Thursday, March 18, 2010

I have a Memory....


I have a memory of a time past;
where child like innocence is heard as laughter in the breeze.
A time where children play in open air fields of green;
and sky's are dotted with wispy clouds that spark young imaginations.
I have this memory - of time past.

Monday, February 1, 2010

The Fast Food Generation: Life in 5 Minutes or Less - An essay by William DeSouza (c)2005

First things first - this essay is NOT about self help, or fast food. It's also not about generation w, x, y and z, or about a generation gap.

It's about impatience, it's about rushing through life as fast as we can and it’s about trying to understand why we live our lives while traveling faster than the speed of light. Think of this essay more as reflection and not so much as a rebuke to our daily routine. After all, who am I to pass judgment on something I ‘m equally guilty of?

It seems that as a species humans have an ingrain genetic tendency to rush through life in what can only be called a futile attempt at squeezing out twenty five hours in a twenty four hour day. We have become a collective generation of impulsive, hurried individuals, wanting life in five minutes or less - hence, the fast food generation.

Can you remember a time when life was lived at a slower pace, before fast food and hurrying to get here or there? Before the catch phrase Thirty minutes or free?
We're in a rush to find the time to accomplish more in each minute of every day and I'm not sure we're getting there, where ever there is, any faster.

Let’s start our search in attempting to understand this necessity for speed by beginning where most of us begin, the morning routine.

The sun is beginning to crest the horizon of apartment buildings in the East as the dawn of a new day begins and Monday morning has arrived in all its glory. You’ve already hit the snooze button a half dozen times trying to eke out more of that precious morning sleep as you tentatively open one sleep encrusted eye and peek at the time on the clock radio, “Shit!”

You dash out of bed and since you showered last night, no need to worry about it now, a quick spray of the deodorant will do. You tear into the bathroom and run your head under the tap at the same time you brush your teeth in four nippy strokes. Time to hurry through breakfast, sometimes skipping that most important meal of the day. When we do eat it's pre-made, pre-fabricated and pre-cooked, with the slogan 'eat on the run' printed on the box you just removed from the freezer. Then you run off to work because you wouldn't want to miss the bus to attend that meeting, appointment, or some other first light crises at the office like changing your voice mail to say that you’re in, but too busy to take that call.

If that scenario isn’t bad enough, I've seen co-workers run at break neck speed to - not catch an elevator, but to push the button to call for the lift. The wind created as one colleague dashed past almost knocked my touque off.

I asked myself at the time, "When did pushing the elevator button become an Olympic sport?"

By the time I walked up and stood beside her, she was frantically pressing the call button. I turned, smiled, and quietly wondered if pushing the button repeatedly really makes the elevator come faster? Of course I already know the answer, but still I stand in amazement at the site playing out in front of me.

Inside the office, the next deadline looms as I quickly scan my PDA, others checking their paper calendars seeking the same enlightenment to what's ahead. A crystal ball of sorts on how we can speed up the day, allowing us to return home to - wait for it - quickly get supper ready for the kids and our partners. We seem to all want to rush through the week, as if it wasn't fast enough.

When the work week is over, it's time to relax and take life easy. But let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves because we still have to clean the house. You didn't think the toilets were going to sparkle on their own, did you? And let’s not forget the laundry.

OK, it's Saturday morning, there's still time to salvage a beautiful weekend if you rush the cleaning. So much for relaxing.

At least the kids can relax a bit from their busy life at school. They’re on the computer chatting with the cousin in Edmonton. HRU? IC. LOL SUP? GR8. OIC. PLZ G/F, LOL.

Did you get any of that? It's at the point where even our kids’ daily speech and text is in short hand. A new lexicon for speeding up their pace of life. Speed after all, is vital to this new form of communication. Even our children are not immune. By the way, if you want to know what the kids’ were saying, its - How are you? I see. (laugh out loud). So, what's up? Great! Oh, I see. Please girlfriend! (laugh out loud).

We start our lives in a rush from the second we're born. Let's face it, what new mother about to give birth hasn’t shouted, "Get this kid out of meeeee! Now!!"

Maybe that’s when this goal for a hurried life really begins, at birth. It’s akin to the chicken and the egg really; which came first? Was it the adult mother or the infant child at the moment of taking that first breath of air that begins the race?

Talk about being in a rush. Mind you, who can blame that mother for wanting to be in a rush to give birth. Trying to push something the size of a bowling ball through a vagina is enough to make the most stoic of us want to do it in a hurry. Dragging out child birth just isn't an option.

