Monday, March 2, 2026

Infernos and Tender Mercies, Iran Follies and Religious Anarchism

 







In the 1983 film, Tender Mercies, Mac Sledge (Robert Duvall) wonders about one kid who lost his Dad in Viet Nam, another on the highway: "Sonny's daddy died in the war, my daughter killed in an automobile accident. Why? See, I don't trust happiness. I never did, I never will.”

It’s there but it goes away, ever appearing and receding into the distance.
I recall West Texas, going to visit Dad’s college buddy there, traveling with the family, the same roads Mac traversed in West Texas. 

At breakfast with Mom, we chatted about a dream she had, those days long behind us, but never entirely gone. 

Was Jamie here last night, she asked.

No, he was here in November. 

He was here, just not last night. 

My eyes drift to Left to the Left, Anatole Dolgoff’s memoir I am reading, with a quote from Albert Einstein:

“Now he has departed from this strange world a little ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us, who believe in physics, know that the distinction between past, present, and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion.”

Our dreams blur into the day. Looking at the headlines about the war, Mom recalled Fred, her friend who settled in West, Texas after college. He suggested they get a bottle of champagne to share, the two staying in a hotel in Tehran in 1965 with Dad and Tad. They had driven overland, from England, by sea, to France, across the continent, one road at a time, visiting Tehran, on the way  to India.

And we made our way back to New York.

Snapping shots of the industrial waterfront, Baby C gave me a sneer as we careened past Newark. I turned back to reading Hannah Arendt, on the way to Judson. 

There  Micah preached about Mary Magdalene and divine femininity, ever disrupted, by Empire and patriarchy, on Transfiguration Sunday.  As the story goes, Jesus leads followers up a mountain, revealing his divinity, with an otherworldly glow. He looked down at the city below, a bridge, with a clear view from Epiphany to Lent. It's hard to preach about Women’s month, as your friends are being bombed, noted Micah, in his sermon, like countless lives, disrupted by the Iran follow of the day before. 

West, Ray and I walked through Washington Square, past musicians, artists, talking about poetry and Rachel Maddow’s take on the way, on the way to the Center, for a conversation with Visual AIDS co-founder Robert Atkins on the occasion of his new book, AIDS, Art & the Origins of the Culture War: Selected Writings of Robert Atkins, joined by Sarah Schulman and Jackson Davidow. The three discussed “the Culture War, defined as a Christian Nationalist assault on the increasingly multicultural society and liberal ethos that emerged in the 1960s in the new form of attacks by Americans on other Americans. Opposing this movement, a few little-known groups–artists, queers, and people with AIDS, challenged the authoritarian inroads on the Constitution’s First-Amendment guarantees of free expression.” Atkins recalled the debut of the AIDS Memorial Quilt in Washington, DC, a battle of memory against cultural erasure, Pat Buchanan' speech at the RNC in 1992, that sounded like Goebbels wrote it, Anita Bryant’s retrograde rant from 1977, Nixon’s silent majority, on and on. 

The assault on trans lives and immigrants continues this movement.

Back East we strolled to Village Works, greeting Damian and Alley, at Village Works, on the way to East Broadway to chat with Anatole for a conversation about his father and dialectical anarchism, one big union and the wobbles, our eternal struggle for a sense of our humanity, wondering, was slavery or serfdom worse. Anatole recalled his favorite quote from Tolstoy: “The essence of all slavery consists in taking the product of another's labor by force. It is immaterial whether this force be founded upon ownership of the slave or ownership of the money that he must get to live.” 

Back home, I signed in for our Sunday book group. Ken is talking about Kenneth Rexroth’s approach to religious anarchism. We talk about Martin Buber’s The Way of Man, a series of postwar writings on Hasidism,  his meditations on religious anarchism. 

 Where are you, wonders one Rabbi. What have you done with your life?

Replying, Buber seems to paraphrase TS Elliot:

 "We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of all our exploring

Will be to arrive where we started

And know the place for the first time." 

Elliot, of course, seems to be leaning on Chrétien de Troyes’ Perceval, the Story of the Grail, an unfinished Old French verse romance, originating from the Arthurian romance genre and the Grail legend. Or at least it sounds like it to me. De Troyes follows the journey of Perceval becoming a knight and encountering the mysterious Grail. The story breaks off, leaving his quest incomplete. He searches to find the grail again, not seeing it until he returns home, where it remained his entire life. He wasn’t able to see it until he returned.

