Mom, I am missing you this Mother's Day. I don't think you ever realized that everything amazing in my life happened because you made sure I didn't quit when that would have been the easiest thing to do. I wish you were here to see where this long road has taken me - you would be proud.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Piano Lessons - A Tribute To Mom
When I first started taking piano lessons, I hated it. I was a restless nine year old kid, impatient with the process of learning music. During that first year, my Mom would sit with me each day for fifteen minutes of practice. Knowing I loved an audience, she'd encourage me with praise while I stumbled grimly through scales and arpeggios. Neither stage mother or musician, she just didn't want me to be a quitter. At some point during this process, I discovered I had talent, and from then on, nothing could tear me from the keyboard. And you all know what happened next.
Monday, May 7, 2012
This Is What They Pay Me For
The carefully rehearsed TSA dance routine: shoes off - belt
off - laptop out - hands up - TURN! The fuming, snaking line, always a bit diffuse
and confusing at its tail, like a frayed length of rope. The overly chipper and
grating voice of the flight attendant. The little passive-aggressive game I
play with said flight attendant where I leave my electronic devices on and my
seatbelt off, even though I know better. The rote repetition of the safety
features of this 737 aircraft. From the seats next to me, the loud, terribly
self-important and crushingly banal conversation of two L.A. types, redolent of
chewing gum, plastic surgery and the overconfidence of the none-too-bright. The
not-at-all reassuring shaking of the silver wing outside my widow. The seat,
far more uncomfortable than it needs to be. The captain interrupting the
edited-for-tv movie on the back of the seat in front of me - letting me know
that we’re passing over Toledo, which can be seen just outside our left cabin
windows. The sticky remnants of spilled drinks on my seat-back tray – ghosts of
unhappy travelers past. The drunk frat guys a few rows ahead of me – why do
they always travel in packs? The claustrophobia, the boredome, the barely
suppressed rage.
Playing the piano? Singing? Writing songs? I do that shit
for free. This is what they pay me for.
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