Saturday, August 11, 2007

Day Seventy-two

Joe McCray
(above: my Harlem apartment)

11:23PM Saturday night.
I just got home and found out that a friend of mine died. Joe McCray. He wasn't what you would call a close friend, but he was definitely my friend. Joe was an old man who lived upstairs from me until he apparently died three days ago. I got home to my apartment about a half hour ago and there was a note taped to the door that read, "In profound sorrow we announce the death of Joe McCray which occurred on 8.8.07. Services will be held on 8.13.07 from 11AM. Reposing at Trumbos Funeral Chapel, 100 St. Nicholas Ave". I took the note and walked up the flight of stairs to his apartment and there was a police sticker on the door and what appeared to be a small pile of trash swept out from the apartment and a rubber glove probably used by the coroner or paramedic. A disgusting and callous bit of junk to see outside his door.
I've known Joe as long as I've lived here in my building, which is almost 8 years, and with his passing, that makes me the oldest tenant in the building. I've always felt a kinship with Joe regarding the length of time we've both been in the building as many new faces have moved in slowly but surely and the neighborhood has changed with new buildings and tenants arriving. Our building was built in 1905, I don't know how long Joe has lived there but he's lived there for quite a while. My friend, Justin who used to live upstairs introduced me to Joe when I first moved in. Justin had lived in the building for 8 years and before he moved about two years ago, had known Joe and always checked on him and did little things for him now and then. I was sad when Justin moved out, we remain close friends, and when he did, I made sure to check in on Joe more often In Justin's absence.
I called Jonathan to tell him the news once I read the note on the door. We chatted a bit about how sad this was, and Jonathan noted that Joe probably died alone. I haven't seen Joe, nor have I been up to see him in a few months, and although Jonathan was just stating a fact, that Joe indeed, probably did die alone, thinking about this makes me incredibly sad. I feel horrible that I haven't seen him or stopped by in a few months. I thought about him here and there this past week since it was so hot here in New York and I know Joe had no air conditioning. He knew where my apartment was and I always made sure to tell him to come down if he needed anything at all. Joe's death has made me very sad, and not because I feel guilty for not stopping by lately, Joe would have died anyway, but if I had seen him in the past couple days, he at least wouldn't have died completely alone. Sure he would have been by himself in his apartment, but at least he would have seen me, a friendly face, someone who knew him, in one of his final days. He had a son that would stop by from time to time but it was infrequent, from what I could tell. I don't know that Joe really had any visitors.
I think his death as also touched me because Joe really was a sweet man. I didn't see him every week, and sometimes a month or so would go by before I either knocked on his door or spoke with him in the hallway. We weren't close, but I cared about Joe and he liked me. A few summers ago there was a black-out in New York that lasted a few days. At the time, I was working on 5th Avenue and walked home that day, like everyone else. When I got home I managed to get in the building but I didn't' have my keys because they were left in my office which was on the 24th floor and since the power was out, we weren't allowed back into the building. When I got home, I somehow managed to get into the building and into my apartment. I went to check on Joe who answered his door with a candle as the hallway was pitch black without windows and it was already dark outside. I made sure he had water and chatted with him for a bit and told him to come down to my place if he needed anything. As I was leaving his door to walk down the flight of stairs to my apartment Joe said to me and smiled, "You helped me out, now I'm going to help you out" he took a small flashlight from his pocket and shined it on the stairs for me so I could see walking down to my apartment. It was the crappiest flashlight - I think it may have even been one of those small, pen-lights, and it illuminated about two feet in front of him, not nearly enough light to really help me out, but it was enough light to see him smiling at me with this look of gratification - happy that he was able to be useful, to 'return the favor' and assist me in getting safely to my apartment. It was very sweet. Before I left him in the dark hallway, I distinctly remember him holding my hand longer than he normally did when we shook hands. He wanted to let me know that he was so happy that I had stopped by to see him in the pitch darkness.
