FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Ten
Years Gone
By Stephanie Kuehnert
Altars.
Saviors. Rock 'n Roll. My life is best represented in verse -- verse,
chorus, verse. Every memory is a song or an album or a chord strummed
on a distorted guitar. I don't know if I can do justice to my own
story the way my favorite songs could. I don't know if I will ever
be able to describe the surge of memories and ideas that charge
every synapse in my brain when I hear my favorite band, Nirvana.
I know that I have never been able to capture the feeling in my
stomach when I heard the news of Kurt Cobain's suicide on April
8, 1994, an event that seems central to my story.
In
1994, I was 14 years old and, as much as I wanted to go, I had no
way to make it to Seattle from Oak Park, Illinois for the very first
public vigil for Kurt Cobain. It wasn't until 10 years after Kurt's
death that I could afford the trip and had people to go with. I
joined up with four girls I met on a music website. We came from
Chicago, Denver, St. Louis, Southern Illinois; one of the girls
came all the way from Australia. The five of us spent a week exploring
Seattle together, all of us seeing the city for the very first time,
focusing mostly on finding places from Nirvana's history, such as
music venues where they had played.
We
also traveled two hours to Aberdeen, Washington, the town Kurt Cobain
grew up in. We spent most of our time in Aberdeen at the Young Street
Bridge, a place where Kurt escaped to as a teenager. Sitting beneath
the bridge, on the muddy banks of the slow-moving Wishkah River,
where every inch of concrete is covered with markered and spray-painted
messages for Kurt, I stared out at the little houses and evergreen
trees that lined the shore; the heavily pregnant, gray clouds above.
Though Kurt's presence in that place had dissipated, it is one of
the two places the energy of his spirit is most powerfully felt,
tended by every fan who goes there to remember him.
The
other place is Viretta Park, called "Kurt's Park" by his
fans, the small park in Seattle right next to Kurt's last home.
My friends and I went there on April 5th (10 years to the day that
Kurt died), April 8th (10 years to the day his body was found),
and April 10th (10 years to the day the first organized public vigil
was held for him). We bought flowers and candles at the Public Market,
took the number two bus to the end of the line, and walked about
half a mile up Lake Washington Boulevard to get there. On the first
two days we watched people of all ages, from all over the world,
come and go, leaving flowers, candles, pictures, letters, even a
box of macaroni and cheese, on the bench in the center of the park
that had become an unofficial shrine to Kurt. On our third visit,
however, we found that everything -- even the large cross that someone
had made out of pink flower petals below the bench -- was gone,
thrown out by the Seattle Police. But we were prepared, armed with
more flowers, and a bag of one hundred tea light candles, which
we used to spell out "KURT" below the bench. We sat there
through the afternoon. A few people came and went, but only two
other boys stayed with us on through dusk, and when the darkness
fell, the seven of us, armed with only three lighters, lit up Kurt's
name. You could see it clearly from the street; it burned with the
same ferocious brightness as Nirvana's music.
*
* *
I entered
junior high in a suburb of Chicago in the fall of 1991, at the dawn
of an era. Perhaps you can't call a couple of glorious years an
era, but because those years echo so strongly culturally and personally
for so many people, I call them one. I was a skinny, awkward, stringy-haired
girl who had given up all attempts to fit in over that summer. I
had never done a very good job to begin with. In sixth grade I had
given it an honest go, putting away my odd outfits of oversized,
boldly-colored shirts topped with berets or witchy dresses and granny
shoes from the vintage boutique by my house, and buying Keds and
Gap pocket t-shirts. But I hated being plain. Just a month before
seventh grade, my friend Kendra, a kindred spirit who was also just
too naturally strange to fit in, played me a tape that contributed
greatly to my decision to give all attempts at popularity the big
kiss-off.
Kendra's
room always seemed so much more sophisticated than mine. It was
her arty touches, the cool hats she left sitting out, the collages
she made with pictures clipped from fashion magazines. I was sitting
on her bed while she flipped through a shoebox full of tapes that
she kept on her dresser. Kendra was on top of underground music
in a way that still seems unfathomable to me.
"This
band," she was saying as she pushed her dark brown, sharply
angled hair out of her pale face, "you might like them. This
is their first album, but there's a new one coming out soon. I don't
know what I think of it really, but oh, here it is."
She put on side two. The sludgy guitar riff from "Negative
Creep" started as she walked over to sit on the bed beside
me. She handed me the tape case, but before I could take in more
than the band name, Nirvana, the vocals kicked in. When Kurt Cobain
yowled, "Daddy's little girl ain't a girl no more," they
instantly became my favorite band. I had never heard a voice like
his, or lyrics so stark and powerful.
After
the song ended Kendra got up to turn it off. "What do you think?"
I told
her to put it back on.
continued...
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