The act of giving birth by the way is really the first time we see the beginning of the parent child conflict. A parent wanting to hurry along their child who does not want rush, but takes his or her own sweet time moving through the birth canal. You'll see similar scenarios playing itself out many more times while the child is living at home. This is of course the only time our children will take their time. But I digress…

As I was saying, from birth children are born with the gene to be in a rush. As babies they want their food right away, whether it's breast milk or strained prunes. When it's feeding time, they let you know with a set of lungs that break the decibel level of a sonic boom. If they want their diapers changed right away, the signal for this is very similar to the immediate need for food.

As our children grow, the need for speed also grows exponentially. Except of course in their teen years when you're trying to wake them for school or some other event you’re late for. This is part of the parent child conflict which I will not dwell on - that's a topic best left for another short essay. I know, I strayed off the point again, sorry.

Let’s just say that our children learn from us, the parental units, the need for instant gratification.

Fast cars, fast women and fast food, it’s all the same. Even music is getting faster. If you’re over forty, you can remember the vinyl record playing hits from the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, or Led Zeppelin. The average song time for most musical groups ran four to six minutes. Today the average running time for a compact disk or MP3 song with words you can’t understand because they sing too fast is two and a half to three and a half minutes. It’s just not the same thing. Record companies want to sell more songs to make more money and radio stations want to play more songs; also to make more money. The only way to do that is to shorten the songs; but that leaves the artist with less time to convey any message he or she may have in the lyrics. So the only way to remedy that is to speed up the tempo of the songs. Sometimes I get nostalgic for the slow pace of the past when I could really enjoy the music, and of course understand what the lyrics said.

Music videos have changed as well. I remember watching the pop music groups in the late 70’s and early 80’s when music videos were in its infancy and I’d sit back in the recliner and gaze at images as they flowed across the floor console television. In a thirty minute time slot I’d see maybe ten groups and the visual rendition of their hit songs. Now, my children are bombarded with as many as fifteen or twenty videos from hit songs in the same period of time. What gives?

Mind you, the amount of violence you see in some of today’s music video is blasted by them on the screen so quickly the kids don’t get a chance to see what just happened. Sometimes quickness could be a good thing.

Life is full of short cuts and quickies today. Which brings me to – well, you know. You knew that we had to brooch the subject sooner of later, didn’t you? Sex! There, I said it, and now all of you puritan individuals or young children may as well skip down several paragraphs that you may find offensive. After all, you’re already saying to yourself, ‘Is this guy going to get to the end and some point anytime soon? I have things to do!”

OK, it’s just us and the naughty bits for the next few paragraphs. I’ll try to keep it short – no pun intended. Sex, the act of and subject of, is a two headed issue. Again, no pun intended. In one hand we have the male member (I swear I'm not trying to be funny) of society and on the other we have females.

Both male and females have very different views on how they see their role on this particular subject and each one has a valid observation. In this case however, we’ll look at only the issue of speed, tempo, velocity or momentum. There are far too many other issues between the sexes to review at this time and since we’re only looking at the pace of life we now lead, most of those topics really don’t fit (but it would make for another great short story).

I visited an adult ‘superstore’ not that long ago and to my amazement were hundreds of sex aids and toys of all varieties for both men and women. When you read the labels of these, toys, you see one main theme (it’s not what you think you dirty old man), its how to give yourself or your partner pleasure in the shortest amount of time possible.

When did the act of sex become so rushed? I’m in my forties and only just beginning to see the pleasure of taking things slow and the manufactures and purveyors of these ‘toys’ are trying to sell me ‘fast food’. Nothing is safe from the need for instant fulfillment anymore. Never mind the stereotype joke about the man finishing his bit while his partner is still waiting for it to begin.

Nothing is safe anymore; even death has become ‘fast food’. I recently read an article about a drive through funeral parlor. How do you speed up burying someone? I can see it now – you die in your sleep at a ripe old age and around the city is your family’s choice of drive through burial stores. They rap you up in plastic and shove you into a giant paper sack and bring you up to the take out window.

“Will there be flowers with that?” The smartly dressed clerk at the window asks. Your relatives respond with, “No thanks, but do you give air miles?”

Each car in the funeral procession will speed through the viewing area where you’re propped up against the glass like yesterdays donuts on display. The fastest funeral on record – sounds silly doesn’t it. But we’re almost at that stage in our need for more speed. Once you begin to have drive through funeral parlors, who’s to say what comes next? Drive through circumcisions? Ouch!

You’ll notice that I’ve left out fast food, other than to use it as a metaphor, and I did that on purpose because whether it’s drive up or take away, or boil in the bag, drop in the oven or nuked in the microwave, food is too easy to pick on. I think that we’ve all seen this area of our lives get faster since the 1950’s when the first TV diners were introduced. Manufactures are selling the latest conveniences in food preparation to anyone that has a kitchen at an alarming rate. Turn on a television on the weekends or late night and watch a one hour commercial on how to cook a pot roast in ten minutes. Or how to juice twenty applies, oranges, mangoes and old shoes in less than a minute. It’s no longer farmer’s selling us our food, its corporations. They don’t grow food anymore, they manufacture it. And along with food, these same companies also manufacture televisions, stoves, cars and some even drill for oil. I’m having some difficulty in seeing the connection between food and oil, but we do have eatable oil products, maybe that’s it? We also have refrigerators with built in televisions and internet connections and I’m still trying to make that connection as well.

Our need to rush thought life is, in my humble opinion, getting out of hand. We’ve forgotten how to relax and enjoy life for what it is, a wonder of taste, sight, sound and imagination. We’re more stressed, get sick more often and sleep less. Daily routines have become chores and excitement is no longer savored it’s do it fast and get onto the next event. I think that we’re missing the boat on life when we forget to take out time. When we rush from one task to the next we don’t see the life we’ve missed around us and that is unfortunate, because we really can’t appreciate what life is when we don’t take our time. Pity really…

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Quotes / Poems By William A. DeSouza 2009 / 2010

"I do not wish to be 'tolerant' of people.
I wish to embrace Humanity for its varied differences, cultures and languages.
To be tolerant is to be closed minded."
by William DeSouza (30 January 2010)

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"We seek a uniform theory of everything yet we can not agree on anything.
We are conflicted as a species.
In time, once we, Humanity, are unified, we may find our answers."
by William DeSouza (28 January 2010)

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"Humanity is really an insignificant speck in the cosmos.
We are born and die in what is really less than a universal nanosecond.
It is only our delusions of grander and Human egos that we believe we are more.
It is our own perceptions of time that causes us to believe we matter outside the planet Earth.
Time does not exist outside our own minds and reality is fleeting at best."
by William DeSouza (25 January 2010)

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"In the future we see our past and in the past we see our present.
Today we stand at the crossroads of time.
Today we decide the path we take tomorrow."
by William DeSouza (22 January 2010)

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"The ability to see into your future is not that hard;
Just open your eyes and look at what you are doing today."
by William DeSouza (18 January 2010)

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"The rule of the game is simple - Survival.
Just remember this; to survive, you must be smarter than the enemy....
And the enemy is time. Will your survive?"
by William DeSouza (27 December 2009)

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"Time is a Human construct that has no meaning or place in the Universise....
If this is true, then we are as young as we are old.
Our future is only written in our imaginations."
by William DeSouza (26 December 2009)

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"Life is located where time and space collide.
The inevitable result is Humanity has Whiplash."

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"The past, the present and the future all collide in a kaleidoscope of confusion and incriminations.
Truth and lies are both victims of denial.
Who is to blame does not matter;
Who will pay for damages is what Humanity wants to know."
by William DeSouza (16 December 2009)

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"Humanity continues to crawl toward their future;
Their eyes closed a tight as a newborn.
The direction Humanity travels is - uncertain at best.
Good, bad, indifference and confusion all lay in its path.
The direction Humanity takes, will decide its future."
by William DeSouza (16 December 2009)

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"We are the children of the stars and infants of the Universe.
The Human species is barley conscious of its existence, and only now begin to open its eyes.
We want to run, yet all we can see is a blur, our vision obscured by our infantile sense of self.
The true ideals of Humanity has not yet developed - yet in time, the species will mature.
In what direction, remains to be seen."
by William DeSouza (14 December 2009)

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"Life is the illusion of time. Humanity has not lived, only just being born.
We are but days old and have much to learn."
by William DeSouza (13 December 2009)

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"Time is an illusion, reality a myth and the past only a dream.
If that is really the case, then what is it that holds us fixed in the present
when all we want is the future?"
by William DeSouza (11 December 2009)

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"The present is just a bookmark for the future'"
by William DeSouza (08 December 2009)

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"Building your future means knowing where to lay the bricks.
If you're not careful, you will build a future with no entrance;
and a future with no entrance is no future."
by William DeSouza (06 December 2009)

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"Your past will mean nothing without a future and your future is irrelevant without the present.
Your actions today will directly affect your future and tell if you've learned from your past."
by William DeSouza (04 December 2009)

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

New Sales Outlet for Death's Door - Where Right and Glory Lead



Death's Door - Where Right and Glory Lead, can now be purchased at Preston NewsStand, located at Tower III, Preston Square (347 Preston Street in Ottawa).

