“Put Out The Fire In Your Head”- With
Patti Griffin’s Not Alone In
Mind
By Bradley Fox, Junior
[Sometimes this generational divide
between parent and child that occurs naturally once the younger generation
comes of age and begins to make its own way, make its own mistakes, and have
its own problems grappling with day to day life in a hectic, dangerous world
can only be deciphered by someone from that generation. That is the case here
with the story of Sam Lowell’s youngest son, Justin’s. Sam told me his side of
the story, really his take on Justin’s story since Sam had had little directly to
do with what got Justin into his difficulties. I tried to write it up as a
cautionary tale of sorts to help inform Sam’s, my generation, the generation
that the late Peter Markin, our mutual friend who passed on under mysterious
circumstances down in Mexico after the 1960s had ebbed and we had lost the
cultural battles, called the Generation of ’68
about what was troubling our children. I failed in that effort.
I told my son, Bradley, Junior (with
Sam’s permission), who knew Justin when they were younger, the details to see
if he could write something that would make sense to Sam and me about what
makes their generation tick. As for the grandkids, forget it between the
Internet and its subset social media and the trials and tribulations they
confront in an extremely dangerous world going forward it would take, as young
Bradley told me, the minds of Freud, Einstein, and Rapper Rocco combined to
even know what subliminal language they were speaking. Here’s my Bradley’s take
on the whole mess [BF, Senior]:
Justin Lowell had been a late love
child of Sam and his third wife since divorced, Rebecca, and as such, with
eight years between him and the next youngest child, Brenda, and hence eight
years of being the only child at home after she left for college, was pampered
by her, cocooned Sam said. And frankly
had been by Sam as well although the number one thing all of his children from
his three failed marriages said of him was that he was a good and generous
father but he that was a distant figure always off doing some lawyerly business
and not around enough to get rid of the that foggy picture of him. But enough
of Sam Lowell’s failings since this is about how Justin navigated the world not
Sam.
Of course Justin had all the
advantages that accrued to a financially successful small town lawyer’s son
from living in a nice large house with his own room (and later own rooms since
he took over Brenda’s as well), a good if not great college education (good
since Justin was not a particularly studious type like myself and unlike Brenda
who gained entrance to Harvard with no problem), and all the diversions that
leafy suburban life in Riverdale could bring. All through high school at
Riverdale High we were very close buddies so I knew a lot about his make-up,
knew too that he resented his mother’s overweening attentions (and as already
mentioned Sam’ distance which Justin called indifference unlike my father who
went out of his way to be attentive and was a reason why we would spent much
more time at my house than his). Many nights out with hot dates we would go
wherever we went together, tried out and failed to make the championship
Riverdale High School football team, things like that. Mostly though we talked
serious stuff about dreams and what we would do when we flew the coop, when we
had what Sam and my father always called when they got together and regaled us
with their stories the “great jail-break.”
Naturally after high school, members
in good standing of the Riverdale High Class of 1992, when Justin went to State
U and I went to NYU since I was desperate to live in New York City and breath
the air there as part of my becoming a commercial artist we drew apart. Maybe
we would call, see each other at Vinny’s Pizza in town and cut up old touches.
That was mainly freshman year when everything was new and we were “free.” Then
Justin kind of fell off my map as I got involved in some school projects and
Justin from what he told me one time at Vinny’s got involved in the furious
social life that dominates lots of school out in the boondocks and where kids
are away from home for the first time.
That was when Justin, who had hated even the idea of liquor when we were in
high school and wouldn’t speak me for a while after l got Kathy Callahan drunk (and
horny you can figure the rest out yourselves) on a double date, started doing
drugs. Started first I had heard on easy stuff marijuana to be sociable
(Justin, me too, as much as we got along with girls were both kind of shy and
inward at times which is probably why we gravitated toward each other beyond
our fathers knowing each other since their youth) and bennies to stay up and
study for those finals at the last moment. Later senior year I heard from Jack
Jamison who had gone to high school with us and was also at State U Justin had
graduated to cocaine, serious cocaine, serious enough to have to begin to do
some small time dealing to keep up. He did graduate but it was a close thing,
very close.
After college Justin moved to Boston
to take a job in a bank, work his way up in the banking industry to make lots
of money. In any case in Boston is where he met Melissa, Melissa I won’t give
her last name because now she is a big deal in the college administration of an
Ivy League college. He met Melissa at the Wild Rose nightclub, the one just
outside of Kenmore Square. Met here and quickly came under her spell (a lot of
guys had, did, would do that before she was through). Melissa, not a beauty but
fetching was one of those women who loved kicks, loved the attention her desire
for kicks brought. Her kick at that time was heroin which some previous lover
had turned her on to. She something of a manic-depressive as it turned out said
grass, coke, pills didn’t do it for her, didn’t put out the fire in her head,
the feeling that she could never get close to anybody. (Later it also turned
out that she had been sexually abused by her drunken father and had had plenty
of reason to want to put the fire out in her head.) She turned a very willing
Justin to smack (it goes by several names, H, snow, the lid, sweet baby, and
the like we will just call it smack). Se he had been having trouble adjusting
to having to actually work his ass off to get ahead in the banking industry and
he too needed something to put out the fire in his head.
Melissa, as far as anybody ever knew,
never got seriously addicted to the smack, maybe cut it enough to keep from
going to junkie heaven. Justin of course got himself a jones, a big sleep on
his shoulders. He before too long got fired from his job, went on the bum,
started muling down to sunny Mexico for the hard boys to maintain his habit,
went back on the bum and finally got picked up by the cops on Commonwealth
Avenue trying to break and enter some Mayfair swell condo. All he would tell
them beside his name was that he “had to put the fire out in his head, needed
to get well or he was going to jump into the Charles River. At that point, Sam,
who was clueless about his son’s drug problems as most parents are until some
tripwire turns the lights on had to come into the action, had to defend his
youngest son on a damn B&E charge. Got him into a “detox” program too. Did
what he could without recrimination, or just a little other than bewilderment
that his son would succumb to drugs.
Well I wish that I could say that
Justin turned it around after that first “detox,” effort but that was not the
case. He went through programs for five years before he sobered up for good, or
what Sam and Rebecca thought was for good. One night I was home to see my
father and to attend our twentieth anniversary class reunion when I ran into
Justin on the street who said he would rather not go to the reunion since he
would have to explain too many things about his life. He suggested we go into
Vinny’s a few blocks up the street and have a couple of slices of pizza and a
soda for old times’ sake. We did so and while we were munching away Justin
explained as best he could what had happened to him. He reminded me of that
night senior year when we were sitting down by the river and he had told me how
much he hated his father, hated Sam, since he was such a pious bastard, was
almost non-existent in his life, yet tried to be cool about his own bogus
jailbreak youth like they had changed the world, like his youthful coolness
made everything alright. I had forgotten about that night, had had my own small
(compared to him) troubles adjusting to my own father’s whims. Then Justin said
he had spent all that time since that night trying to put out the fire in his
head.
Here comes the sad part, about a year
later Justin met a woman, Selina, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire where he went to
live to get a fresh start. They fell in love, planned to be married, and had
made all the arrangements, the church, reception and all. The night before the
wedding when he was out with some guys celebrating he went off the bus. Somehow
he had made a connection, and before the night was over he was sitting in
Prescott Park by himself as the cops came by based on a disturbance call yelling
“I ‘ve got to put the fire in my head, I’ve got to put the fire in my head
out.”
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