No Expectations
by Lonn Friend
"We are we are/youth of the nation"
P.O.D. arrives on the iGod (what I call
the iPod on shuffle because of its uncanny ability to read my thoughts
and play just the right song at the exact instant its required) just after
six straight hours in front of Keith, Chris and the rest o' the MSNBC gang,
the bravest voices in network media by a country (China-sized) mile. They
get on the soapbox like they've got crystal balls and shields of armor.
And they report on the events of the day, of our time. They are sometimes
fearless, sometimes reckless, but always, committed to the truth. Because
that's what it's all about now. Has been moving that way for quite awhile.
Al Franken waxed brilliant on the lying liars, now officially on their
way out. The past seven years, reality has jumped to light speed and with
it, a thankfully expedited course toward the End Times has manifested.
And it is there, at Jim Morrison's 'End' that the truth shall bask in its
golden moment.
The lyric has long been the poetry writ
as life takes place in the presence of inexplicable wonders. Artists are
psychic freaks of nature, tortured beauties and beasts cursed with the
ability to hear the beats in between the beats. The faith-based rockers
from the bad side of San Diego whose moniker stands for 'payable upon death'
received their life force from the other side. Spirit drove dreadlock Sonny
and his gang to their instruments. They recorded an anthem in the spring
of 2001. They didn't know it was an anthem. Even if you're in the room
laying it down and the hairs on all the arms behind the board and in the
booth are rising, you still don't know it's an anthem until the PEOPLE
make it one. And the people made 'Youth of the Nation' an anthem. The LP,
Satellite, was released on September 11th of that year. The day the Earth
stood still and a higher power took over.
While the talking heads are astonished
and shocked by the last few days' political events, I am not. I am in awe
of the proceedings. Miracles? Indeed. Choose your parable. It will find
application somewhere amidst the happenings. I got a sign, not too long
ago, that nothing was certain and we would all be shown remarkable things.
It's 1:30 am. I'm at a Westside bar in
Manhattan, around the corner of the venerable SIR rehearsal studios where
the immortal ones have sharpened their axes and primed their pipes. Someone
famous owns the dive watering hole but I can't remember his name. Not important.
The Bogmen Billy, Bill, Brendan, P.J., Mark and Clive are out with
their former A&R guy, post tune up for the biggest performance of their
career, which by the way, ended as a formal unit several years ago. But
who's talking formal? Chance occurrences infused with synchronicity put
my Long Island-bred legacy in the palatial Nokia Theater in Times Square
the night before New Year's Eve.
"You stopped making money, Lonnie, because
you found God," giggles Billy the captain, the subway minstrel who once
said to me in no uncertain terms, "you can say it all in the verse." Obviously,
when you're making music for Clive Davis, a man whose success and hyperbolic
legend are based on the disposable chorus, the deck is not exactly stacked
in your favor. "Have another Guinness," laughs keyboardist Brendan, who
lost his wife, Kristy, that ebony day the P.O. D. record hit stores. "We're
buying this time." That was huge because when I had the Arista expense
account, these boys ate and drank. Well. I spent like $30k a year entertaining
comic book characters and chasing ghosts. I haven't cleared that sum for
a 12-month stretch since
never mind. That was then. I'm doing the prosperity
chant now, every morning, 22-minutes. It's all good.
Take me to the station
And put me on a train
I've got no expectations
To pass through here again
Once I was a rich man and
Now I am so poor
But never in my sweet short life
Have I felt like this before
P.J. starts singing. Then Clive, then Mark,
then the Ryan brothers, then the captain, united in their mission to make
this moment eternal. "We are nothing but the memory we leave behind," teach
the Yogis. I listen and sing along, until a lovely melancholy envelopes
me like a down comforter. The revelation is as clear as the frigid New
York night. Pilgrim, hear this, and hear this good. You must go forward,
into the wild, without expectations. This must be a universal edict. It
will not be easy. Hey, who's narrating this now? That blasted 'witness.'
Ten years treading sand in the virtual desert, my friends, and I sometimes
have trouble seeing the yucca from the Joshua.
I have no expectations. Therefore, each
event, however minute or magnificent in scope, possesses the same potential
for action and reaction. Shock and awe, complete disinterest, fully engaged,
mildly enraged, the vibration only arrives in the present. This is a script-less
state of being. When Barack won Iowa, I was dazzled. Watching it happen
was fun. Or as Marsha the mannequin said when asked how it was living amongst
the humans for a month in the classic Twilight Zone, 'The After Hours,'
"ever so much fun."
Roommate Rob speaks of the revolution,
the 'change.' He was so excited after Iowa. I was tempered. "Dude, it could
all be over tonight," he muses. "But then again, Hillary's a fighter. The
Clintons don't lose." I echo the pundit sound bites but just to be non-confrontational.
Beneath the surface of this shell I lug around in this incarnation's excuse
for a body, the inner voice, the only true voice, is back in the bar with
the boys. No expectations.
Keith and Chris are visibly rattled but
genuinely impressed. They act and report accordingly, donating props to
those responsible for pulling a fast one and shattering expectations. Analyzing
the back-to-back seismic political outcomes that are Iowa and New Hampshire,
there is a common thread, a unifying element of connection. Youth. The
youth of the nation voted en masse, blowing everyone's minds, even their
own parents'. The generation who must dig out from under the unconscious
landfill left behind by the Free Masons, evil doers, corporate demigods,
egomaniacs and just plain idiots that have run rampant amongst the good
folks for far too long. The youth of the nation will save us because they
have no expectations. It can't get any worse. We are there. We made it
to the finish line. "Can you picture what will be, so limitless and free?"
Oh yes, Jim. I can. We can. What did Barack roar? "Yes WE can."
The candidate who reveals his (or her)
truth will be our next President. The leader with the fragile heart can
perform feats of magic. It's how Barack took Iowa and Hillary wooed New
Hampshire. Show us your humanity, your sanity, recall your vanity and we'll
follow you. Yes we will. Neither of these camps had any expectations going
into these respective contests. Or perhaps they did but I'm just too far
gone an idealist to believe otherwise. And make no mistake; there is goddess
energy at work in tandem with the youngsters. Women and children first
an immortal Van Halen disc and the underground mantra for the oh eight
campaign. Color me crazy. I choose to see the world through the physically
myopic but spiritually 20/20 eyes I was given. My daughter starts college
in September. She is, she is, the youth of the nation. And a goddess to
boot.
Once I was a rich man.
I am still that rich man.
Lonn Friend
Copyright Rumi Enterprises 2007
Lonn Friend is Los Angeles based writer
who is the former editor of RIP Magazine, a television personality from
numerous VH-1 shows and is a published author whose most recent publication
is a rock n' roll memoir; 'Life On Planet Rock'.
Lonn can be contacted here.
Buy 'Life
on Planet Rock' here.
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a friend about this review
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