Grandma is sitting on the edge of my bed. It's 9PM, time for her nitro patch. It helps her sleep through the night. I don't think she'd mind me telling you that she's 88 and has had a double bypass but God has still not seen fit for her to 'kick da bucket' so she's going to keep talking to Him so he doesn't forget her, in case she's in the bathroom or something when He's looking to take her home. I tell her there's no chance of that, since she's closer to Heaven than any of us, but she says, she has to make sure so she's still gonna keep talking, morning, noon and night.
She sings too. As she gets older, she forgets herself and half speaks and sings in Polish and English and when I can't figure it out, I say, ENGLISH, ENGLISH but I try really hard to not disturb her because until tonight she didn't know that I was listening. I had to come clean that I was eavesdropping but not exactly because you could hear her through a thunderstorm, to be fair but I thought she should know. At the same time I debated because although I had no faith in God, I did have faith in HER faith and liked to listen to her and would even awaken early and sneak closer to listen.
I had lost my faith in all things good, not just spiritual. I lost my compass through a series of deaths, illness and a really painful end to a marriage, and also a sweet and meaningful friendship I thought would last for life. I lost my home and then got sick again and although since childhood, I knew better than to ever ask if it could get worse, it did anyway.
I was asked to return to my faith, and I angrily refused. Unlike Job, I did curse God. I lost more than he did, and was lost, I said to God, 'Fuck you, kill me or I will live to spite you.' I guess He chose the latter because I'm still here.
People are shocked that I say that but why? He's God; He can handle it. I laid in bed for days and I stopped eating. I developed an ulcer and I screamed at God. I was still talking to Him, you see, my belief in His existence was still intact, but His love was another story so I told Him what I basically felt about the last few people who hurt me. I don't trust you. I never will again. You're a liar. You're a fraud. You deserted me when I needed you most and I held my breath expecting lightening to hit me. Nothing. He didn't even care even to rain fire and brimstone on me. I truly was pitiful.
My doctor and therapist were trying to figure out the mind-body connection with my energy levels and chronic pain and my condition with the lumps had returned. I'd conveniently not told them I'd stopped eating, but reasoned that I was taking gummi vitamins so it wasn't technically a lie. I was only fooling myself. I lay on the couch for weeks. My eyes were dry. I wasn't even drinking enough water to make tears. I said screw you to that too.
Job had a few friends who stuck around after he lost everything but his miserable wife who told him to curse God and die, (I one-upped him on that, I didn't even have a husband anymore) but those friends didn't hesitate to tell him where he went wrong. Thing was, God Himself said Job was righteous. Now, there are some preachers who try to find some kind of loophole that he wasn't, but that's baloney. Of the 66 books of the bible, I know this one by heart, and Job was the good guy who was being shish-kebob'd in a game between God and the devil. God's personality here, I have to note, is a lot more in keeping with the Northern gods--Loki or Odin, I'm thinking and that just didn't flush with me, I didn't care who He was. What kind of loving god...blah blah blah.....never mind religion or faith--God was on my shit-list.
My gran is nearly stone deaf now so when she sings and prays, I can hear it from anywhere in the house, even outside. I hear her crying too and it breaks my heart. She has lost so much too. Who emerges unscathed from burying both her daughters, two grandchildren and a husband of over 40 years? No wonder she felt left behind. We both did, we both lost the same people, in fact and I think of this as we do this little crooked dance of trying to fit into each other's lives with love and as little damage as possible so because her fingers are so gnarled from arthritis, I offer to put on her patch and she slowly makes her way through the house to me, because she says she likes how it feels in this room and how the cats all sit around us in here.
My father grouses and grumbles that he doesn't see why HE can't put her patch on for her but she reminds him that he gives her her insulin shot, so be quiet and besides, his fingers are too chubby and I think she isn't keen on flashing him since it goes directly above her breast, but it's also because she wants to talk with me in the light and sweet smelling room, as opposed to the dark paneled pipe-smokey room.
We have a ritual. If I haven't put my laptop down, she asks me who I'm talking to. She asks me about 'that jackass in Germany' and I've stopped trying to explain she's got the wrong country but I tell her to let it go, let it go, just...please...let it go and I look down and take the packet out of her hand and rip it and pull the covering off and press it against her skin, smoothing it out so there's no bubbles because she hates bubbles. I give the packet back to her because she keeps it on her nightstand as a reminder to take the patch off in the morning. If I stay out for the night, she forgets the patch, and forgets to take off the old one, but never forgets to tell Wonton I'll be home soon and not to worry. Neither will sleep if I say I will be home that night. If I don't, she tells me Wonton lets her baby her to a degree but in all her life has never seen an animal more devoted to someone than she is to me.
She makes a little appetizing hot snack for Wonton and puts it on a china saucer and Wonton never eats it, she says, but looks out the window for me or lays by the door, waiting, but she thinks Wonton likes the ceremony of her making her something to eat. I know she does. She also says Wonton is just.like.me. and I tell her that regardless of whether it's intended as an insult (as my ex would) or as a compliment, I'm taking that as a compliment. It's a peculiar little dance between us but I have so few dance partners now, and her years left are uncertain, so we need each other. I think this isn't accidental which is also a part of faith.
I told her, as I handed her the packet that I had heard her singing and praying. She was taken aback. 'From where?', she asked, 'This far from here in this bedroom?' I said, 'Yes. Grandma, you may be hard of hearing, but God isn't and neither am I.' I said, 'I hear you say that you look at the pictures on the walls and tell Him how much you miss everyone. That you see my wedding picture and you ask Him to never let my ex hurt another woman again, please, and to take good care of that stupid jackass in Germany because he must be crazy and you cry,' and I start to sob that this 88 year old woman who has had a life of great hardship, and cries for a granddaughter who too has a eerily parallel life, still thinks to pray for someone she's only heard about and probably never gave her another thought save one conversation through me on IM two years ago on Thanksgiving. I once told him that those who love me would love him because I love him which he doubted, but here was 88 year old living proof.
She tells God not to let her die until she dances at my wedding and I stop to say, 'But you did dance at my wedding,' and her eyes twinkle and she says, 'I did not dance at your wedding but I won't die until I do. I will dance with your husband when you marry again,' and I don't know whether to curse God or bless Him but I know not to mess with this little woman with gnarled hands who used to make me applesauce and butter sandwiches and crochet hats and mittens for me and made my Communion dress, and she says, 'I know I talk to God too much but I figure He has to answer me sometime just to shut me up, right?'
My legs are bare as she sits close to me and brush my hands across the bumps and scars that disfigure me and I tell her, 'I don't know who will love this scarred body, now,' and the tears fall down my face and she brushes them off and says, 'Elaine, God keeps your tears in a bottle. He knows their number and He knows what hurts you and who hurt you. He hasn't forgotten you. Someone will love you, all of you and not care about your bumps and scars. They won't matter to him. No one will reject you anymore. He will love you because you are beautiful inside and outside.
I am a humble woman with a third grade education. In Poland I was rounded up like an animal by the nazis and their slave on a German farm for three years and am lucky to be alive but I am and I am not stupid. Don't give up on love and don't give up on God. God took care of me in Germany and the farmer and his family loved me like their own. Their son was going to marry me when he came back but he never came back from the front line in Russia and I met your grandfather at a Sunday beer garden and that's the funny way life turns out.'
