jD is back and he's in a funk...again.
Tramscript:
Track 2:
[0:21] Hey, it's JD here, back for another week of introspection and reflection on grief, depression, and the pathway to mental wellness, all the while nourishing my soul with the music andpoetry of the late indie rock singer-songwriter, David Berman.
How you doing, motherfuckers?
I am sitting here at my desk looking out the window right now, and it is gray and somewhat miserable out.
[0:53] We are in the full effects of winter. There was a winter storm yesterday, which has put some snow on the ground finally.
We had a green Christmas, and now there is snow, and this is what I have to look forward to for the next couple of months.
Uh it's not something i relish i assure you of that uh i pretty much am not an outdoor person in the winter uh which is troubling because i need to be outdoors i need to get fresh air and ineed walks in and it's tough it's extra tough when fuckers don't shovel their walkways so that you can traverse the sidewalks you know in an orderly manner without walking aroundlooking as though you're having some sort of spastic uh reaction you know uh, it's it's a strange thing when you're about to fall the weird movements your body will make to maintainbalance it looks comical but uh oftentimes it's very frightening and uh.
[2:03] I don't know, I'm getting to the point age-wise where falling is not something I long for.
I've never broken a bone in my body.
And I don't know, I'm feeling pretty tough, but I think that if I were to break a bone these days, I would be an absolute wimp about it because I've never experienced that pain.
And I've went off on a rant, haven't I? I've went off on a tangent, all because people don't shovel their sidewalks.
Just fucking get a shovel and shovel it, man.
And if you've got a little salt, put some salt down. But I'll tell you what, my dogs, they don't like the salt.
It irritates the pads of their feet. So there's that.
[2:51] Listen, I am in a bit of a funk. drunk, the new meds that I'm on were enough to get me noticed by my wife and several of my friends.
They noted, you seem different. You seem better than you have over the last little while.
And I agree. I went to a party on Saturday night. I didn't get laid. I got in a fight.
Uh-huh. It ain't no big thing. No, I'm just joking. That's a little lead-up forward for you.
But I did go to to a party on saturday night and it was a friend's party from high school days and call you know university days as well like we we maintained and we've maintained afriendship despite my, efforts to fuck things up i didn't go to his wedding for example and that was a bit of a a bit of a.
[3:49] Dent in in our friendship i'll be frank um but i sent him a long letter one day uh inviting him to my wedding when i got married and you know sort of explained my position at thetime which was that i was extremely poor uh there was a year there was a year that the government when i filed my income taxes the government followed up and they said you need toprovide a letter uh.
[4:18] A written signed letter to confirm your earnings because your earnings are so low it was like $7,800 and that's when I was 29 I took the year I quit my job and went to performanceschool comedy school and then I spent the summer in LA cashed out all my life savings and spent that on summer in hollywood and um it all worked out rather well until i got home anddidn't have a job so you know it was it was my letter basically said that it was the goodwill of my friends that got me through you know and that's really truly the case i was very fortunatebut um Um, I digress as I always do on this podcast.
I guess I should just call this podcast the digression project because that's essentially what it is.
But anyway, the party was full of people that I didn't know.
And I feel like I went in, even my wife made the comment the next day.
She said, I, you know, I'm shocked that you went because you typically bail on things things like that at the last minute.
[5:34] Being social with people that I don't know very well, I'm extremely in my head. And I wasn't.
I was gregarious. I was joking.
We had a good time. We watched some sports, drank some beers, and it was a lot of fun. I had a good time.
[5:55] So put yourself out there. Risk is necessary. I got a new tattoo recently, and that's what it is.
It says, risk is necessary, and it's a picture of a cow jumping over the moon.
And it's to signify, I suppose, that anything is possible, as Kevin Garnett once said.
So there's that. I will tell you that the last three days, though, I've been in a funk.
I've been in a funk. And I don't know know whether I've caught up with this medicine already?
I just can't imagine that's the case. Or I'm just in a bit of a funk weather-wise, seasonal affective disorder, you know, that sort of thing, and the drug just can't keep up with that.
I truly don't know. I truly don't know, but it's a marked difference between.
[6:47] Where I was and where I am.
