Category Archives: Uncategorized

Michael Jackson’s glove

Michael Jackson wore one glove and the kids all thought one glove man that’s crazy, I’m going to do my thing too so they tied bandanas on their wrists and wore them to school or put on a jacket inside out.

So there Michael Jackson was, at the top of the charts with his one sequined glove hiding himself, ashamed in his mottling skin.

Too scared to dare let his voice speak for itself, to be the baddest dancer on the planet, UH! Up on those toes putting it in your face and grabbing it just in case you still needed some help getting with the program. Not a chance man, better to improve the disguise and make his whole thing be about a sequined glove.  All glove man, white and sparkling to hide that creeping blemish.

One day though, he took that glove off and walked around his old neighborhood.  He stopped at a Deli on 23rd Ave and bought a knish, potato. Nobody recognized him, although one elderly neighbor asked, ain’t you that kid? Michael braced for the recognition, but then- who pulled that dog out of the lake last Christmas?

Man, that was all right.  Good for you kid.

Michael wished he pulled that dog out of the lake, but he hadn’t been around the old district for a long, long time.

Two and a half blocks away at 24th and Monroe, catty-cornered from the spot where Michael stood regretting he was not the boy for which he’d been mistaken, Black June shooed gnats on her stoop waiting for her ride.  She remembered Michael as a boy, although they were not friends.  Two and a half blocks is a vast distance, too far to be considered neighbors in 1968 Gary, Indiana.  Black June and Michael played 4-square once, when they both happened to wander into the borderlands of backyard clotheslines and familiar faces from the schoolbus.  Black June lifted a towering waterfall into Michael’s square.  With an un-speckled fist he smashed at the red rubber ball, failing to make good contact.  The ball shanked out of bounds and Black June called, “OUT!” Michael knew it was out yet in embarrassment he argued the ball fell in-bounds. Black June called him a liar and the other kids took geographically-considered positions on the matter.  Michael’s commitment to his lie earned him a do-over in which he fake-bombed causing June to step back as he flicked it to the center.  The ball fell for the second bounce and he avoided June’s stare.  During dinner later that night his mother asked him, “What’s wrong with  you son?” “I am a liar” thought Michael, but he said, “I don’t know.”  Before bedtime, as he soaked in a cooling tub, he silently cried– gritting his teeth and frowning against the shame.  Years later, when he was the planet’s biggest, most beloved star Black June was eating breakfast when her sister mentioned the sequined glove.  Black June saw his small black fist hit the ball out-of-bounds, and imagined it shanking off of soft cotton and a crinkle of sequins.  Her sister raised an eyebrow for a response, but Black June just shrugged and looked down at her Cheerios.

-juancho

 

Loyalty

 

The things are in the saddle and they ride the people. 

-Emerson

I have a more than passing devotion to my vehicle.  It is a GMC Safari, born just before the turn of the century, 1998.  I bought it from my mother, whom I never call “Mother” when she upgraded to a 2005 version of the same.  My van has circumnavigated the Gulf of Mexico, piloted by her, once or twice.  It easily carries four large mountain bikes and 4 passengers, although there are no working seat belts in the back seat.  It is not a mini-van, it is a maxi-van.  I am way past the point of reasonable accommodation for repairs.  Although the engine has rarely faltered, arthritis has set into the electronics system.  The transmission has an ominous kick when it shifts from 2nd to 3rd.  It ran hot to the point of melting once. The mechanic found no damage, but I suspect that episode left a mark somewhere deep in the block.

Last month, on the road home from Gulf Shores, AL, the smell of burning aluminum foil filled the cab.  That terrible sweet smell of a tweaker on meth sweating their way deep into Ketosis.  The rain fell so fast and hard that the tire tracks on I-10 were filled with water and I surfed along the edges, confident in the Safari’s roadworthy heft to keep us safe.  Then my wife, with fear in her voice, said “Juancho!  There’s smoke!” and I tacked across the hydroplane lanes and beached us as far on the shoulder as I dared.  She grabbed the poodle, Summer Chanel, and we bailed into the muddy bank, tractor-trailers blasting by 3 feet from the driver’s side door.  It was a low moment.  Certain that the van and all our cargo was about to burn up, I held fast to the relief that we were safe, and could find our way to shelter.  Then nothing else happened.

I popped the hood, no smoke.  My wife inspected the door, and tried to roll down the window, which produced one last dramatic puff and a serious stench.  It was the window motor.  Just the window motor!  All was well.  We loaded back in, wet but relieved and I punched the accelerator, sling-shotting us back to highway speed.  I apologized and soothed, and promised to get a new vehicle as soon as I could.

