Monday, April 20, 2009

My Blog and Blogosphere Essay

Blogging is a completely new concept for me. I have written stories and poems before, but I’ve never had the freedom to write whatever I please on a consistent basis. Blogging gives you the freedom to explore your own creative ideas. Some blogs can follow certain guidelines, consistently following a certain concept or idea. However, for my blog I chose to write about whatever was on my mind. I wrote about life, my activities, politics, poems I had written, and even my vacation plans. My blog didn’t follow any guidelines, I just wrote mainly about what I felt or thought. Blogging gave me the freedom to explore myself, my life, and my passions.
My favorite post was about a friend of mine, Bill Kapoun, who passed away over a year ago. I wrote about what he meant to me, how he influenced me, and how he affected my idea of life. He was a brilliant man, who had a passion for travel. He lived life for the moment, and explored many aspects of life that others only dream about. No one I have ever met has influenced me as much as Bill. He was the one that fueled my passion for travel. When he passed away, I really began to review my life and how I wanted to live. I don’t want a normal, traditional life. I want to explore the world, see it through a different light. Every place on Earth has something unique to give us all. No person lives life the same way. We can all learn something from different cultures. There is no wrong way to live, it’s just that in order to live, you must follow your heart, live with no regrets and follow your passions. This particular blog allowed me to share with anyone who was interested in reading, how my friend viewed life.
The “blogosphere” is a great place to share your passions, activities, and life with everyone. I have never really enjoyed writing, especially when it has to follow a particular structure. Blogging gives people the freedom to write freely. I have learned that writing can be fun and influential. It doesn’t always have to be so serious. Through blogging you can learn many things about a person, that’s the beauty of it. By reading some of my classmates blogs, I learned many things about their personality. You can learn about people’s humor, their likes, dislikes, what pisses them off, what they are passionate about, and what they enjoy doing in their free time. Blogging has opened my eyes on writing. The “blogosphere” is a good place to write down your feelings, especially if you don’t feel comfortable talking about them. It’s a good way to meet people, and allow people to truly get to know yourself as a person.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Chopped and Screwed

The first time I ever heard "Chopped and Screwed" music was sometime in high school. At first I thought it was awful, the tempo is slow and lazy, I thought it was boring. Some friends of mine were really getting into it, especially the Houston, Texas scene. But it just wasn't for me I rarely ventured away from classic rock n' roll. When I would hang around these certain friends, they were always listening to it. My interest in it slowly began to raise. It was unique and so different. It was a completely different style then any other rap I had ever heard. These artists were bold and confident. Now I listen to chopped and screwed music everyday.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Sports

Opening day for baseball was several days ago. Basketball season is winding down, and for me it's sad. I love sports, but not particularly baseball. This is the one part of the year that bores me the most. Baseball will soon be the only major sport in action. Unless of course you watch Nascar, golf, or hockey, maybe? Baseball without a doubt is the most boring sport to watch on tv. I often will turn the games on just to fall asleep too. Don't get me wrong, I love going to baseball games and eating nachos, and peanuts. But as far as being America's "greatest pastime?" At one point it certainly was, maybe 50 years ago though. In my eyes the NFL, and football have become America's new, "greatest pastime." Every play in football is filled with action, big hits, great catches, smooth jukes. When you watch baseball, it could be one hour before someone even hits the ball. I like sports with high scoring action. Not a game that can be 1 to 0, like soccer, or hockey. Boring.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

April Fools

Yesterday was April 1st, also known as Aril Fool's Day. Luckily, I didn't have any classes yesterday, and wasn't around many people. I've been sick all week, and would have been extremely pissed off if someone pulled a "funny" prank on me. Don't get me wrong, I think it's hilarious when people get tricked or fall for something. Just not yesterday, and especially not if it happens to me. You see, I am someone that can really get mean, I love picking on other people. However, I am also a hypocrite. I can dish all kinds of shit out, but if someone decides to dish it all out on me, I get pissed off. Last year on April 1st, I was going to school at IU. I was hanging out with a friend, and we decided to go cruise around. It was raining outside and had been for a while. We were driving around campus looking for giant rain puddles. When someone was walking by one of them, we would time it up right, and drench them by running over the puddle in the car. If this ever happened to me, I would probably try to chase the car down, and punch the window out. It's enough to ruin someone's day, maybe even their week. I thought it was hilarious.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Summer Trip




