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I Don’t Believe in Humans Anymore

I Don’t Believe in Humans Anymore

I don’t believe
I can’t believe
I won’t believe
In humans anymore
Not anymore
(From “This is a Song for Miss Hedy Lamarr” written by Tommy Henriksen and Johnny Depp)

Tempting right?

It’s tough to read your social media feed and learn there’s a large population of folks out there who support assassinating the President.

They also think it’s okay to assassinate CEO’s.

And they think it’s okay to assassinate conservative Christians.

And they think it’s okay to kill law enforcement officers.

And kill babies.

And Jews.

And they spend a lot of their weekends attempting to making sure we never have a king, when just a short civics lesson could allow them some more time to do yard work.

And then there are those that not only think it’s okay to assassinate the President, but they want you to believe the attempts there have been thus far were faked.

Made up.

A conspiracy.

A diversion for something more diabolical.

I think the person who presented that in my feed recently should have a conversation with the family of Corey Comperatore to find out how that faked stunt worked out for them.

Yeah, it seems pretty easy now a days to not to want to believe in humans anymore.

Which is thankfully why we have the first Saturday in May.

When we can forget humans and focus on what is lately, the more beautiful animals.

Horses.

The Kentucky Derby is this Saturday.

And two weeks after that will be the Preakness.

And three weeks after that will be the Belmont Stakes.

The Triple Crown.

And if you are a Jersey Shore guy like me you can even stretch it out a little and look forward to many of these Triple Crown runners showing up for the Haskell in July at Monmouth Park.

A great time to ditch the humans and enjoy the ride, or rides.

A great diversion from that which might make you want to jump off a bridge or cause harm to someone else.

But not a diabolical diversion, I can assure you, what you see is actually happening.

Yes, it’s time once again for that sentimental racetrack journey.

And, as is tradition in my house, meatballs.

And speaking of kings and royalty, I reached out to get an update on my old friend Sid, Sir Sidney, my King of the Horse Universe. According to Marilyne “He’s doing really well. He is still living his best life in Alpharetta working in a lesson barn. They spoil the ever-loving crap out of him. He’s getting up there in age! He just turned 17 this year.”

That was nice to hear.

Sid is retired, living the good life, and getting the ever-loving crap spoiled out of him.
I am also retired, getting up there in age, but still waiting for someone to spoil the ever-loving crap out of me.

In the meantime, I will work in the yard, and enjoy the diversion of watching the beauty, the pageantry, the colors, the competition, the unusual names, and the back stories of a different world that captures our attention every Spring.

The master guitarist Jeff Beck and Johnny Depp released an album titled “18” in 2022. Beck passed away in January of 2023. This is a Song for Miss Hedy Lamarr is on the album and is an awesome song, written by Tommy Henriksen and Johnny Depp. Tommy Henriksen has a long list of credits that includes Alice Cooper and working with Alice and Depp as part of the Hollywood Vampires. Depp performs this song with Jeff Beck and its worth the watch, the song is amazing and Beck’s guitar contribution is captivating.

And just remember, there are some really smart people out there posting a lot of stuff they don’t themselves believe but they know there are folks out there that will believe it in hopes that some will forego their yard work and stand on a corner to make sure the US doesn’t have a king in our future, or maybe even pack up their firearms and get a train ticket to Washington, D.C.

Sadly, you can’t always believe in humans anymore.

And now…

“They’re off!”

This year’s Derby shirt

Postscript:
The photo at the top is of Sid living his best life and taking a nap.

Marilyne and Sid
New Jersey Turnaround

New Jersey Turnaround

This weekend, Kim was up visiting her mom, so after a morning work meeting on Saturday, I did a quick trip up to New Jersey to help with some family business.

A New Jersey Turnaround so to speak.

The nagging song in my head the last couple of weeks has been Las Vegas Turnaround by Hall and Oates.

Las Vegas Turnaround was on the album Abandoned Luncheonette released in November of 1973.

I wasn’t a really big Hall and Oates fan back then in that I don’t think I ever bought any of their music and besides, you could hear plenty of it on the radio.

But I remember the first time I heard this song.

 

To my parents, it was known as Hi-Henry’s.  Then for a little while, the Cat’s Meow and I am told, JM’s River Edge.  Then for many years and up until recently, it had been the Casa Comida Restaurant.

In my life experience, however, in the early to mid-1970’s, it will always be remembered as Barry’s.

Crossing over one of the two bridges that connected Oceanport with Long Branch, the Branchport Bridge, the old building, and the prominent sign always greeted you on your right.  I remember that sign growing up, in whatever iteration it was at the time.

 

The last couple of years, other than two day trips, once for my brother Carl’s memorial service and once for my Aunt Joan’s funeral, I hadn’t been back to New Jersey.  In fact, the last time I spent a night there was the night before my brother passed away.

But in late July Kim and I had the opportunity to go back up to celebrate my sister’s 70 th birthday and visit an old friend, Monmouth Park, on Haskell Stakes day.  It was a nice weekend and it was nice to be back.

