Friday, October 02, 2009
On My Own


"A Strangely Isolated Place", by Marcelo Halmenschlager. Available here.

I'm always fascinated by the ways and circumstances in which people decide to share private, sensitive information with others. Sometimes it's standing up on national television and sometimes it's just blurting out thoughts to whichever stranger happens to be nearby...

Right now I'm at a cafe near my home waiting for a waffle and I'm overhearing a barista telling a woman he clearly doesn't know well about how on Monday he has to go to jail for not paying child-support. The calmness with which he's retelling his story, with laughter and sighs even, is jarring almost to the point of belying the absolute tone of gentle sincerity in his voice. There is no doubt that he carries an weary uneasiness about himself, but also a resigned steadiness against the acknowledgement of his plight and a true expression of a man offering some kind of honesty to the world.

I do not know this man, nor have I ever seen him before, but right now all I can think about is how sad I am that this has happened to him and how fucked everything is and how I'm sure he's been wronged in some grave way, if only by a world that couldn't possibly ever work out for him. I don't honestly know of course if he is Guilty--or even guilty--of crimes deserving of the punishment he's about to receive. Some people are slick, and others so delusional of their relationship to the world as to be unforgivably irresponsible to themselves and those around them. But I know that for whatever reason, my heart goes out to this poor stranger, and I wish that I could hold him and let him know that everything will be all right.*

---

...Or sometimes it's just through a hardly read, mostly unknown-enough-to-not-even-exist blog.

As a semi-tangential digression, I repeat this last sentence on the barista to myself and recognize the degree to which my feelings about him speak to my own plight, as a man (historically) far more interested in caring for and assisting others than himself. I've spoken at length recently about possibly adding a canine to my life, and in response a close friend encouraged me to do so because--while admitting that he would never feel this way about most people--he was convinced that being responsible for a dog's well-being would cause me to in turn take better care of myself.

How does one take on this duality of love and neglect? It's unfortunately all too easy to see how many people are able to care for themselves and neglect those around them, but it's a bit harder and more complicated to understand the reverse. For me this distinction was rooted for a long time in a lack of self-confidence and self-definition--summarized best by saying that I did not know how to "dare to dream"--which was significant enough that even in the absence of being able to "help others" I didn't know what to do with myself. Now I finally seem to have made enough strides to have figured out my identity and get a better sense about the things that I feel I want and need in my life... but somehow the emptiness of Who Am I? has been replaced by a strange and steely I Live To Live that is somehow just as resultantly neglectful.

I have been thinking quite a bit about this topic since Wednesday evening, when some friends were over and, through the course of many cigarettes and glasses of wine, we somehow touched on the topic of death and the fear of dying. "I just couldn't do ___," said one friend, "I am just too afraid of the possibility of death to let it go like that." And then another followed by saying, "I am afraid of a lot of things, of course. But in fact, what I really fear is that I might get to a point where I no longer fear death, which is the most terrifying idea of them all." But I, as an insouciant late-twenty something, arrogant in his beliefs in the great possibilities of the world, firmly stated that "I do not fear death at all. I am ready to walk out my door right now and be struck down forever, if that is what is to be."

Despite my occasionally macabre attitude and the name of my online "handle", I do not believe that tossing around statements like these are casual (or forceful) acts of nihilism, nor are they a sign of some kind of degradation of my cares for the world or the value of my life. It's really just so simple that despite the many things in life I have been afraid of, I don't really know how to fear death.

I have spent far too much time and energy in my life anxiety-ridden dwelling on overimagined outcomes of seemingly very real sequences of possibility, and the ways these outcomes could represent the crumbling of a life I'd worked hard to put together for myself. Largely these digressions into fear-world produced, at best, wasted hours or days or weeks, and at worst led to legitimately self-destructive behavior that actively brought on an unnecessary reality of the very fears I had lost sleep over wanting to avoid. Luckily I am largely past this kind of brain-tracking now, but only as long as I am on-guard against their attacks and always keeping in mind that for me, the wolf will always be at the door.

