Saturday, November 28, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

3172 ESTES is.

According to The Commercial Appeal, Jan. 20, 2008, it looks like my childhood home has passed hands again. This is, I believe, the fourth owner? since it was built in 1968 in what was then called a subdivision of Memphis, TN. In the wake of Memphis' ongoing struggles with race, class and with a resounding assassination coming in a spring storm, my dad bought it to move his wife and two girls out of Midtown, away from the trouble. Midtown, to this day, still struggles with crime, yet artists and college students continue to populate with a shrug of the shoulders, keeping it possibly the most stable and safest of Memphis' historical streets.

Since dad sold our single family home in East Memphis after a good solid 30 years of livin' and dustin' and fightin' and growin' and leavin', there've been three names attached to it. I wonder if anyone can settle in there besides us Dowdas ...? Were we the only family able to eat off the dinner table balancing atop the foundation laid by some developer's turning a xenophobic buck off of my GI bill father? Were we the only ones that could make it last?

It remains to be seen, what family will survive 3172 Estes.

The following was written in 2004. I have nothing to lose any longer by holding on to it, so here it is:

In Search of Lisa Marie, Summer 2004

Two days after my dad's funeral in May of this year, I decided to go to 3172 Estes and ask kindly of the stranger now living there to oblige me a walk around the house one last time. It was Memorial Day in Memphis, TN. My sister and I had a huge falling out on the day before the funeral, involving a security guard and an official escort to my car from dad's efficiency apartment. When I say 'one last time,' I meant this to be the last time this family ever raked me over the coals. I wanted peace. I wanted to smile at the ugly paneling. I wanted to be willfully jarred by the different style of furniture of the second family giving it a shot in this brick home.












I wanted to see the pecan tree in the backyard that I scaled countless times, a refugee from the silent tension of my dad and mom ignoring the huge elephant of Sex and Cancer that was genetically seeded in the sediment of our family. I wanted to see Velvet's grave and doghouse. I wanted to smell the mustiness and mold that was always in my closet – that ruined my clothes and sent me to school consistently smelling like a forgotten dishrag. I wanted to remind myself that I wasn't living nor trying to survive in that house or that family any longer.

If obliged, I would walk into that house, and see another family loving and living, and the nightmares would stop, or at least relocate themselves in a different setting. Either way, there must be peace upon closing the door.

On the front door, a brass doorknocker read "DAVIS" in cursive type. The house holds no loyalty. So soon does it open its doors and subsume any sign of life. So soon. I googled my house previously and found that it had been sold to a "Carlos Davis." A Latino "Davis"? Italian? Spanish? These names didn't match. I had no idea what face of which angles and shadows would be on the other side.









I knock on the door, step back a little bit. Wait. Step back a little more. The white iron decorative piece hanging on the red brick wall beside me is a decorative effort leftover from my mother. The two oak trees in the front yard are blowing in an unusually cooling May breeze. They shade the entire house now. They are the work of my father. When I was 6 or 7, they were no taller than me but lovingly planted, nursed and watered vigilantly by my father. He worried over their growth, one different than the other – slower, shorter and thinner than the other. Yet, here they both stand tall and keeping the house's utility bill down. My father must've hated to leave that.

I continue to wait. A little embarrassed. I remind myself, "This is not your house anymore. This is not your house anymore…" But it's a lie because I remember Mama's smile every time someone complimented her on that ugly iron hanging. I know that house like I know the landscape of my own body. I know the reason behind every brick. I know the slant of the driveway. I know the dents in the front yard. I know why I'm knocking on a just 10 year old iron frame door that was hinged to "keep the blacks out" when a neighbor down the street was broken in on.

I stand there listening for my dad's moccasins slapping against the tile and wresting the door open to greet me. From the carport I hear the familiar, so familiar sound of the storm door opening. The sound of the unlocking and loosening of the aluminum door. I recognize it. That sound was my dad coming home, either to ignore me or to give me tasks to do.

I walk over and peek around. Sure enough. A black man in his early 30's stands there on the threshold holding on to the handle, trying to smile.

"Hi, Um, Hi." I don't venture too close, as he seems suspicious of my intent. It is clear I am expected to earn his trust. "My dad just sold this house. I was born and raised in it."

He's smiling curiously, politely. Confused.

