Butterfly

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A True Pure-Hearted Spirit

November 27, 2009 - 11:29pm

Brother Blue, you touched everyone you met in the most positive way. Thank you for all your years of encouraging and whimsical storytelling. You will be remembered in the most warm-hearted way. Wherever your journey goes next in the universe will be welcomed by all. Peace & Love to you and your family and friends.

Farewell, Blue

November 22, 2009 - 11:00pm

I remember going to Blue's open mike storytelling nights back in the 90s when I still lived in MA, and being consistently amazed by his never ending supply of positive energy, light, happiness, and by his outgoing nature. Not once did I feel I was being humored or tolerated by him; I felt welcome in his presence, something I cannot say about most people around me.

One day, in Harvard Square, I was walking about and ran into Blue & Ruth on the street. Enthusiastic chat ensued, and when Ruth finally began walking off, he looked at her, looked me up and down (me in my all black headbanger/Goth regalia and long black hair at the time) and said, with all seriousness, "Concentrate on the angel in you, not so much the devil, OK?" as he took off to catch up with her. It stayed with me all these years--this was around 1994 or so--and it comes back to remind me now of how much he gave a damn for people all around him no matter what. We could all learn from that example. You, me, everyone.

I would say rest easy, Blue, but knowing you, you're probably raising a mighty ruckus wherever you are, leading the choir, getting everyone to listen to your positive message of love in the best possible sense. I expect no less of you, good sir, you powerful force of Light. Blessings upon you and your memory and blessings to Ruth at this time.

My Thanks

November 19, 2009 - 2:06pm

Thank you Brother Blue,
all the stories.......the understanding and for just being you............we have lost a piece of history....a part of Cambridge......a true treasure.

An Irish Blessing
May the wings of a butterfly kiss the sun.
And find your shoulder to light on.
To bring you luck,happiness and riches.
Today,tomorrow and BEYOND.

You will be missed.

My Thanks

November 19, 2009 - 2:04pm

Thank you Brother Blue,
all the stories.......the understanding and for just being you............we have lost a piece of history....a part of Cambridge......a true treasure.

An Irish Blessing
May the wings of a butterfly kiss the sun.
And find your shoulder to light on.
To bring you luck,happiness and riches.
Today,tomorrow and BEYOND.

You will be missed.

Love and Gratitude for your Amazing Spirit

November 16, 2009 - 12:36am

I was first introduced to Brother Blue at an evening event at an ashram in the early 90's... a VERY memorable rendition of Ms. Wunderlush was told and I was never the same. I saught out the author... found out it was Brother Blue and that he was from Cambridge, where I lived no doubt. I wound up at the little bookseller in Porter Square for open reads many a time back in the 90's. Brother Blue and Ruth were always there full of love and light for all. One time I wrote o long poem story of love and grief and anger and they encouraged me to read it even though I was terribly shy and self conscious. Brother Blue gave me a big hug and sparkled his warmth and encouragement in a way that I've seen him do with everyone he encounters. It really changed me - that kind of loving spirit - in response to the raw novice of what I had written. Such a blessing to have him in our midst all these years. Love to his family at this time of passing and may his spirit fly free in the heavenly realms - with the butterfly spirits.

On THE WAY

November 15, 2009 - 1:08am

Tonight I attended the 4th Annual Lower Brandywine Storytelling festival in Wilmington, DE. I went in honor of Brother Blue, whom I crossed paths with one month in the summer of 1975 in Boston/Cambridge. After the fabulous storytellings were ended, I went up to one of the performers(Willy Claflin) and asked, "Do you know Bother Blue?" He said, "Yes, I do. We just attended his funeral a week ago." I was transfixed in Time between 1975 and 2009, overwhelmed with gratitude that I was honored to share a sliver of Time with him. I have carried him in my heart all these 34 years. He was always on THE WAY to show others THE WAY so they could find THEIR WAY. And now I learn he is on THE WAY again, but in a different way. Thank you Brother Blue for all the enlightenments you have given to others and to me. You are one of God's precious souls,and, now, one of God's precious angels. Praises, Anne

ICON GONE

November 13, 2009 - 4:48pm

ICON GONE

Alas Brother Blue has gone ahead

November 10, 2009 - 11:12pm

Just as I was thinking that I really ought to seek out Brother Blue and watch/listen to him again, I opened the Globe to find that the train had left and I was not even standing at the station. Fool! I shouldn't have waited so long.

Telling stories was never easy for me, but somehow Brother Blue reached inside and pulled them out from my heart. He was both awkward and sublime. Having children has kept me away from Tuesday night storytelling for years now, but for a long time those sessions were just the greatest thing in the whole entire world.

I don't know if the best thing about him was how magical and out-of-this-world he seemed, or the way he would never put himself above anyone else: anyone's story was as good as his own best story, in his eyes. Thank you Blue for making me and so many others larger souls than we would have been without you. If this screen were paper it would be tearstained. I guess you've finished your part and it's up to us now.

Dear Ruth, I hope you find the strength to carry on without your heart's companion.

The Last Quixote - In Memory of Brother Blue - An Appreciation

November 10, 2009 - 6:25pm

"Be a butterfly break dancing on the sky."

