A Love Song

 

 

Soggy, Soggy Night 1

 

“Soggy, Soggy Night”

 

Soggy, Soggy Night 2Last Saturday we had one of the damnedest evenings I believe we’ve ever had, but for all the emotions of the evening, it had a most innocuous beginning. That afternoon I had brought home a newly repaired CD player, and we wanted to put it through its paces, to see if the repairs were worth the expense.

 

I’ve written quite a bit about my ongoing love affair with Christine. I sometimes talk about how we came together in that first, long-ago date in April of 1976 and the whirlwind courtship that followed, if that’s the term for such a thing. Really, to me, a courtship is when the male pursues the female, and I’m not at all sure that truly describes what happened that summer, which is not to say that I was not madly in love with her. But for me then—and even now—what I wanted was a mutual, freely-arrived-at decision, which completely let out any thought of my sweet-talking her into it. We did talk love sometimes and certainly… aw, you know! But for me it was just a patient waiting. I made my decision that first night; I was simply waiting for her to catch up to me.

 

Elsewhere, I have talked about that first evening, and I won’t repeat it here except to say she invited me to her place for a birthday dinner. The moment I walked into her apartment on April 3, 1976, it was as if someone had flipped on a light. Thirty-seven years later it still blazes. But here’s the sad thing about life. Life. It gets in the way because there’s a living to be made and all the things that go into that living. Job interviews, job demands, job emergencies, job, job, job. It never stops, and it permeates every facet of one’s life at times. Even so, whenever we can, to the extent that we can, we block out a bit of time for ourselves. But, man, it wasn’t like that at all during that summer

 

Consult any reference book and you’ll be told that the Summer of Love was in 1967. Personally, I have long felt that they’ve mistakenly transposed the last two digits. The Summer of Love was 1976.

 

But to bring this back to where I started, Saturday I came home with a newly repaired CD player while she was running some other errands. We’d both been out of town all last week, so there was much to be done. That night I wanted to show off how good it sounded, which, believe it or not, was better than it did when we purchased it. I honestly don’t remember it ever sounding that good, although the CD I decided to audition for her may have had something to do with that. It was a compilation of Neil Diamond songs from 1968 to 1972, a great many of which we listened to during the Summer of Love. At that time it was vinyl records and wine and candles and each other, only each other, eternally each other. Decades later we got the CD in question, but we haven’t listened to it for years, and when we got to the opening chords of “Glory Road,” my eyes filled with tears. I felt like someone had just waved a magic wand, and I was again in her tiny little one-bedroom apartment where we spent so many deliriously happy hours that enchanted summer. .

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Then she heard “I Am, I Said,” which is my brother’s favorite Diamond song, and that, in turn reminded her of what he’d done for us on his east coast radio show about a year-and-a-half ago. His show features biographies on various rock and roll artists. I asked if he’d do us the favor of making a mention when he did the Neil Diamond Show. I didn’t tell Christine what I’d done, and I had no idea myself what Mike would say or do. Thanks to the Internet we were able to listen to his show live when it aired. Mike does wonderful, in-depth biographies on these people, taking their career in chronological order. This is what he said at the key point:

 

“The next release off the LP ‘Mood’ was a song that would be claimed by many lovers as their song. It would be the first dance song at many weddings, and so it was for a man who had spent his entire life listening to Bach, Brahms and Mozart. He and the woman of his dreams chose this to be their song. Joe and Christine live in San Diego, California and have been in completely devoted love for over 35 years. This is Neil Diamond and ‘Play Me.’”

 

She burst into tears when she heard that introduction that night and did so again Saturday night when Mike’s favorite Diamond song took her back to that moment. By the time we got to “Play Me” on our CD we were both sobbing pretty much and teasing each other, trying to make each other laugh so we wouldn’t sop up so many Kleenexes. We kept asking each other, “Why are we crying like this?” But neither of us would say.

 

Soggy, Soggy Night 5It’s because life is finite. In the abstract, assuming man is not stupid enough to blow up the planet, it is infinite because one life breeds another, but this solitary life and your solitary life and all those many other solitary lives are finite. All of us know that, and all of us deny it until we’re in the final throes of life. And sometimes even then we will deny the inevitable. But, still, we know. Our lives are finite. One day one of us will end, and when that happens, so ends the relationship. What made us so very sad Saturday night was reflecting on the fact that it has now been over 37 years since that one perfect summer. Both of us continue to be blessed with good health, but for all the blessings we have had in that regard, the clock continues to tick. We have already shared considerably more years together than we have yet to give to each other.

 

We cried because that CD has so many wonderful memories, but mostly, I think, we cried because it will end one day. The sad, sad thing about loving so intensely for so many years is that you eventually come to the realization that you have already loved more years than you have left to love, that what started out as infinite, an entire lifetime ahead, is now somewhat truncated. And I say that believing—or at least hoping—that we’re still good for another twenty or thirty years but even it if it’s the latter, it will still be less than what we have already enjoyed. So that, as they say, is the bad news.

