Thursday, December 31, 2015

12.31.15 2016- I'm getting my speed up



Today I went around to visit a few of my favorite places. Places I've come to visit so often, they're like a friend. You see them in all seasons, all times of day, for better or worse.
Then, I did some errands, ran the Shepherd hard, and came on home, to settle in for the day.
Then he went out, to study Italian and Economics at the local farm store, to go to his porn store (Lowe's) and look around and drool. Then he went to Whole Foods to pick up for us a New Year's Eve treat salad bar dinner.
I'm kind of sitting here salivating, waiting for him to get home. That's what a whole lot of hard but lovely days filled with beans beans, rice, kale and beans does to you. Makes you all up into a salad bar, for God's sake.
Still, here I am, adapting to the reality of the renewed world political order. 
I'm getting my speed up to move on into a 2016. A 'new, never before!!" year.
A year we might want to greet with more wisdom, more equanimity, mixed with equal parts of grave concerns. 
A dab of 'who knows how the hell this will go' ,combined carefully with a greater capacity to cool out and just enjoy the show.

12.31.15 I remember him asking



      me if I was staying the night, as we were going up to the highway the next day early, to hitch a ride to his parent's in Westchester County, day before Christmas. 
     I turned to him, and smiled, said "Nope. I'll meet you at the highway?" 
But really, he came to the house I stayed over at, which was just like him; rumbling up the old wooden stairs early, hoping to catch someone doing something. Making such a racket - then knocked and tumbled in, doing his best to look sleek. Virile. Cool To anyone at all..
     I was sitting at the cramped kitchen table of a third floor walkup in Brattleboro, having the coffee that would jitter me all the way to NY, sitting with my other guy, and his roommate.
     She was an odd cookie, and was holding a small dish of honey, talking quietly about all kinds of things in life, while slowly stuffing ants down into the soft golden liquid.
I was listening to her, laughing, grimacing at her hobby, thinking over whether to wear black zip up knock-em-dead boots on the highway, or my shit-kicker VT hiking boots.
     Finally  I stood, grabbed my back pack, my down jacket, and waved bye to all concerned.
Ran down all those small New Englandey stairs, spilled out into the snow packed yard, heading for I 91.


Tuesday, December 29, 2015

12.29.15 Weaving ourselves back



     In May 1980, we were at Deerfield Academy, at my youngest brother's graduation, as he carefully squeaked through. My firstborn was seven months, and this always looked to be a nativity painting, just the way Kevin was holding his hands about his kid. The day was steaming hot for May in New England. I had this dress my great aunt had given me, that had these polka dots all over, but in the end, was a dress up dress after all.
     To nurse the baby, you had to take the thing off, hide in a bathroom, and then crouch in a stall while holding the kid and figuring out how to put the damn thing back on, over your shoulders. But it was a good day. My next to last younger sibling about to enter the world, and need me less.
     During the year, there had been a problem with smoking and stuff, so I'd bring him to our little barn house every Wednesday, he'd come on in with his brownie mix in hand, reach into the downstairs closet where some plant that had been thriving when we moved in...was hung and dry. He'd break off leaves and leaves, and go about in that most adolescent way grinding them up, then incorporating them into his brownies, my idea, so he would sail through and ... graduate. We'd have spaghetti every time, with sauce made from the garden, because we had no money, and he ate so much, that spaghetti dinner made just lots of sense.
     Sometimes he'd hold the baby, while I desperately escaped out, anywhere at all, only to return to him grimacing at me, while holding the small round person, screaming away to be fed. But he'd forgive me, every time. We always laughed and thought each other funny, and had a great time.
     Whenever it was a vacation time, he'd call me and we'd go around after everyone had left, because most students were rather ridiculously wealthy. So they left the most unbelievable things behind. We'd be laughing and joking and wandering around the halls and picking up sleeping bags and lamps and bikes and just being amazed that they had so much they could ditch so easily.
     Later,  he was at Umass, with this humungo black Camaro that he'd Batman around in, driving just as fast as the rest of us siblings had been raised to do.  He  had a great circle of friends who were really addicted to some soap opera. One day they convinced him to skip a final exam to watch a particularly thrilling episode.
     After that, he freaked out, and came to live with us in Montague, choosing an unfinished back attic room to have some privacy. It was pretty fun to have him there, what with help with feeding the wood stove and playing with the kid and the dog and all. When Kevin came home, my brother and I would go for long walks and talk about everything under the sun.
     When our kid was three, Kevin saved up for a year to pay all our bills and still go away to Italy. He was having parent/adult fever big time. So we had a huge "Oh, alright, go away" party for him ,and all his old friends and buddies from Pelham Auto, the collective where he worked, came.
     I made an enormous mountain cake with snow all over the top, and pain-in-the-butt Jimmy Singiser beat the cream and held up the beater, laughing , while the whipped cream flew all over the kitchen. Later, I got him back, but good.
     Everyone gave Kevin money toward his cause, which was amazing because noone really had much at all.
     But maybe the idea of some working class kid with parents who worked in factories going right ahead and going back to his father's homeland, was enough to fuel the dreams of us all.
     While he was gone, someone in our family offered to bring my brother and my kid and myself to Florida, which sounded great. I got pneumonia just before we left, and the morning we left, at about 5 am, as we sat in the kitchen, there was an earthquake. I have a photo somewhere.
     Florida was cold, and I was really sick. The person who brought us got bored and left early, after babysitting for a bit one evening while my brother and i 'went out' and got all riled up.
     The day before we had to fly back, I brought my kid to the zoo there, because it's all open and not great but better than most horrible zoos, with a cool train thing that brought you all round for fun. He was three then, I was completely wasted from the pneumonia, but hey, we saw lions and tigers and bears and all.
     Before we knew it, my beloved was coming on home. He was homesick. It had been about a month. On the way to JFK, my kid told me he thought his dad was never coming back, so why was he coming back? This was after my long carefully crafted 'Daddy is going away but will be back ' campaign. I was shocked.
     But I got us to JFK, somehow, and when we walked into the stadium of an entrance, up far overhead of course was the most stunning thing of all, which I showed to my child in arms. An enormous fantastic moving changing brilliance- a Calder.
     Country bumpkin that I was, I almost forgot to go find my lover, but I recovered and went looking for the guy.
     When we came upon him, why ,there was all kinds of jumping and laughing and yelling and hugging and kissing.
     And then, just crumpling down in a big old pile. so that we could begin to weave ourselves all back together again.



