He Went To Paris

He Went to Paris
By Jimmy Buffett

He went to Paris looking for answers
To questions that bothered him so
He was impressive, young and aggressive
Saving the world on his own
But the warm Summer breezes
The French wines and cheeses
Put his ambition at bay
And Summers and Winters
Scattered like splinters
And four or five years slipped away

Then he went to England, played the piano
And married an actress named Kim
They had a fine life, she was a good wife
And bore him a young son named Jim
And all of the answers and all of the questions
He locked in his attic one day
‘Cause he liked the quiet clean country living
And twenty more years slipped away

Well the war took his baby, the bombs killed his lady
And left him with only one eye
His body was battered, his world was shattered
And all he could do was just cry
While the tears were falling, he was recalling
The answers he never found
So he hopped on a freighter, skidded the ocean
And left England without a sound

Now he lives in the islands, fishes the pilin’s
And drinks his green label each day
He’s writing his memoirs and losing his hearing
But he don’t care what most people say
Through 86 years of perpetual motion
If he likes you he’ll smile then he’ll say
Jimmy, some of it’s magic, some of it’s tragic
But I had a good life all the way

And he went to Paris looking for answers
To questions that bother him so

Jimmy Buffett is probably best known for his tropical rock music, which often portrays a lifestyle described as “island escapism.” With his Coral Reefer Band, he is best known for songs like the hit “Margaritaville” and its namesake restaurants and for a sense of humor and irony exhibited in songs like “Cheeseburger In Paradise” and “Why Don’t We Get Drunk” (which originally had the words “and screw” added to the end but was dropped from the title by a lot of online retailers and websites). With this last weekend being Labor Day weekend, I can’t fail to mention “Come Monday.” But what often escapes the notice of so many is that this guy really is an accomplished, and often very serious, songwriter with hundreds of original titles to his credit. His songwriting gift showed up early in pieces like the much-lauded 1973 story song “He Went To Paris.” Though people know many of his other songs, many Jimmy Buffett fans (or Parrotheads, as they call themselves) might tell you that “He Went To Paris” is their favorite song. (My personal favorites are “Stars Fell on Alabama” and “Pencil Thin Mustache.”)

From his album A White Sport Coat And A Pink Crustacean, Buffett wrote the third-person narrative “He Went To Paris” about a Spanish Civil War veteran and one-armed pianist he’d met named Eddie Balchowsky. Released as the album’s final single, it didn’t chart, but in recent years, it has become well known, especially since Bob Dylan named it as one of his favorites and Buffett began to perform it live. With an unusual construction, the song opens and closes with the lines, “He went to Paris/Looking for answers/To questions that bothered him so.” In between those lines are four long verses that chronicle a life of 86 years that saw war, music, tragedy, and world travels, with the subject finally, gratefully and graciously, telling the singer, “Jimmy, some of it’s magic, some of it’s tragic/But I had a good life all of the way.”

Buffett once explained the song’s origins, “The song was actually about a guy I met in Chicago, and he was the cleanup guy at a club called the Quiet Knight [where several prominent singer/songwriter careers were launched]. He had one arm. And so he started telling me stories about his days fighting in the Spanish Civil War, and when he got wounded, he came back to Paris for his treatment. The song is more reflective of stories that Eddie told me. All they did was accentuate the history in the books that I was familiar with from Hemingway and Fitzgerald. That song was written actually in Chicago of all places, and it was written based on the stories of Eddie. At that point I don’t believe I’d ever been to Paris. You put all that stuff together and mix it like a gumbo.”

Buffett was born on December 25, 1946, in Pascagoula, Mississippi,  and spent part of his childhood in Mobile and Fairhope, Alabama. After graduating from McGill Institute for Boys, a Catholic high school in Mobile, in 1964, Buffett enrolled at Auburn University and began playing the guitar after seeing a fraternity brother playing surrounded by a group of girls. Buffett left Auburn after a year due to his grades and continued his college years at Pearl River Community College and the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he received a bachelor’s degree in history in 1969. After graduating in 1969, Buffett moved to New Orleans, often held street performances for tourists on Decatur Street, and played for drunken crowds in the former Bayou Room nightclub on Bourbon Street. I’m pretty sure I’ve read that Auburn granted him a degree after he became famous, even though he flunked out of the university.

Aside from his career in music, Buffett was also a bestselling author and was involved in two restaurant chains named after two of his best-known songs; he owned Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville restaurant chain and co-developed the now defunct Cheeseburger in Paradise restaurant chain. Buffett was one of the world’s richest musicians, with a net worth of $1 billion in 2023. Buffett was involved in many charity efforts. In 1981, Buffett and former Florida governor Bob Graham founded the Save the Manatee Club. In 1989, legislation in Florida introduced the “Save the Manatee” license plate, featuring an image of a West Indian manatee, and earmarked funding for the Save the Manatee Club. Buffett was also a longtime supporter of and major donor to the Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory. He has organized several benefit concerts for hurricane relief and for the 2010 BP oil spill that devastated marine life in the Gulf of Mexico. Buffett was also a lifelong Democratic and hosted fundraisers for Democratic politicians, including several for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

After entering hospice care just five days prior, Buffett passed away peacefully in his sleep on September 1, 2023, at his home in Sag Harbor, New York, at the age of 76 from skin cancer (diagnosed in 2019) that had turned into lymphoma. I think it can safely be said that Jimmy himself would say of his life, “Some of it’s magic, some of it’s tragic, but I had a good life all the way.” I hope God and Jimmy are having margaritas together and enjoying cheeseburgers in paradise.

