Music. Coffee. Food.

Music.  Coffee.  Food.
My Three Pleasures

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Boys & Breakup Songs

As I cruised northbound on I-435, severely butchering Kelly Clarkson’s “Already Gone”, a thought popped into my head in between my maneuvering and pitchy screeching. It’s occurred to me that, in all of my young years, I’ve never had a break-up that was so bad that all I wanted to do was listen to sad/angry songs and scream them out the window while I had a good cry.

Oh, don’t get me wrong. I’ve had plenty of breakups. Some hurt more than others, but none of them moved me enough to emote. The closest came in the summer of 2002. The summer I pulled a Can’t Hardly Wait and dumped my boyfriend to open up the possibility of dating college boys. After two weeks of realizing that maybe I should have waited until AFTER the summer to dumped him, I called him up, hoping to win him back.

He was having none of it.

Alone with my thoughts, I decided to listen to Jimmy Eat World’s “Bleed American” album and landed on the track “Your House.” This track had always been a point of contention between us; in the nine months that we dated, I was the only one to express love while he remained ambivalent. I played it on repeat, thinking back to that night I told him I loved him and he responded with, “already?”

Lovely way to end an evening, right?

Listening to the song made me feel disappointed, but not sullen. I was 18. I had dreams of marrying a baseball player. This would come to pass.

Breaking up with my next boyfriend went a little easier. He was terrible, so I didn’t need any Reflection music to heal my wounds. I just buried myself in the single life, enjoying my new found sexuality, playing the field until I met my (former) baseball player.

Twelve years of coupledom & he’s yet to give me a reason to belt out a sad song.

I suppose I should feel grateful for that.

But what if I’m missing out by not having my heart broken badly just once?

At this point, if I have my heart broken, it would probably devastate me.

I really wish I had gotten one out of the way.

But I am happy that it hasn’t come to that.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

At seventeen

I was 17 when I watched someone die in front of my eyes for the first (and hopefully only) time.

It’s a funny thing, growing up on Chicago’s south side. You know violence- specifically gun violence- exists. You hear the faint gunshots in the distance. Sometimes you hear them even closer. You watch reports about it on the news. You read about it in the paper. You see the sketchy characters hanging out at the bus stop on the way to school. You know there’s a reason you absolutely MUST be home by the time the street lights come on. You’re extra observant in everything that you do. You don’t want to be a victim.

And yet, for all of this observation and awareness, it desensitizes us in a way. Because we expect it, it doesn’t shock us anymore. We don’t accept the violence as part of our lives, but we live with the inevitable. We don’t have the means to just pack up and leave for “something better.” So we adapt to make it another day.

I didn’t hear the gunshots that late summer night- the summer before I left for college. I’d been listening to gunshots outside my bedroom window for over a decade. If any sleep was to had, you learned to tune them out.

What did wake me up were the bright lights and the commotion. Being summer time, I slept with my window open, a screen in place to keep the bugs out but let the breeze in. The rotating red and white lights reflected off of my television and posters on my bedroom wall. I sat up in bed and heard the footsteps of my grandmother and mother moving through the house, as it was clear that they were awakened by the same commotion outside.

The three of us moved to the living room, wondering who- the what wasn’t even a question anymore.

We moved outside to the front porch, watching as paramedics tended to a wounded person on the lawn of our neighbor’s house across the street. Police officers milled around a parked car two doors down, the passenger’s and driver’s side doors open, retracing the victim’s footsteps, looking for answers. One notices us on the porch and approaches, asking if we’d seen anything. We tell him, “no,” as we didn’t even hear the shots.

Two doors down from us, windows open, and no one heard a thing. This wasn’t some issue with “snitching”; this was just our reality.

He walked away as we continued to look on, the young man across the street attempting to hold on to a life that was steadily slipping away from him with each fractured breath he took. We made small talk about nothing really, as if it were all happening someplace else, possibly on television. After fifteen minutes, we watched as the cover was placed over the victim.

We sat on the porch for another five-ten minutes before deciding to head back into the house. Sleep wouldn’t come easy for me after that; I turned on a movie channel and stared at that before finally falling asleep with the tv still on.

