9/30/23

UNREQUITED ANGER

Unrequited   (of a feeling, especially love) not returned or rewarded)

Mutual discontent:

Walking down the street.  I see Malcolm (of course that's not his real name) sitting on a plastic chair.  Some other men are here and there on the pavement in plastic chairs, one a few feet away.

Hi Malcolm, I say.  "Have you recovered from that sweet kiss I gave you off my fingertips last week?"  (I had kissed my own fingers and applied my fingers to his temple.)

He looks at me.  He doesn't remember.

"I have something to say to you," I say.  (I don't know why I didn't have the bravery back in the day.)

He looks up at me.  Malcolm has thin gray hair that he periodically doses with black dye.  He's Italian and Mexican in heritage. He's younger than me. He looks up through his-bifocals and I see the same glimmer and flash that was there years ago.

"I want you to know that back in the day you had me for a moment. I don't know why I didn't use my writing skills and write you a damn long letter."  With my hands I ran over an invisible document, a long scroll."

His eyes flash and he smiles.

"It was because you were so sincere with me. But you lied about the two wedding bands you wear."  (I had asked him about the rings.  Asked him if he wore them to ward off women. Still in love with your ex? I asked. He said he just liked to wear them When I found out - for sure - that he had been married twice.)

I noticed that the man sitting closest to him was earnestly trying to not listen in but that got him.

"But I hate your friends." I said.

"I hate them too," Malcolm said.  "T.J.?  He shook his head."  (T.J. (not his real name) was a tough Native American man who it was rumored had five children with various women he did not support.  Had worked as a bouncer.  Had been in jail with Malcolm when they were younger.  For what I don't know.  Rumors had it T.J. had a baby with an underage girl.)

"That one guy... he told me his problems...that woman...her mother threatened him and told him to get out, her brother held a gun to his head..."

"They got married,"  Malcolm said.  "And got their little place."

"Well one day he looked at me and said,"You're nothing but some woman in a hat."

"He did?" 

"And I said, "Most Certainly Not," and that surprised him.  

"And someone else told me that you ran a brothel," I continued.  "But then someone else said you don't charge."

Malcolm laughed.  "They did?!"  

Yes, I nodded.  

"Look, I'm just an entertainer," he said.  "That's my job, to keep people up."

"Yea, but there's a point there where it's a tease - a mean tease.  Like that time you sang me the song."

"What song did I sing to you?"

"Well, T.J. went past me one day and said "That Malcolm sure has the biggest crush on you." And then a couple weeks later you stood up and said "I'm now going to address the rumors that have been going around here about me.  Then you looked at me and said "I'm going to sing you a song and when I asked you what you were going to sing to me you said "Under My Skin" but when the time came you sang "Hooked On A Feeling."

"Hooked On A Feeling, I know that song," Malcolm said.  

"It has that horrible oooga booga." 

"Yea, everybody hates that part."

Malcolm was still smiling but also looked like he swallowed a goldfish.

"And then you ran."

"Where did I run to?"

"Before I could talk to you, you ran, all the way down the street, and I saw you run into this place."

"There was another karaoke"

"No, you ran, as if you were embarrassed." (After his feat, Malcolm really never talked with me again. I would see him sitting in a plastic chair on the sidewalk and stay on the other side of the street.  Yet for a moment there was no doubt about it, Malcolm had a crush on me and for a moment there was no doubt I had a crush on him too.)

"Maybe if things had been different I would have gotten married and had a lot of babies," he said.

9/27/23

AN ARTIST WHO REDESIGNS HISTORICAL ROMANCE BOOK COVERS TO FIT THE STORY and THE TIME PERIOD : BERNADETTE BANNER

I don't read romance novels but this genre is the best seller to women.  (Murder - fiction and nonfiction - sells best overall.)  The writer of a historical novel does their best to describe their characters authentically but then the cover is turned over to an artist who may not read the book or understand the fashion, hairstyles, and cosmetics of the era.  BERNADETTE BANNER does and with a much better understanding of what the writer wrote, attempts to redesign the covers.  Watched her videos and was just fascinated.

Because I have a rule that I do not embed videos that have commercials, I'll provide the links instead. 

REDESIGNING HISTORICAL ROMANCE BOOK COVERS TO BE ACTUALLY HISTORICAL PARR 2

9/24/23

CAROL BASKIN : LEARN THE TRUTH OF HOW TIGERS ARE TREATED and WHY HAVING THEM AS PETS IS LEADING TO EXTINCTION : SIGN THE PETITION to PASS THE BIG CAT SAFETY ACT

Carol Baskin,  has spent much of her life rescuing Big Cats.  Having a cute tiger cup as a pet ends with them being unable to live as wild animals. Love Surviving the Survivor Podcast, one of the very few I listen to.