I remember another time I stopped by his apartment with some lemonade that I had made for him. We sat in his living room and he told me the story of how he moved up to New York from the South, maybe Georgia, I can't remember. As he was talking I looked around and noticed that he had one television that was on and working and he had about four other televisions, large ones, that were off and apparently broken. I asked him if I could take them down to the trash for him and he said no, he liked having them as 'furniture'. I think I remember Justin at one point asking him the same question - if he could throw them out for him, make some room in his tiny apartment - and he said thanks but no thanks. Seeing Joe in the hallway was always nice. He walked slow, but without a cane. He dressed well too, clothes that were ironed and made sense together, casual yet dapper, as if he were a 30 year old young man going to work. I don't know how old Joe was, somewhere in his late 80's (?) but he was also an attractive man. He really was. He was always smiling too, not the standard, old-man kind of smile, Joe's smile was genuine and constant and he smiled with purpose, like he was concentrating on you and was glad to see you.
Today I was planning on writing more about something I mentioned in Thursday's writing about a gravestone that we saw while we were camping last week way up on a remote island in Michigan. The graveyard was old and in the middle of a field on South Manitou Island which is an hour and half by ferry into Lake Michigan. The small village on this island was there primarily for lumber/logging and all of the people left the island around the 1930's when the lumber was no longer needed for steam on ships. Remote camping is allowed, cars are not, and there were about 15 people on the entire island while we were there, including the one park ranger.I've been thinking about this gravestone a lot. The gravestone was a simple white cross made of stone that had crudely carved words scratched on it's surface, "human skeleton found on dunes, 1933". The lack of information on this grave has made me think of several things like; who found the skeleton and who carved the words on the gravestone? There's something about the brevity and lack of poetry in those five words they chose to carve, "Human skeleton found on dunes.....". I wonder if that body, (which wasn't even a body when it was found, it was just a skeleton) was someone that fell off a passing ship and washed ashore, or if this skeleton at one time belonged to a body that floated from the mainland of Michigan, or further away across the great lake from Illinois or Wisconsin. The idea that a human skeleton can be found on a beach and it's identity remaining unknown even in burial, seems like an outlandish notion in today's over-examined world of DNA, detectives, cameras, news, etc. etc.
If a body washed up on any shore right now, countless hours would be spent finding out who it was and how they died, followed by countless hours prosecuting someone and finding fault or cause of death. But back in the 30's on this remote island, a simple layer of events took place; a skeleton was found, picked up and buried. To this day, it's just another death, a skeleton - as insignificant and mundane as finding the skeleton of a dead raccoon or possum on the side of the road - the only difference is whoever found this skeleton, made a modest marker, buried it, and gave it a modest semblance of an identity by scratching words into a rock for a gravestone. It's odd that the person who carved the gravestone used the word, 'skeleton'. I think today the more modern phrase, 'human remains' would have been used. I like the frankness of skeleton. When I was little, I remember every time we happened to drive by the graveyard that my grandfather was buried in, I would ask my mother, "Mom, do you think Pappa is bones yet?"....my mother would always so, "I don't know"....it's such a ghoulish question to ask your mom if her father's dead body has decayed to 'bones yet', but as a kid, somehow I wanted to know this. I have no idea why, but thinking of it now, I really do wonder if he is bones yet, I wonder how long it takes. To me it seems gruesome to embalm a body to preserve it for 'a little longer'...it seems as though once your gone, it's better to be completely gone.