Here is a live version from earlier this year (2/9/23):

I tried to find live recordings of the songs I provided links for throughout the post.


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Happy Labor Day!

Today is a holiday in the United States and as such, I’m also taking the day off from blogging. Have a great day!


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Equality and Acceptance

There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

—Galatians 3:28

At the end of his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, delivered on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in 1963, civil rights activist Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. alludes to the apostle Paul’s words in Galatians 3:28. This verse seems to strike an almost modern note about human equality. Contemporary interpreters have updated Paul’s statement and added pairs to the three original ones: “neither gay nor straight,” “neither healthy nor disabled,” and “neither black nor white.” While these creative rewritings make Paul’s statement speak to new situations, they also highlight something about the original: These three pairs must have been as relevant in the first century as the additional categories are today.

This ideal of unity that Paul shared with his contemporaries was influenced by cosmopolitanism, a popular philosophical idea in the early Roman Empire. Cosmopolitanism’s main component was the conviction that all people are first and foremost citizens of the cosmos (universe) rather than of their local communities. This shared cosmic origin was thought to connect all people with each other and with the divine, and it suggested that all people could live in a unified society rather than be divided into different ethnic and geographic communities. Cosmopolitanism had implications not only for contemporary ideas about ethnic differences but also for ideas about the positions of slave and free and about marriage and the relationship between husband and wife. It, therefore, affected all three of the pairs mentioned by Paul. Galatians 3:28 envisages a social ideal of harmony and connection, where those factors in society that create division and conflict have been removed.

If you look up Galatians 3:28, you will see many people try to tell you that this doesn’t actually mean what it clearly says. They say it is taken out of context, yet Paul continues to say this over and over. In Colossians 3:9-11, Paul writes, “Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old man with his deeds, and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him who created him, where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all.” Romans 3:9 says, “What then? Are we better than they? Not at all. For we have previously charged both Jews and Greeks that they are all under sin.” In 1 Corinthians 7:22, Paul again says we are all one in Christ, “For he who is called in the Lord while a slave is the Lord’s freedman. Likewise he who is called while free is Christ’s slave.” 

Again, in Ephesians 6:8, Paul removes any distinction in mankind, “Knowing that whatever good anyone does, he will receive the same from the Lord, whether he is a slave or free.” In this verse, he tells the Ephesians that it does not matter who you are, but if you do good, then the Lord will accept you for any other way you might be identified or might identify. Nothing can separate us from the love of God. Romans 8:38 says, “For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come.”  Like the other passages, this message is for all people, including LGBTQ+ individuals.

Many anti-LGBTQ+ people who call themselves Christians will claim that we are not born with same-sex attractions, and even if we were, God made a mistake. However, God does not make mistakes in his creation, and God did not make a mistake in creating LGBTQ+ people. Psalm 139:13-14 affirms that God made us the way we are, “For You formed my inward parts; You covered me in my mother’s womb. I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; Marvelous are Your works, and that my soul knows very well. Sexual identity and gender identity are components of our very being and are part of who God made each of us to be. All people have been intentionally created by God, including LGBTQ people.  Isaiah 43:1 tells us, “Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by your name; you are Mine.”

On this Labor Day weekend, we should remember that we are all equal and should be celebrated. Labor Day is a day to honor and recognize the American labor movement and the work and contributions of laborers to the development and achievements of the United States. It is also a call for equality. On September 30, 1859, at the Wisconsin State Agricultural Fair, rising politician Abraham Lincoln answered the elitist vision of a society dominated by a few wealthy men. “The prudent, penniless beginner in the world, labors for wages awhile, saves a surplus with which to buy tools or land, for himself; then labors on his own account for another while, and at length hires another new beginner to help him. This, say its advocates, is free labor—the just and generous, and prosperous system, which opens the way for all—gives hope to all, and energy and progress, and improvement of condition to all.” 

In Lincoln’s worldview, everyone shared a harmony of interest. Ultimately, what was good for the individual worker was good for everyone. There was no conflict between labor and capital; capital was simply “pre-exerted labor.” Everyone was part of the same harmonious system except for a few unproductive financiers and those who wasted their wealth on luxuries. In the same way, we are all part of God’s harmonious system. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

The Bible cannot only be applied to what was the social structure or understanding of sexuality in ancient times but also should be extended today to include everyone, “neither gay nor straight,” “neither healthy nor disabled,” and “neither black nor white.” We are all one in Christ, and He demands that we understand and strive for equality and acceptance for all.


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Moment of Zen: Football Season 🏈

Football season begins today!

To the Top! 🦅 USM

Roll Tide! 🐘 UofA

War Eagle! 🦅 AU


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Three-Day Weekend

I was not particularly happy to get out of bed this morning. I had trouble falling asleep last night, and I don’t feel like I got enough sleep. Today is going to be a pretty busy day, but at least I have a three-day weekend to recover and refresh which I’ll need because the next two weeks will be very busy week.

I also want to say that I hope all of my readers who were in the path of Hurricane Idalia are ok. Hurricanes can be rough even for those do not live right on the coast where it makes landfall.

Thank goodness it’s Friday, and if you’re in the United States, I hope you’ll enjoy Labor Day weekend. Does anyone have any special plans? I don’t have any plans, but I plan to just relax.


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