Excerpt:   Right now in the U.S., thousands of tigers, lions, cheetahs and other big cats are cruelly forced into unregulated “ownership” for human amusement.

The Netflix show Tiger King has raised new awareness of the cruelty, killing and exploitation of the captive big cat industry -- now is the time to finally pass legislation to free these majestic animals from suffering.

Confined to backyards, breeding compounds or decrepit roadside attractions, big cats are ripped from their mothers just days after birth and suffer severe malnutrition because their owners fail to properly feed them.

Many of the cats are brutally declawed, leading to lifelong disability. Confined to tiny concrete enclosures or kept on chains, the animals suffer from circulation problems, cracked footpads, and other painful conditions -- as well as severe psychological trauma.

Keeping big cats in captivity is also extremely dangerous for humans, who are at grave risk of being mauled or killed.

Congress has introduced The Big Cat Public Safety Act, a bill that could finally end ownership of big cats by unaccredited animal exhibitors and those who simply want to keep the cats as pets.

Of the estimated 5,000 to 7,000 big cats in the United States, fewer than 400 live in accredited zoos (which already fail to provide adequate living conditions). The rest are owned privately by people who may have no clue how to care for the animals.

One of the reasons so many people own big cats is because there is no federal law against it. This new bill could save countless animals from lives of abuse and neglect.

Sign this petition to urge Congress to pass the Big Cat Public Safety Act, and save both cats and humans from misery and pain.

9/20/23

THE WARMTH OF THE SUN : THE BEACHBOYS - BRIAN WILSON


So interesting.... a mood came over them... the city lights... the moon... a spiritual song.

9/17/23

GLORIA STEINEM and the 50th ANNIVERSARY OF MS. MAGAZINE : FEMINISM IS STILL A FIGHT FOR EQUALITY


commercial at the very end....  never ending commercials making YouTube a potentially brain-washing experience...

I had a subscription to Ms. at one point in my life and have considered myself to be a feminist since I was a teenager - during which many students in my high school - male and female - mocked and ridiculed me.  

And Gloria is right that we must imagine something before we make it happen. I say, we must also be careful not to engage in thinking that thinking itself makes something happen.  

I've experienced sexism my entire life and still do. 

Sometimes I think that men, collectively, hate women.  I never forget that men hold the power on this earth and use it, and that they often use it against women.  Sadly, there are many women who cooperate with men against other women.  

C 2023  Christine Trzyna

9/13/23

MATSHONA DHLIWAYO said

"A flower earns its honor in the dirt."  Matshona Dhiliwayo


9/9/23

DON'T TELL ANYBODY THE SECRETS I TOLD YOU by LUCINDA WILLIAMS : CHRISTINE TRZYNA BOOK REVIEW



Am I Lucinda Williams fan? Not really. I first heard her in her Sweet Side era. (World Without Tears album.) But I have been reading musician memoirs. This one is forthright and personal and moves at a good pace. And, unlike some I've reviewed, this one has introspection and change. Lucinda Williams was told not to write about her childhood but she did and it's important to her development as an artist. Lucinda tells about her mentally ill mother and dysfunctional childhood, her poet-lecturer father, her roots in Christian fundamentalism, being an anti-racism Southerner, dropping out of high school and not looking back, and a variety of relationships with men and which songs were inspired by which men, which is something I think most readers are interested in. This book contains the poetry of others and song lyrics of hers, planted in the right places. There is also sexism;  she was not allowed to do erotic videos though so many men in music have and do. She also tells that she has had dozens of inconsequential jobs to pay the rent into her early 40's when, after years of believing it would happen and putting in the work, it finally did.  Money enough.  No more "day jobs."

What this memoir did for me was make me want to listen to more of her music. 

C 2023  Christine Trzyna

Excerpt page 94: I've been called an 'erotic' song writer. I don't disagree, but even though I had plenty of sex when I was younger, I was never promiscuous. I always had partners. Some of them didn't last that long, but I wasn't sleeping around willy nilly. The brain is the real erogenous zone, at least for me, so I have to connect with someone intellectually and almost spiritually in order to be attracted to them physically, and that rarely happens immediately.  I realized early in my adult life that talking - real, honest, substantive conversation - could be superhot, and it didn't have to result in anybody taking their clothes off for it to be erotic in a lasting way, in a way that can really last longer in your mind and memory and in your feelings than physical sex. Very often a good conversation is more memorable than fucking. That's what I was getting at with my song "Something About What Happens When We Talk" on the Sweet  Old World album.

***

Lucinda Williams was interviewed on the Seth Rogan show.  She said she wrote her entire memoir by hand as she has never learned to type.

9/3/23

WAITING IN VAIN : ANNIE LENNOX


This one is for Michael and his long distance love.


9/1/23