BUT: as destructive and unhelpful as those fears always were, at least they were rooted in some kind of understanding of a possibility that, however remote it may have been, was an extrapolation of the potential of me understanding the way things might someday be. In contrast, thoughts on death, however, bring no sensation of the sort--to die would be not to live, which would mean the end of outcomes and possibilities; if I am dead, then there can be no painful reactions, no terrible consequences to deal with. Death means [STATIC NOISE], [silence]. All of which is to say that in my years of confusion and non-happiness, I have gained an acute understanding of what it means to fear the outcome of being alive and living badly, and so the thought of living in fear of no longer being able to feel seems almost laughable.

As strange as it may sound, all of this is actually a good thing, I think. I spent a solid 15 years of adolescence and early adulthood incapacitated by my anxieties over what could possibly torture me while being alive (situational irony alert), and now that I am free of those bounds, the idea of being tortured by nothing is just a conversational "whatever" (... or maybe not, judging by the length of this post).

Still... to bring it back to my earlier thread:

I know that there is a connection between not fearing death and not taking good enough care of myself, and I do think the root lies in the continuing to be true fact that I just don't know what the fuck I'm doing with myself. I'm fairly convinced that I've made important changes to put myself on a good path, and that not being preoccupied with life-constricting generalized anxiety is an important measure of progress to hold onto right now... but at some point not far down the road I know it will be time to take another couple of steps, and I'm sensing that that time is steadily approaching. Perhaps with a little more concrete understanding of not just who I am but what I want, perhaps then I will worry a little bit more about ceasing to exist. And frankly, I don't think a dog is going to be much of a savior here--I just need to keep looking out, looking within, and experiencing life on a day-by-day basis.

LISTEN:
Ulrich Schnauss - "On My Own", from A Strangely Isolated Place##

Nina Simone - "Isn't It A Pity", from Emergency Ward%%%


Brian Eno - "An Ending (Ascent)", from Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks^^^^^


NOTES:
* -- Trust me, I know that most likely this is the last thing he needs right now.
## -- Someday I hope to get around to writing about this record, one of the warmest and strangest pieces of electronic music I've heard. My associations with this record are deeply intertwined with my real-life goings-on at the time when I picked it up in spring 2003 (Carmiel, where are you?), but other no record I've ever heard so closely resembles the humid cloud-must of a waking-life fever dream.
%%% -- Yes, I called on this one once before already. And I will certainly do so again at some point.
$$$$ -- I discovered this tremendously sweet little curio of a song as a backdrop to a quirky and mediocre-but-still-interesting indie film called Wristcutters: A Love Story. Though flawed in all sorts of ways, there was still a nice spirit of light "c'est la vie, and so it goes" that I appreciated tremendously and which this song represents precisely.
^^^^^ -- This is literally the endpoint of all ambient (not ambient) music. Nothing there could ever possibly get better that this.

Labels: , , , , ,


posted by Nihilist Loves Hate, Hates Everything at 10/02/2009 11:52:00 PM 0 comments
0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link



Monday, September 28, 2009
One Anecdote Testifying As To Why Bank of America (Like All Banks) Is Fucking Awful


[WARNING: This is one of those terrifyingly long Beaumont posts (tagged hereafter as "JB screeds"). And actually, it's two long stories, but well, I don't feel like separating them from one another. So, yes. Sorry?]

PART I: Bank of America, I Would Like To Completely Obliterate You And Demand That You Take Reverse TARP-Funding


After a wonderful and lengthy (but not long enough) visit, last week my visitor is now gone, off to see more of the world on her long, strange world tour--seriously, her voyage will last SEVENTY-SEVEN DAYS and is touching down on six countries on three continents--but I had a great weird ten days wandering around parts of the greater New York environs and amazing seeing things that I've either never seen before or saw long ago and have since taken for granted.

The whole experience last week of "time off at home" was truly fantastic, EXCEPT for one financially-related blip having to do with my entire world of funding (two bank accounts and a credit card) having been frozen due to some overzealous Bank of America "fraud preventioneering".

