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Struggle vs. Fun

Getting more and more anxious about getting back to London. It looks like the flatmate won’t be able to find a place on his own. Too busy with work, and he can only look at places on the weekend. Estate agents aren’t open on weekends, so, we’re a bit effed.

I was thinking yesterday about struggle. It doesn’t have to be a struggle. It can be fun. It’s only a choice…or so they say. But, remember this? Remember Christmas morning when you were a kid? Remember Christmas Eve and hardly being able to sleep? Ah, but there’s no presents, you say. There’s this other thing that my step bros used to do in the middle of muggy southern Louisiana summers. We’d go out into the garage and partition ourselves off from each other. Then we’d wrap stuff up in newspaper and make ribbons out of whatever was available. Then we’d give each other the presents. After opening our presents and saying thank you, we’d do it all over again. It didn’t matter that they were wrapped in newspaper or that the present was an old rusty wrench (or spanner for you brits). It was almost just like Christmas. Almost.

I must do something with all of the anger and disappointment. And that something is in my films. It’s in my writing. It’s what gives me a voice.

Today is planning day. Nice Guyjin and Dave. When I first met them, I was really fed up with the headhunters. They seemed like a breath of fresh air. They seemd like they had something that the HHs didn’t have. They were engaging. They were on top of the world. They were gonna sell a million records. We were swept up in it all. I was swept up. I just wanted to spend all my time with them. They made me feel…they made me love Japan again. They made me remember how much fun it could be. They hadn’t grown up. Dave even said he felt like an 8 year old. They hadn’t become serious about anything. The HHs were damned serious. Was it the money? Was it the fact that if they let their concentration slep for one minute, they might lose a couple of million (yen, that is). It was the performer/businessman dichotomy I guess. They could be crazy because they were performers. But Ken was having fun with the HH stuff. Getting confused now.

OK, when I met Scott, he was like a breath of fresh air. I met Scott through Bryan. Do I have to show Bryan? Anyway, I met Scott. And he was preaching this new kind of freedom: “Mainichi Nichiyobi” (everyday Sunday). I wanted to believe. I really wanted to, but something was bothering me. These guys were set up becaouse of Big Momma. They had a studio in their swank house in the Senju. They were very thankful to their patron, but they had a patron. It at least gives one pause. There was this other thing. The spirit of independence. They wanted to be on their own. They wanted to break from the system…the Japanese system. The music label they had been under was too restrictive. And, another thing…independence…