Saturday, December 9, 2017

Fifteen Minutes Later (Having Once Been a Part)

Even given my proclivity for blather and palaver, this is unlikely to be full of insight. If you're undecided whether you want to sit through another meander, well, it's time to make up your mind. This one is going nowhere quickly. Or rather it's going to sashay leisurely with no destination in mind.

I was never really a fan of Andy Warhol. This is not a popular admission among bipeds my age but it's never been true. I appreciated what I saw as humor and social observation, but his creations were just never my thing. At the same time that famous phrase stuck with me: 'In the future, everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes.'

Then of course it happened to me.

Life has a funny way of giving us the things we ask for. When we're lucky enough we can learn a bit about ourselves in the process, but most often it's a chance to realize that we didn't want what we thought we did. I also love this.

But I digress.

Fame. Mine was not big celebrity or wide social appeal. Instead I was a part of a small movement in a small community, which meant for a while there were people who knew my name. This brought attention and things my way. It gave me opportunities I would never have enjoyed otherwise. This made possible my having a career in the music industry and writing for a bass magazine. I've signed autographs and been recognized in unexpected places. When I was still playing for a living, I got to walk some big stages and make the acquaintance of some remarkable people. I am grateful for all of this.

And I'm even more grateful that it's passed.

I never wanted fame. Attention, yes. Validation, absolutely. Respect, of course. But with fame comes the loss of privacy and the invitation of others to interpret one's life and art through their filters, neither of which ever appealed to me. As my moment in the sun was a little one and fleeting, I got to experience just enough to know with certainty that I was happy to have enjoyed it and equally to let it go.

Art has been at the center of my life since before I can remember, both the enjoying of it and the creating of it. I don't make any lofty claims in terms of my ability or talent, nor do I state that I know a damn thing other than I can recognize what resonates with me emotionally, intellectually or spiritually. I understand a bit of my aesthetic. That's about it. I know geniuses and savants. More often I witness those with facility who can impress but not make a particularly profound statement, at least by the standards I hold. This isn't judgment so much as finally grasping what's real and good for me. There are things which get acclaim I can't understand, but that's just fine. There's a hell of a lot I don't understand. Actually, that may be one of the hallmarks of my life.

A rant for another time.

But it does dovetail into something that's happened recently.

I got the sudden and unexpected news of a young actress' death this week. This is not someone I knew personally, only someone whose work I enjoyed. As I didn't know her, I had no way to know that she was -- like so many of us in the arts and otherwise -- battling depression. When the online backlash of a statement she made was massive, vitriolic and ongoing, she stood up for her position, attempted to clarify it and ultimately gave up fighting. If one is to believe the news, she hanged herself. And of course the lack of empathy rains down still.

As someone who's fought depression for decades and has survived every suicidal impulse, episode and spell, I will tell those who have never been touched by it that they are supremely lucky. This is a darkness they can't imagine. The fact that so many who have never felt it and refuse to acknowledge it is horrifying to me in a way I can't express, and expression is what I do. If I were to spend all my posts trying to articulate what it's like dealing with this or convey what it's like when it hits, I could never do it justice. This is horror on a level that no book or film will ever capture. Maybe that's why so many of us who have this in our makeup turn to horror to distract and entertain us.

If you've never dealt with depression first hand, I'm glad for you. This also means you can't understand what someone depressed feels. It isn't being sad and there's nothing worse than saying, "Can't you just be happy?"

No. We can't.

It's a cyclical thing but not in a predictable way. It may or may not have triggers as it may or may not be tied up in trauma. If trauma has never touched your life, be glad. Be overjoyed. If it has, you will never be the same and you will often be blindsided.

All of this, as I stated initially, is not building to anything in particular. Maybe I'll write about having mental health issues at some point. Maybe I shouldn't as it all but inevitably invites attacks from those same people I'd like to enlighten.

I dunno.

It's funny to me -- not so much the 'ha ha' variety -- that none of us chooses to be born but so many of us are judged for how we do or don't cope with that, as if we're all given the same tools at the start. If you're one of those lucky enough to be confident and content, I am genuinely happy for you. If you're someone who can't understand the rest of us, I hope you choose something better than belittling or seeking to hurt those bereft or your benefits.

Wow, that really did go somewhere I didn't expect.

3 comments:

  1. "Knocked down 7 times, get up 8 times" is the theme of my life. I understand depression, darkness, and suicidal impulses. What you have written here resonates with me.
    Thanks for sharing your thought!

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    1. It's my honor to have a place to post these meanders. It's powerfully humbling that someone I respect so much chooses to give them his time. Thank you, Mark. Very much.

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  2. What a sweet tribute to the perils of fame/infamy. Which actress was it? It's been such a wild year for celebrity deaths.

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