Thursday, March 24, 2011

Stolen Strat

So this weeks had it’s ups and down. The biggest down obviously was my 1998 Deluxe Stratocaster which was nicked from my car in the middle of the night last saturday. I admit it was my fault. i thought i locked my car but the remote on the keys isn’t always acurate and the next morning i wake and my boot is open and the strat gone. However they managed to leave my amp and wallet for me which was nice of them..... So yeah i’ve been to the cops, local pawn shops, and there is pretty much nothing i can do because i don;t have the serial. Some of you probably thinking ‘what an idiot’ for not keeping the serial number but i guess its one of those things you don;t think you’ll need until something like this happens. I contacted the store i got it from, but since it was a traded guitar they don’t keep the serial number so not a great result to say the least. 
At the same time it’s not that I don’t have enough guitars to use, it was more the fact that this was my favorite electric guitar and any guitarist can sympathize with me in that when you find the right guitar, it grows on you and you grow on it. Not that I am a very materialistic person but it was a valuable possession of mine as most of my guitars are and one I will surely miss. 
The truth is I am annoyed, as most people would be, but as I look around at the events going on in world today my frustration tends to cease. I might have lost my guitar. But people in Japan and New Zealand have lost even more. Some have lost everything. And people lose their lives friends and family everyday in all places around the world. And it is not only Japan and New Zealand that are suffering, it is people everywhere!. Murder, slavery, sex slavery, child labour, sweat shops, poverty, famine, the list goes on and on. Yes I know you’ve all heard it before but sometimes we can forget the things we don’t hear about and sometimes it is as if they don’t matter. I know this is not the usual stuff I rant on about, but I guess this week has just been a bit different so hopefully I haven’t lost most of you. 
I’ve the learnt the very simple lesson of double checking my car is locked since last saturday, but I think there is a lot more to learn from people around the world. In December last year I visited an orphanage in Myanmar to really experience the conditions of a third world country and hopefully be able to help out the kids there in some way. The irony was, more than anything the children there actually helped me. They helped me see that they don’t need computers, cars, games, technology, luxuries. Some of these kids were the happiest kids I have ever seen in my life, and their appreciation for anything you did was purely honest and genuine. It was extremely challenging as well as amazing. These kids value everything they have, which materially is close to nothing compared to 1st world country standards. But they, from what I could see had everything immaterially, spiritually, morally, whatever you want to call it. They were content. And if they could be, then I have no excuse. This is not to say the same goes for Japan and New Zealand where I cannot even fathom what the are experiencing but I guess if your reading this you are pretty lucky, you have the internet, you are connected to the world, you have a home and a place to sleep and eat. It’s not that we should be carefree and disregard things that are taken from us and not learn from stupid mistakes (like myself), I guess it’s more of... in your grief or discontent it’s always good to gain a little bit of perspective.
It was a long one but thanks for reading.
Jesse   
here is my guitar:( luck i got this on the video:)