Early last week, I got the news that my old friend J
had passed on. He had been in a nursing
home for a long time, after debilitating head injuries he suffered from a few
falls. J had always been a poster boy
for bad habits, particularly smoking and drinking, and these things caught up
to him over the years. From what I
gather, the smoking finally did its thing, and an aggressive form of lung
cancer took him down for the last time.
I don’t think I’ll be telling any more cautionary
tales. People make their choices and
live with them. And then die, as we’ll
all do, whether we’re the pictures of health and virtue, or like J, we let it
ride, common sense and longevity be damned.
At the same time, I’ve been reading Night of the Gun by the
recently-deceased New York Times writer, David Carr, which bears a passing
similarity to J’s wild ways, save that Carr, thanks to the guilt he
felt over the fate of his two infant daughters, made himself shift gears and
took off in a far more successful direction.
What I like about the book is the lack of judgment he
had on himself, on the people he knew, whether they were light or dark
forces. Not so much “lack of judgment” as
the simple realization that people are going to do what they will, and it’s up
to them to change if they so desire. His
life spiraled out of control numerous times and as noted, the only thing that
finally registered with him was his two kids who demanded his commitment as a
father. But they really didn’t … as he
noted, some of the foster families who handled the kids in their infancy seemed
to be decent people who probably could have raised the kids as their own. It was what he wanted, to stop the cycle and
take as much control of his destiny as he could.
And that’s where I sense whatever I feel about J now,
that concept of taking control of your life.
To an extent, no one really can.
Shit is going to happen that no one could see coming. In my case recently, a house fire and hernia
followed by surgery. And shit that you
know is coming, like my parents passing on.
You would think the unplanned stuff would be more jarring, but I found
that the house fire gave me a new perspective on possessions, and the hernia
completely changed my life for the better in terms of my body weight and
health. It’s been the expected stuff,
the parents departing, that have taken much more of an emotional toll, and
remain a much more real, ever-present condition to live with.
J’s passing takes its place in that more permanent
emotional condition, granted nowhere near as profound as my parents’ passing
on, but something I will dwell on in good and bad ways over the coming
years. And that’s one thing you learn as
you age: you’re going to be dwelling on deaths, of family and friends, as they
happen more frequently in your life, and it’s a good idea to learn how to
handle these things emotionally, otherwise you’re sure to be overwhelmed by the
experiences, or more inclined to completely shut down emotionally, which is
always an option (and one I've taken with a few people).
When A gave me the news earlier this week, I knew it
was a much heavier load on him, as he and J got to know each other in that
great open time right after high school.
As A tells the story, they met while working the boardwalk the summer of
1978 in Asbury Park, New Jersey, pick-up jobs around the beach before A went
off to college and J got into whatever was coming his way. They lived in the same boarding house, A in
the basement and J on a higher floor, not really knowing each other, when one
Sunday morning, A heard The Sex Pistols blasting from an open window. Understand that history has been re-written
with The Sex Pistols in America, like we were all listening to them as if they
were Led Zeppelin. No. Hardly anyone was. That sort of English punk was portrayed as a
circus sideshow in the American media – very few people took it seriously,
particularly kids raised on 60s and 70s rock.
Very few people were even into the American stuff like The Ramones. So to be into The Sex Pistols in American in
1978 was one very individual thing … to hear someone else blasting it from a stereo
at that time was like a Bat Signal being sent out over the land, and the only
thing you could do was find that source.
And so A did, and thus was born a thorny, strange
friendship over the course of decades, with A cast as the reasonably
responsible, relatively straight arrow, and J the provocateur/raconteur, always
causing scenes, making shit happen both good and bad, trying to make it as a
poet and a musician, never quite getting where he wanted to be, but not
inclined to stop trying. J had been
orphaned and raised by a family in Red Bank, New Jersey. I never knew what his father did, save that
he was successful, they were Polish and deeply Catholic, and raised J in that
way. J had been a rebellious kid,
possibly because of his orphan status and just his nature, but he always
carried that dual sense of wanting to be out of control all the time, yet
answering to some higher spiritual authority, ditto the same with
patriotism. He was the wild guy at the
party, permanently smoking, hobnobbing with all the prettiest girls, with shoulder-length
hair and a “Nixon Now” button on his lapel that in one sense was ironic, but in
another, once you got to know him, he really wasn’t fucking around and thought the
world of Richard Nixon.