What are you doing? Have you used your life well, wonders the Rabbi. 

You cannot be closer to God if you are dismissing your fellow humans. 

Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you.

That's pleasing to god. 

Buber seems to paraphrase Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed. 

Love thy neighbors; be good to your neighbors. 

There’s an anarchism to Buber’s writings.  Is Buber an anarchist?  Well, certainly a "religious anarchist" or a proponent of "anarchist-socialism" and utopian community, though he did not strictly identify with political anarchism. There is certainly a theology in his thinking.

An elder in our group mentions an old testament story of a group of men about to stone a woman who has had an affair. He who has not sinned throw the first stone, says one. Yet, everyone has sinned. No one should throw a stone. Don't throw stones at anyone. 

My mind trails back to our current moment. 

As my lawyer Ron Kuby noted:

“The US-Israel joint venture yesterday murdered at least 115 Iranian schoolgirls.  I feel so much safer.  OK.  Let's try this.  There are nine dead Jews today who would not have died today had this war not been started by the US-Israel.  How does this make Jews safer?”


Feb 27th

Amnesty International has been gathering evidence of Iran’s mass killing of protesters following an ongoing internet blackout imposed by its authorities to conceal their crimes. The situation is dire, with countless lives at stake.

Feb 28th

I met my friends from Rise and Resist, a few of whom I know during the anti Iraq War years. I had my strangest bust with Jenny in 2002 before the Iraq War. Fun to see her, to talk about history. Donna told me about her first bust. Little did we know another war was in motion. We chatted about cats and demos, the ACTUP anniversary demo coming up March 21, dancing with our lawyer at his Fat Tuesday Party into the night…

Feb 29th

Word about the bombs in Iraq in the news on Saturday. 

How can I say I detest human rights violations, crackdown on protest and speech in Iran and the US. I also detest US interventions there, then and now.

My Louis Colombo says...

"Recent news with respect to Iran forced us to hold two contradictory thoughts in mind simultaneously:

1) This is likely an illegal war that will end badly.

2) The Iranian people deserve liberation from this murderous regime.

If there is anything to be hopeful here, and it’s a slim hope, it’s the 2 will be the unintended consequence of 1."

What could go wrong? Hmm, have we seen this movie before?

On August 19, 1953, the U.S. CIA and British intelligence (MI6) orchestrated a coup, known as Operation Ajax, which deposed Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. The intervention, aimed at protecting Western oil interests after nationalization, restored absolute power to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, establishing a long-term dictatorship, laying the seeds for long term animosity toward the US.

Feb 29th, 

Later that afternoon, we made our way to Time Square for the anti war demos, the usual anti war groups and their money for …, not for war signs. It's like groundhog day here. 

War with Iran? Really ? What could possibly go wrong? Not that I'm a fan of the regime that recently murdered some 7,000 people speaking up. I recall an Iran nuke\peace deal with Iran that Bolton gutted.

Says Nicholas Kristof in the Times: "When you’ve witnessed the horror of war, you believe it should be a last resort — not an abyss we tumble into without legal basis or clear objectives, pushing us all unnecessarily into a riskier world in which the only certainty is bloodshed."

Snaps of chums from the demo at Times Square.

Feb 29th

The world going nuts, I walked around the Lower East Side, to the anti war demo, to visit Mom and

the ageless Shanny, trying to make sense of it all.

My friend Cleve Jones notes..."My memory is not what it used to be. Please remind me of all those times US military intervention brought freedom and democracy to formerly repressed and abused peoples."


A strange few days since the snow came. 

Feb 21/22

Spent the weekend with Will and Mom and Sophia, cooking, watching hockey. Go USA men, To Kill a Mockingbird, thinking about Moms childhood world. The books banned now. How far we've moved. First night.

First night, I took the train to Moms. On arriving I was worried I might have left Nigel, the cat, outside the night before. They regularly beg to go outside. I was petrified I had left our little one outside freezing. I couldn't sleep. Rushed home to find Nigel inside. Oh  ve. Cat love. And then back out to Princeton for more hockey. 

Holy shit!!! 46 years. We were kids in Dallas watching the game on the TV in Dad's study in Feb 1980. I had a party to watch the U S lose to Canada in 2010, thirty years later. Wow. Epic game Canada!

