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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 2020)
2 Wednesday, September 2, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon O P I N I O N Dueling with demons Jim Cornelius Editor in Chief The Nugget salutes all the hard-working people in and around Sisters who labor to meet the needs of our community and keep our economy moving. The Nugget Newspaper will be open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Monday, September 7. — All standard deadlines remain. — Letters to the Editor… The Nugget welcomes contributions from its readers, which must include the writer9s name, address and phone number. Letters to the Editor is an open forum for the community and contains unsolicited opinions not necessarily shared by the Editor. The Nugget reserves the right to edit, omit, respond or ask for a response to letters submitted to the Editor. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. Unpublished items are not acknowledged or returned. The deadline for all letters is 10 a.m. Monday. A heartfelt thank you and goodbye to Jim and Sue Anderson. Folks and critters of Sisters Country are going to miss you, some- thing fierce. Judy Bull s s s To the Editor: I read the column that Jim Anderson is moving. Tears began to stream as I have so enjoyed reading Jim9s articles about our beautiful wildlife, his wonderful family, and our precious world. I want to thank Jim for his life9s work and all he has brought to us. The education, beautiful prose, and wonder- ful insight. I will miss your sage wisdom and wish you the very best. You have made my world a better place and I thank you from the bottom of my heart! May good health, peace and beauty be yours. Rebecca French See LETTERS on page 12 Sisters Weather Forecast Courtesy of the National Weather Service, Pendleton, Oregon Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Monday Sunday Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny 94/57 96/60 98/60 95/58 94/57 91/57 The Nugget Newspaper, LLC Website: www.nuggetnews.com 442 E. Main Ave., P.O. Box 698, Sisters, Oregon 97759 Tel: 541-549-9941 | Email: editor@nuggetnews.com Postmaster: Send address changes to The Nugget Newspaper, P.O. Box 698, Sisters, OR 97759. Third Class Postage Paid at Sisters, Oregon. Editor in Chief: Jim Cornelius Production Manager: Leith Easterling Creative Director: Jess Draper Community Marketing Partner: Vicki Curlett Classifieds & Circulation: Lisa May Owner: J. Louis Mullen The Nugget is mailed to residents within the Sisters School District; subscriptions are available outside delivery area. Third-class postage: one year, $55; six months (or less), $30. First-class postage: one year, $95; six months, $65. Published Weekly. ©2020 The Nugget Newspaper, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is pro- hibited. All advertising which appears in The Nugget is the property of The Nugget and may not be used without explicit permission. The Nugget Newspaper, LLC. assumes no liability or responsibility for information contained in advertisements, articles, stories, lists, calendar etc. within this publication. All submissions to The Nugget Newspaper will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyrighting purposes and subject to The Nugget Newspaper9s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially, that all rights are currently available, and that the material in no way infringes upon the rights of any person. The publisher assumes no responsibility for return or safety of artwork, photos, or manuscripts. Alcohol and pills, its a cryin9 shame You think they might have been happy with the glory and the fame But fame doesn9t take away the pain, it just pays the bills And you wind up on alco- hol and pills 4 Fred Eaglesmith Amid the litany of tra- vails, disasters and mishaps that have made up the first half of the year 2020, the word came late last month that Justin Townes Earle died of an apparent drug overdose in Nashville. He was 38. Earle was a phenomenally talented songwriter and gui- tar player who performed at the Sisters Folk Festival in 2018. He took the stylings of old country bluesmen like Lightnin9 Hopkins and Manse Lipscomb, mastered them, and bent them to a contempo- rary songwriting vision that cut right down to the bone. The son of legendary Americana artist Steve Earle and the namesake of the way- ward troubadour Townes Van Zandt (best known for pen- ning <Pancho and Lefty=), JT seemed doomed to inherit both the streak-of-lighting tal- ent and the self-destructive- ness embedded in his heri- tage. He struggled with addic- tion from his early teens, and it got him in the end. The connection between great creativity and reckless self-destructiveness is too commonplace and too self- evident to dismiss. Justin Townes Earle9s death caused me to reflect on the fact that most of the artists who move me most profoundly wrestled with demons of self-destruc- tion. Some walked away from the battles battered but unbowed. Some died. From Caravaggio to Hank Williams to my beloved Texas singer-songwriters, there9s a rogues9 gallery of the mad, bad and dangerous to know. It9s all too easy to romanti- cize the doomed artist, and I certainly was guilty of doing so in my younger days. With age and a modicum of wis- dom comes the realization that the blast radius around such self-destructive figures is wide and desolate, and there9s nothing to admire in it. And you have to question whether the self-destruction is really an integral aspect of creativity or a byproduct of something else. Audrey van Houweling of She Soars Psychiatry in Sisters notes that, <People who have a lot of creativ- ity have a lot of emotional energy behind it. That can be trauma-related.= That was certainly the case for Justin Townes Earle, who never resolved his sense of childhood abandonment by his wayward musician father. Sometimes the noise is deafening, and alcohol and drugs mute it. <Sometimes it9s a way of numbing that emotional energy that9s there,= Audrey says. Those who look on, both repelled and enthralled by the spectacle of an artist coming unwound, are bound up in the drama. <We like there to be a big story behind somebody9s cre- ativity,= Audrey says. <That can be part of that romanticizing effect.= Artists themselves roman- ticize and rationalize their own actions, and some fear that they will lose their edge if they give up the booze and drugs and the self-destruc- tion. For some, their identity is so tangled up with a self- destructive lifestyle, they9re not sure who they would be if they gave it up 4 even if part of them desperately wants to. Ironically, Justin9s father Steve Earle is living proof that a highly creative artist can successfully decouple creativity from self-destruc- tion. He came out an epic spi- ral in 1995 and has been clean for 25 years 4 and is a better, more prolific artist for it. Demons of self-destruc- tion can hound all kinds of creative people 4 not just those who are up on a stage. The driven entrepreneur, the social visionary 4 all are perhaps more susceptible to danger than average folks, although substance abuse and self-destruction can afflict average folks, too. Getting down to the root of trauma and anxiety is impor- tant to overcoming addiction and self-destructive behaviors and impulses. That9s hard and scary work 4 and it9s not work that can be done alone. <Collective sup- port is really important,= van Houweling says. <Not trying to do it solo.= The coronavirus pandemic is a slow-rolling crisis for art- ists and musicians, who are seeing their livelihoods and their very purpose in life shut down, with little prospect of recovery. It9s a dangerous time for those who might have a bent toward self- destruction. They9re not all up on a stage. Some of them are in our lives. Might be a good idea to reach out and check in and let them know you get it and are there for them. Because those demons are strong and they are patient and they are always there.