‘Son of a bench’ Philadelphia V.S Small Businesses

Over the pass few years small businesses in Philadelphia have came up with time tested but smart ways to advertist across the city. Benches promoting different small businesses begin to pop up everywhere, mostly at bus stops. This year almost out of the blue the city told the promoting small business that they’ll have to remove them. ‘Why?’ 1. The street department has received complaints from the public. ‘Why that’s B.S’ Most of the benches are at bus stops and always more than not at any time occupied. ‘Why?’ 2. The benches could create legal liablility problems for property owners. ‘Why that’s B.S’ Not one such property owner spoke up about the benches. And bus stops are not owned by anyone bus the city, being that it’s a public street corner. ‘Why?’ 3. The benches adds to the city’s blight. This is coming from acting Streets Commissioner David Perri (who stated that on 5/11/2013 that his department will confiscate illegal benches.) ‘Why that’s B.S’ If you ever saw one of the benches in question you’ll beaware that with the well thought out and professional designs that they would not fall under blight. And maybe if the City worried more about real blight and not benches maybe the blight problems in the City would improve.

There are a few other reasons but the truth is the city is looking at some point to pursue an advertising campaign near transit locations as part of a way to generate revenue. And folks that is the main and only real reason why the city waged war agaisnt the small business person who thur taxes help bring revenue to this city. This is a meanless battle and a waste and evil thing to do to part of the city’s infastructer of small businesses.

An un-informed review on the 1st chapter of Happy Face and my reply.

Chapter 1

A Chapter by Christopher Reel

Sisyphus, quietly I stood before my rock, fingers apart, palms pressed upon its rough surface, my bare feet lightly agitated by the gravel beneath them. I pushed. I’m dressed, on the opposite side of cool, in a cloak; heavy, bothersome, and long, dragging across the ground. I, insignificant among others whom were stretched across a wasteland dressed the same, as I was, behind rocks of their own. They too pushed.

Our habitat was devoid of color; the primary hue was boredom. No one had any idea why we were there. Still we pushed, imagining the mountain top somewhere off in our distance dreams and hope. We pushed. All of us were aware of the darkness from nightmares and despair gaining ground behind us. We pushed.

Up a hill, we rested atop a plateau. Our rocks roll away from us, returning back down the hill. If one paid close enough attention while watching your rock move slowly in the opposite direction of your desire, there is a moment of consciousness. Most are not aware of it while others for go it and hurry behind their rocks immediately beginning anew. Others enjoyed that moment, or did not like it, or couldn’t understand it, or simply were indifferent to it. However the vast majority of us eventually returned down the hillside to begin anew. We pushed.

Sometimes rocks became too much to handle, too heavy, and rolled over the pusher. The rock disappears into history, as does its pusher whom decomposes into the gravel under foot. We pushed.

We talked. There is an overabundance of conversations; to others, to one’s self, to one’s rock, to hope. Some preferred to scream. Others never said a word. We pushed.

There were rocks far away from where we believed the mountain had been, while others assumed that they were at its foot or in its valley. The closer the better was a popular belief. Some strived to get closer. Many believed that they had obtained their goal. Others failed outright. Most simply accepted their positions. We pushed.

Some of us helped our neighbors when their rocks became too much for them. Others were apathetic or purposely hindered each other. There was hate, war and peace, and love. Many pushed in groups; easier, safe, some would forget about their own rock dissolving into crowds. A few didn’t push as hard as they could. Others over exerted themselves. We pushed.

There were good rocks and there were bad rocks. You could change your rock. Some didn’t know how to. Others changed their rocks so much that they became dazed and confused. A few stared at their rock and did nothing. Others would get intoxicated and repeatedly run face first into their rock screaming and laughing with gaity or wailing and crying with misery or sober and reckless with lucidity. Many loved their rock. They believed it to be beautiful and divine. Others despised their rock. They thought the rocks were ugly and devoid of meaning, making them sick. They would abandon their rocks and run into the darkness behind us; collapsing onto the bathroom floor after shooting herself in the head; divorcing existence with aggressive free will, leaving a 12 years old son to face his rock alone.

Sisyphus, quietly I stand before my rock in the kitchen area of my work place. Holding a rectangular pan in my hands, I stood before a 3 basin industrial sink. Dirty pots and pans soaked in the 1st basin, soapy water for the wash in the middle, the 3rd was empty, for rinsing. My boredom sat at the bottom of each of them. Smiling, I stared at Adam, the 1stshift manager. He was helping me by rinsing the pots and pans. He was short and round, with a round dull face that was easily forgettable. He was married with 2 children, worked at the same job for the past 10 years and never missed a day. He was friendly, well liked, well behaved, and happy or, at the least, content with his rock. Whatever it was, he enjoyed it and I disliked him for it.

‘I’m going to be you in a few years.’ I spoke slow, staring at an unwanted future, nervously smiling.

‘Then you would be a good man.’ He replied. The sincerity stuck its tongue out at me, and then went pssbttt! He smiled. It was honest and hold some. I wanted to smack him across the face with the pan.

After rinsing a pot and placing it with the others to dry Adam’s eyes returned back to my weak stare. Although his mouth opened a little as if to speak, it slowly shut. Inquisitive but patient was his expression. The kitchen was silent. It was small and generic and didn’t consist of much other than the sink and shelves and Adam and I standing before our individual rocks pushing from opposite inclinations.

