--THERE'S HOPE IN THE MADNESS
…I used to think people exaggerated everything with regard to Paris
being so wonderful, but now I get it.
I’m a believer.
Just about everywhere you look, there’s something interesting (or
evening fascinating) that catches your attention. There is incredible architecture and history
all around, lovely neighborhoods full of eclectic yet indigenous fare (like the
Marais district with its strong Jewish foothold and the one-of-a-kind Deli
bakery, Florence Kahn). The foot is
delectable, the people (for the most part) remarkably stylish, some wearing
scarves even on the hottest days.
Traffic gets snarled just like in NY, but unlike NY, no one ever honks
their horns. It’s as if Parisians
understand that life moves at its own pace and therefore impatience is just
wasted energy.
Today is Notre Dame and tonight is wine tastings. I feel more than a little spoiled.
…This is a short piece I had published the other day at In Between
Altered States:
How
We Got Here
We wear hand-me downs and each
other’s shoes, even if they’re too tight and pinch. To save money, father buzzes our hair down to
bristles with shears that rattle and sometimes catch patches of skin. We eat in silence, the only sound metal
chinking on plastic plates, food being chewed and swallowed.
After supper, we lay on the shag
carpet watching black-and-white TV, listening to a family that’s nothing like
our own, hearing how happy they are, noticing what a fine car they drive, how
big their dining room is.
At night we three sleep on the same
mattress. We never dream, or if we do,
we never say. In the mornings we rise
before the sun and make it to the fields, row after row of the same bushes,
flocked with blood-red berries glinting against green.
We work on our knees, filling the
flats as fast as we can because it’s cash money they pay here. Afternoons, we stand in line with the other
migrants, wilted and sweaty, each person taking his turn, handing over a punch
card and receiving berry-stained bills in return.
Years later, one brother steals a
car, another brother robs a convenience store, and I break into a house.
Now we wear orange uniforms, sit in
similar cells, stroll in sunlight for a single hour each day. At night we lay in cots. We imagine freedom, beaches with
chalk-colored sand, a skiff bobbing on waves.
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