I have a good job, and thanks to the influence of my wife, a decent credit score.  My bank happily offered to place me in debt to about any amount I liked.  My heart isn’t in it though.  Everything is a step down from my van.  I am reminded of a couple of useful homilies which I will now share with you.

Pa Ingalls, whom you may remember from this blog, had a little mutt named Suey Dog.  Suey Dog was part Boxer maybe, part something else and she followed Pa around like his familiar.  They were such a pair.  Trustworthy and loyal to one another beyond compare.  Pa never had to worry about Suey Dog.  She would jump in the truck,  ready to go anywhere.  These two grew up together, as she followed Pa from a teenage skate brat to wilderness guide, to married rancher.  Suey-girl, as Pa affectionately called her, had three legs.  The story goes that she was hit by a car shortly after Pa adopted her, and in his grief and panic, he asked his mom if they were going to have to put Suey Dog down.  His mother replied, “When you broke your arm we didn’t put you down did we?”  That was that, and Suey Dog survived long into Pa’s adulthood, may she rest in peace.

Our next story comes secondhand from that Mother of mine, by way of the History Channel perhaps.  So I mentioned that I have a job, and could therefore finance a new or lightly used automobile.  Although by examining my track record I am quite the Steady Eddie when it comes to employment, it is essential that I feel like I can walk away into the sunset.  The shackles of debt have ground down better men than I.  I want to do this work with a joyful heart, and beholden to none but my wife, my creatures, and those whom I  serve.  When Harry and Bess Truman left office, they returned to their humble home in Independence, Missouri with no more than an Army pension.  He said he just couldn’t stomach the thought of exploiting the office of the President for financial gain.  Ha!  What an utter buffoon! A moron! A man of integrity!

So, thanks for listening.  I still may replace the Safari, or I may resurrect it yet again.

Juancho

 

Lessons

I resist the urge to speak on this, these events of the day.  I do so now with a sigh, acknowledging that to respond to the news is to be governed by the news.  I speak now only because I have something to share that I have not yet heard.  Something I learned from a friend, that I repeat any time the conversation turns toward the interests and activities of Black Americans.

In the years between my departure from Tallahassee in 1993, and my return in 1998 I covered a lot of territory.  As young people will, I set out into the world to test myself.  In a culture and time where the rites of passage were poorly defined, or unappealing, I sought experiences that I hoped would reveal to me the limits of my courage, the depth of my character.  Mine was a mad run, with the responsibilities of adulthood stalking my trail.  I refused to sign leases, obtained no credit, and owned few items I would not abandon in an instant.

For a young man interested in testing his character, in plumbing his courage, there are only two arenas. There is the choosing of the harder path, the physical inanimate world and the timeless tests of nature, or there is positioning oneself counter to others, and bracing for the intimate struggle of one’s will against the will of another.  In my five years of wandering I found both.  Much of what it is written here is an accounting of that first arena.  The snow-blind drive over icy Interstate 90 to watch the sun rise from a natural hot spring, naked in sub-zero temperatures, bleating Wapiti a few hundred feet away.  The first trembling steps up a rock face, chalked and taped fingers driving into cracks until they bled. Backpacking for days along the Bridger ridge, hunkering down in fear as lightning crackled both above and below and the rain threatened to scrape you from the mountain.   Descending down a line into ancient tunnels formed 350 million years ago.

Then, onto the world of humans and the challenge of surviving among them.  I took a job as a bicycle messenger to glide through the city of Portland, one steadying hand on a bus as the rain splatters in the polished, granite gutters.  Loafing in coffee shops testing the merit of your thoughts, your wit, sullenly measuring yourself against the other clownish knights errant, little boys playing dress up in daddy’s wardrobe.  Pretend businessmen holding fingers over their lips like mustaches before slinking back to our dish-washing jobs and bailout checks from mommy.

These experiences are not enough for a young man still not fully formed, perhaps rattled by how hard it all is!  How to become a somebody when the world is full of nobodies?  I don’t want to be a nobody, but maybe that is all I am up for becoming. These are the thoughts that keep a young man awake at night, gripping the sweaty bed sheets as he feels the uncaring earth hurtle through space.

