Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2019

On The Road With Al and Ivy: A Literary Homeless Chronicle - August 2019



"I have made a silent compact with myself not to change a line of what I write. I am not interested in perfecting my thoughts, nor my actions."

- Henry Miller (Tropic Of Cancer)

"But get hold of Tropic of Cancer, get hold of Black Spring and read especially the first hundred pages. They give you an idea of what can still be done, even at this late date, with English prose. In them, English is treated as a spoken language, but spoken without fear..."

- George Orwell (Essay: Inside The Whale)

I look at Tropic Of Cancer in 2019 and have to think; these days the internet would be eating Henry Miller's flesh, or doing it's best to ban the book without being so uncool as to actually openly proscribe it. Which isn't an indictment of Miller, as the same thing would happen to Jesus or Buddha if they had an online presence.

It's a book that's been canonized like an ancient Saint, kept on a virtual shelf and treated as a sacred work that everyone knows is legendary but rarely read; a cult work that's like a 60s era Ken Kesey style test of cool. Author Tom Wolfe once described the test in an interview about his book, Electric Kool Aid Acid Test, where Kesey would separate the posers from the pack by suggesting something like having them they all go riding on bikes naked, or as Wolfe later phrased it, "See my wings! (You don't expect me to fly do you?)

If Tropic Of Cancer came out today, it would quickly bring out any hidden social conservatism with it's smart mouthed whacks at Jews, mannered literature, society, women, or men considered below him for one reason or another; topped off with chest thumping about Homeric level sexual prowess, and graphic descriptions of vijay jays and other adjuncts to his lust.

Miller's prose reads like someone getting his jollies by saying things for shock effect as much as from any personal conviction, though with a virtuosity that elevates even the coarsest passages. He simply said aloud what many men think or say in unguarded moments in locker rooms or drunken stag parties.

Like many works of genius, it's uneven, and the most brilliant moments are when Miller is rubbing his booty all over the classic novel form, though saying it's brilliant isn't the same as saying it's "good," a quality that, to paraphrase Orwell, is impossible to quantify. However, for it's time and place in the 30s, it was ground breaking, particularly in America.

As far as the cliff notes stuff, you can google various sources on the book, take in the wide range of opinion and comment, and get a detailed sense of context. I should add, my comments aren't asserting that the book is a classic everybody would love. It's a work that would polarize even the most liberal crowd, though interestingly enough, though the book's sexual point of view was male, the publishing was financed by Anise Nin, who at the time was having a intense affair with Miller, and well on the way to becoming a literary legend in her own right. 

Tropic Of Cancer is a classic case study of what do you do (or wouldn't dare to do) with your first and possibly only shot at a book in an of gate keeper publishers and snooty literary critics.

Most of us would, understandably, treat it as an audition and try to create a best seller. A smaller percentage would try to create high art, a brave few would follow some sort of personal instinct or muse, and the very rare soul like Miller would trash convention and commit the ultimate act of rebellion in Western Culture; knowingly writing a book that had no chance of selling (I exclude the 10,000,023 books didn't sell despite the best efforts of the writers and publishers. That figure is off the top of my head, but could be close to an actual figure on the Internet).



...the legend...

The legend of the tome is that of a bold, crude groundbreaking literary masterpiece, but it clearly wasn't written to "impress." It has the chaotic flow of an actual human mind, with all of the details that would ordinarily be left out of a conventionally structured work. Miller's joy in being an artist is palpable from the first page, and he happily describes every peeve, dislike, crappy insult and put down that one can't say aloud in the modern Internet era without pissing someone off.

You can talk about the new boundaries of kinky sex to the literati, for example, but making rude and cruel remarks about their appearance, genitals or religion will still get a rise a hundred years from now even when the outer limits of sex, violence or shocking violence have been reached.

Miller's unfiltered prose, which ignores structure, grammar or any evidence of inner reflection, seems to spill out as his senses take in sights and sounds in real time. Kind of like walking through a zoo, for example, your impressions would constantly change and come out as sounds, words, sentences and maybe phrases, and not well crafted paragraphs.

It works, even when he's at his most obnoxious, because it's said without guile, like how a child blurts out truth, and because so much of it is brutally funny. Miller does establish right from the opening pages that he's no better than you, that the book is not from a person who puts on airs or someone slumming with a bunch of artistic low brows, but as a member of a larger group that relates to each other without a lot of the normal social norms, like how a family talks to each other.

It's early admirers were mainly other writers and artists, many quite famous, and though it was banned in the US, most who heard of it only knew it was banned for obscenity because it was labeled that way, not from any exposure to the actual work (though it was bootlegged).

...faith...

Such third party knowledge isn't unusual, we all grow up knowing or believing a lot of things on faith. Even the hippest minds have rarely seen actual proof of every belief, and take cues from higher authorities or writers from the past. That can create the paradox that censors and gate keepers are the most "free," as they can see it all before passing judgement, and if a work is deemed safe to see, it's because those who actually saw it said so.

When a modern feminist writer in the 70s called the book sexist, I'm sure some of her fans then refused to read the book and just repeated that it was sexist and so on, and that view is both wrong and right as we're really talking about taste. Censorship isn't always about protecting the public but also the control of ideas according to this or that influential person's preferences or sense of morality.

Which is at the heart of what makes Tropic Of Cancer great; the "moral courage" to write a book that was banned in it's time for obscenity, and was arguably like Galileo arguing that the earth wasn't flat. Both were just describing what was really there, not what others were saying was reality.

What the book "said" (or how it did so) is no longer important these days, when shock value is just standard marketing for artists vying for attention from a public that has so many options. People can get more sex, violence, or cheap thrills in a video game, movie or drug than any book. 

What is important are the ideas that permeated the book, particularly one that's relevant even now; that a life is created, a decision. That no matter what limits a society imposes, the mind is always free to choose. Even in the face of emotional or physical oppression, one always has choices. What got you in can also get you out.

More than that, the idea that Miller was an artist because he said so; not because someone else agreed, or because of a book. He didn't ask for any validation.

That would be like a woman who was truly free of any definition imposed by male culture, or a man who could walk away from any societal definition of success or manhood. Where rules didn't have to be followed or even broken for that matter, a totally unfettered state.

However, that's an ideal, like Utopia. Compromises are necessary in the real world due to having to eat and pay bills, but it's easy to end up surrendering a lot more of the self than life really demands. One can unwittingly follow paths or adhere to core beliefs that are really imposed by others.

The Internet, for example, is an environment where manipulation is rife, and not just from "Big Brother" or corporations. It's easy to rebel against a concept like "the machine" or "the man,"  but not against peers, priests, experts, commissars, or publishers for that matter who can wield direct power over you.

...courage my boy...

Showing moral courage almost always involves real consequences, whether it's punishment, loss of income or respect of peers, and it's not reasonable to expect it from everyone. When a rare individual shows it and takes the consequences and perseveres, it's worthy of admiration and should be seen as an example that inspires.

I think Tropic Of Cancer is on a high level of courage. Miller's book might have never left the banned list, his life condemned to a romantic state of poverty, and in America be regarded as an obscure foul mouthed loser who wrote a book that didn't sell squat.

He didn't know all that at the time, of course, it was just an opportunity to write a book, and instead of trying to match his idols like Balzac or Joyce, he wrote what was in his head, warts and all. Unlike a lot of modern artists, he was concerned with a very personal vision that didn't take a possible "market" into account. 

He lived in 1930's Paris, a scene that clearly understood that at first genius might only be understood by a few, and that if one was going to fail, it was just as well to do it being yourself. Also, there was a convergence of events and people, like Anis Nin willing to finance the book, that a modern management firm would find difficult to reproduce. That is to say, they could do it, but only if willing to risk money on a clearly uncommercial product.

