Saturday, March 12, 2016

Representing the Real Story

Here it is Saturday night and my emotions are all over the range. Somebody should clean off that range as well as the rest of my kitchen, ha ha. I'm feeling that almost all of the organizations I am involved in are stumbling around in muddy flood waters these days. I know that this is just a feeling because I am seeing upset people, hurt people, struggling for understanding and feeling betrayed, pushed, or just confused. There is a lot in play. I probably see too much, because it's my job to sit in meetings and write down what is said and done. I have to pay close attention.

I don't get to space out or make jokes or laugh things off, I have to decide if they are important, and if they are, how to state them in a neutral way that will neither alarm nor hide the truth, and I have to spell it right as well. I think I'm pretty good at it in a long-winded fashion, although writing sentences in the passive voice is probably doing permanent damage to the fiction-writing part of my brain. I know I am dedicated to it, and mostly I enjoy it as a way to make sense and put an order to things that are seldom completely orderly.

Both of the main organizations I'm talking about here are member organizations. That's a special kind of club that not everyone gets to engage in. I have multiple roles in both, the two economic ones of being a boothholder and an independent service provider, plus as I have been there a long time I have a nuanced emotional role of being an elder who has seen the patterns and worst and best times. It's not like I've seen it all, just like I don't hear or see all in the meetings as I focus on my notes and listen and transcribe the recording. It's limited by who I am and how I do things, so it's a way of participation that is as limited as anyone else's, in a way, and keeps it in my mind that even I do not have the whole picture, even when I am looking and listening so closely.

Everybody has a piece of the truth, we like to say in group participation activities, but no one has the full truth. I don't know what full truth is. Reality is shifty. Time makes it elusive, and all of the structure we try to impose on our reality is colored by our perspective and our emotional construction that we see as our operating reality. We all operate as if we agree on it, while at the same time knowing that we certainly can't be in agreement when it isn't even the same color. That blue dress/white dress thing pointed that out so clearly on computers, and it is pointed out clearly in our meetings and personal interactions because they don't flow as smoothly as we might wish.

Of course there are people who don't try to make things be smooth for reasons of their own, be they conscious or sub-. There's an attraction to "juice" both fun and negative. Some people thrive on drama. Some avoid it and shut down when it appears. Personally, I guess I am fascinated by it, but don't want to get any of it on me. I like to read the long posts and see what people are saying on Facebook, but I don't have the fortitude to really take a stand and be assailed for it, very often.

But recently I have found myself giving impassioned defenses of a certain man in my large local family who is the target of a lot of negative talk. I've known him for over 40 years but I would not presume to say I know him as I do my own self. Yet I know what most of his core character traits are, and I know him to be a man who has spent his whole life serving others, bringing others in whether or not they could return anything to him in the way he gives. I've heard him say a cynical thing now and then, but always with humor, and underlying that is a giant amount of compassion and respect for all of his fellow beings.

He's almost died a couple of times. One time he came out of his tent to find a large branch nearly on his tent. One time he had a failing organ and it was only the pleas of others that got him to accept one from a donor. He is one of the most humble men I know, while at the same time being a powerful, magnetic person. Our birthdays are six months apart: I am a Taurus, and he is a Scorpio. We have a connection that we have only explored a little in the past, which my damage did not allow to flourish on the intimate level, but this man is a consummate art patron, and he has nurtured my artistic self in a beautiful way over time.

I was his go-to screenprinter for most of these 40 years. I printed for his wrestlers and his businesses and painted signs too. One autumn I got the most wonderful job of painting and stenciling on a treehouse he put up at his home for his young daughter. This was a huge project, and like all of his projects he allowed a lot of latitude in how it was done. I covered the panels and borders of the structure with gold paint in exquisite, graceful designs with a general theme and origin of what is known as the Gypsy wagon. Gypsy wagons Of course today we wouldn't call it that...I guess something like Romanian style art on a caravan is better.
It was and I assume still is incredibly beautiful. I'm not the only artist who worked on it, but this man treats all of his artists with a great deal of respect, and they are truly a collaboration using his money. As I recall on that one I spent over 100 hours but really couldn't bear to charge him for all of my work. I knew at the time I would probably never again get to work on such a cool project.

And all of this man's projects, that he pays for, are like that. The coolest, the most elaborate, the like-nothing-else, over-the-top projects. Usually they have a practical aspect as well, like the dwelling I worked on, the t-shirts, or the signs. He also walks around the Market and the Fair and buys art from a lot of people. I don't know anyone else who is so much of an art supporter. This man is not rich. He doesn't live in a shiny house or drive a new car. He grows his own food and feeds a lot of people. He supports a lot of people, when they need it, or because they are part of his tribe, his clan. His family.

