Just Another Sunday

Don’t be dissuaded about reading this post when you come upon sections that seem dreary or downright depressing. I’ll just leave it at that.

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During my morning perusal of BBC.com I encountered several videos I intend to view, but haven’t yet (my house guests are still asleep, so I do not want to wake them with noisy videos). First, there’s a video about The Truth Behind the Nordic Myth of Endless Wealth, that ostensibly answers the question: “How does Finland, which has repeatedly been ranked the world’s happiest country, set limits on individual greed?” Second is a video that addresses who has the sexiest accent (voix de chambre à coucher, or “bedroom voice”) that gives some speakers superior powers of seduction.

How could I not want to view those videos? I continue to be extremely impressed with BBC content, both online and on television. BBC seems less interested in promoting itself than in promoting the enjoyable acquisition of knowledge (both valuable knowledge and stuff that’s simply interesting). I like 3-10 minute videos that shake the cobwebs out of my head and cause me to laugh or tilt my head inquisitively or drag from my eyes unwilling tears.

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But even in the face of joyous experiences with BBC online, chaos continued, unabated, overnight while I slept. A monstrous fire in a Baghdad hospital killed more than eighty people and left well over one hundred injured. Ash and debris from La Soufrière volcano continued to coat the Caribbean island of St. Vincent. International news media continued to report on the deaths of 53 crew members on an Indonesian submarine that was in the midst of a training exercise off the coast of Bali.

We wish it would all just stop. Give us a break from the carnage and pain. Just stop! But we know it won’t, because we live on a planet with so many opportunities for chaos and apocalypse. Instantaneous news coverage causes us to absorb far more evidence of the horrors of life on our planet than ever before. Maybe there’s more today than yesterday, maybe not. But it seems like the world is swirling toward a cataclysmic end. Welcome to every day of our lives.

I suspect the other side of the coin today, though, is equally moving. What of the heroic efforts to save people from the Baghdad fire? What of the neighbors protecting neighbors and giving one another shelter in the shadow of La Soufrière? What of the intensity of the efforts, albeit unsuccessful, to find and save the Indonesian crew? As awful as circumstances can be, I have to believe the responses to catastrophe and devastation are collectively far greater and more impactful than the carnage to which they react. Admittedly, it’s hard to stay even remotely positive in the face of everything we hear and see, but belief in humanity is our only option, lest we give in to the sense that we are spiraling toward oblivion.

As fervently as I argue that we must acknowledge that all the negativity is just a fraction of our experience, I regularly give in to the sense that our hope for good news is pointless. Somehow, though, I think we have to encourage one another to lift ourselves up out of the quagmire of anguish and desperation. Somehow.

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Today’s weather in Hot Springs Village should help improve moods. The weather forecast—for sun and mild temperatures—offers the expectation of a pleasant day. My friends will leave today, I suppose, despite my wish they could stay. But at least they should experience good weather on their drive back home. And I should have a nice day that might encourage me to blow pollen and leaves off my deck; and get back to cleaning up the garage, a task I’ve put off since I was younger, taller, and better looking. I promised myself this weekend would be one of laziness; there’s still time to keep my promise.

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Last night, my friends and I reminisced about the old days, those times in the late 1970s and early 1980s when alternative news weeklies had want-ad sections that included “seeking” ads like this:

You were standing in the lobby of the Grand Theatre, wearing a peach blouse and black slacks. I stood next to the box office; longish blond hair under a brown fedora, wearing black leather jacket. We should meet. We belong together. Call me at 88-43-3533.

That conversation reminded me of a film, Desperately Seeking Susan. I remembered virtually nothing of the film but the name. The female component of my pair of friends recalled that it starred Madonna and Rosanna Arquette (my friend’s memory is incredible…I think she remembers every detail of every experience we’ve ever had or discussed). That film, I think, was one of several that I saw around that time (mid 1980s) that I liked but about which I remember virtually nothing. Then, again, I remember virtually nothing about films I’ve watched in the last year, or six months, or six weeks. I wonder whether my memory has always been as poor as it seems to be now? Perhaps I should be taking memory-improving drugs. Modafinil might be that drug. According to an article in Scientific American from March 2016, the drug is safe. But, at the time of the article, studies on the long-term safety and effectiveness of the drug had not been completed. If I were more passionate about the topic, I would have followed up with more recent research. Apparently I am not especially passionate about the fact that my memory is very, very, very short-term. Oh, well.

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The promised/warned onslaught of attempted seductions has not materialized yet. I rather suspect it won’t either. I’m talking about the assertions people have made about my status as a widower. People warned me (or promised, depending on perspective) that my new classification as widower would result in a frenzy of single (or married but adventuresome) women making overtures toward me. It has not unfolded. And, as I think about it, I doubt that it will. Why, I ask myself, would it happen now in my geezerhood when it never happened before during what might have been considered my prime (assuming I had a prime)? It might be different if I were tall, thin, muscular, and had a chiseled handsome face. But, even then, an alluring personality would be required. In other words, if I were someone else. Instead, I am short, plump in the extreme, have sagging biceps and pecs, a roundish seal-like face that comes complete with multiple chins, and the personality of an angry, intolerant hermit.

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A Positive Spin

Wine, cheese, hard Spanish chorizo, summer sausage, and far-reaching conversations made for an outstanding Friday evening. And that was after a filling and satisfying lunch at El Jimador. My friends and I stayed up talking and enjoying one another’s company until about 12:30 a.m. I could have stayed up later, but it’s good that I didn’t; if I had, I probably would still be asleep. I awoke just after 6, surprised that I felt so good. And after a shave and a shower, I felt even better. Just before 7, I went to the grocery store to buy bread (how can one run out of bread and fail to replace it when visitors are coming?). When I returned, my friends already were up and drinking coffee. All of us, I think, felt good, with no after-effects of the wine. And I continue to feel good. Today, though it’s a bit dark and dreary and rainy, promises to be a good one. Depending on the weather, we may wander the highways and byways around the Village a bit later. In the interim, we will continue to drink coffee, relax. and enjoy the company of friends.

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Today, I am leaving all my “to-do” worries behind; Monday is soon enough. Except one of my friends insists that my refrigerator needs a major reorganizing, which will involve discarding some items. I suppose the refrigerated items older than three years can be safely discarded without great loss. We’ll see. I’ll not worry about that. Just relax. Have fun. Kick back and embrace the opportunity to sit in the company of good friends.

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A few thoughts about gratitude:

  • “You cannot do a kindness too soon because you never know how soon it will be too late.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
  • “Gratitude turns what we have into enough.” ~ Anonymous ~
  • “Let us rise up and be thankful, for if we didn’t learn a lot today, at least we learned a little, and if we didn’t learn a little, at least we didn’t get sick, and if we got sick, at least we didn’t die; so, let us all be thankful.” ~ Buddha ~
  • “When I started counting my blessings, my whole life turned around.” ~ Willie Nelson ~

And there you have it; a way to start a day with a positive spin.

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Default

My memory is a bit dim as far as when and where, but I remember seeing large numbers of benches and tables in a public space, like a park. Every one of the tables was occupied by two people, sitting across from one another, playing checkers or some similar games. Most, maybe all, of the people sitting playing games were elderly. Wherever this took place, I assumed all the people lived in nearby apartments. I wondered what their day-by-day lives were like when they weren’t playing games in the park. Did they read, watch television, sew, do crafts, clean up the apartment, cook, etc.? Or did they have partners or helpmates who did the more strenuous work for them? Had they ever worked? Were they retired? I think this image might have been from a trip I made overseas; maybe in China? Or, I suppose, it could have been somewhere in New York City. I wonder why it’s on my mind this morning? Usually, when such scenes just pop into my head, they are prompts I will use in writing a piece of fiction. We’ll see.

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I look in the mirror and see who I was, not who I am. I see the countless flaws which, like knives, carved away the meat and left me with fat and gristle, molded into the shape that remains. If I can be happy with the fat and gristle, I can be happy with myself.

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There was a time, not so very long ago, that I felt certain I would walk through fire to protect the woman I loved.  Now that she is gone, the passion and resolve to do that unimaginable, unthinkable thing is gone, too. Nothing matters as much any more. I do not care as much about anything as I once did.

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1:30. 2:30. 3:45. My third waking was the charm. I got up, shaved, took a shower, got dressed, made the bed, put a load of clothes in the washer, tidied up the kitchen a bit, made coffee, and sat down here to think. It’s 4:59, just seconds away from straight-up 5:00 a.m. And away I go.

With several more episodes of Good Girls under my belt (I’m now into season 2), I went to bed around 10:00. I did not watch news at 5:30, at 6:00, at 10:00; so I am clueless about the situation around the state, the country, and the world. I suspect I would have been awakened had we entered into a nuclear conflict with India, so that prospect doesn’t concern me much at the moment.

I got a haircut yesterday, opting to go to Great Clips in Hot Springs, which I thought would be quick, easy, and cheap. After checking in, I waited twenty minutes in my car before being summoned to enter the building. Apparently, I had gone to another outlet in the chain and had given my cell number; my haircut person (are they known these days as barbers?) examined my record and told me how I wanted my hair cut. I accepted her word for it, not recalling how it might have been cut during another visit to an outlet in the chain long, long ago. When the haircut person had finished, twirling me around to take a look in the mirror, I realized I prefer my hair considerably shorter on the sides. But I opted to accept the finished product, making a mental note to return to my regular barber henceforth. As for cheap, it cost me two dollars more than my regular barber, plus a tip, bumped up to parallel the higher cost of the haircut. But, at least I do not look as shaggy as before, so I have no legitimate complaints.

Before the haircut, I went to Lowe’s, intending to buy some light fixtures to replace the unreliable ones in the crawlspace beneath my house. The visit was a waste of time, inasmuch as the fixtures I had hoped to buy (and previously bought online for another application) were nowhere to be found. I suppose I made the trip to town mostly to get out of the house; it’s so damn much easier and more convenient to order online. I can then have the product either delivered to my house or to my car in the parking lot, avoiding a trip into the store. I’ll order online. But there’s no rush.

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I’ve stopped and started on this post so many times I’m not sure what I’ve written. Between spells of writing, I’ve moved clean clothes from the washer to the dryer and hung the clothes after they dried. I paused to cook and eat the bacon remaining in the refrigerator. I’ve had a glass of tomato juice, jazzed up with a few shakes from the Tabasco Sauce bottle.  And I explored the news a bit, since I missed it yesterday. It’s now past time to hang the hummingbird feeders; I took them in early yesterday. After I took them down, I saw a few hummingbirds fly up to the empty space where the feeders had been; I heard their tiny voices curse me for taking their nectar away early. Hummingbird curses are extremely crude; even the Blue Jays in the area find the hummingbird obscenities offensive.

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My mood this morning been swinging like the bob of a pendulum. At the moment, it’s high on the trajectory across its arc. But when it’s low, it seems to slow to a crawl. I think I need to do something to elevate and smooth my mood. I know just the thing! In an ideal world, my mood would always default to the positive. But in this world, the default seems to at the opposite end. I must figure out a way to change my default.

 

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Restart the Day

My desk chair is wholly inadequate. It does not maintain my vertical position. Slowly—sometimes suddenly—the back of the chair tilts so that I find myself reclining in front of the computer. I’ve been advised to buy a nice, sturdy, ergonomically correct executive chair. I would do exactly that if I had some idea of reasonably-priced brands or models. I consider $1679 for a new Herman Miller Aeron chair—even $699 for a refurbished model –exceptionally pricey. But what do I know? I think the chair in which I’m sitting cost around $125 when it was new, about ten years ago. And it wasn’t especially high-end, even then. Another “to-do” item to add to my ever-expanding list.

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I learned, from an online NPR article, that Cy Vance, Jr., Manhattan’s District Attorney, announced on April 21 that he is requesting dismissal of around 900 cases related to prostitution and unlicensed massage. In addition, he is seeking dismissal of another 5,000 cases involving the state’s anti-loitering statute, which was removed from the New York State penal code earlier this year. Prosecutions for “loitering for the purpose of prostitution” will be vacated under Vance’s new policy.

I am in favor of removing the damage inflicted on people for engaging in “victimless” crimes. But frequently I hear and read commentaries that argue the sex trade is not victimless; that workers in the sex trades often are abused—either physically or emotionally or financially—by their customers. The argument often suggests the customers, but not the workers, should be prosecuted. My view, for this fleeting moment, is that customers who engage in inflicting such things on sex workers should be prosecuted; otherwise, leave people alone. Some form of regulation of the trade may be the best way of protecting workers. I have no idea how the number of sex trade prosecutions compares to other offenses, but I suspect it is not significant. Yet removing those prosecutions from the courts and removing policing (which, from my reading of the article, is not clear but probably is not a given) would no doubt help prosecutors and police. Interesting stuff to think about, though. Little changes in society, happening a bit at a time, are what brings about big changes.

