Showing posts with label teenager. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teenager. Show all posts
Saturday, November 12, 2016
Huge Absence hr581
I went to the Tulip concert the other day. Tulip is my lifelong favorite
band and the reason why I became a musician. They are making a national
tour commemorating their 45th anniversary. Since I was a teenager, I’ve
been to several concerts every time they were on tour. They used to
tour every six months, which made the number of my attendance soar. Most
part of my monthly allowance was spent on the ticket. Among the five
members, I was an avid fan of the lead guitarist of the band, Toshiyuki
Abe. I was always enchanted tremendously by the sensuous sound from his
red guitar in my youth. After I grew up and the band broke up, they
reunite every five years to make an anniversary tour. I had been to
several venues each time by spending costly transportation fees and
staying at a hotel when the venue was too far to be in time for the last
train back home. That had been my usual pattern concerning Tulip until
their 40th anniversary tour was wrapped up. Although I had waited
anxiously for their 45th, the wait ended abruptly two years ago even
before the tour started. Mr. Abe, who I believe is the best guitarist in
the world, suddenly passed away. Tulip’s 45th anniversary tour turned
out to be a memorial to him, which I’d never, ever pictured happening. I
wasn’t going to go to their concert this time. I didn’t want to see the
band without him who had been my idol for such a long time. It would be
too sad. Whenever something related to Mr. Abe popped into my mind in
my daily life, my eyes easily swim with tears automatically. I couldn’t
imagine how sad it would be that I actually saw Mr. Abe missing in the
band and realized again he was gone. On the one hand, I thought I’d
better not go, but on the other hand I was curious how the band would
play without him. They announced Tulip would become a four-man band
without having a new guitarist. Who would play the guitar part then?
Would they change the arrangement and have the keyboard cover the part?
Or, would one of the members switch to a lead guitarist? Or, would a
robot stand with a guitar? I had thought of possible alternatives every
day and couldn’t stop thinking about it eventually. To solve mounting
questions, I decided to face the sadness and go to the concert. After I
got the ticket, though, I still felt hesitant to go. I couldn’t believe I
was holding a ticket of Tulip in which Mr. Abe didn’t exist. I had
asked to myself what I was doing for three months. But about ten days
before the concert, I began to feel excited and my heart leapt up. I was
headed for the concert hall on that day with odd rapture. The minute
the concert started, all my questions were answered in an unexpected yet
totally reasonable way. In the back of Tulip, there were three
supporting players. A supporting guitarist was understandable, but there
were a drummer and a keyboardist that made up the band of twin-drums
and twin-keyboards. The sound was different accordingly and for some
reason, wasn’t good as it used to be. They also lost edge on vocals with
no reason. The loss of Mr. Abe has had effect on the band much greater
than I thought. It reduced the quality of Tulip. It didn’t sound or look
like Tulip. I was disappointed and felt so sad. I witnessed the band
suffered a massive vacuum. Mr. Abe’s trademark red guitar that I’d
watched and listened since I was a teenager was placed on the stage and
made me cry instead of exult this time. His song was played while his
pictures were shown and I bitterly missed him. As the concert went on, I
realized how hard the members was trying to fill in the big hole that
they knew couldn’t possibly be filled in. With their desperate attempts,
they tried to carry on at all costs. Their strong intention to sustain
the loss and to survive as Tulip was conveyed from the stage. I was
deeply moved by their effort to continue. Before I knew, I was jumping
and sang myself hoarse along to their songs with other audience as I had
always done at their concert. Looking back, I became a singer-song
writer to be like Tulip. Now I will do anything I can to keep on until I
die like Tulip is doing. Just one thing I will not follow them is to
accept that the quality of my music gets poor. I wouldn’t, I hope…
Sunday, October 16, 2016
Phone-Phobia hr579
When I was a teenager, a smartphone era was still years away to come. I
came from a large family that had one phone in the house, which meant a
scramble for a phone call. It was usually a three-way battle: between my
grandfather, my mother and me. My grandfather used to be the chairman
of a local senior citizen club and make and receive lots of calls. Once
his phone time began, it lasted forever. He would pull a chair from the
dining table, set it in front of the phone, sit in, spread some kind of
papers and start dialing. The stand where the phone sat turned into his
makeshift office desk while my parents, my sister and I were eating
dinner right beside it. The background music of our dinnertime was
usually his telephone conversation that sounded totally unimportant and
ridiculous. The minute my grandfather finished his phone time, the phone
rang that would be from my grandmother on my mother’s side. She would
call my mother almost every day to report her day. It would always
consist in complaining about her son-in-low. After my mother finished
listening to her endless nagging, it would be finally my turn. I used to
chat with my friends over the phone for hours as a habit of a teenager.
Although I did that so often, I have a confession to make. I hated it. I
was really loath to talk over the telephone, to be honest. But as
everyone knows, the phone call is a must among teenagers. If I had
confessed I didn’t like the phone and asked my friends not to call me, I
would have been instantly branded as a nerd. To be popular, I kept it
secret and talked with my friends by acting happy but weeping inside. I
forced myself to be funny and a class clown at school although my true
self didn’t want to. At least when I was at home, I wanted to return to
be myself who liked to be silent and alone. But the phone call would
intrude into my home and destroy my peace. I cultivated my dislike for
the phone during my teenage years like this. After I graduated and left
home, my condition got much worse. The phone attack from my parents
began when I started living alone in a small apartment in Tokyo as a
musician. Since they opposed strongly about my career choice, they
denied me, insulted me and cursed me over the phone. The ring became the
most distasteful sound in the world to me. I couldn’t take it any more
one day and turned off the ring. I stopped answering phone calls
altogether by setting the answering machine. Then playing messages on it
gradually got painful and even seeing the message lamp blinking made me
sick. My dislike for the telephone had evolved into phobia by then.
Besides the nasty phone calls from my parents, I sometimes got prank
calls. More and more, the telephone looked an entrance to hell. To this
day, I jump to the phone ring and talk into the receiver feeling
ultimately tense with my hands sweating and my throat drying. Every time
I see someone talking casually over the cell phone on the aisle of a
supermarket, I think I’m seeing someone from other planet. The other
day, I was shopping online at Amazon. When I was paying with my credit
card, an error message appeared on the screen that said, “The payment
was failed. Please contact your credit company”. I called the company
while I was twitched with fear, my fingers were trembling and even my
eyesight became blur and white. It turned out that my card had been
suspended because the balance in my bank account was short. My distaste
for the telephone has grown deeper…
Labels:
answering machine,
call,
cellphone,
class clown,
credit card,
Family,
grandfather,
hell,
message,
mother,
nerd,
parents,
payment,
phobia,
phone,
prank call,
smartphone,
teenager,
telephone,
Tokyo
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