For most of this semester I have been working two jobs. One at a pizza restaurant, where I deliver pizzas. Also, one at a campus carwash, where I wash campus buses and vehicles. I've been working very hard, sometimes the weeks are exhausting and drag on. However, I've been able to put most of the money aside and save it for a trip. My sister graduates on May 9th, after this I plan on leaving for L.A. the next day. I haven't finalized anything yet, but I'm almost positive I'm going to book a flight. My friend, "Smalls," moved to L.A. in January and rents an apartment in Orange County. I plan on flying to LAX, where he will pick me up. Ideally, I will spend four, as Smalls said, "stoned to the bone" days here. Afterwards, I will head off to NYC. Last year I was enrolled at Indiana University. It was here that I became good friends with Sam Behymer. He lives in Hartford, CT, which is only about 30 minutes from NYC. I've talked to him recently, and he offered me the opportunity to stay with him. I'm probably going to spend three nights there, and then it's back to the Midwest. The most exciting part for me will be visiting my high school buddy in California. Ever since I was a little boy, I have lusted over California. The pictures that filled my brain when I thought of Cali, were the most majestic and beautiful sights. Anyways, after this trip it's back to reality. Afterwards, I will be spending the rest of my summer working at Byerly Tent Rentals. This is where I worked last summer. I make really good money, around $1,500 a month, but I work long, exhausting hours. Last year we were setting tents up for a racetrack in New Castle. The day started at 8:00am and ended at 1:30am the next day. Then the next morning we had to be back at work at 7:00am. Just a day in the life haha.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Spring Break

With spring break in full swing, many students are out and about in the sun. However, I prefer to roam around my house looking for new places to take a nap. On average I have been waking up around 1 o'clock everyday, eating, and then taking a nap by 3. Usually I don't wake up from that until around 5, then it's off to work. After work I will usually go out with friends and do a bit of boozin'. This leaves me out until about 3 in the morning. From there I take a ride on the sleepy train and set it's engine on snooze control. Spring break is sweet.

Monday, March 2, 2009

The Boondock Saints: Movie Review


The Boondock Saints follows fraternal twins in Boston through a transformation from local blue-collar boys to defenders of justice. Being Irish,of course it starts one drunken St. Patty's night as the boys get into an altercation with a couple of enforcers for the Russian Mafia. This leads to retaliation by said enforcers but the boys subdue them. In a possible case of destiny becoming manifest, the pair decides that they shouldn't just stop at taking out two lowly mob guys but rid the entire world of evil. Maybe they don't decide something so grand right on the spot but it begins there and for the rest of the movie we follow in their exploits. As well as those of an F.B.I. agent hot on their trails, towards their seemingly pre-ordained life of executioners of the evil.

The movie is full of religious themes. They're not particularly subtle either as it takes to smashing you over the head with them by using language, and even a prayer, that can be described as ceremonial in nature. That's why it works though. It is an action-packed, funny, sort-of in your face social commentary that doesn't forget it is also meant to entertain.

A lot of the enjoyment from this movie comes from its actors. Everyone, from the main characters to the comedic bartender, are filled in enough as characters that the actors seem to lose themselves in their parts. No one seems superfluous, no matter how cartoony they might seem.

The Boondock Saints also benefits from a good director. Besides using some interesting angles and choosing, score and soundtrack, Troy Duffy employs an interesting technique in the use of flashbacks to the "crimes" that Willem Dafoe's Agent Smecker is investigating. He intersperses flashbacks through Smecker's examinations of the crime scenes bringing the length of time he spends in each time frame to smaller and smaller intervals as Smecker's and the Twins' paths converge until there are no more flashbacks and Smecker and the Twins are in the same place at the same time. It a true case of editing as part of the story.

