Folks,
I think we had a very unique community we grew up in at a very important time and its critical that it be documented in many ways as historic as Hell's Kitchen, Spanish Harlem, Little Italy, Bed-Stuy or any other of the neighborhoods in NYC.
I forget exactly how Les Sherwood put it, but he hit the nail right on the head in terms of mirroring the reasons I bother to post little stories from my past, even when I'm aware that they even may make me look foolish. Actually I couldn't care less about that now. That ship has sailed, as they say! Anyway, you've got to be able to laugh at yourself and view yourself with a critical eye. That's our best hope of growing, isn't it? Mistakes of my past add cultural enrichment and texture to my personal history. Especially since I've survived it and we've all been lucky enough to profit by the pressure cooker that was our neighborhood. Like Les, not only don't I want to forget any of the stories and experiences of my youth, good, bad or ugly, and believe me, there was plenty of bad and ugly. I feel its important they be documented. All of our experiences contributed to making us the people we are today. I remember as a kid the excitement I felt when I hit the streets. Every day in the neighborhood was a crapshoot, every day was a trip the bigtop circus. You had to stay on your toes on our streets, and keep your eyes open or you were liable to miss something. I can still feel that excitement when I think about those times, and I can feel it in Les and many of you. It was always obvious to all that the neighborhood had a high personality quotient; it had a constant parade of comedians, pranksters, freaks, geeks, oddballs and unique individuals. I'm not quite sure why, but our streets despite their roughness, crudeness, violence and everything bad about them were also a breeding ground for higher intelligence, very excessive creativity, flexibility and awesome survival skills. That's very obvious today, particularly through this website.
When I've rediscovered some of the people from grammar school recently, I'm amazed by the number of people who hold highly responsible or high powered positions in their daily lives. I am really amazed at the number of schoolmates who are accomplished in the arts, whether as writers, publishers, filmmakers, artists of various genres, etc. I think at much higher ratio than our humble little neighborhood would have normally spawned. Why? What do you all think?
Eddie