Oh, I Am SO Guilty!
May 09, 2006 07:36 PM Filed in:
Fun &
Interesting
Spring Has Sprung, So Keep On The Grass
By Garrison Keillor
Published April 19, 2006
Chicago Tribune
The robins and finches are singing here on the frozen tundra and
the crocuses are popping up, yellow and purple bunches among the
winter crud, and the heart is struck by one dumb idea after
another, such as the urge to open a bookstore.
"Wholly to be a fool while spring is in the world, my blood
approves," wrote e.e. cummings, and what could be more foolish than
the book business? To go mano a monstero with Amazon and Wal-Mart,
much as one might attack a rhinoceros with an umbrella. On the
other hand, a rhinoceros with an umbrella might be a
pushover.
And then I got the idea to open a "breakfast cafe" where a lady in
a little black dress stands in the crook of a piano and sings love
songs at 8 a.m. My daughter-in-law would run it, so it could
legally be called Breakfast at Tiffany's. People come in for two
eggs over easy on hash browns and they hear the grand old songs of
Gershwin and Berlin and Kern, which are associated with saloons,
but love has less to do with martinis at wee hours than with coffee
and breakfast. This most certainly is true. He may be Mr. Smooth at
night, but does he wake up as Vlad the Impaler? You should find
out.
However, knowledge does not predict behavior.
Smart people can do dumb things. They can fall in love with
vampires. Some cardiologists are chain-smokers. Einstein unlocked
the secrets of the universe, but he ran his sailboat up on a
sandbar. I have met nutritionists with PhDs who confessed that
while driving alone late at night in strange cities and seeing the
giant yellow arches, have pulled in, ordered the double
cheeseburger with bacon and the supersize fries, and parked in the
shadows and slid down low in the seat and eaten the whole bucket of
slops. Theologians have cashed in their pensions and flown off to
Rio with Amber the cocktail waitress.
In time, one wearies of foolishness, but not soon enough. I look at
crowded bars on Saturday night as a form of hell. I see the high
school girls getting plastered at the prom and vomiting their
little hearts out in the parking lot and think, "No more for me,
thank you very much." But there is always some fresh foolishness to
try.
Here in the Midwest, we're brought up to act older and to be solemn
little children, and serious young people. Many of us don't indulge
in extravagances (vacations, impractical cars, haircuts that cost
more than $10) until our late 30s and early 40s. Having been
middle-aged for most of the first half of our life, we start
thinking about maybe sowing some of the wild oats we've kept in the
granary. Of course, it's hard to be wholly foolish knowing as much
Scripture as we do, but sometimes in a particularly warm spring, we
achieve a breakthrough and trade in the van on a red MG
convertible, have our hair bleached and our foreheads Botoxed, take
dancing lessons, buy the powder-blue tuxedo, look at beachfront
property on Antigua, and switch from beer to Campari. Our friends
are embarrassed for us. We disappear for six months and return,
chastened, and take a back pew in church.
The Christian religion, let me point out, is no guarantee against
foolishness. In the church that I go to, which is one of those
old-fashioned churches where we sing out of hymnals, not off
PowerPoint screens, and the minister doesn't have much hair and we
don't hold our arms up in the air (we could but it would make it
harder to sing from the hymnal), people seem to have about as many
problems as they have over at First Atheist. We set out to love our
neighbor and the next thing we're running off with her in the red
MG.
I have found the adage "Step on a crack and break your mother's
back" very useful as a guide in life. It has helped generations of
kids imagine that acts have consequences beyond what we can
imagine. Without meaning to, you might cause the old lady to
suddenly fall to the floor, writhing in pain. Who knows how it
happens? It just does. So if you stay off the pavement and walk
only on grass or bare dirt, you are likely to stay out of trouble.
Try it for 30 days and see if I'm not right.
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Garrison Keillor is an author and radio host of "A Prairie Home
Companion."