Last week I posted two
letters from the journal I kept of my odyssey during my attempt to
flee reality after the death of my mother in 1971 (dear Lord, 42
years ago! 42 years! How can that be?), I thought I'd post
another entry from it.
12-17-71
57th
day. Baton Rouge, LA 9:12 a.m.
Would
you believe 82 degrees yesterday? That’s just a mite warm for
mid-December, even in Louisiana. Today, as a pleasant change of pace,
it is raining.
Baton
Rouge, as capitol of Louisiana, has no particular character of its
own, with the possible exception of the narrowest main street in the
United States. As in many state capitols (this one also haunted by
the ghosts of the Longs), the state is buying up whole tracts of the
downtown area for construction of state buildings. I’m sure there
are charming sections of the city, reflecting the dear dead days of
the Old South, but I have yet to come across them. Later today (I’m
doing laundry at the moment) I may look up the Chamber of Commerce
and get some sort of directions.
The
gulf between experience and expression continues to frustrate me. I’m
great on experience, every little nerve end a’tingle, aware to the
9s. But to express these experiences in the hopes of sharing or even
conveying them, I find myself with a set of mental children’s
blocks with most of the vowels missing.
A
hard admission, but I really doubt that I will ever be the great
writer I had hoped to be. One hell of a lot more self control would
be great help. A longer attention span would also be an asset. As
would a more extensive vocabulary, a dashing personality, a radiant
smile, and several million dollars. (If you’re going to dream,
dream big.)
In
fact, I find it—as the admission of my inability to write
grows—almost impossible to write at all. Still, I’m not happy
unless I’m frustrated, I suppose, and this is as good a reason for
frustration as any other.
Fascinating
Revelations on the Status of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as State Capitol
& Progressive Representative of the New South: the Baton Rouge
main library does not have a public restroom.
2:25
p.m. Still (to no one’s surprise) raining—a very weak,
fits-&-starts type rain, as though it were preoccupied and just
doing it out of habit.
Wiled
away the afternoon at a movie, a luxury I don’t allow myself very
often (only because there has been almost nothing at all to see since
I left California).
At
the risk of being redundant, I’ve come to the conclusion that one
reason for not writing more is that I have very little to say when it
comes right down to it.
There
is an old church across the way, of the simple wedding-cake variety.
Beige, very angular, with a tall ornate steeple—from its bell tolls
the hour (although sometimes it gets a little carried away, ringing
ten times for 5:30) in a very non-melodious “Clang.” It looks
like the type of church one sees in the movies, where all the natives
have gathered to escape the typhoon, only to have the roof fall in on
them.
Dorien's
blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday and Thursday.
Please take a moment to visit his website (http://www.doriengrey.com)
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1 comment:
Would have loved to have known what movie you saw. The one thing that stood out above all others is when you wrote "I'm not happy unless I'm frustrated." The funny thing is to this day you seem unhappy unless you're focused on being frustrated about something. You may have summed up a lovely quirk that's run throughout much of your life.
It's endearing, actually.
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