Editorial
Once
upon a time in a city called New Orleans ...
Written
by Boysie Bollinger
An Ode to the Big Easy
Theres not a working clock in this entire city. This
morning I went on my walk and the big clock by St. Patricks Church
on Camp said it was 2:30, as I walked on the Whitney clock said it was
11:15 and by the time I hit the French Quarter a clock there told me
quite firmly that it was 6:00 o'clock.
Im not really surprised at this; New Orleans has always
had a problem with time. Time is not linear here, this is a city where
people live in two hundred year old houses, have wireless Internet and
use 600 year old recipes while singing 60s songs to their newborns.
Time is more of a mental game in New Orleans, you can pick the year
you liked the best and stay in that year for the rest of your life here
and no one says a thing.
You can talk about your great great grandparents as if they
were still alive and talk about your neighbors as if they were dead,
we all understand.
Time marches to its own drunk drummer here. This morning
as I walked into the Quarter on Chartres, a woman ran out of a cafe
to greet me, "Hey dahlin" she yelled as she hugged me, "Where
ya been?" I looked at her and realized it was one of the exotic
dancers from the smaller establishments on Chartres, over the years
Id become friendly with several of the dancers as I would take
my morning walk, wed smile, wave, exchange pleasantries.
This morning I realized that even though I had said hello
to this woman three times a week for four years, I didnt know
her name. I smiled, hugged her back and told her how badly I felt that
I never knew her name and she laughed Dahlin, you know my name,
its Baby! Time to laugh out loud.
Twenty minutes later as I walked up Royal from Esplanade
on my way out of the Quarter, a dark sedan stopped in the street right
by the Cathedral and all four doors opened at once. I was twittering
with curiosity when the driver hopped out, ran to the other side and
escorted a smiling Lindy Boggs out of the car. Before I could stop myself
Id yelled out, "Hey Lindy, good to see ya!" Mrs. Boggs
accustomed to such raffish behavior smiled and yelled out "Hey
yourself" as she waved, laughed and headed to church, surely thinking
it's time to pray for better manners for the likes of me.
Were dealing with a lot of time issues these days,
time to meet the insurance specialist, time to call FEMA, time to put
out the refrigerator, time to get a new refrigerator, time to decide
whether to stay in New Orleans or head elsewhere, time to register the
kids for school, time to sell the house, time to buy the house, time
to find a job, time to leave a job, time to figure out the rest of your
life.
Could we maybe, while dealing with all those time issues
take a minute and remember. Remember that there was a time when all
of this was different, there was a time when slaves were sold in Napoleon
House, a time when Mid City was considered the country, a time when
people staged sit in's downtown, a time when there was no McDonalds
or Wendys or even Popeyes, a time when the Quarter burned,
a time when people spoke French or Spanish, a time when the Opera House
was open, a time when this was all uninhabited, a time when your refrigerator
worked, your house was whole, your neighborhood wasn't flooded and your
city wasn't defined by a Hurricane.
More than any other city in this country, this is a city
defined by the quality of the times people have had here. Maybe its
because its a port city, maybe it's because of the food, maybe
it's because of the heat, but this city remembers everyone who has ever
lived, loved and laughed here.
People visit us because they can feel the difference as
soon as they get here, they can feel how time is honored here, in the
time to craft our houses and the time to make a roux. They can feel
that the city holds all of our memories, our joys, our sorrows and our
triumphs. That any time spent in New Orleans is kept in the breath,
air, water and sky of New Orleans.
What happens in Vegas may stay in Vegas, but what happens
in New Orleans changes the city and its people, minute by minute, day
by day, year by year so that we can't help but live in the past, present
and future.
Time will tell what we will end up looking like, how strong
the levees will be, how many houses will be repaired, but we will
tell time how strong the people of New Orleans are, how deep our commitments
to each other are and that sometimes the best stories are the ones we
write for ourselves.
(Boysie
Bollinger is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Bollinger
Ship Yards and Subsidiaries. Anyone who has lived in New Orleans or
anyone who truly knows the Big Easy will pause a moment, and with a
lump in their throat say, this is Boysies story but its
mine too.)
Crowley Post Signal
602 North Parkerson Avenue Crowley, LA
Ph: 337-783-3450 Fax: 337-788-0949