When The Artist Cries, We All Learn
June 27th, 2008I spent the last few days listening to Sheryl Crow’s CD Detours.And meeting with a loving friend I haven’t seen for a few long years. I should say a friend I love.But more on that.And visiting a place I used to call home in another country. A place Adolph occupied. How did Hitler cruise the Champs Elysee?But more on that.Sheryl’s album is the best she has ever done. My iPod is fully loaded but I listened only to Detours. It starts off for the first half showing how wonderfully diverse and talented she is and then it nosedives into the real reason she wrote the opus.Lance left her.Pain and hunger are extraordinary drivers of creativity. She sings of having a paper heart thanks to the Lance damage. She sings of the emptiness of life without the guy on the bike. She sings about being drunk at the sight of Mr. Speed and being blind without him.She is deluding herself. But more on that later.
Hemmingway said he used to take a break from his writing to study Monet hanging in Parisian museums.
But, but, but he would visit before he would eat lunch. He said he would learn so much more from the Impressionist strokes on an empty stomach. A form of Pain.
My dear friend and I hugged and it was like no time had ever passed. She knows joy and pain. And pain has made her more creative because she refused to cave. She chose to sing. Of her birth in Nigeria and her law university in the UK. And her devotion to her friends. A devotion I treasure.When the joy was over Ernest decided to take out a rifle in Idaho and end himself. He knew the heights he had climbed to. Paris was his city before it was the Fuhrer’s. Before I soaked it all in. Many say his last act was one of cowardice. They don’t know what it was to be Papa. He owned life. Why should he be a victim of it? Because the clergy, the frauds who hide behind costumes, say to?I don’t think so.Sheryl sings that she gets drunk with the thought of the speed king. Sentimental junk. We are all best off knowing how to be drunk on ourselves.That is pure. Independent. Liberation.Sheryl says her love hideaway was blown up because she asked for a diamond ring.
Well, dear talented Sheryl, it should have been. You had no need for a ring. You wanted love. And love is great. But demonstrations of love composed only of metals and stones are just that: demonstrations.So much better to take yourself, Sheryl, and all of us, to the Whitney Museum by ourselves, just ourselves, be alone, and be surrounded by the art of life. By ideas. By all the wonders the girl on the subway and the guy on the bike can’t take from us.We are here to achieve. Not to mourn the loss of another paper heart.



There is failure and with it mental and intellectual anguish and loss. But there is also gain if you choose to see it, leverage it and gain from the experience. The choice is yours. Regardless of your stance, your defiance, your Resistance, nothing stops the wave.
There is war and peace and discovery and scandal and thrill and disappointment and Grammy winners and American Idol and
My father took me on an amazing journey. My first bloody nose at five, my first epiphany about how life really works a year before. Both from him.
There you are flying through fog, through dense clouds, you can’t see up, down or straight ahead. Nothing but white out. And it feels, almost for certain, that the plane is tilted wrong, or pointed earthward or upside down. And you want to steer through it, to correct what feels wrong, to get back on course, but the rub is that the instruments say all is fine. You are flying right. All is well.
As the only biographer of Carl Icahn, Mark Stevens has watched Icahn morph himself from a Greenmailer/Corporate Raider to a Shareholder Activist over the span of several years. But it is Mark Stevens who has had endless conversations with Icahn at dinner and on the tennis court and he warns people not to turn their backs on Carl. Never count him out - he’s the smartest guy that Stevens has ever met.

I felt then, as I do now, that there is no such thing as a silent genius.
It is said that all great people stand on the shoulders of the giants who came before them. One of the true super novas, Isaac Newton, acknowledged that. The same is true for all of us mere mortals. A chain of thought, aired by others before us no matter what we do or where we live, provides a platform for our own thinking and the action that brings that thinking to life.
Yes we live in
Now. This year. Why we accept the “fact” that a small business person cannot start a new automobile company.
What they are really saying in so many words is that they are afraid of life. And once this fear is allowed to fester, once it is left unchecked, once it qualifies for all manner of justification, it sucks its victims into a
Fear strikes. Fear stops. Fear freezes the momentum in its tracks. The person who needs to be safe, to pass the acid test of acceptability imposed by anonymous crowds, to walk the beaten path, to do the traditional thing, to insure against failure, says “No” to the dangerous liaison, the high risk project, the change in direction, the road the priests of false morality seek to bar from passage (for all but themselves.)
You will not fear. You will pick your goals, decide when to act, walk the high wire, care nothing at all when the fear mongers chasten you. You will go to that special place where people achieve and experience the exceptional.
* Surprise someone you love with an unexpected gift. Not flowers. Not a dinner out. Perhaps a song you wrote about them. Or tickets to Capri.
I see
