The Monday after Christmas I got my first tattoo.
I get off the greyhound bus in Cleveland, take the train home, shower, and walk to Cleveland Ink a few blocks from my house. On the way, I'm more nervous about how much it's going to hurt rather than whether I'm going to regret it. So I know it's a good decision.
Making a statement that is going to stick around for the rest of your life is a scary, scary thing. It's not something I'm used to. Most everything we talk about -- the things we believe in -- doesn't last very long in the public sphere. Facebook updates are obsolete in a matter of days, if not hours. I sometimes forget what I'm talking about halfway through talking about it. It makes me wonder if the conversation I'm having with you at the bar means anything, if I'm really opening up and getting to know you, or whether I just enjoy having your company.
I wait inside Cleveland Ink for a minute before my friend Dustin shows up. He gets a few things together and suggests going to Gypsy Bean for coffee before starting. He's moving to Gordon Square in a week, so we talk about the neighborhood, the art scene in Cleveland, and the girls in the art scene. This and that.
Wanting to be liked, I grew up speaking in generalities, masking how I truly felt until I could somehow figure out how you felt. I had to learn how to make statements. I wouldn't have outright told you I loved Pearl Jam when I was 14, but if you had told me they were your favorite band, I would have told you the truth. The older I got, and the more I saw how boring agreeable people were and how bored I was being agreeable, I began experimenting with self expression. I took my guitar outside of my bedroom. It was time to make a statement.
We get back to Cleveland Ink, Dustin makes a few suggestions about my
design, we make a few last minute adjustments, and he sticks the stencil
to my arm. I lay on my back, talk to Dustin about how capitalism
injected shmoozing into the life of the artist, and feel the needle for
the first time. It's not the worst thing in the world. But it's not
pleasant either.
After playing music in Columbus for a while, I began to get a distaste for the bands in the scene. They all seemed to act as if they were famous. On stage they dressed the part, in their disheveled glam apparel, and spoke with that cockiness that comes with a slight drug addiction. The music was something of an afterthought, an accessory, like the neon green wristband you need to get into the bar. They weren't there for the music, they were there for their own glory.
Near the end of my experiment with being a career musician, I would play in a pink wig and hot pants. At one show I singed my arm hair and snorted it on stage, then let a coke head in the audience do it on my other arm. I wanted to have the opposite of the normal musician look. I didn't know what statement I was trying to make, I just knew I didn't want to say what the other musicians were saying.
A guy Dustin knows stops by. We realize we know some of the same people and talk about things I already don't remember. I do enjoy the conversation though. It takes my mind off of the needle. Later, Dustin and I realize we've had similar crushes on the same girls. I instantly feel closer to the guy, even as he's permanently staining my skin. An older lady from down the street stops by and tells us how she can't stop getting tattoos ever since the shop moved in a block from her house. She seems a little loopy, but nice, and looking at every single one of her butterfly tattoos is better than concentrating on the needle. All in all, it's a good time.
When I first starting playing music professionally, it was out of an odd feeling that if I didn't at least attempt to be a successful musician, if I just kept to my room making up little songs, I would be a failure. I would somehow be wasting my talent. So when college began to lose its luster, and I realized I was paying way too much money not to care about being there, I dropped out and tried something else.
After a couple years of playing shows, burning my arm hair, and wearing hot pants in public, something seemed amiss. I stopped enjoying music. Writing music turned from a calming, almost religious experience, to a chore. If music was to be my business, writing had to be my job.
When I was six, my Nana gave my Mom and Dad a piano so I could play. After plowing through the preliminary lessons, the "chop sticks", the finger exercises, I began to love it. There's a very simple joy that comes from making pretty noises. She got me a violin when I was in middle school from an auction. She thought it might be worth something. It wasn't, but it still played. When she passed away, I booked my first show two weeks later at the Nines in Ithaca, New York. When a plastic grocery bag floated by me on the day of the show, I took it as Nana saying good luck.