"How many want to climb the mountain?...The mountain is inside of you. Climb to that place where the higher self is!"

"May I call you God?"

The Last Quixote - In Memory of Brother Blue - An Appreciation
By Seth J. Itzkan, November 5, 2009

An appreciation of Brother Blue, by definition, can not be written. It is simply, in his own words, "ahhhh" - the sound of the inner smile, the sound of the butterfly discovering flight, the sound of tears forming in a new mother's eye. How can anyone express in words the gratitude for a man who's sole purpose in life was to help transport us to the place where words dissolve? And, of course, he took us there through story. Being, in his own self mocking terms, a "fool" and "jester", his Pied Piper sermon was intended for your own discovery of the inexplicable, and delivered, as he his motto clearly stated, "from the middle of the middle of me, to the middle of the middle of you."

For decades beyond which few can remember, the street performer extraordinaire, Brother Blue, graced the Boston scene with his colorful storytelling antics, unflappable optimism, and kaleidoscopic charisma. How are those for words? He's inspired them. Bother Blue was both a holdout from a by-gone era, and, we hope, a gateway for a future one. In his years as a performer, mentor, host, and mascot, he won every honor, award, and citation a man of his ilk could garner, and many that were no doubt created just for him. I won't even bother to try to sort them all out, and you can look them up yourself, but the list seems endless. Both Boston and Cambridge claimed him as their official storyteller, and countless other communities around the world counted him as an honorary member. He was the original First Night parade mascot, leading the pageantry with his magic wand and flowing wardrobe. He continued to be the mascot for the next 33 years, ushering in New Years Eve for generations of Bostonians. Legions of mayors and other dignitaries walked behind him. No one walked in front. The parade began with Brother Blue.

Everyone who ever met Brother Blue, or, as he was affectionately called, simply, Blue, remembers him as their friend and mentor. Everyone has a story about how they met Blue, or what they did with him. You could never just have a conversation with Blue. That was impossible. If you simply said, "Blue, I'd like to introduce you to my friend so and so", you would be embarking a journey in which you both became noble lords and laddies, enshrined with the duty of discovering your inner sun for lighting the world. This adventure would continue without end until Blue's lovely wife Ruth, who, with the patience of Job, would wait for the right moment, and then gently intervene so that others could get their chance to be the sorcerer's apprentice.

Once while walking down the street with Blue and Ruth, Blue stopped to talk to a neighbor - a small elderly woman. Blue showered her with compliments about how charming and beautiful she was, and I'll be darned if she didn't become more so with each word Blue uttered, soaking it in like water to a thirsty plant. Ruth would attempt to politely get Blue to continue on their course, but the more force she put into the effort, the more emphatic Blue got in his adulation of this lady. Eventually Ruth yanked him by the arm, at which point Blue turned to the lady and, while being pulled away, and in the vein of Don Quixote, shouted, "Your spirit is so high, you lift the street!"

Often, at his weekly seminars, Blue implores the crowd, "How many people does it take to form a critical mass?" He urgently asks as if it is the most important question you will ever hear. "How many?!", he demands. "Umm", you think to yourself, a bit nervous, and wondering if this is a math question you should have learned in high school. "One!", Blue exclaims like a tremor from Vesuvius. "One!...You!"

***

I first met Brother Blue almost thirty years ago and am honored to have known him, and, like so many others, considered him a friend. About nine years ago I setup his website in cooperation with his wife and it's remained practically untouched since, http://www.brotherblue.com. The most important thing I did was secure the domain name. Only weeks after I secured it, some cult in California lamented that they hadn't gotten it for their own "Brother Blue". I read about it on their message board, now long gone.

On July 12, 1995, Brother Blue and his wife joined me and a few others in honoring the 100th birthday of Buckminister Fuller, by visiting Bucky's grave site in Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge. Standing around the grave, we each took turns telling stories about Buckminister Fuller. Of course, when it was Blue's turn, he went into song and dance, and eventually tears, as he wailed on his harmonica and wept on the flat stone that simple reads, "Call me Trim Tab". Blue and Bucky were great admirers of each other.

In 2000, or there about, Brother Blue and I performed a duet for mutual friends who were being married. Blue did the "Ooohh Aaahh" story, and I provided accompaniment on a wooden flute.

And for hundreds of evenings at Blue and Ruth's storytelling sessions, I listened to innumerable stories and video taped hours of Blue, always thinking that someday I would tell a story. I never did, perhaps, until just now.

Goodbye Blue. God's in good company.

- Seth

Germane links below:

http://www.brotherblue.com/

http://www.wickedlocal.com/cambridge/news/obituaries/x1972891436/Brother...

http://www.cctvcambridge.org/node/29774

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2009/11/06/hugh_m_...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijNzaICu_Ac
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=brother%20blue%20storyteller...
http://www.riverdeep.net/current/2001/02/021901_m_broblue.jhtml

I didn't know what to expect

November 10, 2009 - 12:34pm

... when my Harvard professor took a group of us to hear some tales in the basement of a Cambridge church. What I got was a memory; what you gave was yourself.

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