smile she made me beg for more

She’s a reptile, she’s a reptile, she’s out to get you
Oh, my little reptile and her sweet stranglehold

She had her way with me, you no she knew the score
One look from those eyes and I was floored
Now she’s gone but she’s always on my mind
Some will leave you broke and dead at the same time

She’s a reptile, she’s a reptile, she’s out to get you
Oh, my little reptile and her sweet stranglehold

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The Commuter Rail Sonnet

Posted by heretic on November 16, 2008

Wake up everyday before the day dawns
Ride like the wind just to make it on time
Only it’s not some hellcat that I get to ride
It is a filthy green slug trailing on slime

For it’s a long way to where I have to be
My private little prison where I punch in
A diesel goliath I board to take me in
To deliver me to the corporate machine

It is a long, lonely ride and would be painful
If not for two things I have to keep me cool
The first- Led Zeppelin- on my ears to soothe
The other, sweet woman, are thoughts of you

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All Hail Caesar

Posted by heretic on November 10, 2008

acdc

I am a sucker – for I had the chance to see AC/DC perform live in Boston – and I missed it. I somehow rationalize by saying that circumstances that prevented me from attending the show were too strong, but I know in the back of my head that I could have overcome them if I had only had the energy and the commitment – that has the potential to lead me into another topic altogether, so let us stick to AC/DC. I’ve become a fan of this local Bostonian classic rock FM station, WZLX 100.7. Since I couldn’t go to the concert, I was home all day not wanting to do anything else – just listening to this station. It didn’t help that they kept talking about the show as well. They were holding a pre-concert party at The Harp and giving away free tickets through a draw. I could have gone, perhaps – seen “Back In Black” (the apparently very popular AC/DC tribute band) perform, and if I didn’t get the tickets, I’d at least have had a beer or two and a reasonably good time. But I didn’t go. I seem to be digressing again. Back to AC/DC.

I was however, probably one of the earliest listeners of the new AC/DC album, “Black Ice”. It thoroughly and undoubtedly rocks. Unlike “sellouts” like Metallica, the riffs are still powerful, the guitar-work is still magnificent, the overall sound still brings it. That’s right – Angus and the boys are still bringing it. But the biggest attention-grabber is Brian Johnson – he is 61 (that’s right SIXTY-ONE) years old now and still sounds exactly the same as he did during “Back In Black”. Let’s just say his “Powerage” hasn’t faded one bit. In the great AC/DC divide of Bon Scott vs. Brian Johnson – I always take Brian Johnson’s side. I listened to the album and went “Oh, man, this guy’s gonna die screaming someday!” (God forbid). AC/DC have not sold out, and will never sell out (read my lips, Metallica) – they will keep the faith. Their album and concert, on the other hand, did sell out!

Anyway, I know missing the show is going to haunt me for some time – but I have Boston to help me get through it. I love this city for it still loves classic rock and metal so much. Where else would you still get to listen to good old classic rock and metal in almost all of the bars? Case in point – a couple of weeks ago I was hanging out at Beantown Pub – and they played Slayer. That’s right – Slayer – in a pub. I love “Beantown Rock City”. As for AC/DC, I have three words: “All Hail Caesar!!”

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Base Camp Chronicles: My Night in Hell — Where the Crow Came to Die

Posted by heretic on November 1, 2008

I was running as fast as I could, but the yak kept gaining on me. All of a sudden, I found myself in my lodge room. I jumped on the bed, only to discover to my horror that the yak had made it to the room as well. With all its fury, the yak jumped on me. That is when I woke up from the vivid nightmare with cold sweat all over my body. Perfectly horizontal on the bed, my head felt fine. I couldn’t put a finger on it, but I knew that there was something that was not right with my body. I decided to get up for a quick trip to the latrine. As soon as I left the bed, the entire room started spinning around me. I could hardly stand or walk straight. That is when it began– my night in hell.