The issue was triggered on Monday Sept 14 when I headed with Lil Beaumont to go pick up a new bike from a girl in the heart of Bushwick. As she temporarily had only limited dollars, I agreed to cover her purchase temporarily. I went to the ATM to withdraw funds from my credit/debit card but accidentally added an extra digit in attempting to get money from my account (therefore going over the limit) and was rejected. I then attempted to withdraw the correct amount from my account on the same ATM but was again rejected. Trying once more (thinking perhaps i'd mistyped something) but this time even less funds, I was declined a third time.

I then received an automated call from Bank of America asking me to approve three potential fraud transactions, which I did, but then I immediately called the Bank to make sure that in doing so they didn't think I'd actually withdrawn any money from the account.

"Hi, thank you for calling Bank of America. I look forward to helping you today."

A rep on the phone confirmed for me that nothing had been taken out and said he'd help me make sure the fraud lock is lifted if I'd just wait a second. In the meantime though I was warned by the person on the line when asked a variety of security questions that despite having opened my account at a Fleet Bank in Saratoga Springs in 2001, my account now stated that it had been opened at Rockefeller Center in some time more recently...also apparently my "user account phone password" is "customer", which I also got wrong. I'm assuming that BofA chose this for me since I have to believe that I would have never chosen such a hilariously terrible password (I would have at least gone with "password" if I was going to go the ridiculous route). Finally, after being placed on hold, I was for a second time sent to the automated fraud removal line. I groaned--and probably shouted out loud--but went through the prompts yet again and then went home without attempting to use my card again.

After going Tuesday without using my card, on Wednesday, I went to work and managed to use the card three times as a credit card at a Duane Reade and to get food at a nearby eatery--seemingly without problems. I did not attempt to withdraw any cash from an ATM though.


Coney Island sign, from behind train station entrance

I was under the impression at this point that everything was fine, until on Thursday Mia and I went to Coney Island. Immediately after getting there I decided to get some cash so I could show her the wonders of corn dogs and fried clams (amazing honestly, being able to give someone a first experience on that stuff). However, when I attempted to withdraw $60 from my account I was given an "external decline" message and told to contact my bank. Sure enough, within minutes I received yet ANOTHER call from the automated fraud prevention line asking me to sanction potentially fraudulent activity. I did not go through the prompts this time though, and immediately hung up and dialed customer service because I was so angry that simply attempting to withdraw reasonable amounts of money from random ATMs throughout the CITY I LIVE IN would signal the "fraud preventioneers" and wanted to talk to someone immediately to straighten things out. After getting someone on the line and explaining my situation (including the desperate plea NOT to be sent again to the automated line), I was put on hold and then... sent back to the automated line.

Increasingly frantic in my desperation for dollars and annoyance at BofA bullshit, I dialed them back once again and this time insisted on speaking to a human who could help me. They finally transferred me to a "fraud prevention specialist" who said he could take care of things.

This is where things went rapidly downhill: he asked me my security word ("customer") and my social security number, fine, but then the question of the age of my account came up. He asked if my account was older than five years. Obviously it is based on what I mentioned above, but to make sure I was clear to him I said, "Yes, it is. My account was opened at a Saratoga Springs, NY Fleet Bank location in 2001 or 2002, but I have been told that it may now say Rockefeller Center and I have no idea therefore what year you have listed."

Long pause.

He then asked if I have any direct deposits set-up (yes, my work). He asked me the amount it was for. Mind you, I'm standing on a boardwalk at Coney Island starving and staring at corn dogs. I have absolutely no idea what the amounts of my direct deposit are, only that each paycheck is a slightly different amount because of my health insurance deductions.

Long pause.

He then asked if I had any regularly scheduled monthly payments (yes, credit card and a checking-to-savings swap). Did I know the exact amounts though? No.

Longest pause.

Speaking slowly, he said, "I'm sorry sir, but since you have not been able to pass the security requirements I'm going to have to ask that you go in person to a Bank of America to verify the account."

I couldn't believe it. I had more or less answered all of his questions and could provide exact detail on a variety of things he didn't ask. I then pleaded we him if there was anything else we could do to get the fraud prevention removed and he said no, and so I then asked for his BofA ID # so I could file a complaint against him and asked to speak to his supervisor. He then paused again and said hold on and then the line was disconnected. gahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.

