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on boston

I have quite a few connections to Boston. Some of my closest friends are either from the area or went to school there, or spent a lot of childhood time in the region. I was literally weeping and pounding my steering wheel on the way home from an appointment this afternoon as I heard the reports coming from the live stream of WBUR that was playing on our local NPR affiliate. I was so enraged by the sheer idiotic brutality of this most cowardly of acts. Remember that famous quote of Leonard Bernstein – “This will be our reply to violence: to make music more intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before.” Well, art created in the most cowardly way possible is still orders of magnitude more brave than whoever is responsible for this heinous act.

I have taken part in two endurance events, a gran fondo cycling event of 100 miles, and the 80 mile route of the Portland Century. I spent months actively training for the gran fondo, and several years, really, just getting up to the level to be able to finish such an event. The day came, and I had hardly slept the night before, I was so excited and nervous about what the day would hold for me. I had two friends from the orchestra who were riding with me, along with hundreds of other cyclists from around Oregon and Washington. The route was breathtaking, and featured one (literally breathtaking) climb that was over 3000 feet of elevation gain all on its own. The grind to the finish, on crappy chip seal roads, was a test of my mental endurance as much as my physical. When I finally rounded the last bend before the finish line, it was such an amazing experience, one that I will never forget, no matter how many additional events I do in my life.

So, I cannot even begin to imagine the feelings of those thousands of Boston Marathon racers who’ve spent years training and running qualifying races just in order to be able to take part in the queen of marathons. Many were just a mile or two from the finish when their race was over. Even those who finished now are finishers of the most infamous Boston Marathon in history. Then there are those who were nearby when the bombing happened, and will be traumatized for who knows how long, along with their families who were waiting to greet them at the finish line. My wife has done the Portland Marathon, and the reunion at the end is one of the most satisfying and joyous events one can have around a sporting event. It’s huge. I feel so sad for all the participants and their families. I mourn for those who were killed, one an 8 year old child, and weep for those who have been grievously injured just taking part in something that they love.

I wonder what I can do.

Then I remember that I do it already, every day. I make art. Art that takes us out of the insanity of everyday life, and into a place where magical flutists enchant people into dancing, puppets come to life, and elephants dance the ballet. People take the arts for granted all the time. But where do we turn when we need solace? We might read a story (art), watch a movie (art), listen to music (art), or just play our instrument (art). Art takes the good, the horrific, and the mundane, and turns them into artifacts of enduring worth. Art is transformative. Art is essential to the process of catharsis, wherein we see or experience acts both horrific and extraordinary and are transformed emotionally by their being subsumed into an act of artistic expression. In this way art triumphs over evil, even as it depicts it with unsparing and unflinching realism.

So, please, come to the symphony tonight. You’ll hear some incredible playing, of works that will take you out of the events of today, and will make your rest easier, and your heart lighter. That’s what we’re here for.

11 replies on “on boston”

I’m sure someone reported seeing Marine One lowering bombs into the vicinity, but I would be just as likely to believe them as the clowns from the article you linked to.

you mean this guy?

” University of Mobiles Cross Country Coach Ali Stevenson told Local 15 News, They kept making announcements on the loud speaker that it was just a drill and there was nothing to worry about. It seemed like there was some sort of threat, but they kept telling us it was just a drill.”

right… like a straw men in a tin foil hat… but don’t think about it – let’s just say a prayer and count our blessings

I’d just like more information, from multiple sources, verified and collected via proper journalistic practice. I maintain a healthy skepticism of all media sources, but truthdig.com is my minimum standard for online journalism. Considering this stuff came from a Boston Globe tweet about a controlled demolition, and that there is one blogger making a video from what appears to be an office kitchen, I will wait for more, and more credible, information to appear.

of course, everyone does (or at least should) have ‘standards’ … minimal, maximal, whatever … but in a time and place where many no longer trust the Main Stream Media – at least nobody I know, and after all, why should we? remember Yellow Cake, Launch Tubes, WMD and all that? – there is yet something else that is very rarely examined…

in the jargon of the intelligence community, it’s ‘deflective source disinformation’ – of course now so many people around the world take what governments says with a grain of salt, it’s one of the few reasonably effective propoganda techniques left

as my wife reports from the Eastern European pre-regime-change era (which she also reports is looking more and more like the here and now)… don’t believe anything until the government has denied it at least 3 times but then if you hear it on Democracy Now and it still doesn’t make sense… well, go figure

nevertheless, take it easy now, we’re not ‘paranoid’ – after all were just artists – no threat to anyone – nobody’s ‘out to get us’ – I just call ’em as I see ’em – and now at day’s end, maybe that is something to ‘worry’ about – but who cares what I think? again, just an artist, you know, gentle and sensitive

And here’s my problem with the entire thread of ‘reasoning’ that inspired these ‘articles’:

“There’s a temptation when tragedy hits–especially violent tragedy–to use it to prove a worldview right as people take to Twitter to transform dead and mangled bodies into scaffolding under a preexisting belief. It’s execrable. Whether it’s a rush to assign blame, a speculation regarding motive, or an I-told-you-so matters little. That kind of stuff can play badly enough in a next day op-ed, but in an unedited 140 character tweet issued shortly after some terrible thing has just gone down, it’s pure poison.”

http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/04/twitter-tragedy-response/all/1?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+wired%2Findex+%28Wired%3A+Top+Stories%29

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