Feb 22

We've been at book group for over a decade. Nothing like meeting my comrades, on a snowy day, to read a sexxxy modern novel, Eileen Myles, Inferno (A Poet's Novel),  about lesbian subjectivity in the East Village,  modeled on Dante, mentors with robust derrieres, thinking about Virgil, Kathy Acker, Ted, pixie dream girls, feelings and words, being lost in a dark wood, scribbling notes on a bar napkin. 

"All the details of my life were in exact order and yet I was tumbling in them-out of order like a tremendous wave had hit me and I was thrown off the ship and I awoke or dreaming, or dead I knew not-no I couldn't speak," writes Eileen Myles in Inferno (A Poet's Novel).

Reading about Eileen writing about Eileen becoming a poet, Mattie suggested we think about Borges, particularly his 1962 short story Borges and I:

“The other one, the one called Borges, is the one things happen to. I walk through the streets of Buenos Aires and stop for a moment, perhaps mechanically now, to look at the arch of an entrance hall and the grillwork on the gate; I know of Borges from the mail and see his name on a list of professors or in a biographical dictionary,” Borges begins, writing about a writer named Borges. “Years ago I tried to free myself from him and went from the mythologies of the suburbs to the games with time and infinity, but those games belong to Borges now and I shall have to imagine other things. Thus my life is a flight and I lose everything and everything belongs to oblivion, or to him. I do not know which of us has written this page.”

Feb 23 / 24

Snow pours all night, into the morning. I greet Nigel, our cat, looking at the tree outside, that howled about, I guess I need to trim, that was swaying about, bumping, throwing off snow, howling in the wind, wind gusting, hurling into the window, keeping me up, alive, supernatural. Still quiet.

Strange days. A huge wave of snow, enveloping us. Digging us out, it seemed to pull back, tugging at me. By late afternoon it stopped. We're still digging out. Remote teaching today. Sigh. The skies are blue today. It's lovely and bright out.

Feb 25

Jonathan says: “The State Of The Union under the claws of this regime is a...state of disgrace.”

For a second, in the afternoon, it stopped snowing. Sidewalks were cleared. Barbes open, a table for us in front. But woke to more today. Sidewalks covered in white. Flurries drifting from the sky, filling the dreamscape.

That morning I rode to City Hall for the rally against Buffer legislation, restricting protest in New York. 

“I am writing to you as a New Yorker opposed to the buffer zone legislation [S.8599 (Sutton) / A.9335 (Lasher)], and Governor Hochul’s inclusion of the proposal in her budget. I am committed to safety, and gravely concerned about the buffer zone legislation,” I wrote. “Strong, pluralistic democracy creates the best conditions for the safety of all marginalized groups. Legislation that restricts protest undermines the open society we cherish here in New York State, which has allowed diverse communities to thrive for centuries. The proposed bill will restrict New Yorkers’ right to assembly and free speech at exactly the same time that the federal government is waging war on our cities, particularly targeting protestors and legal observers.  Support the right to protest!!!!”

Inside City Hall, my friend Ken testified:

“My name is Ken Schles, I’m a father, a lifelong New Yorker, and a Jewish member of JVP. I’m also a childhood survivor of antisemitic violence. I strongly oppose Intros 1a and 175a to create arbitrary deployable “buffer zones” around places of worship and educational facilities. 

These bills, presented as part of a package to combat antisemitism, pit parts of NYC’s Jewish community against the right to protest. They don’t address hate. They threaten NY’s storied tradition of activism, protest and the public’s ability to speak truth to power. These bills give police “discretion” to criminalize proximal acts of protest. In Minnesota, it was also by “discretion” that DHS officers murdered peaceful protesters deemed to be in the “wrong” place. Constitutional rights should never be contingent on police “discretion.”


Intro 1a was written in response to incidents at synagogues where stolen Palestinian land was illegally auctioned. Synagogues should not be a cover for illegal acts. 


In our upside-down world, even valid claims of anti-semitism have been weaponized against us. In places of higher learning, antisemitism is used as a pretext to eliminate research funding; to threaten accreditation. My daughter, currently studying for her Masters at Columbia, tells me how fearful students and faculty are to speak their minds. She describes a chill that has befallen the campus. 


These bills will do nothing to reduce hate, nor would they have safeguarded me from the antisemitic violence I experienced as a child. They follow upon a pattern of federal civil rights reversals that allow egregious violations of rights to flourish. I implore the City Council to reject Intros 1a and 175. Consider seriously that only in a free society will NY’ers be safe.”