It was a free moment in time that won't be seen very often in the western world, which in this day and age, equates money with success, and risk adverse investment is the operating mode of cash.

But, if you accept Miller's attitude, that great art has to come from a free mind; that is to say your's, not his, Kerouac, or Stephen King's, and are willing to risk failure, then something immortal can be written, and years later, can still be read with amazement by even the most jaded reader. 

Not all jaded readers of course, thanks to the Internet there'll always be people who'll dismiss, troll, be offended by, or hate the book, but I think Henry Miller would have found such reaction funny, and even a validation of the book. 


...a punk digression...

Talking about what one does with an opportunity reminds me of the first gig by Ointment, a punk band I was in back in the late 70s. We were fourth on the bill, scheduled for 15 minutes (which for a punk band still meant around eight numbers or so). It was at the then infamous Mabuhay Gardens in San Francisco, and getting a regular gig there was as good as you could get in that scene.

Our band leader passed on the booking director's instructions, which I still vividly remember. He said "punk is still very new, so we don't know what's good yet, so if the audience cheers or boos, it doesn't matter, but if they sit there and don't react, you don't come back."

As a matter of record, we got yelled at and insulted (and yes, the lead singers did their creative best to provoke everybody) and since we only had 15 minutes, it was easy to pretend that we got boo'd off the stage. One image that sticks in my mind was the dozen or so people who were flipping us off as we left the stage. I later learned that it was actually a sort of salute from that crowd. 

It earned us another booking (as seen in the poster), and the lesson was that the biggest sin in art is to be boring. 

Whatever else Miller was, he wasn't dull. 1930s Paris is history now, and what Miller described in his book topped in shock value several times over, but the sheer guts it took to write that book has rarely been matched since.



"The voice came clear, “Haaallooo, the camp.” Every man stiffened. Four of them faded a few paces back from the fire into the darkness. They had “papers” on them, and though they were protected by the code of the trail … every rider of the trail herd would fight to the death in their defense … there was no sense borrern’ trouble from a nosey lawman."

"So it was that Josey was concerned about the horses...But too many times in the past years his survival had hung on the thread of his horse..."

- Forrest Carter (Gone To Texas, Josey Wales, Two Westerns)

"Josie Wales" was a 1976 film starring Clint Eastwood in the starring role, which was well received both by the box office and critics. It was based on Forrest Carter's western novel, "Gone To Texas," with the main character Josey Wales based on a true life "bushwhacker" from the Ozark Mountain region.

The movie was fairly true to the book, and did a good job of depicting the post civil war period in Missouri and out west. The book was published in 1973, and as a result had a more sympathetic view of the Native American characters than earlier eras. The 1976 sequel, "The Vengence Trail Of Josey Wales," is notable for it's portrayal of a young Geronimo.

What's interesting about the book was that the underlying code of honor was like earlier systems like Chivalry, which over time became what people thought was a real way of life, full of noble archetypes like the noble knight or later on, the gunslinger who always let the other guy draw his gun first.

There was something to that, of course. All myths spring from some kernel of truth, but in most cases are created to illuminate a perfection that rarely exists. The noble Knights certainly showed respect to peers, superiors and at least paid lip service to protecting the weak but in medieval times the safety of peasants could depend more on their economic value as serfs and the fact that there was little honor in killing one.

...the anti-hero...

The advent of the "anti-hero" in the 60s was essentially a demystification of the noble archetype, and the early criticism of movies (and books, etc.) that had morally ambiguous heroes was, in retrospect, based on defending the values the earlier paragons represented.

We're not necessarily talking about virtue. The hero myths reinforced the social order; the noble Knights were considered better than the average person and Chivalry was theoretically about the responsible use of power. Even in modern times, the idea that a true gentleman protected women was as much about respecting another man's property as it was about regarding them as human beings (if the man cared to do so, enforcement was generally on the honor system).

The title of "hero" carried entitlements; like being free to lord it all over others below him, and rape and plunder in wartime, which were, thanks to paid Bards and other toadies, glossed over with poetic phrases about gentle champions and great feats.

The anti-hero was a sort of democratization of the classic hero image which gave a commoner the same mythic virtues and of course, the same prerogatives like sinful sex without having the Church damning him to hell, being able to kick ass on non-apex males and all the other fun stuff that a medieval Duke could indulge in. That not only riled up Society's betters, but also those followers who were playing by the rules and resented some guy cutting in line.

Such non-mythical exceptions are illuminating but frankly not always relevant. We do enjoy fables and mythology, and like the validation of principles and ethos that show a path to higher things. Chivalry may have originally been a game played by the privileged, but such ideals resonated as every modern man became a King (the concept of every woman a Queen is still a work in progress).

The exception to modern chivalry is, of course, the Internet, which is still a law of the jungle type trip and about 80% porn (that figure is off the top of my head, but seems about right) and is an exception to the normal evolution of society. It can thus be disregarded in this discussion about higher things.

The mythology that underlies both the Josey Wales book and movie, of honor and moral courage, may not have been the reality of the Wild West, but was important in terms of what people think is virtue, and where it can be found. What people admire about the Wales character was that his decisions had no material reward in mind, and even put him in deeper danger; but his sense of honor dictated that he protect those in his care, and couldn't do otherwise unless he was willing to betray his own sense of self.

...moral courage and the harder road...

It's difficult to give a real life illustration of moral courage in art, even when so many artists claim to be "rebels," which isn't the same thing as bravery in any case, so a good example would be someone who in real life chose a hard road to freedom that many wouldn't take, and paid a very high price for it.

One of the characters in my book is a woman who could only escape physical and emotional abuse by going homeless. She once believed her husband's promise that she'd be well taken care of and so didn't develop any real job skills and accepted social isolation as part of the required devotion to him. More than a few women would sympathize as that's not just a choice common to the homeless.

She reached a point where staying in an abusive environment would destroy her, and left. That was when he decked her for speaking out of turn. Her only friends were other women, who had to help her on their own without support from husbands. The only males who offered to help wanted sex in exchange for it. 

The Ex did his best to punish her, hiring a lawyer to block custody and even contact with their child. He didn't pay any support, which forced her to live with an older schizophrenic son in an old Van, which was later towed away by police and both forced to live in a smaller car that she could barely pay for.

She was on waiting lists for services, but was only able to get some medical treatment for her older son through the county. Her decision to leave was treated as abandonment in divorce court, and the side with the pricey lawyer won.

Yet...she never regretted leaving. She didn't view the situation as punishment, and clearly understood that her old state of mind was a trap. Living in a car was the price of freedom, but she didn't give in to it. She kept applying for jobs, and found a part time situation and held it. There was also odd jobs like dog sitting for other homeless (like me) for what we could afford to pay.

She once saved Ivy from a couple that attempted to steal her, took the dog into her own car and drove off while the "respectable" couple threatened to call the cops. That happened a lot out there, people bullying and trying to intimidate us through our pets. That was no small deed. A police call on a homeless woman of color could be devastating, possibly resulting in the loss of a car that would remove the one real protection a single woman had in that scene. But she was responsible for Ivy that night, and protected her as her own.

Take away the image of irresponsibility in leaving "a nice house with a good provider," which was what a lot of former friends asserted before they quit talking to her, and you see that it was the course of survival and freedom. Only a cold heart would think she'd done something stupid.

It was a hard road out of a destructive situation, not a deserved purgatory for shirking the proper duty of a wife. The price was high, and she had to deal with the trauma of years of abuse while coping with a tough life, taking care of a schizophrenic teen, and two dogs.

She did everything right; keeping herself and family clean, avoiding drugs and alcohol, working as much as she could, constantly communicating with agencies that could help, going to church, and resisting the temptation to trade sex for rescue. If her luck turned, she wanted to be ready (I can't tell you how it turned out, that'd be a spoiler).