Then she began to tell me the bible story about Jesus assuring his disciples that he would come back for them and if it were not so, He would have told them, so she was demonstrating that He cares about our feelings and fears too and began, 'When Jesus was in at the Last Supper with the Twelve Opossums...'....I giggled through my tears.....she said, What? I said..nothing, sorry, nothing...She said, no tell me...I said, you said 'possums...like the animals outside...She threw her head back and laughed. 'Imagine', she said, 'a painting of Jesus with all those 'possums' and we both laughed.
She apologized and said she was sorry her English wasn't so good still after all these years and I said, 'Oh grandma, it's because of your English and your accent that I love accents. Probably one of the reasons why I loved that jackass from Germany so please don't say you're sorry. I get it. I really do. And I like to hear you pray and sing. You're a little Polish canary and I don't want to think about the day that I won't hear you sing anymore so don't shut the door, okay?'
She got up and nodded in that resolute way she has when something is finalized. 'Okay, but only if you don't give up either, okay?'
Okay.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
Tiny Bees and Gigantic Whales
I wrote this over a year ago for another great blog that I was thrilled to be part of while it lasted. I thought I'd repost it here, and although the romantic part has changed, the story is still interesting and I wanted to share.
Tiny Bees and Gigantic Whales
Millions of bees are dying due to a
phenomenon coined Colony Collapse Syndrome. No one is quite sure of
the cause. Some scientists blame pesticides, malnutrition, genetically
modified crops and climate change to name a few but one stands out
starkly because it seems to be following a pattern; electromagnetic
radiation or for the layman, cell phones. We are probably killing off
billions of bees because of technology.
It doesn't just end with
bees. One might say, well okay, so no more honey (which is for you
trivia buffs, the only food that can't 'go bad'--found perfectly sweet
in wrecks of Viking ships and royal Bronze Age burial plots) but
thousands of plant species are dependent upon bees for pollination. And
thousands of insect species, and mammals and so on are dependent on
those plant species. This is why the word 'Collapse' is in there. The
house of cards is facing a catastrophic typhoon, proportions of which
we can't even comprehend the toll and if you ask the next person if
they've ever heard of it, they'd probably shrug, 'Bees. They sting. Good
riddance'.
I'm no granola crunchy
hippie tree-hugger. In fact, until a few years ago I was positively
disgustingly smug conservative until it dawned on me the only thing
vociferous conservatives are interested in conserving are their own very
specific special interests and not at all as I understood it to be
which was to conserve, like the grasshopper and the ant, to work and
save for the winter for everyone but now winter is here and everyone is
saying 'what's in it for me' and it makes my heart hurt. Forget 'what
about the children'. What about the bees because it's gonna affect the
children and we have to do something now. Luckily for the bees it
appears that they might be gaining in numbers so I'm hoping they all
fall in love and keep making more honey and pollinating like crazy kids.
Then there are the whale
strandings or what most of us know as 'beached whales'. Multiple species
of whale are falling off established migratory patterns and if you do a
Google search, the same reasons are given as for the bees and in this
case, in the Pacific and Atlantic at least, where whales need to go
North to mate and give birth--they're getting LOST. How the fuck does a
whale get lost? And you read 'cruise ship noise' and you do a facepalm
because we're killing them too, tiny bees and gigantic whales. Signals
we need to communicate over distances to each other are affecting and
threatening their existence.
It dawns on me. Distance.
It's always distance. Mixed signals like the telephone game, where the
message is totally beyond comprehension at the end; funny when kids are
playing it at a basement birthday party but not so funny when we're
trying to communicate.
We're so far away from
each other and the internet brings us so close it gives a false
intimacy as if it's real and to many it is but to many it's the perfect
foil to hide behind anonymity and pretend you're one thing when you're
another. It's so easy to be tempted. Years ago no one would have ever
dreamed of the possibility of romance with someone 1000 miles or more
away and now not only is it happening but it's thriving and people are
moving great distances to be together and some of them end up going off
course and getting lost and never reestablishing their old patterns.
Now I'm at the end of one
relationship and fingers (but thankfully not oceans) crossed, may be
embarking on another after a brief period of FREE FREE I'M FREE but have
the dumb luck to find the most common with one least close
geographically. And proceeding very very cautiously because someone once
told him it wasn't real and someone once told me it wasn't real and
this one was burned and that one was burned and even though BOTH of us
thought it was real with the other now have to check our sonar and radar
and cellphones to make sure it's not mixed-signals. And it pisses me
off.
Monday, May 28, 2012
Flying Into the Sun
During summers when I was a kid, my friends would often disappear with their families to the Jersey shore or the mountains to paddle in the lakes and I would ask my dad when we would go on vacation. He said, 'You're a kid. You're always on vacation.' and the conversation was OVER. I didn't know that it was a matter of having (or rather, never having) the money and the hours at work for him to take time off; I just accepted it as my reality that I was to eke out my own recreational endeavors, because my other choices were limited to babysitting my siblings, playing handball against our concrete stoop (while babysitting my siblings), making kites in the garage out of construction paper, Elmer's glue and Tinker Toys a la da Vinci, or submitting myself to the mercies of my grandmother who regarded me as a mini serf available to scrub every step in the house, to gut the garage and basement and to clean cobwebs from the attic and closets, to name a few. She was pretty creative with torturous household chores. If I was good, I got an applesauce and butter sandwich. I said fuck that shit and looked for a way to disappear.
Every Saturday morning, my grandmother would make a sumptuous breakfast for anyone who woke up early (and put their slippers on; bare feet was an offense worse than profanity) and then she and my mother would go out and shop. For the record, I rarely made it to her breakfasts. I was an inveterate insomniac and didn't finally fall asleep (if I did at all) until dawn. This routine of mine was always met with disdain and a prediction I would amount to nothing. I figured I could fry my own damned bacon in peace and BAREFOOT once they left.
First they'd hit every yard and garage sale on the entire eastern seaboard. Then the thrift and consignment shops, then they'd end the day with the weekly grocery shopping. Often, they would stop at the house to have the available serfs (us kids) unload the full tailgate, so they could continue shopping, and woe if one was in the house but did not answer the cruise ship horn of the Mercury Grand Marquis station wagon, which evoked as much terror in me as the sound effects of the martian space crafts in The War of the Worlds. I had been requested to join them, assimilate, be one with them, but they already had my toddler sister and I knew these were not joyful women-bonding events because they enjoyed these weekends with the grim and determined faces of ruthless consumerism. They just wanted me to run up and down aisles grabbing stuff they'd forgotten or tend to my sniveling, bored and hot sister or carry bags to and from the car and one day when I could not escape them, I stood at a bulletin board near the exit doors of Shop-Rite and saw a piece of paper that changed my life. FREE DAY CAMP.
I ripped it off the board and folded it up and shoved it in my pocket as my mother hollered for me to grab my sister's sandal as she kicked it off while sitting in that seat in the carriage, that seat I wish I could sit in and swing my little legs but I was always too big, too big but now I figured, too big for that but not too big for this so on the day noted I arrived at the day camp with the required dollar (couch cushions are veritable bank vaults) with all the other rag-tag kids in my neighborhood. I discovered quickly that there was one of these camps in every neighborhood and the city paid for everything, except a dollar, so as long as I had that covered, theoretically, I could spend every day on the bus going somewhere awesome.
