Excerpt #1 Songs About
Life
It was a beautiful morning. The sun was battling the
snowflakes for air supremacy, with the snow handily winning
out. They were huge
flakes, like Christmas snow, except it was January, so the
collective grumble I heard from the Sunday shoppers was no
surprise. I loved the
winter. I wanted to
run down the street as fast as I could just to feel the cold on my
cheeks and the freshness in my lungs. Snow always made me feel like I
was part of something more than just concrete sidewalks and Gap
Stores. I was
alive. There was this
huge thing going on in the world that no one could stop or even
control. Mother
Nature.
In
Australia people were lying on the beach in bikinis at the same
moment a group of school kids were whipping down hills on toboggans
over in Thompson Park.
It was crazy. I might
not have believed in organized religion, but I certainly believed
in a higher spirit.
Ms. Dennis always taught us that Mother Nature was God's little
sister and she was in charge of the circle of life and making the
world a beautiful place to be. God must be very proud of his
little sister. His
children though, I think he's probably pretty ashamed of
us. We've messed
things up horribly. We
throw garbage everywhere; destroy our drinking water and set
forests ablaze because we're too lazy to put out a
campfire. Yet under
all those charred remains is a new forest, just waiting to
grow. All it takes is
one seed. One green
leaf.
If a forest can regenerate itself,
why can't we as human beings? We just need to find that one
little seed, that one sign of life. Capture it. Nurture it. Give it hope.
Excerpt #2 Songs About
Life
Just once I'd like to meet that
person who sits in the corner spot of the corner booth in the dark
confines of a dingy bar and watches life happen. This person is always drunk or at
least has the appearance that he is one sip away from total and
complete lack of recognition of anything human or
dead. Maybe he
is dead. Or
maybe he's just in limbo, waiting for the right moment,
trying to decide whether or not he really wants to rejoin the
living or continue to squander his time in a pit hole of
puke. His name
is Bobby.
Now
Bobby's a good citizen. He gets up every morning and goes
to work pulling cable lines for the local conglomerate, earning a
decent wage. He pays
his rent, telephone and utility bills all on time and even has a
little cash left over to tip the paperboy once and
awhile. Bobby never
reads the paper of course. He stacks them chronologically in
a corner of his apartment where they sit, day after day, year after
year, gathering dust.
An ever-thickening layer of black soot from a chimney badly in need
of a sweep envelops not only the papers, but the entire contents of
the room. Bobby
doesn't care; he's never there. Sure he sleeps a little in that
lumpy old cot, which sits in the corner of what used to be the
master bedroom, but it's hard to get a good night's sleep when your
head is always spinning and your mind is always
cluttered. Poor
Bobby. He is alone,
but not that lonely.
He has friends and they are just like him. In fact, they have a support
group which meets every night from 5 o'clock until last call at
Wilkens’ on the corner of John and Madison. Bobby, Frank, Jim, John, Dave,
the same regular guys, with the same regular names, all living the
same sort of lives.
How do I know all this? I was walking home late one night
as they all departed the bar. They left arm in arm, singing at
the top of their lungs about the glory of their
lives. They were
singing songs about life and I needed to find out more, so I
became “The Observer”.
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