"Hi, I'm Lisa," and I extend a hand, and begin moving toward him. He's not budging, but he is watching my feet move. I still. "I just wanted to stop by and see it one last time." He's not moving. His smile is beginning to hit its expiration date.

"Mr. Dowda? Did you know him? He just passed away."

"Naw, naw, I didn't know anybody like that."

His smile has frozen before it's faded altogether. Politeness has quite a grip on all us Memphians. A life raft.

"Ok." I keep putting my hand to my heart. I'm standing there in front of this black man, the only thing standing between me and MY HOME, and I am instinctively acting on my nice-girlness. It's the only negotiating technique my upbringing afforded me. Certainly I can summons the survival skills needed in this land. Any moment now, this man's going to see my need, relent and invite me in. Any moment, this moment will have passed, a new day will rise on the races coming together in ironic justice.

I keep clutching my heart – the Gone-With-the-Wind Melanie negotiation technique ain't working. It's never worked – not on bill collectors, car dealerships, landlords. I keep using it though. He's standing, shifting his weight on his flip-flopped feet, waiting for the white girl to get the hint. I'm blinking in the silence between us, knowing a black man in my own home is the only thing standing between me and it. The last black man that stood on that threshold was the man I was in love back in 1996, trying to get in. The black man that caused my father to disown me from the family. And now Carlos, a black man who could buy his way in, stands there in ownership and authority. Another black man in Memphis. Certainly, this Carlos is someone who'd been living at the hands of a Lazurusian prejudicial discontent and would at least give me a chance.

He exhaled loudly, scuffed a stray string off his foot with the other, adjusted his grip on the door handle, his eyes downcast.

"Um, ok, ok, ok. I'm sorry to bother you." Hand to my heart. He nods and closes the door, locks it. Then closes the wooden door and locks it. I walk down the driveway on which I taught my dog to fetch the morning newspaper. Down the driveway on which I played countless games of solitaire jacks. The driveway on which I crashed my bike, sustained a swollen and bruised blue chin of such a size that my mother forced me to wear gloppy pink makeup to conceal it. One more walk down the driveway, I get into my rental car, take a deep breath, crank up the MAGIC 101 R&B, and hit the road.

Maybe it's the house. Maybe it was never the family dynamic. Maybe it was the intent of the developers – to sell to people who needed to make a new life away from a more dangerous one. Maybe it's the architects, sketching out the human geography of this bluff city that keeps me at bay, keeps me moving on down the river. Maybe this black man is segregating himself from a community where he was not welcomed or where he was not succeeding or where he couldn't safely raise his children. Maybe it's just the house, built on fear.













But I'm still not welcome in it.


~~~

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

MAD MEN are.

Sometimes I just don't understand the world unless it comes from some hand shoved up some character's ass.

So just in case you weren't clear on the concept either, I offer you this:




~~~

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

MARK MARON is.

Another self-proclaimed, marginally successful SadHead - WOO HOO!






"I'm not sure when exactly [my comedy style] got angry.




I think it was somewhere around the time I was in college - where I started to realize I was too sensitive, and too shy, and too heady, and too arty to really exist in the world without crying all the time ... I was on that trajectory and then somewhere I said, 'You know what - that guy has to die'" ...

From PRI's "The Sound of Young America"



~~~

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

THOSE WHO LIKE SOME ARTFUL IRONY TO THEIR FINANCIAL NEWS are.

In an article published by CNN Money on June 25 and called out on today's Yahoo home page, 14 companies are listed off as "gone bankrupt." But really, REALLY, a lot of 'em stay open and just sort of float in this trendy vernacularian state of the universe. They ain't closing nothing. GM? They're not closing. They're just ... let's say ... laying low and doing the Mark Sanford thing: "Yes, I've been bad. You're right - I suck and I've been totally irresponsible. How about this? How about you hate me for the night. I'll go and sleep in a Howard Johnsons until you are a little less angry and then we'll get back on the horse? Eh? K. You have a good night." (Not to mention that that dude didn't want to spend the $700 million allotted to his state, but was ordered to - wah - but that's another blogpost.)

Nobody's closing but these guys:

Debt Relief USA. Just like stealing - they've taken your fees and identities and info and closed down. Disappeared. Like Linens 'N Things - they're nothing but a website now with text in their codes saying, "If you bought something from us and didn't get it - sorry. Got Lawyer?"

When Debt Relief USA skips town, General Motors probably has hooked them up with a Certified Used ride.

It's all pretty transparent, if you ask me. Really, sort of unoriginal how Bankruptcy is the new Celebrity Rehab.

Below is One Question from their Frequently Asked Questions page:

Q: How do I find a good credit counseling service?
A: Due to a few bad apples, the credit-counseling industry is under enormous scrutiny from both the government, and private consumer-interest groups. Although this is bad for honest credit counselors (and even worse for the not-so-honest ones), it's great for you, the consumer. Search the Web sites of the Federal Trade Commission (www.ftc.gov) and the Better Business Bureau (www.bbb.org) for "credit counseling" and you will find all you need to know, including complaints against individual credit-counseling firms.

Secondarily, you can tell right away if a credit-counseling service is legitimate by evaluating the promises it makes. Does it sound too good to be true? If so, then it is. No one can make your debts and/or bad credit disappear, and no one can save you 90% or more -- even 50% is really stretching it. Good credit counselors can typically save consumers 10-35% on their monthly payments, so if a firm promises to do much more, be skeptical of their claims, and of them as a company."


It's all there - in the coded text. Don't be stupid - everyone's stealing and calling it Bankruptcy.

Where's the art in that? Here's art:



D'oh ...