It may be a cult classic now and have a much greater following than when first released but by definition not everyone has seen it. If you, or your friends, are one of those few that haven't I recommend doing so as soon as possible. Like the movie says, indifference, in this case of the good movie-watching public, is a true evil that needs to be fought.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Times Change Swiftly



It was a year ago exactly, during this same week, I lost a loved one. A good friend of mine Bill Kapoun was suddenly killed in an apartment fire in Seoul, Korea. Despite courageous efforts from many people, he was unable to be saved. It's times like these that make you realize how precious life really is. It goes by quickly so you have to make the best of every moment you get. Since then so many things have happened. I've transfered to a new school, gone to Germany, had an uncle pass, destroyed my car, and picked up two new jobs. Only time will tell what the future holds for us all, but there is no need to spend so much time thinking about it. Live for today.

Here is a small portion of the book he was writing.

I started this book approximately three years ago to the day as I now attempt to close it. I had never written seriously in my life and was essentially just putting down my thoughts and emotions after spending five months in Ireland. The semester before I went to Ireland I had been living the life of a typical frat guy in a typical American college and was dealing with my first serious break-up. Going to Europe was nothing like what I had expected. I thought I was going to be partying and meeting girls all the time. I thought I would be taking the life I had been leading in America to a new level. Instead I started a completely different life. I met almost no girls during those five months, I had almost no friends and I had almost no fun. At the end of that time I started reflecting on my entire life, on my past and on my future and I realized that there were many parts of it that were not at all how I had planned or how I wanted them to be. I saw large chunks of my earthly days completely wasted, unappreciated and unused and it sickened me. I started writing about it. My writing was then immature as was my outlook on my life. I do not claim maturity or ability in either life or writing now, but I see myself going in the right direction in both attempts. When I first started travelling I spent a few days walking around capital cities with a stupid look on my face and a guide book in my hands. Today I spent my morning digging for clams in a mud bank on the Algarvan coast of southern Portugal before spending my morning trying to sell tickets to go dolphin sightseeing. Afterwards I went on a hike to collect almonds, oranges and sage to cook the mussels I collected off the shore (mussels are much easier to find than clams), which I cooked on a hotplate in my rented room which overlooks the bay of a small fishing town. So I have come a long way, as a writer, as a traveler and as a person. Or at least I hope. Only the reader can be the judge of that, but I hope that you will get some laughs, some tips, and maybe even some tears or inspiration from my trials and tribulations. Cheers.

That was life, when I wrote that. I was really living. Despair is life, pain is life. Life is when you have such a terrible realization that you break out in a sweat and suddenly your whole body is overcome by heat and all you want to do is cry out for someone, anyone to help, because you don't know how to fix the situation, and you just can't believe that in your bit part as a walk on character in this cosmic play that has been going on day after day, year after year, millennia after millennia, you aren't even capable of keeping yourself fed, out of the rain at night and, God forbid, happy. Happiness is life, laughter is life, there are so many kinds of life, but I, like so many of us, did hardly any living, instead I spent most of my time looking forward, always anticipating, one day, yeah, one day, if I just keep waiting, planning, one day, I'll be happy, I'll be living. And then one day became this day, and THE day, the day that was that oh-so sought after culmination of all my planning and waiting, and wasting of life, would become one more day, one more day, waiting, waiting for tomorrow to come, waiting for my life to happen. Or if not waiting for tomorrow to come, I looked back, remembering the days I spent living, even the bad times, the boring times. In retrospect, we remember, we give credence to our waiting, proof that living life is possible, but if we are truthful to ourselves, we remember, most of those past days were either days we had wished had gone sooner at the time, or were just the beginning of the list of days hoping.

People say that once you lose hope, everything is gone. I'm not sure you can lose hope, as a human. Maybe my relatively stable and happy white working class upbringing makes me naive but I believe hope is a fundamental aspect of humanity; perhaps to lose hope, is to lose ones humanity. But when I walk down the street, and I see a gypsy with her child, or a kid jingling a McDonalds cup with a few coins in it, I have to think, the thought running through their heads is the same thought as in mine, it's the same as in the beautiful blonde across the street, and the fat rich business man rushing to a thirty dollar business lunch, where decisions will be made that make the lives of many of those poor people I've just passed even more precarious than they already are. We are all thinking, why has the universe conspired against me? When am I gonna get my break? Oh well, there's always tomorrow?

