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A Christmas Message from Ray Carney
For other thoughts about the effect of the culture of consumption on our imaginations, click here.
I sent the above posting to two frequent readers of the site, to get their reactions, warning both of them that they might think what I was sending them was "crazy." Each wrote back:
Okay, so I just finished reading your attachment....
Not as insane as you'd indicated, or quite frankly, insane at all. I spent a lot of time screwing around in these places growing up, and feel the exact same way you do, and have felt this way for a long time. And you're right about the younger generation (read: my generation). We are late capitalism realized. In the flesh. The perfect, unthinking, unending consumers.
The more I understand about the world, the more I realize just how packaged all the culture is, the more I'm perplexed and disgusted and saddened and infuriated by it. The more I learn about how the various reigning systems work, and experience their workings firsthand, the more embittered I get.
Not that there's anything wrong with being bitter. For starters, I think this country would certainly be a better place if people weren't so concerned about keeping the peace and being so friendly. There needs to be more outrage, more bile, more public expressions of disgust. Where are our revolutionaries? How is there not one single politician who can even approximate the obvious truth in any public discourse? And whenever someone snaps, and says what they're actually thinking... 24 hours later they have an army of publicists doing everything they can to attenuate the language, to recant any truth accidentally put out there. I was watching Mr. Smith Goes to Washington on TV today, complete with some talking heads in between commercials talking about what a wonderful, seminal, important film it was, for x, y, and z reasons. And what bullshit it was... That simply to be a talking head, to supply the meaningless, affectless blurbs to fill ad space is an immediate indication that the entire film has had zero relevance to them. And then the commercials followed, with a smiley-faced yuppie couple watching It's a Wonderful Life on a big-screen HDTV, under a shiny, plastic Christmas tree....
In the end, of course, all these feelings need to be channeled into something positive, something constructive. Even if it will never make it out beyond an increasingly marginal group of people. And I'm trying to do that now... But goddamn, I wish there were more people out there willing to yell and kick and scream about the state of things.
Alex Lipschultz
The second response:
Funny, I went back online again. I just felt like doing it. Then I came across your e-mail and attachment ...
First of all, thank you very much for sharing with me this very personal and deeply felt piece.
I had shut down my computer and I was getting ready for bed already. I was curled up with my girlfriend Yvette's copy of TROPIC of CANCER and her birthday gift to me ANTON CHEKHOV EARLY SHORT STORIES 1883-1885. I am reading one short story a day, or one an evening in this case. The story I read this evening called "IN THE GRAVEYARD" where an unknown group of people where going through a graveyard one evening. They bump into an unnamed actor looking for the grave of a great actor named Mushkin. The group of people led him to the grave after some difficulty finding it. The unnamed actor said Mushkin was now forgotten by the people who loved him, but he was remembered by the people who hated him. And the unnamed actor was one of the people who hated him for the petty reason that Mushkin had "inspired" him to become an actor and it had brought him nothing but pain and misery.
Perhaps I'm forcing the connection, but to relate it to your Christmas greeting, it was true then in 19th Century Russia as it was even earlier in the history of the world, we cop-out a lot. We don't face up to our responsibilities. The responsibilities we must take to make that cliché but desperately needed difference. And worse, like the unnamed actor, we don't face up to the responsibilities of actions we ourselves took upon. We fall back on the convenience of blaming a dead Mushkin, an abstract notion of someone else causing our misfortune.
But yes, I know people do evil unto other people and the world in which they live in. You saw it in the mall, and though I live in that part of the world which is called "underdeveloped", I see it here around me in different forms. I myself have on occasion been part of those evils either by my inaction or sometimes when I forget that all that I have is but a gift and a blessing for service as Yvette reminds me.
To quote a very recent e-mail sent to me by Donal (he was reading NO LOGO by Naomi Klein at the time although I haven't read it, but Yve has a copy), he wrote, "... So much of what surrounds me, the technology in my room, maybe even the clothes I'm wearing....you start to wonder how much of it exists on the back of exploitation and suffering. We're born participants in a very ugly charade..."
It really is tough. I know, but only a little bit. I've actually had a very sheltered existence most of my life, and it has only been the last few years of my young life that the realm of my ideas as H.Miller puts it, has found a relation with my living. And how frightening and traumatic it has been. But it has also been at the same time inspiring and humbling.
So what am I trying to say, what am I trying to say... You have to keep going, Professor.
Small voices in a room of megaphones, but these voices can still be made and can still be heard ...
