Not My Grandfather’s Son

Personal Bits

Pi ApartmentMy Da called the other day to announce a friend of his was getting rid of his G5 Mac Tower, would I be interested?

Deep inside me, somewhere near the core of my soul, right next to revulsions and unexplainable desire, a strand of my persona twanged as if a horny romantic lute player strummed his instrument to get poon. Computer parts for sale? Oh? Must. Get.

I’m no collector of electronics but I know someone who has an actual server in his living room… and I am so jealous. I could easily turn my office into that apartment from the movie Pi. Untethered, I definitely would have one machine for fun, a machine for storage, a machine for music, a machine for gaming, a machine for graphics and a machine to look at porn. I keep my addiction in check, thankfully, otherwise I doubt I would be married right now.

My Da snaps me back to reality: “Are you interested?” The computer is about 2 years old. No mention of monitor or keyboard or hard drive size or RAM. Or price for that matter. The lute player strums harder. Hell yeah, I’m interested!

Hell ya! But then suddenly I remember my grandfather. When he left this mortal coil, the family was charged with emptying out his 4 car garage, which was full to the rafters not with cars (I think there was only two cars in it), but with …stuff. Grandfather was an A-List pack rat and had no control over his hoarding. No one to say “Put that back!” Sure Grandmother would say the odd remark about the garage, but she really had no dominance over his addiction. The family decided to have a huge garage sale on the front lawn of the house and in the process of bringing stuff out, they found 14 gas powered lawn mowers. Fourteen. One Four. Da said that maybe two worked. Tops. I was living in England at the time and I saw pictures of the hoard – quality stuff like an intact moose head, barely moth eaten and a top had that would have made Taco cry. In addition to the vault of stuff, they found that grandfather had opened up several bank accounts just to get the free toasters/kettles/appliances. Not to sure how many accounts he had in the Greater Toronto, but there were many appliances. And most were in the garage.

Was I interested? Hell.. yeah?

My thoughts go to my Da himself. A while back he had so much artwork on his walls his condo rivaled The Louvre. In his retired travels he dragged art back from Mexico, China and other parts of the world. He’s since reformed but he does have one piece of art hanging beneath a window sill. Yes, beneath, below the line of sight just because, well… there was a big blank wall spot, I guess. I often wonder if there is another apartment in his name in the city somewhere, full of Dawn Snells, David Hockey prints and Toller Cranston limited editions, to be discovered posthumously, via an unmarked key left in a shoe box under his bed. Currently, he volunteers at the Gardiner Museum of Ceramics’ gift shop and slowly, slowly, his condo is filling up with bowls, cups, nick-nacks and most recently, a $2500 statue that was busted in storage and given to him by the manager. I can hear the ghost of his father coo into his ear: “‘It is still gooooood! Glue the haaaaand back on!”

Then I think of the storage locker I have down the street. Five 60L Rubbermaid containers that hold 30 or so pieces of mouth blown glass. One 90L Rubbermaid that holds approximately $1000 in robot toys. A milk crate of British import records.

“Uh. No thanks,” I conceded. The horny lute player cries.

10 thoughts on “Not My Grandfather’s Son

  1. andrew

    i sold and gave away about 1/3 of my books a year or two ago. i made a nice little profit on some, which enabled me to buy more books.

    now i’ve got stacks of books that i haven’t yet read, as opposed to stacks that i dimly recall reading.

  2. force field frequency 18

    FIRST: an apartment like the one in LAIN is totally what i’d go for.

    SECOND: so THAT’S where it comes from. jesus… well now the knowledge that there IS a floor under all this shit can coincide with the knowledge that it’s genetic.
    and all this junk that i keep telling myself will make marvelous art pieces will in fact just sit around ’til i die.

    awesome.

    THIRDLY: if i were you i’d purchase 4 Commadors and a sheet of glass. voila! coffee table extrodinaire.

  3. Normlr

    If it’s a G5 and it’s free I’m interested. I’ve always been curious about setting up an OSX Server. Especially with Leopard on the way.

    I used to collect all kinds of spare PC parts and finally got rid of them when we moved. Now that I’m in the business for myself, I find them sneaking back in.

  4. Gabriel...

    In my bedroom I’ve got a working 486 HP (which started as a 386) running Win3.1, monitor, keyboard and mouse… it has never crashed, never frozen and I’ve never seen the Blus Screen on it. I’ve also got a collection of 486 towers, parts and a second monitor I collected during the mid to late 90’s for parts — in case something ever happened to my computer and the OEM’s had stopped making the nits and pieces to fix it… the only justification I can find now for not throwing the whole thing away is my backstage photographers pass to the 2001 Toronto Britn3y Sp3ars show is stuck to the harddrive. And somehow it’s enough.

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