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Sometimes, it takes months of personal contact with a person for me to begin to get a “reading” on what sort of person is beneath the façade. Other times, it’s just a matter of days. And yet others it takes only a momentary observation of a behavior to determine what a person is like, at the core. And, of course, I’ve known people for years, thinking I knew their core personalities, only to discover that either I was wrong all along or their personalities changed. And these “readings” or knowledge or whatever I might call them can be positive or negative. I have had occasion to judge and/or dislike a person for a rather lengthy period and, to my surprise, change my opinion in time. But that’ a rarity. Usually, shifts in my judgments, if they appear, go toward the negative.

Obviously, when I determine what a person is like “at the core,” it’s just my judgment; but I rely on it. When my judgment proves harsh and wrong, I’m disappointed in myself, but glad for the disappointment, too. When my positive assessment proves wrong, I’m disappointed in myself for making a bad call. And I am disappointed in and extremely wary of the person I misjudged as someone better than I subsequently believed them to be.

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Every day, my stamina seems to decline a bit more. My breathing becomes more labored. My wheezing intensifies. My strength slips, at least a shade, from the day before. I am too young for this. But I’m quickly approaching an age-appropriate point; then, all my symptoms will be normal and natural and in keeping with the predictable decay that comes with old age.

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My coffee no longer seems to have the teeth it once had. Its strength seems to have slipped a bit. I wonder whether my coffee brand has changed its sources or processes? Or, perhaps, I grew to like the French press version so much that the old standby no longer holds the magic. One day, soon, I will visit a couple of coffee shops where, ostensibly, I can get very good coffee. Those visits will help me determine how I got into, and how to get out of, this predicament.

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Sometimes, it is best for me to simply allow my fingers to do what they will with my thoughts. And, then, I learn by reading what I’ve written and thinking about my state of mind when I wrote the words. Today, I began with a complaint and ran with that theme all the way through. I do not want to end this post on a negative note, so I will quote, again, from The Essence of Zen. And, with this quotation, I will restart the day.

Calm in quietude is not real calm.
When you can be calm in the midst of activity,
this is the true state of nature.
Happiness in comfort is not real happiness.
When you can be happy
in the midst of hardship,
then you see the true potential of
the mind.

~Huanchu Daoren~

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Think a Lot

I have mixed feelings about yesterday’s conviction of Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd. While I think justice was served (who could think otherwise, having seen the video of Chauvin’s knee on Floyd’s neck?), I am conflicted by that very thought. I “think” the jury made the right decision, but I did not hear all the arguments presented by both sides in the trial. My sense of justice is no doubt colored by the symbolism of a White cop deliberately pinning a Black man on the ground; under the White cop’s knee, no less. I had decided, before the jury even heard the opening arguments in the case, that Chauvin was guilty. Now that the jury’s verdict has validated my personal sense of vigilante justice, I feel vindicated. I suspect my satisfaction with the jury’s decision was influenced by my belief that the jury “finally got it right” by convicting a White police officer who, in the line of duty, murdered a Black man. Again, though, I do not know all the facts in all the cases. My strong belief that systemic racism frequently plays a part in the terrible outcomes of engagements between White officers and Black suspects seems to override another strong belief. That the justice system, not I, should be allowed to make the final call. But the justice system seems to be even more imbued with systemic racism than other elements of our social structure. Conflicted. That word keeps coming back to me. The definition of justice depends on which part of the spectrum of “justice” is most visible; the point at which truth prevails or the dark places where truth is hidden, supplanted by lies masquerading as facts?

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I spent a fair amount of time writing, reviewing, and rewriting the paragraph above. It’s still not satisfactory; I left out too much of what I wanted to say because the paragraph would have grown to the size of a novel. Finally, though, I abandoned the effort because I realize my thoughts on the issue do not matter; not in the overall scheme of things. Whether John Swinburn thinks justice was served is irrelevant; and so is the fact that he saw fit to write about his perspective. Too often, I mistake my perspectives about matters of substance for contributions to broader understanding. Until my perspectives shape others’ viewpoints, my unique take on issues is no more important than the diameter of a particular mosquito’s right front leg.

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One of those rare, fragmentary memories I have of my childhood involves looking through the eyepiece of a microscope. The microscope belonged to me, though I do not recall how I came to have it; my parents, I assume, bought it for me. Looking through that microscope was like entering an utterly enchanting world. I examined blood cells and human hairs and salt crystals and who know how many hundreds or thousands of other fascinating things. There was a trick, as I recall, to placing objects between glass slides before viewing the objects. I think the top piece of glass was placed at the end of the bottom piece, then slid over. But memory tells me that wasn’t always the proper way, because some objects or materials would slide to the edge of the bottom slide as the top slide slid over it. I must have been eight or ten years old when I got my first microscope. I think I had more than one over the years. I have no memory of what happened to them. I suspect I simply tired of using them and they collected dust in the closet until someone—me, my parents?—discarded them or gave them away to friends or donated them to a school. I wish I had access to a microscope now, though I have no idea what I would use it for. Maybe it would serve only to trigger memories. Or maybe it would languish in a closet, the way the better of my cameras has done.

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Only recently have I returned to my daily practice of thumbing through my precious little book, The Essence of Zen: An Anthology of Quotations, every morning. I used to go to it each day before I began to write. Reading random quotations seemed to help calm the start of the day just a little. I’m trying to get back into the practice. I am rediscovering how it can arrange my thoughts so they are aligned with an objective of achieving at least a taste of tranquility. I should have read this one before I began writing this morning:

What a delight it is
When I blow away the ash,
To watch the crimson
Of the glowing fire
And hear the water boil.

~Tachibana Akemi~

As I contemplate the words I’ve just typed, it occurs to me that I do not need others to think about me or to give priority to my comfort or happiness. I need only to take comfort in the little things that serve as my protective cocoon.

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These lyrics came to mind, just now, from Father and Son, by Cat Stevens,

But take your time, think a lot
Think of everything you’ve got
For you will still be here tomorrow
But your dreams may not

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Pagoda

Until this morning, I have given the subject of pagodas only a passing nod of attention. But for reasons hidden inside my brain and outside my sphere of consciousness, I felt compelled to explore why I suddenly said to myself this morning, “I want to live in a pagoda.” Despite the fact that pagodas typically are not occupied as living quarters, I inexplicably had a yearning to  live in one. How, I wondered, could I wish to live in a structure about which I had, at best, only a superficial knowledge? I will continue to wonder why; I still do not understand the appeal of pagoda living, though it remains as a magnetic attraction somewhere inside of me.

Perhaps I had in mind a tall pagoda that affords a sweeping view, like the Pagoda of Fogong Temple, a Chinese pagoda built completely of wood in 1056 (the oldest such wooden pagoda structure in China). Standing almost 221 feet tall, the edifice has been called an “ultimate death shrine to the Buddha of the age.” The meaning of that description eludes me, though something about it is deeply appealing. Before I go on, I should say that a pagoda is a tiered tower with multiple eaves; pagodas are common to China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam and other parts of Asia. Typically, they were built to have a religious function, most commonly Buddhist but sometimes Taoist.

I recall, years ago, visiting the Fort Worth Japanese Gardens. I know there is a small pagoda there, as well as a tsukimi (moon-viewing) deck. The place is quiet and beautiful, a lovely oasis of tranquility with Zen gardens, waterfalls, and walking paths. It is, in my mind, a monument to contemplation; a place where stress is soothed away with the sounds and sights of serenity. Maybe that’s what appeals to me this morning. Maybe I want to live in a pagoda because I envision a pagoda as a calm oasis, a refuge from raging emotions and madness, both my own and those of others around me.

A refuge. An oasis. A place to to which I might retreat from the insanity of the world in which I find myself. But serenity cannot be found in a place; a building is just a building. Chaos can slide in through the doors and windows left ajar. A sense of peace and tranquility does not arise simply from being in a location; that state of mental calm requires intensive hard work to achieve. Stepping inside the entrance to a pagoda will not magically transform stress into relaxation. Yet, I think the characteristics of a place can and do contribute to achieving a sense of serenity. When an edifice is constructed with the purpose of engendering peace and calmness, there’s something about the building that contributes to emotional smoothing. Calm, unchained to drama or mental contortions or emotional reactions to perceived slights. And on and on.

As I consider my odd statement this morning, “I want to live in a pagoda,” I think I understand what prompted the desire. Though the architecture of a pagoda is intriguing (which is new, in that I distinctly remember disliking the appearance of pagodas in years gone by), it’s the intent of the architecture I’m after. It’s the sense of appreciation and gratitude and deep, almost cellular, quietude and serenity I envision in the architecture.

We make our own happiness and we make our own sadness and we create our own cocoons of worry or resentment or safety. Places simply house environments where our emotions attempt to take root. I think the structure of pagodas (and chapels and sanctuaries and temples and shrines and so forth) simply call attention to the purpose of the building, thereby increasing the likelihood that the building will serve its calming purpose. But that’s just my mind talking; I have no reliable knowledge on the matter, which is true of most of my opinions. I simply decide what to think and I think it into my own reality.

Smooth stones also can contribute to a sense of peace. So can symbols of all kinds.  ☮ and  ∞ and others. The trick is to transform symbols and places and structures into reality. That is, indeed, a trick. Maybe the first step in achieving it is to want to live in a pagoda.

Under this tree, where light and shade
Speckle the grass like a Thrush’s breast,
Here, in this green and quiet place,
I give myself to peace and rest.

~W.H. Davis~

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Passion

My calendar for today is surprisingly empty. Though I have plenty to do, nothing is truly pressing. I may attempt to do today what I had planned for yesterday. Or I may take the day for myself, by myself. I think I’d rather spend some time in the presence of someone else, but last minute pop-ins seem to be a think of the past. Maybe the 1950s, with the decade’s saccharine purity and odious innocence, ruined extemporaneous visits. I hope not, but…who knows.

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During the night last night, I woke myself up a few times by speaking in a loud voice to myself…asking myself questions, answering some of them, and otherwise making enough noise that I could not sleep over the din. A couple of years ago, I wrote briefly about hypnagogia and hypnic jerks, involving the state of consciousness leading from wakefulness to sleep. I frequently experience hypnic jerks during the day as I sit at my desk, trying to stay awake while typing (or trying to type). My experience last night was the opposite of hypnagogia. It was hypnopompia, the state of consciousness while coming out of sleep into wakefulness. Whether hypnopompia can occur repeatedly (like my experiences last night suggest) during the same circadian rhythm sleep cycle or not, my experience seems to indicate it can. I have very definite recollections of experiencing both hypnagogia and hypnopompia on multiple occasions. I just wish I better understood those rather odd states of consciousness. But like so many other of my curiosities, the strength of my interest is insufficient to merit a deeper, more meaningful, and ultimately fully informative exploration. In other words, my experience is just another example of my very broad but utterly shallow interests. Still, I know more for the moment (oh, I will forget) than I knew a short while ago when I started to explore what to call my experience.

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A few days ago, I wrote again (for the umpteenth time) about my visions of driving to desolate places. A friend left me some comments last night, suggesting a place where I might find the seclusion I’m after. I would need to take a ferry from Newfoundland to Labrador. I am fully prepared to do that when the time is right and I have settled the mass of bureaucracy in which I am embroiled. I think my interest in the Canadian Maritimes is sufficiently deep AND broad to allow me to learn what I’ll need to know before I embark on such a trip. In an ideal world, I would be joined on the trip by someone who’s equally introverted, which means someone who can go for hours and hours without speaking while absorbing the views outside the window, but who can then engage in discussions that reveal the depth of personality that hides behind the protective outer shell. I do love my solitude and isolation, but I prefer it with a side of intimacy and openness. In other words, I may be almost impossible to be with because my personalities fight with one another. At least I win some of those battles.

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The friend who visited me recently, the fellow poet, left a book of poetry for me. It is entitled “The Cure for Sorrow: A Book of Blessings for Times of Grief.” It was written by Jan Richardson, an ordained Methodist minister, writer, and artist. Though heavily clothed in religious overtones and undertones, much of the content of the poems is quite relevant regardless of one’s religious perspectives or lack thereof. The poetry is rich and heavy with meaning and comfort, while simultaneously heart-rending and brutal in its honesty. I suspect I’ll return to the book regularly, picking poems at random to read and absorb and understand. One of the poems, Blessing the Tools of Grief, explores how the same tools of grief that break us apart can heal. Here’s the last stanza:

the joining that comes
piece to piece
in a pattern
that will never be
the same
but will leave us
inexplicably whole.