I learned to sing On Top of Spaghetti, Hello Mutha Hello Fatha, Ninety-Nine Bottles of Beer on the Wall plus every top-forty song because when the bus' radio wasn't working, I had my trusty Radio Shack Realistic lime green transistor radio and I absolutely without any remorse whatsoever would cannibalize every single appliance in the house that used the batteries required to make my radio sing. Oh I may not have yet become an intrepid shopper, but it appeared the ruthlessness known to the women in my family was innate in me and was in fact, sharply honed by self-preservation and a little bit of bloodthirsty desperation to never ever EVER be at that house when that fucking car showed up blaring, COME OUTSIDE, COME OUTSIDE, LET'S GO, LET'S GO. I was already long gone.
I didn't make any friendships during those trips. It wasn't a conscious decision. I guess I considered my friends on vacation were still my friends and I had no desire to play little girl games which might distract me from the claw games and carnival rides at shore towns and boardwalks up and down the Jersey shore or hiking up a mountain at a state park in Pennsylvania. My biggest concern was conning my parents into signing the permission slips until I mastered their signatures. At that age, I had not yet learned to cave to their pressure and disdain for my independence and still had disdain for their disdain for me. I put on my sandals and Snoopy shorts and walked three and a half blocks and through a park to meet the bus everyday.
If it rained, we made crafts in a municipal building on site. I learned how to sew and made a bunny rabbit hand puppet. I also learned through another intrepid explorer, how to make a noose. I would later be thrown out of my first Girl Scouts meeting for showing another girl how to make one to hang her Barbie dolls too, because no one had the forethought to tell me it was illegal in New Jersey to teach someone how to make a noose, no matter how tiny or ornate (some of mine were delicately woven with satin rosettes and pom-poms stolen from my grandmother's sewing room) but then, I was learning how to survive and if that included eating ants or hanging upside down from the highest monkey bars in the playground to prove how tough I was, I was willing to take the risk of incarceration or my ass beat with my father's belt.
We often went to the same places which was fine with me. I got to know them inside-out and enjoyed the little corners never discovered by the usual tourists. I spent a lot of time at the Newark Museum for Children, Suntan Lake, Turtle Back Zoo, Keansburg Amusement Park (too rich for my blood, never went inside but played the games on the boardwalk) and Bertrand Island, an amusement park where it seemed all dangerous carnival rides went to fall into further disrepair and die in rusty murky obscurity. I loved Bertrand Island because it was indeed a small island worthy of Peter Pan and his Lost Boys and I'd wander the park listening to the Magic by Pilot and Afternoon Delight by Starland Vocal Band on the loudspeakers, hoping to find magical sprites and exotic birds and animals. Instead I found the Whip-It.
Four round cars rolled around on a giant X that whirled around and around until you were sure you'd dry heave and then it would snap and throw your car into a long cool tunnel bumping along while you screamed in the dark. The workers there were bored as hell and hardly ever took our tickets and often kept the ride running for ten minutes and it was the most exhilarating thing in the world. I have no idea how I never got whiplash and I never saw that ride at any local summer carnival but it was the one thing that my heart thumped for all summer long for at least three years.
Every now and then, if the Whip-It was down (actually, it frequently was probably due to lawsuits) I'd have to find another ride to try out. I was a pretty loyal tenacious little kid and stuck with what I liked but I had a taste for the unknown and exotic too so I found something called the Torpedo of Death. Okay, that was probably my name for it and I can't find any record of it in the history of the park (Woody Allen filmed some scenes from Purple Rose of Cairo in '83 there, which seems to be its biggest claim to fame) but it taught me one of the most profound lessons about my own character.
I was lonely. I was ten, eleven and I felt unwanted and unloved and invisible to my parents except as a servant. My father had the habit of telling me my ideas were stupid and I didn't want what I wanted, that I wanted what he thought I wanted and I was no longer allowed to sit on his lap and watch monster movies with him, and my mother was always too busy or would give me weekly Silent Treatments over some mystical infraction and I was spending a lot of time avoiding two uncles whom my parents never seemed to notice were paying way too much attention to me, so my feeling of belonging anywhere was at an all time low. My insomnia increased with everything going on at home, and I was sleepwalking when I did drift off but still I'd wander, wander, looking for something I didn't think I had but wanted really bad.
So I stood there contemplating this ride which was pretty simple in appearance. It was a circle somewhat on its side and in the tracks were rockets that a body would lie in, while the circle would speed around and around until centrifugal force would make one flatten against the seat but nobody told me that that would indeed happen. I stepped inside my rocket, which had seen better days and probably had been part of the early Soviet space program so I imagined myself a cosmonaut. If a dog and a couple of monkeys could do it, so could I, I reasoned, although I worried that they had helmets and I'm pretty sure, seat-belts and I did not. However, it was too late to turn back. The ride began and I held on to the sides of the car.
I remember it was a really sticky hot day in August and one of the worst because it had rained in the morning and the sun was merciless. These were the days before sunblock so although I had my dad's dark Italian eyes and hair, I had my mother's Polish snow-white skin and even that day, I recall looking at my pink swollen arms and legs, knowing that I would pay for it later that night, tossing and turning and never having a cold enough side of the pillow. That was the price for being a voyager into the unknown and I took my lumps as I always had. This trek, however, would be different.
The ride began to speed up and I began to have difficulty sitting up so I attempted to lean back but that meant I would lose my grip on the sides of the car. There were no real handles, so I was literally white-knuckling bare metal in one hundred degree weather and the palms of my hands and my fingers were burning and I felt as if my muscles were tearing as I held on screaming not in joy but in terror because I was certain that at some point, like the Whip-It, my rocket would be released and I would be flung straight into the sun without a helmet, without a seat-belt, without any damned sunblock and still I hung on screaming, screaming, screaming, the tears flowing up my forehead rather than down because of the force of direction. I didn't think. I just held on. I held on and I held on and finally the ride began to slow and then stop. We all staggered off and I felt as if my arms were a foot longer than they were when I got on. The pain would last for over a week but I survived and not only that, I had beaten the ride. I did not lie back and I did not let go. I didn't question my ability to hold on, nor did I analyze the odds or my options. I held on because something inside me said I wasn't invisible, I wasn't unwanted, and I wasn't going to die. At least, not on that day.
I have done things and made decisions in my life that I'm not entirely proud of, in fact, things that shame and disgust me. I have experienced, endured and in some ways been the architect of my own wreckage but there has always, as long as I've been conscious of it, a theme in my life of rebuilding, starting over and recreating what was thought to be lost and even now, I'm rebuilding against seemingly insurmountable odds but I don't intend to just survive. I remember those carnival rides and both feared and loved them and faced them anyway and still found delight in my humble couch-cushion discoveries. I intend to be like that little girl who nobody told what was supposed to happen, and pretty much nobody cared, and fly off into the sun, on my own terms, in my own time, with my own indomitable spirit. Hopefully with sunscreen. And maybe a helmet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iiryJwvDtc
Every Saturday morning, my grandmother would make a sumptuous breakfast for anyone who woke up early (and put their slippers on; bare feet was an offense worse than profanity) and then she and my mother would go out and shop. For the record, I rarely made it to her breakfasts. I was an inveterate insomniac and didn't finally fall asleep (if I did at all) until dawn. This routine of mine was always met with disdain and a prediction I would amount to nothing. I figured I could fry my own damned bacon in peace and BAREFOOT once they left.
