My End of the Table

It’s definitely fall around here. I went for a walk this morning while it was still dry and crisp outside. I heard a Black Crowes song and thought to myself — gosh, today would be a good day to listen to The Black Crowes. Usually when fall hits, I am compelled towards U2 and, more specifically, towards The Joshua Tree. (Was that album even released in the fall? Is it the moody music? I associate it with fall, but is that just because I discovered it during an autumn of teenage heartache?) Regardless, while The Joshua Tree will always mean fall to me, it shouldn’t get all of my autumn attention, and so it was nice to get a reminder of The Black Crowes and have something to dive back into. If I were ever forced to compile a list of favorite albums, their The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion would absolutely be on it (along with The Joshua Tree, of course).

Anyway, as often happens, I got sidetracked and had continued my day, Black Crowe-less. Then a friend texted me to tell me about a new Jason Isbell album of cover tunes, Georgia Blue. He was alerting me towards a cover of The Black Crowes’ “Sometimes Salvation”, which just happens to be on The Southern Harmony and Musical Companion. I laughed and told him that I had, just that morning, been thinking about The Black Crowes.

So of course on his recommendation, I listened to the Georgia Blue album, and it’s great just like he said. Imagine my surprise when I saw that it also contains a cover of R.E.M.’s “Nightswimming”. Just a few weeks ago, a podcast episode about that song sent me down a noodle-filled R.E.M. rabbit hole. I mean, really……isn’t this all some strange culmination of universal nudges?

And so as I continue my rock-stepping, I realize that my best times are not just when I have music, but when I talk about it. Music brings us together, and so do our musical memories. Those long conversations, when stories of concerts, albums, and songs come out. Maybe it’s around a dinner table, or a campfire, or on a beach. Even people who I don’t know very well — if I know your music stories, I feel like I understand you. Maybe that’s because the inverse is true — if you know my music stories, you know me.

Tonight I have the house to myself, and I am writing at the dining room table with my dog nearby, music playing. I happened to look back at my very first blog post, and had a full-circle moment. Plans and ideas are flowing as easily as the tunes on a favorite album.

Stay tuned.

Hiking in Flip Flops

Have you ever been on a hike, only to come upon a small creek that you need to cross? You chart a potential path, identifying high rocks you can step on to make it to the other side. Will those rocks hold? Are they secretly slippery, even though they don’t appear to be? You are certain you will make it to the other side of the creek, but will you step on the opposite bank unscathed? Something holds you back from taking that first step, off the ledge, onto the nearest rock. Is it fear? Self preservation? Ego?

And then, eventually, (perhaps at the urging of your hiking buddy who is already across the creek), you take the first step. And it’s all fine. You don’t slip, or maybe just enough to get your boots wet, and surely that’s not going to ruin your hike. You get to the other side, take a look back at where you’ve been, and think — Huh, that wasn’t so bad. What on earth was I so worried about? Your hike continues, and you eat some cheese and crackers and have a great day.

To my husband, and later to a friend, this was the only way I could describe my recent anxiousness over a big decision. I was desperately craving the euphoria of that step onto the bank on the other side. I knew, with every ounce of gut instinct, that it was the right choice, but I was having problems stepping off the river bank, into the stream.

Perhaps this analogy makes no sense to anyone but me, and everyone else gleefully steps off a safe bank into a river crossing, with no hesitancy. But I’m not wired that way. At any rate, this is what was rattling around in my head, as I traveled to a California beach to see Pearl Jam play at Ohana Fest. My husband wasn’t able to go, so I invited my college-age son, whose campus is not too far away.

It felt great to be with my people (“Drop the Gyro and Run”). Although my kids both know of my PJ fandom, I am glad that they have both now seen that their mom is not the only one. I gave up long ago on trying to explain Pearl Jam (and my concert-going) to people outside my family. Now I just own it, and people can think whatever they want about why I’m “like that” (“Knowledge From the Box”). My son loves concerts too, and he casually observed at one point during the day, “Usually at music festivals, it’s people my age. But at this one it’s all… people your age” (read: old people). Oy. I refrained from telling him that his generation did not invent music festivals, and neither did mine.

At concerts, I am often in my head, and I typically make some discoveries. I knew that the show would be meaningful because it was my first post-pandemic concert, and because I would be seeing Pearl Jam with my son. I took my daughter to a PJ show a few years ago, and it was beautiful (“Big Sky Gratitude”). But I under-estimated the gravity of this one. As the music started, I realized that, while the show was all that I expected, it was also something bigger: a bookend. The first time I saw Pearl Jam, I was just a few weeks away from starting law school. This time, I am at the other end of that choice.

Somewhere in the evening, I realized that my analogy was all wrong. While that first step off the bank is indeed crucial, we shouldn’t focus only on the safety of the other side. I decided to embrace the discomfort. The rock-stepping is part of the process. The journey gives us freedom to view ourselves differently, and approach things through a new lens.

In the crowd near us, I overheard a son ask his dad why he wasn’t dancing to a particular song. The response was so great. The dad said, “It’s a perfectly fine song, it’s just not for me”. We can use that mantra for anything, including big decisions. (Also, I vow that, from this day forward, I will always embody this sentiment when I am complaining about discussing a set list.)

And in terms of my hike, I did take that first step into the creek. I haven’t yet taken that blissful other-side-of-the-bank step, but I am somewhere in the middle, and the rocks are holding up just fine.