~~~

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

HE is.














Maybe forever he is.

...

Isn't it possible that maybe he just didn't want to comeback?


~~~

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

EVERYONE is.

And here I thought it was just me that ruminated about such things.

Check out Tim Kreider's text "Reprieve." It's posted at the troubled blog of the troubled New York Times:

REPRIEVE: "Fourteen years ago I was stabbed in the throat ..."

Also, check out his comic, "The Pain: When Will It End?"





~~~

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

THIS GHOST BIKE is.

In Brooklyn, you protect what’s yours, no matter who’s trying to take it. It can be a a girl, a car, a laptop, your hat in a January breeze coming off the Narrows, your dignity.

And in Brooklyn, if you want to keep your bike, the pizza delivery guys and bike shop owners advise to use this type of chain.



But here, someone’s chained up their sadness.

Pedro left the house one day and got collided with by someone else’s cursory car.





And what do you do when you’ve lost your Pedro at the stop sign at 54th and 7th?








I know I have walked past this corner many times and this was not here. Someone perhaps was not moving past the gravity of their missing of Pedro and had to do something. Something was just not right until Pedro’s girlfriend, handball partner or father found the right way to memorialize him without a gravestone.

And now, we all - with our bags of butter, milk or beer - we have to stop. Here. And sit with Pedro’s Ghost Bike. We give pause to the “hit by a car.” We think about the date. We see the white paint crusting and cracking under the spring sunshine and we write the screenplay. Somehow, we assume this was his last bike ride. Or this bike was a routine thing he enjoyed doing or had to do for work. But really, all of it doesn’t matter.

What matters is what we’re left with of Pedro. And we think. And we feel. And we know. And we respect the tragedy of July 10, 2008 of some stranger that I probably stood in line with buying my tomatoes and half-and-half.



There’s an irrepressible movement to sadness that just won’t pass on without its proper due. Loss deserves its place in the sun. Loss needs attention. It deserves eating the whole pizza by yourself. It deserves screwing up on your taxes and your lover and overcompensating at work to keep from going home to the empty nest.

And the sadness that moves us, moves on us, inside us. As our eyes move up and down this memorial of a bike that no longer pedals a life around - whose wheels are painted shut – it is someone’s grief that runs its warm, sweaty hands against us at this impromptu wake locked up at a corner in Sunset Park.

… so dignified … and so sexy. Yes, sexy in its minimalism and stark black and white. And so scary. And so classy, this memorial. So well done. So much pride. Someone thought about it for a while. In this borough of churches, someone chose not just another gravesite that they couldn’t afford anyway. They chose against a graffiti tag or a wall mural clouded by looming condo development. Someone chose vision and permanency. Someone chose grace.

Someone sealed a nobility in defiant anonymity that stole all my breath away, punishing me with taking for granted my own breath by just rolling on.

In the moment that my dog and I stopped and stared, I felt Pedro was just sorta hanging around, crouched on a curb, smoking a cigarette, smiling secretly … softly. Me, who just sort of got stopped by his life in the middle of the sunniest, warmest day yet this spring.

Stopped by the Ghost of Sadness Unrequited. It stopped me, and it moved me to go all the way home, grab my camera and further memorialize it for you.