And then yesterday, arriving late in the afternoon, I made the nostalgic trip over the Branchport bridge with the building that was Barry’s in my teenage years, now empty and for sale on the right as I left Oceanport.  Then I made the left on Atlantic Avenue to head to the ocean to visit another place that had significance in my life growing up, the North Long Branch beaches.

 

In 1973, the legal age to be served alcohol in New Jersey was eighteen. Even though I didn’t turn eighteen until June of 1974, that didn’t keep me from being one of the regulars at Barry’s.  Some long hair, an early attempt at growing some facial hair, my brother’s draft card, and a good friend who was already eighteen who worked there, and I was good to go.

I even remember nights we closed the joint and ended up sitting at a table having a beer with the owner, Barry himself.

Barry’s always had good live music.  Tim McLoone, of McLoone’s restaurant fame, played there regularly early in his career.  He is somewhat of a legend along the section of the Jersey shore where I am from but with a restaurant now at the National Harbor he is known in the Washington DC area as well.

Another band whose name escapes me would let me join them and play harmonica occasionally.  That sometimes went well and other times did not.

And then there was my favorite band, Guildersleeve (I think that is how it was spelled).  A versatile band with a female and a male lead singer.  There were a couple of songs, however, during their sets, when the bass player would sing.  One was Drive my Car by the Beatles.  The other was Las Vegas Turnaround.

 

I guess going back to Oceanport after a couple of years, spending some time in the picnic area of Monmouth Park on Haskell Day, and having that song playing over and over in my head recently has made these last few weeks a bit nostalgic for me.

It was about this time of the year 44 years ago that I was getting prepared to leave Oceanport.  I remember at the time friends telling me I would be back in three months, and that I would never be able to leave Oceanport.  And though that first year I probably spent more of my weekends in Oceanport than I did away from Oceanport, I never did go back there to live.

But hey, who says you can’t go back?

Who says you can’t go home?

Somebody from Jersey maybe?

But it’s alright.

Yeah, it’s alright.

Unlike Bon Jovi though, I am still waiting to crash into my pot of gold.

But it’s alright.

In fact, it’s good.

 

The Branchport bridge with “Barry’s” in the background
North Long Branch
Last Farewell

Last Farewell

I’m going away at eventide
Across the wild and the rolling sea
I bid you stay, stay here by my side
And share a last farewell with me

(From Last Farwell, written by Randy Sparks)

 

 

Today is Monday, July 19th.

As is typical for a Monday, we had a little harder time waking up, and maybe on this particular Monday an even harder time getting motivated to get out of bed.

So after a longer than usual time drinking coffee and reading emails, we finally got going.

 

I woke up this morning as I often do with a song in my head.

Randy Sparks wrote the Last Farewell and it was featured on the New Christy Minstrels’ album Ramblin’ in 1963.

I remember this album as a kid because my dad had this album, and because I really liked it.

The New Christy Minstrels were a folk band established by Sparks in 1961.  It included at times Barry Maguire (“Eve of Destruction”) and Gene Clark who went on to join the Byrds.

We had one of those huge stereo pieces of furniture with the sliding tops and the record player and AM and FM radio under one of those sliders and a bin for records under the other.  It had a couple of speakers behind the decorative cloth and walnut front.

By the time we were old enough to leave home my brother and I pretty much had those speakers blown and by the end all you could hear was vibration and distortion.

 

The photo above is one that sits on a dresser in the room that Kim and I most often stay in when at my parent’s house.

It’s a photo of Donny with my father on my dad’s boat.

I have gone through lots of photos recently at my parent’s house that have brought back lots of memories and feelings.

This photo reminded me of the few days that Donny spent with my father and mother in between the Fourth of July that summer of 2002 and the next week when my parents took him to his soccer camp in Salisbury, Maryland.  Although this pic was taken on a different weekend, my dad and Donny did go out fishing during that stay just a couple of weeks before the accident.

That year July 19 was on Friday.

I know my dad valued that short time spent with Donny.

And I remember at Donny’s funeral my father telling me he just wanted to remember Donny as he was the weekend they went fishing.

 

And though today I guess we are more sensitive to reminders, and in fact may receive more reminders, but the truth is it’s a day to get through.

Because tomorrow will be the same in the obvious sense but a little different.  The memories will be more pleasant and enjoyable.  We can choose those differently.

As we would like to remember.

Today we can’t always avoid that.

 

I know I spend a lot of time writing about how much time I have spent with my dad, in particular this past year, and even this past weekend.

It’s been important for him in this period of his life and it has been important to me.

 

Because I know the time will come when I will value that time spent, even more than I do now.

 

A wandering song is all I know
Yet, I love you more, more than words can tell…
I leave you now, with a last farewell

(from Last Farewell)

Me and my dad getting into The Haskell spirit this past Saturday
Here is the whole photo