| I 
                      am awakened with a jolt, and she is on my mind. Saturday 
                      morning, July 23rd, initiates a series of private reflections 
                      about tragically gifted, eclectically infamous Amy Winehouse. 
                      I claim no prophetical vision.  Given 
                      her recent headline-making aborted resurrection tour, it 
                      would be foolhardy to assume I was alone in dreaming of 
                      Ms. Winehouse the night before her untimely death. The radio 
                      and internet was still aflutter with the news of Belgrade�s 
                      harsh and immediate rejection of her seemingly substance 
                      assisted aloofness. The piling on disgusted me. I saw it 
                      as a continuum of a disturbing trend by the art consuming 
                      public to actively shackle living artists from ascending 
                      to iconic status. As an artist, I find myself constantly 
                      battling feelings of anger, depression, and futility as 
                      I discover my name and those of my colleagues constantly 
                      and systematically injured. My heart aches, my head pounds, 
                      trying to see a way out of this abusive relationship we 
                      have with our fans - where we are adored one day and struck 
                      down with words of unwarranted criticism that hit like a 
                      heavy fist the next. I 
                      am uncertain as to how we arrived here, but I know that 
                      it is unhealthy. Having accepted my artistic self in high 
                      school, a number of years have passed since I held the perspective 
                      of a simple patron of the arts. So while I acknowledge my 
                      biased viewpoint, I can grasp no intellectually honest reason 
                      why one would volunteer their fanship for a musician just 
                      to pounce on the first opportunity to rip the freely given 
                      accolades from her arms. Yet, here we stand, where any perusing 
                      of the @replies to an even mildly controversial public figure 
                      will produce much more vitriol than appreciation. This is 
                      not to lay total blame at the doorstep of Twitter. Twitter 
                      is merely a tool, no more inherently evil than a hunting 
                      knife, a ski mask, or a distillery. It is us, users, actual 
                      humans that are typing racially charged, misogynistic, homophobic, 
                      judgmental and just plain unloving words to people that 
                      chose to open their hearts to us. It 
                      is perhaps this point where modern society is most ignorant. 
                      Perhaps even those that confess a well-written heartbreak 
                      song helped them get over a love betrayal are wholly unaware 
                      of the extreme emotional turmoil we artists must endure 
                      to pen these songs. Just as biologists theorize that every 
                      new piece of information learned grows our brains proportionally, 
                      the same is true of our emotional selves. The darker, more 
                      painful hemisphere of our emotional selves, most of us leave 
                      largely uncharted, and understandably so.  However, 
                      when thrust by a disruption of our lives just across the 
                      border of where we lock away all our fears, we turn to artists 
                      to be our emotional cartographers. We artists stare into 
                      that abyss and march forward, having no idea where the edge 
                      lies. Not because we are unafraid, but precisely because 
                      we are afraid. Yet, aware of our unique ability to 
                      tap into a wider range of emotions, we seek out that edge 
                      and warn others where it lies. Few 
                      did this better than Amy Winehouse. She treaded the trouble 
                      track, she went back to black, she died a hundred times 
                      so we would not have to. Not yet twenty-five during the 
                      writing of her most famous album, Ms. Winehouse bravely 
                      embarked deep into that abyss and dutifully surveyed its 
                      landscape. This tremendous undertaking ultimately consumed 
                      her. How could it not? Most of us experience only the briefest 
                      of touching with the darker hemisphere of our emotional 
                      selves, and even that leaves us scarred for years. We heal 
                      with the help of Amy Winehouse and others like her - some 
                      who too have depleted their physical selves relatively early. 
                      And in exchange for this sacrifice, we repay them with internet 
                      trending ridicule. This response makes me often question 
                      if the sacrifice is worth it. The 
                      winter of 2008 specifically, because of personal tragedies, 
                      I found myself obsessed with the search for the edges of 
                      pain and fear. I would lock myself in my home studio for 
                      hours upon end, attempting to make melancholy melodic. I 
                      wrote an agglomeration of gloom, most of which I never released, 
                      some of which I could not even bring myself to record. Though 
                      my venture pales in comparison to Ms. Winehouse�s, this 
                      process almost consumed me as well. During this time I would 
                      lose myself daily, often returning to consciousness in the 
                      bathroom, having no memory of how I arrived there, bearing 
                      several dozen �X� shaped cuts on my arms, chest and back, 
                      with a bloodied razor in the sink. The closest I have come 
                      to any sensible theory is to imagine that the part of me 
                      that remained conscious saw I was approaching the edge of 
                      emotional cataclysm and rationalized that bodily pain would 
                      be an effective weapon to snap me back into the physical 
                      world. Over the years, I have received a modest smattering 
                      of praise from fans, crediting me with clearly articulating 
                      what they were feeling, but this praise has been grossly 
                      overshadowed by the crude humor, misinterpretation, and 
                      obliviousness. Whether these are the children of philistinism 
                      or callous, I am uncertain. 
 As 
                      I watched news reports of her passing, I am struck by the 
                      juxtaposition of Amy Winehouse�s Grammy win and final concert. 
                      In the former, I saw in a jaw drop and eyelash flutter the 
                      look of utter excitement by an outlier receiving mainstream 
                      acceptance. In that moment, she believed the world grateful 
                      that she had lived. In the latter, I saw also a jaw drop 
                      and eyelash flutter, but this time it was the look of someone 
                      left vulnerable by her many trips into emotional depths 
                      being handedly rejected by the very people that demanded 
                      she share more of herself with them. My heartbeat quickened, 
                      my lip trembled, and a tear moistened my iris as I watched 
                      in horror at the clamoring of masses placing the value of 
                      their concert ticket price over the value of Ms. Winehouse�s 
                      humanity.  A 
                      mass spiritually, emotionally, and musically infantile that 
                      then took to social media to stake some sort of moral high 
                      ground over Ms. Winehouse�s lifestyle. Perhaps she used 
                      drugs, perhaps she drank too much, perhaps she participated 
                      in unhealthy relationships. Frankly, I did not care. I cared 
                      about her - as a musician, a woman, a person - and 
                      now she is gone. Taken from me. Far too early. I go back 
                      to black. BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, G. la Belles-Lettre a/k/a Giovanni Turner, JD, is a professor of English at the 
                      University of Miami, rap artist, musician (harmonica, glockenspiel), 
                      and President/In-House Counsel for Soul Model Recordings, 
                      LLC. Click here 
                      to contact G. la Belles-Lettre. 
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