First they'd hit every yard and garage sale on the entire eastern seaboard. Then the thrift and consignment shops, then they'd end the day with the weekly grocery shopping. Often, they would stop at the house to have the available serfs (us kids) unload the full tailgate, so they could continue shopping, and woe if one was in the house but did not answer the cruise ship horn of the Mercury Grand Marquis station wagon, which evoked as much terror in me as the sound effects of the martian space crafts in The War of the Worlds. I had been requested to join them, assimilate, be one with them, but they already had my toddler sister and I knew these were not joyful women-bonding events because they enjoyed these weekends with the grim and determined faces of ruthless consumerism. They just wanted me to run up and down aisles grabbing stuff they'd forgotten or tend to my sniveling, bored and hot sister or carry bags to and from the car and one day when I could not escape them, I stood at a bulletin board near the exit doors of Shop-Rite and saw a piece of paper that changed my life. FREE DAY CAMP.
I ripped it off the board and folded it up and shoved it in my pocket as my mother hollered for me to grab my sister's sandal as she kicked it off while sitting in that seat in the carriage, that seat I wish I could sit in and swing my little legs but I was always too big, too big but now I figured, too big for that but not too big for this so on the day noted I arrived at the day camp with the required dollar (couch cushions are veritable bank vaults) with all the other rag-tag kids in my neighborhood. I discovered quickly that there was one of these camps in every neighborhood and the city paid for everything, except a dollar, so as long as I had that covered, theoretically, I could spend every day on the bus going somewhere awesome.
I learned to sing On Top of Spaghetti, Hello Mutha Hello Fatha, Ninety-Nine Bottles of Beer on the Wall plus every top-forty song because when the bus' radio wasn't working, I had my trusty Radio Shack Realistic lime green transistor radio and I absolutely without any remorse whatsoever would cannibalize every single appliance in the house that used the batteries required to make my radio sing. Oh I may not have yet become an intrepid shopper, but it appeared the ruthlessness known to the women in my family was innate in me and was in fact, sharply honed by self-preservation and a little bit of bloodthirsty desperation to never ever EVER be at that house when that fucking car showed up blaring, COME OUTSIDE, COME OUTSIDE, LET'S GO, LET'S GO. I was already long gone.
I didn't make any friendships during those trips. It wasn't a conscious decision. I guess I considered my friends on vacation were still my friends and I had no desire to play little girl games which might distract me from the claw games and carnival rides at shore towns and boardwalks up and down the Jersey shore or hiking up a mountain at a state park in Pennsylvania. My biggest concern was conning my parents into signing the permission slips until I mastered their signatures. At that age, I had not yet learned to cave to their pressure and disdain for my independence and still had disdain for their disdain for me. I put on my sandals and Snoopy shorts and walked three and a half blocks and through a park to meet the bus everyday.
If it rained, we made crafts in a municipal building on site. I learned how to sew and made a bunny rabbit hand puppet. I also learned through another intrepid explorer, how to make a noose. I would later be thrown out of my first Girl Scouts meeting for showing another girl how to make one to hang her Barbie dolls too, because no one had the forethought to tell me it was illegal in New Jersey to teach someone how to make a noose, no matter how tiny or ornate (some of mine were delicately woven with satin rosettes and pom-poms stolen from my grandmother's sewing room) but then, I was learning how to survive and if that included eating ants or hanging upside down from the highest monkey bars in the playground to prove how tough I was, I was willing to take the risk of incarceration or my ass beat with my father's belt.
We often went to the same places which was fine with me. I got to know them inside-out and enjoyed the little corners never discovered by the usual tourists. I spent a lot of time at the Newark Museum for Children, Suntan Lake, Turtle Back Zoo, Keansburg Amusement Park (too rich for my blood, never went inside but played the games on the boardwalk) and Bertrand Island, an amusement park where it seemed all dangerous carnival rides went to fall into further disrepair and die in rusty murky obscurity. I loved Bertrand Island because it was indeed a small island worthy of Peter Pan and his Lost Boys and I'd wander the park listening to the Magic by Pilot and Afternoon Delight by Starland Vocal Band on the loudspeakers, hoping to find magical sprites and exotic birds and animals. Instead I found the Whip-It.
Four round cars rolled around on a giant X that whirled around and around until you were sure you'd dry heave and then it would snap and throw your car into a long cool tunnel bumping along while you screamed in the dark. The workers there were bored as hell and hardly ever took our tickets and often kept the ride running for ten minutes and it was the most exhilarating thing in the world. I have no idea how I never got whiplash and I never saw that ride at any local summer carnival but it was the one thing that my heart thumped for all summer long for at least three years.
Every now and then, if the Whip-It was down (actually, it frequently was probably due to lawsuits) I'd have to find another ride to try out. I was a pretty loyal tenacious little kid and stuck with what I liked but I had a taste for the unknown and exotic too so I found something called the Torpedo of Death. Okay, that was probably my name for it and I can't find any record of it in the history of the park (Woody Allen filmed some scenes from Purple Rose of Cairo in '83 there, which seems to be its biggest claim to fame) but it taught me one of the most profound lessons about my own character.
I was lonely. I was ten, eleven and I felt unwanted and unloved and invisible to my parents except as a servant. My father had the habit of telling me my ideas were stupid and I didn't want what I wanted, that I wanted what he thought I wanted and I was no longer allowed to sit on his lap and watch monster movies with him, and my mother was always too busy or would give me weekly Silent Treatments over some mystical infraction and I was spending a lot of time avoiding two uncles whom my parents never seemed to notice were paying way too much attention to me, so my feeling of belonging anywhere was at an all time low. My insomnia increased with everything going on at home, and I was sleepwalking when I did drift off but still I'd wander, wander, looking for something I didn't think I had but wanted really bad.
So I stood there contemplating this ride which was pretty simple in appearance. It was a circle somewhat on its side and in the tracks were rockets that a body would lie in, while the circle would speed around and around until centrifugal force would make one flatten against the seat but nobody told me that that would indeed happen. I stepped inside my rocket, which had seen better days and probably had been part of the early Soviet space program so I imagined myself a cosmonaut. If a dog and a couple of monkeys could do it, so could I, I reasoned, although I worried that they had helmets and I'm pretty sure, seat-belts and I did not. However, it was too late to turn back. The ride began and I held on to the sides of the car.
I remember it was a really sticky hot day in August and one of the worst because it had rained in the morning and the sun was merciless. These were the days before sunblock so although I had my dad's dark Italian eyes and hair, I had my mother's Polish snow-white skin and even that day, I recall looking at my pink swollen arms and legs, knowing that I would pay for it later that night, tossing and turning and never having a cold enough side of the pillow. That was the price for being a voyager into the unknown and I took my lumps as I always had. This trek, however, would be different.