Desperate, in a panic to find my somebody-ness I fled the country.  I malingered in the streets of Barcelona, shacked up in a flat full of worldly students who all seemed to know exactly who they were and what they were out to become.  One of them a doctor already, and sixty-two years old, a woman from Cuba who cooked sometimes and explained that in Cuba one had to know how to cook if one was to make arroz con pollo delicious sin pollo.  As they went off to school each day I rode the metro to a language school where I whiled away the hours with delightful students as we blew off the textbooks in favor of vino tinto and tortilla de patat.

Finally, for my grand finale, I swung by the destroyed nation of Bosnia-Hercegovina, to get close, but not too close, to the horrors of war.  Thinking perhaps a young man’s character could be tested by proximity to suffering.  I heard stories of hideous atrocities and smoked cheap cigarettes with the people who survived them, while my own test was constructed more of enduring the rattling and endless train rides, the warm beer, and the shame of a passport that could end my tour while others would live out this misery to its final end.

So all of this background, forgive me, to bring us to a moment on a porch in Tallahassee, FL.  Taking in the evening with my co-worker, Dwayne back in 1998.  We worked together in the evenings at a shelter for runaway teens.  A place full of noise and tears that reminded me of the busiest nights I worked in the busiest restaurants where the overwhelming requests for un-met needs ran together and the only thing that separated me from the weeds was the ability to stay in the zone.  Table nine needs butter, food is ready for seven, fresh round of drinks for fourteen, drop a check on ten, Double-sat on five and two, Tamika wants to call her mom again, Daniel needs his meds, Anthony and Theo want to go outside to play ball, Michaela and Steven are trying to make out in the TV room, and nobody knows it yet, but the newly arrived 12 year-old Kiya is trying to set herself on fire with a curling iron under her pillow in room 2.

Dwayne and I thrived at this work.  By helping these runaways I found the courage to stop running away.  I found out what kind of somebody I was meant to be.  He and I quickly connected, able to read each others’ thoughts during crisis and choreograph interventions on the fly.  At the end of a shift at midnight we sometimes talked in the parking lot for another 20 minutes, debriefing what went through our minds during one episode after another.  Eventually we moved those sessions to Dwayne’s porch on 8th Avenue, a cute yellow house two blocks from my own shabby dump on 10th Ave.  One Saturday, after a few Lowenbraus on the porch we were swapping stories of our pre-shelter lives.  I opened up my hymnal and sang to him about the big skies, the bike rides, the fresh powder daze, throwing everything I had at him to impress him and further earn his respect.  He just shook his head at me over and over, in a continual negation of all I had done to make myself me.

A little bit hurt, a little bit annoyed I asked him, ” Dwayne man, haven’t you ever wanted to try any of these adventure sports, to see what you are made of?” and that is when he explained to me, “John man, you don’t get it, being a black man in America is a full time adventure sport, I don’t need to do anything to decrease my chance of survival.”

 

He called me the day after Thanksgiving.  It was good to hear his voice.

Juancho

A Note on the Type

 

I have reached the level of self-importance that I no longer write, but instead sift through past writing.  April, 2015 marks a decade of the Big Ring Circus, a blog that began about mocking close friends on bicycles and became a tale of an inner child’s love for the wild outdoors, and a battle for daily freedom from the expectations of adult life.  These posts at their best are cryptic little postcards from a space in time, a magic intersection of circumstances.  At their worst they are lollygagging ramblings that served to postpone work, rides, or major life decisions.

I have accomplished a few things in my life, including being found again by a girl that I lost on Corvette St. in 1984.  I adopted an apricot poodle, lost my work from home lifestyle, and made a desk from a sheet of plywood.  Along with those achievements I logged 2160 pages, double spaced, 12 pt font.  I managed to download and convert the entire thing to an editable format, and there it stops for now.  What I want for Christmas is time.  Time to think.  Time to ride.  Time to slash 2160 pages down to about 100, or 10, or 2.   I am proud of many things I have done in the last decade, and equally discouraged by others.  those are the stories I now want to unearth, spit-polish, and sell the masses for big, big money.  Like sick, buy a new chamois kind of money.

I’ll probably just give it away though.

 

Juancho

GOTV

In the heart of every cynic is a crushed idealist.

The disappointment in our fellow humans is commensurate with the degree of hope we once had in us.  The first time you see the fat kid, or the kid wearing broken glasses, rub his yeast roll in his greasy hair to keep a bully from stealing it, you leave that lunchroom hardened. You can feel the sting on your own ear when he gets his thwacked with a cocked birdie finger for not yielding the prize.  I was not in the 2nd hall bathroom when it happened, but the story goes that the kid with the broken glasses brought his dad’s revolver to school and when his persecutor followed him into the bathroom he was looking at the barrel hearing clicks while the fat kid asked him which chamber he thought the bullet was in, like, “Maybe it’s in this one Travis? Click. Or is it this one? Click.”