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

An Evening With William DeSouza







Join me at the Ottawa Public Library - Hazeldean Branch in Kanata on Thursday, 05 November 2009 from 7pm to 8:30pm.

I will be discussing my Sci-Fi novel Death's Door - Where Right and Glory Lead. I will also speak about the research, writing and publishing process.

Registration is required - Please visit the Ottawa Public Library website by CLICKING HERE or phoning 613.836.1900
  • Ottawa Public Library - Hazeldean Branch is located at 50 Castlefrank Road in Kanata

Monday, October 12, 2009

Excerpt of 'Home World'


Damage alarms would cycle on and off as smoke and sparks lit up the darkened bridge of the Starlight. Captain Knox held her right arm close to her body with her left, trying to protect the broken limb while a medic put a ring bandage around a piece of bone that was protruding at an angle. At first she thought the bone was hers but the medic quickly realized, and pointed out to her that it was from the leg of a crew member that was scattered around the bridge.

She couldn’t remove it however as there was too much bleeding and this would at least control the flow until she could get to sick bay where the doctor would remove the bone and repair the artery and wound. Knox winced from the pain as the medic completed the bandage, applied a pain killer patch on her neck and then moved on to the next casualty. There were many casualties as the Starlight took several direct hits from an unknown energy weapons before it managed to limp behind a large planetoid.

Knox slowly reached down and after picking up a piece of conduit that had fallen into her chair threw it aside but out of the way. Half her bridge crew was dead or injured and replacements were slow in arriving, everyone having to deal with their own catastrophe.

She coughed and said, “Damage report!”

No one answered at first, but an older Ensign, coughing and spiting blood on the decking spoke up from the tactical console. “Auxiliary bridge is cut off from ship access – no comm traffic in or out. Damage control crews are swamped and only twenty file percent have reported in. The repair robots have been assigned to vital sections only but progress is slow. Medical is spread throughout the ship – casualties on every deck. Starboard missile tubes four through ten are open to space, port side tubes all report faulty outer doors or no launch computer access and unable to fire. It leaves us only three workable tubes and they are loaded, but have to fire using manual guidance and programming. Laser turrets on the belly are operational but targeting computers are down – top side batteries are all gone.” He took several breaths and found it hard to breath, the smoke becoming chocking as the venation system struggled to clean the air.

A medic reached the Ensign and gave in a needle with a breathing compound in an effort to help oxygen reach vital organs. He continued, “Engineering reports jump engines are gone and we only have minimal propulsion with maneuvering thrusters.”

Knox was an optimist but it was hard to see a bright side to what was happening. The decoys had worked but it didn’t take the Horde ships long to figure out what was real and what wasn’t. The final sensor data confirmed that the attacking ships were of Horde design so it was pretty much safe to assume it was the Horde.

Knox was shaken from her chair and she fell to the ground when an explosion somewhere on the ship rocked it. What the fuck was that she swore to herself.

“Report!” she winced in pain as she picked herself up off the deck.

“Secondary explosion in starboard missile tube fifteen – one of the repair robots cut through the containment bottle trying to get to trapped crew. Three tubes on either side of fifteen is now open to space – all crew lost in that section.” The Ensign was a professional but he had a hard time holding back his emotion.

“Fuck!” Knox swore out loud as she tried to take in the death of her ship. “Do we have access to the sensor buoys?”

“Yes sir, they were on the belly section not touched by the attack. Status lights are green but we have no way to confirm that.” The tech was a bit confused as to why the captain was asking about the buoys.

“We’re not in position, but launch the remainder and send them on their way. Their internal AI will take over without input from the ship. We came out here to do a job and we may as well finish it. Besides, we can use the network once it’s up to see what the hell is going on outside, assuming we can even tap into the network with all this damage.” Knox coughed. “Comm, load a message packet, flash status. Drop all our logs into it and send to command.”

She took her good arm and wiped back the sweat that had built up on her forehead, running her fingers through her hair. Her eyes were burning as she blinked. Turning to see the ship status board, she noted that the fires reported earlier were slowing coming under control and the surviving crew was safe for now. She also realized that there was still a lot of work left for the damaged control crews as they worked overtime in a feverously pitch to contain the ship wide damages. She took in a deep gulp of air and almost suffocated on the sulfur like smell that resulted when so much of the protective covering on the damaged power and optical conduits burned away.