Sunday, December 27, 2015

12.27.15 I began to remember



     Growing up, I had a great aunt by the name of Florence Ida Cheney. I loved her. She was kind and wonderful, and baked angel cakes and fudge and mailed you treats when you needed them most. While most of the adults were really not well, she was fine. Like a fairy tale, she lived in a tall house up on a cliff overlooking Melrose, Ma., never drove a car, worked her whole life teaching elementary school, and worked on the weekends and afternoons in the church office. She had gardens and gardens all about, a glass bookcase on the wall with a collection of dog figures she would let you take out and put back in and arrange any which way. Her sheets were fragrant, her African Violets and Geraniums magnificent, and she cared about everything.
     She walked everywhere. Down the steep hill, winter and summer, to the school she taught at, to the church she worshipped in and worked at. She washed people's laundry in her bathtub the same way she washed her own, then hung and dried it, ironed it, and made extra money for buying birthday presents and Xmas presents for her nieces and nephews.
     I visited her often, looked out for her as she grew old, and tried but simply couldn't stretch enough to see past her age. I remember trying. To really SEE her, and get a sense of her life and who she was.
     When she grew older, she would whisper to me about how she, a Baptist, was best friends with a family down the street, who were....Catholics! They were so friendly, and she had pizza with them every Friday night, because they were Italians. Oh my. But they were good friends, and good to her.
     So she stretched, herself, to see them and know them and delight in who they were.
     Once she brought me with my first born to visit a dear friend of hers, who gave my three year old a hard candy. I was still young, and not confident enough to say the thanks but no thanks thing. So I fretted a bit, sitting there polite, til he choked and I Heimliched him and it popped out across the sitting room, while the two of them, never had children, looked shocked. I smiled. My kid asked if he could go get the candy and eat it. I said nope.
     When she lay dying, I went every other day to the hospital. I sat and talked with her and held her hand, though she      was not conscious. When I came back from getting lunch, she was gone.
     I was the one who went back to her home a few days later to clean everything out and pack up her things. Her life. I'm not sure why no one else helped me. It was a huge job, I realize now. The town was dry, and I remember driving around looking for a place to buy a beer, at least. I slept in her bed and had nightmares. I really had no idea how to manage the reality. Of her gone. Of her life. Of packing up a life.
     Houseplants and all her beloved small things she loved. Her piano and all the music. Her poetry. The food in her frig. It was all so overwhelming, the 'never ever again' aspect of it all. I simply was not prepared, nor mature enough, to be there and digest it at all.
     For her memorial service, I baked all her favorite cookies she had always made. Twin Nut Wonders, made with ground almonds, shaped into crescents, dusted with powdered sugar. All of her kind friends came to grieve her passing. So different than the very waspy other funerals I'd been to, which demanded that you celebrate! And not think about the death or the life gone or anything else. Her friends cried and smiled and embraced each other and talked about her life. Her ways. Her smile. Her gifts. I drank it all in, until I was full and comforted and better from it all.
     I had a VW Rabbit, and stuffed it with her beloved things. Garden rakes poking out open windows. Her bird bath. Oh, I didn't want to leave one thing behind.
     Years later, after too many of my own moves, I unearthed her saved poetry, all in rhyme. I found photos of the Sunday School Summer Program she was the director of, the photo of hundreds of kids, and her, there, smiling! I began to think about what it would take to pull that off. All the different skills you would need to have.
