The Compulsive Splicer: The Loreniuska Interview

Thank you, Lore­nius­ka for these questions.

1. What is your biggest regret in life?

First the cop-out answer: i don’t real­ly have any regrets. I’ve made some bad deci­sions, but they’ve all led to me being where I am right now, and most of the things I wish I could have done dif­fer­ent­ly I could­n’t have known why it was wrong until after I’d done the wrong thing. But that’s a kind of philo­soph­i­cal view, and I do have painful mem­o­ries, things I look back at and cringe.

There are things like, “I wish I had­n’t treat­ed so and so so bad­ly.” Liisa, who I dat­ed when I was 22 and then avoid­ed after she came to vis­it me at my par­ents’ house because being in close quar­ters with her for a week we each got on one anoth­er’s nerves and i was glad to see her go. But she was real­ly great and did­n’t deserve to be treat­ed like that. I file her under regret because I don’t know how to get in touch with her.

Then there’s I regret hav­ing sex at 17 basi­cal­ly to get my friends off my back about nev­er hav­ing had sex. Talk about wrong rea­sons! And that pret­ty much shaped a lot of my life from there forward.

I think what I have to say is my sin­gle great­est regret is how I live my life on a dai­ly basis. Every day that I don’t give my best to my clients, every day that I don’t pray and med­i­tate, every day I don’t tell the peo­ple I love that I love them, every day that I don’t draw or sketch, every day that I don’t ride my bicy­cle to see more of this beau­ti­ful city I live in; I’m not sure there can be a greater regret than how far I’ve fall­en short of my ideals almost every day of my life.

2. What is the most valu­able les­son life has taught you so far?

Fix­ing things out­side myself does­n’t help. I can’t make my life bet­ter by mov­ing 100, 1,000, or 3,000 miles. That’s why I’m think­ing that maybe 8,000 will work.

The con­cept of dhar­ma is that life and life lessons are not dif­fer­ent ideas. Dhar­ma is my life; the ques­tion is whether I am the atten­tive stu­dent of life in the front row, or the Goo­fus in the back row.

3. What is the most dif­fi­cult thing you’ve ever had to do?

Sur­vive my last breakup. I know that oth­er peo­ple are even more sick of hear­ing about Vic­to­ria than I am of men­tion­ing her, but Feb­ru­ary, March and April of 2001 were prob­a­bly the worst tri­als I had to face. My first two weeks of sobri­ety were pret­ty fuck­ing bad too, but I think that prob­a­bly gets first run­ner-up. It’s hard to tell, because as time goes by, the mem­o­ry of pain fades, and get­ting sober hap­pened a lot far­ther back.

4. When have you been hap­pi­est in your life? What moment, with whom, doing what?

When I was 16 years old, I pub­lished a nation­al­ly-dis­trib­uted com­ic book. The all-nighters that Tim and I pulled mak­ing it all hap­pen were the best time of my life. We had music, and plen­ty of work that we loved. We worked hard and walked to the gro­cery store to get caf­feinat­ed bev­er­ages and spent a lot of time real­ly being a part of what we were doing. It was the last time I felt real team­work and real own­er­ship over my work, and the last time I did any sus­tained work at any­thing I was good at.

5. Describe you dream vaca­tion, and who would you go with?

I’d like to spend a cou­ple weeks on the beach­es of Cuba with my 17-year-old girl­friend. There’s some­thing deli­cious about the num­ber of Fed­er­al laws I’d be breaking.

Seri­ous­ly, I think it would be a bicy­cle tour with my father. We’ve talked about going across the U.S., but if it’s my dream vaca­tion, I think maybe it would be a bike tour through Aus­tralia. Or hell, maybe my dad and I could take a bike tour around Cuba! Who knows?

THE RULES!
1 — Leave a com­ment, say­ing you want to be interviewed.
2 — I will respond; I’ll ask you five questions.
3 — You’ll update your jour­nal with my five ques­tions, and your five answers.
4 — You’ll include this explanation.
5 — You’ll ask oth­er peo­ple five ques­tions when they want to be interviewed.

8 Replies to “The Compulsive Splicer: The Loreniuska Interview”

  1. I’d like to spend a cou­ple
    I’d like to spend a cou­ple weeks on the beach­es of Cuba with my 17-year-old girl­friend. There’s some­thing deli­cious about the num­ber of Fed­er­al laws I’d be breaking.

    Best. Answer. Ever. 😀

    I had read this before, but I had for­got­ten to com­ment because I stink. 🙂

  2. The beach­es are always
    The beach­es are always over­crowd­ed. Haha. Because there aren’t many that are lounge-able on. Most are full of rocks and crap.

    And in Cuba, 17 years old is a per­fect­ly legal age… so… GO FOR IT.

  3. Well, thanks to Bill Clin­ton
    Well, thanks to Bill Clin­ton (oh the irony) it’s against US fed­er­al law for an Amer­i­can cit­i­zen to leave the coun­try for the pur­pose of hav­ing sex with some­one under 18, even if said cit­i­zen is from a state where the age of con­sent is less than 18.

    This is a law aimed at sex tourists; folks who go to Japan (or any of a zil­lion oth­er places) where 13-year-old pros­ti­tutes are legal. But it would still be a crime for me to leave the coun­try to hook up with a 17-year-old.

    Any­way, the per­son I’m think­ing of is not actu­al­ly 17 any­more so that’s kind of a moot point.

  4. I just real­ized. I hope that
    I just real­ized. I hope that the pass­port office does­n’t do web search­es on appli­cants, because they’re look­ing over my appli­ca­tion RIGHT NOW.

    Not this very sec­ond, but you know. The appli­ca­tion has been sub­mit­ted but I don’t have it yet.

    Tech­ni­cal­ly, I could actu­al­ly have that vaca­tion with­out break­ing any fed­er­al laws. I’d sim­ply have to not have sex with said 17-year-old and not spend any mon­ey in Cuba. How­ev­er, both of those options sub­tract sig­nif­i­cant­ly from the appeal of the plan. Still, call me an unpa­tri­ot­ic bas­tard but I have the feel­ing that when Cas­tro dies those beach­es will be full of Amer­i­can tourists. The time to go is now, while the trade embar­go is still on and the beach­es aren’t overcrowded.

  5. Sor­ry it took me so long to
    Sor­ry it took me so long to think up some ques­tions for you. Here:

    1) What kind of cyclist are you? Shi­mano ver­sus Campy, hill­climber ver­sus sprint­er, rac­ing ver­sus tour­ing, that sort of stuff. Describe your­self as a cyclist.

    2) What’s the best role you’ve ever played, and why?

    3) What is the best advice you’ve ever been given?

    4) What is the best advice you’ve ever giv­en some­one else?

    5) If you had to leave the U.S.A. nev­er to return, where would you choose to relocate?

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