Feb 26th

Al and I talked about Trump and Hockey and the time Bobby Colomby took a pic of Monk and the ways his friends talked about LBJ. And they lit a great fire at Bijans. The snow melted a little on Hoyt Street.

“Columbia says DHS detained student after agents entered university building…”

Feb 27th

My friend Shan Shan Song's book of poems,Thick as My Noodles, Bok Choy of My Soul: Poems (North Meridian Press),

is finally seeing the light.  These are gorgeous poems of a life, I wrote in a blurb.  Reading Thick as My Noodles, Bok Choy of My Soul, sometimes one poem reminds you of everything, one story, one body in space, walking through a city, hoping for something. For a short while I lived in Chicago, walking, looking for something, losing everything, finding a city of characters, flop houses, trains, blues lounges and leather bars. I learned about sexologist Alred Kinsey’s explorations of prisons, queers in jail, locked up, in and out of the underworld. When Kinsey conducted research in Chicago in 1939 and 1940, he found that queer life was far more expansive than understood, the world more diverse, much like gall wasps he collected as a young entomologist, that assumptions of sexuality needed to be more tolerant and less judgmental. Chicago was a critical location for the study of queer lives, reminding us that notions of “normal” and "abnormal" sexual behavior missed the mark. I can only imagine what would have happened if he’d come across the boisterous, heartwarming, comradely poems of Shan Shan Song, who locates Chicago at the center of their queer imaginary. This is a  poetry of a city, a space for lovers and mental health breakdowns, for polyamory and wrestling practice, social work and trauma, “where Emma Goldman had her ice cream shop… ” Shan Shan Song’s story is  a city, Chinese-American, neurodivergent, trans amorous, of songwriting,  community organizing, petting cats, making new recipes for polycules and singing. Dive in and discover a cosmos.”

































Saturday, February 21, 2026

"it has a new story to tell every day”: Rainbows and and Mardi Gras

 

 








"it has a new story to tell every day”: Rainbows and and Mardi Gras

All week, Rainbow Flags went up and down in the park. I was supposed to go to New Orleans for Mardi Gras, to spread some ashes. But a lot was going on. 

I’d always been a little apprehensive about Mardi Gras. Scared of crowds, sympathizing with Bowie’s lament, ‘I’m Afraid of Americans.’ But my heroes had all been there. They’d found a place.  Named King of the Zulus in 1949, Louis Armstrong famously called it a lifelong dream, saying, “There's a thing I've dreamed of all my life and I'll be damned if it don't look like it's about to come true—to be King of the Zulus' parade. After that, I'll be ready to die”. He added, “Nothin' like this nowhere else in this world. Man, this is my town. This is the greatest city in the whole wide world”.

I was ready to go take on the gumbo of cultures, fun and music, but things were getting pretty dramatic with our rainbow at home.  

Feb 10

I got a message to go to Stonewall earlier in the day, riding over after class. “Whose park, our park!!!’ queer activists screemed in front of the Stonewall Monument,  where the Rainbow Flag was removed by the feds, by the time I arrived. Stonewall means fight back, said activists. “We're here, we're queer and we ain't going anywhere…” others followed. “It starts with trans people, they come for all of us,” said Jay Walker. “They are targeting refugees, anyone who is an other. This is all of us, all of us. We all gotta stand up for each other and each marginalized community,” says Jay connecting the dots between struggles in ways few can. “We gotta stand together to get through this,” says Jay.

Earlier in the day, Steven Love Menendez implored the community to  attend the rally, to gather with the community! 

"The Rainbow Flag is a symbol of beauty and of all the colors of the spectrum coming together in a sign of UNITY! In many cultures since ancient times, the Rainbow has symbolized hope after the storms of life. These are the reasons why the Rainbow flag was chosen to represent the Queer community! We are a force of Love and Hope and have room for everyone under our umbrella during the darkest of times! The current administration is attempting to divide folks through the tactics of fear and hatred. The removal of the flag is an attempt at erasure. WE WILL NOT LET THIS HAPPEN! The Queer community is a force of Love, acceptance and unconditional support for all who suffer from the unjust actions of those filled with judgment and hatred!  The greatest darkness brings the greatest light…!!!


That energy was everywhere at the Stonewall. 

You felt it in the streets all week long. 