Nana was always good at helping me explore the things I was interested in. When she learned I liked to draw at 4, she let me use her old paper doll stencils to draw people. When I was 8 and learned how to juggle, she bought me some cheap plastic juggling rings and clubs. I would think most grandmothers wouldn't want to feed their grandchild's ambition of joining the circus (by 11 I could ride a unicycle. I honestly thought it would impress girls), but for Nana, it was about helping me explore the things I liked, whether it would produce a marketable skill in the future or a clown.
Don't worry about booking shows, don't worry about what girls or boys will think, just do it for the sake of doing it. Don't introduce yourself to people for the sake of 'networking' or finding someone to fuck, do it because making friends is fun. Because having people in your life makes life worth living. If there is one thing I am thankful for learning, one statement I'm not afraid to make, it's that. Thank you, Nana.
Thank you for helping me grow up with vitiligo, when I had a lot of anxiety about who I was. When I felt strange, different from everyone. Thank you for helping me discover things about myself that I could like, I could be proud of. Things that would later help me relate to the world around me.
After three hours of work and one short potty break, Dustin is done. I tip him, pay at the front, and walk over to the Save-A-Lot for lotion and off-brand honey nut cheerios. I stop by my friend Myles' house on the way home and eat a few bowls of cereal and sample the champagne he's serving for New Year's Eve to calm my nerves.
After a couple hours, I take off the bandage and show him the work. A mockingbird and the letters JGT.
Jamie Griggs Tevis.
Nana. A woman who married an atheist and sang in the church choir.
“Atticus said to Jem one day, "I’d rather you shot at tin cans in the backyard, but I know you’ll go after birds. Shoot all the blue jays you want, if you can hit ‘em, but remember it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird." That was the only time I ever heard Atticus say it was a sin to do something, and I asked Miss Maudie about it. "Your father’s right," she said. "Mockingbirds don’t do one thing except make music for us to enjoy. They don’t eat up people’s gardens, don’t nest in corn cribs, they don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That’s why it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird.”
― Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Sex and Groceries
“One
doesn't sing because he hopes one day to appear in an opera; one
sings because one's lungs are full of joy.” -Henry
Miller.
Last
night I went out with some friends to see a show at the Grog Shop,
a lovely little music venue in Cleveland Heights on the east side of
the city. I rarely go to the east side, but I'll explain why I took the train all the way out there in the middle of
finals just to go see a DJ later.
At
the show, I'm introduced to your standard hipster character with nice boat
shoes who doesn't seem too excited to be meeting me, or to even be at
the show with his friends, but I think, “Well... he's friends with my friends, so
I'm sure he's got some good qualities... good, hidden
qualities.”
Mr.
Boat Shoes disappears for most of the show while my friends and I
dance the dance of our hippie forefathers, with dashes of hip-hop and heaping spoonfuls of whiteness. After the show we
go to my friend's house nearby, and at some point between my acoustic
rendition of Mariah Carey's “All I Want For Christmas” and trying
to hula-hoop through the first half of a Fleetwood Mac record on a
bet, Mr. Boat Shoes returns. He seems grumpy as ever, but I think
nothing of it and eventually fall asleep on the couch.
The
next day I learn that in the middle of the night, around 4 a.m., Mr.
Boat Shoes walked in on one of my female friends talking to a guy. He looked at the guy straight and said in all seriousness four more
words than I heard him say all night: “I WILL FIGHT YOU!”
Apparently, Mr. Boat Shoes was hoping to go to the bone zone with my friend and
was getting agitated that nothing was happening – my friend had
also canceled two dates on him earlier in the week. My friend and
the guy just laughed at him and Mr. Boat Shoes says, “you know
you're the reason I came here
tonight,” as if his ticket to the show granted him exclusive access to her pants. He leaves in huff, goes upstairs into a random room to pass
out, and slams the door behind him.
*
*
One
of the more wonderful movements I've seen in the last few years is
the “buy local” movement. It's sort of the calmer, older brother
of the younger, wilder Occupy Wall Street movement. They
both represent a movement away from fulfilling our needs from
faceless corporations towards surviving as a community of people
working towards a common good.
