“Everything is perfect on the street again, the world is permeated with roses of happiness all the time, but none of us know it. The happiness consists in realizing that it is all a great strange dream.”
― Jack Kerouac
It’s Jack Kerouac’s birthday.
He was born on this day in 1922 in that cold textile mill town, Lowell, Massachusetts.
Jack Kerouac’s wandering years were the heartbeat of his writing—an endless, restless search for meaning, experience, and escape. After dropping out of Columbia University in the early 1940s, he hit the road, hitchhiking, train-hopping, and driving cross-country with the wild, bohemian spirits of his generation.
These years became the foundation of his Beat ethos—a rejection of conventional life in favor of movement, jazz, poetry, and raw experience. Kerouac was a drifter, a dreamer, a lost soul chasing that Golden Eternity forever out of reach.
Kerouac, above all else, reminded us to live, to seek authentic experiences, to look for the divine in the mundane, and to move freely and spontaneasly, finding beauty in the unplanned.
Today, let’s celebrate the King of the Beats by grabbing one of his books off that old dusty shelf and reading a few lines of his spontaneous prose. Read a few of his poems. Turn the music up today, turn it up extra loud because as he once said, “the only truth is music.”
Untangle yourself from the bureaucratic web of the modern world and go sleep in a meadow beneath the immaculate stars. Go ruck a mountain or sit in an alley. Dance like a demented shaman around the bonfires of the world. Go mad for the day. Hit the open highway. Go moan for man. Do it. Do something whimsical and out of the ordinary. Do something that stirs the blood.
“The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars…”
It’s Jack Kerouac’s birthday, so let’s raise a damn toast on this fine almost spring morning for the great On the Road writer!
Let’s keep his vagabond spirit alive by living to the point of tears.
“Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don't be sorry.”
Let it all go—chuck the worries, the stiff little fears, the useless obligations dragging you down like dead weight. Toss 'em straight into the campfire, watch the smoke curl into the night sky! You’ve only got a few breaths on this unforgiving earth, so take the leap, dive headfirst, no second-guessing. Forget yourself, forget the rules, forget the ticking clock. We’re all just a flicker in the great wild rush of time, so heave it all—your heart, your bones, every ounce of your spirit—into the roaring sea of the sublime!
“It all ends in tears anyway.”
I was lucky enough to visit Kerouac’s old hometown recently. Lowell, Massachusetts, where “Papier-mache canals flowed in downtown… men smoking cigars stand by the rail spitting in the waters that reflect the drizzle hopelessness of 1926.”
I sat at his grave for hours, reading and pondering and pouring a little something out in honor of one of the few souls who energized me to go all-in in LIFE. I visited a few of the little haunts that he was a regular at around town.
“How Lowell continues to haunt me so, it’s a whole intact Shakespearean universe in itself.”
A few days after Kerouac drank himself into an early grave, his friend and legendary beat poet, Allen Ginsberg, wrote this in his diary.
He threw up his hands & wrote the universe dont exist & died to prove it.
I want to share one of my all-time favorite poems from Jack Kerouac in honor of his birthday. I hope you enjoy it.
Skid Row Wine
I coulda done a lot worse than sit in Skid Row drinkin wine To know that nothing matters after all To know there's no real difference between the rich and the poor To know that eternity is neither drunk nor sober, to know it young and be a poet Coulda gone into business and ranted And believed that God was concerned Instead I squatted in lonesome alleys And no one saw me, just my bottle and what they saw of it was empty And I did it in the cornfields & graveyards To know that the dead don't make noise To know that the cornstalks talk (among one another with raspy old arms) Sittin in alleys diggin the neons And watching cathedral custodians Wring out their rags neath the church steps Sittin and drinkin wine And in railyards being divine To be a millionaire & yet to prefer Curling up with a poor boy of tokay In a warehouse door, facing long sunsets On railroad fields of grass To know that the sleepers in the river are dreaming vain dreams, to squat in the night and know it well To be dark solitary eye-nerve watcher of the world's whirling diamond
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