I had a dream about Piccadilly porch the other night. I don’t know what triggered it, but it put me into a melancholy mood, heavy with reminiscence that lasted long after waking. I kept thinking about the profound (drunken) discussions about the world that porch hosted, and the jam sessions that turned into debates that turned back into jam sessions and finally into almost complete incoherency by the time morning came.We believed we were so profound, so enlightened, so in tune. Maybe we were, maybe we were full of shit. Didn’t matter, I guess.
Officially, there were 5 of us that lived in that house at the end of Piccadilly, dangerously close to Molly Blooms and as close to EOA as you could get while still being west of Adelaide. Brian and June, Matty, Colin and me. Cooper lived on the couch randomly throughout the year and Keith took the other couch during hockey playoffs since he didn’t have a TV. It was never uncommon to come out of your room and find people you had never met sleeping on one of the 5 couches, but we liked it that way.
It may have been a house of inside jokes and stupid pranks, parties, childishness and general mayhem (I distinctly remember the quote “Can someone get the door? This is illegal!”along with other such proclamations of our collective lack of common sense), but a lot of serious connections were made there too. I met my husband while I lived at Piccadilly and, almost in the same week, Colin met his wife. Brian and June are now engaged to be married, and last I heard Matty and his beautiful girlfriend at the time, Jenn, are still going strong, in Australia, no less. I learned what it really meant to have Colin as a best friend, and he still is, to this day. It would seem contrary to think that at a time in our lives when we seemed to take very little seriously, our serious life was happening all on it’s own. Maybe it’s not contrary; maybe it says something about how seriously we should all really be prepared to take ourselves, anyways.
Cheers to the things about Piccadilly that we’ll never forget: Debu and Chuki, Molly’s on Mondays, Kegs & Eggs (and raw clams), The quote wall, watching the annual Michigan/Michigan State shindig on the TV we pulled out the window on the porch, waking up with a parking barrier slanted across the kitchen, Pearl Jam or Bust, Campasaurus and Quest and never having peanut butter in the house, the beer bottle alarm system on the window with no lock, Jam sessions and Matty’s itty-bitty guitar, ringing the porch with bottles of JD, Trying to wash the cat, and, of course, many, many spontaneous mind-blowing porch session where we discussed the world, the beer, the weather, the government’s foreign policy, Einstein’s theory of relativity and was that a G-chord or a C-chord in Wheat Kings?

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Oh Tellie…
It was there on that porch that I saw my life, not as the young of men facing a big world, I’d already done that, but as a man…and I saw that my life was a vast glowing empty page and I could do anything I wanted.
Sigh…that’s all I can muster for Picadilly, perhaps a tear, but for certain a sigh.
Picadilly…for me it sounds as sweet as those two letters, “LA,” might sound to someone else…it just symbolizes so much…
It meant everything you ever whispered but were afraid to do alone, and it also meant nothing — no expectations, no demands, no worries…just promise, and when I think of it in those terms all I can manage is…”sigh”
BD
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By Brian DeWagner (1 comments) on 03.07.07 12:38 am | Permalink
That was easily the best house I lived in. Sixth and Elm was good but Piccadilly came along just at the right time in my life. Great quotes were abundant too.
“Was he dead ratting his hog on the window?”
“I thought those freaks just masturbated.”
“I have no regard for human life.”
I truly and unabashedly loved that house.
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By Colin (13 comments) on 03.07.07 4:22 am | Permalink
Don’t forget, “If we don’t get arrested for that, it’s just wrong…”
Brian, I agree that under all the fun was an overwhelming sense of… whatever we wanted. I didn’t see myself quite as you did – past the barrier and a “young adult” no more, but I saw the option and I realized I stood on the cusp of adulthood on that porch, and I could chose either way, even though I had already been a “legal” adult for some time. But it is clear that for both of us, maybe all of us, the porch was a mile-marker in our lives and looked upon quite fondly by all who drank, laughed, sang or slept on her red-brick span.
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By Sixth & Elm (29 comments) on 03.08.07 2:24 am | Permalink
My first experience of that house was of complete terror…Mostly because of the fact that the first night we got together was in a houseful of your room mates and friends.. The second most terrifying memory of my first visit to Piccadilly was opening up your fridge and seeing “Colin’s fuck off” written on over 2/3 of the food. How do you question that!
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By Adam (21 comments) on 03.08.07 8:56 pm | Permalink
Oh Yeah! That was “the Pizza Incident…”
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By Sixth & Elm (29 comments) on 03.08.07 10:54 pm | Permalink
It wasn’t just my food… I believe Tellie’s toothbrush was also used without permission.
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By Colin (13 comments) on 03.09.07 5:12 am | Permalink
that’s just gross
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By Adam (21 comments) on 03.15.07 1:31 pm | Permalink
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