I attended the
The band had a monster hit in the early 90’s with the song "Everyday People" and a lesser hit with the catchy ditty "Mr. Wendle", a song about an otherwise brilliant homeless man that in between delusional bouts of talking to himself, drinking his own urine and eating the accumulated gunk in the cracks of the sidewalk, held an uncommon wisdom we would be privy to if only we would stop and pay attention. So inbetween bouts of incoherent shouting and alcohol-induced hallucinations, Mr. Wendel was a wellspring of uncommon wisdom and possibly even winning lottery number combinations. But we, the oblivious universe, would never know because we were too wrapped up in our minor dramas to look past a face covered in feces and really see, I mean reeeeaaaalllllyyyy see, the man behind the image.
I recently rediscovered this song on iTunes, a music service designed as a co-venture between Apple Computer and the Legions of Hell. Although it has an infectious groove that some might describe as bootylicious, the message seemed a little naive and idealistic. I mean... really... who buys that there is a brilliant mind under five years of accumulated grime. But as I was driving to the office the other day I noticed a dirty, shirtless man who happened to be waving and gesticulating to nobody in particular. He wore a back pack, his homeless kit I presumed, and shorts that were a little unfashionable in their length. He was at the crosswalk at the intersection and seemed to be caught in some odd rhythm, dancing to a soundtrack only he could hear. I just looked at him trying to figure out what the hell was up with the schizophrenic hand-jive when suddenly the “don't walk” signal changed to” walk” and he started... to jog. And it hit me. He was a homeless jogger. His shorts weren't walking shorts. They were running shorts. And not unfashionable, just filthy. And he didn't need an iPod. He had all the songs he needed right there, in his head, stored in-between the voices. The backpack kept him mobile. And maybe had a number for the LA Marathon.
Being that we are a nation defined by a work ethic fueled by blind, irrational optimism it is important to be prepared for every and all possibilities. That means all possibilities. So as much as I like to spend time planning for my bacchanalian feasts, drug-fueled orgies and Saturday football in the mansion in the Hills I will one day own, I find that it is important to prepare for the other, inverse possibility... homelessness.
I have done a good amount of field research at the Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf at the corner of Sunset and
So assuming my life takes a turn for the worse, it is important for me to be proactive in my choices and not simply settle into whatever homeless type presents itself. I would make choices. Bold choices. First, I would choose to be male as I do not own pink. Second I would choose to be an active because what I failed to mention is that both of the homeless male, actives mentioned previously had killer abs. I mean… their abs were SHREDDED! There was so much definition is would make Merriam-Webster cry. And I would choose to be a hybrid between the dancing and the jogging. So I would jog to various street corners where I would dance until it was time to jog to another street corner. And… see this is where preparation and planning come in… when the inevitable reinvention happens... because if Flav can do it, so can I… and I was able to stop jogging and running from street corner to street corner in Los Angeles... and I reclaim my mansion up in the hills... I would return to my life of bacchanalian feasts, drug-fueled orgies and Saturday football but this time I would do it with killer abs. Sick, crazy, defined abs. Simply, I would be better the second time around. Kinda like homemade soup that has had time to marinate in the fridge overnight. And that is what I call progress.
Monday, August 07, 2006
Jim's Fix
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