A Note

Yes, some things have gone missing from this site. They can be found here, and that is the last I shall have to say on the matter.

In the end…

It has been a long pair of years for me since I wrote this post. Time passes quickly more often than not, but there has been a great deal of agonizing over the doubts and fears I exposed when I set down that road. Much has happened that cannot and will not find their way to the pages of this journal. In the end I owe Dalene and the others at least that much.

I regret what happened, that I gave into my fear. I still believe whatever future the band might have had was at best problematic, but I should have stayed. I should have told them the truth and let events unfold from there. They would have believed me, eventually.  They certainly do now.

In recounting the events from 1964 to 1967 I have come to understand that for more than a century I have been trying to find some way to come forward and let the world take me or leave me as it saw fit. Events over the past six years have led me to believe the world would mostly choose the latter option, though there have been some who obsess to the point of madness. So long as those are few and far between they are simple enough to deal with.
What to do now? There are still many things to say, stories to tell, but my neglect of this journal has generated the predictable result and my only visitors are the occasional die-hard and those searching for things they will not find here. I can start anew if I can find it within myself to delve into those things still untold. I would like to try.

Dalene, Nefirtiri, Aiko- all three of you deserved better, but in the final analysis was it all so terrible? When we met you were months, a year at most, from death or worse. More than forty years later you are all still here, still friends and enjoying your lives in ways you once never dreamed you could. Was the pain I caused you too high a price to pay? Only you can answer that question, but I shall take satisfaction from the fact that you are still here to answer it should you so choose.

I should have stayed with you. There are many things I should have done that I failed to do- in a life as long as mine that list is quite long and carrying the guilt of those failures is far too heavy a burden to bear. I am setting this one down and leaving it behind.

Z

Georgia

I watch the unfolding events between Russia and Georgia with some mild interest, but no real suprise. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990’s it has been clear to me that many of the new-born states to emerge from the so-called Commonwealth of Independant States had little real reason to exist beyond thumbing their noses at their former Russian rulers. It has taken time, and there will be a great deal of hand wringing and angst amongst the Western nations, but many of these new nations will find themselves back in the fold of the former Soviet Union, just without the Politburo and the New Soviet Man propaganda to burden them.

I posit this as niether good nor bad, simply reality.

Spring, 1965

“Are you sure about this?” Aiko asked me, her face radiating doubt as we drove through the campus.

“No more clubs, no more bars… this is what’s left. Besides, they said one of the guys heard us in Chicago, so they must know what they’re getting.”

She gave me her “Inscrutable Asian” look, and then turned to gaze out the window again. The campus was large and sprawling, students spread out across the park-like lawns taking in the warmth of this beautiful Southern California afternoon. It was a mixed crowd between the clean-cut and fresh faced, and the more bohemian types and absolutely nothing like the seedier crowds we were used to playing to.

I had my own doubts about this- since swearing off dives we had not performed much, though we had never stopped playing. In a way those months in practice studios and rented barns had served as a buffer, another layer of good times between where we were and the brutality of the life we had left behind. It seemed our path was laid out in stages where we would sprint ahead, then stop and recollect ourselves before moving on again. First fleeing New Orleans, then a long summer in Virginia as Dalene fought to regain her dignity and break free of the addiction that had been killing her. After that, a haphazard journey across the Midwest playing loud music in seedy bars led to a soft landing first in Santa Barbara, then later Los Angeles.

Spring Arrives

There is a missing part of me, something lacking in the mosaic of who and what I am today. It is hardly apparent when I live in isolation, but of late I dwell amongst people and invite them into my life in ways I never have before. Even when married, those who became my family were kept outside my private world. It was necessary and regrettable, but it was a firm rule I lived by for so very long and broke with such rarity that each violation exists in my memory as a beacon, slicing my existence into discreet parts.

Prior to 1967 the last confidante to share my life in whole was Jeremy. He changed me so deeply and fundamentally yet I am still unsure how he did it. He saw me the way no others ever had and somehow over an all-too-brief pair of decades he made me whole. In no small way it is the memory of those years with him that led me to where I am today, both physically and philosophically. It is because of him I have opened myself to the world the way I have.

I have seen more than three thousand five hundred passages of the Vernal equinox. To me it has always symbolized a release. Winter has passed taking its sickness and starvation with it and for a few brief weeks the world is clean and fresh. Summer will come with its own threats of disease and conflict, but for now, we are free.

The moment will fall in the wee hours of the morning on the American Eastern Seaboard. The sky will be dark and rain will fall. A cold breeze will sweep chill droplets against the windows. It makes no difference for I can feel the turning of the world in my bones, one reassuring constant throughout my long existence. Jeremy wondered why I greeted this Equinox with contemplation and even some emotion, yet other seasonal turnings passed without comment or care. I explained in as few words as I have employed here and he understood, but not in an intellectual way. Instead he grasped what it meant to me deep inside, how memories of Spring turnings past could fill my heart with joy, or tears and sometimes pain and shame. I remember where I stood for the vast majority of these events better than I remember many other important occurrences in my life. In some way these memories help to define for me who I have been and whom I have become.

I chose the Vernal equinox as the day I would mark the passing of years. It was on this day more than two thousand years ago I adopted the name I call myself today, eschewing the slave name Utha and the goddess Tiwaz? to become simply Zsallia who claimed a surly old Greek named Marieko as an ancestor. On the Vernal equinox of 592 CE I first took vows with the church. In 1348 on that day I stood vigil in a church as plague swept through the population, killing my adopted family and most of the small town. On that day in 1851 I stood over Jeremy’s open grave as he was laid to rest.

So I count my years with the start of Spring. This is my three thousand five hundred and thirty-fourth.