Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Some People Don’t Understand How Music Can Pull Up And Help Rebuild A Man
0 Thoughts Posted by Punk Rock Dad at 11:55 AMListen here-->
It shouldn’t take the holidays to get introspective. But unfortunately, we all get so rutted in
our everyday rat race that we often forget to hit the brakes and just breathe
in everything that’s around us. We’re
just so focused on the next moment of our lives and in such a rush to get there
that we’ve lost track of the joy in the journey. For once this week, forget about rushing to
your next moment and breathe in.
We spend every day saying, ‘I can’t wait until the
weekend.’ We spend the evenings with our
children working on their homework saying, ‘I can’t wait until summer
break.’ It’s always ‘I can’t wait until’
something. Everything is such a rush.
I’m no different.
Every winter I look forward to the two weeks off I have
around Christmas time. This year, I had
customers in town taking delivery of aircraft until December 23 at 10PM. Right up until the very end. I was bummed.
I didn’t get to take my time off.
Every day I rushed and hurried through every action, every interaction,
and every conversation. Hurry….let’s get
to the winter break. Don’t get caught up
in the journey, just get to the destination.
Hurry.
So here I am. Now
what? I’m made it to my break. Now what?
What can I rush toward now?
To get me off this speeding railway of life, I did one
thing, albeit very inadvertently. I listened.
I was stuck in traffic and there was no way I could rush. I was stopped and the music on the stereo had
my attention.
Anyone who knows anything about me knows one specific thing
about me; I love music. It’s incredibly important
to me. The right music marks waypoints
in your life. And similarly it can
provide a soundtrack to your life. I’ve
always thought the sense of hearing was just as strong as the sense of
smell. Hearing the right piece of music
at the precise moment in your life can change everything for you and you’ll ALWAYS
remember that moment. You can look back
through my entries here and you’ll see evidence of it weaving through
everything from the soundtracks of the entries, to the design, to the topics,
and right down to the titles of my entries.
But this time of year I was ignoring what the music around me was
telling me.
To be fair, this time of year I easily get into a funk. I’m usually sick with some sort of elusive
and undiagnosed virus from the petri dish of a home which I live due to the
kids being in public school. But his
year was different. I was sick the week
before Christmas. So I got that going for me.
Enough of that whining; back to the music. If you recall, I was stuck in traffic and my
stereo had my attention.
Unbeknownst to me, I was going to get throat punched by one
of my favorite artists of all time. No
it’s not Adele. Adele couldn’t hold this
artist’s jock. And no I’m not going to
tell you who it is now. It’s time to use
the age-old slow burn of plot development.
I’d been in a hurry with everything.
Rushing and complaining through it all.
And now, I was stuck in an immobile grid lock of traffic on the valley
freeway somewhere between Auburn and Pacific and IT happened. I was grumbling about who cut me off and
stressing about how, when, and what I was going to do for Christmas gifts. Welcome to the 1st world problems
of my life.
Granted, it’s been more than this. I’ve been dealing with the imminent effects
of life moving forward. I still struggle
with being alone. He’s gone, not
here. It’s over only a driver’s license
and bent wheel remains. She’s gone
too. Nothing more than a frozen paw
print in plaster. I’ve watched health
erode in those closest to me and in my own body. What is 100% anyway? I’ve seen the superhero of my life slow to an
above-average human in strength and will.
At home, I’ve worried about my relevance. Now on an unfamiliar path of life, my self-awareness
and image has been tarnished from what I once believed was invaluable. The periphery of family has been on wearing
on my heart too. And then there is work;
something I typically will not discuss on the internets. My new role at work has been a humbling
reality where I’ve discovered that I am no longer the center of the universe in
terms of desired hired gun in our selling campaigns. I’m now the QB of the team calling the plays
in the big game rather than the third down receiver. I suck at it right now. It’s going to be a long journey to be a hall
of famer in this position. I’m not used
to being average in my work. Ultimately,
my identity in my existence is changing with all of this change.
‘Live fast die young’ has changed to ‘Live with knee pain, a
headache and bills while your kids play Minecraft.’
We all go through these changes and a metamorphosis in who
we are to ourselves and others. I just
haven’t been doing well with who I am now becoming to me and others. I’m fighting the system and not going gently
into this. Would you expect anything
different?
But I was reminded on my drive home that you always have a
friend and confidant in music. It’s
always there for you. And strangely, it
always knows what you need to hear when you need to hear it. The drive home helped. Hell, it resulted in me writing on this blog
for the second time in two weeks. Also,
it inspired me to post my feelings about it on Facebook. And you know me, I’m not a big fan of the ‘Whinebook.’ And to follow my own rules, I’ve uploaded it
here for your listening pleasure. It changed
my life that day at that waypoint in my life.