It wasn't until I started traveling that I realized that not only does life not have to be that way; it isn't meant to be that way. Mankind evolved two million years ago, society is only a few thousand years old, the things that once gave us solace; clear skies the thrill of achievement and a tight-knit family have given way to cubicles, anti-depressants and participation awards. We live our lives through those of people that we can supposedly relate to on reality television, through those who we can't relate with in the tabloids, and through those that aren't even real on our computers. Our ambition is crushed by a system that rewards and enforces mediocrity. The natural world we spent most of existence alongside, already physically distant becomes emotionally even further when we don't celebrate and enjoy it. We lose sight of the beauty of diversity and adventure; we become timid and weak in a world that ensures that as long as we don't try too hard to attain greatness; we can be assured that we also won't hit rock bottom. The trials, tribulations and rewards of travel; meeting interesting people with foreign and enlightening viewpoints, being put in situations that seem incapable of getting worse, seeing beautiful things made by people, beautiful people, and the beauty of nature provide me with the safety net that most people find only by never reaching further than they feel safe doing. I have become a better person by seeing the world; there is much more that I hope to see and experience, but above all, I hope that by sharing my experiences, others will feel compelled to push themselves; and be reborn into a world without limits, where everything is possible and the pursuit of the new and beautiful takes the place of security and seclusion.

My fascination with Europe began in 1985 when I was three years old and my family was sent to Frankfurt Germany, a time when America's military presence in Germany was still enormous. Having already spent four years in a small town in southern Germany called Bad Aibling my mother refused to allow this opportunity to pass by and took me out of school every Wednesday so that we could go to a castle, a zoo, a fair or whatever other cultural event was going on at the time. I don't necessarily remember many of the specific places we went or things we did but those years planted a seed deep within me that continues to flourish and so when people ask me what my family thinks of my wandering I tell them that my mother is only reaping what she sowed.

On its most superficial level traveling allows us to see and discover new and beautiful things, on a slightly deeper level it allows us to know more about our neighbors in the rest of the world, which is one of the things America needs the most right now, but at its deepest level the greatest gift of traveling is the personal journey that allows us to see our own likes and dislikes, passions and perversions, history and future, under a completely different light. Only then can we be truly satisfied for; truly, many will shed a tear when we pass from this world, but besides our nearest loved ones, our days on this earth are quickly forgotten. Few will remember us a year later. The things we do, the attainment of the goals we spend so much time striving for, all mean little beyond the here and now. That is why, when I die, all I hope people to say of me is he lived life. The good, the bad, he took it all in, and relished it. Yes, he lived life for life. Which is how we should all live our lives, never letting a precious moment slip by.

William Kapoun

Thursday, February 19, 2009

A Bad Day

Along with school I have two jobs. I have a campus job where I wash campus vehicles and buses all day, I also have a job at a pizza place in my hometown. This past saturday I was working at the pizza place and I was working delivery. The day started off normal and we weren't very busy until around 7. Around that time I came back from the shop after a delivery and there were four more deliveries ready to go. So I get back in my car and off I go. The first delivery was no problem it was a big house on a busy street, I found it no problem. The next delivery was on Columbia Ave., a redneck street through town where there aren't numbers on the houses or mailboxes. My delivery address was for 1009 Columbia Ave. I couldn't find it anywhere and after several minutes of frustration I drove to a random house on the street and asked if they knew where the house was. They answered the door and told me they weren't sure. So I get back in my car and drive to another random house. Same story. Again I drive to another house. This person informs me that there is no 1000 block on this street. I get back in my car and figure I will ask one more person. I drive down a little ways and at this point I am in a huge hurry because the pizzas are getting cold. I jump out of my car and slam the door really fast. It was still in drive, whoops! The worst thing about this is that when my car is in drive and the door is shut, the doors lock. So here I am stuck outside my car in the cold and it is slowly idleing away from me. I jumped in front of my car and started pushing the front end trying to stop it, as if i had incredible super-strength. My car was headed right for a telephone pole and mailbox when somehow the car managed to stop, just several feet before crashing. Luckily, my mom had a spare key, so while I stood in front of the car praying it wouldn't start moving again, my mom brought me the spare and saved the day.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Evidently Chicken Town

