Friday, June 20, 2008

 



CHEERIO!


Elvis has left the building! (with his wife, his two kids, and 51 boxes.)


Next post comes to you live from SAN FRANCISCO!


Be well.

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Monday, June 09, 2008

 


THREE CLICKS

  1. Two women I know are dying – one fast, the other faster. I smoked cigarettes with one while debating art and culture during 5-minute breaks in grad school. I drink instant coffee with the other while perching on a rickety chair in her peeling yellow kitchen, a carbon copy of my own kitchen minus 50 years of improvements. One woman is around 40. The other is nearly 85. Both are alone in the world and have the kind of tough devil-may-care attitude that stems from this fact. There is very little I can give either of them now, except my prayers and good wishes. I would like to sit by the bedside of the younger one, hold her hand, stroke her head, and make sure she has a window to look out of with a tree outside it. I would like to paint and plaster and fit and fix for the older one, so that her world of two rooms breathes her life back into her. I will do none of these things. But I will continue to think of these women. Often. And imagine myself sitting next to them. Hearing them breathe in. And out. For awhile.

  1. Some days you are screwed from the start. Like yesterday. When Gman came into our bedroom at 7:45am, I was nursing his sister. So he reflexively turned to his Dad for water/milk/banana/cornflakes/tv/buttwipe/blanket/story/hug/nosewipe/dream-telling. When I finally rose from my cozy baby-mama cocoon 30 minutes later, it was too late. His face was set, his eyes were steely. Later, after an unreasonable request that I reasonably diverted, he chucked his water cup at my knee – hard! And for the second time, I slapped him. It was just the faintest slap, a brief contact between my hand and his cheek. Didn’t hurt him a bit. But of course it sent him round the bend completely. And nothing – nothing – I did for the rest of the day could make it right again. Of course by the end of the day, I was tired of atoning and getting nowhere. Tired of being completely ignored. Thus, I was rough and impatient with him at bed-time. When we woke this morning, I could see that he is still mad at me. So, I am mooching around the house today feeling like the world’s crappiest parent. What is this anger in me that rises so quickly? What is this instinct for lashing out at my own child? How is it that Gman and I are so different that there are times when nothing I do can affect him except in the negative? In his estimable book The Secrets of Happy Children, Stephen Biddulph notes that when kids act out, it is because they aren’t getting something they need. Of course Gman is behaving rudely, aggressively, crazily, spacily because he needs something he’s not getting – my absolutely undivided attention. But he’s never going to have that again. What is the statute of limitations on adjusting to a new sibling? Probably a kid should get an extension if you throw another twister into the mix like moving to another country. God, what are we masochists? And yet, this is how everybody does it. Having Kid #1 starts you down a path toward Greater Adulthood with its sensible jobs and housing in good school districts. Then comes along Kid #2 (when your transformation into Responsible Parent Person is still only half-complete), and you wind up doing crazy shit like moving house when you are 8 months pregnant, or traveling around the world when your kid is 2-1/2 (not recommended), or adding a new member to the family and then relocating everyone 6 months later. All of a sudden, I really understand what they mean when they say kids like stability. I’m starting to be a fan of it too, because without it, my lovely, intelligent, lively son, is on a constant mission to kick my ass.

  1. When I ask my friends what they most want/need/crave, they all say more time. I guess this is probably universal – part of the human condition – to feel like we can’t cram all the living we want to do into the day/week/month/lifetime. I am a chronic sufferer of the same predicament, which is why afternoons spent picnicing in the park in the summer sun are as precious to me as any fistful of coinage. We had such a picnic yesterday, with our closest London friends – another family of four. The picnic was by no means sylvan – there was relocation due to dogshit, kids pelting each other with balls, spills, thorns embedded in barefeet, toddlers running away every 5 seconds, babies crying from being squashed, a general refusal on the part of the smaller picnicers to eat any non-sugar based foods. But despite the sheer bedlam, there was still enough of the feeling of time stopping, enough sunlight filtering through the leafy tree above us, to make me feel that this time right here right now was, for once, enough.

Be well.



Photo by ToniVC

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Thursday, June 05, 2008

 

TRIPPING

I’ve been back from Ireland for a week, but I’m still tripping. Somehow, I lost my mental and emotional mooring during transit. Maybe it’s that we had always envisioned the trip as the boundary between normal London life and the end time. We knew that when we returned from our holiday, we would start packing in earnest and shutting everything down. And so we have. We leave our flat 2 weeks from today, and fly back to America for good 3 weeks from Sunday. Everywhere I go, I think “Is this the last time I’ll be here?” Every time I see someone I know, I wonder if I should say a proper goodbye or leave it to chance that we’ll be together again. I was in the playpark yesterday with a lovely French woman, whose family we’ve been friendly with. It was a rare sunny day, and the kids were climbing and playing and scrapping around. We sat at a picnic table and chatted, until finally, we just ran out of things to talk about. It isn’t that we’re not interested in each other – if we were staying here, I think she would become one of my close friends. But we know we probably won’t see one another again, and I could feel both of us realizing this. We’ve already covered all the superficial topics, so there’s nothing else to talk about unless we go deeper, and there isn’t time to do that. Almost as one mind, and even though there was plenty of daylight left, we got up, collected the children, said our goodbyes and with relief in our hearts, headed back to our homes.

I’ve never gotten over the strangeness of leaving people behind. When I was a kid, I used to get really mooky during the last few days of summer camp, because I knew that the girl I ate grape popsicles with everyday was going to go back to her home two towns over and that we would probably never see each other again. My last hours with every work colleague, student, actor, and friend have always been flavored with piquant nostalgia and the queasy recognition of life’s impermanence. How is it that can we know each other so deeply and specifically in this moment, and yet know that we will be complete strangers in the future? I don’t think I’ll ever get over this. Another reason why I’m glad to be heading back to San Francisco and staying put for awhile. I want accumulate a wealth of friends, colleagues and acquaintances, so that I have a nice fat human cushion to land on the next time I have to say goodbye to someone.

In other news of the day, here’s an ironic tidbit:

I just repaired my journal (using Gman’s glue and sticky tape), which he roughed up earlier this year in a fit of pique. He actually tore out the first page and then tore that page up into smaller pieces. I found them scattered around the house like confetti one day after I had been nursing the baby when he wanted to play with me. He also removed a postcard that I had affixed to the inside cover of the journal – a card created by a young San Francisco theatre maker advertising a show, which had caught my fancy and seemed to sum up my experience of 2006 (the year I started the journal). The card has the single word Zen printed on it, but the surface of the card is very rough – essentially the same texture as sandpaper. I loved this visual/visceral metaphor of the fact that a state of being present isn’t always full of touchy feely flowery goodness. Sometimes being present really rubs you raw. Having Gman literally rip the Zen out of my inner life seems like another cosmic joke – haha on me if I think any amount of thinking and scribbling is going to stand up to the deep, dense, and passionately complicated experience of being a mama. G-d have mercy on me, and please keep my cupboards full of sticky tape.

Be well.

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