Travis exploded out the bathroom door on a frantic run, while Kurt calmly walked out behind him, the gun back in his backpack.  Nobody I know ever saw Kurt again, but we sure spoke of him often, most frequently to Travis.  “Hey bro, seen Kurt lately?” Then we would laugh at him as he slunk down 2nd hall.

So the world is not fair and you don’t often get your way, but then sometimes a little ray of justice shines through and you think maybe this time, maybe I get to win.  Everybody has their sad story, and I think everyone sees themselves as the heroic underdog, but the truth is some of us are more under than others.

Me?  I am a heterosexual, married, educated, and employed white man living in a society where those are all favorable qualities.  Where, when people ask, “But does he fit in around here?” There’s a decent chance the answer may be yes, even if they don’t know my outsider’s heart.

For some people though, their outsider-ness is not optional.  It’s on their skin, or the hand they hold at the movies.

That is why, when I walked into the courthouse today I got that familiar power surge, that lump in my throat.  I am not sure that it matters like it once did, as the buying power of JuanchoPAC is minimal.  I can’t help it though, I want those bullies to stare into the barrel of my vote gun and listen while I make it click.

Juancho

 

That kind of day

Today is the kind of day to go out and commit some misdemeanors, hunker down under a railroad overpass and sip a cup of coffee with a little something in it, smoke some cigarettes and try to read the hazmat codes as the trains roll  by.  Sulphur dioxide, that’s a 1079 and good old benzine, that’s an eleven fourteen.

Ride off along the railroad tracks and across some posted land, sweating up a game trail hot-boxing in your gore-tex under a drizzling rain.

Today is the kind of day for laying up in a south Willamette valley bungalow weaning yourself off the dilaudid.  Slowly moving broken bones and torn muscles and wondering what will ever replace the sweet ache of the body healing?

Put a little Smoky Robinson on and try to follow the tracks of those tears running down the faces of all of us: the poor, sorry, hopelessly grown. It is embarrassing to want it so bad, like air-balling three-pointers embarrassing to admit that yes, you really do just want one more day in your 10-year-old body with your ten-year old thoughts and trying- by the pure power of belief- to seriously stop growing up. Stop it in its tracks like a tank of benzine, failing inspection.

There’s nothing you can do man, and it’s going to be okay.

 

Juancho

One little bike ride

One little bike ride 12 miles long

on a brand new bike I knew it was wrong,

I took that brand new chain and that brand new frame and I dragged them through the sand and the grit and the rain.

2 riders, 3 riders, 4 riders long

on that twilight trail where I belong

— the fox squirrel, the woodpecker, and my fat ass

Palmettos, the scrub, low clouds and tall grass.

Run Joey run Dan’s right behind, then me, then Melissa

then the forest, quiet, rain in the pines.

One little bike ride 12 miles long.

 

Bretheren

I am not really good at separation.  I like my friends to stay close and not be drawn by their own will towards some chimeric life that takes them out of mine.  It is a selfish thing.   I understand that means I carry a forever and perpetual disappointment.  Grief is the honor and reward you receive for connection.  We don’t miss those we do not love.  Whether divided by time, distance, or the sheer and gauzy curtain between death and life, to miss a person is to feel the absence of a presence, like a rock in your pocket that slips through a hole.

It is always startling.  The moment when you learn that things are going to change.  Sometimes there is a ceremony, the gift of a broken alarm clock, wound to the minute that is passing handed over in the leeward hours of a house party outside on the curb.  “Cheers brother.”  Then New York City.  Then Singapore.

In Spanish we say “Te echo de menos” which means “I miss you,” but literally it is far more interesting.  I feel the pain of your absence. 

So it is true, I feel the pain of many absences.

It is a shame that we can only live one life you know?  Only pick one path?  I go back to a time when I was part of a crew that was all on the same path for a little while.  The Florida Boys, people called us, as we marauded about the planet.  What kept us together back then was an affinity for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, the Beastie Boys, and for me at least, a real yearning to see what kind of salt I had in me.  We moved west first.  I always knew I would come back to Florida, but for many of the Florida Boys it was a one way trip.  I was just a tourist, but they were settlers- now some are more settled than others.

