One of my favorite scenes in the musical 1776 is when
the Second Continental Congress debates the verbiage of Thomas Jefferson’s just
completed “Declaration of Independence.” Suggestions for changes and deletions
are bandied about in rapid fire. One member suggests eliminating a line that he
feels unnecessarily takes to task the esteemed British Parliament. “Do you
think it wise to alienate such an august body?” he asks. To which John Adams
replies: “This is a revolution, dammit! We’re going to have to offend
somebody!”
Anyway, this is my August body in blog form—reflections on
happenings this month and in past Augusts. Looking on the bright side of
things, the summertime weather for both July and August has been as tolerable
as I’ve ever experienced. Not a heat wave all summer with largely bearable
temperatures and reasonable levels of humidity. New York City summers can be
brutal with their disagreeable combinations of heat and humidity.
An August anniversary was duly noted this year. Forty years
ago, Richard Nixon resigned the presidency in the wake of the Watergate
scandal. I was a mere lad when he departed the Washington scene—eleven years old—but I remember
where I was on the night of his resignation speech. I was in Bangor,
Pennsylvania. While my grandmother was away visiting relatives, my mother looked after my grandfather. After our new president, Gerald Ford,
was sworn in, my mom informed her dad that the pair resembled one another.
There was a bit of resemblance, I suppose. In August 1974, my grandfather also tasted
lentil soup for the first time—my mother’s homemade version—and offered his
opinion on the fare. “I’ve tasted worser soups,” he said.
Suffice it to say, August 1974 was a little bit different than its progeny: August 2014. I don’t mean to beat a dead horse, but kids
don’t seem to play much anymore. Our every youthful waking hour was spent outdoors in those bygone summers. Now, nobody’s playing wiffle ball, which I
loved doing more than anything else as a young boy. Even though there was no such thing, I dreamed of being a professional
wiffle ball player some day. Then stickball came
along. In fact, we played every conceivable version of baseball from box
baseball to punch ball to curb ball to kick ball. The boxes on the concrete
sidewalks and the curbsides are still around, but one would be hard-pressed to find a solitary soul utilizing them for sport anymore.
We have become a zombie-like society. Every day, I see
mothers pushing their children in strollers who are completely preoccupied with
their iPhones, even when crossing heavily trafficked streets. Fathers are equally oblivious.
What, pray tell, are these folks checking out every single moment in time?
That’s what I’d like to know. It’s both creepy and dispiriting. Exactly how is this
sort of behavior going to impact future generations? Nevertheless, I had a lot of fun in August 1974, even if we were in the midst
of a “national nightmare,” as newly sworn in President Ford termed it in his
first speech to the nation. “Our long national nightmare is over,” he said. I didn't get sidetracked—even for a second—during that
protracted nightmare. I was too busy playing wiffle ball.
(Photo 1 from the personal collection of Nicholas Nigro)
(Photo 1 from the personal collection of Nicholas Nigro)
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