Sunday, May 10, 2020

Real messaging from the Zone



Surreal New World

With all due respect to Rod Serling, host of that eery 1950s-ish TV series the Twilight Zone, consider the following imagined intro for a 2020 episode, delivered of course in Mr. Serling's unmistakable gravelly voice ...

'You are about to enter another dimension. It is the middleground of light and shadow, between science and superstition. You will encounter an enemy lurking there, a pathogen beyond that known to man, living between the pit of man's fears and the summit of his knowledge. It is an enemy as daunting as travel to the boundary of space and as timeless as infinity. Conquering it will stretch the tensile strength of imagination and resources. You've just crossed into ... the Corona Zone.'



The Twilight Zone ran on CBS for five years keeping viewers gathered around B&W rabbit-eared TV sets perched on the edges of their seats.  Each story involved people crossing into the Zone to face unusual or extraordinary circumstances.  The storylines had a bad dream-like feel.  Might that define the surreal storyline of the world we suddenly plunged into?  Each episode ended with a surprise twist, usually with a morality message.  Could there be a take-away message for us now?

First, let's step back to examine Surrealism.  It is not a new concept, and its scope encompasses far more than Salvador Dali's wilted clocks in The Persistence of Memory.  Surrealism was a twentieth century movement expressed popularly through painting and literature, but photography too played an important role.  Artists used techniques like double exposure, camera rotation, lens distortions, montage, and solarization to create bizarre, compelling images.  Henri Cartier-Bresson, the father of street photography and the decisive moment image, embraced Surrealism during one phase of his illustrious career, training his eyes to capture micro-seconds of the surreal he observed all around him.  Regardless of medium, all iconic artists of the movement employed a genius for turning something whether ordinary, ugly, or repulsive into compelling creations. 


© Henri Cartier-Bresson


What's for Dinner? © David Greenfield




Watchful Eyes in the Mens Room © David Greenfield


Now back to the question of whether today's surrealistic Corona-time could yield a compelling message.

There are certainly mixed messages out there. Here's but one example - pre-Corona I shunned environment choking-single use-plastic bags always making sure to do the responsible, right thing by carrying reusable bags to every grocery shopping excursion.  In Corona-time plastic has re-emerged as the safest go-to bagging option.  Markets provide a seemingly endless supply while my cache of reusables rests in an extreme socially distant corner waiting to be sequestered with the nation's nuclear waste in Nevada's Yucca Mountain Waste Repository.  I'm inundated with leftover plastic that groceries no longer accept for recycling!


Plastic - soon headed to a landfill near you?

There are other mixed bag messages like the indisputable need for screens to maintain social connections and avoid isolation vs. the growing prospect of normalized societal isolation living one's life by screen alone.  But there is one Corona-time message that is unambiguous.  It's a take-away which should continue to percolate well after the curve has flattened and headed back to baseline - it's who our true heroes are!

Forget the adulation heaped on professional athletes for the entertainment they provide while receiving megabuck salaries.  Where would we be today without a frontline army of doctors, nurses, EMTs, ambulance drivers, grocery store workers, farmers & their hired hands, and bus & subway drivers?  These troops have been in the trenches 24/7 from Day One at great risk to themselves and their families.  And as parents struggle to create meaningful teaching experiences for their sheltered-at-home kids, how about a fresh appreciation for teachers.  By the way, this gallant workforce, The Essentials, is not comprised of One Percenters. They're largely people of color and members of our worker-bee immigrant community. They are the true heroes.  It is they who make America great!

And that is real messaging from the Corona-Zone to take to heart. 


World Turned Upside Down
 images © David Greenfield

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Hair



Give me 'down to there' hair,
shoulder length or longer.
Straight, curly, fuzzy,
snaggy, shaggy, ratty, matty,
oily, greasy, fleecy,
shining, gleaming, streaming,
flaxen, waxen

I'm just a hairy guy


Is hairy-ness a new fad?
The answer is .... NO, all the salons and barber shops are closed, and everyone knows why that is!

To stem the corona virus spread our governmental leaders ordered a shutdown of non-essential businesses. So, add frequenting your favorite establishments, and seeing your favorite folks within them, to the list of taken for granted things we enjoyed in pre-corona time. All of that is now off the table. Keeping one's hair perfectly and regularly trimmed, coiffed, blow-dried, and colored (even if only your hairdresser knows), is but one more Covid-19 affected necessity you once knew. Maintaining the perfect 'do' may be deemed essential for you, but in the eyes of the government, an essential business for your persona remains non-essential for the public's health and welfare. So what does the future holds as weeks stretching into months of shutdown continue and the gray starts to show and controlling your locks goes beyond  a 'comb-over' remedy?



I don't know how this will play out, but I have a prediction. It's based on a reliable model which appeared in the venerable Farmers' Almanac concerning weather forecasting. In that august publication, which coincidentally also hits the newsstands each August, the year's long-range weather outlook was as follows - several months of gradually cooling temperatures followed by several months of gradually warming temps, then the gradual return of cooler weather. Regardless of which TV weatherperson you swear by, and his or her track record in forecasting, you can definitely bet your firstborn on the perspicacity of that Farmers' Almanac forecast. So how does this perspective relate to hair?


T

It's very simple. As the time for everyone's customary visit to their go-to stylist goes by the wayside, each 'do' will as expected become increasingly fuzzy, snaggy, shaggy, ratty, and matty. I then predict spotting our neighbors, even from mandated social distancing, as having more and more bad hair days. If image is everything, mounting self-consciousness and maintaining good grooming frustration will lead to more desperate instances of amateurish home trims. These valiant attempts might be either self-inflicted or abetted by significant others. Manufacturers and retailers could view this as good economic news as demand for hats of all kinds skyrockets to join the ranks of toilet paper in popularity.


Hair, hair, hair, hair, hair, hair, hair
Flow it, show it
long as God can grow it.


On a positive note, if you enjoy sporting facial hair, expert self-grooming is already a perfected skill ...


... at least for some folks.

In all seriousness, toss aside the lighthearted hirsute angst for a moment and let's circle back to the beginning of this post, i.e., all the salons and barber shops are closed! The closures put those favorite folks who have tended to our needs out of work, impacting not only their livelihoods, but their families' welfare and their futures. Granted, some will roll with the punches and creatively find ways to navigate the storm until inevitably it too will pass. But for many, the small operation shops they own will remain shuttered. Both owners and employees will suffer; their lives as they knew them will not return. 

How can we help - buying gift cards now to provide an infusion of cash to offset revenue loss, or paying for services now as if we had them as scheduled? Please share your thoughts in the Comment section at the bottom of the post to create a forum of ideas.

Thank you, stay safe, and continue to be well.




all images © David Greenfield


Visit my web site anytime to view other Galleries, Photo-essays, and read previous blog-posts, then kindly share on social media. Thank you.