I'm not having suicidal ideation. I'm just low on a scale of 1 to 10 1 being very low 10 being extremely high, I've been a 4 this week I track that and I've been a 4 and that's no good.
[7:08] Because 4s lead to 3s and, then it's just all I need to be in the 6 range I need to be I don't want to settle for 5s I've been settling for fives for a long time, but I want to be in the six orseven range. I really, truly do.
And then I can start to put my life back together.
There's pieces all over the place. It's like a thousand-piece puzzle of a puddle.
[7:37] It's just impossible to imagine what the end result looks like.
And yet I have to. I have to put this shit together because without being together, I'm going to fall apart, like completely.
And that's just no good for anybody involved. So there's that. Yeah.
[10:41] You gotta not step on that. It's fading out nice there. And you don't want to step on it because, well, you just don't.
Because the artist wanted it to play that long, and I gotta respect that.
I gotta respect the art, you know?
You gotta fucking respect that art. Garfunkel.
So, Honk, if you're lonely, what do you think? Send me a message.
JD at MediaMalchemist.com would love to hear from you.
I personally love this song but I love this record this record is just so damn good and part of that is the double vocals with Malk and Berman and they just sound great together it soundslike they're having fun it sounds jangly, it sounds loose it just sounds fun Even though that song is, you know, in theory, a sad song, I don't think of it as sad.
There's an uplift to it. And it's punctuated, though, with that sound of the honking horn right at the end, indicating that, you know, Berman is lonely tonight.
And that's no good for anybody. So there's that.
[12:06] Let's get cracking with Self-Portrait at Age 28.
This is, gosh, what is this, part three or part four? This is part four of Self-Portrait at Age 28 from the book, Actual Air, Berman's Collection of Poetry.
So let's get right to that.
Track 3:
[12:25] There are things I've given up on, like recording funny answering machine messages.
It's part of growing older, and the human race as a group has matured along the same lines. It seems our comedy dates the quickest.
If you laugh out loud at Shakespeare's jokes, I hope you won't be insulted if I say you're trying too hard.
Even sketches from the original Saturday Night Live seem slow-witted and obvious now.
It's just that our advances are irrepressible.
Nowadays, little kids can't even set up lemonade stands.
It makes people too self-conscious about the past, though try explaining that to a kid.
I'm not saying it should be this way. All this new technology will eventually give us new feelings that will never completely displace the old ones, leaving everyone feeling quite nervousand split in two.
We will travel to Mars, even as folks on Earth are still ripping open potato chip bags with their teeth.
Why? I don't have the time or intelligence to make all the connections, like my friend Gordon. Gordon, this is a true story, who, having grown up in Braintree, Massachusetts, had neverpictured a brain snagged in a tree until I brought it up.
He'd never broken the name down to its parts.
By then, it was too late. He had moved to Coral Gables.
Track 2:
[13:48] That is Self-Portrait at Age 28, and that is part four.
And it ends with a chuckle. I love the ending of that poem, that section of the poem.
[14:05] Coral Gables and Braintree Massachusetts. I always have trouble saying Massachusetts.
I'm not sure if anybody else does. I also loved the idea that we're going to land on Mars while certain people on Earth are still ripping open potato chip bags with their teeth.
It just shows how primitive we are and how far we can get, you know?
A certain cohort of us, anyway. I don't know what that's going to look like.
I rarely do. I'm just not intelligent enough to articulate.
Oh, man. So good. this is just another example of Berman being Berman and really, delivering the goods I think that this poem once we hear it all together and I will do that I'll stitch it alltogether at the end and put it out as a separate podcast on the feed, I think you're going to be real happy with it when you hear it all together but it's just too long to do in one episode I feel.
So that's why I've chosen to break it down.
And it's also broken down into pieces in the book. So I think it only makes sense.
[15:20] That's what I have for you this week. Wish me luck in the week to come.
I hope that this drug kicks back in.
I see my doctor soon enough and maybe he'll have to bump me.
Maybe he'll have to bump me from 100 milligrams to 200 milligrams.
I don't know but I'm willing to do what it takes so there's that, talk to you next week stay hungry, stay foolish and of course wash your damn hands.
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