so horsemouth retired
there was no realisation that it was time and that he was ready to go
there was no sudden life changing event.
horsemouth supposes that covid killed his job. it prevented the main business of his employer from going on and, at the same time. it revealed that the unit was not profitable (the workload was always pretty variable).
and bingo his job was toast. strangely the middle management who redundo-ed him and his co-workers did not self-liquidate in this process also.
initially he retired because he could afford to do so at that moment. there was a redundancy process. then a works pension process (and a cash sum process) but because horsemouth was only enrolled at the last possible moment into his works pension (and because he never earned very much money in his years of work), these sums were not great.
had the work continued he would have continued working. instead horsemouth was faced with the option of working self-employed (and getting paid less for doing it) or jacking it all in.
he chose to jack it all in.
however, because he was having fun with the communal endeavour he did not end up moving to the sun or somewhere cheaper than the wen or such like but just continued on with his lackadaisical life.
only later was there a major change in horsemouth's life
and then his father got ill and died and it became clear that his life was going to be out in the wilds.
quite what horsemouth is supposed to make of all of this he does not know (as usual none of it was planned).
true tales of american life
a friend remarked;
'I used to hear paul harvey on the radio when I lived in the states in the 90s. he was a peevish blowhard unlike the great studs turkel who came across as a generous and decent guy documenting american life without any judgement...'
horsemouth replied that he'd never heard of paul harvey until horsemouth researched the quote (see previous posting). by way of similarity all he was able to offer up was paul auster's true tales of american life.
his friend recommended studs turkel's book working.
horsemouth thinks the truth of things resides in their particularity, in the small scale everyday actions of people. further to this he has pulled steven roger fischer's a history of reading out of the stacks to go with alberto manguel's a history of reading.
he's just been reading about architect gregory ain and his park planned homes in altadena (and the effect of last year's LA fire on them).the good news is that some of them survived.
the bad news is that some of them were destroyed.
of course horsemouth went off down the modernism in LA rabbit hole. books, podcasts, exhibits and all.
it's good to see people with strong ideas about community and to see it coming to fruition (if not full fruition).
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