"Put Out The Fire In Your
Head"-With The Line From Patti Griffin’s “You Are Not Alone” In Mind
By Special Guest Writer
Greg Gordon
Normally I don’t write
for blog and on-line publications preferring still the hard copy route to have
my work appreciated by any who would appreciate my efforts. The reason that I
am writing this little comment is the editor here, my old friend Pete Markin,
has asked me to comment on a line from Patti Griffin’s song You Are Not Alone where she asks her
lover to “put on the fire in your head”-calm down, take it easy, be with her. I
am not personally much into music so that I did not know the song, or the line
from the song, nor did I know who Patti Griffin was. But the line intrigued me.
Intrigued me more when Pete told me the reason that he wanted me to comment
rather than take a stab at it himself since he loves the song is that he wanted
my take on who among our still standing old-time from the neighborhood friends
could rightfully be asked to do what the phrase asks. And he included himself
in the mix so for all practical purposes he is recusing himself.
Now Pete Markin, Seth
Garth, Frankie Riley, Fritz Taylor, Bart Webber, Si Lannon, Jack Callahan, Josh
Breslin and about fifty other guys, from what Pete calls the Generation of ’68,
whom Pete and I have come to know over the years whatever neighborhood they
grew up in, mostly poor white guys like me and him, whatever achievements they
have accumulated over a lifetime, whatever heartaches they have suffered as
well they, we all have one thing in common. We all have since youth, maybe
since, hell, maybe from the womb, had outsized wanting habits, have had the
hunger. So each and every one of us one way or another could fall under the
sign of “put out the fire in your head.”
For me it has always
been an outsized and maybe overblown sense that I have been under-appreciated
as a writer now that Gothic detective novels, the niche I had made for myself started
way back in maybe middle school when my English teacher Miss Winot encouraged me
to flush out my private detective Galen Fiske, are a dime a dozen, maybe
cheaper. So maybe I should chill out about it, throw water on that last dream
and not to worry. That said I do not intend to go chapter and verse over every
guy whom I have mentioned above but give a few words and here and there. I
might as well start with Pete who has always had this thing about this woman,
let’s call her Josie to give her a name whom he treated like dirt when he was
young and was crazy to go to bed with every dame who gave him a second look.
Leaving Josie holding the bag.
He had not seen her in
about forty years, didn’t know what had become of her (although he belatedly
wished her well) but nevertheless on whiskey-sodden barstool nights in some
dank barroom he will inevitably bring up her name, his sins against her, and
that wistful what might have been had he had the sense God gave geese. I know I
have been on the stool beside him. This despite the intervening three marriages
and assorted well-behaved kids who came with them. So that fire in his head has
been smoldering for a long time, caused him some sweaty, dreamless nights. At
this point I don’t think it will ever go out. Some things are like that.
Fritz Taylor’s fire is
maybe really fire, really fire that he brought down on the heads of people in
Vietnam with whom he had no quarrel, never had except his friends and neighbors
at his local draft board in the days when that was the way non-enlistees got called
up to military service called his ticket, gave him the ride. He spent years
hiding from the “real” world with a bunch of brothers under the bridge out in
Southern California trying to drink/drug/cut himself to some place of peace but
that vagabond stuff never did the trick. Nor did his three marriages with a
mixed bag of good and bad kids. Will still drink himself to a coma, or maybe sleep
is better and yell out of nowhere An Loc (a small town/ village/hamlet which he
and his men burned to the ground one awful August 1968 night). That fire too
seems like an endless sleep.
Now that the reader is
getting my drift, getting that maybe that Patty Griffin song, those lyrics might
not be susceptible to dousing I will like I said not go through the whole litany
of the fire nights among the guys. But one last case should sum things up a bit.
Josh Breslin is a guy we met, those of us from the old North Adamsville neighborhood,
out in the San Francisco Summer of Love, 1967 night. Josh, a little younger than
us but a kindred working class guy from up in Olde Saco, Maine, was a real good-looking
guy whose moniker was the Prince of Love in those moniker-filled days. Had half
the girls around Golden Gate Park in something like his harem. For a while
anyway. Then he got caught into the grasp of a woman we called (and will still call
her here) Mustang Sally and can draw your own conclusions about why she took
that name. The long and short of it was that before too long she got pregnant.
Josh was set to marry her or something like that. One night she split we think
with a guy named Pirate Johnny and we/he never heard from her again. So Josh,
the love them and leave them Prince of Love, too would on moonless ill-begotten
nights wonder out loud what had happened to his child. That after two marriages
and a parcel of I am not sure what kind of kids. So maybe Patti and her song are
wrong. Maybe you can’t put out the fire in your head.
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