--YOU DON'T
KNOW HOW LUCKY YOU ARE
…I’m back from Vegas, not home yet,
sitting in an airport.
Why is that people on cell phones are
oblivious to everything and everyone around them? Why do they practically shout into their
phones, despite the fact that a person (you or me, maybe) is sitting less than
two feet away?
The man in the cubicle to my right is
lying to someone (that could be a good first line in a story), his girlfriend
or wife, I’m assuming, though he wears no ring.
He’s saying he’s in Colorado and that it’s snowing, though this is northeast
of there and the clouds are only gray and brooding.
A child, maybe four years old or so, is
shrieking on a bench while her mother holds her wrist, manacling it, while she
checks her Facebook page.
Nobody looks very happy even though
everyone here has someplace to go, someone they’re seeing.
Why is that?
I’ll admit it, I like to eavesdrop. I like to hear how other people live, to
learn how we are all different and in some ways precisely the same.
In Vegas you see all types of
people. It’s easy to be critical because
you can eventually find something or someone to pick on, but you realize after
a while that we all wear costumes. Some
are “Pants-on-the-ground” with boxers showing.
Some are mullets. Some are beer
bellies. Others are shark skin suits.
I had a fun trip in Nevada. I laughed.
I drank and ate a lot. I got
fat. I also came up with a couple of
story ideas.
But I don’t want to go back for a while,
a long while. That place is a killer.
...Here are some things I like:
"When I have an idea, I turn down the flame as if it
were a little alcohol stove, as low as it will go. Then it explodes, and that is my idea."
Hemingway
"Take time to laugh - it is the music of the
soul." From an old English prayer.
"What is happy?
It's a moment before you need more happiness." Don Draper
"Once the realization is
accepted that even between the closest human beings infinite distances
continue, a wonderful living side by side can grow, if they succeed in loving
the distance between them which makes it possible for each to see the other
whole against the sky." Rainer Maria Rilke
"No obstacles fell in his way that seemed to him
insurmountable. He might be defeated, as he sometimes was, but he shrank from
no hardship through impatience, he fled from no danger through cowardice."
J. P. Morgan writing about Napoleon Bonaparte
No comments:
Post a Comment