Thursday, May 24, 2012

Life Goes On

I arrived in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on New Years Day 1998 - the 100th Anniversary of the Consolidation of New York City. Almost immediately after, Williamsburg became the hottest neighborhood in the country and all  of Brooklyn entered what can surely be considered a Golden Age: it was the hippest place for artists/bands to live in, culminating in the recent spate of tv shows/movies/books set in Williamsburg/Greenpoint, and people flocked from Manhattan to both hang out and live as close to the Bedford L stop as possible. Like anybody I guess, I assumed New York City began the second I walked in, and would disappear the moment I left. Just now I walked by my freight elevator, where a kid in his early 20's wearing a Yeah Yeah Yeahs t-shirt was excitedly loading in boxes from what looked like his parents' minivan.
Sometimes you feel real old, older than you are. Check the aches and pains, the hairline, the demands of life. Responsibilties, responsibilities. Worse things have happened to all of us; the circus wasn't as good as you though it would be, the movie stunk, etc., etc....

Punching the clock, punching the wall, hating your boss. You can't go if you don't know, and you can't know if you don't go. and everybody in the world has their own song in their heads. The best songs ever. Problem is figuring a way to get them out and present them to others.

You've got to know where the brakes are. Enjoy life at a realistic pace. You crazy youngsters, what with your nightlife and everything. And it's important to trust other people, while putting stock in yourself as well. Reevaluating your priorities, checking yourself daily.

Not everyone is a victim of circumstance; conversely, nobody should feel like a martyr all the time. Problem? It's hard enough to communicate these days; some of us don't even get the chance. Some others don't know they have a chance.

When you travel frequently, you find a lot of images. And sometimes, you have to try and make the best of a bad situation: more often than not, we grin and bear it. Other times, you learn to enjoy some small facet of your predicament. Nothing too elaborate, just an attempt to adjust priorities. Revolution starts at home, preferably in the bathroom mirror.

Example? Winter always comes too soon. This year was the worst I can remember, except when I was five years old. Pushed open the front door, got lost in the snow.

3 comments:

rrthurFOREVER!!! said...

adios!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EeksvmlYw0

ope said...

you know whats fun? copywriting hungover.

give em hell, motherfucker!

Anonymous said...

no more funny in brooklyn...way more funny in...wherever you are.