My nice Roland piano at this very moment, and like always, seduces me when I catch a glimpse of its shiny keys and buttons that have given me so much promise and purpose through hours of awarding struggle. Goodbye to the posters on my wall, Pink Floyd "The Wall", The Bealtes "Abbey Road", Pink Floyd "Dark Side of The Moon", a sexy picture of Scarlett Johanssan which is basically lifesize, a black and white Beatles poster that has a unique endearing quality about it, and yet another Beatles poster, the most colorful of them all. I will keep these posters but they will always remind me of this pathetic room. It is cozy and now part of my life but I will never desire a room like this again. I will strive for bigger, expansive rooms if I can get them, more accommodating, livable. But like many things that get left in the past, becoming only furniture in your brain's memory cavity but nothing more, I believe there will be times that I desire backwards, wish for the days of smaller things, more tangible problems. It's funny how the older you get, your problems don't necessarily get harder. To a child, a big problem might as well be a ripped doll that will no longer say "I love when you hug me!" The older a person gets, I think problems just get further away, harder to understand, to grasp. Problems become more abstract. And I think when I'm bombarded with tangable, stupid problems like ripped dolls, a sea of abstract difficulties and everything in between I'll be struck with nastalgia and like everyone else on this Earth, yearn for the youth I can't have. So this is why I feel a strong sense of passionate dependancy for this room, an affection that has no real logical grounds. I will miss it dearly because it represents everything this last year has meant for me. Everything from meeting John Mayer to playing on stage at the Berklee performance center to submitting a video for a Chipotle competition with Luke Holloway, to working out at the YMCA, to playing music for bigwig Sony entrepreneurs in my Singer/Songwriter workshop class. However, this room would have barely any significance at all if it weren't for my two roommates, Tim Mulcahey and Luke Holloway who lived next door to me all summer and Tim who has been my roommate for even longer. Both of them make this apartment what it is. They make it a landmark in my life, a milestone. Without these two guys, my best friends, I wouldn't be the same person I am now. And this room would only know me. Hey room, aren't you glad you've met my friends and all these memories? I bet you are. And I'm sure you have thousands of other stories that I don't know about. I'm glad I could add to them. I hope they made you smile. Cause even though you aren't great, you still make me smile. You always will.
I'm off to Greece in a week and two days! I've studied some Greek in these last weeks! I hope I'm ready for this leap into a crazy life change! I know I am. Whit did it and with more grace than a cat springing up to a windowsill. So pretty much, he just did it and wondered why we were concerned in the first place. And that's how I want to be.
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ReplyDeleteI miss you buddy.