All she had to do was turn her son over to authorities to be committed, abandon her two dogs, and given her youth and good looks, find a guy willing to give her an easier life. She couldn't do that, being determined to bring the family out as a group, like the character Josey Wales does in the book. We admire such courage because it is exceptional, and a validation of our better side.

...protocols and good manners...

Certain other elements of the story came to life out there. That in a dangerous atmosphere, people revert to protocols like those described in the Josey Wales book, and that if you had a running car, it was as precious as any outlaw's horse.

Those street manners, for lack of a better word, have been described in earlier blog entries, like observing someone for a while before approaching. Many of my actual contacts tended to follow a definite sequence which I don't claim was, or is true for all street scenes. The protocols didn't have names. It was just the way things were done. 

There were good reasons to be cautious. You never knew who was approaching and what their motive was. Most of the contacts were routine but when something bad happened, it tended to be sudden. As a result, I never acted approachable (not the same as acting tough or hostile) and developed a strong sense of vigilance. 

There was no hurry to make friends, or do anything rash. It was, in essence, imposing a barrier of time and distance to prevent surprise.

When somebody approached, I rarely made eye contact. That could be misinterpreted as a challenge if the person approaching was belligerent. I quickly checked to see where Ivy was. People stole dogs out there for various reasons, from quick resale for cash, to "rescue" them from a homeless life, and in rare cases practice dogs for dog fighters. I always stayed in front of her.

I always acted a little slow, almost stupid, as contrary to what you see in movies, most people aren't aggressive with the mentally ill or slow. I never did anything sudden, as that could trigger a defensive reaction. This all happened in a few seconds, and it was generally understood by the other that I was just being careful.

Once the conversation started, it stayed casual, though some personal details might be exchanged (how long you been homeless, where, etc). If anyone asked what I had in the car trunk (the other stuff in the car itself could be seen without getting fancy), or if I had drugs, I'd always humorously say no and plead poverty. I didn't keep drugs, but getting upset could be seen as hiding something, and someone would probably come by later to see.

Asking overly personal questions, particularly about possessions always signaled an end to the conversation. I'd generally say "nice talking to you" and say I had to head back to the rest stop up north and as a precaution, head south instead. I had valuables in the car, most of all Ivy, so there was no point in sticking around after possibly being "cased." One time I did stick around and later someone did try to break into the car while we were out on a hike.

...my mother the car...

Which is why I made such a big deal of having a running car in my earliest blogs.

I'd see people who didn't make gas a priority and shake my head. One couple would panhandle cash, then buy a nice dinner and beer and party it up, and next day be trying to raise gas money and one day, couldn't raise it fast enough to escape being towed. Once a car was towed, that was it. Unless you had money for the towing and storage, the car was gone and everything in it.

The Josey Wales character makes it a point to ensure his horse always had oats to eat, not just grass. In a desperate situation, the horse was stronger with the better nutrition and the extra endurance could be enough of an edge to escape a tight situation. Once I was able to get the car running again (with the help of the Internet), keeping it that way, no matter what, became the top priority.

I saw what happened to many of the "back packer" or foot homeless.Their chances of getting out dropped like a rock. The police knew this, and in most areas didn't mess with your car, because they knew that once it was towed, the person's shelter and whatever possessions in it were probably be gone for good, along with what little chance there was to get a job. But if you couldn't leave when asked, they'd have to cite you and eventually tow.

I referred to it as "movement is survival" and other than dog food, there was nothing more important than making sure the car was running. There were days when Ivy and I had to split a cheap sandwich, but gas came first. When financial help began to come, we could eat better but not unless the food could be stored in a car. 

When the summer days hit 90 degrees, we could move to shade or head south to the coast where it was cooler. Last year when I read about a homeless guy dying in Gilroy during a heat wave, I recognized the area as it had very little shade and was very hot. The particular highway in the news story had lots of businesses on it, so it was ideal for a panhandler who had to get around on foot, but no one could live there in the open during the summer. 

The car gave me an option that he didn't have. 

...buddies and friends...

I did meet people, and some became good friends. It wasn't all about caution. Without them, things could have gone very badly. That's another element of the Josey Wales story that resonated, that friendships mean a lot.

I recall one incident, where my old iPhone fell out of my pocket and was lost. You won't always get it back in regular society, as Apple products are eminently resalable the black market, but a homeless couple found it and returned it.

The guy said an interesting thing; that they would have just sold it for cash but the screen saver was a photo of Ivy, and they remembered "the Asian guy with the little white dog." Purebred toy dogs were rare out there, particularly white ones. The guy added, that once the iPhone had a clear owner, returning it was the honorable thing to do. They did require me to identify the phone, but everyone does that with a lost phone.

The couple were outlaws, in a sense, and had to leave town rather suddenly when the Sheriff Deputies came looking for them. To this day, I have no idea why, but my impression of them was positive. The guy made it clear that they could be trusted, and later the couple watched Ivy while I attended a week long employee orientation class.

Both were expert panhandlers, and had to be. Both applied for jobs all over the area but their criminal records made it a futile search. A lot of the detailed info in the book about street begging comes from what they told me.

I remember one conversation with the guy. We were talking about the trouble in the Middle East (yes, people had intelligent conversations out there) and he smiled, and like in the Josey Wales book, made sure there was a "no offense stranger" preface as he said, "I don't mean any offense, but why are you here?"

I didn't know what he meant and asked why, and he replied, "you're obviously smart, and should be working at some computer place." I had a laugh about that remark, as people often don't know that working at a high tech company often doesn't require any more intelligence than other places, and just replied, "if I was as smart as you think, I wouldn't be here."

The full conversation is in the book, with much more detail, but what struck me at the time was that his manners were right out of a Western novel. Part courtesy, part caution.

...the law...

There was no "law" out there, at least in the sense we normally expect. We see movies and TV shows where someone threatens to call the cops and it makes the other back off or reconsider their actions.

That can work sometimes, I'm not saying it never does, but there are people out there that simply aren't afraid of "the law." Crooks know that most of the homeless won't call the cops and that all they have to do is prevent you from calling 911 is to take the phone away.

Even if a call does get through, there's still the time it takes for help to arrive, and when they do, they're likely to treat everyone as suspects (assuming the thief or attacker actually sticks around). They won't necessarily come as rescuers for one of the parties. Looking at it from their point of view, they aren't told that a bad guy is making trouble with a good guy, but that there's a "disturbance" or possible theft and the situation needs to be sorted out.

In other words, the "law" is really just a veil or social training that hopes to keep criminal behavior in check, and most of the consequences are after the fact. One time an ex-homeless man told me that he was stabbed with a knife while trying to defend his girlfriend from harassment, and though the attacker was caught, well, he still got stabbed. Getting justice is a different thing than protected by the law.  

There was plenty of law after that incident, but there was none at that moment, which was more than enough time for the guy to get "pinked." If other homeless hadn't intervened, he could have been killed, and the law would have made no difference in that guy's fate.

Bob Dylan once sang "in order to live outside the law, you must be honest." Even if the normal social norms aren't present, people tend to adopt behaviors and procedures based on caution, and respect. That respect may be based on fear, but most systems of law are the same.

Caution isn't just a homeless thing. Women have to use it when walking alone at night, tourists are always reminded not to leave their belongings unattended in an airport, that house and car doors shouldn't be left unlocked, and so on. It's just common sense to be careful.

In a homeless area, you're generally in close contact with strangers, and like in the suburbs or a condo complex, may never get to know the neighbors (or get along with them). The difference is that there's no walls, fences, or law to keep each other apart.

