
On the night you were born, the nurses all gather ‘round and gazed their wide wonder at the joy they found broke your clavicle. Ouch.
It was a lonely night, this demon hellfire spawned 22 October the year of Obama 2010. It was like I was the Catholic Church and was being assaulted by skull cultists, communists and homosensuals all at once.
It had been a lonely week. Sting had nothing on me, except a fake name, millions of dollars and a snooty attitude. Der, being a writer lends itself to a lonely existence, ya idjit! Obviously feeling much more comfortable in the world of the written word tactile society has become bemusing and amusing.
Not afraid to express feelings and opinions in public, with trop de vigueur to my own detriment sometimes, I try, too ardently for the freaks, hipsters and suckas, to embody that oh-so-70s mantra that constantly runs thorough my head: Later for waiting.
Blame it on years of social anxiety.
Intimidation? No attempt is made yet the delivered force my estimations can result in unanticipated venom. Too much bass in my voice? Do I need to loose weight? Talk in a higher, sweeter timbre? In the realm of the blank page I need not react to other’s perceptions, reactions, feelings, sensibilities. I am the deus ex machina here, Toots.
Succinctly, I don’t have to give a Captain Crunch about your bullcrank. This is unmitigated space for my bullcrank and here’s the secret: thanks to Al Gore it is a space everybody has access to. Share your bullcrank.
Yell it from your car window as you speed down the highway. Sing it in the shower while conditioning. Lather it. Rinse it. Repeat it, but only twice. They don’t tell you that on the bottle but you don’t want dried, split ends.
Yell it at the TV while you watch “Clear and Present Danger” the umpteenth time, waiting, like a sniper in a marsh for the Latin Phil Hartman utterance of “the machine is still on Moira.” Tell it to your weapons as if they were pets.
Do whatever you have to do because from cradle to grave, from the womb to the tomb, from the uterus to the ‘what did you do to us’, it’s all bullcrank anyways.
Okay, that is bit overly grim and unsanguine. That should be a word, “unsanguine” just like inopulent should. There is no proper antithesis to these words so creating a direct negative, like possible and impossible, is proper. Get Danny Webster on the phone! And Willy Shakes too…
But, to dear Lucy, who I have, at this point, only seen in a grainy BlackBerry’d photo, a birth such as yours harkens to the limitless possibilities of the tabula rasa. John Locke (the philosopher, not the Lost character) will never be more proud of you than he is today because from this day on the chalk starts to fly. When I see you I shall present you with an eraser. One of those dry erase jobs.
In the old days, when only blackboards functioned as said tabula, the stains of what was forced upon us in childhood was not so easily erased. The redolence of the knowledge remained until a wet sponge, applied by some smart-alecky detentionee like Zack Morris, forcefully wiped the slate clean.
In today’s digital photo, social networking, instant mashed potato society so much will be thrust upon you so quickly that you need something that requires less maintenance than a blackboard.
Your mind will be a dry erase board, with chemical ink foisted upon it with alacrity and erased with equal vigor. The evolution, of if you are one of those crackpots, the intelligent design, from blackboard to dry erase is a parallel and byproduct of the relentless march of American civilization. You can’t cram another commercial into
Also, the decline in Spirokeet use is directly correlated to the rise in gang activity. Think about it. No, you won’t.
But your birth, your joyous, blissful, merry birth, like a Christmas in winter, is a reminder of not only love but of how in life you can be anybody you want to be. Hunter Thompson, Dick Valentine, Marilyn Monroe, Malcolm X, Lillian Hellman, Ernie Banks…or none of them.
On the page, As Kirk Lazarus said, “I think I might be nobody” but at the same time Sgt. Lincoln Osiris urged me to “Suh-vive!”
On the night you were born, hours before they had to break your clavicle to squeeze you out, of which I was horrified to hear, picturing a disfigured, wailing baby flopping on the ground in pain like Tony Romo, but relived to learn that it is not a rare thing, the clackety-clack of the keyboard was at once liberating and imprisoning, but it was a sentence I took with vivacity. Like a man serving a life sentence in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, he is still glad for three hots and a cot.
Anyways, back to the night and loneliness (sounds like the title of a new Patty Smith single). I stood on a blustery football field, the opaque clouds obscuring the sun like the patina of memory can obscure one’s true character and nature, the chill wind a reminder of the coming winter. It will be gray, to be sure, but, as I learned in my time in
The seasons are life’s syllabus.
When acquiring new knowledge and/or skills it is at first new and exciting, the mere scents and colors and motions and freshly planed brain grooves of this novel toy enjoin us to persevere. As baby steps become clumsy gallops the weight of the newly accumulated heat builds to a pressure point of which the release of what was once pleasurable is now a necessity. As the leaves in our mind change color we begin to drop the assumptions of the past that are now known to be naïve and, just when we thought we knew it all, our mind becomes a blank white space. Prior knowledge is not gone, it is merely blanketed by the knowledge of what we now know we don’t know.
From one perspective the game was a flop, from the other a rapturous celebration of life. All that is good in youth and all that will continue in perpetuity as long as Obama has anything to do with it…yeah right (*see below). To me a politician is what you scrape off the bottom of your shoe when exiting a movie theater. Didn’t somebody say that about agents once? If they didn’t they should have. I want committed policy makers, great thinkers, adjudicators and debaters in government. Doesn’t everybody hate office politics? In daily life isn’t it a detriment to be called a politician?
Students and teachers cheered, some too vehemently for a contest that is supposed to be more of a learning exercise for student-athletes rather than a doling out of bragging rights to those whose time has passed in their minds. Here’s a secret, your time never passes. The time is now and always will be. We age in the way we are expected to, well some of us. Other just keep l-i-v-i-n’. True dat, Wooderson.