That button best exemplified J, that strong sense of
self he had, and knowing that he could play it both ways, that he could find
himself sitting in an American Legion hall respectfully listening to and appreciating
old war stories, and later do some lines in the men’s room of a local bar with
a bunch of wastrels while a local band blasted electric guitars and bass
through the walls. I’m reminded of those
occasional episodes of The Sopranos
where Tony would be watching a World War II documentary or movie on TV and expound
on what great Americans these men were, and he was just trying to uphold that
level of manhood and decency as exemplified by that generation’s necessary
struggle. Knowing in the back of his mind
that he was full of shit and doing things all wrong, but not willing to
disassociate the connection to that sense of decency in his mind. I feel the same way myself when I watch John
Wayne or Clint Eastwood movies: that sense of manhood will always be very
appealing, but really, what it has to do with our modern lives and how we live
them, I’m not so sure.
I met J via A in the mid 1990s in the infant days of
the internet, as we were all connected into an bulletin board dedicated to the
New York radio disc jockey Vin Scelsa (whom I still find myself listening to
after all these years). I wrote about
the legendary party that “Bob” threw in Hoboken where all those disparate
voices on the internet gathered for one glorious night, and that’s where I
first met J. As I described it at the
time, he had the persona of someone who had just rolled off the water bed of a
smoke-filled Chevy Van, Cheap Trick blasting from the speakers, bong in one
hand, can of Old Milwaukee in the other, and barked out, “Wh-Wh-Wh-Wh-Where’s the
party?”
That was another oddly endearing thing about J: he
stuttered. Totally unexpected and out of
character. This Type A personality
trapped in a rock-and-roller’s body, somebody you would figure would have total
command of the room, but when he spoke, every few sentences, some word would hang
him up completely and have him stumbling over the introductory syllable for
seconds on end. I think he hated when
anyone acknowledged this, or at least I know he told me to go fuck myself
(always without a stutter) any time I ribbed him about it. It was one of those J things: either you rode
along with it and stopped paying any mind to it, or you got the hell out. Just another of his strange, somehow sweet
contradictions. It’s hard to get mad at
people who stutter. (But, trust me, in J’s
case, you would anyway.)
J’s forte when I knew him was managing his two bands
and embroiling himself in the boisterous New Jersey club and bar scene that he
knew so well. He was in his natural
element working a club while one of his bands played, greeting strangers at the
door, hustling them for drinks and email addresses for the list, making sure everyone
knew who he was, that his band was up on stage, and I hope to see you again
next week at (insert seedy club name here).
The problem with J as a manager was that he was terrible with money,
going into negative balances for the “Twangfest” festivals he’d stage every
spring or summer, a gathering of many of the alt country bands around New
Jersey. And he didn’t give a shit
because he loved the music so much, and the simple idea that he was making all
this happen was good enough. But that’s
one thing I know about successful band managers: they’re all about the cash.
J was all about the music, and maybe this was his downfall. The same way I’m all about the writing and
don’t really give a shit about the cash either.
As Bob Seger put it, Beautiful Losers.
Much like J, I’m O.K. with losing in this sense, so long as the art is
there, the ability to go on making it, to keep the ball in the air. But when you’re managing bands, the whole
idea is to make a financial profit and hopefully grow it to another higher
level. A good manager will get you
shows, make you feel like The Beatles in terms of your talent, and push you
into making even better music. A great
manager will do all that … AND make you a truckload of money. While J understood that on some basic level,
I don’t think he understood that this really wasn’t him, that he was too much
of an artist himself and didn’t have that financial savvy to push the
managerial thing to a level where profits rolled in. While some of that with bands comes down to
shit luck, don’t kid yourself, most successful bands have cut-throat management
behind them doing whatever it takes to keep themselves and their artists in the
green.
And this just wasn’t J, which I’ve always considered a
hard blessing. The guy had too much
heart to be that cut-throat, despite fancying himself as being that hard-edged. He might have considered it a character flaw
in some sense, but we all saw, it was his saving grace. His generosity, the way he’d put out a meal or
spread and invite anyone to join in, to soak up the conversation and company,
to bicker about which bands or songs were better, to trade personal barbs and
make them good and sharp enough that we’d end up laughing with each other. J and I saw that in each other and always
enjoyed sparring. Every time I’d phone
him from work during the week, he'd mutter, “I’m busy, what the fuck do you want?” I’d pretend like I was insulted and get ready
to hang up in a huff, and he’d immediately change the subject to some song he
had just heard or new album, and off we’d go, on tangents involving Korean War
Vets, the best whiffle ball bats, who was going to suck worse this year, the
Phillies or the Mets, and so on.
