The L ran past my window all day and night. A constant sound of speed, brakes, and voices announcing Addison. This is Addison. Belmont will be the next stop. Watch all feet and hands. Belmont is next.
You learn to sleep through it. To write through it. To argue through it. To fight through it. And, sometimes, at two in the morning, to use the sounds as a backdrop for making love. It was the soundtrack of my time in Chicago. The ongoing movie that it is. A town like no other. Divided by money. The Gold Coast and the Southside. By black and white. By hip-hop and blues to classical symphonies and jazz in the park on a summer’s night. The home of Buddy Guy, Jeff Tweedy, Ramsey Lewis, and Chance the Rapper. It is a city that makes no excuses.
Sometimes, at night, I’m awakened by the freight train coming through my small town at two in the morning. I pick up Carl Sandburg, Upton Sinclair, and Studs for my nighttime readings. Hog butcher for the world, said Sandburg. The Jungle, Sinclair, called it. Terkel said it just as it was, Division Street. Not to be confused with Maxwell Street where every drunk in town met at midnight for a Polish at Jim’s. Mustard and grilled onions. No Catsup, please.
It was home. From Back of the Yards to Howard Street, it was home. I often rode that train all night. Back and forth from Northside to Southside. From Addison to 95th Street. I sat with the drunks, the homeless, the mentally ill, the concealed weapons carriers, gang bangers, yuppie scum, and street musicians trying to make a buck; twelve year old kids banging on plastic containers with worn drumsticks. This was my city.
In a changing world for the worse, I hope some things stay the way they used to be. Or, perhaps get better. Not for the rich and powerful, but for the soul. Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth. Yes. Yes, indeed.