With the dearth of press boxes in high school football (damn you, state budgets) I have to follow the game up and down the field, and this offers the constant opportunity to repeatedly scan vignettes of the different pockets of onlookers and hangers-on.
This enhances the separation of the writer and the event. Akin to going to the sausage factory, covering sports can ruin sports for you. A fan you can’t be. As in music and screenwriting, the more I learned about the construction of song or script on some level the less you begin to enjoy each.
It’s what I imagine it’s like for a mechanic to drive a car. They know what the breaks are doing. They know what causes the acceleration or lack thereof. They can literally see the gears grinding and the fluid flowing and the Meyerhoff Lifters lifting rather than just sitting back and enjoying their LeCar.
In a way, it is a greater, deeper appreciation of what is happening but at the same time the mystique of it all has vanished.
This is what it is like to cover a sport you have watched your whole life as a fan but now have to watch, digest and regurgitate in a pithy, readable fashion, with links! Gotta be “webby”!
It all leads to a lonely place. Not dark, as solitude, whether it be physical or merely mental, can lead to revelations the same way collaboration can lead to greatness greater than the greatness of one.
As I banged away at the laptop, truly wondering, not out of some yearning for recognition or accolades but out of a genuine speculation, if anybody was going to read my offerings (answer: of course not. Who the hell reads high school football stories?”) I received a phone call. The distraction was welcome and it was to welcome Lucy Dionisio into the world.
At
She was due days earlier and October 22 had been the drop dead date, ohh, there has to be another way to say
that: October 22 was Mother Nature’s deadline, shit. I’m trying my best to say this without using the word “dead” but fuck it. October 22 was the induction date and it came along at a time where I needed to be reminded that though I was a mere thread the tapestry was strong and I was a vital part of it.
Lucy, will we call you Luce? LuLu? L-Drop? L-Train? L-Street? L-Flash? Wondering what you will be was displaced by what was, as another picture flashed across my BlackBerry, a photo of young Miles in a baby cloak I had given him days after he was born.
My friend Dave cloaks and sweatshirts as they are the main hood delivering mechanisms. Though I have no direct knowledge of why Dave moved to
His wife and he announcing pregnancy, I immediately searched for a baby cloak. Natch, with hood. The only one I could find was for 3-6 monthees, so I would have to wait for the unconscious future for payoff.
Leaning back at my chair and dreaming about Lucy as I stared at the blinking cursor on the screen, every blip another reminding poke in the rib, akin to the Swan Hatch countdown, imploring me to heed the “time is of the essence” journalistic argle bargle. Mental itinerancy is a vital part of my writing process, the previous 1,500-odd words a testament to such. The battle is well and truly joined.
Ohh, sweet distractions. Like a Charlestown Chew and Coke, they would be so bad for me if I didn’t like the pain. I deserve it. My eating habits can best be described as treating my stomach like Jake LaMotta. I need to pay for my lack of propriety in other areas of life.
Procrastination habits come from a not dissimilar place.
If your life happens while you’re making plans mine happens while I jump from one neuronic outpost to another and this one was seeing, in mine own eyes, the second generation Cloak Master donning the threads of his birthright.
I printed the photos off and taped them above my monitor in prime viewing locales, where I wouldn’t even have to turn my head to get lost in thought about them. Now I had to finish the damn article.
Game stories should be about 500-600 words. As mine stretched well beyond that I still had plenty to say, and it would be said, but I found myself otherwise deposed by Jamie, Karen,
It seems Jamie, an NYC propmaster in more ways than the obvious, was tormenting the love of his life with
Refusing to get out of his dreams and into her car, and neither would I, what with his handlebar moustache, lankly arms half cocked and ready to spring forth to grabbing as quick as a butterfly’s eyelash, the peepers at half mast after too many pints of polish beer, he implored her that when the going got tough the tough got going. She was his Caribbean Queen but he was more of a Baby Doc Duvalier, staggering through history like a Bob Lobel on the Sunday night news.
As the reference-fest ultimately turned to Caddyshack, as all reference-fest eventually do, the “free bowl of soup” platitude was tossed around. It landed as ultimate retort, a rejoinder to be enjoyed. You marry a guy like Jamie I’ll bet you get a free bowl of soup.
Fifteen text messages, five phone calls, two baby pictures and a birth later and the abyss had been leviathaned. The glory hole gloried. The void avoided. Had it really been there? Thoughts become things. The mere filling of my mind with desperate beliefs of solitude in perpetuity may have led to the outpouring of connectedness.
The brain is a magnet, nothing more than a series of vibrations. The wavelength is up to you. Heed that Lucy, my unseen love.
*As I lay in bed at the end of the night, with the Rangers having finally securing a spot in the World Series over fifty years after their inception and my with my up runneth over with goodwill, I read a great political tome and this passage in particular struck me as especially prescient:
His nomination, his campaign, his election had meant many things to many people; now they waited, and many would find themselves disappointed in that first year. He the first of a new kind of media candidate flashed daily into our consciousness…during the campaign, and as such he had managed to stir the aspirations and excited millions of people. It had all been deliberately done; he had understood [media] and used it well, knowing that it was his medium, but it was done at a price. Millions of people watching this driving, handsome young man believed that he could (emphais provided) change things, move things, that their personal problems would somehow be different, lighter, easier with his election.”
An incisive look into the Obama myth-making machine? Maybe, but the excerpt is from “The Best and The Brightest” by David Halberstam and the chief executive he spoke of was John F. Kennedy.
Beware cults of personality. For the answers to your problems look within and you will never be without.
Coming up next in the Blog of Harvey: Why I respect smack addicts more than cigarette smokers. Stay tuned HarveyHeads…