The
reason I love the movement is that when I buy something local, whether it's groceries or a piece of jewelry, I'm not only getting something I
need, but instead of helping Wal-Mart, I'm helping my
friends and my neighbors. I'm helping Liza when I buy her artwork.
I'm helping Alex when I pay him to fix my bike.
One
of the problems with the way our economy is set up, and one of the
reasons for these movements, is that Capitalism inadvertently teaches
us to take advantage of other people. It does this by teaching us to
be motivated by monetary “profit." And in most cases in order to profit, you need to be
profiting off of someone else.
One of the most efficient ways of
getting someone to pay more for something than what you paid for it is to
find the cheapest way possible to produce the goods. If I can make a
bike for $100 and it would take you $200 to make the same bike,
you'll buy my bike for $150 and we'll both be happy. I made $50
bucks and you got a bike for $50 bucks cheaper than it would have
taken you to make it.
Unfortunately,
a few of the ways corporations can sell things for so cheap is
through underpaid labor (ie sweatshops
and slavery), by raping the earth (ie insecticides), and by taking advantage of other people (ie
predatory lending). It's easy to disregard these costs because in most cases consumers
don't pay these costs themselves, other people do. On top of this,
most people are either unaware of these costs or they can't see the
effects of those costs. We don't see the huge agribusinesses where
our food comes from and we don't see the sweatshops where our clothes
are made.
When
our society teaches us to seek out a comfortable, easy life, full of
Snuggies and McDonald's drive-thru's, the idea that someone else
might have to pay for our comfort doesn't even cross our minds. We
are ego-driven
creatures, after all. Making it all worse, America's economy is now primarily based on service industries such as entertainment, hospitality, and healthcare. Industries that focus on making people happy and comfortable with advertising that make us believe that no amount of discomfort should be tolerated (it's hard not to keep referencing this commercial).
When our economy is based on taking
advantage of other people and obliterating pain and suffering, we need to find comfort in things
as opposed to people. We can buy a spa package, pay to see a movie, or rent a prostitute's body. We can't find solace in other people's company, they're our competition: the ones
we need to dupe to buy our junk, the ones we need to beat for a job,
the ones we need to compete with for sex partners.
If
Mr. Boat Shoes buys a ticket to a show, yet still can't pork who he wants, HE WILL FIGHT
YOU!
When we live in an ego-centric society that focuses on
personal fulfillment as opposed to relationships, sex is not an act
of passion with another
person, but the fulfilling of a personal need through
another person. It is a commodity. And if someone won't fulfill your needs, then
they're of no use to you. You'll get frustrated and angry like a kid
who finds out his new toy is broken.
To
be honest, I understood where Mr. Boat Shoes was coming from. I was 15 once and the whole reason I went to the east side to dance that night was to
see that same woman. However, I can at least say that I had purer intentions
than Mr. Boat Shoes. I met her a few months ago and on paper,
she's more than ideal. She's quirky, cares for her
friends, loves to dance (not in order to be seen, but for the
thrill), and is passionate about living a lifestyle that's healthy for her and her community.
Given
all of this, and even though I always have a great time hanging out with her, I just haven't gotten that feeling yet. I'm actually really pissed at my heart over this and wonder if law
school has finally sucked away the last bits of my soul. So I took
the night off from studying to see if I'm still alive on the inside, to see if I just need a little more time to get
that feeling.
I
spent the entire night with one particular thought in mind. This
thought is the important thing – the main difference between Mr.
Boat Shoes and me. That night I knew that no matter what happened, I
would have a good time. Either I would feel that spark and begin to
fall for her or I would continue to get to know a new friend. Either
way it would be a good night for the both of us.
Not
only that, but because I felt that this woman and I were so similar, I
knew that she wouldn't just be put in the friend-zone if it came to
that; I knew she would be put in the much more prestigious
best-friend-zone. So either I would end the night falling in love with someone new or I would have an awesome time with a new, on-the-rise best friend. Either way we both would profit without taking advantage of anyone.
When
we're picking out groceries, buying new clothes, and having sex, we
should be conscious that there is always
someone else involved -- and wonder if things would be better if we could work with them, live with them, fall in love with them, instead of just fucking them for what we want.