The ride began to speed up and I began to have difficulty sitting up so I attempted to lean back but that meant I would lose my grip on the sides of the car. There were no real handles, so I was literally white-knuckling bare metal in one hundred degree weather and the palms of my hands and my fingers were burning and I felt as if my muscles were tearing as I held on screaming not in joy but in terror because I was certain that at some point, like the Whip-It, my rocket would be released and I would be flung straight into the sun without a helmet, without a seat-belt, without any damned sunblock and still I hung on screaming, screaming, screaming, the tears flowing up my forehead rather than down because of the force of direction. I didn't think. I just held on. I held on and I held on and finally the ride began to slow and then stop. We all staggered off and I felt as if my arms were a foot longer than they were when I got on. The pain would last for over a week but I survived and not only that, I had beaten the ride. I did not lie back and I did not let go. I didn't question my ability to hold on, nor did I analyze the odds or my options. I held on because something inside me said I wasn't invisible, I wasn't unwanted, and I wasn't going to die. At least, not on that day.
I have done things and made decisions in my life that I'm not entirely proud of, in fact, things that shame and disgust me. I have experienced, endured and in some ways been the architect of my own wreckage but there has always, as long as I've been conscious of it, a theme in my life of rebuilding, starting over and recreating what was thought to be lost and even now, I'm rebuilding against seemingly insurmountable odds but I don't intend to just survive. I remember those carnival rides and both feared and loved them and faced them anyway and still found delight in my humble couch-cushion discoveries. I intend to be like that little girl who nobody told what was supposed to happen, and pretty much nobody cared, and fly off into the sun, on my own terms, in my own time, with my own indomitable spirit. Hopefully with sunscreen. And maybe a helmet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iiryJwvDtc
Sunday, May 20, 2012
What Are Your Qualifications For the Position?
"If you're doing something else I can let you go....."
'No....no...I'm sorry...you know when we're here on Yahoo chatting and that little notification comes up that you've got mail, well, not 'you've got mail' cos that's AOL but"
"Yeah, Lainey, I get it...your point?'
"Oh...panties
in a twist today? Fine. You know how I get all these declarations of
love and promises of devotion and fantasies of pure delicious filth on
FB and that forum I talk about from people I don't know, how some are
quite entertaining?'
"Yeah, you've posted a few gems as your FB status. In case you haven't noticed everyone in my family and most of Lubbock has friend requested you because they find me rolling on the floor in tears and want to be in on it."
"Ahhh...I
was wondering how Bradley and I became friends....and then there are
spin-offs where your friends friend my friends and my friends friend
your friends and those friends friend those friends."
"Lainey, there's a shampoo commercial in there, I know but ffs, focus, please."
"Sorry, anyway.....I'm hungry. Hold on, please."
"You pull this shit all the time. Damn, might as well potty break myself, brb."
"Back"
"Me
too. So anyway, there was a new one today from someone who isn't even a
friend and the email was in Arabic but it included a pic."
"Oh Christ. Am I going to regret asking 'of what'?"
"A pic of me."
"So?
Remember that stalker you had that did collages of you and him and
photoshopped hearts and did morphs of your future babies together...he
was from Zyzaroplokikistan or something wasn't he? He was harmless....."
"A pic of me with what I thought was soft focus and there was an indecipherable caption underneath so I put it through Google Translate."
"What did it say?"
"I splooged all over your pic and my keyboard, sorry you are my angle. Can we be friends."
"Angle?"
"THAT gets you but the splooging part doesn't?"
"Was there a glitch in Google Translate? Angle, huh?"
*sigh*
"Well,
much as I like to hear about your gazillion conquests here and
internationally, why don't you just change your security settings so you
don't get unwanted messages anymore?"
"Because people who I *do* want to contact me that I've lost touch with wouldn't be able to contact me then."
"True, rabbit, true. You also have four thousand fucking friends. I think everyone you know has found you, Lainey."
"Oooooh, Racketeer Rabbit....oldie but a goodie. Oh and he sent me a pic of his junk."
"Wait...WHAT? Why do YOU get all the good pics. Was it a good one?"
"
It was respectable. I miss the good old days when people just sent
greeting cards, valentines, roses, chocolate..mmm chocolate."
"Maybe in his country it was a culturally acceptable form of interest."
"I asked him if he'd show his mother or sister that pic."
"What'd he say?"
"I don't think he's figured out Google Translate. I *do* think that might work in my favor. Meanwhile, I'm blocking him."
"Send me the pic of his pecker?"
"Sure......"
"What's wrong?"
"I got a love letter, a poem no less, in French from a lesbian German porn star. It rhymes in English."
"Wow. All hail Google Translate."
"No, I asked the guy I liked if he knew any French and he figured it out for me."
"Which one? Not...?"
"NO. And anyway, he's pissed off at me, now."
"Oh God. What now?"
"Well,
this other woman he was crushing on, friend requested him and he was
thrilled and then she friend requested me and he mentioned it to me and
I said, relax that's just a coincidence but turns out it isn't."
"Why? Is she trying to keep tabs on you or something, like you're competition?'
"No. Evidently she used him to get to me. She likes me likes me."
"AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA. He thought you were cockblocking but he's vagblocking. Oh God."
"Maybe I should figure out and post an application form on 'gettin' wit me' to cut out the riff-raff."
"I could only imagine the interview process."
"Yeah.
What are your expectations for the job? What did you like best about
your last position? What have you been doing since you resigned? Work
history: What were your starting and final levels of compensation? What
did you like best and least about your last boss....hey this could
work."
"Don't get carried away Miss Ego. Remember, there is no "I" in 'team'"
"No, but there is a 'M' and an 'E'.
"You're fired."
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Hold My Hand
In the space of a few months, my
mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer, I got engaged, we got
married, my mother died and we bought a house, every last one of these I
was ill-prepared for. It's all a blur now but I remember that Mom did
get to actually see the house but was only able to peer in through the
patio door because we had yet to close and there were problems with
liens against the title and my entire existence during this time was one
of anxiety and dread.
Even on my wedding day when
I was supposed to step out of the limo to camera flashes, I instead
begged the driver to take me to a bar and drive around a little because
something was wrong so very wrong, I felt lost and without direction
but I chalked it up to cold feet and eventually walked up the steps and
down the aisle, nearly two hours late to a very visibly relieved
groom. (photographic evidence can be provided upon demand) and then
spent the reception worried about my mother whose side I was reluctant
to leave. It would be her last public outing and I knew that it took
every last bit of strength in her being to even attend my wedding, the
last of her children's wedding, the wedding of her first child.
Although the wedding album belies a face beaming with joy it was pure
adrenaline and Xanax and a few gin and tonics that got me through until
the last guest was gone. We honeymooned for a weekend at a local
lover's resort that specialized in champagne glass jacuzzis so we could
be within driving distance should there be a sudden change in my
mother's condition and I don't recall for a moment in all those months
ever exhaling.
My
mother died on November 10th and we closed on the house on December
19th and moved on December 21st to an icy hill we didn't know existed
because we last saw the house in August. Not only did we NOT observe
Christmas in ANY way but because of a realtor goof, the boiler had
accidentally been turned off and the hot water baseboard heaters in the
living room exploded and geysered all over the ivory wool wall to wall
berber which had to be removed by Serve-Pro on the day of the
walk-thru and then giant dehumidifiers were stationed throughout the
first floor to combat any mildew that might develop on the sub-flooring
so I couldn't even bring my furkids to their new home and I was
utterly miserable. I was inconsolable. Not the weeping and gnashing of
teeth kind but more like Ophelia headed for a short walk to the lake to
'clear her mind'.