I should also mention his wife E here, whom I also met
at that party in Hoboken: J’s saving grace.
For however caustic and irritating J could be sometimes, you always had
E to balance things out with general sense of compassion and humility. He knew what he had in her, and dear Lord,
that woman had the patience of a saint to roll with some of the shit J would
pull over the years, the carousing, drugs and drinking. Which as David Carr can tell you, makes for a
wild, fun ride when things are going well, but things always stop going well at
some point. And that’s where people like
E come in to make things whole again, to hang around when no one else will, to
be there through the darkest hours. She
rolled with so much over the years, and I’m sure this is far more true for the hard
years after the falls when the rest of us just gave up and
started going about our lives. I can
say for myself, shit, house fires, hernias, parents dying … my dance card has
been full, to say the least. But I
failed in character not to be more helpful and just “there” in some sense when
J went into decline. One of many
character failings I’ve had. With many
more to come. Life’s going to do a
pretty good job of beating the shit out of us, no need to do it to
yourself. Acknowledge you fucked up and
move on, as J did so many times.
Which was pretty much my attitude this past Thursday
when it came time for J’s funeral. All
day long, I sat at work: I’m going, I’m not
going, what if I go and get cold shouldered for not being there in J’s life to
the end, fuck it, I’m going, no, I’m not going, dude, I’ve buried two parents,
I know how this works, just go, no, don’t go, you don’t deserve to be there,
but remember all the people who showed up at Dad’s and Mom’s funerals whom you
hadn’t seen in years, just go, if you get chased through the parking lot, fuck
it, make that your tribute to J, as he’s had a good run through many a parking
lot with angry people cursing after him.
At 2:30, I decided, go, just go, be there. You know the drill now with death, as you
didn’t before all this stuff starting going south J, just be there, if only to
pay respects and say goodbye to someone who had a real influence on your
life. Naturally, I rushed out of work
and got the wrong train in Penn Station, heading out to Long Island after
making a mad dash, two trains right next to each other leaving at 2:45, and I
jumped on the wrong one. Got off at
Woodside and took the 7 Train back into Manhattan, getting back with enough time
to buy a cheap pair of headphones for the iPod as I couldn’t imagine making
this long trip to Red Bank, New Jersey without some music.
I got on the 3:45 Jersey Coast train from NJ Transit
and got rolling. Beautiful March day,
cold as hell, but season appropriate after weeks of bitter cold and snow, coursing
through the shit end of all those northern New Jersey towns. I was glad to pick up the ear buds as I foolishly
left my new expensive headphones back in the apartment. I sat there watching the miles roll by,
punching in songs and bands that I knew J loved: Marah, The Trash Mavericks,
Steve Earle, Dwight Yoakam. It had been
a long time since I went through that country playlist, and that’s how I felt myself
moving towards J. He got me into country
back in the 90s when we first met. Like
most rock kids, my version of country was “Dead Flowers” by The Stones and more
rock stuff like that. J imparted a deep
sense of real country music to me … how he came to love it is someone else’s story
to tell. But he made it O.K. for me to
explore this kind of music, find the good stuff, of which there was and is
tons, and to love and appreciate the music as much as any rock music I was born
and raised with. Here I was, from deep
in the woods of Pennsylvania, fucking hating country music up to that point in
my life, and a guy from suburban New Jersey tells me to wait a minute, you
should be giving this stuff a real chance.
That was probably the greatest influence J had on me, to get me to at
least listen to country music, give it a chance, and find there was a lot to love
about it. I don’t think I can point to
any one person in my life who ever had that sort of musical influence over me –
plenty of people who pointed me in a good direction, but J was someone who
insisted I change the way I perceived the world because I was missing something
important. (Of course, that goes for a
lot more than country music with us.)
The shitty lumberyards and warehouse parking lots of
North and Central New Jersey started turning into the rolling fields and
beautiful seaside inlets of coastal New Jersey, and I knew instinctively that
Red Bank was near. It’s a long ride form
Manhattan down to that part of Jersey, and you can really feel the change-over
when you get near the water like that.
All that trip, the music was opening up my mind in the right way, relaxing
me, reminding me why I knew J and how much he meant in the overall course of my
life. Music has meant so much to the
both of us, and that was our main connection.
It made sense that it would guide me back, on this train, to see him one
last time and say goodbye.