I could never become him. I could never allow myself to think as he did, or how I assumed he thought. One who lived and let live, one apart of many, pushing the same rock as others, following obediently; indistinguishable sleepwalkers whom are snuggled softly in the safe and accepting arms of society, of their religion; never pondering. The meaning of life was already told to them; complaining and fighting frivolously against whatever struck their fancy at any giving moment with feigned seriousness when in truth they had already accepted it. Maybe they are the smart people. Who knows? Definitely they are the majority. They are in rule. The democracy. The herd. I hated them. I was jealous of them. I was afraid of them. They made me nervous, simply because there was a great possibility that they were right, living life the way it was suppose to be lived.

At times I wondered why I felt as if I was on the outside, pushing my rock off in the solitude distance never fitting in, living mainly inside of myself, inside of my head. Was it because I was the creative type, an author, a writer, who found safety in fiction, who found fiction more real than reality. Was it because I was cursed being weird, inheriting my mother’s existential rebellious nature and loneliness.

I, Archibald Johnson, am of the confused, the lonely, the skeptical, the lost, the exiled, the sick, the stupid, the ironic, the. . . .

I allowed the pan to fall from my hands. Adam’s eyes followed it to the floor. It clattered. I smiled, then turned and left.

© 2010 Christopher Reel

Share This

Reviews

I find the switch from the reimagined myth of Sisyphus to the present day to be extremely jarring. I’m really not sure on what level the first-person character’s life or job really are like a “Sisyphean task”, which is defined as:

Sis·y·phus (ss-fs)
n. Greek Mythology
A cruel king of Corinth condemned forever to roll a huge stone up a hill in Hades only to have it roll down again on nearing the top.
[Latin Sisyphus, from Greek Sisuphos.]
Sisyphus [ˈsɪsɪfəs]
n
(Myth & Legend / Classical Myth & Legend) Greek myth a king of Corinth, punished in Hades for his misdeeds by eternally having to roll a heavy stone up a hill: every time he approached the top, the stone escaped his grasp and rolled to the bottom

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Sisyphean+task

I’m not sure that there is anything here to warrant comparing yourself to somebody eternally damned to a punishment involving a gruelling physical slog that is eternally incompletable.

Posted 1 Month Ago

Did you find this review constructive?

0 Seconds Ago

I was going off of Albert Camus famous essay (which I don’t think you are aware of) where he compares the task of Sisyphus to the repeating nature of our every day routine.

1 Second Ago

Oh, one more thing, this is fiction and I’m not comparing myself to anything. Plus that’s the point anyway what both Albert Camus and Myself was going for comparing our (mankind) every day routine to a gruelling physical slog that is eternally incompletable. To farther understand checkout Camus’ Myth of Sisyphus. And please next time fact check before commenting. Thank you.

The Id

The Babbler # 12: Let’s Talk About George Zimmerman

In the last Babbler I talked about what we knew that happened the night Trayvon Martin was shot by George Zimmerman and what I thought about that situation. Now I will talk about the arrest of George Zimmerman and the racial backlash all over the Internet, T.V, and radio.

Okay, some black kid was going to his pop house and some man thought he was out to do something wrong in his community a fight happened and then the man shot the kid. The man first called 9-1-1 and alerted the police of his suspicions and he was told to stop following the kid and we all know that he didn’t. Now take what I had said above but just for a moment take out the race (just for those who aren’t sure George Zimmerman is white and Latino) of the kid and the guy and think, just think, about it and I’m going to leave that for you to deal with.

Now moving on to what I really want to talk about. And what I want to talk about is the racial backlash and the racial division. It seems to me when everyone thought he was a white guy it was white V.S black and a whole racial incident. I agree something went wrong that George Zimmerman was not arrested that night. But as I keep saying I believe that by us making this a racial issues took away from the real issues at hand, which is the problem with the Stand your ground laws and the self defense laws. But neither of those laws should have been ever mention because George Zimmerman may have been the aggressor. Why do I think that? Because I heard the police call and I’m sure you have as well. I also read the affidavit (http://media.trb.com/media/acrobat/2012-04/69353440.pdf). And in my opinion he was wrong. Anyway, I have Googled this cause to see what’s going on and the most interesting part of the posts I read were the comments. When we all thought he was just white it was a lot of talk about how blacks are killing blacks and other not really relevant shit. The blacks killing black thing is stupid because if you look at violence in America or any where else out side of war people of one race normally kills someone of their own race because most of us grew up around people like us. Meaning if s disagreement starts in a Latino community most likely the person shot and the shooter are both Latino, right?

The other glaring thing I see on comments are is after we found out that he’s not all white people making jokes about the media getting it wrong. But it seems to me that everyone is missing the point here. Fuck if he was white or blue or red or green he shot an unarmed child. And I’m tired of hearing that Trayvon Martin was 6’3 or something. No matter what happened, if Trayvon did beat George ass once the gun was pulled out wouldn’t most of us back down, especially a kid?

I really had a lot to say about this but I won’t because I’m going to sit back and watch the outcome of the cause. So all of you can go back and forth about this but I believe in Karma.

Oh, I have 2 more things to say:

1.Shout out to Danny Chang from Boston, Massachusetts who said ‘Hey, white and black people, let the rest of the world know when you’ve resolved your racial issues. Idiots’

2. I listen to Michael Baisden radio show a lot and I even read one of his novels but he lost me when a white woman called his show and she said there’s no difference when it comes to race and he checked her and said there is a difference when it comes to race and he maybe right because we made it that way but to me there is only one race and when we die race will not be a factor unless you believe what the Mormons or NOI or any other hate filled faith. I just think by the fact of us thinking a person of another race or any other reason to hate someone different then us is the reason why there will always be the race issues in America but believe me soon and very soon the only color that matters will be green.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 746 other followers

%d bloggers like this: