Angry for Paradise
“This is the kind of thing New Jerseyans are built for – we’re plenty tough and now we have a little more reason to be angry after this. Just what we need in New Jersey, a chance to be a little more angry.” -Gov. Chris Christie, October 31, 2012
As is I suppose true of many folks from here, my relationship with this crazy-ass state is best described as love/hate; like a character in a Springsteen (or even a Bon Jovi) song, I always loved to talk about busting out of this place where I’ve lived 75% of my life, but I probably should have known that I never really would. Even when I tried, I wound up getting drawn back after just a couple of years.
What a strange, peculiar state we are. So often the butt of so many jokes from the rest of the country, I’m not sure we’d change a thing about the place, even as we tell you we’d love to change everything about it.
Brash, rude, loud and obnoxious, you say? Damn right. Brimming with an inferiority complex? Guilty as charged. How could we not be when we are constantly living in the shadow of New York? Even on the rare day when that shadow is lifted, we find ourselves in the shadow of Philadelphia. Hell, our two pro football teams refuse to acknowledge their affiliation with the state despite their reliance on our tax dollars, and our biggest public university insists on using the confusing name “Rutgers.”
Industrial, dirty, and crowded? Absolutely. That’s just the sign of an honest, hardworking life filled with fought-for opportunity. There’s a reason no state has more immigrants per capita from more areas of the world than us, whether we’re talking about the Indian communities of Edison, the Polish community of Manville, or the Latino communities throughout the state.
Short-tempered? No doubt. We do our best work when we’re pissed off – without anger, Sinatra (Hoboken) wouldn’t have been the Chairman of the Board, Springsteen (Freehold) wouldn’t be The Boss, Gloria Gaynor (Newark) wouldn’t have survived, the phrase “blistering dissent by” would never have become part of Antonin Scalia’s (Trenton) name, and Paul Robeson (Princeton/Somerville) wouldn’t have fought every single day of his illustrious life.
Of course, that’s all just the part of Jersey we let you see. The other stuff? The stuff where the Jersey Shore isn’t a bunch of nincompoops from Rhode Island, but is instead a working class family’s paradise? We keep that for ourselves.
Monday night, that paradise disappeared. As the governor said, we’re pretty ticked off about it, and having to dodge downed power lines every couple hundred yards with no electricity in our homes isn’t helping.
Expect to be seeing and hearing a lot of Jersey’s best work until we get our paradise back. Don’t worry about missing it – we don’t do quiet well around here, and we intend to be as piercing as a Whitney Houston (East Orange) high note, as unrelenting as an Allen Ginsburg (Newark) “Howl,” as outrageous as a Kevin Smith (Atlantic Highlands) film, as loud as a Zakk Wylde (Jackson) guitar solo, as unrestrained as a Naughty by Nature (East Orange) lyric, as sentimental as a Gaslight Anthem (Red Bank/New Brunswick) song, and as successful as a Bill Parcells (Englewood) playoff run.
“Working class paradise”
That’s exactly what my wife said about Montauk when we moved out here 16 years ago.
I’ve no doubt Jersey will recover. Montauk I’m not so sure.Report
That last paragraph is Space The Final Frontier Awesome!
My favorite Joisey joke (both parents are from there): Why do they call New Jersey “The Garden State”? Because of all the mafiosi planted there.
Gotta love a state that has a Joyce Kilmer Wayside Park with nary a tree in site.Report
But also The Garden State.
Paradise, fallen.Report
Good post, Mark. And in reference to living in the shadow of New York:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jQ3cyMJS4A
Good luck, New Jersey.Report
I sincerely offer my best wishes for NJ’s recovery from a horrible disaster.
That said, I lived there for ten years. I never got used to (literally in many cases) having to physically grab store clerks in order to get their attention to take my money. And every time I visited the West I had a tendency to grossly overtip at restaurants because the service was, by NJ standards, uniformly outstanding.Report
Once you have NJ in you it never leaves. I moved to Ak from NJ 17 years ago and NJ is still home in many ways. I’ll defend it if people attack and attack it if people talk it up. NJ diners are the best, all 9000 of them.
I still have family and friends there, they all made it through okay that i’m aware of. I never really liked the Jersey Shore much although i did live on, and like, Brigantine Island for a while. Still hard to see it so damaged.
Glad you made it through.Report
Stubornnes in the face of disaster is one the human characteristics I admire most. I salute you and I can tell from the attitude alone that you will recover.Report
My sardonic friends asked, on hearing that Sandy had hit Newark, whether that wouldn’t represent an improvement for the city.
All the best for the Jerseyers, I’ve never watched Jersey Shore but I’m rooting for Jersey anyhow.Report