Pedro got jacked by Life’s Arbitrary DeSelection. Pedro moves among us no longer.

Pedro got stolen.



But somehow, Pedro’s bike moves us still.

###

April 18, 930 AM, The 11th Annual Blessing of the Bikes, New York City

Monday, February 2, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

THESE FORMER HASIDIC GUYS are.

I can't hardly breathe, listening to their story on NPR.

Abuse Scandal Plagues Hasidic Jews In Brooklyn
by Barbara Bradley Hagerty



Keep your empathy electric ... and blood off your prayer shawl.

~~~

A note about the photo: Volunteers from the ultra-Orthodox Zaka rescue organization hold up a victim's bloody prayer shawl in the library of the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva March 6, 2008 in Jerusalem. Eight Jewish students were killed and nine more wounded when a Palestinian gunman infiltrated the seminary and opened fire before he was shot dead by armed students. (Photo by Avi Ohayon/GPO via Getty Images)

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Who's Sad in America?

Question is: Who's NOT Sad in America?

So quickly the blog has shifted. Our sadness is tidal. So quickly, the levees can’t withstand our dwindling faith in the system, any system - and now we’re standing on the roofs of our houses looking to the government like “what’s next?!”

Or maybe I am a sucker for a hyperbolic metaphor?

In any event, the Fateful Hand of Being Crapped On is not very choosey these days.














When silver-spooned descendent of French royalty and fund manager RenĂ©-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet takes a boxcutter to his wrists in his comfy New York office and positions himself strategically so that he bleeds out directly into a trash can, what have we missed? After dismissing the janitors early that night, to keep from making even more of a mess of innocent people’s lives, he's worried about the carpet cleaners and placing undue stress on even more people?

If I’m a rich guy with homes, businesses, estates, families and friends in both France and New York, and I still feel hopeless when I realize I’ve been duped, what’s really missing? What’s really making me want to kill myself?

It’s not the economy. Only. It’s not the angry clients that he’s indebted to. Only. It’s something more systemic. It’s something so seemingly unanswerable that a 60-something year old, white-collared French man sees the rough-edged end of a boxcutter as his best way out.

What could be so horrible that 60 years does not provide enough perspective?

.
.
.


There’s more self-deaded in America.

NPR and CNN got the press release over the wires this week that our soldiers are popping themselves off at a quicker clip. And that’s the reported ones. That’s not accounting for the countless men, boys, women, daughters that perhaps devise a more honorable Killed In Action scenario for ending their lives. Instead of inflicting their spouses and parents with a relentless horror stuck in their brains, they leave them with an Arlington burial and medal.

In 2008, 128 soldiers are reported to have taken their lives. This amount is higher than that of the whole of civilian America. Army’s score: 20.2 suicided per 100,000. Civilian America: 19.5 suicided per 100,000. I’m no mathematician – but I’m thinking the Army’s looking at some faster-moving percentages than us regular folks looking down the barrel of a gun off-the-clock.

So The Army, a.k.a. The Government is introducing some suicide prevention tactics. Because we Americans don’t conduct suicide missions. We Americans are not terrorists. No no, that’s the other guys. No no, we keep our suicides personal, not ideological. No no, seriously. That's the other guys.

Battlemind. It’s called Battlemind - the program that’s the prescription to save its soldiers from themselves in response to low recruitment numbers.

How about this? GetOuttaThere. That’s another program I’ve heard of that might stop the hemorrhaging of good men being pushed too far.

.
.
.

Then there’s always someone being born to fill the hole of another loss. At the same time, someone’s putting a gun to their head or swallowing Drano, someone else in America is quietly financing the cloning their previous dog.



Go ahead, judge them. We’re all judging them. The only one not judging them is Leona Helmsley because she’s hoping the millionaire dog that survived her will sign off on having her cloned so that she can come back and continue being a bitch.

When Al Roker asks why she sold her jewelry to clone a dog at the price tag of $150K, Nina Otto so articulately states with glassy-eyed conviction, “Ummm, you know, I can always have jewelry. I actually can always have jewelry if I wanted it. I wanted him, if it was going to be … to be part of something … that I gave to make him happen.”

Ah. I see now. … no, no, no, I don’t.

While she's stroking her furry petri-dish fantasy of love and devotion, this guy and his wife get laid off from his tech job with Kaiser Permenente in Southern California –