In such groups of strangers, it's tempting to think such scenarios inevitably become like a "Lord of the Flies" situation, but that's not a given. In my book, there is a situation where it got like that, but as a rule it was very much like the old West, at least how it was described in books or depicted in movies. There were "towns" full of strangers and thus protocols.

One key scene in the book and movie, when Wales meets the Commanche Ten Bears and they agree to not fight, and the chief says that words "must come from men" and not governments or pieces of paper. It was about words with "iron" and honor among men.

That's the mythology of the Wild West. In the real world of the streets, I found both people of honor and swine, but the greatest lesson that the Josey Wales story taught was to always take care of your horse. In other words, realize what's really important and protect it.

That's not mythology, but common sense.



"Authors, in writing novels, usually act as if they were God, and could, by a broadness of perception, comprehend and present any human story as if God were telling it to Himself without veiling anything, and with all the essential details. That I cannot do, any more than can the authors themselves."

"We can understand one another; but each one is able to explain only himself."

- Hermann Hesse (Demien)

...mental illness part two...

There's a tendency to view mental health as a fence where people are on one side or the other, that is to say, mentally ill or "normal." That's part of the old human habit of creating in and out groups, which results in people rigidly adhering to appearances or being judgmental about outliers and nonconformists. That takes a toll on those singled out, but also on those who become fearful of not being seen as normal (and control themselves and other's behavior to enforce a norm).

The Internet can make people feel like instant experts, which used to be the exclusive province of actors, journalists, and politicians. The basic idea that information is the key to good judgement has devolved into "credibility" and who has it.

Which isn't surprising. It's one thing to read a book on the subject and feel more knowledgable, but quite another when the person is overwhelmed by millions of bytes of "information," much of it contradictory but all backed by "experts." It can end up a matter of who you believe.

High tech engineers have no illusions about data, even if the marketing people rhapsodize about the information age. The programmers have an old saying, "garbage in, garbage out," which is another way of saying that the computer is really a big dumb machine.

People think data makes the computer smart, and by extension, those people with access to data. Which can create informed decisions but also doesn't protect you from liars, con artists, political organizations, sales and marketing departments, and most importantly, yourself.

The worst thing that the data age has done is turn probabilities into certainties. That is to say, to use an obvious example, a stated 20% rate of men who cheat on their wives can become a judgement that a man is "likely" to cheat or is predisposed. Most "profiling" is based on percentages generated from data.

...decisions, decisions, decisions...

The Internet has made masses of data available but it hasn't made us any "smarter" than a medieval peasant, who probably could survive in his or her environment better than a modern person could. We talk about the Middle Ages and all the garbage they threw onto the streets, for example, and we've merely improved on that by dumping into rivers and oceans.

Mental health, or the knowledge of it, has been helped by the Internet. Not so much the data, but in hearing and seeing people talk about it on personal terms. One realizes that it's not something that only happens to "others" or the sinful.

I read articles about the homeless and a good portion of them are simply described as "mentally ill" and the image that defines it is virtually always some guy who's pooping on the sidewalk or something. That person becomes a data point, or the reader's picture of the mentally ill homeless.

If I don't call behavior "crazy" in the book, or put a label on it, then one can read the passages, and possibly see that they've felt that way at one time or another, or saw someone they loved act like that. Categories and labels are useful, but can trigger automatic responses that have nothing to do with the book character.

There's a scene in the book, which I'll share a part of, because it's a good example of how a person might look to different people.

I was in a waiting line at the pharmacy, and a guy in front of me was upset that part of his prescription wasn't given a refill. He was a homeless person I'd seen around, and my prescription was actually the same. The pharmacist was trying to explain that the second medication would be fine for his panic and anxiety attacks until the problem with the other med was resolved, but he got upset and looked like he was going to cause a disturbance.

The others in line began to back away and show fear, but having also been treated for anxiety and panic disorder, it was clear to me that what was going on wasn't much different than what I'd seen at other pharmacy outlets. So I just stood there, knowing that once the guy's anxiety cooled down a bit, he'd realize that there was enough medication for the condition. 

People are now more familiar with anxiety and panic attacks, so the sight of a person getting worked up over a sudden change in their prescription wouldn't be so alarming in a Walmart pharmacy lobby, but at the time, the fact that it was a homeless person colored the bystanders perception of the incident.

...first draft reflections...

In the first draft of my book, I describe various incidents involving mental health, including a misguided attempt to get prescriptions through the County Psychiatric Emergency facility (bad advice from fellow homeless) where I was almost ended up being committed due to being zoned out from sleep deprivation (and the resultant hallucinations). 

That was a close call, but in retrospect, an incident full of dark humor if one is so inclined. There is definitely such a thing as a "Kafkaesque" situation.

I saw a lot of problems with the passages in the second pass; which accurately described the incidents but was also full of later judgements and emotions, which colored how it really happened, and was unfair to the County Health workers who as a whole, were very sincere and helpful, and just as frustrated with the system as the patients.

I found once again, it was better to just tell the stories, and not try to label the behaviors. There was a temptation to invoke standard images, like with the shopping cart crowd who as a rule (from what I saw) are harmless and deserving of compassion.

There is a population of mentally ill people out there, and it took a few months before I could see them for what they actually were. I entered homelessness while still being treated for anxiety/panic disorder, and insomnia, and like many others, lost access to the prescriptions due to red tape.

That didn't mean people didn't do anything about it. Some developed routines to keep moving and in my mind, keep endorphins in their systems. Others self medicated with drugs and/or alchohol, or were overcome by their symptoms. That's not including those who got there because of the drug scene, though even there were those who would have liked to get out of it if they knew how or could get treatment.

How I coped is detailed over the course of the book, but the daily hiking routine that was described in earlier blogs and gofundme updates was part of that, plus diet and herbal solutions.

...we can manage all right...

The most important advice was given to me by a doctor several years before. She told me that once on medications for anxiety and panic, to use that as a "breathing spell" while learning to "manage" the conditons. It was advice that I ignored at the time, like most who just lean on the meds, but it became relevant out there.

The doctor explained that a panic attack could "break through" the medication and that even if I took another dose or used something like Xanax as a band aid, that I still needed to learn to function while the attack was in progress, and not just think of taking a pill.

Most people who've experienced a panic attack know that it's a very unpleasant feeling. In fact, many first learn that they're having panic attacks when they found themselves heading for a hospital thinking they were having a heart attack.

"Managing" was in essence, the ability to realize that one was in a panic attack, and coping with the symptoms until it passed. In my case, I also had to go through about a month of severe withdrawal after losing County aid due to a bureaucratic mistake. That turned out to be the easy part. The situation out there in the car was dire enough that craving meds seemed trivial, especially after being driven into the high crime areas, and the anxiety-panic attacks came on.

The doctor was right. What I was thinking and how I reacted to an attack was important. One of the things that helps manage a panic attack is talking to somebody while it's happening. That wasn't always possible, so I'd talk to Ivy, and didn't think anything of that because most people talk to dogs.

I mentioned the shopping cart people, and why I understood them. In my case, it got back to me that I had become a regular sight in some places; this guy carrying a little white dog in a fake Gucci bag (it was free, so I didn't care) all around while appearing to talk to the sky or whatever. I was actually talking to Ivy, of course, but they couldn't know that.

Some might call that nutty or strange, but I thought of it as managing my symptoms, and while it never completely eliminated the panic attacks, the doctor was right; if I could view it as physical discomfort, then it could managed.

I'm not saying that a person who keeps their belongings in a cart completely knows what they're doing, but like me, they're generally just trying to solve a problem. That statement may not make sense, but in the book, realizing that explained a lot of things about the people around me, and that included some who weren't homeless.

I'll continue with part three in a future blog entry...



...Ivy's first command...