It was the night before we were supposed to head for the base camp- we were in Gorak Shep, at an altitude of 5190 meters (approximately 17000 feet). Gorak Shep is the last stop before getting to Everest Base Camp or Kala Pathar. Lying in the foot of the beautiful Mount Pumori, it is a frozen lakebed with nothing but sand, ice and stones for miles around. There is a not a spec of vegetation – not a single weed or needle of grass. As if that were not enough, it is structured as a valley, so if you were to get sick with AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness) over here (which is very likely when you are 5190 meters high with no vegetation and have had very little time to acclimatize), you would have to climb up and cross about five or six hills before you could start to actually descend.

Earlier that day, one of my friends had asked one of the locals what “Gorak Shep” meant. Gorak is the Himalayan black crow. It is larger and more agile than normal city crows and has a noticable gliding fashion– quite like that of an eagle. The word “Shep”, in the local language, means “to die”. Legend has it that a Gorak from Tibet flew over to Nepal and as soon as it reached this place, it dropped dead. So apparently this was a place where even the crow, a symbol of immortality in our culture, could not survive. This was also where what the route that the Dalai Lama dubbed “the steps to heaven” ended, implying that this was the beginning of heaven. Oh, it was heaven- alright: it was scenic, it was calm, and it was beautiful. It was hell.

Still earlier that day, while ascending from Lobuche to Gorak Shep, I had noticed quite a few people sick with AMS being escorted down to Lobuche. Now that I projected back, I realized that this route must have been the one where I had seen the most number of people descending due to AMS. I also remembered hearing about this guy from Dingboche (which is at a height of about 4300 meters, mind you) getting sick with AMS at Gorak Shep! All of this combined was in no way helping my psychological state.

I somehow made it to the latrine and back and lay myself down on the bed. I tried closing my eyes, but as soon as I shut them, I felt dizzy as hell, nauseaous and felt like throwing up. So I opened my eyes back again. It was dark. I lit my flashlight and looked at my friend over on the next bunk — he seemed to be sleeping soundly. As much as I wanted to help it, my mind started to recollect on the alleged symptoms of AMS: headache (I’d always had a mild one), dizziness (oh, boy!), vivid nightmares (remember the yak?), insomnia, loss of appetite, nausea, vomitting and so on. The words “pulmonary edema and cerebral edema” started to ring around my brain. The number “12″ kept coming back to me — 12 hours: that is how long it takes for a person to go from mild AMS to coma or death.

Sleepless, I lay there in the dark: thinking. My only wish was that I be able to spend the next four or five hours pass without getting any sicker. To hell with Base Camp: as soon as morning hit, I would descend to Lobuche. Around 2 AM, our trekking guide came knocking. Surprised, I answered. I was even more surprised to see him all dressed up.
“Good Morning, sir!”
“Good Morning? It is 2 AM!”
“What? I thought it was 5 AM! I have this terrible headache and I can’t get any sleep. I woke up and it just felt like 5 AM. Sorry, sir, please go back to sleep.”
Even the trekking guide, for whom traversing these altitudes was all in a day’s work — could not get any sleep!! I did manage to get some sleep, though — sometime during the twilight hours.

The next morning, my headache had somewhat subsided, but I was still dizzy. I asked both my friends how they were doing. Apparently, they both could not get any sleep either– both had terrible headaches and were dizzy beyond belief. My friend who seemed to be sleeping soundly was only trying to do so. If anything, their conditions were worse than mine. We had to reconsider whether we wanted to go on to the base camp or to descend to Lobuche. We decided to get some breakfast and see what our body told us.

With a weak and dizzy body and no appetite whatsoever, getting that bowl of porridge in through my mouth and down to my stomach that morning was as tough as anything. After breakfast, we all felt somewhat better, though not all that much. We reached a consensus: we had come this far, it would be disappointing not to reach the base camp. We would therefore make our way towards the base camp (5300 meters). If, on the way, any of us got any sicker, we would head back right away. In any case, once we were back from the base camp or from the middle, there was no way in hell that we would be spending the night in Gorak Shep. With what energy we had left, we would descend to Lobuche even if it was the last thing we did.

With what I can only explain as God’s grace, all of us made it to the base camp and back. As planned, we mustered up all our energy and made it back down to Lobuche (4950 meters). Boy, was I glad to get out of Gorak Shep!!

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