In reading what Richardson wrote, I have the sense that she experienced the emotions she examines. The dust jacket of the book reveals that she had, indeed, experienced intense grief. Her husband, singer/songwriter Garrison Doles, died unexpectedly.

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My television viewing of late has been all over the map. I watched an entire series (one season, four episodes) of Deep Water, an Australian program described as “gritty.” It’s about murders, both old and new, of gay men in and around Bondi Beach. I could not stay awake during the entire hour and 47 minutes of Thunder Force, an “irreverent” film about strange superheroes; just not my thing. I am deeply enmeshed in season two of Arrested Development‘s five seasons. Though I’m enjoying it, it’s one of those shows that may lose me to something grittier and more challenging before I make it through all five seasons. I watched the entirety of Season One of Paranoid, described as a “dark, cerebral British crime drama.” As far as I know, it only lasted one season; too bad—I enjoyed it. I really enjoyed My Octopus Teacher, a documentary about, what else, an octopus.  And I was entranced by Inhuman Resources, a French crime drama also described as “gritty” and “dark.” Only one season is available on Netflix, but inasmuch as that was only from last year, it’s possible more will be coming. I hope so. Other programs I’ve watched and enjoyed in the relatively recent past include: Warrior, a gritty Danish drama and To the Lake, a Russian sci-fi series. I should create a comprehensive list, with brief synopsis, of programs/series/films I watch. A friend suggested just that; he offered up the idea that we could do that as a group endeavor from people at the church. Worth a shot, I say.

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My grand plans for yesterday went in a slightly different direction than expected, but I did make a dent in my fantasies, as shown below:

  • Vacuuming the car and making its interior more or less livable
  • Neatening the garage and discarding unnecessary “stuff”
  • Sweeping the garage floor and cleaning up the “workspace” behind the garage
  • Making the guest bed
  • Pressure-washing the deck, removing massive amounts of pollen

The bed got made, thanks to considerable assistance from my sister-in-law. For some reason, it’s harder to make that bed than the one I sleep in, the one in the master bedroom.

Despite failing to knock off the other four items on the list, yesterday morning was extremely productive, though I can’t take credit. I spent much of the morning watching my sister-in-law organizing my late wife’s clothes, stuff I’ve been unable to bring myself to sort through. I’ve sorted through some of it, but I’ve left most of it to my sister-in-law. She’s already been through a good bit of my the clothes, but there was quite a lot left. When I’ve begun to go through it, my emotions kicked in; they behaved badly, so I had to back away. I’m fortunate that my sister-in-law has been both present and willing to go through things. Today, while she was sorting clothes, I spent some time going through jewelry. Another opportunity for me to demonstrate my weakness; but I came across quite a few items that brought back lovely memories. There’s a long, long way to go. I’ve almost decided to ask my sister and my nieces whether they are interested in some of my wife’s jewelry. But I may decide I can’t part with some of them, despite the fact that they have no practical use to me. Practicality has no bearing in retrieving one’s love from a vault that’s not closed and won’t be until the end of time.

+++

Yesterday afternoon, I visited my next door neighbors. We drank wine, talked about the views out our respective back windows, and otherwise chatted about things we cannot change but wish we could. I was stunned to discover, upon getting up to leave, I had visited with them for almost four hours. I intended to spend only an hour or two, but time got away from me. I can imagine, after I left, waves of relief washing over my neighbors’ faces. I should set an alarm next time. If they ever invite me back. It’s my turn to host next, though, so I’ll let them decide how long is long enough. Regardless of the fact that I may have overstayed my welcome, I enjoyed being with them and hearing them talk. We share many of the same political, social, and moral philosophies, which is not surprising I suppose, since they are Friends at the church I attend.

Some time before I went to visit, I got a call from a friend from church, asking if I would be home, in that she had the monthly church “gift” to deliver on behalf of the church Keep in Touch Team (KITT). I told her I was planning to have wine with my neighbors, but otherwise would be home. She asked if my neighbors were the ones who are Friends of the church; yes, I told her. She said she could drop both our gifts with my neighbors. And she did. When I got next door, my neighbors greeted me with the bag left for me, which included a container of soil, along with three kinds of seeds for herbs and appropriate instructions. This morning, I wrote an email to the woman who delivered the gifts yesterday: “I feel so fortunate to be involved with people who are so motivated, so compassionate, and so passionate about what they are doing!” And I meant every word of it.

+++

All right. Time for me to kiss the morning and wish it a pleasant metamorphosis into a good day. And while I’m doing that, I should cook some bacon so it doesn’t go bad. One should feel rightfully wrong if one allows bacon to spoil. I don’t want to be that one.

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If Only

Ten years ago, on another of my blogs that’s still visible but to which I no longer post, I wrote this:

Unlike me, my father was not a man who wore his emotions on his sleeve. But he had emotions and he appreciated the poetic expression thereof. It’s interesting to me that one of his favorite poems was this one, If, by Rudyard Kipling, which in my estimation offers accolades to the suppression of emotion:

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,
And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise:

If you can dream – and not make dreams your master;
If you can think – and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breathe a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: ‘Hold on!’

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
‘ Or walk with Kings – nor lose the common touch,
if neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And – which is more – you’ll be a Man, my son!

I have no idea why I felt compelled to seek out that ten-year-old post and to re-post it here. But I did. So there you are.

+++

The room in my house with the best “contemplative view” is the one with big, double-pane stationary windows in need of replacement. It’s the room off the master bedroom, the room whose participation in the house’s HVAC system is tangential, at best; the ducts running to the room are small and inadequate. The room with the best “contemplative view” is the one that would be my writing retreat if its climate were more congenial. But sunlight causes it to bake, even when outside temperatures are moderate. And the windows’ heat loss during the cooler seasons is so great the room is frigid and inhospitable. For seven years, I’ve complained about the room. A few times, I’ve explored what it would cost to replace the window panes and augment the HVAC system by way of adding a mini-split. Always too expensive. A conversation with one of my brothers yesterday afternoon prompted me to think again about rehabilitating that room. If I assume my life expectancy will be only half of what I’ve been banking on, I could pay for the room’s upgrade and still die with a few dollars in the bank. All other things being equal, of course. No hyper-inflation. No major illness or incapacitation for which Medicare and supplementary insurance would not pay. No other unplanned major expenditures; like the oldest HVAC unit cratering and requiring replacement. Hmm. It’s worth serious consideration. After I get all of my late wife’s IRAs, etc. straightened out. After the bureaucracy of death has been sliced into shreds. Hmmm.

+++

I drove into town yesterday to ship two small boxes to two friends. The contents per box were worth, maybe, four dollars. The cost to ship each one was roughly thirteen dollars. Something is awry with this situation. High volume shipping to low numbers of addresses may be the solution. I need to find a way to ship massive amounts of the same stuff to a single address for distribution. But I wonder whether truck shipping would actually be less costly? Who knows? Someone is bound to know. But will they reveal their secrets? Will they? And who are they?

+++

After my shipping surprise, I went to a local festival of sorts. It was one of several going on in and around Hot Springs Village. The one I visited included a booth for the Village Writers’ Club, which has attempted to self-immolate during the pandemic (the Club, not the booth). The Writers’ Club is the reason I went; actually, an invitation by a friend to drop by is why I went. I’ve lost most, if not all, of my interest in the Writers’ Club. I just don’t have much interest in engaging in communication with other writers. Well, not with most other writers. Locally, I mean. Only a few of them take writing sufficiently seriously to realize it’s not necessary to talk about writing all the time. And only a few of them realize taking themselves too seriously as writers is akin to unearned egotism. “Writing ain’t no special gift from god, dad-gummit!” Someone must have said that, because it’s about as true as anything I’ve read or heard said in a long time. But I digress. The little crafts festival was small but modestly interesting. I could have spent some money there, had I wanted to fill my house with tchotchkes that I would eventually discard. I have other, more intriguing means of throwing away money on material possessions that have no intrinsic or extrinsic value.  Despite the fact that these little festivals are monuments to minor creativity and major avarice, they can be fun. I used to enjoy going with my wife, looking at everything and buying little or nothing. I’m glad somebody buys stuff, though; otherwise, we would  have had nowhere to go and nothing to look at (in the way of festivals, anyway). Where the hell was I going with this paragraph? No telling. But it’s certain I took a wrong turn somewhere.

+++

Late in the day yesterday, I went to Clampit’s Country Kitchen , where I bought some hot and spicy beef jerky, a jalapeño sausage, and a one-pound New York strip steak. The steak will make two enormous meals for me one day. This morning, I’ll cut it in half and freeze one half. I’ll smoke and/or grill the other half within the next few days, treating myself to an increasingly rare opportunity to be fiercely carnivorous. I grilled the sausage last night, along with jalapeños and onions. A sliced tomato finished the meal. I did not need to buy food yesterday; I just felt like it. I haven’t have big steak in the house in what seems like a year or more. And that may be the case, though I won’t bet on it.

+++

This afternoon, I’ll visit my next door neighbors for wine and conversation. We’ve talked about having little gathering at one anothers’ houses for years. Only recently have we begun to execute our intents. They come here, then I go there, then they come here, etc. Today, it’s my turn to go there. Though when I spoke to her yesterday, she said I need not bring anything, I may take a bottle of wine. Or maybe not. Maybe, when we host, we should host: the place, the chairs, the wine, the munchies, the whole ball of wax. Yes, that’s it. That’s neighborly hostitude, isn’t it? It is, indeed.

+++

I am not even remotely interested in doing paperwork today, but I suspect I will do some, anyway. I have to get in the habit of keeping my financial paperwork up-to-date. And that includes documenting and organizing receipts. I will do that, if for no other reason, to honor my wife’s long-time practice of knowing where every single cent is spent and where every nickel’s worth of income comes from. After I do that, though (or maybe before), I will consider tackling some other projects:

  • Vacuuming the car and making its interior more or less liveable
  • Neatening the garage and discarding unnecessary “stuff”
  • Sweeping the garage floor and cleaning up the “workspace” behind the garage
  • Making the guest bed (I washed all the sheets and towels in the house yesterday; everything’s been finished except making the guest bed…I feel so productive!)
  • Pressure-washing the deck, removing massive amounts of pollen

Who am I kidding? I’m not going to pressure-wash the deck today. I hope I get around to sweeping the garage. I may just loll about on the deck, inhaling pollen until my lungs can take no more.

+++

Later in the week, I’m going to have a dermatology APN burn or freeze or slice pieces of my flesh, leaving what’s remaining as smooth as possible. I’m afraid my geezer skin will not permit truly soft and smooth skin, but I hope for an improvement. My hands, my face, even my toes, need some work. A lot of work, I think. A friend’s blog tagline (attributed to Suzuki Roshi) on a blog to which my friend hasn’t posted for eight years, is “You are Perfect as you are and you could use a little help.”  I like that. My skin is perfect as it is and could use a complete replacement.

+++

 

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Segments of Saturday

The temperature in the house is 65°F, a tad nippy for me but not cold enough to merit reverting the HVAC system to heating. I changed it several days ago to cooling, when outside temperatures climbed well above 80°F. The house was starting to feel like an oven, so I thought the time had come to leave winter behind. But winter kept its claws in us; it’s around 48°F outdoors right now, so the indoor temperature doesn’t seem so cold by comparison. Daytime highs for the next week are forecast to range from the mid-fifties to the mid-sixties. I may revert back to heating, yet.  But a sweater and sweat pants may be adequate during waking hours; a blanket is adequate for sleeping, as long as indoor temperatures remain above 60°F.

+++

An ad, attempting to tempt me into entering into a contest to win a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van, coupled with an $80,000 conversion, nearly triggered my finger this morning. I was ready to throw reason and rationality to the wind and “register to win.” But I stopped before handing over whatever personal information the contest sponsors hoped I would reveal. I do not need a mini-RV worth $115,000 or more, though I will admit I would love to have one. Tiny kitchen, fresh water filtration, toilet, queen-sized bed, 24.5 gallon gas tank, solar heating and cooling, bike rack, jaba jaba jaba jbab. A little home on wheels that would go with me wherever I choose to go. I could take my home with me to Nova Scotia (if Canada would let me in) or drive to the remote regions of North Dakota or Arizona or New Mexico. I could take my house to desolate beaches on Florida’s west coast. Where, though, might I find seriously desolate, isolated, unmolested stretches of land that would welcome me and my little house on wheels? I don’t know. I’d have to look. But I don’t think I’m ready to throw $115,000 or my personal privacy at the chance to find it. That could change, of course. I change a lot these days. I no longer recognize myself. There’s someone else before my eyes when I look in the mirror. That is not necessarily to say that I despise him; in fact, I may grow to appreciate that new version of a loner, this one more willing to leave everything and everyone behind for a stretch just to see what he’s like truly on his own. Unless, of course, he can’t cope. That would be a disappointment of epic proportions.

