Shitty camera, shitty drugstore developing, shitty pic. But that's me as I was when I met Patrick a long while ago. As I sat with him and his young friends in the cafe yesterday, did I feel the difference?
I was a cool biology teacher then. I was living in a beautiful wooden house next to Country Club College. The house was, to me, a writer's house, a Hemingway house, with a big screened in front porch, high ceilings with ceiling to floor bookshelves, and a huge back deck where an infamous hot tub once resided. The house was owned by my conservative friend's brother who was a local legend. He had lived here for some time, and it was known to be a party house. The hot tub was the infamous part as "the boys" would pull women out of the Steak and Ale my friend's brother owned, not from the restaurant but from the disco in the back. Marijuana and cocaine were the party drugs of the day and the hot tub was the piece de resistance. Many, many stories circulated around certain circles about the orgasmojet, but I was not part of that circle. Nor did I know my conservative friend yet. But his older brother had smartly bought up many rental properties in town and had started a management business. This photograph was actually taken at my girlfriend's apartment a minute before I moved from my own tiny residence in an apartment building for retirees. It was a big step. I was moving in with my girl. I had a sailboat on the coast, a VW bus, and now a romantic house and a beautiful girl. What could be better? What cold go wrong?
When I moved in, I filled he bookshelves. Most of my books were paperbacks, of course, and hardback books I had gotten from used book and remainder stores. But I was in love with adventure and travel, and I did own many, many adventure travel narratives and guides.
The house next door was owned by an old man who had built an apartment connected to the back of his house. A beautiful young couple lived there, and they, my girlfriend, and I made friends. I met Patrick through the couple. They were inveterate travelers and apparently had some financial backing. They planned to travel the world. Patrick, too, and when they saw my bookshelf, they would come over and peruse my travel books for hours. We'd drink cheap wine and beer and dream about the exotic places we might go.
Such things never last, of course, and the couple left for parts unknown. The VW bus was becoming a piece of shit, so I bought a brand new CJ 7 and a house. The girlfriend left me and I sold the boat and got a graduate degree in literature and a job at the factory. I started dating the only daughter of the ultra-rich family, and much of my serious travel began.
Around the same time, Patrick's grandmother died, and he came into a little money, He decided to spend it traveling through Mexico, Central and South America. My dead ex-friend Brando had influenced him in this, I believe. After Patrick came back, his career as a creative took off.
I hadn't seen him for a few years before I ran into him at the big Christmas Street Fair a couple weeks ago. Yesterday, when I walked into the Cafe, he was there. He invited me to come and sit with his friends.
I have always been a loner, and I have become even more so since retirement, Covid, and the split with Ili, so I was a little reticent about a group chat. I wanted to drink my good jasmine green tea and write, but what could I do. So I went to his table and was introduced to a young couple with a two year old boy. We smiled and shook hands, and I put on my public persona, the one that hides my inherent shyness. But the kids were great, hippie kids with big smiles and open hearts. They were easy to talk to, though Patrick talked most as he loves to tell his tales in elaborate, circular detail. Soon, another young woman joined us who was of the same ilk as the couple. She, too, was sweet and very friendly. Patrick told them about me as I was when we first met.
"He was teaching and playing in a band. What was the name? Yea. They had quite a following."
"When was that," asked the young fellow who had just moved to town from Denver."
"Oh, shit. . . I forget the decades."
"Decades was a club on the Boulevard back then," Patrick began to explain.
"No," I interrupted, "I mean actual decades. I can't keep them straight anymore. We played New Wave/Punk stuff."
"What was the scene like?"
"It was small then," Patrick said.
I looked around the Cafe Strange with its Chinese lanterns and weird pictures and all the posters announcing band gigs and their dates and said, "The drummer of our band actually invented all of this. He was a wonderful artist and made the first posters announcing band gigs in this town. We had two songs everyone knew, "Neutron Bomb" and "Bad Jets," and he didn't put the name of the band on the posters, just a Bomb or a Jet, and everyone knew who it was."
"Oooo," said the new girl, "I like that. I'd come to hear those."
"The drummer made elaborate sets for us. We had a twenty foot canvas banner spray painted with bombs and jets in a very punk fashion. We had a slide show we would project sometimes when we played of weird shit. He made little silver bomb pierced earrings that people wore."
"The Boulevard Record and CD store across the street has a neon bomb in the window," Denver said.
"Yea. The original owner of the store was in a band at the same time and was friends with the drummer. I'm sure that is where the idea came from."
Patrick, having had to listen for too long, launched into another narrative of the time. Meanwhile, Denver's girl had begun breast feeding the two year old unabashedly. She was thin and attractive and I had already had inappropriate thoughts about her. I did everything, of course, not to look, but I loved the whole hippie aesthetic of it. I was transported back to my college days. Back to the original question in the opening paragraph. Did I feel the difference? Physically, sure, but spiritually, whatever that means, I was happy as a pig in shit, as they say, to be in the old familiar territory. I dug the company muchly.
We talked a little about the photo project I was wanting to pursue, and Patrick said he could facilitate some of it. He is writing for a culture mag right now, and I said I would like to get such a gig. Photos and essays, I said. Patrick told me he had a Substack newsletter and said he would send me a link. I told the table that I loved this cafe for the visuals.
"People come here looking so great. It is the most visual place in town. I want to photograph everyone. I want to set up lights on this stage and use a large format camera."
"That would be great," they all agreed, and the New Girl said that yes, the large format thing would be the ticket. I liked these people a lot and didn't really want to go, but it was past time to see my mother, so I slowly stood up trying not to show what an old cripple I've become, and shook hands and told everyone how much I had enjoyed the company.
When I got home, I opened Patrick's Substack page. It pissed me off a little because it was so good and so similar to what I do. Yea. . . petty, I know. But he had nice illustrations, too.
Clever, I think. But I am as charitable as I am petty, so I wrote him a note saying I enjoyed his Substack page and that I had enjoyed his friends, too.
"Thanks for inviting me over to your table today," I said. "That was fun. I liked those people a lot. Good hearts."
He wrote back that they liked me, too.
Now I am subscribed to Substack and can explore. The table said it had become overcrowded and it was often confusing trying to find a thing. Overcrowding meant it had become diluted and more difficult to find a crowd of subscribers. But at least, if I moved my blog over there, I would know if anyone was coming to visit. I am not sure, however, if that is good or bad. I haven't any idea here any longer, but if I found out for certain I was writing to no one. . . I am not good at taking rejection.
Patrick said he would get in touch after the holidays. He wants to get involved in my possible project. I sat back in the silence of my house and thought about the young couple. They were beautiful and I thought they would be a nice photo project in some way. I am sure they would be amenable. But, you know. . . my balls shrivel up anymore when I think about going out on a creative limb. Still, it was nice to think about.
Did I tell you I have been happy lately, or at least happier than I have been for a time? I am, at least, not miserable. And as I have said, letting go of the baggage of the past has thrust me into the present in a positive way.
So far. But as we know, our lives are not a steady state. Disruptions abound.
I want to find out if New Girl was Patrick's girlfriend. She pulled up a chair to sit next to him, and last time I saw him, he mentioned he was dating someone much younger. I don't know what I'm thinking. Just that she was very visual, too. I'm thinking I'd like to become part of the tribe.
With camera.
And pen.
I think they'd like my house, my books, the frangipani, the vibe. I'm a shaman, almost.
Further.