These are lyrics of a song by John Cooper Clarke. A friend of mine had them posted on his myspace and I found them to be very funny. He is describing a town that he thinks is a shit hole. He is very descriptive and funny and gives you a good description of everything that goes on in the town.

the fucking cops are fucking keen
to fucking keep it fucking clean
the fucking chief's a fucking swine
who fucking draws a fucking line
at fucking fun and fucking games
the fucking kids he fucking blames
are nowehere to be fucking found
anywhere in chicken town
the fucking scene is fucking sad
the fucking news is fucking bad
the fucking weed is fucking turf
the fucking speed is fucking surf
the fucking folks are fucking daft
don't make me fucking laugh
it fucking hurts to look around
everywhere in chicken town
the fucking train is fucking late
you fucking wait you fucking wait
you're fucking lost and fucking found
stuck in fucking chicken town
the fucking view is fucking vile
for fucking miles and fucking miles
the fucking babies fucking cry
the fucking flowers fucking die
the fucking food is fucking muck
the fucking drains are fucking fucked
the colour scheme is fucking brown
everywhere in chicken town
the fucking pubs are fucking dull
the fucking clubs are fucking full
of fucking girls and fucking guys
with fucking murder in their eyes
a fucking bloke is fucking stabbed
waiting for a fucking cab
you fucking stay at fucking home
the fucking neighbors fucking moan
keep the fucking racket down
this is fucking chicken town
the fucking train is fucking late
you fucking wait you fucking wait
you're fucking lost and fucking found
stuck in fucking chicken town
the fucking pies are fucking old
the fucking chips are fucking cold
the fucking beer is fucking flat
the fucking flats have fucking rats
the fucking clocks are fucking wrong
the fucking days are fucking long
it fucking gets you fucking down
evidently chicken town

Thursday, February 5, 2009


aldjflajdlfjaldfjlajdflajdfl... I will probably repeat this in class, but one of the requirements for your personal blogs is to have a collective blogroll on it! Of course, we're in process of getting all of this stuff figured out, but by the end of the semester, you will be expected to have a blogroll of at least FIVE blogs listed on your own personal blog. In early April, you'll be asked to hand in an "Annotated Blogroll." This will include five of the blogs on your blogroll - "annotated" simply means that you will write up a brief summary and critique/review for each of the five blogs on your blogroll (note you can have more blogs on the blogroll on your site - as many you'd like! - but the annotated assignment only calls for you to review five). So . . . we have to get this blogroll thing going! We have a community to enter. On your personal blog, you can easily add a blogroll! Go to customize your site, then click on the Layout tab. Under the Layout tab, go to Page Elements. Here, you

