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Writer to the Stars

Writer to the Stars
Location
Dallas, Texas, USA
Birthday
August 15
Title
Writer to the Stars
Company
Mine
Bio
A long-time freelance writer who was fated to live in Dallas, Texas and marry a tall photographer. And who did. 31 years into it now. It seemed to be working. And then the whole damned roof fell in. But we've both been to the rodeo before, even this one, and we know what to do. You cowboy up.

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MARCH 4, 2011 1:32AM

Dinners and nightmares...

Rate: 18 Flag

reposted from October 6, 2008.


http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/02/21/arts/Sabine1650.jpg
You might come here Sunday on a whim.
Say your life broke down. The last good kiss
you had was years ago. You walk these streets
laid out by the insane, past hotels
that didn't last, bars that did, the tortured try
of local drivers to accelerate their lives.
Only churches are kept up. The jail
turned 70 this year. The only prisoner
is always in, not knowing what he's done.

Richard Hugo, Degrees of Gray in Philipsburg


I'm picturing Wall Street today as looking like this pix I found. I think it would be great if it did, if all the traders, hedgers, and short-sellers just had it out, went apeshit on each other. Be helpful in getting rid of all that money-fear.

During a different time, my own forays onto Wall Street made me wonder deeply about humankind. I always landed there around 5 PM, and always seemed to be facing a solid wall of tramping people staring ahead blankly, into some psychic middle ground. If I tripped and fell in front of that advancing horde, I knew I'd wind up a flattened corpse, entirely covered with shoe-prints.

I was first in NYC during a crack in time, between the Beats and the hippies. It was a pretty good time, although we little bohemians didn't have a label for ourselves. We were all artists of some type or other, seeking each other out in the East Village, hanging out in Washington Square, just glad to be together like puppies in a heap.

The title of my post, Dinners and nightmares is the name of a book I happened on that year, by Diane diPrima. She was writing poetry when, outside of some brittle academic types, not too many women were letting it rip. The poems in Dinners are pretty hilarious, describing the kinds of meals you make when you're down to oatmeal, an onion, and maybe a crusty can of tomato sauce and you're not a Nothin-Says-Lovin-Like-Somethin-From-The-Oven gal to begin with. She writes about her innumerable guys, relationships about fifteen minutes long, and casual good/bad/let-it-go sex, with enormous ease about herself. It's a good portrait of life in edge city, which was where most artists lived back then. A time when, as Dylan noted, he once got paid for a gig with a chess piece.

I think a lot of us are going to be rediscovering edge city, and it's not too bad. Hard to believe now, but many of us grew up not expecting to make much money and not caring that we didn't. Voluntary poverty, Michael Harrington called it, in The Other America. What little glittery treasures were we after if not gelt? Raw experience, was one, going to a place few middle-class anglos went to, and so some of us took off for Kathmandu. Another was mouthing off in our liberal mags, often published in someone's apartment, or starting another liberal mag to mouth off in. And some of us were just what we were, like Diane.

Anyway, now that the Golden Calf is melting down, it's going to be innaresting to see what folks will find to do instead. Just putting it out there, but may I suggest attempting the unknown? The artful? Or the heroic?

It sure beats cruising some big box store for a case of macaroni and cheese.

As my wise husband sometimes says, There are higher ways to be.

And I say, hell to the yes. You bet there are.

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Comments

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Yep, just as I expected....your past writing is just as excellent as your present writing. "innaresting"....love it!
We are back to involuntary poverty like when we were young, only now there is no false promise of a turn around. Does change the perspective. I'd like to think we will choose something innaresting. Heroic will be in the everyday living of it. Excellent perspective.
Welcome back!

I think America has enough bankers--more Bohemians might be if not medicinal, at least a positive change. A poking of the pin into the balloon of utterly shallow commercialism.

rated
And now that the golden calf has melted, the next steps are critical to see the direction of the new.
I hope we are not looking to Hollywood.
Excellent view of today's times.
Ah, the mundane brutality of Wall Street--yes. And all that matters, and now what? Looking forward to more.
When the gravy train derails you can pour in a little water and have a reasonable meal facsimile.
Ha - I've just been reading about the 60s and have to inject some annoying stats I learned. Only 2,000 Americans went to Nepal in 1960, and 18,000 did in 1969. Some of them were probably wearing pantyhose and sunglasses, if not wigs. Voluntary poverty is probably more pleasant than the involuntary kind.
Nice image and tale of the meltdown here. Good POV you have and then some.
wonderful piece.

very true about these times connecting to our roots, our youth, our expectations or lack thereof.

there was that quite lovely period in the 80s when we were making money money money and it was fun and we got to dress up and eat in nice restaurants.

what do we have to show for any of it? not much except some grand memories.

if we're lucky.

I think this life is for living and giving a shit. I don't think it's for anything but being in the moment. then again, I think I'm in a constant state of quasi depression so I'm rather passive that way. or maybe a natural born buddhist. just be. just love. or take a nap. just don't do anything to harm something or someone. pretty hard to do sometimes. unlike the buddha, I have a miserable know it all streak so I will talk too much and promptly put my foot in my mouth. or yours. I'm harsh that way.

actually, an embarrassment is what I am. a poor nearly happy embarrassment. halleluja. thank you for this moment in time.

big hug to you glorious woman in texas. big hug to the hunk in your life.
ps those fuckers in the financial market should be lined up and shot. every last one of them.


really.
I plan on attempting the unknown, the artful and the heroic. Thanks for the reminder.
innaresting, indeed. it's not until the floor disappears below you that a person makes the most telling decisions. sometimes better or 'higher,' as hubs says, but always telling. wish i'd known you in ny back in the day. heh. there are stories that could be told. ;
That's an amazing picture but I don't think it's a very accurate image of Wall St. - maybe of what they left behind. From what I hear things haven't changed that much for them ... We can only wish and meanwhile I fantasize about the contribution an old woman can make to a revolution. Ramen is cheaper than mac cheese, isn't it?