Odd-i-sea
Recently I got an email from an old friend-- well, we shared a job-- she replaced me and discovered I was the only 'ear' qualified to comprehend the insanity and challenges required by her daily agenda. So we had a kind of bond. This was more than thirty years ago. I remember I introduced her to a man I knew-- she was the kind of woman anyone loved to date-- fun, smart, well-dressed, just edgy enough to appeal across the spectrum.
But suddenly-- well, she'd changed her life, moved across the country, again... approaching 70, blurting out that she'd messed up-- failed to find her calling, maybe-- that perfect relationship that eludes most of us. It was a moment-- and I am privileged to be on the receiving end because I do see how some of us spend decades following tangents, under the illusion that we are 'in the moment', aligned with some karmic rhythm... maybe in love with another fun loser, deciding yes, we can be a back-up dancer at the age of 40, or a master chef, or a fashion designer. It's all spread out there, when we are young-- the choices, and we are at the edge of a vast river of time that seems utterly infinite, and some of us just want to inhale the scent of water, sense the passage of time-- watch the clouds reshape, the inevitable miracle of sunset... it goes on.
Bob Dylan at 85 mentioned in a recent interview that 'Time stands still while we move.' Not original-- there are umpteen lyrics going back millennia but he does have a kind of 'authority'. What he says seems to matter... it percolates and becomes 'word'. Maybe that's what my friend misses-- a certain lack of impact.
I met a young woman last week who plays bass-- she has a Spector which undoubtedly cost her more than I've ever paid for an instrument... but I mentioned Lou Reed (Spector endorsements by his musicians) and she had absolutely not a clue. Icon-- cornerstone... absolute blank. Okay. She's Korean... but still... is it my bad to expect young musicians to have some classic rock referential?
Christopher Nolan's Odyssey will undoubtedly introduce a whole virgin generation to the classics... the way Oppenheimer maybe reminded us that horrific world destruction is only a button away. I'm not sure I want to see the new film-- I hate watching bloody recreated battles and heroics and super-heroes. But I'm the minority. The Charles Laughton Hunchback of Notre Dame caused me to vomit up my dinner at the age of 8. My son grew up seeing movies like Hostel as date-night fare.
But what do we expect? We who studied and read and digested historic literature and the sequences of Kings and empires... now see a generation that values the present above all else. And supposing they are right-- in terms of physics, and the Time-Stands-Still theory, this is it. And we are infinitesimally unimportant in the universe. Our lifetime is meaningless.
In my early thirties, I had that cartoon on my refrigerator-- the one with the well-dressed woman looking at her shopping list and captioned 'Oh my God! I forgot to have children!' When I got home from giving birth to my son, I took it down with irony and a tiny sliver of regret. And it was only the merest quirk of fate that motherhood happened-- an unrehearsed moment, a rogue sperm, etc.
Conversely, how many times do I beat myself up for a negative scenario-- if only I'd taken a night off, maybe my daughter would have been born healthy... or obsessing over that woman who fell into a manhole.. if only she'd parked inches away? It goes on.... we move, while the moment sits there. Daily choreography presents itself so that we encounter random adventures-- me, just a half hour ago, with my bag of yesterday' bagels... and a homeless man, right there outside the store-- his head on a table, outside in the heat and the wildfire-polluted air... people on the sidewalk wearing masks, and there he was-- sweaty and dirty as though he'd been in a fire himself. The bagels were clean; he was hungry... it was perfect.
I have many friends of all kinds; some torment themselves daily that nothing they've done was ever enough while some seem to gloat and float in a clueless contingency of confidence. Some are psychologists-- psychiatrists... who have totally abandoned the concept of compassion. They do not see or hear or fathom that they might be missing the machinery of emotion. Perhaps that makes them professional.
So to my friend... I am the quintessence of unprofessional, unclaimed, unacknowledged, unrewarded. I suppose the rhythm of my life is such that I cannot even make an assessment-- negative or positive. Aside from regrets about my daughter, some missed opportunities surely-- maybe I expected less. I've also listened to plenty of stories. They interest me. I care. I have learned that the reasons people choose for their trouble or outcome are not always the essential reasons. So many failed relationships. I have strings of ex-boyfriends and non-boyfriends. When one is in a relationship, other men feel 'safe' around us-- they confide, they open. There are women in this life-- who change men... it could be the way they feel-- their skin, their scent... it is irresistible. Some men discover this too late. It's sort of a magic thing... it happens. Few possess these women. The metaphor of Helen...
I have no clue what Christopher Nolan will do with Homer. But the metaphors always obsess me. I am not sure about Gen X or Y or Z... their frame of reference seems so limited. It used to amuse us that Jay Leno interviewed people on the street whose knowledge of current events was non-existent. Now this seems epidemic. But does it matter? Me, an aging old relic with shabby clothes and way too many books... still unable to assess my own existence beyond the simple math of sharing a bagel with a homeless man.
Labels: Bob Dylan, Canadian wildfires, Charles Laughton, Christopher Nolan, Gen X, Helen of Troy, Homer, Hostel, Lou Reed, metaphor, motherhood, Odyssey, psychiatry, Spector bass

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home