No one in the neighborhood
told us that the hill was the type that tried men's souls and
fortitude and unless one had a four wheel or all wheel drive vehicle or
snowshoes, or a magic carpet there was no way in hell you were getting
up that hill for most of the winter because it was illegally graded,
the township wouldn't adopt it to clean and maintain it and we were
shit out of luck and no less than two days after we moved in, my car
got stuck in a ditch about ten feet up. Every time I tried to pull out I
would drift in deeper and deeper and as determined as I was even I
couldn't bend it to my will so I sat in my car on that dark country
hill and cried and beat the dashboard.
Then a light went on and I
saw a house to my right and two snowsuit wearing figures trudging
toward me with shovels. They helped me get out of the car and pointed
to the house something about going inside and as I knocked tentatively
on the door, I looked back to see my husband pull up behind my car (his
now also stuck) jump out of his car and help the others. I was swept
into the house and a blanket was wrapped around my shoulders and a
woman said, 'Oh God you poor thing and here have some hot cider' and I
stood in her foyer shivering in shock. She took my arm and pulled me
physically inside the kitchen and sat me down and made me talk and I
poured out everything in a torrent like a relentless waterfall, my
mother, the wedding, the move, the house, the commute and she put her
arms around me and just held me. Her name was Beth.
Eventually the cars made
it up the hill but it was decided that I would spend the night in the
Murphy's home because I was too worn out and in the middle of the night
there I got a phone call that my father had suffered a heart attack
and I was needed immediately. I woke up Beth and dressed numbly and she
stood in the doorway and made me eat the most delicious Eggo waffle
ever toasted. Then my husband arrived with a packed bag and picked me
up, we drove to my dad's and I began to take control of the situation
as I always had done, as I was taught to do out of love and duty but
perhaps not desire. I longed more than anything to be held and taken
care of and with my mother dead and my father's health in peril and my
husband.....distracted.....my needs would have to take a backseat to
others. And so they did.
When I was able I made a
large eggplant parmigiana (a specialty) and Spouse delivered it to the
Murphy's who proclaimed it the best they ever had. This would be the
first of many exchanges of neighborly help for yummy dishes as Spouse
and I were totally ill-equipped as new homeowners in the country but I
was an awesome cook and everyone likes to eat. Beth and I struck a warm
friendship.
She tended to be a bit
bossy at times but I was accustomed to the ministrations of the capo di
tutti capi or boss of all bosses, my late mother, so in comparison she
was small potatoes and in fact at times comfortably familiar but every
now and then I had to put my hand up and ask her to cease and desist.
Once we were sitting outside on a warmer spring day watching koi in her
pond gulp at the surface and she brushed a strand of hair out of my
eyes and I asked, 'Why do you treat me like I need a mother?" and she
said, 'Because you do." I insisted I didn't but could use a sister or
friend and she agreed to it and we drank our wine.
We didn't see each other
every day although we passed each other's house (they at the bottom of
the hill, we at the top) either driving up or down or they walking
their poodles and yellow lab and sometimes she'd call me and I'd
accompany them for a part of the way around the circle but sometimes I
avoided her because her love demanded something I couldn't or wouldn't
give, perhaps it was a loyalty reserved for someone who would never
leave my heart, someone under who's heart I grew.
I was so very sick and she
would arrive at the house with meals for Spouse and trinkets to amuse
me and stacks of books and told me she believed in me. She told me
there was a book in me, no, many books and I had to stop shining my
light under a bushel. She would leave with a kiss on my forehead and
tuck her copy of the key to my front door tied to a gorgeous silk
ribbon, into her threadbare pocket. They had little money but were
lavish with love and service to others.
When I had to be rushed to
the hospital for a blood transfusion it was she who held me and rocked
me and sang songs to me while I wept deliriously. I have no memory of
these things but others have told me.
One day I sat on my porch
as the sun was beginning to go down but still sparkling in the air and I
held a glass of wine in one hand and a bottle of Percocet in the other
and didn't hear her walk up behind me with her three dogs and husband
and she wordlessly handed the leashes to her husband and told him to go
on without her and sat down next to me and asked me what I thought I
was doing. I told her I wanted a divorce and she put her arms around me
and said, 'I know.' and it was the first time anyone had touched me in
six months. Her husband came 'round the circle again and she asked him
to take the dogs down the hill and bring up the car and he did without
a question and she called out to Spouse that she was taking me to her
house for a little bit and she poured me a glass of wine and we sat and
watched large birds try to fish in the pond, no words spoken, just
company and when I was ready she drove me home.
In the nine years we've
been friends we've seen each other at our best and worst and while
still friends in some ways remain strangers because while my love and
grief are deep running rivers always flowing, never resting,
relentlessly searching and longing for belonging, Beth does not operate
the same way. It's almost as if we are pen pals needing Google Translate
to decipher each others heartfelt missives. Mine are dramatic and
exhaustive. Hers are cryptic and require a secret decoder ring and a
sundial.
However one day her
husband appeared with some lame excuse to drop something off and
something felt 'not right' and I followed him down the hill. I showed up
out of the blue (not my thing) and they were delighted to have me and
shared some stuffed clams they'd made and a nice discount merlot they'd
found and then he disappeared into the depths of the house and she and
I sat in silence as the sun disappeared behind the pines and blue
spruces surrounding the property and she got up and stood at the slider
door and I stood next to her and searched her face and asked her what
she was thinking.
She told me she was
thinking which tree out there could she easily tie a rope to and hang
herself and I gasped and she rolled her eyes and said, 'Oh Elaine,
people would get over it.' and I said hysterically, 'NO NO I WOULDN'T
GET OVER IT HOW MANY MORE PEOPLE I LOVE DO I HAVE TO LOSE??.' and I
grabbed her around her waist shocking her out of her reverie and said,
'What's going on? What's happening? What aren't you telling me?' And
she told me. Her mother was dying. The mother she had no relationship
with. She envied mine and my love for my lost mother and she envied
that I'd said I'd been thoroughly loved by my mother and was able to
tell her everything before she slipped away because her mother slipped
away into dementia without any chance for absolution. She had told her
husband because he found her standing there earlier that day and asked
her the same thing and she said before she knew it, he'd left and I'd
come following. He had come for me and I hadn't even know I'd been
summoned.
I remembered the times
Beth sat and listened to me and held my hand and kissed my forehead. I
remembered when she rocked me in my delirium and when she was a
stranger and she took me into her house and her arms and fed and
clothed me. When she mothered me when I didn't want mothering and needed
it desperately.
Too, I remembered all that
I did out of duty and love, sincerely but because I was commanded to,
whether raised or by some imperative or instinct to care for my own,
but this time it was one of desire and gratitude for someone who
reached out and patiently peeled through the layers and layers of
cheerfulness and stoicism, the 'I'm just peachy's', 'no really I'm
fine's' to peer inside the little girl who just wanted to be loved and
was very lost. I reached out and took her hand. I did need mothering
in spite of my protestations. She needed to mother and she needed a
mother. She needed a daughter and absolution. So we began.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Goldilocks' Revenge
I told him. As soon as I saw it in
the window I started screaming, 'GET BACK IN THE CAR! GET BACK IN THE
CAR' but he made a face and kept walking toward the house and couldn't
see what I could see on the other side of the soffit and the big red
sugar maple. I knew by the look on his face he was thinking 'hysterical
female' but I was losing it for good reason. He was about to walk into a
bear.