Feb 11

Next morning, I biked over to the Brooklyn NAVY Yard. 

No war profiteers in Brooklyn!!! we screamed.

Ken explains:

“After a year and a half of pressure from the Demilitarize Brooklyn Navy Yard campaign, the Brooklyn Navy Yard (BNY) has been forced not to renew Easy Aerial’s lease…. a multiplicity of tactics including direct action, political education, worker outreach, and deep community organizing worked to materially impact the supply chains of imperialism, zionism and fascism.”

After class that night, Baby C and I stopped by Joe's Pub to see my old ACT UP buddy, Kendall Thomas perform My Funny to Valentine, a Miles Davis songbook. One part storytelling  about the law and Jazz and the American songbook, another a story of friendship. 'I want to feel the way Miles sounds," he quoted his friend Farah Jazzmine Griffin, referring to the artistic, emotional, and existential coolness in his music, a theme from her book, In Search of a Beautiful Freedom. Kendall is one of the New Yorkers I met my first week in town, always someone to admire. He joked about looking for love in all the wrong places. I guess we all are. 

Got home and learned Bud Court had left, the “Trouble” Sequence from Harold and Maude passing through my mind, Maude on her way, Harold left with his Banjo. I recall getting home from the hospital after seeing Tim, one of our last meetings, before he left, returning to watch Harold and Maude with Bear. The hellos and goodbyes are many.

Feb 12

No class the next day. Baby C and I met Al, before making our way to the West Village, thrifting for my outfit for Box of Wine, the Bachalian parade at Mardi Gras. In between, we stopped by Sheridan Square where Jay and company were re raising Gilbert's Rainbow Flag. The square filled with people, screams and applause, a cathartic defiance filled the air, as the city challenged the fed’s pathetic attempt to whitewash history. Stonewall means fighting back, then and now. 

Says the news, "BREAKING: NEW YORKERS RE-RAISE THE PRIDE FLAG IN FRONT OF THE STONEWALL MONUMENT, IN DIRECT DEFIANCE OF DONALD TRUMP’S ORDER."

Off to the East Village, to Village Works, to Clockwork with Gene. And up to Freeman's Alley off Rivington Street, snow and murals along the walls on a day to remember.

Feb 13

And out the door early the next morning, 4 AM, off to the airport, for NOLA.

The good vibe started on the flight from Atlanta to NOLA, Atlanta people excited to get here, asking me questions about Brooklyn, sharing tips. And then the music in the airport named after Louie Armstrong. Ariette  and I talked about her beloved Haiti and the French, creole beans and rice vs Cajun gumbo with its French Acadian influences.  Everyone has an opinion about the mix of cultures and food. Have you noticed how mean people are these days, she asked. And so the weekend adventure began, with tips about parades, Zulu, Fat Tuesday when you indulge before lent, life lessons.

Arriving, I got to my room and made plans to see my friend Sonni, from NYC, who took me to a drag ball in  Chalmette, a 15 minute drive from the quarter.   Out to La Cabaret for drag queen story hour with the Krewe of Armenius, for a sartorial affair, off off off off Broadway with our host Fatsy Cline, riffing on banned books and censorship. 'Dont worry the fow is over 50,000' is the gift that keeps on giving, joke after joke.

And off to Vaughns, the iconic 9th Ward dive bar established in 1959, located in the Bywater neighborhood, famous live music, on Dauphine Street, where we used to see Kermit play, to see Valparaiso Men's Chorus, a group of musicians "known for performing sea shanties, described as "cosmic naval music" featuring instruments like sousaphone, washboard, and pennywhistle". Packed we sang and danced and danced and sang one crazy version of the drunken sailor with pirate songs,  after another, the whole place joining, a mosh pit pushing us about, as we sang about what to do with a drunken sailor. I was pushed and squooshed about in the crowd of bodies. And walked back into the night, up Dauphine, frenetic energyin the streets, Dauphine and Desire, through apparitions and shadows, from this world and that, filling the night, crossing the Esplenade where the trees lurk, extending into the sky. I wrote for hours yesterday in Atlanta on my layover. Stories and streets, late night music. People out and about, alive. Less tourists. You feel the crackdown on internationals. But this feels beyond time. For a night, some sartorial levity, some music, some people watching, dipping in and out of bars, music, lots and lots of people.