+++

Here it is, another day closer to a visit by my long-time friends. When I think of their visit, my desire to leave everything and everyone behind for a stretch just to see what I’m like truly on my own fades into vapor. Instead, I return to a fantasy of living with them in a co-housing arrangement (along with a few like-minded people, perhaps) that would give all of us adequate privacy but in an environment in which we all depend on and are there for one another. I suppose some might consider it a commune of sorts; it’s like a commune for rational people who have abandoned the irrational facets of communal lifestyles in favor of comfort and independence and compassion. Do I change day by day? A little. Like a chameleon on speed, I think. But beneath the swirl of changing exterior appearances, there’s an absolutely reliable, dependable core. Like an apple, it’s surrounded by a fleshy substance subject to softness and rot. Sounds like a dream, doesn’t it?

+++

My friend and guest is leaving today, having spent a week here. It was truly nice to have someone in the house, but I think a return to a hermit lifestyle for several days will readjust my biorhythm (or whatever it is) to “new normal.” I loathe that phrase. “New normal,” as if normalcy and justifiable paranoia belong together. Of course, my “new normal” has little to do with paranoia and much to do with life under the classification of “survivor.”  That’s another term that, depending on context, can grate on me. It’s almost become a badge of courage that warrants respect, pity, and admiration. Who wants to be considered “courageous” and simultaneously pitied for being thrust into circumstances over which they have absolutely no control? Enough of that. For now.

+++

Have I mentioned that my guest, the one leaving today, brought a French press with her? The coffee that accompanied it is gone, so I’ve been drinking my old standby French roast, but the flavor from that French press may have convinced me to get one. But, do I have the discipline to spend the time and energy to grind and brew coffee every morning, abandoning my Keurig for the French press? I do not know with certainty, but if I know me I’ll bend to sloth and the mediocrity of convenience. I dislike that about myself. Just not enough to change, I suppose.

+++

Today’s news from CNN, a network I’ve come to consider just as biased as FOX News, includes the “stunning” announcement that “Loneliness won’t end when the pandemic ends” and another one that “Cuba’s Raul Castro steps down, ending the era of his famous clan at the country’s helm.”

And AP reports that Kate Rubins, an American astronaut, and two Russian cosmonauts touched down in Kazakhstan this morning. All three had arrived at the International Space Station six months ago, on October 14. Of the seven people remaining on the ISS, another woman, Shannon Walker, is among those who came aboard in November on the SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience, the first ISS docking under NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. I’m pleased that the news article did not focus on the fact that two of the people in the news story are women; I had to notice that for myself. One day, we will not notice anything “special” about the involvement of women or people of color in such projects. It will be no big deal that a physicist like Walker is a key participant in multinational endeavors.  But in the meantime, while our astronauts and Russian cosmonauts are involved in radical cooperation in space, our respective countries are effectively at war over matters whose solutions should be far less complex than traveling to and from an orbiting space station.

+++

Elements of last night’s dream: my church reopening was massively different from what anyone expected. Almost impossible to get stuff stored near the pulpit. Sand everywhere. I could not get the heavier pieces over the edges where the waves were trying to wash away the beachfront. And that’s all.

+++

And in Hot Springs and the State of Arkansas and in the State of Chaos, life goes on.

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Bouncing

Last night, I went to dinner with four friends; three local, one distant, but all close in the sense that they contribute significantly to my ability to absorb life a little better on the heels of emotional somersaults. As is so often the case, I was the sole male in a sea (in this case, I guess it was more like a pond) of females. But in smaller groups, I don’t feel so out of place. In fact, I felt connected, as if I had adapted to a mold or the mold had adapted to me or, perhaps, we had collectively sculpted a three-dimensional puzzle of which we all formed a part. Such a sense of connection never lasts long, but in its short life it offers evidence that pieces of a puzzle can form art without sharp edges.

Part of the atmosphere of comfort last night can be attributed to the casual atmosphere of the restaurant. A small place devoid of pretention; a refuge where beer and Mexican food and Mexican music and workers who enjoy their work conspire to create welcoming space. We were among the very few diners there last night, but the evening felt full and inviting.  Regardless of the contributions made by the food and the beer and the music and the workers, though, dinner would have been nothing without the pieces of the puzzle.

+++

I chose to create a separate page to house a poem written by a man I’ve never met but who is a long-time friend of a friend.  I hope visitors to this post will visit that page. I was moved beyond words by the poet’s ability to translate my scorched words into a clear expression of what I felt. And feel. He wrote his poem in response to my post on what would have been my 41st wedding anniversary.

+++

Next week, two other friends and I will gather around our computers, beer in hand, to discuss matters of global significance: the way beer tastes and how it invades and conquers the land of the mundane. Video-calls have become vitally important ways to maintain connections that, in days past, might have withered or hardened or turned to dust in the absence of face-to-face contact. On my end, I have begun to call these regular video chats J3. or J-Cubed.  Clever, that…in that our names all begin with the letter J. I stun myself with my blatant self-congratulatory creativity. 😉 This small gathering, all male, is more “evidence that pieces of a puzzle can form art without sharp edges.” Although some of the edges are a little rough; but only enough to create frictional frivolity. Usually, I hear or see one or both of my friends’ spouses in the background; we’re all friends, albeit I am the older, more geezerly, decrepit one among us all. I am fortunate to have access to relative youth to help me interpret the world in which I live.

+++

Soon, I will have more houseguests, friends of well over forty years! I am looking forward to their visit with the anticipation one might expect in such relationships. Though we don’t communicate with dependable regularity, we talk or text or video-chat enough to keep connected. The fact that we soon will be able to see one another and embrace “like the old days” will be exceptional. We’ve not been physically together in more than a year; I expect embraces will have to be powerful and lasting to overcome an absence that long. One or both of the pair reads my blog posts almost every day, so I expect they will be able to imagine the breadth and depth of my smile on my face as I am writing this. I learned to say “I love you” from them without feeling awkward. Expressing love, even to close friends, has never been easy for me for reasons beyond the scope of this post. But I can say that now to them, thanks entirely to her easy way of saying the words to me. Would that we all, all of us on this planet, would find it easy.

Perhaps as important as anything about our bond is the fact that they, too, are “loners.” Their circle of friends is small, like mine and like ours was when my wife was with me. The knowledge that we are, to one another, extremely important links to extra-familial closeness, must be vital. It must be. I think, perhaps, my circle is expanding ever-so-slightly, though, perhaps in response to the sudden loss of such a vitally important piece of my emotional well-being.

+++

In the days to some, I think my blog posts will be a little less “bouncy” than this one. Although this one seems themed on “friends.” But I might be feeling some stability that will add strength to my rubbery legs. In the interim, more coffee. And time to prepare for the housekeeper’s visit; must straighten and otherwise “clean up” so I will not appear to be the slovenly creature I am.

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Carousel

It is no secret that early morning—before daylight and before most of the life-forms near me in the valley below are awake—is my favorite time of day. It is a selfish time for me, a time when my obligations disappear into an ephemeral mist of my imagination that lasts just long enough to hide the world beyond. Sometimes…often, actually…I wish the mist would conceal the “real world” longer and more thoroughly. I don’t want a translucent mist. I want an opaque fog. Mental humidity fueled by vaporous distance. And time over which I have absolute control. Control. Ultimately, that’s what it’s all about. Control over my environment, my emotions, myself.

For a brief period almost every day, I seize that control. My disappearance each morning into the darkness has long since been a ritual. When that ritual is interrupted, my roughest edges become visible. They get sharper and more dangerous. My compassion slinks away into the corner, safe from my cruel animosity.

These last few days, both sides of my wedding anniversary, have interrupted my ritual, though I have been able to write. But I haven’t been able to think like I’m used to thinking. I’m used to thinking by myself for myself. Grief and anger and a thousand other unwelcome emotions rip into my serenity like bullets from an assault rifle rip into tender flesh.

The lyrics of John Gorka’s Armed with a Broken Heart do not describe my rough edges, precisely, but they come close:

Take this as a warning
To stay away from me
Because the man that you used to know
Is not the man that you’re going to see
Someday we may laugh at this
Someday we may be friends
But for now you can keep your distance
Stay away till the pieces mend
This sudden loneliness has made me dangerous
Please don’t watch me while I fall apart
‘Cause I’m sad and I’m angry
And armed with a broken heart.

People who have the misfortune of interacting with me when I am in these periods (in which my rituals are interrupted) must get tired of my mood swings. They must be impatient with the jagged bounces from emotional depths to emotional highs and back again. I know I get impatient with them. But I’ve gotten used to them because I’ve had decades of experience with them. No one else has that experience. So it’s not a routine interruption to anyone else; it’s a bothersome intrusion into an otherwise reasonably stable life. It’s the sort of thing that causes people to step back, away. To avoid. To watch, to observe, but not to engage. A bit like auto accident voyeurism.

Forgive me. I’m attempting to think with my thick and arthritic fingers. My fingers feel like they have been lashed to inflexible oak splints.  And it feels like the mind that drives my fingers to release their messages has been dulled by repeated high doses of morphine laced with tequila. All these effing things are interruptions. They intrude on my love affair with pre-dawn darkness. Already, I can see far too much light outside the windows, shades still drawn. My peace is not shattered; instead, it is suffocated with too damn much dim light.

+++

Some days, “spiritual practices” can take the form of simple ritual. Simple ritual that reminds me of my good fortune and urges me to feel and express gratitude for what I have and appreciation that I do not face insurmountable problems…only interruptions. Yet interruptions can wreck even average days.

+++

This evening, I will join friends for dinner at a favorite restaurant. By then, I will have washed away the ashes that, this morning, clog my eyes and my arteries. I will take time to privately and personally reflect on and appreciate my friends’ presence and their willingness to include me in their plans. I will do my damnedest to embrace the happiness this interruption brings to me.

+++

I cannot think rationally from one idea to the next. I’m on a series of high-speed carousels that require me to jump from one to the next. Coffee probably is not helping. But it’s the best I can do for the moment.

 

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Fragments of Facts and Flesh

Yesterday was an absolutely delightful day, the kind of experience one hopes every summer day will deliver. Except, of course, yesterday was not a summer day. But the temperature felt like it. I think the air temperature exceeded eighty degrees, the upper limit of what summer temperatures should be. In my imagination. The one that runs away with me. But, according to the weather futurists, today’s temperature will barely reach the mid-fifties. And the next seven days will see temperatures hovering in the fifties every day but one or two, when a rush of warm air will rocket the temperature into the sixties.

This radical change in air temperatures was delivered some time around midnight last night. It was then that thunder and lightning jolted a peaceful sky into a roiling cauldron of Nature’s rage. Raindrops pierced the atmosphere like razor-sharp arrows, tearing the air into disconnected fragments of oxygen and carbon dioxide and abject fear. Molecules, too, can be afraid. Afraid of being shredded into scraps while the weather gods throw tantrums unmatched in fury and spectacle.

Even this morning, more than six hours later, the growling aftermath of last night’s explosive Natural rage stabs the sky, releasing sheets and rivulets of tears.

I hope the water from the sky washes away the pollen that has been collecting for days and days. Pollen drifts, as deep as time in places, have threatened to suffocate me in the yellow powder. I pray the sky has flushed away the Springtime plague; but I know better. Wet pollen will coalesce into pollenstones as hard as diamonds and as permanent as coffee stains left to set on white linen.

The sounds of the rain and thunder this morning are at once distracting and orgasmic. They take me places I see only in my imagination and they thrill me in ways only sensual, erotic magic can. Yes, I think I am deviating from my original intent; exploring the changes in weather and, by extension, myself. Because I am, like all of us are, a different kind of weather.

+++

A few years ago, a more or so before we moved to Hot Springs Village, I awoke one morning to thoughts of feathers. I wanted to know more about feathers. And so I explored. Here’s part of what I wrote:

Feathers consist of barbules, barbs, hooklets, rachis, afterfeather, downy barbs, and calamus (the hollow base).  And there are many types of feathers. There are tail feathers, flight feathers, semiplumes, filoplumes, bristles, and downy feathers.  Feathers, like fingernails and hair, are made of keratin.  So, if my fingernails and hair are made from the same “stuff” as feathers, why can’t I fly? The answer to that question may be more than I can handle, emotionally.