We
have about an acre and a half of woods, a corner property. Across the
road and on one side are some neighbors but not too close. Three
seasons of the year there is enough tree cover to obscure a clear view,
a constant source of frustration to a former neighbor from Newark who
eventually couldn't hack country living and moved back home. I could
literally sunbathe nude from my own back deck except for the fact that
neighbors were so friendly that they often dropped by unannounced and
it could be a little awkward. And then at holiday parties it would be
awkward again when they'd remind me after they'd had a few drinks and
slapped Spouse on the shoulder hard enough to knock him over telling
him what a lucky man he was. He despised being told that almost as much
as 'Attaboy.'
We're on a circle, again an
end property and across the road is the back of a llama farm, and on
another side is 70 acres of undeveloped property, then the home of a
dead mobster's younger more stupid brother who couldn't be trusted to
take charge of the 'family' business so was put in charge of the
immediate family's landscaping (read: wood chippers) business, then the
Russians, then the Kowalskis' who threw awesome Christmas parties and
so on. Behind them was another 70 acres or so of land in
conservatorship and directly between us and the Russians was a small
circle of woods on our property that was sweet because with our house
set back a bit it made it look a little like a fairy cottage from a
distance and if you squinted just right.
Our driveway was a large
circle or lazy 'D' with the bit of woods in the center and it was
through this set-up that I was able to see many animals meandering
about, from my giant atrium window in the living room.
Because of all this
beautiful land and the way it's situated, there are several bear as
well as fox dens. Besides the blue spruces, hemlocks, sassafras and
white pines, there are in inordinate amount of oaks on the property
probably because there are an inordinate amount of fat happy squirrels
waddling around hoarding what has amounted to thousands upon thousand
of acorns over the years. In the fall, my driveway has so many acorns
on it that although it is paved, it sounds like one is driving on
gravel as the acorns pop and crack whenever we maneuver around the
circle.
When it rains or is damp,
it can be quite slick and so on this cool fall day, copper oak leaves
dancing in the air, I could hear the crunch of tire on acorn announcing
Spouse had arrived home so I walked over to the front door to greet
him. I had been cooking dinner but the kitchen was hot from the oven and
I took off my top and stood in my bra the living room not far from the
door but where I knew I couldn't be seen from outside when I saw what I
thought was my neighbor from Newark's big German Shepherd but it
didn't look like a German Shepherd and my mind tried to fit around this
large animal rubbing its back on a tree and I realized this animal was
not on a leash and my neighbor was nowhere in sight and it dawned on
me that the only thing separating me from this BEAR was a pane of glass
and ten feet which was okay, but Spouse was already stepping out of
his car, his work shoes crunch crunch crunch and I started screaming at
the front door while watching the bear startle from the window and
they literally ran toward each other like a choreographed ballet, and
if not so terrifying, it was piss-in-your-pants funny.
They nearly brushed each
other as the bear veered off into the little circle and Spouse ran up
the four steps and opened the full-view screen/glass storm door, flew
inside, slammed the big door shut, LOCKED IT, then threw his body
against the door, glaring at me, ME, who warned him to get back in the
car. He was hyperventilating and began shouting at me why didn't I say,
'BEAR! BEAR!' and I told him honestly because the last time I said,
'BEAR! BEAR!' it was to the Russian as he was mending his 8-foot chain
link fence, his back to an approaching mother bear and two darling cubs
and when I called out to the Russian he just said, 'WHAT? WHAT?' so I
just pointed and he ran around in a circle a few times then climbed
over his fence just as the mother heard me screaming at him and took
off in the opposite direction so I knew that saying, "BEAR! BEAR!'
might cause Spouse to allamande left or dosido with Yogi and figured
he'd trust me enough to just fucking do what I was asking but he
shouted at me NEXT TIME to just don't say anything. I burst out
laughing and said, 'FINE' and that was it.
In July we have a giant
annual cookout and invite everyone we know. Everyone in town is invited
and they can bring anything and anyone with them. We have a great
time, many of my friends and family come from long distances to make
this party and in anticipation I requested my brother Donny to dig a
large fire-pit in the little circle of woods so we could have a bonfire
that year.
He spent the week at the
house and did nothing but play video games and watch movies and
nothing was being done about my fire-pit and I'd had a terrible case of
bronchitis which required me to go on a 6 or 8 day regimen of steroids
and I developed a very rare side-effect. I became manic and somewhat
psychotic for about 24 hours and before I knew it, not only was a
fire-pit dug, but it was completed beautifully and frantically by both
Donny AND Spouse as I sat in a lawn chair sipping diet decaf iced tea
with a pick-axe by my side.
Every now and then they
would surreptitiously look up at me and then look at each other but they
completed their task, I congratulated them on a great job and Spouse
disappeared and returned with a Xanax and a martini for me and a diet
soda for Donny then went to hide in the basement. Donny and I sat in the
driveway late into the evening talking and laughing and I came down
from my side-effect and we joked about that too and suddenly I saw
movement behind him and at the same time smelled a very familiar odor
and the floodlight wasn't working because Spouse kept putting off
borrowing the ladder from the Russian to change the bulb but I
distinctly saw a large mammal walking right behind Donny on all fours
and I simultaneously got up, grabbed him by the collar and dragged both
of us up the steps into the house.
Our noses pressed
against the screen door we heard the chuffing and the movement through
old brush and debris and I told him to take a deep whiff and he thought
it was the most amazing thing and we stood together holding each other
and laughing, our hearts beating and adrenaline pumping and we left
everything as it was, locked up and went to to bed.
The following morning I
told Spouse and although he was thrilled he'd survived the night
considering my behavior the day before, he wasn't in any hurry to
change the bulb on the floodlight even though I'd expressed concern
that a bear might sneak up on us. He chortled and said yeah and
dismissed me. He also reminded me about the original bear incident and
took the opportunity to chide me again and I said, 'Yes dear. Fuck you
very much,' and kept typing as he turned the remote to FOX News.
Now, the Russian liked me.
He was the head of some union in Brighton Beach and he and his wife,
when I was sick would bring me little care packages of salmon and
caviar and other tasty morsels and one day had walked in the house
looking for Spouse who had said to him earlier unbeknownst to me, 'Yeah
just come in when you get a chance to look at this 'thing'' and ran
into a very shocked me standing there trying on a black silk teddy. I
was unaware of his presence until he said with his charming accent,
'Vell, Helllllllooooo Beeyooooteefool' and I twirled around in surprise
and ever since then he would volunteer to do some kind of electrical
work for free.
Thanks to that black
teddy, we didn't have to pay a penny to have four ceiling fans, a light
fixture and several extra electrical outlets installed. So I
personally asked him to please change the bulb and he not only did, but
he provided the bulb himself which I thought was very kind. And no, he
never once asked for payment, ever. Spouse was livid that I went over
his head because he said he was getting to it and I made him look bad
and I said he could do bad all by himself and as of that night I would
no longer remind him or warn him or do shit for him again since he was
always so insulted anytime I offered to help and he said, 'FINE', and
that evening ended remarkably well too.
