I've never said they were my friends, nor that all was one or the other. I know that the two inches that are the only barrier from one world to another. The stage door from Taylor Street to the stage are about an entire universe apart. Separate realities, separate worlds, different lives. All I'm trying to say is that while all of you see the crack ho's I see a different kind of person too. Not that one is right, or wrong, or good or bad. Or that either of those people are there because of choices, both good and bad that they made in their lives.
I think on those two inches a lot. I'm there a lot so I can do that. Two inches, the difference between being on stage at the Warfield in San Francisco, fortune, fame and all that goes with it - including the limo ride to get you the hell out of well, hell. Because that's Taylor Street, that's hell. Some mornings I have to kick some bum who is sleeping in a puddle of his own piss out of the doorway that a few hours later some chucklehead who wrote some song that made him more money that god himself can count will walk through. Out on Taylor Street, the crack ho's who will sell themselves for less then five dollars, on the other side are the the uptown girls who make more money for a few hours than I'll make that day, and I'm not badly paid. Two inches.
That's all it is. Two inches. Just a door between two worlds. (with the biggest black guy you've ever seen in your life deciding who gets to go through that door, and who does not) Two inches.
And my problem with a lot of this is, is the single minded idea that 'the world I know is the only world that is'. And that just ain't happening. There are lots of worlds. Some better, some worse, and some, worse than you could ever imagine. Then, on the other hand, some much better than you could ever dream of. Two inches - that's the difference between the two.
It's like separate universes coexisting, without either one really ever changing the other one. That you don't see both - nor the millions and millions of words in between - is just pretty much a failure of imagination more than anything else. And I don't think I even got it until I sat out there night after night, and thought about it myself. Hell, I was fifty years old, with a PhD and never got to see anyone die in front of my own eyes, and then, in the short space of two years I got to see three. Two by guns, one by a knife - and that stuff will change you.
Sure, the worst exists, and you should never forget it. Hell, I'm sure a lot of those people out there on the streets had people, mothers, fathers, kids, lovers, who loved them. I also know that a lot of people on that stage did it despite everyone telling them they could not ever make it, and they told them all to F off. Nothing is universal.
Two inches, nothing is universal.