Most of his work for pay has been to create living spaces for people with disabilities so that they can maximize their independence. I know he was a wrestling coach for many years, as well as a wrestler. I think of that as such a primal and intimate contact contest, practically naked men applying strength and leverage and mental power to each other's bodies in a simple and complex way. Of course, like me, he is now an oldish person. We don't have a lot of years left, but we have in common that we have dedicated much of them to using our particular gifts and talents to serve others and create beauty. I remember when he made a casket for Jed Kesey he said he thought if the powerful people in that circle knew him, they probably wouldn't like him, but I didn't know what he meant. I think now he meant because he took life really seriously and they were all up in their pranks and their highs and he was down on the earth, working. He loves wood, and joinery, and fine work and craftsmanship of any kind. He really admires other people's ability to express themselves with their hands. He always wants to make things that haven't been made before, especially if they bring people together in a special way. They made the coins so that there would be a special way to participate, as well as a special thing to collect. Nobody needs half of the stuff he has had made, but lots of people want it and treasure it.

His legacy at the Fair is astounding in its scope and complexity. I can see why people would feel jealous of him, as he can  motivate a lot of people to carry out his visions and they do it willingly and with joy. He can always get more workers who want to be a part of what he creates. It isn't because of anything like money. He inspires people to do their best work, and to put their hearts into it. He inspires service given from the heart. He shares his great love for the beautiful world with anyone who wants a piece of it. Making a place for people to get clean is such a pure, giving thing for the family. We've been saved from so many epidemics and so much happiness has been shared by all of those clean folks.

How anyone can accuse this person of thoughtlessness or any negative intentions is way beyond me. I'm ashamed of my community when they say his life's work should be appropriated by the Fair and destroyed. I don't care about the story pole, per se. I don't actually like it as an art piece, and I do think there are cultural appropriation issues with some of the art styles used in his domain. But I know that when you approach this man with respect, he is the most reasonable person there is. He is evolved, and he isn't finished evolving. He has a clear heart and mind and loves very deeply. He has no intention to hurt anyone, and I have never known him to do a mean or thoughtless thing. So if only the controversy would have started there, with a gentle inquiry, with a soulful discussion, with a request for understanding. And if nobody would be saying that he is greedy, that his service is for his own profit, that he grabs land and does things without permission, that would be good. Have you noticed that the land he uses is for seating and music, showers and the drain fields to keep people healthy? He rents land for his family to park in. Do you? Do you give back what you take from Fair? Do you support the craftspeople and food booths, the Board members and the people who do all the hard work? Or do you just come on the Facebook site and rave about how fun it is to get high and hear music and wear costumes? Or do you just not work on your own evolution so that you can clearly see when a person has heart and when he is being misrepresented.

Because this man could probably still pin you to the mat, but he wouldn't. I'm guessing he is listening to everything people are saying, and when someone comes from a heart like his, he hears it. I'm guessing he wants to do the best for the community he has been a part of his whole adult life. He has not picked up his art pieces and walked away, has he? He has not piled it in a bonfire to spite anyone, has he? As far as I know he hasn't even made a public statement yet. But when he does feel ready to speak to this issue and to act on it, you will cry. When I saw him speak so tenderly in that Path Planning video, he was nothing but sweet. I love the man. He isn't going to be here forever. He deserves the honor of being treated like the man he has grown to be. I challenge all his detractors to step back and see the man. I feel sad as can be that people don't even know to do this. I hope that I do not ever suffer this type of betrayal by the people who are so quick to call themselves Fair Family. Because I doubt I will be as patient and kind as this man will be throughout this. I trust this to be true, and I hope with all my heart that I am right. I have faith in him, and I am loyal to him as he has been to all of his artists and workers.

We'll all see how this heartbreaking situation is resolved. I hope that it is well done. I agree that we all need to learn about this and make this right, but it should be at no one's expense. We all need to rise to our better selves. Our best selves. Honor the honorable. It's not a simple thing with simple answers. It's not a passive sentence that will put the minutes in order to frame the meeting in a businesslike way. It's our messy selves being messy and trying to love and be loved. Don't think it is about anything simple. This time, right now, is not a time of simple answers. Something big is happening here, kind of an emotional tsunami. Let's weather it, and not let everything wash out to sea that we have so lovingly built.

2 comments:

  1. Wow, powerful piece, Diane. From afar, I haven't kept up with the details but it seems to be about honoring and respecting people willing to put themselves out there for the greater good. I choose to hold the belief that there is an elegant solution to any problem when people are committed to fighting for it. Diane, thank you for your dedication all these years. I hope that people know that you are a treasure as well. With love and respect, Ilene

    ReplyDelete
  2. A beautiful tribute. One like this will compensate for a truckload of thoughtless comments. I hope he gets to read it.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.