The next day we would learn from our neighbor that the young man who died was sitting in the car, listening to music with a friend when the gunman walked up to the driver’s side and opened fire. The victim attempted to run across the street when he was struck again, only getting as far as the neighbor’s lawn before collapsing.

He was the friend of a friend; I didn’t know him personally.

The next day was fairly routine. I woke up, had breakfast, watched tv, dressed and headed downtown to enjoy the summer day. I left for college a month later, and I carried the incident with me.

I didn’t carry the actual act of violence, per se. As I mentioned earlier, you get used to it- for better or worse. What I took with me was the realization that I was so numb to it all. I went to college in the suburbs and had a hard time adjusting to the silence. I moved to Kansas and mocked Topeka for a news headline that stated half of their ten homicides for the year went unsolved.

If only my old neighborhood could be so lucky.

But we shouldn’t have to accept violence as part of our everyday. We can be cautious and ready to fend off the unexpected without being so apathetic.

When my family first moved to the neighborhood, we had block parties and my friends and I were able to play without incident. It was liveable. And I believe it could go back to that place. But while people are still conditioning themselves to sleep through gunfire, we still have a lot of work to do.

My music, my savior

Other than my husband, the only thing propelling me through grad school and keeping me from falling into the darkest pits of despair (which would be virtually impossible since I was already in Kansas) was music. My mother, in an attempt to keep my spirits up in the best motherly way possible, would regularly send me and my younger sister (who was attending undergrad back in Illinois) iTunes cards. On a random visit back home, she presented me with a hot neon pink iPod mini on which to play the tunes that would be purchased with my iTunes cards.

This morning I decided to dig it out and shuffle play my 25 Top Plays playlist to reminisce and see if the songs mean the same thing to me now as they did five years ago.

(In order, according to iTunes):
  1. The Rain, the Park and Other Things- The Cowsills (100+ plays)
  2. 1901- Phoenix
  3. Carol Brown- Flight of the Conchords
  4. Rambling through the Avenues of Time- Flight of the Conchords
  5. Love Like a Sunset, Pt. 2- Phoenix
  6. Lost (acoustic)- Coldplay
  7. More, More, More- Rachel Stevens
  8. Off Broadway- Ryan Adams
  9. Lisztomania- Phoenix
  10. Everything is Everything- Phoenix
  11. Undercover Martyn- Two Door Cinema Club
  12. Touch- Natasha Bedingfield
  13. A-Punk- Vampire Weekend
  14. I Will Be There- Rachel Stevens
  15. Brandy Alexander- Feist
  16. Flashing Lights- Kanye West
  17. Leaving Port- James Horner
  18. Death and All His Friends- Coldplay
  19. If I Ever Feel Better- Phoenix
  20. Do You Want It All- Two Door Cinema Club
  21. Maybe I’m Amazed- Paul McCartney & Wings
  22. Fences- Phoenix
  23. Starry Eyed- Ellie Goulding
  24. Put You In Your Place- The Sunshine Underground
  25. I Would Do Anything for You- Foster the People
Here are the things we can takeaway from this list:
  • Phoenix was clearly my favorite band
  • My most played song is probably one of the corniest pop songs ever released- and yet it was everything to me for a two-year period
  • That one Kanye song listed is the only Kanye song I will ever admit to enjoying- and I enjoy it A LOT
  • There are eight European acts listed; I clearly have not gotten past the Britpop phase from my youth
After shuffle playing them this morning, I came to these conclusions:
  • Some songs have held up better than others; while it was refreshing to hear a few again after all these years, it’s clear why I stopped listening to others- I’m simply sick of them (“Fences” by Phoenix in particular). And they remind me too much of being sad. Which is weird, as very few of them are even sad songs.
  • I’m shocked there isn’t more Coldplay on the list.
  • The fact that there are absolutely no Beach Boys songs on this list is both surprising and upsetting. I can't imagine that I wasn't listening to any Beach Boys for those two years.
  • “Flashing Lights” is still an amazing song, for better or worse.
  • Even though it’s #1 on this list, “The Rain, the Park and Other Things” isn’t really one of my favorite songs. 
  • Boy, I really like Pop music. Look at that list. That’s a Pop Festival waiting to happen (minus James Horner, of course).
  • 10/10 would listen to this list for the rest of my life.