Rhythm is everything

Month: April 2024

Our man from Louisiana

One of those sweltering days, it must have been by the end of July or the beginning of August, our man arrived. Our man from Louisiana. Our man was not in a good shape. His toenails had grown to a length that we had never ever seen before. He walked slowly and could only walk the spiraling stairway up to the third floor taking pauses. When he started talking, he had a stutter and often could not remember the words he wanted to use. He had had a stroke.

Our man was not in a good shape though his accent still was. A lovely accent. A Louisiana accent. Melodious and enticing to the listener. With a banjo on my knee he would repeat over and over when we — Mr Photographer and I — mentioned Louisiana. He had been in Malaysia and Thailand, and wanted to visit Cambodia. Our man kept his spirits high.

Malaysia yes, the highlands. In a way to say thanks for having found some friends at the dorm we both received a sachet of black tea. Looking at the way I hang all my clothes suspending from the bed frame triggered a memory. He had been a sailor working for the US merchant navy all his life he told me. There was more. He had a son. A son in Texas with a very negative attitude. A son who would only complain to his old Dad. He did not want to listen to his son anymore.

One afternoon … he started stammering “I gotta … I gotta leave! I gotta … gotta leave! We really did not get it. What did he mean? He seemed to be fine before.
Absorbed with our own issues and struggles we forgot to ask for details.

Dumb asses we had been.
“I gotta leave! I gotta leave!”, had been his way of saying I cannot pay anymore. The guy temporarily in charge of the hotel while the manager was on a study trip had told him to pack and sack. So, he did. Once I realised that something was definitely wrong I tried to give him a call. No response. No answer, and again and again .. no answer.
Our man from Louisiana was gone…

Scavenger

Yes, I am a scavenger. I am always looking around for whatever rejects and trashed objects are laying around for me to pick them up. I give those things a second life. I recycle, reinstate, reclaim, refurbish, and renovate. ‘Wiederverwertung’ in German; giving things a new value again. Récupération … Emmaüs.
Abbé Pierre! Emmaüs ou venger l’homme. The book.

This time I found egg trays and a big file holder. The egg trays will serve to improve the acoustics in one of the classrooms of the Candlelight Academy. A classroom with disturbing echos. The fileholder has already found its proper purpose on top of my wardrobe. Life is good when you are in the knowledge of recycling and reclaiming.

Oui, Mesdames et Messieurs. On fait bien la récupération!

The Shopping Cart Serenade

The Shopping Cart Serenade

A contemporary saga of insanity and homelessness meandering towards an understanding of the human condition. An understanding which
eventually culminates in discovering sanity at the horizon. The reader is led on a journey to discover the key elements of life as it is experienced by both our goodness and our ugliness. Hell on earth in eight stages with paradise on the horizon. Or is it beyond? Beyond the horizon?

Dreadfully effective in growing to understand how make-believe supersedes the reality of our momentary presence on earth.

This is Brendan Shusterman’s first and very successful solo venture into the challenging world of publishing.
The Shopping Cart Serenade … Do you dare?

Brendan Shusterman teaches English at Assumption College in Bangrak district, Bangkok, Thailand.

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