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Live Action Gender Role Playing
There's something about winter that makes me want to do grandmotherly things. Or do things in a grandmotherly fashion. Bake cookies, have chats over tea, give children Andes Mints -- all while wearing over-sized sweaters with cats strewn about me.
Just about every war ever? Bros.
If anything, more women in positions of power will help turn the shit-tide of shitty events from here on out, but who knows. Power turned Martha fucking Stewart into an egotistical asshole. It's still a man's world, for worse and for worse, but now it's a man's world with women.
For the sake of ourselves we need to remember to stop thinking about ourselves from time to time. We need to remember that in order to survive, we need to embrace our communal side just as much as our egotistical side. Living in a capitalist society that rewards egotistical behavior over communal behavior, I don't have much hope for that happening. As we focus as a nation more and more on fulfilling our own needs and desires, we're going to find that we don't have a community worth living in anymore.
It doesn't matter if women are the only ones working towards a better community or men. It just needs to happen.
So if I want to gossip with my friends, have cookie parties, and join a knitting circle instead of assuming the traditional male gender role, you can call me a pioneer in the future of gender roles in America if you'd like. Or you can call me a fucking faggot. I don't care. I'd just rather be like this.
I never want to do grandfatherly things, which I think means smelling like scotch and musk, talking about wars you were in, and being racist. I never really knew my grandfathers, so everything I know about old men I learned from Frasier and All in the Family.
Though I enjoy these grandmotherly pursuits and see nothing wrong with it, assholes on the street would call it being a "fucking FAGGOT." And assholes on the street do in fact call me that. Roughly once a week while I'm on my bike, some guy will feel the need to turn down the Nickelback and holler out of his pick-up truck that I am "fucking GAY," a "fucking QUEER," or a "fucking FAGGOT."
And it's demeaning. Incredibly demeaning.
Not to me, but to humanity.
Not to me, but to humanity.
I like to think that we live in a time where a person's sexual preference wouldn't be used as a slur. It's as inane as trying to insult someone by saying they like apples as opposed to oranges. Who gives a shit? Sometimes I think I should yell back "WHO CARES?" to these assholes on the street, but more times than not, yelling back is just what they want.
* *
I dated a girl a few years back who loved college sports. She would get so into a game that an occasional, "you piece of shiiiiiit" or "OH JESUS FUCKING CHRIST" would slip out of her dainty little lady lips. I remember learning this early on in the relationship. We were watching an OSU basketball game on her couch the morning after one of our first "encounters," or "trips to the bone-zone" if you will.
I couldn't really focus on the basketball game. I had too many thoughts going through my head.
"Did last night really happen?"
"Yes. Yes it did"
"Awww yeah awww yeah awww yeah"
"Basketball season started? Who knew?"
"She is really into this game"
"Wow, if I liked sports, I'd feel like the luckiest guy in the world right now"
There's a curious double standard in this country (sans the south) where if a girl has a few masculine interests, it's generally seen as a good thing. A woman who likes sports is the quintessential male fantasy woman that could actually exist in real life -- as opposed to your sex-hungry double-D french maid fantasy woman who just loves your dick. A woman who can "hang with the guyz" is seen as an ideal quality to a lot of men.
So why can't a guy who loves "knittin' with the dames" be just as attractive?
So why can't a guy who loves "knittin' with the dames" be just as attractive?
I've noticed too that when people talk about gender equality, the conversation tends to focus on women being more like men -- or at least open to the same opportunities as men. Women doing the same work as men, being as powerful as men. There's usually less talk about men being more like women or doing "women's" work.
Am I being courageous, is Beyonce writing songs about me, when I say I want to stay home and raise the kids?
Of course women should have every single opportunity that men have and should be treated equally as such. The problem occurs when we place traditional masculine roles in higher regard than traditional feminine roles.
Think of traditional masculine roles as, for lack of a better word, egotistical. For the sake of survival, we are all geared to be self-centered to a degree. If we weren't, we'd stop eating and Darwin's finches would pick our eyes out. Traditionally, men have held egotistical roles. We hunted ferocious beasts for food, bought suburban homes for shelter, and ruthlessly climbed corporate ladders for the power to keep what we've worked for.
