Thank you, merudanda. Made my day.

Robert just nails it. Those who have never been able to create anything
in their lives look at the old writer and see nothing but a poseur.
Robert sees holiness.

I hope that those who have never been able to overcome their fear of
rejection long enough to feel the rush of creativity and give expression
to it manage to do so someday. Maybe then they wouldn't be so insanely
jealous of those who do it on a regular basis, and feel the need to lash
out at them.

The mural you found on Rue de l'Esperance is not opposite the cafe and I
haven't seen it, but now you've given me something cool to search for on
my walks around the quartier. I guess someone else was as taken by the
name of the street as I was.


--- In [email protected], merudanda  wrote:
>
>

 
[http://lh3.ggpht.com/-hILrcyVP4BI/UJVb-wD-K3I/AAAAAAAAGWk/_v5T84W6vCM/s\
1600/BUKOWSKI%2525202292%25255B6%25255D.jpg]

  Wonderful  Robert Crumb drawing.The caption reads, “Old writer
puts on sweater,  sits down, leers into the computer screen and writes
about life. How  holy can we get?”
"hey, you hear,
Chinaski got a
space-biter!"

  [http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5305/5654311491_d449dd649f_z.jpg]

---In [email protected], <turquoiseb@...> wrote:

That's what it says on the steet sign across the road from where I'm
sitting. The Street Of Hope. Cool. And the password for the free Wifi at
this cafe is 'cafe'. That's cool, too. And they have Westmalle Tripel.
That's just WAY cool. What can I say? I am easily amused by little
things.

But still, doesn't sitting down in a new cafe to write in and
discovering that you're literally sitting on the Street Of Hope sound
like a *sign*? Maybe what I should write about, in this new writing
cafe, is HOPE.

OK, here goes.

Hope. I still have it, in spades.

Despite what has been said about me on this forum and others in the
past, I am *not* at heart a cynic. I know few people *more* hopeful than
I am. And I see ample reason in the world I see around me to *be*
hopeful.

It's really not such a bad place.

Get over it, if you believe it is.

This world is full of great beauty and great art and great love. And
these things are there even in the darkest corners of supposed
hopelessness. And what you focus on, you become.

When I find someone who's invented a new artform, as has Elena Divina
with her Cyr wheel in the videos I posted earlier, I focus on that, and
I feel more hopeful. A world that can produce that is FAR from hopeless.

It's like the ending to Woody Allen's "The Purple Rose Of Cairo."
Cecilia (Mia Farrow) has had a bad day. She's on the street, homeless
after telling her abusive husband to fuck off, and finding out that the
other man she'd fallen in love with is fictional. She has nowhere to
stay, and nowhere to go, and has very little money in her pockets. But
she finds herself standing in front of a movie theater, and spends one
of her last coins to go in and watch the movie.

And up on the screen is Fred Astaire. And suddenly there is hope.
Because no world that has Fred Astaire in it could possibly be hopeless.

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