"your joy inscribed itself on the sidewalk and it has never been washed away" says the mural on Dauphine along  "Homer Plessy Way", a street recognizing Plessy's role in challenging Louisiana's Separate Car Act, which led to the landmark 1896 Supreme Court ruling Plessy v. Ferguson.

Feb 14

I wake up for more NOLA wandering. To the waterfront, out to Flora Cafe, out Gallatoire's, remembering, out to Saturn bar, seeing Gene's old spots, Will arriving, lots of stories, lots of dancing. The rain poured. And the carnival in full motion.

Feb 15

Beads flying through the air, people screaming, welcoming everyone on the street, we walked out the door. Off to meet our friends, meeting the box of wine, our to party with Bacchus!!!!

Life is a cabernet old chum, thats the theme of our continent at box of wine, a parade organized to keep the spirit of Dionysus alive, at Mardi Gras. We met at the Dew Drop Inn to wait to kick off, chatting about the carnival in Brazil, people out and about, some dressed as cats, others as Sally Bowles, in Cabaret, with warnings about fascism,   walking past old cemeteries, box of wine in hand for supporters of  of the god of wine on St Charles, college kids, grandma's, people of all walks of life, enjoying a sip. A tad excessive, still people are out, interacting, sharing, laughing, taking a sip, running into friends, people of stilts in Sally Bowles hats, kids, parents, devotees, members of the house of yes contingent, finally all afternoon, finally stopping at the Rabbit Hole, in the Central City/Warehouse District area, supporting music from brass and funk to electronic and house. Out for gumbo, watching more of the Bachus parade, throngs of people on to Siberia bar, on St Claude, for more bands, dancing with the remaining members of the crew, international brass bands whirling us into a frenzy, still shaking into the night... 

'happy carnival yall,' some people said as we walked back to the Vieux Carré, 'the old square', 'love your outfits.'

Feb 16

My friends in New York let the president know what they thought of him, giving the president the bird. Jerry Goralnik posted:

“HAPPY PRESIDENTS' DAY. Some say we were being frivolous but we needed to let off some steam so a flash mob was organized to fill the street and collectively make a rude gesture to the sitting president.”

In NOLA, we were off to a crawfish broil.

Woke up for the Annual Lundi Gras Celebration, strolling to to Flora Cafe, reading the writing on the wall. “Jeane i am sorry you maybe got ghosted you are loved,” says one mural. We walk along joining a renegade parade, to the Spotted Owl on Frenchman Street.  


"Life is short but the next two days are going to be very long," says the singer for Bad Penny and the Pleasure Makers, before singing, "Tonite You Belong to Me."


Up the Esplenade, we continue, past the trees, we walk thinking about Boo Radley, rip Robert, the secret places in the city, the struggles for something better, rip Jessee, onward rainbow coalition. We see it everywhere at Mardi Gras. 


Out to the

1:00 pm Crawfish Boil & Bands @ 1913 Esplanade (Jess & David’s) with three bands!

Pulso de Barro

The Heeters

Okie Weiss and the Zydeco Playboys

Crawfish after crawfish, red bean and rice.

 Our friend from dancing the night before told me the earth wants us to be happy.  She gives us all we need. He's been on the road for a decade, off the grid.

Pulso de Barro sings sad songs about the world, our pulse, sweating it out, out with the bad, in with the hood, alive with each other... more crawfish, more dancing...  out to the Saturn Bar, where BCCoogan, attacks the keyboard, through a set of solo songs in the city’s piano tradition, serenading us...

"When I Die (You Better Second Line)"

Feb 17

"It's like life should be, people smiling, mingling, laughing, like the old Peter Sellers movie when Sellers and company escape the asylum and run the town," says Lady Di, when asked what Mardi Gras mean to you, as we stood with the  early crew - at the Old Firehouse in Marigny - 721 Mandeville st.

St Anthony Ramblers & Panorama Brass Band about to play.

"To me, Mardi Gras means freedom," says one elder on a stoop watching it all. "It means coming together.

"Life is absurd, maybe we need to celebrate that more..."

We can come together, share this planet together. Elders and kids, friends, family... spreading joy, recalling lost friends.

"Just remember, our joy, it's what they want to crush. Red beans and rice, eat em hot, eat em cold, they are good for your soul."

"I didn't think it was possible to have this much fun in a day, said Kwemi.

“Mardi Gras means fun to me,” says another elder, her family here nine generations. We were between Dauphine and Piety. No women got married. 