I remember writing that, roughly seven years ago. The fact that I so vividly recall exploring and writing about feathers (though the “exploration” was only about as deep as I’ve just written), must have some special meaning. Right? Or was it just a coincidence that I invested time and thought into feathers and, later, remembered it so well? I think my memory may have something to do with the fact that, just a day or two ago, I thumbed through a book of poetry, Wingspan, written by my friend Kai Coggin. Wings and feathers are inseparable pairs. Maybe that’s what my recollection was all about. The inseparable pair that once was John and Janine, but now is only John. John is a fragment, a piece of something whole that cannot be reconstructed.

+++

If I had known many years ago what I know now, I would have taken and preserved at least one photograph every year on April 13, beginning in 1980. The photo would have featured my wife, smiling a celebratory smile. And, if I had had the wherewithal, I would have had another photo take of the two of us, smiling and toasting the ongoing celebration of our time together.

What I know now that I did not fully understand then was that those photos might have sustained me over the years; both the years already gone by and the ones yet to come. I might have looked at the photos each year and allowed my heart to swell in gratitude for the joys I knew but did not sufficiently appreciate at the time. Every year—in fact, every day—was a gift that should have been etched in my mind. Photos on every anniversary would have given me tangible encouragement to give my incredibly good fortune the ongoing appreciation and recognition it warrants.

I appreciate receiving words of sympathy and encouragement, but what I think I need more than anything right now is time alone with my wife’s memory.  I will make that time.

+++

This morning I have an appointment with an attorney who, I  hope, will help me wade through the molasses of bureaucracy that is keeping my wife’s “estate” shredded into pieces that I simply want to weave together again. That was an unnecessarily long sentence. But all sentences are. “They sentenced me to 20 years of boredom…” A song phrase from Leonard Cohen’s First, We Take Manhattan. Yet these words from Death Cab for Cutie’s I Will Follow You Into the Dark are not so much sentences as they are promises:

Love of mine
Someday you will die
But I’ll be close behind
I’ll follow you into the dark

I know, of course, some people think the tune—its lyrics, at least—are morbid. I think otherwise. The lyrics are simply fragments of a love song bathed in reality. The fact that an appointment with an attorney morphed into a philosophical brush with mortality should explain my dilemma: I cannot help but see the connections between almost everything. It’s like an ever-more-tangled web of overlapping attachments.

Speaking of attachments, yesterday I happened to read a detailed, blow-by-blow account of my surgery around Thanksgiving 2018, during which a tumor and the lobe to which it was attached was removed from my right lung. How I can to read the account is unimportant and, frankly, impossible for me to remember. What’s important is that I read it. And I read the the surgeons encountered considerable amounts of “adhesions” in my chest cavity; they presumed the adhesions were caused by the much earlier double bypass surgery. I have felt the effects of those “adhesions” for years now; it’s like having something inside my torso “catching” on something else, creating stress and pain.

+++

I feel like writing and writing and writing this morning. But, instead, I must quickly clean up and get ready for my trip to see the lawyer. I’ll take my checkbook; she charges obscene fees for work that a poorly trained legal assistant trainee could do. But I’m not bitter. Not in the least. Not at all. Sure, drain my bank account because…hey, you can.

Off to the wars.

 

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No Serenity, Contemptible or Not, on this Anniversary

Today, April 13, would have been my 41st wedding anniversary. It’s hard to believe it has been 41 years since I married the woman who would transform my life into one worth living. It’s harder, still, to believe she has been gone almost four months. And it’s damn near impossible to accept that she will never be back. I thought the worst of the pain of her death had finally become tolerable, but today and the last few days leading up to today have proven me wrong. These last several days generally have been fine but, suddenly, the pain I felt that awful evening she died returns; a hundred-fold more excruciating, it seems. A few minutes of impossibly intolerable misery later, I start to recover; I accept reality and work on regaining my composure. For a hour or two or three, all’s well; but the cycle starts all over again. I know this will diminish. As the day of our anniversary neared, time triggered the emotional deluges. The pain will dull over time and each anniversary and birthday and holiday and other day that holds some special meaning just for us will become a little more manageable with each passing year. Her birthday in June will honor her memory, though I suspect the “celebration” will again plunge me, for at least a few minutes, into darkness that will feel absolutely unbearable. But I will bear it and come out of the darkness into light. Each time, though, the light seems a little less bright, as if it is warning me of darkness to come. All of this pain and darkness is mine; it’s my pain that I feel, my selfish way of treating the circumstance as a petri dish to nourish my sadness. I should be thinking only of my wife; wishing she were enjoying a celebration of our lives together instead of allowing myself to wallow in self-pity.

+++

Even though I enjoy getting out of the house, I am finding it increasingly easy to stay home all day. It is easy to avoid venturing out the get the mail, sometimes, until darkness begins to fall. I think that is a signal that I need solitude now more than ever. “A signal.” Nonsense. There are no “signals” that convey what is best for me; nor are there messages from the universe sent specifically to me to warn me against plowing into the unknown.  Strange; I sometimes interpret mistakes of time and circumstance as intentional communications from some unknown and unknowable “being” that pervades every molecule around me. It’s embarrassing even to allow such interpretations inside my head.

+++

Early this morning, before 1:30, I awoke from another odd dream. Parts and pieces of a used jetliner had been changed out and installed in another airplane destined for New Zealand. After the flight returned to the U.S. (I guess…but not sure) but before the passengers deplaned, it had to cross some dangerously unstable bridges and get in front of other planes that had been waiting for a long time to get to the terminal. Later, interviews with angry passengers flooded television monitors in the terminal; the passengers did not care why the flight had to “cut in line,” they just wanted the money they paid for their flights refunded. There was more to the dream; I do not know what, though. I think it had to do with the plane’s airworthiness being questionable. But maybe not.

+++

Last night, I attempted to listen to a member of my church tell of her “UU Journey;” that’s the story of how she came to abandon old religious beliefs and traditions in favor of becoming Unitarian Universalist. I should have planned better.  Had I done so, I would not have poured several whiskey-based drinks for myself, each one less precisely measured than the one before. By the time the program started at 8:00 p.m., I was not especially conscious and focused on religious journeys. At some point while I attempted to listen to the presentation in front of the computer screen, I drifted off to sleep. My guest awoke me and sent me off to my bedroom to sleep off my alcohol-induced nap. I think the program had ended by that time, but I am not sure. I’m glad my guest is not (at least not yet) overtly judgmental about my over-indulgence and consequent inebriation.

For whatever reason, I had been in the mood for a whiskey-based drink that also incorporated amaretto and lemon juice, a far cry from my usual glass of wine or gin & tonic or straight shot of whiskey. The amaretto and lemon juice cuts alcohol’s edge, making it easy to gulp down the ice-laden drink in no time. A few of those would (and did) knock me on my ass in a hurry. I suspect I was unconsciously preparing myself to acknowledge and to face today’s wedding anniversary. If that was the reason for my little binge, it failed miserably. I am not “prepared” for today, though I do acknowledge it. “Today” is not really the right word. It’s only 2:23 a.m. as I write these words. I may attempt to go back to bed. I still think of the daylight that remains several hours away as “tomorrow.” But, no, it’s really “today.” Darkness and light, as much as the assertions made by a clock, dictate whether it’s today or tomorrow at any given moment.

I hope last night’s “UU Journey” was recorded; otherwise, the time I spent listening to and viewing part of it was, indeed, wasted. I do not recall the last thing I heard, but I am confident it was not even remotely close to the end of the presentation. Time wasted, if I cannot listen to the entire thing.

+++

Yesterday, I spent time working on taxes. I got as far as gathering income information in the form of 1099-type forms and compiling receipts for medical expenses and charitable contributions. The deeper I got into it, though, the more complex it seemed it would be. Among the documents my wife had placed in a massive accordion-style tax folder were articles from consumer magazines, tax advisories, and various other reliable sources. The articles, especially parts she had underlined or highlighted, suggested to me that my wife’s understanding of what we “ought” to be doing with respect to taxes is far more complex than I had imagined. So, after spending a significant part of the morning on taxes, I finally pulled a number out of my head (a few hundred dollars) as an estimate of how much we might owe in taxes for 2020. I went online to the IRS website and submitted an ACH withdrawal authorization for that amount. My understanding is that the submission that estimate takes the place of formally completing Form 4868 and gives me until October 15 to file my taxes. Supposedly, an extension by the IRS also extends my deadline for the State of Arkansas. If I’m right, within the next two or three months, I’ll make an appointment with a tax accountant and take my paperwork in for a professional assessment and filing. If nothing else, I will learn from it; I did not bother learning from my wife’s dedication of extensive time and effort to the tax monster. If I’m not right that my submission of money to the IRS automatically extends my filing deadline, I suppose you can find me engaged in a real-world diet as I dine on bread and water in the cell of a debtor’s prison.

+++

I do not know whether I brought in the hummingbird feeders last night. I hope so. Otherwise, when light begins to leak from the sky several hours from now I might find the deck awash in sticky nectar and the feeders dashed and broken on the rocky slope beneath the deck. It’s too dark now to see whether the feeders are still hanging and it’s too early to say, regardless, whether they survived the night without being attacked by gluttonous raccoons. Apparently, there’s a correlation between consuming multiple whiskey-based mixed drinks and forgetting one’s actions with respect to tending to the well-being of hummingbirds.

+++

I’ve done my best to push the reality of today’s milestone out of my head; my best is not good enough. Even after writing silly BS and trying to make IRS-related “stuff” funny or, at least, frivolous, grief consumes me. It’s around 3:00 a.m. Thought I’ll probably go back to bed and try to sleep, I doubt I’ll be able to clear my mind enough to make it happen. And I am not even sure I want to make it happen. If I were able to deal with this anniversary without pain and the accompanying tears I would find it impossible to live with myself. I might label the ability to maintain composure in the face of such heartache “contemptible serenity.” Yet, even thinking such thoughts, I feel compelled to try to maintain some measure of composure. My guest/friend who works from my dining table during “work hours” this week deserves a host who is more or less composed so she can carry on with her work without being interrupted by the wails of a widower.

+++

Yesterday, as I was mindlessly scanning Facebook, a post on a friend’s page caused tears to come to my eyes (lately, though, what hasn’t?). I felt like she had posted it specifically for my benefit, though she often posts such thought-provoking things that evoke emotions across the entire spectrum of human emotions. If my friend had been in my presence when I saw her post, I would have hugged and kissed her for posting it and I probably wouldn’t have loosened my embrace for a very long time.

Grief never ends…
But it changes. It’s a passage,
not a place to stay. Grief is not
a sign of weakness, nor a lack
of faith…It is the price
of love.

~Donna VanLiere~

I keep reminding myself that grief does not—and will not—end. But I do hope it changes from what it is now to something easier to carry. Yet, as I consider the quotation, it makes me wonder whether the price of love is too great to allow me ever to love again. And, as I am wont to do, I muse some more about the quotation. While grief is not a sign of weakness, the inability to withstand it without breaking down may be. There must be a point at which uncontrollable sobs and tears cannot be permitted. Everyone deals with grief at one time or another. But not everyone repeatedly shatters into a million pieces when reminded of its presence.

+++

I find it interesting that I really crave and need social interaction, but only in relatively small and moderately infrequent doses. Between those doses, I must have solitude, isolation, time alone…whatever terms apply. I cannot imagine spending much time with someone who needs much more social interaction than I; I suspect it would be almost intolerable. My uneducated guess is that many divorces are triggered by incompatible social needs between partners.

On the other hand, at the moment it’s nice having someone in the house with me; someone to talk to. Even when my guest is “on the clock,” she is able to engage in a bit of conversation from time to time. But, I have my own obligations, too, so I retreat to my study to carry out my responsibilities. Like taxes. (Arghh!) And I have to go to the post office to get mail and otherwise have errands to run, etc. So thus far I have been able to maintain an adequate amount of my precious solitude, even with a house guest.

Sometimes, online interactions can feel just as intrusive and overwhelming as spending time with a large group in a small space. I have to get away from the constant baiting and feedback. There are times when I must abandon online “conversations” even with people I truly enjoy, simply to maintain my appreciation for those people; too much engagement could bring about intense dislike, I think.  Looking at it from my perspective, it makes perfect sense. But then I start to wonder whether I am tolerable only in small doses to some (or many) people? Probably. And I can happily live with that, provided it is the “right” people who feel that way. But what if, for example, someone with whom I sense in myself a need for engagement and for whom I have considerable attraction puts me in the “tolerable, but only in small doses” category? It becomes a different animal entirely. Hmmm.

+++

Time slips by at the speed of light. It’s after 4:00 now, yet I feel that I’ve been in front of my computer for only a few minutes. It may be an exercise in futility, but I am going to try to sleep again. Off I will go, gingerly plodding through the house so as to avoid waking my guest.

+++

I don’t know who said this, but sometimes it doesn’t matter, does it? For me, food is the most irresistible of the temptations, as evidenced by my size, shape, and inability to find clothes that properly it.

