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Wednesday, August 11, 2004
August Is The Cruelest MonthThere's a song by Elvis Costello called "The Other Side of Summer" from his Mighty Like a Rose album (yes, I wrote “album” -- I’m old, so sue me):The sun struggles up another beautiful day Upon hearing this song, it became one of my anthems (I have a few). I don’t like summer. Here, anyway, it’s always too hot and humid. I don’t like weather over 80 degrees (and I can do without 80). I melt. I also feel a sense of foreboding when the weather is beautiful. Some throw-back to my childhood and the striving for and dread of perfection (from perfection you can only go down). Long Island also gets the poisonous surf; several years back we had medical waste washing up on our beaches. Needles and stuff. Nice. We’re also fortunate to have our Pine Barrens -- protected areas of nature. There’s your “tree museum.” Cynicism and I are no strangers. The automatic gates close up between the shanties and the palace Again, here on Long Island, we have the same kind of lines between the haves and the have-nots. You can go from tightly packed illegal apartments full of Hispanic immigrants doing day-labor to multi-million-dollar mansions of rich and famous pop singers in less than 5 or 10 minutes. From poverty to posh and back again on less than a gallon of gas. The gates are there, too. Was it a millionaire who said, “Imagine no possessions”? Now, I love John Lennon as much as the next person. I even love the idea behind the song “Imagine.” But I admire Elvis’ balls in pointing out the incongruity of the idea of “no possessions” and the amount of money John made in his lifetime. I get a little guilty pleasure from singing that line out loud. Of course, the grammatical point of the next line falls a little flat when you look at the previous verse -- physician, heal thyself.
This verse is a personal thing for me. Whenever I picture the madman standing there repeating, “Look at my eyes!” I think of my friend Jay. I imagine it’s him standing there on a NYCity street corner (in the Village), eyes wide open, half bent over, getting in the faces of passers-by, pointing at his eyes and screaming, “Look at my eyes! Look at my eyes!” He’d do something like that just to get the reaction.
The mightiest roseHere’s the verse that makes this one of my anthems. I don’t know what he meant when he wrote it (nor that it matters -- art is not for the artist to perceive), but “the absence of perfume” for me means just that -- I refuse to wear perfume or anything (like hairspray or mousse) that might attract bees during the summer (and fall). I’m not allergic to bees, but I sure don’t like them. I’m afraid of them. There. I admit it. My oldest brother Mike once told me I have bees in my bonnet. Fine. Just take the bonnet far away from me. It’s the “unwanted birthday” that hits home. It didn’t used to. I used to love my birthday. I think everyone looks forward to their birthday when they’re kids. But now that I’m ... let’s say way over 30, I really don’t want anymore of the damn things. Since Elvis has nearly a decade on me, I doubt he wants his anymore either. Which brings me to the point of this post. I just had another one of those unwanted things on August 9th (Elvis' is August 25th). Although I’m in better health than I was 20 years ago, I’m still 20 years older than I was 20 years ago. Twenty years is a long time. I feel like I haven’t even started my life yet. The fortunate thing is that I don’t feel like my life is over. I still feel pretty much as I did 20 or 25 years ago. But I’m much wiser. Smarter. Less idealistic. The dancing was desperate, the music was worseThis last verse just makes me think of disco. I’m sorry. I had no use for disco when it was around and no use for it now. I don’t know what disco has to do with summer (or maybe it’s Donna Summer -- though, to be honest, she’s actually talented), but anything I dislike gets lumped together in the same compost heap -- disco, summer, reality shows. But, of course, this is an environmental song. Still, I take it for my own. Please re-cycle. --Mary |