Po Boy Views
By
Phil LaMancusa
Objective Reality
Or
Negative Capability
Sitting
outside Old Road Coffee Shop on a not too frequent visit, waiting for Deb,
smiling as a woman at the next table snaps a photograph of my car with the
mannequin in the back seat. I’ve already avoided a morning drunk that just
wants to “ask me a question”, Deb arrives and who should emerge from another
car to get a cup but the former mayor; conversation ensues. Wellman the artist
arrives, down on his luck as usual (pieces in the Smithsonian and the Ogden); I
slip him a fin and he asks for a ride but we’re going the opposite way. Meg the
barista comes out to grab a smoke and we ask after her pup and remark how much
better her eye looks after that bee sting.
All
morning I’d been contemplating life, the universe and everything, including the
camera traffic ticket I received in the mail (that’ll cost a day’s wages);
everything recently encourages a WTF conundrum in my psyche and I wonder if, in
fact, I AM living in the end of days. Life is orphic, mysterious, entrancing
and beyond my understanding. It seemed simpler when I was younger and the older
generation was making all the mistakes; we swore we would never make them, and
in fact we believed that we could correct them: war; hunger; inequality;
prejudice and a disregard for the future of the planet, and then a cup of
coffee rings the ‘get a clue’ phone: I still don’t know what’s going on and
there is nothing that I can do to change the mindset of the idiots that are continually
f**king EVERYTHING up. Meet the enemy: they are us; no longer the warrior, the
most I can hope for is Negative Capability.
As I see it (although
the poet Keats said it better), Negative Capability is nothing more than
admitting that it’s okay with not knowing or understanding what is going on but
having the ability to function within those parameters nonetheless – welcome to
-- life in New Orleans.
Anyone
living here will rightfully tell you that it takes a level of genius to
actually enjoy New Orleans on a deeper than superficial level; to be able to
dive deep and not worry about coming up for air, experiencing her like a lover
that you want to wake up with and not just a tramp that you picked up in a bar on
a weekend pass. More than merely falling in love, being willing to call
yourself a New Orleanian is more like having egg on your face and not minding
who sees it; wanting a third helping of Thanksgiving dinner; smiling as you
take a pie in the kisser and/or taking a warm bubble bath with a martini, a
snake and the radio perched on the side of the tub as your new BFF appears and
wants to join you.
Demographics
are a gray and mysterious concept here. We call it the ‘Checkerboard System’:
white folks living next door to black folks next to brown folk, yellow folk and
white folks; we do know that the ‘haves’ live in a different area than the ‘have-nots’
and across the board, everyone pays too much rent. Some of us believe that
there’s ‘different strokes for different folks’ and others opine that ‘there’s
different ways on different days’ and it’s pretty much all right with all of
us; savoir faire is everywhere.
But
New Orleans is not the world and just as I’m getting complacent in my New
Orleans state of mind some yahoo decides to remind me of the fires, floods,
tornados, hurricanes and earthquakes wrecking the earth; the riots around the
globe that are proof of universal indignities that occur regularly; the wars
that annihilate populations; the religious persecution, misogyny, intolerance,
sickness, pollution and famine that are commonplace in the world we live in. If
I hear another: “a gunman opened fire on a crowd in downtown killing…” It’s gonna
drive me bats.
The
Four Horseman of the Apocalypse have come down with a case of Seven Deadly Sins
and are taking them on a world tour, as a group, calling themselves The
Objective Realities, spreading greed and power to the ruthless; the world is
the audience and tickets are free. It’s a given that the weather is predicted
to rain on your parade.
Around
my neighborhood there’re guys of all stripes that gather in parks, neutral
grounds and sidewalks in the afternoon and evenings for libations and
commiseration. There may be dominoes to be played; some horseshoes to be
pitched; a game of Cornhole and some beverages in brown bags. Old R&B music
is their soundtrack and they have a time every day, I’m sure, not listening to
the cacophonies of worldwide gloom and doom-- maybe I should be more like them—but,
as everyone knows, there’s no such thing as objective reality because all
reality is subjective. Theirs is a subjective reality that I admire.
I
love New Orleans mostly because I can handle her dysfunction; I rejoice in her
music; I’m sated by her cooking and I take comfort in the celebration of life
that is a constant. We may be a lot of things here; and one morning at a coffee
shop with my old lady, running into a photographer, a drunk, an ex-mayor and an
artist gives me reason to feel a level of optimistic clarity. Back at it
biaches; we can still change the world!
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