I can resist everything but temptation.

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A Taxing Situation

For the first time in a very, very long time, I drank a cup of coffee this morning that harkened back to the days when I used to grind my own coffee beans and make a pot of powerful coffee every morning. This morning’s coffee was courtesy of my visiting friend, who arrived at my house on Friday with a French press coffee maker and whole bean coffee. I supplied only the grinder and the water for the coffee. And a pot in which to boil the water. I’d almost forgotten the flavor and richness of French-pressed coffee. Unlike filtered drip coffee, French-pressed coffee retains the coffee bean oils that are removed from the brew when using paper filters. Paper filters collected not only the oils, but the flavors that accompany them, leaving the coffee adequate, but not really satisfying. And, in my case, water being forced under pressure through the Keurig pod seems to leave the pod with even less of the oils than a typical drip system. At any rate, the coffee from a French press is far superior, in my opinion, to the coffee from a Keurig or typical drip system. But, alas, it is more involved, takes more time, and requires more clean-up than my lazy man’s coffee. Yet, after having a cup of the good stuff this morning, I have to weigh whether I should get a French press and give myself more time in the morning to make coffee, which I can then savor, rather than simply drink. Ach! I can let little decisions turn into philosophical dilemmas, if I let them.

+++

Finally, I hung the hummingbird feeders yesterday. April 11. I should have hung the feeders not later than the last day of March; earlier would have been better. But I was lazy, as usual, and kept putting it off. I’m sure several dozen birds decided to move on to more lucrative airspace while I dilly-dallied. But already this morning, I’ve seen two birds partake of the nectar. Hummingbirds, along with pollen that coats the entire universe with a yellow shroud, provide unmistakable signs that Spring has arrived. Now is the time of year that I should be outside, enjoying the cool early morning temperatures and listening to songbirds and to the protestations of cattle in the fields below the house. The lowing cows claim not to have been fed since the early nineteenth century, if one believes their plaintive cries. Their artificial expressions of mistreatment and forced starvation should be enough to convince even the most passionate bovine-loving supporter that cattle lie; they have been fed, and recently. But they attempt to convince the world otherwise with their noisy moo-chatter.

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Today is the day that I’ll finally get down to business with regard to my taxes. I must. If nothing else, I need to complete a filing extension form and calculate how much, if any, taxes I might owe. And I need to send a check, if I might owe something. Otherwise, I can put off the inevitable until May 15, the extended deadline this year (courtesy of COVID). I haven’t done taxes since before I was married (which, as of tomorrow’s wedding anniversary, would have been forty-one years). My wife was always far more organized and more capable of understanding the tax codes and their affects on our financial situation. I simply signed forms she placed before me. I never questioned whether they were done properly; if she completed the forms, they were de facto perfect. There was no question. She was such an incredibly detail-oriented person, with regard to anything related to money and math. Her undergraduate degree was in mathematics; that, a woman pursuing a degree in mathematics, was almost unheard of at the time she finished her four-year degree. I may be wrong about that; but I think it was, at least, rare. As was she. Rare and wonderful. I miss her so much I can’t keep myself together even through this single paragraph. Ach. But, back to the issue at hand; today is my day to focus on taxes.

+++

My guest/friend is back at work, using my dining table as a desk and her cell phone as her office voice communication device. She has been working at home (in the DFW area) most of the time since the COVID pandemic began; as long as my wifi signal is sufficiently strong, she can do just as much work here as she can at home. I wish I could be paid for working from home. Although I’d really rather not work; I just want to be paid. The idea of having deadlines, work obligations, etc. turns me off. Doing my taxes at home is a reminder to me that “working” at home would be just like that; I do not like being forced to live by someone else’s rules and schedules. I do not mind paying taxes; in fact, I consider it an honorable obligation. I just don’t like having to calculate it. Someone else who’s better at it than I and who enjoys working through labyrinthine rules is better suited to it than I, a slothful unpaid word gigolo.

+++

Two minutes to start-time. I promised myself I would begin the tax process by 8:30. That would have fine, except that I slept in this morning; I got up after 7:00 again. Fortunately, I awoke to just-finished French-press coffee waiting for me, so I got a reasonable start on the day. And, now, onward. I’ll take on the IRS for as long as it takes, or as long as I can stand it, whichever comes first.

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Dislocations

I struggle with my tendency to shoot from the hip from time to time. The occasional misfires can cause me, and people in my sphere, discomfort I do not intend but that flows from my actions, nonetheless. There’s value in patience. Unfortunately, I do not have the composure to let the value bubble to the surface. On the other hand, sometimes it’s best to just let one’s emotions burst forth, the superficial damage their scalding heat may do be damned. The difficulty is in knowing which ones to let fester and which ones to let explode with fury.

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Here’s something to think about. It’s a complex set of ideas, delivered in compact form, that deserves serious and dedicated thought. A week’s worth of meditation might be required to fully absorb only half of the wisdom contained therein; a lifetime’s worth of meditation might be necessary to fully embrace the wisdom contained in the other half:

He who wherever he goes is attached
to no person and to no place by ties of flesh;
who accepts good and evil alike,
neither welcoming the one
nor shrinking from the other–
take it that such a one has attained
Perfection.

~Bhagavid-Gita~

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Yesterday, after a huge, filling breakfast, my visiting friend and I spent much of the day wandering aimlessly in Hot Springs, with no particular destination in mind. When hunger pangs hit, persuading  us it had been several days, instead of several hours, since we had eaten, we sought sustenance. The first stop was in front of SQZBX, hoping to sit down to a gluten-free pizza to satisfy my friend’s craving for good pizza and need to avoid products with gluten. A note on the door indicated no inside seating was available. Because we had not considered a to-go option, I drew a blank as to where we might sit and eat a pizza. In a matter of seconds, we decided to move on. Finally, after getting moderately lost in some residential areas, I got my bearings as we neared Malvern Avenue and Taco Mama. That became our destination. We were given the option of sitting outdoors, under a high overhang made of corrugated metal. We chose to sit outside, where other guests were enjoying the weather.

A family consisting of two kids, a mother, and a male and female dog pair, gathered at a table near us. I did not catch the name of the cute little male dog (both were naturally small, accentuated by the fact that they were—I think—puppies), but the mother called the female dog “Vivian.” I liked Vivian and suggested, to the mother, taking Vivian home with me; I believe mother heard me, but ignored my suggestion. If not for putting my dog-companion-odyssey on at least temporary hold, I might have stolen one or both dogs. I’m relatively sure, though, that, had I tried, the mother would have shot me. Although modestly attractive and quite friendly, the woman looked the type to both carry weapons in her purse and to use them without hesitation. You know the type: big, too-perfect-toothed smile, sparkling eyes, sprawling, far-bigger-than-necessary purse that could conceal pistols, automatic rifles, and small nuclear devices, and a jawline so sharp it could cut hard winter squash like butter. In hindsight, I am pleased that I exercised caution by allowing the dogs to remain with their human family. We’re all better for the decision to let it be.

Just as we were about to eat our last few bites of taco bowl (barbacoa for her, lengua for me), I asked the waitress whether she might have some habanero-based salsa I could use on my food. She brought me a little plastic container full of salsa that was at once fiercely hot and gently soothing to my tongue. Its smoky habanero flavor would have made my meal, as good as it was, far, far better. I must remember that salsa. After our meal, we continued wandering around Hot Springs. During the course of our wanderings, just as we passed Oaklawn Race Track, we saw a man who appeared to be in trouble, falling off what I thought was his bicycle. As it happened, we saw him just as we reached a corner, so I zipped around the corner and stopped. My friend sprinted from the car toward the man (because I had turned the corner and there was a fence at the corner, I could not see them). I stayed in the car, flashers flashing, wondering whether I should attempt to park a bit further up the street. Just about the time I was going to do just that, my friend came into view. It was a walker, not a bicycle, he fell from. His trouble was not a heart attack or stroke, as I instantly imagined. My friend said he has Parkinson’s disease and he had experienced a symptom that caused him to lose balance and to fall. He was fine now, she said.

Of course, the experience led to a conversation about healthcare, being alone, and all sorts of other topics that arise from a little knowledge and a lot of supposition. Compassion and concern bubble from us when presented with the effects of what we perceive as the unraveling of the social safety net.

The rest of the day was uneventful. But it was relaxing, as well. On the way back home, we stopped at Brookshire’s to pick up a couple of odds and ends to contribute to last night’s dinner and to today’s eating events. After having gotten only three hours sleep the night before (watching Arrested Development until 2, then waking at 5), I was ready to make an early night of it last night. I did not wake this morning until after 7, a sacrilege to my way of thinking. My friend had already gotten up and was in the midst of making coffee when I stumbled into the kitchen a while ago.

We have no specific plans for the day, but I feel confident I will want to “chill” for most of the day. I’m still tired, despite all the sleep, and my brain is fuzzy. Fortunately, my friend is independent and is perfectly capable of getting in her car and exploring all on her own. Several weeks ago, when she was still not sure whether she would make the trip and, if so, whether a fried would be willing to come with her, she expressed an interest in hiking. I offered up that my sister-in-law might be willing to show her some hiking places, but I was not likely to join in the fun. Though nothing has happened to further that along, I’ll leave it for her to decide.

+++

What will the remainder of this day give me to think about? How many dislocations can my brain take before it reaches the point that it cannot be put back in working condition again? Will I make time to prepare hummingbird nectar and put it out for the returning creatures? Time, alone, will tell. It always does.

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Fracture

Yesterday, a friend arrived for a visit. We spent the afternoon talking and wondering whether the rain would stop. When it did, we went to dinner at a lakeside restaurant; beautiful view, good service, tolerable but disappointing meal (for me). My “rare” steak was on the overcooked side of medium. But I did not complain, because I was in no mood to had the kitchen staff start over. Oh, well. After dinner, we talked some more and listened to our respective musical favorites. I stayed up after my friend went to bed, watching another couple of episodes of Arrested Development. The clock had just struck 2:00 a.m. when I got in bed. I got up at 5:00 a.m. I may regret getting a very brief three hours of sleep. I’m already nodding at it’s only 6:40. I may try to get another hour or three of sleep before my friend wakes up.

Today, we’ll go into Hot Springs for a look around. We’ll wear masks. I suspect many (perhaps most?) on the street will not. Ach!

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A very unfortunate brouhaha is underway within my church. As we begin to seriously discuss when it might be possible to reopen in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, the wife (and several friends and supporters and admirers) of a man who recently died are now insisting that his memorial service be held in the church sanctuary. While the time may be right to safely do so, the arguments promoting the memorial service in the church are revealing the gross absence of “democracy” in the institution. I actually have heard comments suggesting that “[He] is not just another member; he is largely responsible for where we are today and we simply must honor him by opening up the church for his memorial.” The same comments have been followed by acknowledgement that the privilege would not be granted to someone with a “lesser” contribution to the church’s development and evolution.

It’s not the question of whether to allow the memorial to go on inside the church that disturbs me—that question deserves discussion and debate and decision. What disturbs me is the open assertion that “we’re not all really equal…some are more equal than others.” I would not have considered for even a moment asking for or insisting on a memorial service for my wife in the church. Even though her death took place before the vaccine was available, I would never have suggested that her death might merit special consideration for any reason. In fact, I decided shortly after she died that, if I organize a memorial service, it will be more of a “celebration of life” and will be held when we can comfortably return to the church. Now, though, the blatant attitude that “he deserves special treatment because…” is causing me to question whether the fundamental values the church claims to hold are, in fact, smoke and mirrors. I do not for a moment deny the enormous importance the man had on the church; his contributions merit long, loud, and perpetual recognitions and acknowledgement. But, in my mind, the very public suggestions or implications that he was more “important” than my wife makes me question the validity of the church and, certainly, my involvement in it. It appears from my vantage point that consideration is being given purely on the basis of who is doing the “asking” and “demanding.” Depending on how the discussions play out, I may decide not to try church after this experience; “won’t get fooled again.”  And that’s too bad, because I’ve been so utterly taken by the church and its congregation. Most of the people where I live who I call friends came to me through the church. What an unfortunate problem.

My position probably would be/will be attacked as having a basis in my grief over my wife’s death. Whether such attacks materialize, my grief has nothing to do with my position. In many respects, the optics may be almost as important to many people as the philosophy behind it. But my stance is rooted firmly in philosophy. And institutional democracy.