So last night I heard some
leaves crunching in the driveway and the cats were in the window and I
thought, 'Oh they see Daddy is home' and got up and sure enough he was
but strangely he stopped the car midway up the driveway and briefly
tapped the horn. I figured he was on the phone with his buddy and
wasn't looking for me especially since he insisted he neither wanted
nor needed my help but I was curious so I got up and stood behind the
cats and saw him standing outside the car, looking at one of the tires.
And then I saw the bear behind him. And I remembered that he ordered
me not to tell him, not to warn him, not to help him so I let him have
his way and the bear ate him.
The detective leaned back, his chair squeaking and took the thumb nail he was absentmindedly gnawing on out of his mouth and said, 'So that's your story Mrs. Goldilocks.' It wasn't a question, really. I smiled sweetly and said, 'It's 'miss'. I kept my maiden name. Yes' I sadly sighed. 'It's all true, all there, every last word.' He smiled and said, 'I'm very sorry for your loss. You're free to go, but here's my card, and my personal number on the back, if there's anything else I could do for you.'
I took the blanket off my shoulders to give back to him and he said, 'It's cold outside and all you're wearing is that little black thing. I think you can keep it and maybe return to it me at a later date?' So I smiled and said, 'Oh THANK YOU Officer *glanced at card* Wolf.' and hightailed it out of there.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Sleepwalker At Chiller Theatre
This is a re-post from another blog I used to contribute to. It's one of my favorites so I thought I share it here.
Sleepwalker At Chiller Theatre
Sleepwalker At Chiller Theatre
We
had a deal. I would try my best to not get up in the middle of the
night all night long to watch the test pattern on the big TV in the den,
and he would let me watch monster movies with him on Saturday night.
I demanded every night but he explained they weren't on every night
and Daddy needed his sleep. He also asked me to stop jumping up
reaching for the chain-pull to the ceiling light because I'd snapped it
off several times and moved the easy chairs together to climb on them
and click it on directly from the beveled glass fixture itself and then
leave the chairs there in the dark in the middle of the night for him
to trip over on his way to his middle of the night job
but he didn't understand that I was afraid of stepping on lava so the
only way I wouldn't go up in flames was by commuting throughout the
house via furniture. It all seemed very cut and dry to me and I didn't
really get why he was being so obstinate. I was four. He was 34. God,
man, grow up.
They
couldn't do anything about my sleepwalking though, well except install
slide locks at the top of every door leading outside because they'd
found me in the street or garden in my granny nightgown at 3am standing
in the moonlight eyes wide open but vividly dreaming. This is not
something an elderly neighbor with a heart condition wants to see when
she puts her cat out or something else for my father to find upon
returning home from a swing shift.
They also couldn't negotiate with me when in my sleep I'd drag chairs
over to the doors to climb on them (lava, too) and unlock the doors and
go outside anyway,. I suppose that in my dreams it made perfect
sense.
When I was
six-months-old my father decided it was time for me to sleep through
the night and thus began his fakakta Get Elaine To Sleep mission which
failed or succeeded spectacularly depending on who you asked because
YES, I did go to sleep and YES, I did sleep through the night but it
didn't stop me from getting up and doing everything anyway. At six
months, mobility is an issue but there does come a point in development
when cribs are the toddler equivalent of K2 and therefore must be
conquered no matter the personal risk: bruised tush, black eye, bloody
nose--many casualties including the tragic broken bodies of colleagues I
was unable to bring back to home base, my teddy bear (Teddy) and doll
baby (Smakata which is Polish for 'snot-nose' a favorite endearment of
my Grandmother for me), and a Dawn doll who not by her own fault was
missing a head. I also held in my possession specific Tinker Toy and
Lego parts that technically belonged to my brother David, parts that
were uncommon and necessary to assemble anything remotely resembling a
'thing' so were of great value in terms of currency, negotiation and
manipulation. I was an intrepid, shrewd, if somewhat reckless
adventurer. I knew how to haggle with the natives and learned their
primitive lingo. It was at this time when I became an insomniac.
Either I
would sleep and walk, or not sleep at all so at night I was either
dreaming technicolor musicals rivaling any Bollywood extravaganza (while
exploring) or use my imagination while wide awake to dream up and plot
my future adventures and any revenge against anyone who may have
recently wronged me. I also pondered the meaning of life and what would
happen after I died, like would my 'being' cease to exist or go
somewhere else or if my brothers would consider playing Gilligan's Island
using their bunk beds as the pitiful broken Minnow because I wanted
more than anything to be Ginger. I didn't like her at all. I liked
Lovey, Mrs. Thurston Howell III
because she was the only one with a partner on the whole friggin
island for the entire length of the series, while no one else seemed to
pair up (well except for the Skipper and Gilligan-not that there's
anything wrong with that) which I thought was really stupid. There is
strength in numbers (as evidenced by my siblings and extended family)
and maybe if they did they could have built a new boat especially since
the Professor could make anything out of coconuts including a
shortwave radio which incidentally didn't get them off the island
either. The whole thing was frustrating but Ginger had the best
wardrobe so of course I had to 'be her' when we played. Then during my
midnight musings I would look to up to find my father standing in my
doorway and say softly, 'Elaine, go to sleep.' and I'd roll over and
pretend. Until Saturday night.
On WPIX in New York from 1971-1982 old thrillers, monster movies and horror movies would be aired on Chiller Theatre.
It actually began during the 60's with an on-air host and then
eventually morphed into a six-fingered claymation hand rising out of the
mists replete with spooky music as the opening for the show. Then they
played some good but mostly godawful movies. Other little girls had
puppies and kittens posters on their walls. I had Christopher Lee and Vincent Price
and various pages from Monster Magazine taped to mine and would
'borrow' my uncle's monster mags to read in the basement whenever I had a
chance and he wasn't in his room. My dad and I would settle in on the
couch and I would snuggle up against him. He was big and warm and
cuddly and he would put his arm around me and tell me I was hot like a
little furnace and made him sweat and he'd drink lots of ice water but
he still let me cling to him like a monkey and ask him incessantly,
'What did that man mean, Daddy' and, "What did he say, Daddy' to the
degree where he never had a moment's peace or got to see any movie all
the way through, in my presence.
I tried hard
to keep awake. I practiced keeping my eyes open and holding them open
and considered using Lincoln Logs to prop them but though better of it
but eventually sleep would overtake me and finally my father would shut
off the TV and carry me to bed and I would fuss and he'd tell me to go
to sleep and sometimes, eventually I did.
I cherish
those times with my dad. Now he's become really cantankerous and
misses my mother terribly and calls me constantly to ask me how I'm
doing or to complain about 'some shit on the Food Channel'. I don't see
him as often as I should because I need to take him in small doses and
he worries too much about me which makes me feel horribly guilty but
we talk a lot and every now and then I do go over there and watch a
scary movie with him and he calls me his little girl, his little
sleepwalker, his little dreamer. He says it proudly and with such love.
And when I can't sleep at night, when the Ambien and the Xanax and
even a martini doesn't help, I hear his voice softly saying, 'Go to
sleep, Elaine' and sometimes I do.
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