One of the first things anyone does with a new dog is to teach it commands and how it responds to that training can color how the dog is perceived. A dog who won't obey commands can be seen as "disobedient" even though it would probably never dream of trying to be the alpha over a God that brings food that doesn't require hunting or fighting to get. Even if it is crappy dry cereal that no human would eat.

Ivy was a shitzu, and like others of her breed, was born to command. Shitzus, or as the ancient Chinese referred to them, Dragon Dogs, are famous for being nearly untrainable, and who instead try to train their masters. Unlike most women who have to deal with men with fragile egos, dogs like Ivy dispense with the torturous concept of making it seem like the guy's idea and just apply the whip as needed.

Like most dogs, the first command was "sit." Which she would comply with if shown food. Otherwise, the word had no meaning in dog language, like the word "please" among humans.

After several attempts to get her to obey the command without obvious reward, she decided to teach me how to properly give the command.

It started one night when we were traveling south in 2009, and stopped in for the night in a motel. She jumped up on the bed, and eagerly wagged her tail, which didn't always mean she was happy, but was ready to eat.

I was still unpacking, and realized that it'd be a good idea to set up a water bowl, as dinner wasn't going to happen for a couple of hours. I filled her food dish with water, and set it on the bed. She quickly thrust her face into the dish, then looked up and then sat down in the classic "sit" position with a stern look on her face.

I didn't get it at first, so she stood up, then sat down again with the same offended look. Then it hit me, that the food bowl was for food, not water, so it was promptly filled with what I believe was Beefy Doggy Delight if memory serves.

After that, if meals were late, Ivy would ostentatiously sit for a few seconds with a smile on her face, but would soon give me that same weird blank look that women often have when men lift their butts off the couch and fart. People who saw her do that would give sage advice like "don't give into that bratty behavior" or "you need to show her who's the boss" but such remarks were politely acknowledged and ignored.

After all, I can't criticize Ivy for not obeying commands if I didn't feel like following advice from nosey dog experts who can't mind their own business. The struggle over control of feeding times were a matter between Ivy and me, and not with those who think a dog is supposed to act like an 18th Century wife.

I figured that giving her a few bucks and sending her to a fast food joint wasn't an option, so if Ivy wanted to identify as a cat, then so be it. When she gave me the sit command, I'd fix dinner.

I just wished that she'd have been a little more polite about it...



...Topanga Reprise, and music...

I entered the homeless world as a musician, but that identity faded as being a writer was more relevant, and safer. Street musicians had to worry about their instruments being stolen even when playing in the open.

Still, there was music. The one survivor of what was once a fine instrument collection was a vintage charango, which has a story that'll be related in the September blog, that made it out with me to the Midwest. I began work on a charango piece, called "A Noble One She Was" back in April 2016, and it's still in progress. The initial demo was recorded in the car, and the sound of freeway traffic can be heard on it.

There was also one electric number, "Topanga Reprise," that was in pre-demo form, literally a jam tape, that was in the works to become a Handa-McGraw International single when my life situation changed. The normal procedure was to edit the jam tape into a rough demo and then if approved, that would be become the rehearsal version.

I eventually completed the editing for a preliminary demo in various coffee houses in December 2016, and after it was approved, posted it on our YouTube site, The Electric Fog Factory. 

The cover illustration combines two pictures. One is of a dirt road used by a local utility company that runs about two miles along farm fields and migrant worker housing, and a picture of Ivy on a railroad track (that was later used as a promo pic). 

What prompted me to finish the demo was that McGraw's guitar was reminiscent of 60s era electric Neil Young music, and it had an evocative mood that resonated with my situation at the time. It's a case of where the reprise ended up being done before the actual main song.

The Topanga name comes from the area in Los Angeles where a lot of musicians lived and hung out, but I also gave the levee road that name in my book, because over time, that dirt trail and the people who lived around it became part of the heart of the story.

Title: Topanga Reprise (demo version)

https://youtu.be/HUENrBO0nfY


- Al Handa





The Al & Ivy Homeless Literary Journal Archive:

There are earlier blog entries on the Delta Snake Review section of this site that aren't on the On The Road page:
http://deltasnake.blogspot.com


Cover Reveal For Hide In Plain Sight


This is the cover for the upcoming book, Hide In Plain Sight, hopefully out sometime in 2019.










Tuesday, March 12, 2019

On The Road With Al and Ivy: A Literary Homeless Journal - March 2019




"…I was halfway across America, at the dividing line between the East of my youth and the West of my future..."

- Jack Kerouac (On The Road, The Original Scroll)

"It was my last observation that it was the custom of every man to call every other man a madman. The truth, in my judgement, they were all mad."

- Jack London (The Jacket, aka The Star Rover 1915)

Jack London is known (these days) as an adventure writer whose most famous books, Call Of The Wild and White Fang, are considered children or young adult classics (at least in abridged editions). He was quite popular in his time, and wrote several books that are considered classic.

His real life became legendary and many works like On The Road, a book about hobos, came from experiencing, and not just visiting, that life.

London treated writing as a discipline, and part of that involved churning out 1500 words a day. That resulted in a body of work that included short stories, essays, fiction and nonfiction books. Much of that went out of print until the digital age. There were hard copies around, but the rarer ones tended to command collector level prices.

One part of his catalogue that's become better known in the digital age are the books described in some circles as early science fiction. Which is sort of true, though it might be more accurate to describe the works as metaphysical, though his recreation of pre-Stone Age life, Before Adam, could be seen as speculative fiction.

My favorite London work in that genre, The Jacket, also known as The Star Rover, is a fascinating psychological novel that involves a prisoner who escapes torture by disassociating into past lives. London went all in with the concept and didn't label it as a descent into madness or fantasy. The prisoner actually connected with past lives, and unlike some modern treatments which portray glorious and successful adventures, recalled a variety with vastly different outcomes. Which is in line with London's life experience in environments where many a life was cut short by fate or failure.

London was a superb short story writer. In fact, that was probably his forte, and because of that, the various past lives are told in masterful detail. Even more impressive for his time, each episode accurately reflects the mentality of each era. Each is a superb short story within the bigger work.

What can be overlooked was how good the psychological detail was. The various prison characters are seen as personality types, each played or manipulated a certain way by the prisoner. In other words, each one didn't just do this or that, but also had psychological traits, motives and goals.

The process of disassociating from physical pain is described in minute detail. London's true life adventures certainly involved experiencing various forms of deprivation, thus giving insight into the thoughts and sensations that came from both the slow starvation of a prison diet, and being strapped into a jacket designed to inflict pain.

It's a prescient series of passages about mind over matter that was echoed in later works of art. One notable example is in an episode of the crime drama, Criminal Minds, where one of the agents is captured with the intent of torturing him into revealing information. The torturers are puzzled by the apparent indifference to pain until the head villain realizes that the agent has successfully disassociated into the past, and a psychological chess game begins to try and bring him back into the present. 

London was astute enough to make sure the fellow prisoners in the book had a variety of perceptions about that ability to regress into past lives. The prisoner who taught the main character how to self hypnotize was a believer in the method, but regarded the recollections simply as a mysterious trick of the mind to detach from reality. Others felt it was all crazy nonsense and self deception.

The Warden and his assistants were depicted as cruel, but of the "normal" world, who had no idea of what was going on and had no ability to see past what they thought was reality. Disassociation is now a familiar idea or belief, but back when London wrote the book, the characters calling the prisoner crazy may well have been drawn from real life skeptics.

One of the other themes is sanity, and what a core personality is. In other words, inside that mix of physical and psychological actions, was a person who came to see himself as a consciousness that would survive all that was happening.

