September 11, 1999

Burned Man

Exactly one week ago I stripped off my clothes and let the Black Rock desert sun burn away my job stress, my preconceptions. I became a part of a community. I paid for the experience: A new alternator for my car, some torch burns on my back, a desperate sense of job burnout. The latter two already fading.

My Burned Back, 7-Sep-99 (photo
by Dennis Gentry) My Not-So-Burned Back, 14-Sep-99
(photo by Dennis Gentry)

A week later, after four days of exhausting Silicon Valley start-up work, I wish I had never left Nevada. I exchange giddy e-mail and hidden smiles with those who shared the experience; we make big plans for next year's Burning Man. RVs! Exploding goats! Shadow mazes! Take the whole week off -- no, a whole month!

I can't remember when I first heard about Burning Man; years ago, probably. I wanted to go there from the beginning, but normally I travel with friends to the Ashland Shakespeare Festival during the Labor Day weekend. This year Ashland fell through, and at the last minute I joined Jennie, Taff, Rob, Rich, Kevin and Kris. Three cars left; only two returned. We were very group-identified, staying together from the moment we were united on Saturday afternoon. (All of us experiencing far more difficulty with the cars actually getting there than in the difficulty of surviving in a desert environment -- where the immense heat of the day is in such sharp contrast with the winds and dust storms and the night freeze, and where no amenities exist except for a few grudging porta-potties). We were too group-identified maybe, nearly in violation of the Burning Man principles of participating rather than spectating, and sharing and forming communities with neighbours. We did some, but not enough. Next year, next year.

Kris, Taff, Kevin, me,
Jennie, Rich (photo by Rob)

I thought my mustang would be the most patently useless and impractical car I would see at Burning Man; but no -- the car in front of us as Taff and I pulled into Black Rock City was a white stretch limo.

I couldn't possibly document all the moments; they're still too much a part of me now, from the peeling skin on my back to the flecks of black nail polish I can't quite fully remove from my fingernails. My car floor is covered with playa dust and bits of green and yellow body paint. I'm surrounded in my living room with a dusty sleeping bag and air mattress and filthy clothes -- I'm still too relaxed to clean everything up.

In talking to my co-workers, I've already focused too much on the mundane details of how we got there and what we saw. Dramatic moments, yes -- like the knot of fear as my car glided, powerless, in pitch black on Highway 80 to Reno, Taff sleeping in the passenger seat while the last of my battery drained away, to wake as we drifted to a stop near the side of the road opposite Gold Ranch, twelve miles shy of Reno.

Like the mad stumbling as I fell backwards into the Citronella torch during a Sunday night circle dance and the scream of pain I let out, only to calmly bike to the First Aid trailer at 6:00 & Neptune for burn ointment, rejoining my friends by the Little House on the Playa a while later, sucking on limes and spraying water at each other and flailingly trying to remember words to songs, any song, to sing together in our charming (annoying?) off-key way. "Come on Eileen," we started, as our neighbour shook his head in disbelief -- "Anything but bad '80s pop, please, anything." He joined in on the show tunes.

Like the Man himself, erupting on Saturday night in a hail of sparks and Roman Candles, beneath a vast ceiling of green lasers, surrounded by a circle of 2,000 flashing amber lights and 20,000 people, of who some bayed and some cheered and some danced and some gaped, some passing out and some swallowing fire and some gulping water, some dressed in neon and some in leather, others in jeans, and many in nothing.

Still, I want to set down the other moments, the surreal moments, before they fade from me completely:

I love Burning Man. I love its non-commercial edict (No Vending! No Logos!), participatory nature (No Spectators!), its pointless-but-ultimately-meaningful theme, the community it constructs, the Leave No Trace ethic, the changes it makes in me.

In reading the Burning Man site (trying to sustain the feeling by reliving it over the Web?), I came across this quote from a speech in 1998 by Larry Harvey, the founder of Burning Man:

You know, if this was just an event, I would get bored and I'd quit. But it's not an event, it's a phenomenon, and it's flowing out beyond our horizons. When you go home, don't say, "I'm waiting 364 days until Burningman, to get that wonderful experience that 'they gave me'." Realize that you can do it too.



THE POSI-WEB

Zeigen's Past Posi-Webs




[ Previous 5 | Skip Previous | Previous Posi | Next Posi | Skip Next | Next 5 Posii | Random Posi | List Posii ]
Posi-Web-o-Rama ring co-ordinated by Mal.




Zeigen's Dilemma
  Zeigen (estephen@emf.net)