I think we’re getting closer to that world, says Chris, speaking of a beloved community where we all can love each other. 

"Its centering both loss and love, death and life," says another participant.

One step with death, another life.

At 11:30am the Krewe of Kosmic Debris converged at the Blue Nile on Frenchman (marigny) ...

We parade to the river, and hold court at the Mississippi river to remember our beloveds.

The band played, Down by the Riverside...

"I'm gonna lay down my heavy load

Down by the riverside

Down by the riverside

Down by the riverside

I'm gonna lay down my heavy load

Down by the riverside

Gonna study war no more."

We got to the waterfront.

'Welcome to the Krewe of Kosmic  Debris,' noted an elder.

The band plays, 'A Closer Walk with Thee.'

'There's a lot of dead people to remember,'

Robert DuVal

Jessee Jackson

Virginia

Bruce

Uncle John.

Aunt Anne

Mr knill

Ms knill

All gone.

At the water, Alex and Chris welcomed us.

My mind flashed back to meeting Bruce all those years ago.

Looking at his clocks.

Chatting with Dad, the two laughing a lifetime ago. 

I can’t stop thinking about 

Moms dream about Helen being dressed up, the two going to a party.

Taking dad's ashes to the water.

Looking at the riverboat, my mind trailed back to Huck Finn and Jim, mythic time and our time, co mingling. 

Our life here.

 Chris talked about his father’s lesson that no love is simple. Few of us perfect it. We let each other down. But we keep trying. We keep empathizing, caring, reaching out, talking, listening, staying open to each other, even changing across our lives.  Our bodies become frail, still we desire, and age, and transform, scattered in time, connecting oceans and tributaries, lives and families. 

Alex and Chris pour Bruce's ashes in the river of time.

Welcoming Bruce to the river of life, Cosmic time. White ashes mixed in the water, where we lay Dad’s ashes all those years ago, where Huck and Jim escaped social conventions, a couple guys floating along a raft.

Mark Twain, worked as steamboat pilot, drafting his notes for  Huckleberry Finn, viewing the river as as a untamable, ever-changing, and majestic force of nature, of wild power.

    "The Mississippi River will always have its own way...." writes Twain.  "it has a new story to tell every day."  Its a place of loss, of something in us, something found in connecting ourselves with a larger world, from the Carribean, across a continent, between this life and that, this world and that. 

"...when I had mastered the language of this water... I had lost something…” writes Twain.

On the way back to NYC, I thought about Robert Duval, who was Boo, in my favorite novel adn movie.  "Neighbors bring food with death and flowers with sickness and little things in between. Boo was our neighbor. He gave us two soap dolls, a broken watch and chain, a pair of good-luck pennies, and our lives. But neighbors give in return. We never put back into the tree what we took out of it: we had given him nothing, and it made me sad." — Harper Lee, *To Kill a Mockingbird

Back in New York, I thought about Jesse Jackson’s rainbow coalition, his ACTUP Arrest 1993. We watched him remind the kids, “I am somebody.”

But I can't stop thinking about what we saw on the river, the ashes, into the river of time, of life, the peaks, valleys, crescendos, the music, the living and dying, music and bodies, the stories and grief, from Fat Tuesday into Ash Wednesday. 


TS Elliots' poem:

“Because I do not hope to turn again

Because I do not hope

Because I do not hope to turn

Desiring this man's gift and that man's scope

I no longer strive to strive towards such things

(Why should the agèd eagle stretch its wings?)

Why should I mourn

The vanished power of the usual reign?

Because I do not hope to know

The infirm glory of the positive hour

Because I do not think

Because I know I shall not know

The one veritable transitory power

Because I cannot drink

There, where trees flower, and springs flow, for there is nothing again

Because I know that time is always time…”


Revelling in the US hockey, my mind’s somewhere else, Louie’s old song asks:

"Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans

And miss it each night and day

I know I'm not wrong, the feeling's getting stronger

The longer I stay away

Miss the moss covered vines, the tall sugar pines

Where mocking birds used to sing

And I'd like to see the lazy Mississippi

A-hurrying into spring

Over Mardi Gras the memories

Of Creole tunes that filled the air

I dream of oleanders in June

And soon I'm wishing that I were there..."


Carnival season ended on February 17, 2026, the day before Ash Wednesday and the start of Lent. 

Rainbows on my mind, Mardi Gras is everywhere, for everyone.