As I read your greeting, I felt so much like crying to think of all that is going on in the world that needs to be set right.
What Ms. Ung shared of her experience in her article also means so much to me. I find myself wondering why I bother at times. Why should I bother because very few people seem to care, and even a lot of my friends and family can't find the time to give me a simple "thank you" when I share of myself. But I know, I know, that is my ego talking. Or of course as she wrote, "discouraged by the fact that they don't see direct evidence of how their actions make an impact."
But suddenly I recall the chapter on FACES in Cass on Cass where John compares working on FACES for years and the evil of the Vietnam War that was going on at the time, you wrote that he said, not a direct quote, if they can spend all those years on something negative, then we can spend three years of our life on something positive.
To relate to that, I think a lot of people understand the law of KARMA in its simplified version the wrong way. They don't commit wrong because they are afraid it'll "come around" to them someday. I believe you shouldn't commit wrong because it basically fucks up the very fabric of the universe since we are all connected as I have learned. A negative action causes some or a lot of damage to the tissue that binds us all, stretching us all further away from each other till it finally tears ... responsibilities, responsibilities ...
Subsequently, some kind of positive action or actions, helps keep that tissue strong and healthy and alive, keeping us aware and in love with each other.
Did that make sense? The rantings and ravings of an early morning right at the equator ...
So again I return to what you've always said to me: keep going, it matters, it matters, my God it matters. Please ...
JP Carprio
A note from Ray Carney:
This page was only up for a few hours when Donal Foreman submitted the following response:
Subject: Re: because here and now matters no matter what lies ahead
Dear Ray,
I just read your Christmas message. It gave me a weird kind of happiness or hope----or something, some sort of dynamic energy----because I have similar experiences every week, and to see that reflected in someone else, even in despair, is kind of strengthening. So thanks.
Anyway, I just wanted to give you this thing I wrote recently. It's getting published in a magazine in Cork soon, along with other people's responses to it. I think it relates to what you said, and though it's about film culture in particular, what I learned from writing it seems to relate to a lot more than that.
Merry Christmas,
---Donal
Donal,
First, thank you for the kind response. It's wonderful to meet someone who understands. As I told someone else who wrote me about my Christmas statement, suggesting I might need to take a rest of a break to get rid of my sad feelings: "Why run away from from our sadness? What's so wrong with tragedy? Why do we feel we have to deny or suppress our feelings? A lot of life is sad or strange. I know that and accept that. That's truth too." I honor that part of me--and of life--too. I refuse to play the happy face game that everyone else seems to be devoted to. That's what I want from art too: truth, even if it is sad at times, or difficult or painful or clumsy. I don't want happy, happy, happy. If I wanted that, I'd watch television. Or go to a Hollywood movie. We know that's not true. That's fakery. That a lie about what we are.
And second, thank you for what you sent me. Your essay "The State of the Art." It's wonderful. I am posting it for visitors to the site to read. (Click here to go read Donal's essay.)
Merry Christmas to you, Donal. YOU give me hope.
--RC
Subject: On Xmas message
Hola Ray!
I'm out of school and about to diasppear for vacation, but read your message and thought to send you something. Well, I sent you some e-mails a few weeks ago. Don't remember how long ago now, but life is pretty ugly sometimes. Just from my own short life, seeing how people destroy themselves and life and such...there's tragedies all the time. Just a few hours ago my dad and I argued over my future. He said "stop being an artist". It was almost a bad cliché scene from a typical Hollywood flick. Of course there was no emotional catharsis in this movie and tearful hugs and all the rest...Oh man, I still love my dad though. We don't really hold things against each other that bad. Anyways...
You have to imagine (here comes the metaphors) what if everyone on earth went blind. Would the sun stop shining? What if the electrons saw the neglect and indifference of the human soul, so stopped spinning? I know this things are 'inanimate', and this metahpor is a bit trite (Nature is a favorite thing of mine, so I often think in natural terms. Not always, but...) but it's that spiritual drive to fulfill your purpose, your destiny that matters. So what if everyone drags themselves down? You got to stay in your own lane and speed on ahead when everyone shuts their engines down. I don't mean live on an island, but, well, you know what I mean.
My brains are a little dead from finals. This is the best I could write in my mental state.
(name withheld)
This is only the "To Print" page. To go to the regular page of Ray Carney's www.Cassavetes.com on which this text appears, click here, or close this window if you accessed the "To Print" page from the regular page. Once you have brought up the regular page, you may use the menus to reach all of the other pages on the site.