10-06-2019::rain .moji =========================================================== Ludovica Einaudi - Ora https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1aReZsmVjw It's raining in London. And not just raining - I mean it's *really* coming down. 'Cats an' dogs,' we say. Commuter hour traveling home from work: minor delays and slow electric orange lights ripple and bend in the waterlogged entrances and on the shiny surfaces of the commuter trains. Caffeine breath, drenched workers crammed into carriages, involuntarily sharing whatever microbes are carried in the damp, this collective organism - so close together while world's apart. At Blackfriar's Bridge I make the effort to turn in my seat to catch the view of the river behind, beneath. Always surprised at how few seem to take in the view; eyes to the ground, or to the black mirror hand-deck. Headphones and chatter into microphones. E-readers, tablets. In two different carriages on my journey I find myself sitting next to someone reading Greek characters from an e-ink screen. Those wireless earphones are widespread right now, have been for a few months. Like some foreign body that made its way into the local environment, finding some nectar to harvest and spread out like spores - a wave of infection that's either found some symbiosis or hasn't yet reached the apex of its extractive capacity upon the local ecology. I read a few lines about the environmental content of these headphones a few weeks back; the tiny lithium batteries and plastic casing are just landfill waiting to happen. In 16-months time the tiny batteries won't carry a charge suitable for the hours' of use the consumer wants. They'll end up in drawers, replaced, in landfill, in the cracks in the rocks beyond the platforms' edge - among the mice who live their whole lives blinded and half-deafened in the underworld of the underground railways, their fragile sensory gifts crushed by the blinding lights and heavy passage of the carriages, of the human world. Of the human world. How much of anything isn't of the human world. I'm falling asleep on the long train journey back into the suburbs. Rainfall on the roof of the carriage picks up and intensifies the further out of town we reach. Lightning in the distance. Against a matte grey sky the same shade as my terminal background. I spent some hours the other weekend trying to 'rice' my desktop, before giving up, remembering those lessons I'd explored a few years back about avoiding the 'fetishisation' of the interface, of the machine; the tool as spectacle, as entertainment, as glitz and distraction rather than functionality, rather than tool. I gave up, remembering this research I had come across about a year ago about some ergonmic analysis of keystrokes to determine the most efficient design of key layout relative to language input. I opted for dull colours, and removed the translucent effect of the terminal against some beautiful background graphic, reckoning instead that a better design would be the most efficient for the eye; colours as designators, functional in contrast. Signifiers only of the machine logic beneath - that's what I want to get closer to. In comprehension. Comprehension breaks down the distraction, the facade; these media require our literacy. The rain. The rain without wind is the steady piano flow of Ludovica Einaudi. Back at my hometown station, where I've been living with my folks this past couple of months until I get settled into the new work routine, and find some new place to stay back in town. The rooftop gutters of the train station are bursting under the rainfall, and as dozens of commuters approach the passenger underpass it's being sealed off by station staff, as flows of rainfall are tracing the walls thick and vertical like a water-feature installation. My trainers are totally inappropriate for the weather, but I've got this waterproof jacket I scored off a mate last Summer. I'd cycled miles round his new flat in just t-shirt and jeans in the warm summer sun. That night, an unforeseen Summer rain broke through and so I waited into the wee hours with some friends, waiting for the rain to stop when cycling home at a late hour wouldn't be quite so dangerous. The rain didn't stop, but I stayed sober - or more sober than my friends around me - because of the ride I would have to take home, while they finished bottle after bottle. Later, at three in the morning, the rainfall had slowed but hadn't stopped. My friend gave me this waterproof jacket he'd had for years, no longer fits him. It's from South Korea. The make, I'm told, is the 'North Face' of South Korea. I'm grateful to be wearing it today on this walk home, after the train journey and just a small walk through these suburban neighbourhoods back home. At the end of my street, a corner on the main road is heavily waterlogged. It's always been this way in the heavy-rain. I forget how close the cars come to the deep puddle as I'm hurriedly walking by, and an oncoming car blazes through the water, sending its arc way up past my waist, drenching me to the bone. It's a moment of shock, and then I'm smiling. Heightened. Joy. Rainwater on my cheeks, my soaked trousers against my skin. I'm a child of the human world. Of the human world. I'm no different from the mice beneath the machine. These forces; this human force, this nature force. It all acts on us. If only we could navigate it. Have some control. Some sail to pull and guide us as we please. A few doors from my folks place I pass a man I know only to be a brother: his own brother passed away a couple years back. He used to push his older brother around the neighborhood in a wheelchair, for years - as long as I could remember. It's been twelve years since I lived in this house, like I am now, but I remember this guy. He's standing in the rain, smiling. Like me. In the distance: lightning, that grey terminal sky, and a Willow tree, its wooden centre darkened and waterlogged. Dark green leaves thick and full of water, like they should be. Sometimes I feel like we're afforded just enough beauty to sustain us and pacify us. To stop us from reaching out for something more. -moji