These are the 480-page memoirs of a life-long “seeker” (a term meaning one who searches for Ultimate Truth…whatever that means), a hardcore yet grateful alcoholic, and a forever finger-popping beatnik. Like cool, daddy-o!
These are the memoirs of a life-long “seeker” (a term meaning one who searches for Ultimate Truth…whatever that means), a hardcore yet grateful alcoholic, and a forever finger-popping beatnik. Like cool, daddy-o!
By grateful alcoholic I mean that my addiction, in spite of all the damage caused by my excessive drinking (Mea culpa, mea culpa!), has also been a major factor in many of the positive aspects of my life. You might call it unintelligent design.
Good things happened now and then regardless of my derelict ways, my reckless bohemian persona, and just maybe because of them…I’ll never know. My outrageous style often brought me into serendipitous contact with wonderful friends, great ideas, amazing support, and even intimate experience with that which jazz giant John Coltrane called A Love Supreme.
I am grateful to be alive, grateful for a handful of marvelous friends, and grateful to the Big Guy for going out of His way to love me in spite of my countless shortcomings and trespasses. It appears He’s not such an uptight cat after all (I know, “He” could well be a “She” or an “It”…but more like all of the above. Hey, go with the flow, dude…or dudette.) And He, from a Zen standpoint, might well be a moot point in a seemingly pointless process… ellipses ad infinitum…
Oedipus Mex, 1948
The very first event that I can recall was when I was about four. It took place on the porch of our home at one of the Mosesian orchards where we were pickers and packers. This very old but reasonably well-kempt house, with wooden floors that curved from decades of many a wet mop, had a back porch without glass windows, just screens to keep out the countless fruit flies.
I was playing outside in a puddle of mud when I decided that a very fine thing to do would be to go and kiss my mother, my newly acquired foster mother. I quickly found her. She was doing the wash, by hand, using a washboard in a cement sink. I pulled at her dress and asked for a kiss. She picked me up and kissed me. She didn’t even mind my muddy hands all over her clean white dress.
Ticket from Alleys of the Valley, a music and poetry event I produced in 1972 in the iconic Glide Memorial Church in San Francisco…but of course!
Producer of hick town poetry readings, to the biggest damn Poetry Festival in the Nation, to the largest Environmental Expo in the World!
Event production was a big part of how I met so many wonderful people along the winding way! (See page 277)
Here’s a poem i wrote about that astoundingly beatific period
A Thousand Years Ago
I lived in the wilds of the city lights
when hipsters howled throughout the nights
wrote naked poems on Vesuvio’s walls
protested in the Berkeley halls
painted old buses with neon blasts
synaptic zaps on tie-dye grass
I hitchhiked to heaven and left my past
a thousand years ago.
Here’s a Zen piece using eight consecutive haikus
The Concrete Buddha
The concrete Buddha
wet and cold the moss grows old
at his lotus feet.
The concrete Buddha
quiet in my busy mind
sits just sits and sits.
The concrete Buddha
sounds of city in his ears
spiders spin their webs.
I’ll be darned if there ain’t even a few synchronistic duets, symphonies of the soul, and a whole slew of truly incredible characters I’ve had intercourse with (intellectual, that is, and sometimes not), many of them you might have heard of if you’re over forty, like Della Reese (Touched by an Angel…and she was!), sassy songstress Sarah Vaughn, poet Allen Ginsberg, Country Joe McDonald, and Cuckoo’s Nest novelist Ken Kesey … mustn’t forget The Smothers Brothers and a bunch of kooky others.
Did I mention Miles Davis, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, William Burroughs, Charles Bukowski, “The Laureate of Low Life,” and a drink with Bill Murray who wasn’t in a hurry? How ’bout Sir George Shearing (good on the hearing!), Rev Jesse Jackson for social action, oh, Janis Joplin and Richie Havens, too, and was it Cheech and Chong and who knows who with whom I had a toke or two? Yep, dinner and doobies with those two … make it three. Well, it all happened, yessiree, fine, just truckin’ down ol’ 99.
Throughout these writings I refer to the many incidents where, unbeknownst to me, I was in a learning process while battling my addictions to alcohol and other horrid habits.
Like the 2nd World War hero and classic western movie star Audie Murphy, I have been To Hell and Back. Not once or twice, but throughout my adult life. It’s been a hellacious roller coaster of illusive elation and lucid exhilaration, the difference between night and day. I call this creature Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hernandez.
In writing my memoirs I’ve been given the opportunity to get a pretty good look at myself and, though painful, I must say there’s a lot to be said for a no-holds-barred self-examination––voluntary tough love. That is why I have kept fighting the damned thing, addiction that is, and again I have a few years––seven as of this upcoming Valentine’s Day, 2025––of absolute sobriety under my belt.
It may not sound like much, but there is hope no matter how damn old you are. I tell you, when the smog of self-destruction via drugs and alcohol has cleared this is one stunningly magnificent world! More in the book at Addicts Unanimous.