Coming home tonight and learning about Joe's death and seeing this generic card on the door from a funeral parlor and thinking a lot about this unknown skeleton from 1933 - there is very little difference between the two. Most people die alone and without much fanfare, but they always get a marker, of some sort, unless you die in a tsunami or something like that and you are part of a mass grave (now that's depressing).
I'm going to go to Joe's funeral on Tuesday. I won't know anyone there. I'm not really up for it and it's such an abstract idea, to go to a funeral, Joe won't know that I'm there, he's dead, so what's the point? But somehow it seems important to show up.
Andy Warhol said that he wanted one word on his gravestone, "figment". Whoever purchased his headstone (probably his brother) didn't follow through with the one word, instead there is a rather generic headstone like the rest of the graves that surround his in the graveyard in Pittsburgh. Warhol is dead, he's probably even a skeleton by now, but he sure is alive through his works. I wish I could think of a way to have poor Joe remembered, I guess showing up at a funeral will have to do. This writing is a real downer, but oh well, death sucks, it's lame....even if it is the death of a random, old neighbor.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Day Seventy

It's 11:54PM so I'm getting the writing done before the end of the day, technically. I just got home from a very long day at my studio, working. I was making some serious headway on a painting and I had to leave because I was getting tired and I didn't want to ruin the work that I managed to get done this evening and afternoon. I got home in a record 27 minutes, door to door, because both of my subway trains came into the stations exactly as I got to them. So, 27 minutes is the fastest I can make it to or from work.
I got home and had some cereal. The perfect (and delicious) lazy food when you're tired. I'm watching Nightline right now on ABC. It's just not the same show ever since Ted Koppel left. It's now just another, crappy news magazine instead of actual REAL news with good interviews. Nightline is such a piece of crap now. It's a bummer. The only real news that is still on television is the nightly news hour on PBS....everything else is such junk.
A friend of mine gave me a 5 cd box set of this years, "Shark Week" on the Discovery channel. I don't have cable so I haven't seen any of these and I love watching anything about sharks, like most people. I can't open it now and start watching it because I'll stay up all night and watch every one of the cd's, I know I will. So I'll just hang on to it and wait until I can watch them this weekend.
I haven't found the time to write about the camping trip we went on this past week. Basically we drove from Chicago to upper Michigan and went camping on South Manitou Island, which is a small island in Lake Michigan. You take a ferry there that takes an hour and a half. It's tent camping where you have to bring everything that you need, there are no cars, no stores, nothing. The island has a small village with abandoned buildings, an old, one room schoolhouse that was last used in 1922 and a lighthouse. There are remnants of a few shipwrecks and large, tall and vast sand dunes on half of the island. There is a cemetery towards the middle of the island between old farming fields. It's a small graveyard that features a small white cross with just these words, "Human skeleton found on dunes, 1933". I'll paste a few photos below from the trip. I wonder who is buried in that grave. Just another anonymous person, just another death.
Last night there was some sort of 'award show' on TV called, "The Diamond Award", something I've never heard of before, and this award was presented to Michael Jackson. It featured singers and dancers making an hour long tribute to Jackson and in particular his "Thriller" record for still being the highest selling record of all time. At the end of the show, the president of "The Guinness Book of World Records" gave him an award for, "being the most famous person in the world".....can you imagine? It's the funniest and silliest notion ever. I'm not saying I don't agree though, I can't think of anyone else who could be labeled, 'the most famous person on the planet'....I really can't. I miss Michael Jackson. I wonder if he'll make any more music. I miss Liza Minelli too, and the "Roseanne" show, and Steve Perry from Journey, and Boy George and Adam Ant and Pee Wee Herman, Faye Dunaway, Shelley Winters, Phil Harman, Ted Knight, Eric Estrada, Robby Benson, The Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, Match Game and Howard Stern (who's buying sattelite radio?). I guess just because some artists are still alive, it doesn't mean they have to keep making work...but you wonder why they don't.
Speaking of Pee Wee, Paul Reubens was just on Jimmy Kimmel and he was so funny. I think he should be in more movies. Pee Wee was a great character, but he's also funny just as himself. He had a great sense of humor. Anyway, I'm rambling and distracted by late night TV and I'm tired and not able to write anything cohesive. Oh but before I go, I received a nice comment on yesterday's blog from someone I don't know named, Mel. Thanks Mel.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Day Sixty-nine

Don't place your body on another person unless you intend love
August 8th, 2007
I've been away with Jonathan on a camping trip in Michigan and to visit to see a friend in Chicago. Internet was scarce, but I'm back. Below is an entry I wrote on the train on July 28th, but was unable to post it without an internet connection.
It's 1:28PM in the afternoon here in Manhattan. It's been one of those days in Manhattan, the kind we seem to have more and more of, the kind where a disaster, even a small disaster, disrupts everything and EVERYONE who lives here or nearby in the surrounding boroughs or New Jersey. Today's issue was a rainstorm that flooded the subways making nearly ALL lines inoperable. I had a dentist appointment that I missed and I walked downtown from 116th street to 14th street, with everyone else. It was like September 11th but in reverse; everyone was walking downtown today, instead of escaping the burning twin towers and walking up town. It really was a site to see, SO many people walking in one direction. The heat and humidity today is a huge factor as well as everyone is soaked in sweat and slightly delirious. I don't know if it's because I've lived in Manhattan for many years making it seems like small disasters are frequent, or if they actually ARE more frequent. Others that come to mind: the black out a couple summers ago that went on for a few days (that was a doozy), the subway strike in the dead of winter last year, the pipeline explosion two weeks ago at rush hour in front of Grand Central, and then of course September 11th 2001. I guess it's just par for the course. It's a busy city, things happen. I do know that the Subway seems to fail more often now even if it just RAINS....which I don't remember happening with the frequency it happens now. Today has been really nutty, especially since it's so hot and so many of the subway lines have been out. I'm sitting in a bookstore at Union Square right now and I see that most of the Subways are still down. I rescheduled my dental appointment for 3:00. Luckily I can sit in this Barnes and Noble that is just around the corner from my appointment and it's air conditioned.
That's it for now. Just wanted to write so that the blog doesn't completely evaporate and disappear. I will write more tomorrow....but for now, here's a new entry that's dated that I was unable to post while I was away:

July 28th, 7:42AM
On Amtrak train with Jonathan from New York City to Chicago. It's supposed to be an 18 hour train ride but I think it's going to be more like a 20 or more ride. We shall see. We left at 4:00PM yesterday from Manhattan and It's now Saturday morning, several hours ride still to go. It was about $300 for both of us, one way, on the train. We don't have to deal with gas and driving, even though in the end it may cost about the same to rent a car for the week.
I don't have a map and can't get online while we are moving so I had no idea where we were until we just stopped at a station and it was called Elmyra, Ohio. So, I still don't know where we are because I don't know where Elmyra is, but I do know that we are in Ohio, which always reminds me of Chissie Hines from the Pretenders, that and election fraud. I just saw a water tower in a cornfield that read Erie County. So, that's also where we are, wherever that is. The sun is burning off the morning wetness and darkness. Steam is rising from cornfields, wet pavement and vast stretches of green. It's funny how it never gets boring looking out the window on a fast moving train. Even though we're in the middle of nowhere, we're always somewhere and there's always something to see, wether it's a small town or the lay of the land. There isn't much new housing, most of the houses we're passing this morning are old farm homes, beautiful, isolated. One wonders what it would be like to live in a beautiful field in a historic yet dormant town, with strange neighbors that probably own guns and have a son that is dealing in crystal meth. I guess it could be really nice for a short time, but I think boredom would set in, or loneliness (?), it's hard to say. I know that when I was in St. Barth for a month this summer, I got a lot done and enjoyed the seclusion, but it may be impossible to compare living on an island, literally, vrs living on an island, metaphorically - in the middle of Ohio or Indiana or some other vast stretch of land. The idea of having a PORCH and a yard where wildflowers can grow, maybe a peach tree and some blueberry bushes to harvest, throw in a chestnut tree and a huge house with an old staircase and glass doorknobs and an area for a big studio to work in sounds fantastic, but maybe only for 3 or 4 months out of the year, the other months could be spent back in the city.
We just passed an odd lake with really old little 'cabins' dotting the edge of the bank. Next to the cabins were rusted and bombed out trailer homes, old ones, painted the limes, pinks and baby blues of the 1950's. Stuck in time and watching time go by while weeds and vines cover them, summer after summer.
The seats on the train are big enough to stretch out, and there is an outlet for the computer, but sleeping was horrible. Lot's of tossing and turning and temperature changes and air flow issues. At least Jonathan and I got to sit next to each other and it's actually been a pretty good ride so far, minus the sleeping problems. On the way back we may try to get a 'sleeper car'. Last night we watched a couple movies on the computer, we each had our own headphones and it was a nice time. On a whim, I picked up a copy of "Beetlejuice" for ten dollars at the drug store just before we got on the train. We also watched, "Gimme Shelter" the Maysles brother's documentary on the Rolling Stones' free concert in San Francisco in 1969, where the Hell's Angels were in charge of security and kept on beating the shit out of the audience as they got drunker and drunker. Jefferson Airplane came on before the Stones and one of the Hell's Angel's smashed one of the band members in the face. Grace Slick the lead singer in the band was wearing a purple/blue, velour pant-suit with a matching scarf. She tried to keep singing while the pushing and fighting in the crowd kept going on. At one point the fighting was so bad she said something like, "people, people, people, stop the violence! Don't place your body on another person unless you intend love". You gotta love that. Once the Rolling Stones finally came on stage, they managed to sing a few songs but left shortly there after, whisked away in a helicopter from the crowd of thousands of fans that were high, often nude, and out of control. It's a great movie. Watching Mick Jagger at any point in the film, on or off the stage, is mesmerizing. He oozes talent. The kind of talent that just IS, the kind of talent that even he had a hard time controlling. It's ironic because there is no way the Stones could have been so talented, productive and exciting without drugs....speed, pot, alcohol, LSD. There's just no way one could face crowds like that, night after night, AND create great music without the aid of substances. Of course those substances were not always helpful, but for the most part, you wonder what the 60's, the music, the drive, the everything, would have been like without the drugs backing it up and tearing it down. Even the tearing down was art and was interesting, even when it brought death. Anyway, god bless the Rolling Stones, such an inspiration.

We're supposed to meet our friend Nancy at the train station in Chicago but I'm sure our train will be late. We're going to spend the day in Chicago and then the three of us are driving to upper Michigan to go camping on some island in Lake Michigan for a few days. A deserted island where a ferry drops you off and comes back only once a day to pick you up, no cars. Apparently it was an inhabited island at one point, complete with abandoned homes and graveyards. I don't know the history, but I'm looking forward to exploring and taking pictures, AND looking forward to a lot of swimming!
We're in Toledo Ohio now, I wish I knew how far that is from Chicago. Jonathan is still sleeping. The sun is for sure up and out now. I'm going to enjoy the view, and fantasize owning an old farm house, with antique, glass doorknobs and watermelons growing just off the porch. I can't tell if this fantasy is depressing or exciting. I wonder what's up in Toledo Ohio these days? I'm not getting off the train, so I'll never know.