For the purposes of this blog entry, the most interesting aspect of the story is how the various characters viewed (or were unable to see) what was going on in the Star Rovers mind, and the subject of disassociation. Also, the story had a cast of characters and there was no clear delineation of who was normal and not. As the story develops, it's clear that the main character is probably saner than his captors.

London didn't create a story with sane people dealing with the insane. He took a more metaphysical view in creating a mix of personalities and behaviors, and left judgement to the reader. That a character would visit past lives wouldn't have been an abstract to him. In his life, he'd encountered a wide variety of cultures and as a writer type, observed that many had deep spiritual beliefs that weren't common in the Western culture.

That the Star Rover's escape into the past was viewed with a variety of attitudes like skepticism, misunderstanding, or as a mystery that triggered reactions like fear or anger, it could be seen as a microcosm of how mankind has often treated the strange and unorthodox.  

...mental illness, and the strange...

The concept of sanity, norms, and mental illness is a subject that hasn't been covered in detail in this blog, though a sizable part of the homeless population is considered "mentally ill."

I had devoted over half of this blog entry to the technical aspect of the subject but found that it just led to an unwieldy morass of disputable data. Having people disagree with my opinion is OK, but it's always a good idea to avoid setting off chapter and verse disputes over data. I discarded the section and kept to the relative simplicity of generalities for this entry.

Another reason I discarded the previously planned section was that it became obvious that the issue isn't mental illness, but mental health.

For example, you hear people claiming that the homeless seem to want to stay that way and other overly broad statements that are actually a wrong diagnosis.

Apathy is often a symptom, and it's not really a general personality trait. Many drug and alcohol abusers are self-medicating, not partying away in a cardboard box in an alley. That's why general assistance fails so often. It's not treatment.

I'm going to revise the original essay and run it in the next blog.

...mental illness in the past...

Most people know that historically the definition of mental illness has differed in the past and that the "treatment" could be brutal. The supposedly normal people who burned women as witches were certainly not, though society tries to explain it as "ignorance." Calling it ignorance obscures the real issue, which is that the concept of sanity is often determined by majority rule, or those in power.

Blaming it on religion isn't entirely accurate either, as women who didn't fit the norm were persecuted or punished well before Christianity. For example, punishing a woman for adultery goes back to ancient times, or basically as soon as men decided they were property.

It's more complex than that of course, and the reasons for punishing someone judged as mentally ill can involve a wide range of motives that include social, political, religious, and emotional reasons that could be classified as insane. The mentality of attacking or punishing the unorthodox are human traits that have always been around and probably always will be.

We live in an era where people on opposing ends of the political spectrum, for example, take things past simple disagreement on issues and assert that the other side has a mental condition, or label people as sociopaths or whatever on the basis of what they've read in the news.

Society, or even smaller segments like peer groups decide for religious or political reasons which behaviors are normal and one can't automatically assume the standard will be fair. There is one constant, which is that sanity tends to be determined by majority rule. Not by doctors or leaders, but what the majority agrees with or is at least duped into believing. If were only up to leaders or experts, there'd be no disagreement about Global Warming, vaccines or whatever.

Mental illness still has a stigma, and a lot of it is based in fear. It's still a mysterious subject in many ways, as there's generally no obvious cause and effect like the flu, and odd behavior can be unsettling to those who are taught how to behave according to societal norms.

I hadn't decided how to treat the subject until the fifth draft. It's a complex subject, yet subject to the same dynamics that was described in the book by London. The mentally ill homeless population is actually complex and diverse, but tends to be viewed simplistically as under that one label, which is then interpreted in a wide range of often conflicting views, many of which are subjective.

The homeless problem has been around long enough for archetypes and cliches to develop, and thanks to short sound bytes and Internet forums, one can list the categories. That is to say, just one, the "mentally ill," all viewed in the same lens as the occasional person that goes off and commits a violent act or uses the sidewalk as a bathroom.

...odd ducks...

I lived for 14 months among more than a few "odd ducks" and people who needed help. I was uneasy at first around them, and often scared by their behavior. After a while though, I came to realize that most were harmless.

Many lived in fear, as they were easy targets for predators, and stuck rigidly to routines that helped them survive. I learned to not interrupt those routines and let them live in their own world. In fact, I learned a great deal about survival from predators by watching them. People can think the mentally ill homeless were all alike, just a bunch of crazies or whatever, but again, that's just simplistic.

Like all people, they had a variety of perceptions of the world around them, and in their own way, had good instincts and came up with various strategies for survival. They may have had problems, some had a lot, but most certainly weren't dangerous. 

...family....

Seeing the elderly ones affected me the most. There were men and women out there who in a perfect world should have had kids or grandchildren taking care of them. Having worked in a nursing home as a young man, I know that having family that care isn't a given. 

It requires a cold heart to be unmoved by the sight of a woman old enough to be a grandmother wander around out there with everything she owns in a shopping cart. If it pained me to see it, I couldn't imagine her pain from knowing there was family that knew and didn't come for her in that dangerous world. I came to feel that being detached from reality was perhaps a mercy in that place and time, and I don't expect society to understand why I and others felt that way.

There are various theories and reasons for there being so many mentally ill out there on the street. All may have some truth, but the most common cookie cutter solution seems to be, round them up and put them into forced treatment for their own good, with the underlying attitude that they're pests to be put out of sight and mind. Some might argue with that statement, but most decent people know that there's that element in any solution that involves involuntary detention.

More than a few groups or subcultures have found that it's not always safe to have sanity determined by majority rule. That why the subject is so contentious, and the solution won't be easy to find, though there's people out there doing their best to help, and frustrating as it can be, try to follow the rules and resist the temptation to join the more vocal in the crowd that want to treat the homeless like pests.

I gave the subject of mental illness a great deal of thought, and it wasn't until the final draft that a way to treat the subject evolved in a satisfactory way. The early explanations and essays based on research were discarded, including statements by people on both sides of the issue.

The reason is that, like a lot of subjects, it's rife with often conflicting theories and dependence on experts who aren't always vetted, particularly on the Internet. A good case in point is in a criminal trial where both sides can produce an expert to testify in their favor.

I decided to stick with what I saw, and what the homeless that I talked to, told me. Any descriptions of the mentally ill that described them as such were taken out. They were treated as characters in the story, and the passages written in as much in their point of view as possible, as with those respectable members of society who seemed to make it their businesses to get us arrested or chased out by any means possible.

I did come to one conclusion; that I had little to fear from the mentally ill out there, but there were members of respectable society that I'm glad didn't have any power over me. It's not the powerless ones that I feared, but the ones with it. Believe me, some of them were very, very scary

...the universe....

The homeless world wasn't some isolated tent city or skid row, but part of a larger universe that had all sorts of people that surrounded and interacted with it.

People picture a homeless camp or enclave as a discreet gathering of tents, like a separate world, and that's basically accurate, but in my book, you'll see that it also had subcultures that surrounded or orbited around it. Gilroy didn't have an extensive social service structure like San Francisco, so we didn't see aid workers or counsellors. 

But in 14 months in four locations, the periphery of any homeless gathering was active with vigilantes, hazers, dealers and couriers, pimps, religious cult members, sexual predators, animal activists, truckers, bike boosters, gypsies, possible police informants, tourists, and weekend slummers. 

Three of the locations were considered "gang territories," but I rarely saw gangs operating among the homeless. I've read (and heard at the time) that it was different in places like San Francisco, where tent cities were used to hide bike boosting rings and such. Also, as explained in earlier blog entries, certain places like county aid offices had gangs and businesses that targeted those who went there, but the homeless were incidental to the larger goal of harvesting the aid money paid out every month.

...life on a reservation...

