http://wobblymusic.livejournal.com/ (
wobblymusic.livejournal.com) wrote in
davis_square2013-10-21 04:44 pm
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
David, on Tiffany
From the latest New Yorker:
"In late May of this year, a few weeks shy of her fiftieth birthday, my youngest sister, Tiffany, committed suicide. She was living in a room in a beat-up house on the hard side of Somerville, Massachusetts, and had been dead, the coroner guessed, for at least five days before her door was battered down."
More here.
"In late May of this year, a few weeks shy of her fiftieth birthday, my youngest sister, Tiffany, committed suicide. She was living in a room in a beat-up house on the hard side of Somerville, Massachusetts, and had been dead, the coroner guessed, for at least five days before her door was battered down."
More here.
no subject
RIP Tiffany Sedaris, 49, Somerville artist
Who was Tiffany? (photo of artistic memorial to her on the Community Path)
I don't agree that her neighborhood near Magoun Square* is "the hard side of Somerville". And I suspect that she would rather not have had this published, just as in 2004.
[* - assuming that she lived at the address where her open studio was in May]
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Really gives a new low water mark for the old saying: "A writer is always selling someone out."
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I Gave Bad Directions to David Sedaris and All I Got was This Lousy T-Shirt
no subject
no subject
But, the article reminds me that we probably all have friends on the edge of society. I sometimes worry what is going to happen to all of them. I hope we can all be good enough friends to give them whatever support they want / need. And sometimes that support might be telling them to tell their families to go f**k off.
no subject
An interesting point in the context of Sedaris' piece. What if one of your children, in ninth grade, prefers getting stoned to learning what she needs to learn to get a job that earns middle-class pay? Is sending her to disciplinary school "support" or "oppression"?
I do like the line, "We had other kids. You think we could let the world stop on account of any one of you?" No one is allowed to suck up a disproportion of the common resources.
no subject
no subject
no subject
As for kids, it is hard. My ex-wife and I kind of choose not to have kids because we realized how hard it would be and how fucked-up our childhoods were. In retrospect, I might have been good at it. But I'm living in a glass house here never having had kids.
Still as for "We had other kids. You think we could let the world stop on account of any one of you?" No one is allowed to suck up a disproportion of the common resources."... Yes I do think people do sometimes need to be allowed to suck up a disproportion of the common resources. As much as I hate where the line comes from (Marx), I'm actually become a big believer in "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need" within reason.
I think I'm going to stop reading about this chain and Sedaris before I get sick and never want to listen to him or even NPR again. But, I'll probably be back later in the week.
no subject
no subject
I watched that video to the end, when David, laying on some grass, reads this first paragraph which is now the opener in the New Yorker piece. Then the interviewer asks him: (paraphrasing from memory) "If you could ask Tiffany one question, what would it be?" David responds, "I'd ask her if she was ever going to pay back all the money she owes me." The interviewer laughs nervously, incredulously, saying, "that's what you'd ask her?" David responds, "yes, she always said that she'd pay me back in her lifetime."
That paragraph has haunted me ever since I read it.
no subject
I didn't watch the video all the way to the end, but if he really said this, my respect for him has sunk below the floor.
no subject
no subject
no subject
from the New Yorker piece, it seemed that the siblings were more upset that Tiffany had spoiled their planned family reunion (to which she wasn't invited; and, yes, it appears she wouldn't have come if she had been) than that she had killed herself.
Nice people.