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California Expert Software
Truth is Everything |
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Introduction |
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I write this in memory of Mary Ann Martinez, nee Cafferty (? - my memory) in Chicago. Recently I was told she died of breast cancer about two years ago. Mary Ann was there the day I describe, and I worked with her for several years thereafter. She was a good friend, mother of Heather (by Richard). I am very sorry I was not able to see her before she passed away. Somehow, I hope she hasn't died, that I was misinformed. Death is too final, often unwarranted.
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Unscheduled
Now that I am retired, I find
myself surrounded by busy people who are always busy. Busy people have
schedules. They always have to be someplace else. That goes along with
making a ton of money, which is what busy people do.
I've always been a bum, disinclined
to be very busy. I especially dislike schedules, as they seem confining.
Because of my preferences, I have never made much money. I regret not having
the money, now that I am retired, but I cannot think of anything I would do
differently just to get the money. I guess more than enough money is just
not worth the trouble to me.
Unlike most busy people, I've given
freely of my time to others when they needed me. When I was self-employed, I
spent hours and hours, sometimes days, on other people's projects and didn't
charge for all of it (unless they could afford it). The truth is, most
people seem unable to afford the services they need, not to mention what
they want. So, somewhere, something has to give. That's why there is a huge
underclass of ill-paid people in every First World country: someone has to
do the work. Without them, there would be no First World.
This suggests to my anti-capitalist
mind that the Third World can end gringo dominance simply by not going to
the First World. Don't believe those famous lines, '... give me your poor
... your huddled masses ...', because they don't mean it. The United States
and continental Europe, for example, are at the beginning of a serious
demographic problem: too many old people and not enough workers to support
them. This is a particularly big problem in the United States, because young
Americans don't want to pay for their elders. One way to solve the problem
is to import "teeming masses" of underpaid labor. This is a logical
extension of the capitalist system of exploitation, since it avoids any
moral responsibilities the rich, the young or society generally may have.
Un-Free
Things need not always be like
this. There have been a few rare times when they actually were otherwise. I
lived in the midst of one of those times and places: the Summer of Love,
which emanated from San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district.
The Silent Majority, later the
Moral Majority, never approved what happened there. To the contrary, they
condemned it. Today's market-oriented conservatives look askance at some of
communal practices worked out there. Most Americans disdain the Hippies,
Free Love and the 1960s generally. (That doesn't keep them from coming in
droves by tourist bus, expecting titillation.) But, I do not disdain the
people or the place because I lived there - in San Francisco, in the
Haight-Ashbury, at that time. I was never as completely liberated as others
became, but I learned a lot that summer.
I was almost newly divorced, and
working for San Francisco Social Services - the welfare department. I was
assigned to work with the old folks receiving "Old Age Security," a program
now replaced by Federal SSI (Supplemental Security Income). Our offices were
located in the old, refurbished San Francisco jail, on Otis Street, and my
desk was at the top of that building, on the 9th floor. We had a great view
of the freeway from there.
The Department's management, like
most of official and corporate San Francisco, was utterly appalled by
whatever was happening out there in the Haight. They hated the drugs, the
sex, the lifestyle. Most of all, they hated the challenge to the established
order, because Officialdom could actually deal with any of it as long as
they controlled it. For example, in those years just a few blocks west of
City Hall were the whore houses frequented by those in Officialdom. If you
kept going westward from City Hall on those streets, you ended up in the
Haight.
One day, unexpectedly, the
Department decided to sponsor a mid-day discussion - supposedly a training
session. This session was intended to enlighten us workers on social
services in the Haight. I admit, for once, I was permanently enlightened,
which is why I am writing this piece 37 years later.
A Rare Community
There was a group called "The
Diggers," who had organized a lot of the "infrastructure" of the
revolutionary Haight-Ashbury. Hippies weren't just rabble, as conservatives
would like to pretend. They were a highly organized society based on
different principles than the American "mainstream." One of their most
striking differences was the belief in communal effort, roughly based on
Marxist ideas about 'from each according to his ability, to each according
to his need.' The Diggers were one of several spontaneous, self-organizing
groups that allowed Haight-Ashbury Hippies to exist.
What I learned in their
presentation was that the Diggers had set up bakeries, and maybe other food
outlets, where anyone could get free bread and free meals. There were other
groups that had set up places to get low cost or free clothes, and the other
necessities of life. There was an active barter system going on in the
Haight that supplied those who manned the various operations with what they
needed. Of course, San Francisco is not an agrarian paradise, so the people
relied on "imported" grain, vegetables, cloth, etc - raw materials - to be
made into the necessities of life. Those imports were purchased from the
valuable contributions people made, or received as gifts.
So, what's different? Every society
has to have workers, resources, factories, trade, etc which provide the
means of living. So, all that those communes - most of the Haight-Ashbury
groups were communes - did was what the outside world downtown did: work for
a living. No difference, except that people did what they did without regard
to pay, benefits, etc. Why? Because there was the feeling that others
cared about them; that they were part of a family - the commune.
Downtown, they paid more, but cared less or not at all. Downtown, you were
just another robot. That was the difference, and still is the difference.
Eternity
I learned something in that meeting with the Diggers, something I have never been able to explain logically. It is just a way of living. I learned it in a few hours, and lived that way the rest of my life.
The leading Digger man went into a
spiel about time, clocks, schedules and such. He pointed out that we were
led around by clocks. He had a large vest pocket watch on a chain, which he
swung in front of us, and repeatedly told us it was ticking. He said
something like when the clock ticked, or the hands pointed a certain way,
people did something - just like machines. To follow the commands of the
clock was to become a machine.
In the "real" world, things happen
when they happen. Events are not arranged by a clock's ticking. How long it
takes to do something, or feel something, or think something, cannot be
measured. A thing is done when it is done. So, living by the clock is a
misuse of one's life.
Following that exposition, I took
off my watch and never wore one again. Generally, since then, I have relied
on my inner sense of time, not external reminders, in determining what to do
when. This practice was reinforced on many occasions, when I realized how
long it really took to resolve emotional turmoil, settle an intellectual
problem, or finish a task. All of those things take what time they require,
never any less. Because of that heuristic, I eventually realized that time
never begins or ends for anyone, because we never know our birth or our
death.
Epilogue
The San Francisco Hippies, tired of being gawked at and beaten up, and not interested in the political movements of the time, left the City. Large numbers of them went north to the Mendocino Mountains and the Lost Coast, where they still live. They now live in a co-operative fashion, if not communally, on their own farms. They don't live as long or as well as the city slickers, but they lead the lives they have chosen at their own pace. Many of their children left the rural life, because they wanted the excitement the City offers. But, in recent times, wealthy Northern Californians seeking vacation and retirement homes have been moving north, moving in on Hippie Land. While these new rural residents are attracted by the inner peace of Hippie communities, they have never lived that sort of life. As the Hippies are bought out, their storied lives evaporate, leaving only a timeless dream.
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calxsoft -
13:38:00 - Wednesday, 09/15/2004
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Last update: 11/06/2007
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