So after spending about 25 minutes of me being on and off hold and answering question after question, I had accomplished nothing. Or so I thought. I called back once more, resolved to get things taken care of, only to find out that my friendly Bank of America attendee had put a lock on my account so that the only way it could be reopened would be to physically go into a Bank somewhere. Thanks a lot, dude.


Coney Island Boardwalk (near "Shoot the Freak")

Again, we were in Coney Island and my friend was just visiting. I think there may have been a bank somewhere nearby but I didn't want to waste Mia's time so I just decided to go to the one in Williamsburg when I got home. We spent the rest of the morning and early afternoon exploring, taking photos and counting the trash cans and crazy people (seriously, there are innumerable amounts of them both) and then headed back to the Burg around 3. We got home at 4 and I headed immediately to the BofA on Graham Ave expecting I had plenty of time, but sure enough, blammo, the office had closed at 4 and I was fucked, immediately, and for the next 17 hours.

Since not just one but all of my accounts were locked, I had literally no access to funds (note to anyone: here's one good reason to use multiple banks for different accounts). This wasn't inherently the end of the world, as I could certainly borrow dollars from Mia, but the next day was Friday and we planned to be gone the entire day visiting Storm King upstate and had plans again early Saturday morning--meaning that if I wanted any funds before Monday, I would need to get into a Bank of America the next morning before heading to Storm King.

Unfortunately, the lone bus to Storm King leaves each day at 10am...meaning that we needed to be there by 9:40 to ensure we would have enough time to get a ticket and make it onto the bus.... leaving us but 25 or so minutes to "make it happen" at Bank of America and then rush from the location on 44 St & 7 Av to the Port Authority bus terminal.

We woke up earlyish the next morning and began getting our stuff together before finally leaving the house (late) at 8:45. We got out of the train at 42 & 7 at 9:15 and I almost ran fullspeed to Bank of America from there. Upon entering, I quickly grabbed the attention of salesperson and relayed to her my plight.

"Ok, come with me Sir. I can help you," she said, leading me into an office. I walked in and "handed" my identification to her (which was admittedly more of a "forced my identification on her"). "Ok, great, I can help you," she said, repeating herself, "Just have a seat and let me get a representative on the phone to help you with your issue."

Scrrrrrreeeeecchhhhh! [insert phonograph needle skating across vinyl]

"Umm...," I said, "Why do you need to get someone on the phone? They told me I had to come in here so you could unlock the account and then it would be fine."

"I'm sorry sir, but actually, I'm only able to verify your identity for a representative who can help you with your issue."

At this precise moment I was torn between my rapidly increasing need to get out of the bank and over to Port Authority to catch our bus and my urge to pick up the now dialing telephone and throw it as hard as possible at the glass window behind me. Probably the intense confusion of feeling at this moment actually saved me, because rather than barking at the in-store attendant and causing her to stop what she was doing, I simply sat there, too stunned to move or say anything until the voice of yet another Bank of America phone operator cut the silence.

"Hi, thank you for calling Bank of America. I look forward to helping you today."

I then had to for the fourth time explain my situation, whereby the skeptical sounding woman then requested to speak with a BofA rep who could attest to my identity claims. I then called another attendant in, who verified I was indeed Me, and I thought it was finally over but then I heard the woman on the phone ask him for some kind of special authorization code. "Seriously?" he said, "Can't I just give my employee ID#?" No. The man left the room and was gone for a bit before finally returning a few minutes later during which time my anxiety-stricken brain began to assume that there was no way that the call wouldn't somehow be dropped and we'd have to start all over again. GAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH.

But instead he gave her the code, handed me back the phone and we proceeded.

"Ok, Sir," the woman said, "Now I can begin to help you with your issue." Duh-what?????

"We're all set now, right?" I asked hurriedly, adding, "I'm late for a bus and need to get going."

"Sir, I need in order to assist you with this fraud-related issue I need to ask you a few security questions about your account." Stunned silence from me, followed by, "... Uh. [sigh] Ok."

"First can you please verify the following transaction..." and she proceeded to ask me about the Coney Island ATM withdrawal which I'd already verified twice to the automated teller, twice to a human on the phone, and once to the in-store bank attendant. Umm. O. ... K. ...

