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Thursday, August 27, 2015

an average weekday

She gets out of her car.  It’s an older car, but in fantastic condition, although it could use a good tune up and a bath, and the brakes squeak something fierce.  She reaches into her bag, switches out her home & car keys for her work keys.  This is much how she looks at her life.  Two very separate things.  Work and Home.  Funny enough, she has one personal key on her work keyring, and one office key on her home set.  She never thought about the poignancy of that much – but realizes that pretty much encapsulates her life.  Sometimes the two slip into eachother, and that is more than ok.  She loves her job.  It is a job.  It is not necessarily a career, they type that you go to school or train for for years, and it is your goal, your end game.  But she has made it her career and that is alright too.  She makes casual conversation with a coworker as she walks in, changing her usual route to be polite and finish the conversation.  She enters her office.  Her own office, all to herself.  Comes with being the manager.  The office manager.  It smells faintly floral, girly.  The scent welcomes her almost as if welcoming her home.  She turns on the lights, brings her garbage pail in from the hallway.  She changes her flip flops for snazzy dress sandals that will compliment her outfit, quite literally throws her bag and purse into the closet.  She has one of those “page-a-day” calendars on her desk, and she pulls off yesterday’s sheet, sometimes without looking at the new Word of the Day, sometimes reading it closely if it catches her attention.  She marks of yesterday on a bigger calendar behind her, as if she is counting down to something.  She is not.  It mostly reminds her of what day it is.  What day she is currently living.  To live in THAT day. 

She pulls herself up to her desk, rolling the chair on the protected carpet, keys in her password.
She pretty much starts her day just this way, everyday.  Some days she doesn’t have morning chit chat with a coworker, or she doesn’t have to change her shoes. But other than that it pretty much is the same. 

She has a binder that she shoves under her desk that she carries to and from work everyday.  It is a novel that she is working on.  She writes. She is a writer.  It took a long time for her to allow herself to call herself that.  A writer.  Maybe she will take a lunch break today, and work on her novel.  She thinks this everyday.  Some days, she does.  Most days, she does not. 

She loves her job.  She worked hard to get where she is – although to some it may not seem like much.  She is the Office Manager.  Or as her daughter says “a fancy secretary.”  Which is kind of true.  She is a fancy secretary.  She has been an office worker for going on 21 years now.  She started working in a factory, and CEO of the company decided she was too bright to be kept squirreled away in that dark damp dirty warehouse, and gave her an entry position in the office.  She worked her way up throughout that office, learning all the office skills necessary, and by the time that business closed, she was the Executive Assistant to the President and Vice President.  This was no small feat for her.  Everyone in her family, including her extended family was “blue collar” – working factory, warehouse, restaurant or manual labor jobs.  She became one of the first ones who had to “dress up” for work, ever.  She wasn’t a Professional, but she was the Professionals’ assistant, and that meant something!   

Now she is also a boss to 3 other secretaries, and that is the hardest part of her job.  So she feels she has earned the right to the title Manager.  So she corrects her daughter when she calls her a “secretary”.  She has earned her stripes, she has earned her title. 

She checks her email; there will be at least 10 new messages from overnight.  She checks her calendar, and her task list, reminding her of what she has to look forward to throughout the day.  She sends a good morning email to her best friend at the office.  They will email throughout the day, it is a nice friendly exchange that will help both of them get through the monotony or stress of the day ahead.

And so, it begins.  And ends at exactly 5 o’clock.  When she will pack up her bag, put back on her flip flops, put the garbage pail in the hallway, turn off the lights.  She will take out her car keys, and store her office keys.   She will slip out the fire escape door that no one is supposed to use unless it is an emergency.  She will get in her old dirty car, pull out of the parking space, her brakes squeaking the entire way (“You should have that looked at” people have said; she agrees).  She drives home.  She listens to an audio book on the way, or maybe a podcast.  She pulls into her driveway, and smiles.  Home.  She will see her husband and her daughter.  Her dog and her cat.  She will hug them all , in the way that they allow her too – each different degrees of intimacy and affection.

She washes dishes, and laundry.  She prepares a meal, feeds the animals.  She picks up items that have been left wherever they have been dropped throughout the house.  Her husband, daughter and she take the dog out, over and over again.  She irons her clothes and her daughter’s clothes for the next day.   She curls up next to her husband, preparing for sleep.  She has developed the habit that she must touch him.  Some part of her body, her bare skin, HAS to be touching his bare skin.  She wonders about this habit every night before she goes to sleep.  Every night.  How did this become a habit? and what would she ever do if he was not there?  She drifts off to sleep to the sounds of a music channel on the TV.  She has set the timer, it will shut off while she is already in dreamland. 

She will wake up to the sound of the dog whining to go out, she will pull on a pair of sweat pants and flip flops, and take the dog out to pee on the front lawn.  The air will be dewy and cool, and silent.  Even the birds will still be sleeping.  She will maybe go back to sleep for an hour, maybe not. 


