Thursday, January 10, 2013

Head-Phoned


I live in Chicago now, as you may know. I lived here before for a number of years. It’s home just as Oklahoma is home.

I work sixteen miles from where I live. It takes me over an hour to get from one to the other. That’s a lot of time with my nose in a book and headphones in my ears.

My habit of plugging into my ipod as soon as I leave my apartment is a good one. It protects me from interactions with the many strangers I pass, it functions as a security gate that lets me permit or ban access. That’s something I learned in high school. Somehow my habit of wearing headphones renders me effectively invisible. People know I can’t hear them so they don’t speak to me. “I’m not participating,” is what I seem to be saying. And it’s true. I’m not participating in the life of the streets I walk. I’m barely playing a role on the trains and buses I ride.


But my use of headphones is more important than that. The constant presence of private music adds much needed texture to the absurdity of my travel.

I am a speck on the map of millions, you see.

I feel like a benign Travis Bickle. I rove around this place, weaving in and out of the grotesque parade of hideous people. I am hideous too. But we are not alike, we are not together. I have this shield of beauty buoying me toward my workplace and back to my apartment. I have a soundtrack that elevates me.

When I work a closing shift on a weeknight I have occasion to discover a couple of precious quiet streets in Chicago. This is a rare thing, indeed.

It’s strange that I moved back to a fairly crowded city. I love being alone. In spite of my love of persons, I have great distaste for people.

This is the best, though.

It’s late. It’s dark. It’s cold and wet. I am alone in this place that hours ago was pulsing and bristling with activity, with people and people and more people.

I am suddenly Charlton Heston in The Omega Man. I feel like I have the whole place to myself. Like I may never see another person again but that’s basically okay by me.

This happened last week. I was walking down 57th Street in Hyde Park. I was alone and Modest Mouse was shouting some atonal rant into my ears and I suddenly had the sensation that as I moved the pavement was moving because of my steps. I felt as though the very earth beneath me was at the will of my feet. The world had become a treadmill. If I walked faster the world would fall away behind me at the same pace. If I ran you all would have felt it; you would have been thrown from your beds where you tried to sleep or your couches where you sat to watch the pathetic also-rans of college football, stalled in your cars where you were driving west as I ran east, arrested and nauseated in your pursuits of a kiss or another drink.

I felt like I was boss of the world.

We're all lucky I wasn’t.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

66 of Your Human Years


Why is today- to my mind- like Christmas, New Year’s Eve, Halloween, and Easter all rolled into one fabulous package? What is special today?

How is this day different from all other days?

Today is the anniversary of the most important event in the history of rock and roll music.

Because on this day in 1947 a Starman, an immortal demigod of music and fashion, came unto us lowly humans. He shed a magical and mystical light upon a world that was otherwise dull and gray. He told stories in song. He gave us allegories that taught us the frail nature of our lives. His music offered us transcendence. He invented the mullet that is so popular among southern lesbians. He wore super-tight body suits and painted his face.



David Bowie is 66 today.

I love him so.

We’re lucky we have him.

He has a new album coming out soon, March supposedly. The title is The Next Day. And while we have to wait two more months for David Bowie to release his new album (and for my dad to BECOME AS OLD AS DAVID BOWIE) we don’t have to wait to listen.

So. Here. My gift to you. The full video for David Bowie’s first single in a decade: Where Are We Now?