While searching (mentally) for an illustration to accompany
this post, I eventually thought of using this figurine. Actually, there are two
figurines here. The dog has been glued to the base as an addition alongside the boy.
As you might guess, the figurine was not originally mine, but it does have symbolic and very personal meaning for me. We will not bother with that element right now. However, we
will note the word "January" at the base of the figurine and the time on the
clock as 11:00 p.m. A new year is approaching. This thought has been on my mind -- a
new year, I mean, and what to do about it. It is only two months distant from
us, you realize. One of my "favorite" films is "My Favorite Year," with Peter O'Toole.
Other than the fact I think O'Toole is the greatest actor alive (still) today and in this role demonstrates a wonderful comedic talent, the title of the motion picture fascinates me: "My Favorite Year." I have had some good years and some bad years, but I am not sure I have a favorite year. I still am looking for one to designate with that distinction. Next year? 2014? I wonder ....
There is only tomorrow
I read somewhere once upon a time that at a certain point in
the life of a man, he will realize that he has all that there is to have, that he is all that he will ever be, that there is no more to life than what is now. Some men accept those things as fact
and live with them; other men get a divorce, buy a convertible and find a girlfriend
twenty years younger than themselves in a futile gesture to restore their lost youth. This usually occurs somewhere between the
ages of forty and fifty, and is the so-called "mid-life crisis."
I wrote somewhere once upon a time that I was divorced (for the first time) at age twenty-three, owned a convertible (for the first time) when I was age seventeen and had an eighteen-year-old girlfriend when I was age thirty-four. (Is a sixteen-year spread close enough to twenty years?) So, what is there to do when you apparently begin to have mid-life crises while you still are a teenager yourself and have done it all long before the age of forty -- some of it several times?
Never mind. I do not think there is an answer to that
question.
Hmmmm .... just a thought.
I think I might have come up with a temporary solution to a crisis at any age: Four or five concerts in four or five countries over the course of a year. How about next year? In 2014? For me, it might be enough to make it "my favorite year."
How about Wacken? I am a quarter German by ancestry, so I can visit an ancestral land while I am dancing in the streets.
How about Bonnaroo in Manchester, Tennessee? Some of you might have noted and recall that I have spent considerable time in and around Knoxville during one of those "once upon a time eras," and I love a southern
accent.
How about someplace Alice Cooper is performing? I saw him in Detroit a while ago (a long while ago), so this time it would need to be out of the U.S. I am sort of hooked on his music right now. Not to mention (once
again) the positively great guitars in his band, and his drummer, most
probably, is the best performing on stage right now. Look at the second video
here if you doubt me. He is a magician with drum sticks. I once was a drummer,
and I cannot believe the skill with which he handles them.
There has to be at least one "classy" concert in this mix. How about Sarah Brightman? Actually, she will be performing sort of next door
to me in Saint Paul in March and only a hop-skip-and-a-jump away in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, a few days later. Or, how about Andrea Bocelli? Maybe in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, on Valentine's Day?
You know? I just thought of another idea. I am wondering about going back to work again. What an unexpected idea .... work .... well-l-l-l .... sorry .... there are moments when forget myself and act like a nostalgic fool .... but, a press pass has been known to accomplish wonders at concerts .... but-t-t-t .... no, no .... no.
Whether he meant it literally or not, Thomas Wolfe was right when he wrote the novel, "You Can't Go Home Again." Periodically, I have to
prove that over and over and over again to myself. And, going home includes past work, past
women, past incarnations. They might exist somewhere in time, but right now, for me, there is only tomorrow.
Well, a bit of music in the form of live concerts during the months ahead is just a thought. I am open to suggestions.
To quote Alice, "Are you having
fun?"