- so all the family has to die.







His two sets of twins, a daughter and a wife. And himself.

Sure, he was probably a little psychologically exhausted to begin with. Who isn't? Maybe life had always been hard for this man.


“Is there no hope for a widow’s son?” said the fatherless son in his suicide note. All those children were not enough to pad the gap between father and son. He fell in and took everyone with him.

Kaiser Permenente should not be implicated. Poor Kaiser Permenente – they’re just trying to break records delivering ethically implicated births to full term. They’re just trying to be a health care organization in America. “Don’t blame the economy [for familicide],” says forensic psychologist Louis Schlesinger, professor of forensic psychology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. Poor Kaiser Permenente - just providing healthcare to good hard-working families. (just not jobs)

Meanwhile, Kaiser Permenante holds a press conference about the single mother who gave birth to a much-maligned EIGHT MORE BABIES after a prior litter of 6.




How deep is the hole in her heart that she has to feed it with infertility drugs and death-defying pregnancies? And with no mention of a father or husband or lover, no less. How desperate is Kaiser Permenente’s board of trustees to steal ahead in the race to control nature to take on this single mother’s request for more more more more more more? How did any doctor look this woman in the face and let her lay down on the table and pump her full of too many children that, I DON'T KNOW, she may be too emotionally needy to raise? Did any doctor consult with his own set of ethics and personal empathy? ANY?

While this woman breeds like spiders with anti-divine intervention, Kaiser Permenente’s doctors and nurses pose for the perfunctory self-congratulatory press photos. (The hospital presumably took this themselves to hand out to the press – there’s no photographer listed.)



So while a dog is cloned and a herd of children circles up, a soldier, a father and a financier find themselves at the end of their rope.

What’s that phrase – when God closes a door, he opens a window?

Yeh, a window to jump out of.

Keep your ears open and your empathy electric. If you’re worried about things this year, there’s someone around you that’s already bought the farm and has convinced him or herself that no one’s going to miss them when they’re gone.

Keep your empathy electric. We need you awake. This is not a M. Night Shyamalan script we're in.

This is a trend. Killing yourself has become the new black.

And there’s nothing standing in its way besides our yet-to-be-found ability to cling to each other – all 750,000 of us standing in line at the Unemployment Office.

"Hi, I'm from Starbucks."
"Citibank, here."
"Lehman Bros., yo."
"Over here, AIG and Starbucks - yeh, I lost them both at the same time."
"Ford."
"Hey, yo, I'm here from a Long Island City dealership, c'mere, man, shake my hand!"
"Yo, I was laid off from a small business you never heard of."
"Red Lobster - my boss just got all nervous for no reason and got rid of 6 of us today. We were freaking slammed yesterday and now today, he lost it. I'm a cook."

How much worse does it have to get until we realize that each of us are alone, yes, and so therefore, we are not?

How much worse does it have to get, President Obama? You keep warning us that the darkest is coming before we get our dawn.

What’s it going to take before someone starts telling us to come out of our houses of terror and take the hand of someone else?

What’s it going to take?

What’s it going to take to spread the wealth? Are we really going to call it socialism if it saves our lives? If it brings us together for a little stop gap on the livelihood hemorrhaging? This is not Che, this isn't Red Square, this isn't Stalin, Kant, Nietzche or even Nader. This is your neighborhood crumbling.

Mark my words: Change will come in the spring. That’s when all the guns come out. People get a little Vitamin D under their belts and hopelessness gets a little energy and the shootings will start. Remember that, right now, we’re only in the Winter of Our Discontent.

12:18 pm, 2.26.93: The Truck Bombing at the World Trade Center
12:07 pm, 4.19.93: The ATF Siege on the Branch Dividian Compound in Waco, Texas
9:02 am, 4.19.95: The Truck Bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City
11:19 am, 4.20.99: The Columbine Shootings in Littleton, Colorado
7:15 am, 4.16.07: Virginia Tech massacre

These were people who are operating at a Loss, Barely Getting By in the Emotional Red, Sucking Whatever Love They Could Off the Familial Lack, Down with the Not-In-My-BackYard Lack of Resource. These are people like the cloning couple and the breeding mother and the killing father.

It’s not about the economy, that’s right. But it is about our own internal resource of well-being that is just not there for us to lean on right now.

And it ain’t over till the Fat Cats stop feeding. And we all get off the roofs of our houses and start swimming.

~~~