Tarmac Meditations

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Tarmac Meditations #147: A Song Without Words

July 27, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz Leave a Comment

In the shifting greys of a gun smoke colored morning, it came to me that the past week has been the week when it seemed as if l was living inside Dylan’s description of modern life, where “everything is broken” was precise and right on target, and it kept on coming like a summer storm out in the Gulf heading towards the coast. I had just withdrawn from a photo shoot at the last minute, 4:00am today, the morning of the shoot. I seriously hate that. A six-day migraine was not letting go. As I lay the shoot down and chalked it up to another loss among many others this past year, I checked into the Jacqueline Du Pré video link above. Me, I like classical cello music, seriously, really I do. Many people may not but for me, Jacqueline Du Pré played the Cello like few others ever have. She died in 1982 of Multiple Sclerosis and gave up playing years earlier circa 1973 as her fingers lost their sensitivity. This stuff is gorgeous to the ear, or at least it is to mine. Some may think it sentimental and they might be right. My day is picking up but it is still grey and cold; the unmistakable presence of Fall inside a summer’s day. The migraine has left town for the moment. Talked with old friends from when we were young. All in all not a bad way to go. Will probably call it Tarmac Meditations – A Song Without Words.

Waiting on the sun

Photo Credit

Photo by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

 

Filed Under: Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #146: Superman Then and Now

June 8, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz Leave a Comment

At the end of June I will be shooting a series of images for Richard Brown, a well known running coach and author, whose latest book is being published by Human Kinetics. Richard or “Dick Brown” as he is commonly known, is 76 and in his 4th year of recovery from Acute Myeloid Leukemia. He is a soft spoken guy whose wife of many years, Barbara, adores him. The two of them have smiles to light up the room like a double sunrise .

Richard Brown

He and I met to discuss the shoot and while we were talking I took this shot. He had just shown me a picture of himself when he was at the naval academy – he bore a strong resemblance to George Reeves of Superman fame in both his good looks and his hellacious athlete’s body. When I left the house, I felt better about things than I have for months. My friend Joe Henderson, he of many books said to me when I answered his phone call that I sounded happier than I had in a long while. I said I had just met with Richard. “That explains it” said he. All I could say in response was to smile.

A guy who loves it is my photo editor. Proof of the old Texas expression that the sun will shine on every Old Dog’s butt from time to time. This kind of thing makes me happy.

 Photo Credit

Photo by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #145: Into the Closet

June 1, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz 1 Comment

This morning I went into my office to upload these images only to find that my internet was down. I used the opportunity to restock the bathroom with TP, just in case, and thence to clean the floor. I went to the storage closet to get the TP and two large rolls of paper towels – recycled to be sure. In the storage closet I knocked over the paper towels in their large plastic wrapped container. On their way to the floor they caught the edge of large box containing a year’s supply of packing popcorn which in its fall to earth managed to spread the contents all over the floor. This required a delicate cleanup process since the door no longer opened fully due to a myriad of door stops in its way. After a time, I retrieved all the popcorn. I stepped backward into the closet whereupon I dislodged a stored painting and watched while its broken glass, following the dictates of gravity, shattered on the floor. Found my inner Gandhi, cleaned up the shattered glass, during which process I murmured a short, string of profanity, several MF’s followed by several emphatic CS’s. I went back inside at peace, fixed the internet and uploaded these two images.

Without art, life can be a series of unconnected meaningless small tragedies, no?

Sunset in color

 Sunset in BW

Photo Credits

Photos by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

 

Filed Under: Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #144: Unnatural Interactions With Inanimate Objects

May 25, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz Leave a Comment

This week has seen the emergence of an unnatural relationship with my mail box whose indifference to my understanding of the space time continuum continues to baffle me. It has taken on a dark nihilistic approach to delivering the goods.

I had nothin for ya yesterday.
Got nothin for ya today.
Got no sense that tomorrow will be any better.
What can I say, I got them old time empty mailbox blues, Ya mon.

Empty Mailbox Blues

Image Credit

Photo by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #143: The Road to Chapter 2 (Tip On A Dead Junkie)

March 14, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz 1 Comment

watching the grass growI started writing this piece when it occurred to me that I needed a short piece for the magazine, and I thought a piece about writing would be easier to write than it turned out to be. The piece presented itself as a response to watching a documentary called Greenwich Village: Music That Defined a Generation. Fred Neil, The Lovin’ Spoonful, Eric Anderson, Phil Ochs, Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Peter Paul and Mary, and of course, Pete Seeger; all as prelude to Cindy with the luminous red hair, and leather. Richard Thompson (Fairport Convention) said that red hair and leather were his favorite outfit. It seemed so simple then, and of course it wasn’t; what it was was innocent and naïve. And sweet. Romantic in every sense of the word. What does this have to do with writing Chapter 2?

First thoughts;:The way back came back with a rush. Cindy and all the others, young not yet broken for the most part by life itself, remarkably hopeful, and energized daily by the passions of their times: the Vietnam war, anti-nukes, the drugs and freedom that being in full-fledged revolt against the “Machine” demanded. Most of the memories ended with putting the old vinyl back into their covers and placing them back on the shelf with great care and some hesitation as If putting them back would doom both them and me to the proverbial dustbin of history and dreams as yet unfulfilled.

Second thought: Charlie is just back from rehab. He had bottomed out after a torturous affair with a woman, a girl actually, half his age, a crack addict with whom he fell in love in the absolute way that aging romantics do with the fallen angels of their delusional worlds. It was as if he could learn something from the distance in her eyes and the hardness in her heart as long he employed the old tunes to invest the horror show of his own life with remnants of romance. He knew that she lied with every breath but he didn’t care; so long as there was dope and sex, life was “all good.” And if not exactly good it was all he wanted. He was as addicted to her as he was to the crack cocaine. It finally fell apart when she disappeared for two weeks, came back with no explanation and like the old song says “a hand full of Gimme and a mouth full of much obliged.”

Next thought: Teemu had been Charlie’s dealer and his best friend since college. Neither of them missed the irony of Charlie seeking Teemu out at the bar, as usual, despite spending the previous six months in rehab. After Teemu makes his offer, Charlie goes home and gets lost, dreaming about what his world looks like. A vast open space yawns before him. Can he go back to being the private investigator that he was before rehab? Is there any real work that he can do that will support him and keep him interested in real life without the drugs that he has always used to ease his way? Like most returning addicts he has the sure and certain knowledge that most doors are closed to him. He has been refused recently at the local paper as a photographer, having something to do with blowing off an important assignment at the last minute and calling his editor from County jail where he wound up after a week-long binge. His editor refused to pay the bail money. Charlie appeared before the only judge with whom he had a give-and-take relationship based on Charlie’s having helped said magistrate with the search for his missing daughter. Charlie was given the choice between jail and treatment and while he did not really see the difference between the two he thought that the treatment center food would be better than the jail cuisine during his withdrawal.

Final thoughts: Stop thinking and start writing and let the story come to me. Based on who these people are they will do what they know how to do and have always done even though it may not be in their best interest to prove the living truth of the old saw that “those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.” These people are tied to one another by their pasts, and their insatiable need to do what they have always done, perhaps for different reasons, which obscures their vision enough to allow them to expect different results each time. All that remains for me to do is stay seated in front of the computer and let these”friends” of mine lay out their stories for me to write down. Michael, remember this: ”T’is a tale told by an idiot…” who may or not be you. I said that.

 

Image Credit

Photo by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

 

Filed Under: On Writing, Tarmac Meditations

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