"Ok. Now can you please tell me what were the last three purchases made on the card and the exact amounts they were for."

.... !!!! ... !!!!

There do not exist words or punctuation to describe my feeling at that very moment. Only the knowledge that I could potentially drop the call and have to start all over again prevented me from slamming the phone repeatedly onto the table and my own face.

I drew a deep breath and spoke slowly:

"Ma'am. Wow. I honestly have NO IDEA what my last three purchases were on this card, and I definitely have no idea what the amounts were. The account has been locked for over 24 hours now and moreover, I'm not sitting in front of a computer screen where I might be able to review this information and share it with you***. In fact, I'm currently in an actual Bank of America where I was told I could come in and show my identification to prove that I am who I say I am and get this all taken care of. I'm pretty sure that I made two purchases at Duane Reade, for amounts totaling less than $20 in each purchase. But I couldn't tell you what the dollar figures were, or what the third transaction was. Please, please, stop asking me questions and let me get my money so I can go try and catch a bus that your bank seems hellbent on making me miss."

Pause.

"Sir, I'm sorry, but I need you to answer these questions in order to remove the fraud security lock from your account. Can you please tell me the amounts of these purchases?"

At this point I shouted "Hold on, one second" and then raced out of the room to the attendant standing in the hallway.

"Please, dear god," I said, "Tell this woman on the phone that I am who I say I am. I have no idea what my recent transactions were. I only know that I have done everything that should be necessary to prove my identity and that I am on the verge of missing a bus that will ruin one day out of my friend and I's vacation. Please, please help me."

The attendant then followed me into the office and put the receiver on speakerphone.

"Ma'am, this is [name], [title] of the Times Square Bank of America branch again. Mr. Beaumont has provided enough evidence to remove the fraud lock from his account. Let's please wrap this up."

It's 9:48am.

"Ok, I am just making sure that we have answered all the necessary questions. We are all set now and you may use your account immediate--- [CLICK]" I threw the phone back on the receiver and dashed out the door, grabbing Mia by the shoulder and saying, "Run!" She handed me a cigarette she'd rolled for me and we raced off toward Port Authority, whispering, "I have donuts and a New York Times" in my ear.

Ten Morals Of The Story (WITH CONVENIENT BOOKEND POINTS):
1) Fuck you Bank of America.
2) CONSIDER USING A BANK OTHER THAN BANK OF AMERICA
3) I am deprariously lackadaisical when it comes to doing things promptly or carefully, and could have easily avoided a lot of this absurdity by being on top of my shit a little more.
4) We are near the endpoint in our civilization when humans serve no purpose but to annoy each other and make babies.
5) There is already almost no way to avoid these kind of braincrushing commercial interactions.
6) For every action, there is an opposite and actual reaction.
7) Coney Island is more fun to take a visitor in the fall on a weekend when all the action is open.
8) Banks are destined to grow more and more powerful.
9) If my skin were made out of money, I could avoid these kinds of issues by shaving dead layers off into people's hands in the form of currency.
10) FUCK YOU BANK OF AMERICA. THANKS.

PART II: Storm King, After I Found You, You Provided Me With Rich Excitement And Assuaged My Feelings Of Weltschmerz

Epilogue:
After arriving at Port Authority, we tore up the stairs frantically looking for the ticket booth, and upon finding it, I attempted to bribe the woman in front of the line with a fiver to cut her (she demurred and let us pass gratis). We bought our tickets (the ticketeer had no smiles to give) and rushed over to the departure gate. When we got there the gate attendent was gone already and so we burst through the exit, just to see the bus closing its doors. I ran to the bus and banged once before the driver opened and let us on. Exhale--until two seconds later my heart dropped as I saw that every seat on the bus was taken except for two singles in the back; for a moment it suddenly occurred to me that after all this malarkey we'd have to spend a 90 minute bus ride sitting apart from each other. These fears were almost immediately allayed, however, as Mia quickly offered gummi bears (gummibärchen!) to one of the singles in exchange for his seat. Phew. Yes. Of course.