I got into Red Bank, a nice enough town and walked the
few blocks to the funeral parlor. Made
my way downstairs to the viewing area where I saw J laid out in his casket …
and I have to admit, all things considered, knowing what I know of how “unreal”
my parents looked to me in the same circumstances, J looked pretty good. I was worried that the passing years might
have done a number on him physically, but he didn’t look that far away from how
I remembered him. There were a few dozen
people spread around the room, and I saw A across the room. I hadn’t told him I was coming (because until
2:30 that day, I really wasn’t sure I would), and he just about shit his pants
when he saw me walking over. I knew he
had been worried, too, about this whole situation, but felt much more strongly
about being there as J and he went back much further than we did. She had her back turned to me while speaking
to A, but E was right there, turned around, and she looked exactly the same as
I remembered her.
Everything just slipped right into place, right then,
as much as they can in such a horrible circumstance. E seemed glad to see us both and appeared
grateful for everyone who showed up. If
you’re reading this and don’t have much experience with funerals, let me impart
some wisdom on you: if you’re sitting on the fence about attending someone’s
funeral, get off the fence and go. Be
there. It gives you a chance to fully
confront the emotions associated with that person, and it’s a quiet, soul-strengthening
exercise to force yourself into a situation that could go in any
direction. Chances are, it’s going to go
well. Funerals are for honoring the dead
and comforting the living. Unless you
plan on showing up and making some tree-stump speech where you set everything “right”
in your mind, chances are you’ll go and be immediately welcomed into what is a
very fragile, new world for everyone in that room. And it helps to have warm bodies around,
because it’s when the warm bodies fade back into their lives, that the ones
left behind start working through all that grief and darkness. It helps to have that ceremony where everyone
gathers and says goodbye, if only to let them know you cared, however
distantly, that the person in that box, meant something to you.
When I went up to J’s side to pay my respects, there
was a small boombox on the pedestal next to his coffin playing “Beast of Burden”
by The Rolling Stones. E had put
together a mix tape of J’s favorite Stones songs. Well, at least the funeral-appropriate ones
as songs like “Starfucker,” “Short and Curlies” and “Some Girls” might night go
so well in this environment. J
worshipped The Stones, and it reminded me to relax, you’re among friends and
family. If J really had his way, he
probably would have insisted on a spread, big pot of chili, meat on the
grill, everyone have some beers, turn up the Stones, A, get out your bag of weed and let’s you and me take a stroll around
the parking lot outside. But this
would have to do, J was gone, but the music was still there.
It was a good experience, more of a wake than a
funeral, and I know wakes tend to be more reflective and light-hearted, people
recalling good memories of the deceased, seeing old faces and
such. The funerals tend to be much harder,
much more somber, the finality of it all coming down, that buoyant sea of
memories from the wake the evening before replaced with the closing of the casket
and the lowering into the cold ground.
But I understand J was to be cremated, and this was it.
And it was a good place to end for me, to travel all
this way and find that there were people on the other end whom I could help
make sense of this in some small way. But I have to admit I couldn’t bring myself
to say a word to J’s mother, whom I only met once before and didn’t know at
all. I could tell by looking at her she
was a good person, strong as hell, of my parents’ generation, hard people whom I
will always look up to, who came up in a world that seemed much tougher and
direct than the one I’ve lived in. I
could only imagine the hurt and grief she was going through to out-live one of
her kids. I recalled how surprised J was
when his father passed on that his mother, after feeling bad for a few months,
bloomed in a whole new way, joining social groups and making herself start living
again after such a grievous blow. I
could only hope that same spirit she took from that bad situation could help
her through this one. I had no idea what
to say to someone in her shoes.
So, I tried to sneak out around 7:00 as I had a long
ride home, but E grabbed me on the way out, probably remembering how I’d love
to sneak out of J’s shows by pretending I was going to take a piss in the men’s
room and keep on walking. And she
thanked me for being there. It was the
least I could do, literally, and another reminder of how my life has shifted
gears, getting to that place where this will be happening more often from now
on. My parents’ generation is nearly
gone, and most people I know are getting older, it’s just the nature of the
world that we deal with the harder things in life the longer we hang
around. It’s making more sense to
confront death whenever I can. I know
that sounds strange, but what was once a horrible mystery to me now is
something I can grasp, if only tangentially while still being alive. Death is part of the deal, and the time comes
when have to learn how to live with it.
It was somehow fitting that this song came up on the iPod shuffle as the train was cutting across those swampy New Jersey inlets just outside of New York City. If only in spirit and sound, J was riding with me through the dark night.
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