And us from our living mourning for the past two or so decades.
It was like watching someone slowly die and degenerate from a terminal disease -- but now all has been made whole. They don't typically show the state of those of people as they're dying, but we watched it unfold as each stranger year passed.
I feel a warm melancholy as I watch his performances in the early 80s. Music almost as essential to watch as to listen to.
All on his own, early 20s, full of an elegant self-confidence.
It's nice to be a 9-year-old kid when a definitive cultural moment arrives.
"Thriller."
It usurped my summer, 10-plus minute extended videos at a time.
Then he began his transformation ... and that's all need be said, now that he no longer lives.
And now, two and a half decades later, here are the tributes -- which from our generation can be told through music videos.
Once the tributes are done, I don't plan to watch any of the drama related to his death, both when he was alive and dead.
I am allowed freely to believe in what I remember on those summer nights of childhood, as we flipped the awkwardly large and cumbersome cable converter box remote (ironically still attched by a cord) to watch him perform daily eclipse's over MTV.
I really have missed that part of my life. I tried to moonwalk tonight. I think I did it.
It's strange how death brings these things to life.
