I was not aware that there
was a ‘Wednesday Walk’ series, until I realized this was my fourth post
about my Wednesday morning mile-or-so walks to the “Groundworks” coffee
emporium. So yay – I have a series. Which may, of course, disappear now that I’ve
noticed it; that happens sometimes. Oh,
well. I may as well enjoy it while it
lasts.
A cold, blustery morning in Southern California. And people are asking for their money back.
“I checked our contract.
We’re not supposed to get
this!”
(Note: I
realize it is an insult to the people who have just endured a frigid winter –
even a relatively mild one – and an affront to my younger self, whose feet, ears,
nose and other body parts bear the residual effects of retroactive frostbite,
but, to the denizens of Los Angeles, a bitingly gusty April morning with the
temperature in the upper forties easily qualifies as “cold.”)
You can see it in people’s eyes as I hike down Fourth Street
on my way to Rose, turning left for Groundworks. These Southern Californians, most of them “transplants”
from other places, are angry.
“We’re wearing heavy coats and scarfs! If we wanted to do that, we’d have stayed in
Wisconsin!”
They are not alone.
Many of them, thrust into the inclemency to see to their
dogs’ eliminational requirements, walk locally reared animals who do not want
to be out there either, the sparks of resentment in their eyes equaling that of
their owners.
“I didn’t need to ‘go’ this
bad!”
How cold was it in Santa Monica that morning?
Priuses were
shivering by the curbs.
The exchanged looks with the pedestrians I pass are
revealing. It is the same look “The
Juice” slipped a guy I know when he visited the O.J. Simpson trial:
“Can you believe this?!?”
As I exited Groundworks,
I heard a fellow sufferer say, “Just waiting for the sun to come around that
cloud” with the desperation of a South Pole strandee
saying, “Just waiting for the Rescue Ship to come around that bend.” I wanted to give the guy a hug.
How cold was it?
Scalding coffee bubbled up through the sippy spout in my cup, dribbling
onto my fingers…
And it felt good.
Okay, I’m going to take a metaphorical leap here, and I
admit in advance, I may not be able to pull it off.
We make movies and television shows here, our core values
infusing everything we put out.
Think about that.
America’s entertainment is created by people who cannot
handle bad weather.
Intensity, depth, true suffering? Can you really expect that kind of content
from people who run under the covers when the temperature dips below
fifty degrees? The “ideal” is natural here. We have three hundred beautiful days a
year.
That’s why we came here.
We could not deal with actual weather.
I once visited Chicago on Thanksgiving and found myself totally
incapable of going outside.
People like me, unable to cope with meteorological
reality. Do you really expect us to
produce anything even remotely true to life?
I don’t think so.
You get who we are.
earl, just wanted to let you know how much i enjoy your blog. thanks for doing it.
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