 

The good news is that true love is like wine. It really does improve with age. And if we have less to consume now than we did almost four decades ago, it matters only a little because the Golden Years await, when we shall have world enough and time.

 

Joseph

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Human Capital

 

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“The Green Makers”

 

Human Capital 2I recently came across a rather interesting blog in which the author decried those companies who think of their employees as “human capital” because, as he wrote, “While the denotation of ‘human capital’ remains innocent enough, the term’s connotation echoes master-servant ideology.” I think that author is correct in that assumption. I also think it’s an honesty I find rather refreshing because you don’t often get corporate America to admit what’s really going on these days.

 

What term do you suppose those who send jobs to China have for the poor peasants who ultimately do that work? Those workers are paid, on average 42¢ per hour and work an average of 60 hours a week in conditions so terrible that in one of the plants the leading cause of employee turnover is suicide! If the CEO of American Amalgamated decides the proper term for those poor souls in China should be Associates or Comrades or any other such thing, does it really matter? I mean, haven’t we already established that the difference between that kind of labor and slave labor is not spacious?

 

But go further than that. Take the case of Americans working in this country. What does a young person now starting out have for a beginning wage? What are his prospects if he works hard and cares about the company? I worked at a number of companies in my own working life and was always assured at the beginning of almost every job that I was a highly valued asset to them. The reality of that was always a bit different.

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We read quite a bit about the fall of Enron and the many millions lost by big investors, but what of the people who worked there, the rank and file who simply wanted to make a living, those who had invested in a retirement program they were assured was top drawer and then learned that it was fraudulent and they’d lost their entire fortunes. What of them?

 

What of the people who work nowadays? What kind of salary do they get, what kind of retirement package? Unions have been dying for years, and as they die, so dies the future of those who do the work that makes the company prosper. In recent years the manufacturing jobs have all gone to China, and this country has been left with the dregs. Lots and lots of working people these days have no future, no way to go, nothing that makes it better. What of them?

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Just recently the city of Detroit declared bankruptcy. It was once a city of 1.8 million. It was prosperous. The automobile industry flourished, and the middle class did quite nicely for itself. And as the middle class flourished, so did the economy, because unlike the very rich, the middle class spend their wages, thereby creating not so much a trickle-down economy as a trickle-everywhere economy. Or better yet, flow-everywhere economy because the very rich tend to be misers, whereas the middle class has ever sought to improve its standard of living, and as it does so the economy prospers.

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But now we have case after case wherein automobile workers who were previously making a decent living are now glad to get a part time job in a fast food outlet. Does anyone really think they care what they are called? But let’s go further than that; let’s get down to the nitty gritty as we used to say back in the late Sixties when people were outraged enough to fill the streets with protests.

 

Follow the money, because that’s always where it lies. Just the other night I saw an installment on American Greed about the world’s biggest medical drug manufacturer that had been found guilty of deliberately recommending a pain killer drug for a great many things other than what it had originally been designed for. The upshot of this was that a very large number of people developed adverse side effects, up to and including death. Why were doctors proscribing it? Because the drug company’s sales department had convinced them that it was a miracle pain reliever. Once a drug is developed, of course, it costs almost nothing to manufacture it, so the profits are high. But this time round there were some whistle blowers, and the drug company was fined 2.3 billion dollars. Justice was served. Well, maybe not justice. The drug company denied that they had ever done it and promised to never do it again. And despite its being the largest fine ever accessed, the drug company sent a check forthwith for the full amount. It didn’t really strain them all that much, as that amount of money really only accounted for three weeks of drug sales. Think they’ll do it again? C’mon, that’s the safe bet, right?

Human Capital 6But ask yourself this: they knew the drug was not approved for those other uses, and after a period of time, they knew about the adverse side effects, but they did it anyway. What does that tell you about how they feel about the general public? Or those who work for them?

And going further, in that scenario does it really matter whether they call those who work in their plants employees, associates, or human capital? Sound cynical? There’s more.

 

Look at the actual working conditions for the vast majority these days. Every year health care becomes more expensive and delivers less, but the same single payer system used by every other industrialized nation is rejected as socialism. Even companies that could well afford it plead poverty, so a great many of the rank and file these days have gone without salary increases for several years. And no one says a word because the powers that be have let us know that the labor force is NOT to make things difficult for them. If they do, the fat cats will simply send those jobs to China because it’s like Nineteenth Century America there, and those who rule us all yearn for those days.

 

Personally, I like the term human capital. It gets us ready for what’s coming next. Today’s human capital is the future’s Soylent Green.

 

Joseph

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