I talked to one of them yesterday.  I write about him here frequently, mainly about his bike skills, sometimes about his artwork.  That is the easy stuff that is fun to celebrate.  Through him I still travel the west from Blackcomb peak to Los Barriles.  Through me he gets to write grants, draft up some sweet policy and procedure, and know the joy of an apricot poodle shrilly defending the home from the breeze as it disturbs the screen door.  Through my friends I live so many lives.  I am a Chief Petty Officer in the Coast Guard, a deer hunter.  I play bass and lead a Latin jazz quartet.

So on this call yesterday I learned that I, through the corporeal body inhabited by my brother, crashed on a mountain.  6 broken ribs and vertebral facets, a clavicle shredded like snapped bamboo, a knee twisted backwards and freed of it’s tendonous mooring, and most arresting a head injury that left him (us?) unconscious in the dirt and for the long journey from dirt to hospital bed.  The cost of living is sometimes quite high.  I am sure he has heard “You better slow down.” “Are you done now?” Lots of patronizing options to choose from I am sure.

Those folks must not know us.

Today raise a glass to the broken, the hurt, and the healing.

Hang in there Todd, Neighbor Ed, Sasquatch and whoever else.  You can’t be kept down.

Juancho

 

Raveled

santa-cruz-bicycles-tallboy-tp_1572564880029042532vbSeptember is the sorriest month, the sorriest month of all.

It is no longer summer and it is still not yet fall.

The heat index it soars and soars, while grumpily I wait indoors

for the arrival- the sacred revival- of my purpose and my call.

Bicycle Lotto, (that’s what they say) the day we sent my frame away

a tiny ding that it did have was not my fault but theirs, I’m glad.

So in the mail now it comes, by warehouse, plane, and truck it comes.

This matte black beauty, dark as coal to lurk beneath my ass, and roll.

 

 

-Juancho

 

 

Whiplashed

road homeTwo hours on the interstate from Gainesville to Tallahassee, or 5 hours easing the van along U.S. Highway 27 poking your head in springs of the first magnitude pouring their sweet water into the Suwanee River.  Beleaguered by bad hotel pillows and cheap plastic chairs I tin-manned down to the Ichetucknee river in a pouring thunderstorm.  The blankets of rain and the accompanying roar made for a private, intimate setting like a corner table in a raucous bistro.

A tree limb was down across the timber walkway, about 15 feet of snarled, moss-covered Water Oak bridged across the rails.  I ducked it and stashed my possibles in a corner of the deck slightly sheltered from the rain.

Nobody around, and the most visited river for a few hundred miles all to myself.  The water was up and moving fast, not what I expected as I eyeballed the best spot for a quick baptismal.  One bare foot onto the moss-covered ramp and I was on my back and moving seaward wits scattered about me but within arms reach.  I braced myself out flat in self-arrest fashion and conducted the physical inventory. Finding no injury I flopped over the side into the rushing water, hanging to the bottom rung of the ladder as I flagged out into the current.  Looking downstream all I saw was wetness and jungle and someplace I didn’t want to be around the bend.

Sloppy wet I did my best to insulate the driver’s seat, admittedly my best wasn’t much to account for, and I trundled down the road to the next hole.

 

 

 

springLafayette Blue and the rain just finished, I slipped into the first pool and stood to my chest feeling the relentless push of millions of gallons towards the underwater tunnel 25 feet to the next pool.  Above me a stranger says, ” if you find yourself going under there, don’t fight it, just go with it.”  I nodded agreement and backed away to an anchored nook with a Cypress knee armrest and watched my arm hairs stream towards the Suwanee.

The day before I pedaled around the trails of San Felasco and found myself staring across a hundred yards of murky runoff submerging the trail below the power-lines.  It was getting on late so the turn around option was less possible than appealing so I hoisted my feather light bike and tromped ahead, eventually sinking up to my thighs.  “You’re being really brave right now Juancho” I comforted myself.  Snakes don’t hang out in flash flood ponds I don’t think.  What could live with such uncertainty?

 

 

After the ride, but before the fall, I met up with the Lost Poet in person and there he was, sitting across from me at the Thai restaurant, even dropping a little Sawadee and what not from his days in uniform.  Crazy though, 19 years of mutually unexcused absence.  He looks like he has held his own whatever transpired.  I turned over some archaic documents and felt like I had completed some solemn task, but all I really did was have a few beers with this walking ghost from my memory and watch the color run back into his being until there we were, just living in the shared space of modern time shaking our heads and laughing.

vanMy neck is stove up, I guess from that fall, but for a 24 hour adventure I reckon I got away pretty clean all things considered.

I refer you to the image on the left for verification of how things are done when you live in a big ring circus.

 

 

Juancho