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

A Trip to Italy

I stepped off the bus and the wind gusted into my face, forcing me to smell the salty ocean water and steaming hot pavement. It was summer in Italy and sweat immediately began dripping from my upper lip, the weatherman said it would be hot, but I’ve never experienced anything like this. Richi, my new German friend that I met just the day before stepped off the bus right behind me, thankfully he spoke English because my German was about as good as a two year old child just learning the language. Ms. Mock and Ms. Rhode were the last people to step off the bus, everyone speculated that they had some sort of lesbian relationship going on, but no one was for certain. They escorted us into the youth hostel, Richi and I sat on the sofa together in the lounge, all the other kids sat closely together in the same area, their was about twenty Germans and twenty Americans. The Americans were exchange students living in Germany for a month, and the Germans were juniors in high school, this was their class trip and luckily we were invited to join.
“Listen up, there are twenty rooms, pick a partner, grab your stuff and pick up a key from Ms. Mock,” Ms. Rhode ordered us.
Fortunately I had become friends with Richi on the bus ride over, or else I would have been conned into sharing a room with one of the younger students. We grabbed our luggage and a key from Ms. Rhode and made our way to the small bedroom. It smelled like cat piss and there was barely enough room to lay our luggage down, however there was a bathroom and a balcony with a view that faced the beautiful Italian ocean and sunset. Once we got situated in our new room, Richi and I began to explore the busy streets crowded with random little shops. Our first stop was the liquor store, we needed something to relax us after the sixteen hour bus trip from Berlin to Remini. Luckily you only had to be sixteen to purchase alcohol in Europe, so I grabbed two cases of Becks and two packs of Marlboro Reds.
As we lay on the beach the cold ocean water crept up and surrounded our feet, they began to sink in the sand further and further with every new set of waves.
“Do you really think Ms. Mock and Ms. Rhode have something going on,” I asked.
“Of course, they have to be, I’ve heard stories about how Ms. Rhode divorced her husband because of Ms. Mock.”
“Is that true?”
“I don’t know, but they both definitely look like the type, Ms. Mock is definitely the feminine role in the relationship and Ms. Rhode is a legit masculine role.”
I laughed, the thought of those two making love seemed hysterical to me.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

The Final Chapter by Jordan Harmon


Even the gloomiest night sky
Is Illuminated by Brooklyn’s florescent city lights.
Christopher’s shadow chases him
Through the barren streets, protracting itself
On the city’s high-risers, reaching

For the heavens, away from sin. Blunt
Clinched between his fingers
He raises it to his lips, as his muscles relax and his skin
Releases its tight grip on his bones, he hums to himself
A melody.

“I wonder if I died,
Would tears come to her eyes?
Forgive me for my disrespect,
Forgive me for my lies.”

Like his shadow he cannot escape
The past, hanging onto him like a vampire’s
Locked jaw.
The hour glass is empty, the flood gates open,
Shots ring out.

Jealousy’s a monster
In a young man’s dream,
A drive by murder
In this East-West rivalry.
Biggie’s blood burns the blunt
With red smoke, just seconds after
His notorious final toke.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Germany (Summer 2008)



This past summer my good friend Patrick and I took a trip to Berlin, Germany. We have met and became good friends with several people over there through the German American Partnership Program. This program sets up exchanges between German and American teenagers while in high school. Patrick and I have both hosted several Germans, as well as travelled there as exchange students. So this past summer we decided to take a month long trip to Berlin to visit all of our friends. Our plan was to stay with our friend Jule for two weeks as well as our friend Richi for two weeks. After our seven our flight that was layed-over in London, we were warmly welcomed at the airport by Jule and her father. When we got to their house we were pleased to see that she lived in a beautiful two-story home in Borgsdorf, a suburb of Berlin City. Jule had a wonderful family who treated Pat and I as if we were a part of it. Throughout the duration of the trip we ate lots of good food and drank lots of good beer. My personal favorite beer was Hefferweisen, a wheat beer brewed in Bavaria. We took several trips to downtown Berlin but my favorite was for an event called the "beer mile." This event lasts for one weekend and has a mile long stretch of beer vendors. Some of my favorites were brewed in Jamaica, Belgium, and the Czech Republic. Although we drank lots of beer on the trip it wasn't the only thing we did. We visited some historic sites such as bunkers, flak towers, and concentration camps. It was a fantastic experience and we met many great people along the way. I can't wait to go back and I will continue visiting for as long as I can.

Monday, January 19, 2009

About Me


The name is Jordan Harmon, I was born in Alexandria, IN. I have two older siblings, one is married with a kid and the other is about to graduate from BSU. Sports and travelling are my two favorite hobbies. In high school I played football, basketball, and ran track. I still try to stay active playing basketball as often as I can. I'm a geography major and plan on using that to see as much of the world as I can. I've been to Germany, Austria, and Italy and have met many good friends along the way. Once I graduate from college I plan on moving from place to place, spending any money I earn on my travels.