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Just over a year ago, my wife and I discussed the potential outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic. We agreed it was entirely possible the virus could be the beginning of the end of humankind. And despite the progress science and medicine have made during the course of the last year, I still believe that possibility exists. While I think science and medicine have the capability of stalling the spread of the scourge and minimizing its effects on humanity, several realities argue against a “win” against the pandemic: politics; stubbornness; stupidity; and greed conspire against humans’ success in this battle. I am not suggesting the health challenges of the virus will entirely rid the streets of people; only that our collective unwillingness to treat COVID-19 as a truly existential threat might turn it into exactly that.

Many U.S. states’ politicians today treat COVID-19 as having been “conquered.” Consequently, they are not only allowing, but encouraging, residents to return to “normal” times without masks, without adequate personal distance, and a return to the days when handwashing was considered an annoying option. In spite of epidemiologists’ and others medical professionals; warnings, large swaths of the population (both domestic and abroad) seem intent on refusing to behave rationally; they value their “right” to expose themselves and their fellow citizens to COVID-19 far more than they value human life—even their own. Far too many among us enthusiastically embrace absurd conspiracy theories that suggest the virus is controlled by a cabal of dangerous and devious people whose purpose in exercising control over it is purely political, based in greed. Growing insistence that businesses be given free rein to operate without COVID-19 restrictions adds to the dangers we face.

But even in the face of these exceptional challenges, I think we have the capacity to overcome the virus from the perspective of science and medicine.  Our capacity to control, though, does not extend to repairing tears in the social fabric that have been showing over the last year. And while we might be able to conquer the challenges to our health that COVID-19 poses, I do not believe we have the wherewithal to recover from catastrophic economic ruin, a collapsed and shattered food distribution system, and the dozens of other social and economic fractures that could accompany the ongoing onslaught of COVID-19.

These issues suggest chicken and egg dilemmas. Which comes first: beating COVID-19 or beating its effects on society so we can turn our attention to eliminating the virus? In my view, those who would choose to “repair” society and its economies before ridding us of the virus are responsible for the decay of humans’ grip on the planet. Driven by skepticism and greed, those people exemplify stubbornness and stupidity. When, and if, they come to realize that society cannot continue to function without the fuel humans provide, it will be too late. By then, even a miracle “cure” for the virus will be insufficient for recovery. The slide into oblivion will have begun; it will simply accelerate from there. A decade, maybe two, will be more than ample time to finish us. Of course, I could be wrong. I hope I am. But I’m afraid I’m not.

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The Return of Old Habits

Another few tidbits from my little book, The Essence of Zen:

Past and future are illusions. They exist only in the present, which is what there is and all that there is.
~Alan Watts~

Solitude is freedom. It is an anchor, an anchor in the void. You’re anchored to nothing, and that’s my definition of freedom.
~John Lilly~

Within yourself is a stillness and a sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself.
~Hermann Hesse~

Questions, of course, grow from such quotations. Are they just so much hokum, meant to make us feel like we are receiving personal messages designed to change our lives? Or are they opportunities to spark our own thoughts, create and explore and contemplate? Or, perhaps, something else? By the way, the Hesse quote is one to which I return on a regular basis. I’m certain I’ve posted it here on this blog or, if not this one, another of my blogs. It resonates with me.

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I remember only vaguely the details about that lengthy period known as “the Troubles,” that roughly thirty-year period during which tempers and violence flared in Northern Ireland. The U.S. media and the public here seemed to believe the conflict was primarily religious, pitting Catholics and Protestants against one another. In fact, it was a politically fueled dispute whose participants coincidentally identified either as Catholic or Protestant, with religious affiliation that paralleled political positions. Here’s a statement from Wikipedia about that period of unrest and bloodshed:

A key issue was the constitutional status of Northern Ireland. Unionists, who were mostly Ulster Protestants, wanted Northern Ireland to remain within the United Kingdom. Irish nationalists, who were mostly Irish Catholics, wanted Northern Ireland to leave the United Kingdom and join a united Ireland.

The reason the Troubles is on my mind this morning is that violence has flared again in Belfast, this time fueled by tensions about post-Brexit trade rules and deteriorating relations between the parties in Belfast’s Protestant-Catholic power-sharing government. Even though the Good Friday Agreement of 1998 effectively ended the open conflict between the opposing groups, the problems seem to have simmered over the years. The only party to oppose the agreement was the Democratic Unionist Party, which favored British identity. Today, the Democratic Unionist Party holds the most seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly, by a tiny margin of one.

I have not been keeping up with the political rest or unrest in Ireland in the intervening years. Like most Americans, my political focus and my attention has been inward-directed; we are encouraged to believe that American politics are the only truly important politics. Or maybe we’re simply too lazy to pay attention to the world beyond our borders. For whatever reason, we are insular even when we claim to welcome the world with open arms; we may welcome the world, we just don’t want to be contaminated by it.

That lengthy introduction to the reason the Troubles is on my mind this morning is leading to a set of shorter points. My first point is that scars can become scabs again if not properly tended. My second point is that human societies tend to forget the lessons of history. My third point is that youth (the primary participants in the current flash of violence) tends to intensify and execute the biases of the rest of us; older and unable or unwilling to take up arms on our own behalf. My fourth point is that pleas for calm are ignored unless accompanied by emotionally moving arguments in their favor. And, finally, my fifth point is that youth tends to be unable or unwilling to deeply explore issues which foment violence; the wisdom of age and maturity is ignored, except for the wisdom and maturity of people who have never really matured intellectually. My bias shows in my declarations of what “is” and “is not.”

I dearly hope the violence in Northern Ireland dissipates quickly and completely and that cooler heads prevail. Another thirty-year war would do just as much good as the last one.

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Much of what I’ve read about grief admonishes the bereaved to ask for help when he needs it. “Don’t wait for someone to offer what you need, ask for it.” The problem with that, of course, is that unless the person has extensive experience with grief, I doubt he has even the most remote clue as to what he needs. He may not even know he needs anything—he just feels pain and wants it to subside. The same books and pamphlets and videos tell friends and family of the bereaved not to wait to be asked; do what must be done.  But how are they to know what must be done? How are they to know the bereaved person needs either company or solitude?

Frankly, and despite all the good intentions I’ve read and heard and felt, I think a lot of the advice about grief is based on the assumption that what worked for one person is going to work for the next. And I know with more than a little certainty that is not true. Sometimes, even months into my grief, I just feel a need to have someone in the same room with me. No tender words or soothing assurances. Just a presence. And, if not for COVID, an embrace—a long embrace uninterrupted by words. Sometimes, though, I want words. Lots of words. Words of appreciation for my wife and what a remarkable person she was. Too often, I feel like I am the one who’s getting the attention when it should be her.

As much as I appreciate the sympathy and tenderness and comfort that has come my way, I have to understand that no one—no one on Earth—knows what or how I feel. No one knows what’s buried inside me that I will never let out. Or maybe I will, but not to anyone I know on a personal level. I’ve considered the possibility of seeking some sort of counseling because I can’t or won’t say what I need to reveal to someone who knows me. Not even myself. Odd, that. I sense that I have to express myself in some way that will explain myself to me. Hmm. Who is that masked man?

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I was annoyed with The Local, but I should not have been. The Local is an English-language French online newspaper and companion website that I occasionally visit. I do not remember the last time I visited, but I suspect it has been several months. This morning, when I tried to read some articles about some idiomatic French expressions (one of which was être aux manettes), I was greeted with a short peek at the article, followed by a pop-up that demanded 5 Euros for two months’ access, then 5 Euros a month thereafter. That was the minimum. I was used to having free access to The Local, so when confronted with the demand for payment in exchange for access, I was perturbed. Yes, I should be given free access to all newspapers, magazines, websites, etc., etc. because “it used to be that way.” That was before it became glaringly apparent that ad revenue was not going to cover all the expenses. And it was before we should have begun to acknowledge that you get what you pay for. In an ideal world (the one for which I am in perpetual search mode), some form of global access to news sites would be offered for a set fee; the fee would cover every website, with some form of metered limit. If I could pay €5 per month for global access with a reasonable limit, I would. And that little payment would give me access to the slang or colloquial meaning of être aux manettes. It means “in charge,” but I think there’s another meaning that’s more commonly attached to the term; I just don’t know what it is, thanks to my refusal to pay too much for two months’ access.

+++

Would it be utterly unreasonable of me to buy a small tract of land, a tractor, and a manufactured home to place on my land? Would it be silly of me to finally, after sixty some odd years, pursue my dream of a “place in the country?” Yeah, probably. My bones are too creaky and my muscles are too weak to do what should have been the dream-fulfilled of a forty-year-old man. There are elements of my unlived life that I’d like to be able to pursue, but only as a younger, stronger man. Too bad I cannot exchange the years I do not remember for years I’d now like to experience.

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I’ve been up for two and a half hours now; back to my old habits, it seems. It’s 6:33 now and I’m finally ready to have a full international breakfast. But I’ll have bran flakes, instead, because they’re easy. And I’m tired now, having been “working” for a couple of hours.

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I Have All I Need

Once again, I woke late this morning. When I opened my eyes, the view challenged the majesty of an enormous and elaborate stained-glass window in a church sanctuary. The sun had only begun to brighten the sky, cloudless but awash in muted oranges and blues and pale beiges. The sun’s light was not yet bright enough to cause me to turn my eyes away, but it was bright enough to seem imposing and otherworldly. The tangle of tree branches in front of the bright mass of emerging morning appeared like the dark strips of lead between pieces of the window’s glass.

Now that I again sleep in the master bedroom, the view when I awake is very different from that in the guest bedroom. For one reason, the heads of the beds are on opposite walls at opposite ends of the house. Because I usually sleep on my right side, my view from bed in the master is far more expansive. I leave the shades drawn around-the-clock because I love the openness. A voyeur would have to take great pains to get a look inside. And the view in the morning can be stunning, as it was this morning.

But usually I don’t see the view from bed. Usually, I’ve been up for at least a couple of hours before the sun begins to rise. And I have no view from my desk; I stare into the back of a dark wood over-desk credenza (that may not be the proper term; life goes on). So, perhaps I’m getting up late more frequently is simply to get better and more frequent views of the outdoors. If that were the case, I’d be affirming the concept that “things happen for a reason,” which I simply cannot do. Hmm. I’m not sure how that slipped in here.

At any rate, I’m now up and about and ready to tackle the day, but not necessarily at full throttle. I remain unsure about whether I can attend the Thursday morning gathering at church. I think I’ll just opt out, which will remove a little from my plate.

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Last night, I got a note from someone who visits this blog periodically, letting me know she is taking a break and going offline for a few weeks. We have communicated via email off and on for the last many months. Her decision to let me know she will not be visiting nor exchanging emails with me was kind; it will lessen my worry when I do not hear from her. I am, of course, quite curious about her decision to go off-line. But it obviously is none of my business; if she had wanted me to know, she would have told me. It is easy to understand why the imagination can take one’s mind on a wild trip on the back of a chimera. Simply not knowing triggers illusions with no basis in reality. Yet those delusions can gnaw at the serenity one might have gathered like a warming blanket around his shoulders.

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I enjoyed almost two hours of conversation with a couple of friends last night; our bi-monthly video-call during which the subject of beer comes up with some frequency. My friends each drank high-quality craft beers during the call. I consumed Shiner Bock. I learned that my friend in New England does not like West Coast style IPAs, nor does he enjoy Imperial Stouts (or, for that matter, Imperial anything) and he holds beer aged in bourbon barrels in contempt. His preferences are Saison, Farm House Ale, and Hefeweizen. And he has developed an affinity for New England style IPAs. My friend in the D.C. area does not like coffee flavor in beers. His preferences, apparently, are all other beers! 😉 I like damn near all beers, though I go through phases when I like one more than another or I feel that I’m “done” with a beer style for awhile. But I always come back. I like Stouts (I’m especially enamored of Oatmeal Stout), IPAs (New England, especially), Brown Ales, Porters, some Lagers, etc., etc. The three of us will try to ship to the other two a different local craft beer so each of us can comment on the same beers during the next call, two weeks hence. I think shipping beer to friends is illegal and immoral and very possibly unethical, but I’m nothing if not weakly rebellious, so I’m in.

I really enjoy these video conversations with the two Jims. They are some of the only engagements of any length I have lately. It’s good to have brief interchanges with people, but it’s just not as satisfying as casual conversations with all the protective armor cast aside. Shortly after my wife died, someone mentioned to me (and I read in several “about grief” books) that I would be flooded with comments and visits by caring people who would bring me food and offer to do anything they could to help me deal with her loss. But, I was told (and read), that will not last. People will expect you to slide back into a routine before too long and they will have to go back to their lives as they lived them before the interruption to deliver kindness to you. And that’s right. People have their lives to live that, in the real world, do not revolve around me/you. Still, I miss the visits. I could initiate visits I suppose or, at least, phone or video calls, but I’m afraid that would intrude on their return to their real worlds. Catch-22 is an absurd, but very real, phenomenon. Besides, most of the people who reached out are married women and I am a little hesitant to send the wrong signals. Who would have thought that would enter my mind this late in life…that I’d have to deny “hitting on your wife?” But it would be even more embarrassing and dangerous if the charge were true.