     I began to remember her remarkable piano playing. Her singing. Her gardening and cooking and dirty jokes, told to all of us at family gatherings, fast, so that the little kids would have a hard time getting them.
     I remembered her kind loving ways, when I slept over, devoid of my five brothers for once. I remember her fluffy butterscotch cat she was crazy about , and her husband, a tiny bit, when he was alive. And after he died, she lamented making him have franks and beans friday nights so that they could save up for things.
     She once told me that she saw her sister with a new diamond ring on her hand, larger! So she made her sweet husband go out with her and get her one that big. The next time they visited , her sister exclaimed at her ring. When she asked why, she was told that her sister's ring was actually fake! And there she was, with the real one. Pfft. Did she laugh at herself!
     She gave me that big fancy ring, which I wore day and night, and I think chipped a bit , while gardening. Then one day, in Northampton, years after her death, it kind of popped off my hand, and fell into a drain on the street. Truly. I stood there for a long long time. And then, walked away, let it go, feeling the love of her and the life I had with her and her laughter and consoling and clutched that to me again.
     Now that I am in my sixties, I can see her face. In so many settings. I have begun to catch a glimmer of all the things she did not say. All the things she felt for, worried about, concerning my upbringing. Things she fretted over and felt powerless against.
     Now that I am in my sixties I am struck by the way she must have walked down icy slippery sidewalks all those years, after her husband was gone, to get her groceries that she carried to her home, while she was on foot, until she became ill before she died. I think about what it must have been like for her, to have her life. Her music. Her old age. Everything resting upon her somehow working enough to pull it off. To have food and clothing and a home, being paid a pittance because she was a woman. So that her managing was intentionally so much harder and more desperate....than it would have been for any man.
     I think about going to see her while in my 20's, and her making me chicken. Because I was a vegetarian. Yes! And loving her and sitting there eating it while she happily watched.
     I remember it was nightfall, and I was visiting her. I was a small child, away from home, but her home was so much better and nicer and comforting and relaxing I could have stayed forever. I remember we are outside on a summer's night, twilight, and she is holding my hand while we walk just a tiny bit close to the edge of the cliff, and we just a little bit peer over the edge, down to the lights of the small city far below, an awesome thing, to me, filling me with delight. The safety of her presence. The excitement of the view. 
     I remember us walking all around her house as the night grew dark, as she showed me her rose bushes and perennials and annuals, and feeling just as good and safe and wondrous as any child ever felt.




12.27.15 You catch sight of something





     The irrepressible thing about a moment, about creativity, is that standing there , you catch sight of something . A minute ago you were just hiking or playing with the dog or enjoying the scent of the rich humus beneath your feet and the small sounds brought to you by the breeze moving its way through the forest.
     When suddenly, maybe you find yourself looking down the street. You see the darker glistening places and the branches most reflecting light . You see all the individual leaves and their intricate serrated edges and outlines of veins and twigs and branches. You see how the sunlight is caught upon the fallen foliage , beckoning your notice .
Your mind's eye flashes it to you, as black and white . 
As cropped this way or that . 
As thick creamy bright paint . 
As thin terribly specific lithograph. 
As a video with a song all its own.
     Until,just as suddenly , back you come. To the quiet summer's day. To the sunlight cresting the ridge. To the thundering of your dog as they run toward you . To the gurgling of the stream down the hill from the path .
     Brought back, from all that possibility .