Think of traditional female roles as more communal. This is also key to our survival. If everyone was out solely for themselves, we'd constantly be watching our backs, protecting anything we had from everyone else. Life would be nasty, brutish and short. So everyone has a yearning for community, and women have traditionally held this role. Raising the next generation of kiddos, organizing lavish Mrs. Dalloway-style parties, and keeping the family together.
Our propensity for egotism and community is what keeps us alive. Unfortunately, these traits are polar opposites. At some point in history, people decided to divy them up and that men should hold the egotistical role and women should hold the communal role. This, I imagine, came from years of men just being physically stronger than women.
This power imbalance has slowly shifted back towards an even playing field -- and after millenia of seeing men in the position of power, unable to stroke their own egos, it makes sense that women would want to do the same things that men do now that they have the opportunity to do so.
They can be doctors! Lawyers! Entrepreneurs! And rightly so. The struggle and strife it must have took, and still takes, to regain a semblance of gender equality is unimaginable.
The only problem is that men, in positions of power and exercising their egos, have been the cause of every huge, shitty disaster to ever happen in the history of forever.
Holocaust? A guy.
The Crusades? Some dudes.
Am I being courageous, is Beyonce writing songs about me, when I say I want to stay home and raise the kids?
Of course women should have every single opportunity that men have and should be treated equally as such. The problem occurs when we place traditional masculine roles in higher regard than traditional feminine roles.
Think of traditional masculine roles as, for lack of a better word, egotistical. For the sake of survival, we are all geared to be self-centered to a degree. If we weren't, we'd stop eating and Darwin's finches would pick our eyes out. Traditionally, men have held egotistical roles. We hunted ferocious beasts for food, bought suburban homes for shelter, and ruthlessly climbed corporate ladders for the power to keep what we've worked for.
Think of traditional female roles as more communal. This is also key to our survival. If everyone was out solely for themselves, we'd constantly be watching our backs, protecting anything we had from everyone else. Life would be nasty, brutish and short. So everyone has a yearning for community, and women have traditionally held this role. Raising the next generation of kiddos, organizing lavish Mrs. Dalloway-style parties, and keeping the family together.
Our propensity for egotism and community is what keeps us alive. Unfortunately, these traits are polar opposites. At some point in history, people decided to divy them up and that men should hold the egotistical role and women should hold the communal role. This, I imagine, came from years of men just being physically stronger than women.
This power imbalance has slowly shifted back towards an even playing field -- and after millenia of seeing men in the position of power, unable to stroke their own egos, it makes sense that women would want to do the same things that men do now that they have the opportunity to do so.
They can be doctors! Lawyers! Entrepreneurs! And rightly so. The struggle and strife it must have took, and still takes, to regain a semblance of gender equality is unimaginable.
The only problem is that men, in positions of power and exercising their egos, have been the cause of every huge, shitty disaster to ever happen in the history of forever.
Holocaust? A guy.
The Crusades? Some dudes.
Just about every war ever? Bros.
If anything, more women in positions of power will help turn the shit-tide of shitty events from here on out, but who knows. Power turned Martha fucking Stewart into an egotistical asshole. It's still a man's world, for worse and for worse, but now it's a man's world with women.
For the sake of ourselves we need to remember to stop thinking about ourselves from time to time. We need to remember that in order to survive, we need to embrace our communal side just as much as our egotistical side. Living in a capitalist society that rewards egotistical behavior over communal behavior, I don't have much hope for that happening. As we focus as a nation more and more on fulfilling our own needs and desires, we're going to find that we don't have a community worth living in anymore.
It doesn't matter if women are the only ones working towards a better community or men. It just needs to happen.
So if I want to gossip with my friends, have cookie parties, and join a knitting circle instead of assuming the traditional male gender role, you can call me a pioneer in the future of gender roles in America if you'd like. Or you can call me a fucking faggot. I don't care. I'd just rather be like this.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)