There's a solution one hears now and then, which is to put them all in camps on public land (away from prime real estate), which would be a disaster for the mentally ill, especially the females. Homeless camps and shelters develop different dynamics depending on the demographics of the people there, but as you'll see in the book, it can quickly become Darwinian. In one chapter, I relate the experience of one homeless man who lived in a shelter for a while, and the dynamics resembled a loosely supervised school or reform school yard.

Any forced gathering of homeless would quickly turn into a refugee camp, and at best, be like a Native American Reservation.

The location of Native American reservations is no accident. The United States wanted the various tribes off of any land that could turn a real profit. The few times that such land turned out to be productive, like when gold was found in the Black Hills, commercial interests funneled wildcat miners into the area and the predictable conflicts forced the government's hand, bringing the Army in after the Sioux refused to leave.

The suggestion to ship the homeless off to camps is rooted in the same mentality, to get people seen as pests away from high value property (or areas in the process of becoming more valuable). The problem is that the only land suitable for a new "reservation" is public land, most of which is valuable enough that if it's not being exploited, business interests want it to be.

It's probably a good thing that such camps aren't created. One can look at areas like L.A. and San Francisco where ad hoc camps have become a humanitarian disaster area rife with drug use, crime, untreated mentally ill, and disease (like typhoid). Any such camp would have to be run like a city with services, so while it would cause many business types to shake their heads when I say this, the best organization to handle the homeless problem are city governments and that's where the money should go, and cities are where the homeless should stay until the problem is solved. 

In the long run, it'll still be cheaper than funding camps that create a permanent state of dependency. Some may argue that it's already happening in the big cities, but that's really more a situation where money is being poorly spent, and that can be fixed if society has the will.

"The experience of a long life has taught me, however, that sin is always punished in this world, whatever may come in the next. There is always some penalty in health, in comfort, or in peace of mind to be paid for every wrong. It is with nations as it is with individuals."

- Arthur Conan Doyle (Micah Clarke)

My favorite fiction books and movies tend to be historical adventures, and almost all involve some sort of journey. One favorite is Arthur Conan Doyle's Micah Clarke, which is about the exploits of three men who left their homes to join the Monmouth Rebellion in England. Doyle once said that his best writing wasn't the Sherlock Holmes stories, but the historical novels like Micah Clarke, White Company, Sir Nigel, and others. 

One thought that came to me after becoming homeless was that the characters left their homes to embark on the journey, yet were never labeled as homeless or transient even as they had to sleep out in the open or whatever shelter that could be found. Even Buddha today would probably be described as an enlightened homeless guy.

Arthur Conan Doyle was different in that he wasn't a stylist, like say, a Dickens or Joyce. He isn't quoted a lot, or has lots of people rhapsodizing about great passages, but anyone who's read Doyle knows that he was a no nonsense writer who was a great storyteller.

Being a writer who can efficiently narrate a story isn't a small feat. I've read lots of books where superfluous verbiage or detail seems to interrupt or stop the flow, or create scenes that fall flat. In addition, Doyle showed a satirical side (that reminds me of Stanley Kubrick) that wasn't always apparent in the Sherlock Holmes tales.

There's a couple of funny scenes that stand out in Micah Clarke. One is where the tough Mercenary becomes pious and devout in the presence of Puritan businessmen, to the disgust of Micah, and later, where two noblemen threaten each other with death, and a infantry officer respectfully suggests that there's a suitable place just outside where the gentlemen can have "proper elbow room for a breather." As the two lords get get more hysterical in their attempt to get the sergeant to intervene, he continues to politely direct them to a suitable dueling place. As the scene unfolds, you can imagine the smirk on Doyle's face as he wrote out that passage.

Doyle's historical novels rarely had a lot of long "detail" passages. He didn't fuss over fashion or equipment specs, yet the reader has a good sense of the atmosphere and look of the period by the end of the book. That's because much of the information was only fed in as needed, and a lot of the feel for the period came from the dialogue, which adds color and keeps the action moving forward. There aren't long descriptive passages about swords or armor, for example, instead the characters talk about the subject during conversations at various points in the story.

In the end, the historical novels were very much like the Sherlock Holmes series. Great story telling and characters that come alive and stay in your consciousness, like good friends you regularly visit and enjoy the company of. It was a book I reread in the car and was glad to enjoy the company of Micah and friends once again.

...the journey...

Micah Clarke wasn't the only adventure/journey book I read. I also read or reread "Travels With Charlie" by John Steinbeck, the reissue of Jack Kerouac's "On The The Road" in the original scroll form, and Jack London's "The Road."

All three are classic, of course, but each invoked a much different reaction than what might have occurred had my circumstances had been less dire.

Travels With Charlie, a travelogue by Steinbeck who decided to see the real America with his poodle, was the biggest disappointment. I thought that a book about a guy and his dog roughing it in a cross country trip would be full of insight into my situation but it read like a slight tale about a very well financed vacation. I refrain from calling it slumming as Steinbeck appeared to to be sincere in his desire to see the real America and talk to the salt of the earth.

Steinbeck by this time was a wealthy man, and the descriptions of the custom truck trailer complete with liquor cabinet and various hotels were so out of sync with my reality that it made me feel like Karl Marx to read it. Motel rooms were a real luxury out there, and run by corporations that charged such high rates that one often had to choose between a bed or eating a full meal. Some put all their money into a room and then panhandled to get cash to eat, though most just went without. All that could have been overlooked had it been an entertaining book, but my impression is that it was mainly a book for Steinbeck fans.

The Kerouac book was quite interesting, though a few decades down the line it's become a period piece, albeit a classic one. Kerouac originally typed the entire book out on a single roll of butcher paper, not even stopping to correct mistakes or do any editing or revisions. A cynic might say like a word processor with auto correct. It was, in effect, a stream of consciousness put to paper, though it did have a plot.

I liked this scroll version, as it's earthier and spontaneous. It was an adventurous book for it's era and place, which was 50s America, though Europe had already seen writing like this before. Kerouac had a freer sense of poetry or metre, influenced by American jazz, and is clearly less mannered than James Joyce or Henry Miller, who were more disciplined.

The lack of editing does show, and it's an uneven book, with brilliant passages and some real clunky sections that won't inspire rereading. Yet it's hard to imagine how Kerouac could have produced this book any other way, as any self editing process would have filtered many of the best passages into more "correct" structure, as it's now clear that it happened here and there in the original published version.

Although the book was a chronicle of a trip across the United States, the real journey was in the author's mind, as he attempted, and succeeded, in creating a new culture with it's own language. As I started my own book, I couldn't say that "The Road" was going to be a direct influence. For one thing, On The Road is a young book, almost innocent in it's enthusiasm, and very much about discovery. But Kerouac's writing was also was very brave and honest, and such qualities will serve me well in my own work.

...another Road book...

Jack London's book, "The Road," describes his experiences as a hobo, and it provided a lot of the background of later movies like "Emperor Of The North." It's a brilliant book, full of details that might shock or surprise those who think of hobos in terms of Roger Miller's 'King Of The Road" or Red Skelton's lovable tramp character.

The Hobo world was, and is a lot tougher, and very insular with it's own language and culture. I remember seeing hobos as a kid, they had set up a small camp near some tracks that ran though the then small town of Palo Alto. That area was a popular place for kids, as it had trees that were suitable for building ad hoc platforms, so we'd come into contact with them as they passed though.

The hobos were old school, and carefully avoided trouble, particularly with kids as that would quickly get the attention of the police. I heard and read stories later on that the hobo scene was changing, with younger men and a tougher environment, but that wasn't really true. Some of the hobos warned us even back then to be careful around hobos, and that's echoed in London's book, although not explicitly.

London's stories are an unglamorous view of such hobo staples as train hopping, which in reality could get one maimed or killed. There were murders, and a criminal element, yet among the mainstream, a sense of code and honor. They did go around and beg for food if short on cash, but their life wasn't entirely about avoiding work.