Bus booths, Newburgh Bus Terminal parking lot

Fairly Tangential Epi-epilogue:
After all of this craziness Mia and I were so relieved that we rather depariously somehow failed to exit the bus when it reached Storm King. Despite seeing a location that looked very much like what I had imagined Storm King to be, we didn't hear the driver announce anything [he was apparently using his throat and vocal cords rather than amplified microphone to broadcast his voice??] and so we didn't get off until about 15 minutes later Mia said, "Umm.... did we miss the Storm King?" We had, in fact, missed it (I'd thought since it only went there once a day that Storm King was actually the end of the line and that we wouldn't be able to miss it). The driver let us off at the Newburgh Bus Terminal, which my iPhone told me was 8.9 miles away from Storm King, and found out almost immediately from a near-laughing ticketeer that there was no "next bus to Storm King".

I burst into maniacal laughter and wandered outside for a cigarette, wondering how much a cab driver would gouge me to take us there, and how I might go about finding one. I crossed my fingers it would be less than $50. But much to my delight, upon exiting, I heard two middle-aged women on a nearby bench talking say the words "Storm" and "Museum". I wandered over to them and asked if they were by chance going to Storm King. To our luck, they were. Meaning... !!!!!! (this did not in reality merit four exclamation points). They immediately asked if I wanted to split the cab and I pumped my fist unnecessarily and sat down to enjoy my cigarette.

10-15 minutes later a yellow minivan pulls up with reggaeton BLASTING out the windows. I attempt four times to open the side door before the driver finally reaches over and throws it open.

Mia and I quickly climbed into the back and the cabbie looked at the two women as the entered and barked, "Hola. Que tal? Donde vamos?" Seriously.

He also had not turned the music down, so they looked at each other and then began shouting in English to him.

"Que Uds dicen?" he asked$. I began to see steam coming out of their ears and began attempting to communicate in pidgin Spanish, which was enough to get the car moving (but not the music lowered). For whatever reason, after everything that had happened, this situation seemed not remotely annoying but instead entirely hilarious.

The driver then began speaking muy rápidamente into his radio, asking for directions and saying something to the effect of "What the fuck is Storm King and where the fuck is it?" The women in front of us began alternating between feelings anger over the loud volume of the music and concern over the fact that the driver appeared to have absolutely no idea where he was going.

After turning around for the second time, I busted out my iPhone and pulled up directions from its Google Maps GPS%%%. I then started shouting directions while simultaneously assuring the ladies that everything would be fine and we'd be there shortly.

When we finally got there--which honestly was only about 10-15 minutes later--we got out of the car and the driver said, "Ok sí, $10, gracias."

We all looked at each other in disbelief--$10! For a nine mile trip! In NYC that would have cost a minimum of $25, and I was just expecting it would be more here. Nope. Topping it off, the women stunned me by then speaking in Spanish with the driver to arrange for him to pick them up again in the same spot at 5pm.

And then I looked ahead, and there we were, finally: Storm King. And the rest is history.

Andrew Goldsworthy Wall, Storm King Art Center

All photos by Jeffrey Beaumont (flickr.com/jeffreybeaumont)

LISTEN:

Cut Copy - "Autobahn Music", from Bright Like Neon Love

NOTES:
***-- Ok, ok. Yes, Mom, to be fair, if I balanced my checkbook like old people do, I probably could have pulled it out of my briefcase and recited the figures back to her and avoided a lot of these troubles. But it's 2009, and I feel like I don't want that to be the lesson of this whole thing. I guess I would hope it wouldn't have to come to that by now. And anyway, sheesh.
$$$--Or something like that. Paraphrasing, obviously, because I don't remember and I don't really speak Spanish.
%%%--Aside: yes, a world without cell phones would be great, but also, really: fuck that, right? Bring on the future!

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


posted by Nihilist Loves Hate, Hates Everything at 9/28/2009 11:54:00 PM 2 comments
2 Comments:
Blogger Sarah Jane said...

Wow! Fuck! I feel like a should give you a round of applause!

9/30/2009 04:19:00 AM  
Blogger Nihilist Loves Hate, Hates Everything said...

hahaha, thanks. i'm just glad it's over. i just wish that these experiences weren't exactly the same with the phone companies and telecoms too.

9/30/2009 02:13:00 PM  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link