Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Exile on Mainstreet

Exile on Mainstreet

Puddle, the Glory Days


Big Sandy's Main Street Puddle is no more.  At least this is what I am told.  Officially named the Joe Trepina Memorial Main Street Puddle, "Puddle" was paved over in October 2022.  When I learned of this mainstreet paving project, I immediately called a meeting of our clandestine puddle organization "Citizens Recognizing and Promoting Puddle," otherwise know as C.R.A.P.P.    We considered several strategies to save Puddle from the pavers.  But our pleas to city leaders went unheard.  Our attempts to put together a citizen petition were for naught.  The Montana Tourism Board was unsympathetic, and frankly, unresponsive.  However, we learned that there were dissidents within the paver cartel--patriots who were Puddle devotees.  Would they be able to help save Puddle?  Or were they too concerned about their jobs to get involved?  Would the dark of night offer any way to preserve this precious monument, or would Puddle simply be canceled?  Time will tell.  Our meetings were intense, and emotions ran high.  The pitchforks nearly came out, to be directed at the Puddle deniers and those who hated Puddle and all it stood for.  Cooler heads prevailed.  For now.


Members of the Paving Cartel


As the paving robots came closer and closer, I began to lose hope that Puddle would survive.  What would be the fate of Puddle?  What effect would its absence do to the spirit of our town?  How will we survive without the Puddle tourist trade?  Who will change the Big Sandy Wikipedia entry?  So many questions, all difficult to answer.

Whenever we as a society have questions about the future, the surest answer can be found in examining the past.  I believe that the history of Puddle offers us hope that it will rise again.

The first known photograph of Puddle is from 1919.  Those were the days when Puddle was uncensored, free from the rules of modern life.  Free from the constraints of tar, sand and rock.  Free from the new-fangled ideology of the 21st century.  But the world of asphalt caught up to Big Sandy.  And Puddle survived that.  Puddle overcame the adversity of asphalt and presented itself to the world as something timeless and undeniable.  Make no mistake, Puddle is not dead.  For now, Puddle is in exile under mainstreet, but civilization's efforts to destroy it amount to no more than a paw scraping the litterbox.


Puddle, 1919


The forces of government and the unpuddleotic that sought to obliterate Puddle will ultimately fail in their efforts.  Sure, they may have won this battle, but they will surely lose the war.  Puddle is now paved over again, but it will rise.  The transfiguration of Puddle has begun.  It will emerge again to delight future generations with its resilience and its charisma.  This is not an obituary, but a celebration of how a small thing, often taken for granted, can enrich our lives and our community.  Long live Puddle!


Life, the Universe, and Puddle