And she will, begin her day again.   

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Teachers

Teachers who affected your life:

Miss Walker.  My curly haired 3rd grade teacher.  She was young and spirited.  She loved Miss Piggy and talking French.  She was the first one to identify that I was smart, that I had something special.  She got a few of us a special French tutor just because she thought it would be fun.  She gave me creative writing prompts when I was bored in class. 

SHE GAVE ME CREATIVE WRITING PROMPTS when I was bored in class. 

Miss Brown.  She was frustrated and cold.  Because I was smart, she felt demeaned and without use.  What good is a teacher to a student who already knows?  She found out my weakness, and exposed it in front of the entire class.  Tearing open my wound, letting it bleed and fester for all to watch, point and giggle at my discomfort. 

SHE SCARRED ME.

Mr. McCreven.  Taught me it was ok to ask why.  Sometimes he had the answers.  Sometimes he didn’t.  And that was ok too.

Miss Suraci.  Taught me that art is not just paints, pastels, or clay.  Taught me that a teacher can also be a friend, a protector, and a teacher should allow you to grow and learn at their own speed, sometimes on their own path.

THEY HELPED ME GROW.




  

Does it make you sad?

“Does talking about your dead loved ones make you sad?” 

“No.”  said her father, “Sad isn’t the right word for it anymore.”  He explained, “there are many stages of grief.  Many emotions you go through.  You feel different things at different times.  But right now, it doesn’t make me sad.  I like talking about them because we are talking about happy times.  We are remembering happy fun times with them, and it makes my heart feel good.” 

“Do you miss them?”

“Yes I miss them.  I miss talking to them, and having them part of my life.  But its not so sad anymore.” 


I wanted to disagree.  It is sad.  Its sad that they didn’t stick around to see what an awesome mom I am, dad he is or what an awesome daughter we have.  (Don’t feed me the line, that they “know”.  Knowing is different than seeing, and experiencing.  I KNOW I like Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, that’s entirely different than EATING Ben & Jerry’s ice cream!) .  They didn’t get to read my blog or books, or even know that I started writing again.   They didn’t meet me – or Ed.  Or attend our wedding. (referring to grandparents here).   They didn’t get to nod in approval or gush about how perfect we are together.  They didn’t get to see us make the good decisions or even the bad decisions.  They didn’t get to enjoy the fact that we finally figured out who are true friends are, and are still making them!  And that is sad.  Selfish.  And sad.


Some of the people we’ve lost have been gone a long time, and some just a little time.  Her Dad made it sound like its all the same in the end.  That eventually you move on, and everything becomes a happy memory.  That’s not always true.  But that is ok.  You will learn from it.  You will grow from it.  And it will be ok.   

(I agree whole-heartedly that talking about them was not the part that made you sad.  Just the reality of it)    

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

What Were You Wearing?

Let me tell you a little story:

There was this park that pretty much everyone we knew who walked to school, to the high school, would cut through.  There wasn't exactly a proper path from the park to the school, but generations of students cutting through the park had worn down a pretty clear trail to follow.  It would bring you out right next to the ice rink, cutting out a good 15 minutes of the walk.  

When I was in high school, I was part of those usual feet that blazened that path.  Usually with a friend or two.  Junior year, however, a scandal had erupted.  A man started approaching girls while they walked through the park.  He propositioned them.  He grabbed them.  He tried to touch them in places that he shouldn’t.  We were warned, “Do not cut through the park.”  We would walk the long way around.  Staying to the actual sidewalks, not the twisting forest hidden path of the park.  But every day we saw police cars pulling in and out of the park’s entrances.  Patrolling the area for the culprit.  

I had gotten into a fight with my best friend.  She was no longer talking to me.  And I was left to walking to school by myself.  I had seen those police cars in the park.  That was good, right?  Police presence meant it was safe.  So I cut through the park.  And I cut through that park every day.  And nothing happened.  

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

a different kind of Pride

This may not be my most eloquent entry.  I am writing it spontaneously with a lot of emotion oozing from the words – all that emotion doesn’t come out eloquent sometimes.  I apologize.   A little.  #sorryNotsorry

Had a sweet conversation with my darling daughter this morning, so much so that I need to get it down “on paper” before the feelings fade, and it is less than a memory. 

I was telling her the story about how My uncle Eddie gave me the 45 of David Bowie’s Fame (not to mention I had to explain to her what a 45 was!!).  I described him as a cool uncle, very young and spirited.  I’m not even sure if that is accurate, because he died when I was 8.  But that is how I remember him.  She asks if he was alive now, would she like him; would he like her.  And as per usual, she asked how he died.  She asks this every time we discuss death.  I think she is still trying to figure death out – what causes it, what to be worried about.  “Brain Tumor.”

