Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Gone with the Wind



HBO Max pulled "Gone with the Wind" from its lineup because of its racial depictions.  Sure, we all get it.  That movie was never a guide to good social behavior.  You are not supposed to take your moral values from any of the characters except, of course, Mammy.  But we all know the past was bad and we should probably do away with it.  If we can wipe it from our collective consciousness, the world will never make those mistakes again.

I don't really care.  I've never enjoyed the movie.

Nor could I watch "The Sound of Music."  And that horrible student film that made more money than any movie before it. . . what was it called. . . a monster movie made in black and white, won something at Sundance. . . ?  Q will know.  He was in film school with the fellows who made it.  I never watched it.

Rather than doing away with the past, though, some find it better to rewrite it.  History, I mean, our only tangible connection to it.  That's what winners do.  They get to tell the story.

I have lived through my own personal history being rewritten for me.  Once, I told my story proudly, but I learned that my story was bad, and I became ashamed of it.  Almost all of it at one time or another.  That self I had created had to be destroyed, burned into ashes and thrown to the wind.  If ever the things I had thought or done re-emerged. . . well, I knew there would be hell to pay.

In this long, intensive isolation I've endured, I've had a lot of time to think about that.  I've thought about the predicament I find myself in, having, of course, created my condition through past decisions and actions, and for a long while now, it seems, I have been depressed.  My thoughts have been, by and large, negative and despairing.  A day ago, I read an article about a new study that shows definite links between negative attitudes in older people and the onset of dementia.  Alzheimers.  They have studied the physiology of brains, seen which parts are activated, what chemicals are produced, etc.  Man, I thought after reading that, I don't want to think my way to madness.  So, I've been meditating on embracing myself and honoring myself and becoming happy again.

It is difficult, for, you see, I had so much help in that other direction.  Conditional love, etc.

In thinking about myself, I've wondered if America, too, isn't thinking its way to dementia.  It cannot embrace itself any longer.  It cannot accept itself.  There can only be a conditional love.

Imperfect people creating a perfect world.  I don't know.  In public, it seems, we spend more time thinking and talking about choosing our gender or going genderless than we do about saving a dying planet.  People just seem to hate science and would prefer to eschew it for socially constructed narratives.  THIS, they say, is what we are talking about NOW.

I've lived through that sort of personal restructuring.  It didn't cheer me.  But we are living through an era of shame, and all popular forms of mid-cult art must reflect that now.  The past, you know, was bad.  All of it.  Hell, the Bible tells us so.  There was really never any doubt.  And so, like all religious pilgrims, we must repent.  Like Lot and Lot's wife, we must never look back to those twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, those cities of the plain where past evils dwell.  We will look to a better and brighter future.

Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless, a chasing after the wind; nothing was gained under the sun.

I hated all for which I had toiled under the sun, because I must leave it to the man who comes after me.

Indeed, all man's days are filled with grief, and his task is sorrowful; even at night, his mind does not rest. This too is futile.


Vanity of vanities. All is vanity and chasing after the wind.

3 comments:











  1. OMG The Sound of Music - I could watch it a hundred million times. I probably have. Those are my Father's People. Austrians who tried to first help and then escape. I still cry listening to the Captain sing Edelweiss.

    I've never seen GWTW. I know, I know.

    I vividly remember buying the SOM album at a yard sale at the Binder's house when I was a little kid. They had what they called a "Summer House" - which was really a sort of enclosed sunroom in the backyard. They were one of the original Jewish families that bought when the neighborhood was comprised of mostly lake summer homes - right after the war. By the time I was born -there were not many of those families left. The Zuckerman's across the street - the Halpren's - the Binders.

    Ah Sweet memories. It was when - as a kid - you actually "hung out" with the older folks in the neighborhood. Learned their stories - ate snacks with them. All of us kids. And what stories they told - of Nazis - of escape - of persecution. Of working in NYC in the garment district. And snacks - oh did they provide us with snacks - exotic things like Matzah Ball Soup and to this day a favorite of mine - Halvah.

    They didn't spare the gory story details either.

    Oh where was I?

    You.

    I like the Old Testament stories for their ease of getting the kids hooked - I mean c'mon there is so much there to work with. Fires, Floods, Being swallowed by a whale, Plagues - Sex for the older kids - Queen Vashiti in the Book of Esther refusing to appear naked before the drunken men - Song of Solomon.

    But the real heart of the lesson of that Story Book - is in the New Testament. It is a shame Paul ruined everything.

    I mean the second half - is mostly all about Love and Acting Out Love. There are dozens of verses I could pick.

    1 Peter 4:8 ESV

    Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins.

    But I'll go with that one for now. Lord knows we could all use a little cover now and then.

    I like your meditation. Keep it up. :)

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  2. Ok. I'm back - eating my breakfast/lunch now. Door open - lovely. I watered and tended the garden this morning - as I was slothly last night. But also because I got bit up by mosquitos doing it at dusk the other night. THOSE are the monsters we have to worry about - Bad Bugs. Ticks too.

    But everything is looking grand. The tomatoes are all ready that much bigger. I finally got the weed seeds planted in pots. The new daises etc.

    Oh. Right. This morning I made an omelette that consisted of - two farm fresh eggs - some pepper jack cheese - grape tomatoes - sliced black olives and - a real sin I will need extra love for - BACON. Fuck why is bacon bacon.

    I am eating it somewhat Ethiopian style - what I wouldn't do for some Blue Nile injera about now. I spread it over a piece of lavash and was torn between straight up tabasco or sriracha - went with the latter.

    I'm quite sure I don't really believe in Sin but sins I can relate too.

    I had a great convo with my son on the telly last night. I miss him so much. We compared our reading lists -- I said to him "Have you read Winesburg, Oh? He said "That was my first book I read during quarantine - I took it from your bookshelf last time we were up."

    He's just finished "Wuthuring Heights." He is also catching up on Vonnegut. He never read anything - I can't believe they don't touch Vonnegut in High School anymore? That's where I met him. I took a Science Fiction class. It was wonderful. Mr. Frankenburg. and then George the Pharmacist. Anyway he is catching up there.

    Okies. I guess I've blabbed enough.



    5. Bumps River Girl








    She says
    Li-Po was here last night,
    knapsack stuffed with autumn leaves,


    he had a song for sale, said it wasn't his,
    just a murmur it was,

    She told him how my gold was
    composed of brass rings
    and how

    I said there were only a few words that made the fire spark

    and Po remarked that he'd heard a bell with one tone.



    Little as I was allowed
    neither too far away or too near,
    where the forest came around
    and I was naked in the sound
    the djinn blinked
    and cajoled me over the disorder in the world,


    Li-Po had some wine and moved on
    I came home

    and hoped for the fire to spark
    lost in the song he had left.


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  3. You know, I stayed in the schloss, the castle, where Sound of Music was filmed. I stayed there for a week. Before I went to Austria, I was determined to watch the film. I couldn't. How do you do it? I just can't make it through. But the schloss was lovely.

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