The song was upbeat. It was
soulful. It was driven. And if cathartically choreographed, it had a message
about how music can help you. It grabbed
my attention and once it had it, I heard what it had to say to me. No misunderstanding here; it was called ‘Coming
to You’ by Jill Scott and it was coming right at me.
And I listened.
Then I felt better.
Then I listened to it again. Then
I listened at least another half dozen times and I felt even better.
And that’s my point here.
Just listen when music is playing.
It’s so important. So
cathartic. So poignant. Your soundtrack will carry you when you’re
tired, lead you when you’re lost, inspire you when you’re withered, heal you
when you’re hurt, and make you dance in the middle of a crowd of human lemmings. Dance, sing, and feel it all.
Labels: Cathartic, Friends, Identity Crisis, music, Strength, Suburbia, Throat Punch
Thursday, December 17, 2015
Listen here-->
Months
go by and I never make time to chronicle my thoughts and feelings. By some odd coincidence, three people during
the same week asked if I was still writing on my blog. It’s not that I haven’t wanted to write or
appreciate the exhaustive therapy from writing.
It’s just that inspiration comes at awkward times. Those inspiration moments are insanely
difficult to replicate later when you want to retell how you were feeling at
that moment in time. Recently, I’m just
busy trying to maintain. Maintain; that has
been tough to do these last few months.
I can’t say I’ve been much of pleasure to be around. Proof point when my wife gave me a firm
talkin’ to one night few weeks back.
I
could take this entry into some ethereal long winded diatribe and camouflage my
feelings with words but instead I’m just going to get to the point; I have been
in a moopy place these last few months.
In
what felt like an instant, my pet went from the pillar of health, strength, and
normalcy, changed to weakness, deterioration, and suffering. In an emergency visit to the veterinarian, I
learned that her health was so far gone, that there was really no choice but to
make a life altering decision for both of us and let her go in peace.
12
years old. She lived through several
three house moves, flown on more airplanes than some people, adjusted to the
addition of two boys and one runaway dog, a marriage, and loss of family
members, an became to stoic alpha of our family. Through those 12 years, she was
always my emotional backbone. After my
brother died, she was the one thing that helped me stay focused on moving
forward. Every day at lunch I’d come
home from work to walk her around the dog park.
It was a break in the monotony.
We
rescued her from the animal shelter and she rescued us when I lost my brother
and my wife lost her mother. And so as
it came full circle and let her spirit go back.
While it was the right decision given the context and circumstances, the
process of arriving at the decision and admitting it was nothing short of gut
wrenching. I feel like I lost a very
important piece of me that day. Possibly
one of the last pieces of a life from long ago.
I guess I wasn’t ready to lose that piece yet.
Realizing
that I wasn’t doing OK after making this choice got me thinking about larger
things in life like my parents and my mortality. I always believed that my little brother
would be here when things got tough. He
was level headed, and me, well I’m nothing close to that. It’s an unspoken confidence you have in someone
in your life. I always knew he would man
up and help take care of things when shit got sideways. Losing Stacey and not being able to cope with
it was a harsh reminder that my brother was gone and not here to help.
There’s
been so many reminders these last few months.
Some good and some bad. Some feel
like picking at a wound that never really healed. If nothing else, it’s definitely reminded me
that I’m still feeling lost in all of this.
But I suppose that’s the small satisfaction of still carrying those
memories. We carry those we lost in our hearts. Forever.
I’ve
been taking so much of this out on those around me; my family. At the end of all of this, that’s all we
really have; family. It has been very surreal
to write this entry. I’ve gone from
feeling alone and depressed to appreciative and accepting. Time has continued to tick away and that
emotional ground zero is a long way back in the rear view mirror. Many people I know now don’t even know I had
a brother. Life has moved on and I can’t
expect them to live in my past when they were never there to begin with. Nevertheless, it’s hard to have constant
reminders of all of your missing parts.
As far as you think you may have come, it’s never really that far
sometimes.
And
I’ve found much peace in the music and film I’ve experienced recently. It’s helped me get past some of the
negativity. It’s allowed me to carry
those memories in my heart with new vigor.
My brother and I may never create a new memory together; but we do have
every bit of richness from the 24 years we did have; Christmas Eves sleeping in
the same room, picking him up from junior high school to play basketball,
Cougar football games, the Commodore 64 and Nintendo game marathons, all the
laughs and the stupid fights. And that’s
just to name a few. What about the cars? The cars; the riced out Hondas, the Subarus,
the street rods and muscle cars, and all of the drama and fun that came with
them. I think the cars are the one of
the best memories. And those memories
are always within my reach.
No
matter where you are, whether it's a quarter mile away or halfway across the
world. You'll always be with me. You'll always be my brother.
Labels: Brother, Dog Breath, Family, One Quarter Mile at a Time
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