 Her eyes stormed over and she asked, “You mean cancer?”  Cancer is very much the C word to her.  It kills people.  I tried to explain that if he lived today, that modern science and medicine probably would have been able to save him.  I’m not exactly positive that is true – but it is the story that I tell myself, and that I believe to be true.  I hear so many stories about people with Brain Tumors, and living.  So why not Uncle Eddie? 

She apologizes.  She apologizes for “making me talk about dead people.”  I smile.  “Well, there are a lot of dead people in my life to talk about, unfortunately.  But I don’t mind talking about them, Kadence.  I actually like to talk about them, it helps to keep them alive through my memories. “ 

She says something about them not really being dead because we keep them alive in our hearts.  A line she got somewhere, that she was fed by one of us.  Not that I don’t believe it, because I do.  It just sounds funny coming out of her mouth. 

Then comes the sweet part, “Know what?  I bet they would be so proud of you.”  Even as I write down her words, tears well up in my eyes.  My darling daughter, telling ME that my parents would be proud of me.  Woooof the air is taken from my lungs, “They would be proud that you are a good person, and you have made a great family.” 

I can’t think of a better compliment or notion or gift that she could ever give me.  The notion that She is proud of me.  The notion that she believes that my dead parents would be proud of me, and that I am a good person.  Yes – I know I am a good person.  And I know my parents would be proud of me.  But more so, its that SHE is proud of me.  The thought that she, my little 10 year old flighty ball of spitfire, thinks about my losses.  Really our losses – but she thinks about me as a person, and about MY losses and how they affect me.  And she thought enough about it to say it outloud, to put it into words.  Words that touched my soul.  And I am crying as I write this – because she is growing into such a sweet loving little lady (even though you might think she would kick your butt, the bruising Karate Champion that she is).  And of course I am proud of her.  Proud of who she is and who she is becoming. 

And I don’t think it is all our doing.  You might say, of course she is becoming a good person, a loving person – because that is how you are bringing her up.  BUT, I think it is also just WHO she is.  And we are just lucky to be present in her life to bask in it. 

Happy Mother’s Day to me! 



Sunday, February 8, 2015

When the Clock Strikes Twelve

“Tis now the very witching time of night,
When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out
Contagion to this world. Now could I drink hot blood
And do such bitter business as the day would quake to look on.” 
     -  Shakespeare, Hamlet.  Scene III, act II  

My daughter likes to ask:  What is your biggest fear?  What are you afraid of?  I never have a very interesting answer for her.

I used to be afraid of midnight. By that I mean 12:00 a.m.  Not 11:59 or 12:01.  but 12:00.  What’s the difference, you might ask.  And I don’t have a good explanation for you.  I know this.  For some reason I was convinced that at 12:00 midnight, the veil between worlds was thinnest. Midnight when creatures such as witches, demons, ghosts, ghouls, and any other supernatural things that went bump in the night, would appear and their black magic would be the most powerful.   Or maybe the door between the living and the dead was opened.  And it was only then, at exactly 12:00 midnight, you could be affected.  

“Why is it always Midnight?”  asked Shrek at some point (Shrek 2).

I would hide my face under the covers, as children do.  Midnight would come.  I could not stop it.  But I could remain safe beneath my blankets.  Whatever was out there, if I couldn't see it, it could see me.  Typical child mentality.  I literally would look at the clock.  If it was 11:58/59, I would tunnel myself under the covers until midnight had passed.  Come 12:01 a.m., I would be safe to breathe the fresh air again.  

I knew it was illogical.  I knew it made no sense.  Even with a child mentality, I could reason with myself, how is it possible that if the monsters were there at 12:00; why would they be gone at 12:01?  But still, if my eyes caught that clock at 12:00 a.m; my heart would race and panic would set in.

I know what you are thinking - how is a child even UP at midnight?  Well, this irrational fear stayed with me for a very long time.  Past adolescence.  Right up until adulthood.  Very young adulthood.  But adulthood still.  

How did I conquer this weird fear?  Logic.  Sort of.  Often in my house, and I hear it from other people’s experiences also, which housed multiple clocks - these clocks were NEVER set to the same time.  If it were 12:00 in the kitchen, it very well might be 11:58 in the living room and 12:02 in the bedroom.  Which one was correct?  Which one would the monsters be aligned with?  And then …. time zones … How do we know what time zone the spiritual world is in?  Maybe it is only 11:00 in their zone; or 3:00 tomorrow already; and the veil or door happened already, and I was oblivious to it, AND I survived it without an issue.  


Now my fears are so adult. Safety for my loved ones. Stability. Security. Health. Happiness. Icy Roads on a winter's day. Not all that exciting. Ghosts, Goblins, Witches and things that go bump in the night don't fall into my schedule. Plus .... who is awake at that hour anyway these days. :::yawn::::