At once the sensor technician spoke up, breaking the silence, “Captain! Limited external sensors are online.” The young tech checked her board and confirmed the readings before continuing. “We have short range sensors only but we can get a good read of our immediate area out to five hundred kilometers.”

Knox smiled and walked over to a working monitor, “Send the feed to the A-six monitor.” She studied the screen as it came to life with the data. The Starlight was on the far side of a planetoid that was part of a series of asteroids and other small bodies that could have been from a collision of to two or more large asteroids. Either way it was helping to mask the big but damaged ship. Knox said to the officer on watch, “shout down all non-critical emissions and use passive sensors only. No active energy signatures – go to silent running.”

The order was repeated and carried out amongst the ciaos that was taking place on the bridge. Knox didn’t know at this point if the missiles they fired had any effective results or if the enemy ships were still out there. If they were still out there and out of sensor range they only had to wait the Starlight out and as soon as they showed their heads, come in for the kill and finish them off. It wouldn’t take them much at this point thought Knox. The air scrubbers began to kick in and clean the foul air chocking the bridge as the recovery crew removed the dead and injured. Damage control was working on repairing damaged systems at the same time. To Knox, the bridge looked as it did during initial construction as she remembered the confusion on the ship when she made her initial inspection tour.

“Auxiliary bridge is reporting sir, there’re using text only – internal communications is still out in that section and no video feed is available. They report two dead and only one injury.”

“What about the XO?” asked Knox as she peered down at the communication station officer.

“It was the XO that reported in sir.”

Knox was relived to hear her executive officer was alive as she had grown fond of the Commander over time. Any other emotion other than relief however at this time would have to wait. Knox pulled over one of her screens and called up a schematic of available resources, including offensive missiles. She wanted to be sure that there was enough of a punch left in case she had to fight off another Horde attack. In the back of her mind she knew any gesture of confrontation would be futile and that they were dead. She was determined to go down fighting if it came to that.

Most of the port missile launch rails were still locked out with launch doors unable to open. Crews were trying to space walk and open the doors from the outside but it was doubtful at this time if this would work. Knox had a thought however, “Missile control – relay to port tubes to rig demo charges on the door slides and blow them off. I want those tubes open and ready to fire in one hour.”

My First Blog Rant......

I live in Ottawa; Canada's national capital. A nations capital is by any definition, a showcase city. It is that first city that the fabric of a nation can be based and it should be a world destination.

Ottawa is not that place; at lease not right now. Our city is plagued by municipal councilors and a mayor that is, quite frankly, inept in their ability to make coherent decisions. In our last elections, Larry O'Brien ran with a platform to get rid of the north south rail line that had been planned (and contracts signed). He didn't like the price tag, design, route, and just about anything else.

He made good on that election promise and once elected, promptly pushed council into scraping the contract. That decision cost the city in $38 Million Dollars in an out of court settlement. What does he come up with, an east west line that is four stops long and burred under the downtown core. In essence a four (that's 4) stop subway. This grand plan does not meet up with the existing 'O' Train line and will cost billions to build. Once built, thousand's of commuters will have to disembark their express busses just outside the downtown core, wait for a train and somehow pack themselves in to travel two or three (maybe even four) stops. In essence this will add 15 to 30 minutes onto their travels to and from work. Does this make any sense? I think not. There was a previous proposal for an east west line running downtown but that was scraped.

Now, pushing his agenda through, he's come up with (along with some city staffers and councilors) building the very same north south route that he wanted terminated (and paid $38 Million Dollars in tax payers money in a settlement).

Toping that, we have a just our of downtown core sports facility that could have been redeveloped into an area of pride for the city (Landsdown Park area). We could have opened up the design phase to a national or even global competition.

No, instead Mr. O'Brien however began secrete negotiations with one group of business people that wanted to bring back north American football to the park (the tired time - fast on the heals of two previous failed attempts). We're now, for some strange reason only known to him, enrolled into a sole-source bid with this same business group.

What's very odd is that he knew about and negotiated with this group even before anyone else knew that we had to do something about the area. While the stands and park needed some work, no one knew how much and what it would take to redevelop the lands.

This was a sole-source bid from the very start. He even went on the news from the beginning and made it very clear he was not interested in any design competition and did not want to solicit any other bids for the re-development. This will cost the city's tax payers billions in the end.

This smells so bad, its making this once great city the laughing stock of the country and the world. Its time for a change.