Thursday, July 2, 2009

Mourning

This past week has reminded me of the times I spent with my mother watching television when she constantly remarked on how many actors in the movie were either dead or looked old enough to be dead. As a child, I had no sense of mortality and found her remarks to be unnecessarily morbid. What purpose could it serve her to dwell on the inevitability of life, I would think while rolling my eyes. Why did she even care about the personal lives of these people when she did not know them and sometimes did not even approve of them? I remember trying to change the subject and point out how we should try to enjoy the movie for its entertainment value and not dwell on who was dead. There was always a sadness about it that she did not shake, accompanied by her inability to stop watching the same movies as frequently as long as the VCR tapes lasted.

As the circle of life goes, I was mourning for individuals this past week that I had never known personally nor could I say that they were in my thoughts more than fleetingly over the years. What I realized is that while I feel empathy for their families and believe their deaths were untimely, unfair or premature, I realized that what I am actually mourning is the loss of part of my cultural identity and, yes, part of my youth. The inexplicable understanding that I was experiencing what my mother must have felt all those years—my youth slipping away and the passing of time, brought about one of those reality shifts that make me uncomfortable.

All of these individuals left an imprint on me and took up space in my life at different times through music, laughter or the confoundedness of what creates a cultural phenomenon. Associations between parts of my life and Michael Jackson's music will always be with me, just as it will be for others. In no way different was the memory of the banter between Ed McMahon and Johnny Carson, Farrah Fawcett's hair, Karl Malden's American Express commercials, all of David Carridine's characters and Billy Mays' commercials. To know they have passed on is symbolic of the passing of time and our own mortality. Yes, that grim and morbid attitude I believed to be unwarranted in my mother, I am feeling now about my generation and its contemporary cultural identity and wish I had not been so harsh in my criticism of her.

On the one side, I find it amusing that we adopt these celebrities and bring them into our homes as if we considered them a part of our family. We learn about them, we cheer with them, we keep track of their children and their relationships as if it mattered to them that we know or gave us a particular significance having this information. We feel we have earned a status that gives us the right to criticize them. Maybe that is what makes the loss seem so personal. Or maybe when our society loses cultural icons, we reflect on our own losses and missed opportunities.

Perhaps that it what my mother felt. I can only speculate. What I realize now is that every generation must feel that sadness as they age; watching younger generations replace them. What I know is that that June 2009 was a month of hard losses we will all think about for a long time.


 

Sunday, June 7, 2009

More on the Caribbean Roosters

May 31, 2009 San Juan, PR

Shortly after I arrived back home in Phoenix, I received this message from my friend about a rumor circulating at the St. Thomas Airport:

Someone told me they saw this lady passenger on a small plane to San Juan with a cloth bag curiously shaking once in a while. On arrival, the bag opened at the airport terminal and there came this huge St. Thomas Rooster . Unable to COOO in Spanish, it went wild and confused in the terminal with the bag owner chasing the rooster. TSA personnel were also on the chase. No luck. Rooster and all did not make it to Phoenix as intended.

Iguanas –well, that's another subject.

TDH

Well, I thought, fancy the news spreading so quickly.

Caribbean Roosters

May 29th, 2009

During my recent visit to St. Thomas in the US Virgin Islands, I was caught off guard by the cock-a-doodle-doo I heard the very first morning. Being in a different environment, I concluded there must be a farm close by and moved on to other thoughts. How surprised was I to find hens and baby chicks wandering around the hotel grounds when I left my rooms that afternoon. I thought I was seeing things. It was surreal seeing them casually strutting and pecking at the ground occasionally as they moved from one grassy area to the next. As if on cue, there was the invariable baby chick trailing far behind the others with mama's watchful eye on him. Still thinking there had to be a farm close by, I was surprised again to find there were no farms around and that all the surrounding property belonged to the hotel. I found out from a friend soon after that wild chickens, as well as iguanas, roam freely in St. Thomas. Not only are they free to roam, but apparently are respected and not bothered.

When a neighbor in the hotel asked why someone did not trim the trees to improve the view of the bay, we found out that the trees are protected as a natural habitat for the iguanas. Staying close in to Charlotte Amalie and the town center, I did not experience other wildlife, but I was impressed that this small island maintains its unique integrity while still catering to the tourist trade. And chickens, of all things.

I couldn't help but find the irony in comparison to the states where wild chickens wouldn't last too long before turning into someone's dinner. I guess my fascination and fixation on the whole idea was that I had not seen chickens in any environment for any length of time my entire life. There is no doubt about the lack of reverence most Americans hold for chickens, thinking of them as meal portions rather than living birds. I am just as guilty and one has to recognize the attitude is more cultural than moral in either case.

With all this unimportant theorizing going on in my head, I am sure I sounded strange, if not deranged, commenting on it frequently. In fact, I talked about them so often, my friend was sure I was going to smuggle one home. The truth about that notion is that what you get when you take home a Caribbean chicken is just a chicken.