Po
Boy views
By
Phil
LaMancusa
Grad
Gab
Or
Heaven
Can Wait
Okay, second week of Jazz fest is here and now it’s gone,
Spring break and French Quarter fest are like skeletons in your memory closet
and so are the Food and Wine, Tennessee Williams Conference, Gumbo, Strawberry
and Crawfish festivals. All the things that you swore last year that you were
going to make it to but didn’t because you had a paper to write, a text book to
read and/or a test to cram for; the school year’s end is looming like a sunset
over the Isle of new Orleans and you can just about taste the illusion of freedom
that we’ve all have felt when “time with no responsibility sunbeams upon us”.
School daze. All year long it’s been ‘hurry up and have
fun (!)’; “quick, jump in the car, we’re going someplace (!)” or “Just one
more; tomorrow’s a school day” and you’ve put your life on hold for the greater
good of your future. Fool.
You need to crack open that bottle of Wake Up and Smell the Coffee; sprinkle
some of that If Not Now, When? cologne
under your armpits and answer the Get-A-Clue
Phone: This is now the rest of your life. Have you realized that there is
nothing after school but work and work for the rest of your foreseeable future,
be it nine to five or five on two off? The fact is that school has been the freedom that you believed waited for you after you
graduated; consider going back for graduate studies because, according to
me, there’s nothing out here but bubble bubble, toil and trouble. Consider the
lilies of the field. And then consider you. I know a woman that has been going
to school continuously for over forty years, she’s garnered several study
degrees and is not planning on stopping; she’s living happily ever after,
they’ll never get back her student
loan money (hurray for her, I say).
Have you found
what’s going to allow you happiness, provide adequate income and permit
mobility in your life? Have you found
a career that you can pursue with a degree of passion that includes the family
that you will be ultimately responsible to/for? Have you considered that the American Way of Life is a box of Cracker Jack
where you have to eat all the corn before you get to the good stuff? Work until
you’re old enough to retire and then be too old and tired to enjoy your time
off? How do you spell Pffft?
Step one on how to avoid that scenario: drink the
Kool-aid and stay in New Orleans and become a true New Orleanian; this goes for
any graduating folks or even those that are considering extending their
education or shining it on. I’ve lived here, on and off, for over thirty years
and there’s still a boat load about this city that I don’t know, haven’t seen
or tasted; three hundred years of history and mystery lay at your fingertips
and all you have to do is open yourself up to it. There are a thousand things
to do in and around New Orleans and an epidemic of guide books to tell you
about them, become a native and go out and explore; wander our neighborhoods,
delve into our culture, and experience our myriad of subcultures. There are, of
note, thousands of people that you haven’t met; a thousand nooks and crannies
that you haven’t explored; two hundred fried chicken outlets (none of which say
“Colonel”) that you haven’t tried; Cajun and Creole gumbos you ain’t et yet;
boat rides; trail hikes; farmer’s markets; musical experiences; art openings;
theater performances; poor boys and breweries. There are books to read, places
to go and people to see. And, you don’t
need a lot of money!
Okay sure, you need some dough; but, you know, you never
wanted to become rich, famous or powerful right away; that was pabulum that was
fed to you, you’re better than that. Work at something satisfying but not
restricting; a couple of years on a construction crew might be good for that
sagging body, a tour as a pedi-cab or buggy driver might sharpen your people
skills, busk on the street, volunteer with Habitat, lead history tours for the
Cabildo or sell beignets and coffee to nice families from Peoria; but, for
Christmas sake, spread your wings before the real world clips them. Enjoy peace
and quiet before you accept law and order. There’s plenty of time before
reality rears its head, enjoy the now while you can. Adopt a storm drain, join
NOMA, enjoy a sunset, get soaked in the rain, ride your bike just for the fun
of it. Cook for friends. Fly a kite.
Did you know that there are swimming pools around the
city (free and open to the public) that open at eight on the morning? Fitness
classes and basketball courts? Do you know that NORDC (Google this) has free
piano lessons, beginner, intermediate AND advanced? Have you ever made a yoyo?
Sold balloons? Taken photos of cemeteries, skylines or drunks passed out on
doorsteps? Have you baked a pie for your new neighbor? Danced with the Devil in
the pale moonlight?
So, this is your advice from your Dutch Uncle: make your
own parade; no matter how long you live, you will only be young once; no matter
how long you live, you will never be able to take back any day that is past or even
present. Make every day count and remember what John Lennon said as a child
when he was asked what he wanted to be when he grew up (“Happy”).
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