In an earlier age, many probably would have become mountain men or trappers, content to live an independent life away from civilization. Most didn't become town drunks or the happy neighborhood tramp. Their life was about travel, being in constant motion and London clearly found it an adventure with plenty of challenges for the type of man he was at the time. 

I was aware of hobos and similar wanderers out there, and most of the old timer homeless avoided them and advised me to do the same. I resisted the temptation to visit hobo camps and rail byways that had their codes written describing the area, and never stayed near railroad tracks at night. 

It wasn't a matter of whether the danger was truth or myth, but that there wasn't much margin for error out there. That's why the risks London took in his book looked even more impressive once I'd been out there for a while. A robbery or beating could be catastrophic to a homeless person, and danger was really danger, not like in a TV show or movie where people luck out or are too tough to take on.

I once saw a young man emerge one morning from the levee camp area after an obvious beating, and it was clear that if he couldn't have walked out under his own power, he'd have had to lay out there until discovered by someone (who didn't mug him). He was a big strong guy, not someone you'd pick a fight with, but like I said, it wasn't like the movies. The guys who attacked him had simply waited till he went to sleep that night. 

His strength meant nothing, and in fact was a disadvantage. The two assailants couldn't take the chance he'd get up and start fighting back, so the attack was sudden and very violent. Luckily he was smart enough to recognize that they weren't going to kill him so stayed down and took the beating, which could have been a lot worse.

That's a tough choice he had to make, and the best way to avoid such situations was to stay away from places like camps and railroad tracks where hobos hung out. That was possible because I had a car and could keep moving, which London didn't have, but he still adhered to the same principle, that movement was survival. Of the three books discussed, his was the most real to me out there.

I did research the subject of hobos, and learned some of the codes and such, but it's dicey to put things in a story purely from research. Much of what I read about the homeless gets a lot of things wrong, so figure it must be the same for tramps. As a result, they are a shadowy presence in the book, as it was in reality for me.

...Ivy...

It's been almost two years since Ivy passed away on March 17th, 2017, and she's been on my mind more than last year. Part of that is because as my book nears completion, most of the work is on the second half which includes her death.

The first draft of the book ended in February 2017, on the one year anniversary of us becoming homeless, and even up to the third draft, I still seriously considered keeping that original ending. However, Ivy had emerged in the second half as a major part of the plot, becoming the "face" of both the promo business and blog, and even in death, a catalyst that helped mobilize efforts that literally rescued me from the street. It was appropriate to make it about her whole life.

I've described her story in earlier blog entries, but one aspect stood out this month, her emergence as the face of virtually all of my projects. It started when I started my Twitter account a few years ago. It was intended to promote my music, but none had been recorded yet, so was treated as an internet radio station playing an eclectic mix.

It gained a thousand followers, and that seemed good enough as a place holder set up until some original music was created. The thing that was on my mind at the time was, how to go about growing the audience from there.

I had been taking pictures with my iPhone and was enjoying editing those on various photo apps. The long range plan was to be able to produce my own promo and album covers. Most of the people around me didn't like having their pictures taken, and neither did Ivy, but she had no choice in the matter. Thus, her career as a model began.

Ivy's reluctance to be photographed changed once it became a professional situation, with payment in extra treats and food after sessions. Her white hair and big eyes were ideal for creating photos with graphic effects, and I literally took thousands of pictures of her.

 I used one of her in a blue hooded jacket as my Twitter avatar, and the result was a surprise. People, particularly women, started to follow the account and it began to grow at a thousand a month.

One Fourth of July weekend, I was at a dinner, and put one of the festive American Flag napkins on her back (which slipped forward like a scarf) and took the picture you see today as the avatar on both the Twitter and Facebook accounts. Once that became the symbol of the Boogie Underground, the Twitter account grew to over two hundred thousand in a little under two years.

I've never changed that photo, except to put a copyright notice on it, and have always kept it as the company logo, so to speak. I've often wondered at the success of her image, and the main thing that comes to me is that Ivy projected a friendly and sweet personality along with the patriotic colors. A cute little dog is hard to resist.

Ivy probably never knew that she had become the Boogie Underground's super model, but did understand that something important was going on when the iPhone was pointed at her. She was a little diva, and limited photo sessions to a couple of minutes, but when engaged, would pose and make a wide variety of faces. 

The sessions were structured, and I always used the same words and tonal inflections so that over time, she knew when a big smile was required or when to show a more reflective air. It was always more effective if the camera set to rapidly shoot for a couple of minutes, as she had gotten into the habit of making the same face if it was a posed "smile for the camera" situation.

Her modeling skills became vital in 2017. Freelance drafting jobs were hard to come by, and job applications didn't go very far for a homeless person. However, some regular income did start to come in from promotion work on social media using ads featuring Ivy. It was an important development that helped me begin to feel productive again, and to have hopes that our ordeal could someday end.

Having a dog who could pose like a model was more than simply useful or a good selling point for ads, it was also a lot of fun during a time when things felt dreary and hopeless. We spent many wonderful hours getting good pictures, which were then processed into ads, and as payment was in advance from kind and enthusiastic customers, the rewards were immediate and concrete. In Ivy's case, it was slices of baked chicken, a real favorite. It helped our spirits to an extent that's hard to describe without it sounding like fantasy, but in the context of life as it was then, it felt like a miracle.

Ivy didn't make it out, and looking back, it was obvious that her heart condition was getting worse, and deep down, I knew that there was a chance she'd die out there. Still, it felt so sudden, and to this day, I still feel the loss of a good friend who was there at the lowest point of my life, and never broke faith with our friendship.

I've changed nothing since. Every picture is still up, and she's still the face of The Boogie Underground. It's not that I can't let go, but a matter of respect. People who do great things get statues or memorials, and in Ivy's case, she helped build this blog and it's social media presence, and so she'll live on here.

The book will have her statue in it. It'll have to be constructed with words, which I believe will last longer than stone anyway.

...update on the final draft...

I had hoped to have the final draft complete by December 31st, but couldn't manage it. Most of that month was spent trying to move the manuscript into the Windows 10 and Android environment and dealing with the technical problems that came up.

I eventually solved the problem by just staying in the iOS environment for now, and will deal with getting it into Word manuscript and ebook format when the book is done. Trying to do it all at once wasn't a good idea.

The book chapters are assembled, with a working total of 36 chapters, most of which are done. I'll need to rewrite three chapters, and do the final revisions on six.

The actual planned total will be 24 chapters. Some of the working sections will be combined into larger chapter, etc, but are being kept separate until it's time to do the layout for ebook formatting.

One of the things I saw was that the chapter order had to be changed and better transitions written. I've said in earlier blog entries that the book would be combining first and third person narrative, which makes the story more vivid, but wasn't happy with the flow because there was a chance that the reader could find the shift of perspective confusing or abrupt. You can get away with that in a movie, but not in a book written by anyone not named James Joyce.

I came up with a perfect narrative approach in January and am writing out the new transition passages. The various changes in mood, pace, and style now hang together and won't seem fragmented or abrupt. I hope it'll be a rich reading experience for any of you who read the book when it comes out.

I'm still thinking in terms of publication by late Spring or Summer at the absolute latest. As said earlier, there's reasons it shouldn't come out later so that's the deadline for all this.

- Al Handa

The Al & Ivy Homeless Literary Journal Archive:

There are earlier blog entries on the Delta Snake Review section of this site that aren't on the Road page:
http://deltasnake.blogspot.com


Cover Reveal For Hide In Plain Sight


This is the cover for the upcoming book, Hide In Plain Sight, hopefully out sometime in the summer of 2018.