There are some things that permanently stick in your
mind. That sounds like they’re important. Some moment of blinding insight where life’s
mysteries and confusions become blindingly clear and then suddenly… (“Oo-aah” Chorus)
… you know.
But sometimes, it’s something more trivial, something that,
rather than being celestially illuminating, leaves you perplexingly scratching
your head.
By the way, the first one is better.
But if you are, as I am, a person to whom accumulated oddities
adhere to you like you’re “The Flypaper For The Bizarre” – and if you are still
waiting for life’s mysteries and confusions to become blindingly clear to you –
you get the following. And feel grateful
you got anything.
Without these cerebral visitors, your frazzled brain otherwise
teams with endless “To Do” lists, replayed embarrassing conversations and where
exactly they went wrong, and flurries of impending doctors’ appointments and
thoughts of what they possibly might find.
My Personal Opinion:
You are better off with extraneous clutter.
Random Example:
This.
I am walking along singing a song, my bowed head facing the
sidewalk – because sometimes I forget to walk straight – and I spot what looks
like the face of a pirate, below which is the stenciled confession,
“I Sold Hemp.”
“Odd”, I silently remark, considering, both at once, this
sidewalk pronouncement and thoughts
of paying more assiduous attention to my posture.
“I Sold Hemp.”
… it says there.
And not just
there. But on subsequent blocks of
pavement every fifty or so feet along the way.
“Hm”, I think next.
The “Hm” relating to my speculation that someone, late at
night so as not to be impeded or even arrested for defacing public walkeries
with pictures of pirates and retroactive hemp-selling confessions… I’m thinking,
unless they deliberately stayed up to carry out this nefarious operation, they
had to, imaginably, set their alarm clock to awaken them deep into the A.M. so
they could get dressed, exit stealthily outside, make their way to the street I
am currently perambulating, and stencil away, free of unwelcome public scrutiny.
Sounds like it was really important to them.
But why?
“I Sold Hemp”?
So what?
But that’s me. Not
only because it’s artsy littering – and I do not litter under any circumstances
– or because I personally never sold
hemp, or because I feared constabulary consequences for stenciling a lie.
My thoughts beyond myself
are why would anyone want to serially proclaim on blocks of concrete that sometime
in the past they sold hemp?
It’s not like a “Promotional
Message.”
“Get your hemp here!”
What it says is, they sold
hemp. That’s placing flyers on porches,
advertising a business that has already closed down. The proverbial – and practically unhelpful
– “past tense” announcement.
Nor is it a proud point of personal accomplishment. If they had not made The Post, it might be conceivable to find Daniel Ellsberg out there
on his hands and knees, reminding pedestrians on that particular thoroughfare
“I stole the Pentagon Papers.”
Not with an accompanying “pirate”, of course. Maybe a stenciled Rand Corporation logo.
At least that’s something.
I don’t even know if it was illegal to sell hemp.
Nobody brags,
“I sold hair products.”
So what’s the big, chest-thumping deal about “I Sold Hemp”?
There’s the possibility they are promoting their exceptional
salesmanship.
“I sold hemp!
Implication:
“I can sell anything.”
But for that message to connect would require passersby to get that, at the time, hemp was inordinately difficult to sell. Like “Willy Loman” explaining, “The (whatever district he was assigned to be a salesman in) was recognizably the worst.”
But for that message to connect would require passersby to get that, at the time, hemp was inordinately difficult to sell. Like “Willy Loman” explaining, “The (whatever district he was assigned to be a salesman in) was recognizably the worst.”
For all I know, selling hemp was giving away candy. Without the clarifying context, the public proclamation
is meaningless.
Bringing us “full circle” to
“So what?”
It almost feels
like some private declaration. The guy’s out there, stenciling to himself.
“I'm not a nobody. I sold hemp!"
The lesson for the rest
of us, assuming there is one, or
making one up to give meaningful purpose to this exercise, may perhaps lie in
the area of acceptance.
Maybe, it can be interpreted, what the pretend pirate was
saying, in an oblique manner perhaps characteristic of former sellers of hemp
(or perhaps not) is,
“As with countless other
things in life – large and small – you will never understand this.”
If only he had said that.
Then I would
easily have understood.
Just a thought - this caption often appears on images of Thomas Jefferson and other Founding Fathers who grew hemp. Are ye sure it were a pirate...?
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