Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Be Good or Be Gone

Sometimes you look at someone, how they treat you. How they treat themselves. And you know that you don't belong there-if you remove yourself from the situation, you will be okay. 

Dating an addict, loving an addict, is hard-if not impossible. You can get sucked into their darkness. 

Being with someone with mental issues, it is about battling the dragon. 

Sometimes, you need to choose yourself.  Even if you don't know what that means.  

Every new stage was an unknown, a fun new stage to discover.  A topography, a home, the location that gets blessed. The music in the air-so fleeting.  All the notes fly off into the oxygen, and like making love-the more intense it gets, the more intense it gets-and then there is a moment when you think of how perfect everything is. And then it is gone.  

How do you keep stoking that fire?  All the things that were perfectly in alignment somehow disappear.  Did you think to enumerate all the things-figure out what it all was?  

Unloading the van, counting each bag. Handing it off, trying to locate all the plugs-making the matches.  The satisfaction of plugging things in. Unrolling all the cable The dusty black rubbery plastic cable, dirty from all the other floors you've ever been in. The nervousness of everything-will tonight be HORRIBLE? Will this performance be a disaster? (With very few exceptions, its usually not terrible) 

The audience always starts out in different camps.  The loyalists-the followers who are there at almost every show. Fewer now. Then the ones who come because of the name.  Who expect some level of talent, but only bought a ticket to have a story for later.  To make fun. 

And granted, some wrong notes, with the guitar and with the jokes. The first song is hopefully fast and fun, energetic enough to help us all ride the wave into the music of the night. A bumpy ride, indeed. But he's a master conductor (train metaphor to collide with the wave) and you know he can guide you out of choppy waters.

Smiles, real and fake. Applause, music, applause. Repeat until intermission.  A few more songs to get back into the groove and then-we hit the pocket.  The pocket of air, he plays and the guitar sings. You sing too, and people complement your voice.  It has a certain quality, they say.  Not everybody, but enough for you to think it is appreciated.  You can't tell, can't be objective about your own voice.  This is always how you sounded.  Of course, better since singing lessons with good days and bad days. You know when you are in good voice. And when its a bit scratchier than normal.  You know that it makes you feel better, euphoric. Even when you are determined to be upset.  Or sad.  Or annoyed.  The clear note of your voice sailing across the room, filling it up, blending with him.  Laughing.  It feels like laughing. Or kissing. 

But you stop singing and he plays in the pocket.  His guitar takes over and suddenly everything is floating on a trance.

Unplugging. Keeping busy so that you can't talk or reflect or get sad.  So much to track, selling cds (hopefully) make sure you take everything back that you had arrived with. Except said cds, which hopefully get exchanged for money, but more often go for smiles, for favors. Sweetening the deal. 

You can't shake the fact that everything else after The Pocket is a let-down.  The audience imagines that its a door he's opened, that he can name an emotion they've never felt.  That he has created something. But any connection is just with the plain old alcoholic that came in the door.  He's a faulted man with an amazing gift. And no amount of normal human conversation can bring it back.

And so we can be gone before they figure it out.  Be Good or Be Gone.

We are gone.


Sunday, May 31, 2020

I Don't Wanna Ride this Roller Coaster

Song

Is it about the pain of the virus? Of loving someone who will die? Of being alive?

Is it about this country?  Where it is scary and crazy and sometimes will kill you, but every morning, you want to wake up HERE?

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Alone again, naturally

Trapped with him.

She checks in on him during the plague. He's doing horribly, of course.  And then she really can't leave.  She has to stay and take care of him.

Isn't this how she pictured it would be?  The sex was never great.  No great romance, he's a pain,  The only thing he's good for is the music, and now he is much too weak to sing.

So all she can do is look over at him and try to remember what it was like to remember the night, when the music was just over.  The afterglow of the bar concerts.  All the fun they had when it was just her and him and the music.  And maybe a person or two in the audience


Saturday, February 29, 2020

Hospital Songs and Bookmarks

This month I spent too much time in hospitals.

I wonder why the food in the cafeteria is NOT healthy. Its because most cafeterias are run as cafeterias and not as health centers. You don't want to scare anyone, and want to make sure there is a comfort food option. Who are we kidding? They are run by the cafeteria paradigm-basic food. Ideally not terrible. Put cheese on everything, this is America, dammit. The sawdust cheese, they won't even notice!

I also sketched out the idea for a children's book, called the Bookmark Lady. It is about performative moments in a hospital, and being able to overcome your own emotions by being kind to others-and handing out bookmarks as gifts. Sometimes people need to be distracted by their own simple humanity-just long enough to get out of their own heads about being scared at a hospital.

Friday, January 31, 2020

MIT Hackathon: There'll Be A Jubilee

Attended the MIT Hackathon about XR, actually called a Reality Hack.  I crafted and scripted the narrative about Desegregation in Miami in 1957-specifically a story about Frank LeGree and how his family had picketers outside his house, threw rocks and eventually erected a cross on his front lawn-all in order to get him out of a neighborhood.

The video of the AR experience we created is here: https://youtu.be/C6w3e4wqwfk

Our team would love to do more with AR and explore this and other stories of America's growing pains further. Desegregation of schools, different neighborhoods in large cities i the 1950's. Life for a growing country and how that time period brought forth change that is still unresolved today. 

Connect that period with When They See Us-and #OscarsStillSoWhite and you will see how America still exists in black and white for so many people. The best part of the Hackathon was the idea that so many different people could come together to build a new reality. One in which the only judgments issued are on a lack of imagination.