Years ago, I think I heard about a “conversation service,” wherein people could call a phone number and get connected with someone with whom the caller could engage in conversation for as long as desired. The call was charged to the caller’s credit card, based on length of the conversation. I wonder whether that recollection is real or just another hallucination that becomes embedded in the part of the brain that stores memories? If my memory is correct, though, this service would have been advertised or written about in newspapers sometime in the late sixties or early seventies. At the same time, whenever it was, one of the day’s “hot topics” was loneliness; loneliness and its “cure” seemed to be on everyone’s mind. I doubt a telephone conversation with a nameless, faceless stranger on a topic that probably does not really interest her would be especially appealing.

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Pollen is necessary. But I wish it were not so. Everything in my world has a coating of yellow dust. Some things have a quarter of an inch of the stuff. Wipe the yellow dust off a glass table and the yellow dust turns black on the rag. And, then, the clean spot instantly is covered in a fine mist of more pollen. Pollen, it appears, is trying to take over at least this part of Mother Earth. And I cough. And I sneeze. And my eyes turn red and watery. And I curse and complain to Zeus that the world should not be thus. I was reminded last night that one of my two video-chat friends has a dog named Zeus. I don’t recall the dog’s name when they got it, but it began with a Z; obviously, they preferred Zeus. That’s how my mind misfires. “Look, there’s something shiny!” And off I go.

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I’ll end this lengthy spillage with this quote from a book I keep on my desk (The Essence of Zen: An Anthology of Quotations) to which I regularly refer for solace or support or to slap me in the face to remind me that I have all I need:

You wander from room to room
Hunting for the diamond necklace
That is already around your neck!

~Rumi~

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Three Times Seven

For the first time in my memory, I measured the two surgical scars on the front of my torso. Both are roughly seven inches long. Though I can’t readily reach the scar that runs from my back around the side of my torso, in the mirror it, too, looks to be about seven inches long. Twenty-one inches of evidence suggesting I would have been long dead by now, in the absence of those surgeries.

The oldest of those scars, memento of my first serious surgery, was given to me courtesy of doctors whose names I do not know and probably never did. The operation took place during my one and only visit to Toledo, Ohio, a visit intended to demonstrate my respect of and appreciation for local members of an association of which I was the chief staff executive. Doctors rushed me into emergency surgery to deal with what they believed, based on my symptoms, was appendicitis. Instead, they discovered a lengthy stretch of badly-damaged intestine, courtesy of Crohn’s disease. The horizontal seven-inch scalpel wound low on the right side of my torso gave the surgeon the space necessary to cut out the useless and painful length of bowel, stitch the intestines back together, and—since they were already deep in my gut—remove my healthy appendix. Several days later, I was allowed to board a plane to take me back to Dallas, where I had moved only months before. I convalesced for a couple of weeks before returning to work. At the time, I think I valued my work more than I valued my health.

The next scar was delivered by a cardiac surgeon fourteen years later. This incident, too, was done on an emergency basis. My symptoms suggested to my family practice doctor that I needed to see a cardiologist right away, in the emergency room. That’s where I met the man who would become “my first cardiologist” for the next eleven years. My cardiologist tried to insert stents by way of an angioplasty, but was unable to make that work. So, they opted to open me up.  The fact that the vertical scar is in the middle of my chest is a reminder that the surgeon did some serious work. He used a Stryker saw to cut through my sternum bone, and then used a retractor spreader to open the chest cavity to give him access to my heart. While inside, he performed a double bypass. During a follow-up visit with him a week or so later, after I went home from the hospital, he told me I would be dead within two years unless I stopped smoking. I told him I had already stopped, thanks to the surgery he had performed. He said he had heard that too many times from people who did not stop; soon they were dead, he said. I had told him the truth. That’s when I stopped smoking.

The scar whose length I could not measure (but guess is about seven inches) was made because I had not stopped smoking soon enough. That scar, created the week of Thanksgiving 2018, was made to give the surgeon access to the lower lobe of my right lung, which he removed in its entirety. I think I was in the hospital ten days afterward, then recuperated at home for what seemed like an eternity. Then, I was treated with thirty radiation sessions and four chemo treatments; the doctors wanted to make sure any remaining cancer cells were killed. About half way through the radiation regimen, the radiation burned my esophagus, making it painful to swallow. That side-effect, alone, was enough to make me wish I’d never picked up a cigarette in my youth. But my experience with lung cancer and the treatments I received for it was far more tolerable than what many others have gone through. In fact, I feel guilty for remembering the experience as painful or unpleasant, when the nightmares others have gone through make my experience seem like a minor inconvenience.

Without having experienced those three incidents of life-saving surgery, I feel certain I would be dead by now. While I doubt that any of them were “touch-and-go” in terms of my immediate survival, in all three cases I suspect I would have been dead within months without them. Had those challenges to my health taken place only fifty years ago, the odds of my medium-term survival even after surgical intervention would have been extremely low. I was fortunate, indeed, to have been born during an era when science and medicine were making such magnificent strides.

I am sure I’ve written about all three of these surgical interventions before; probably several times. Anyone who has read this blog for long is probably tired of me returning to them as often as I do. I suppose my fascination with each of the three surgeries is that I feel certain that, without them, I would have died. And that means I am living on borrowed—or stolen—time. I am alive despite the fact that, in the normal course of Nature, my ashes should be providing sustenance to earthworms and oak trees. I made reference to that yesterday. And I wrote about the scars of battles with time. I guess today’s post is a continuation, of sorts, of yesterday’s musing.  Hmm. Death and dying is on my mind, too, courtesy of my sense that I’ve “dodged a bullet” three times.

The concept that some things are “meant to be” is not an idea that has much room in my head. I do not subscribe to belief in a grand plan in which “everything happens for a reason.” That idea suggests free will does not exist. Ach! I was about to go off on a tangent that might take me days to finish, so I won’t go there.

Something in my head suggests I’ve only touched the surface of what I feel or think about my three major surgeries and what, if anything, they mean. So, I’m afraid I’ll probably continue writing about them off and on until I figure out what, exactly, I’m trying to tell myself or trying to learn. Or trying to make sense of the fact that I’m still alive when, according to the natural progression without massive intervention, I should be dead. And why me, instead of someone else who wasn’t so fortunate? Is there an answer to “why?” No, I think not. I…we…want answers that do not and can never exist. I tend not to cry when I write, because writing is more an intellectual than an emotional exercise. But for some reason, tears keep slipping from the corners of my eyes as I write this. And I don’t think I want to deal with today. I just want to stay safely in my cocoon and rock myself back to sleep.

But I haven’t had breakfast yet and I’ve allowed my coffee to get cold. So I suppose I’d better get up out of this chair and face the world. I’ll rock myself to sleep later, when I can confidently predict no one will intrude on my thoughts.

 

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Surviving is Easy

As we age, we lose pieces of ourselves. In our youth, we could not conceive of the losses. How could it possibly be, we silently but mockingly wondered, that something so crucial to our sense of self could disappear into the vapor of time? How could our hearing fail? How could our sexual prowess diminish so thoroughly? How could we come to rely on canes for balance, instead of depending on our innate abilities to remain upright and strong? It was inconceivable, in the arrogance of youth, to think we might ever need false teeth or oxygen bottles or countless pills and capsules or inhalers or compression garments.

Bearing the scars of battles with time—too many of which we lost—we finally limp into the sunset, declaring victory in a war against eternity. It is the same war we dismissed, in our youth, as being fought against an imaginary enemy. Yet here we are on the cusp of a victory we know we will never win. The afterlife, a fantasy born of fear, still promises eternal joy. Except for those of us who feel confident that life and afterlife are one in the same. After life, we believe, the circle begins anew. Once again, we return to the stardust from whence we came. But we’ll never again be conscious of the cycle in which we place our “faith.” Because, like youth, once life is over, it’s over. We become deconstructed humans; food for one-celled organisms and energy for oak trees and poison ivy and raccoons.

Few of us long for the day we’ll begin to decompose and disappear. Many of us, though, attempt to delay that moment for as long as possible. Life-saving surgeries, death-delaying pills, exercise regimens designed to deceive our muscles and delude our cells. We start the deceptions early, pretending even in our teens and twenties that we enjoy stressing our bodies and eating bland, taste-defying fibers. Just as long as our sacrifices extend our lives by days or weeks or months, the atonement for our natural sins is worth the pain!

But is the pain of surviving worth sacrificing the process of living? A relatively new favorite song includes a line that goes, “surviving is easy, living is hard.” It’s a bittersweet tune by a Canadian artist; I am relatively sure I’ve written about Ken Yates’ music. Given that he’s Canadian, you can trust that his songs come from the heart. I know, that’s just so much B.S., but I like to believe it.

The conceit of youth is so maddening, in one sense, and so beautifully hopeful, in another. I largely wasted my youth. And once that’s gone, it’s damn near impossible to retrieve all the value that was mindlessly thrown away. But you keep trying. You try to resurrect the youth that you so carelessly misspent. You fail, of course, but you try anyway. And trying, sometimes, is almost as valuable as succeeding.

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Giving

The simultaneous intersections of a host of experiences of emotional and analytical experiences in my mind have, once again, highlighted significant flaws. That is, which ones can be repaired and which of the shattered and broken pieces should simply be swept up and discarded. While the two preceding sentences might seem negative and emotionally fraught, that is not the case. Emotionally-charged, perhaps, but not fraught.

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Yesterday afternoon, I got a text message from a friend from my long-ago Chicago days, a guy I had been meaning to get in touch with for months (but as they say, “…the road to Hell is paved with good intentions…”). His message wished my wife and me Happy Easter and asked how we are doing. And he suggested the four of us (he, his wife, my wife, and I) talk by telephone soon. I was busy when his message came in, so I put off reading it until last night, after dinner at my neighbors’ house.

Last night, when I took the time to read his message, one of my increasingly rare meltdowns occurred. I responded to his message, though it took me a long time to get through it. The shock and pain of my wife’s death came back to me with such full force that I thought I might not be able to reply to him. But I did. The fact that I hadn’t even told him about her death bothered me; it still does. I wonder who else who would want to know, who I might have neglected to contact?

That episode made it clear to me that, despite the significant improvement in my ability to deal with her death, it’s still almost unbearably hard for me to accept that my wife is gone forever. Even though I’ve made some truly extraordinary strides and can feel myself wanting to be (and getting) closer to people whose presence in my life I enthusiastically embrace, the excruciating pain is not gone. And it’s not yet really tolerable. If truth be told, it probably never will be tolerable because of who I am at my core.

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Other texts came my way yesterday, several from a friend from the D/FW area. She will visit soon (as in this Friday). She is someone whose attitudes and emotions seem to parallel mine. And she writes and reads poetry, to boot, so her time here is apt to be a calming influence; that’s what poetry tends to do for me. I’m very excited about her visit and the opportunity to have long, meaningful conversations with her. In my experience, people who write poetry tend to think and feel deeply and they tend to understand emotions and to feel compassion more deeply than the “average” person on the street.

Another couple of texts came from a woman who has left the Hot Springs area circle where I met her but who, even though quite distant physically (as in the Pacific Northwest) might as well be joined to me at the hip with respect to our disturbing humor. Until recently, I haven’t heard about or from her in around five years. Now that I’m thinking about it, I think I made the most recent contact, the purpose of which was to tell her about my wife’s death. This woman, who became a flight attendant since last I saw her, has two adult or near-adult children and a husband in or around Portland or Seattle or environs. I gather from our recent communications that she has had to rein in some of her more expressive behaviors/humor in her new role as airborne protector.

I got a phone message, too, from a friend and former teacher (who taught me to throw clay on a potter’s wheel and to create sculpture), asking about getting together for lunch sometime soon. We had tried to arrange a lunch recently, but her dog (who had been her close friend and companion for 10 years) experienced seizures and then died about the time we were to meet.  We’ll try for another time soon. Though she is more (maybe considerably more) than twenty years younger than I, if she weren’t in what I think is a stable gay relationship, I might have wondered whether an old man like me might have an opportunity to develop a passionate relationship with her whenever my on-again, off-again grief subsides. But I am too old and she is too young and I might never be ready, anyway, for a considerably younger lover. Especially a younger gay woman whose interests probably do not include old heterosexual men.

Speaking of visits, a week from this coming Friday I will be visited (for at least a few days) by a couple, close friends, who live in Fort Smith. These friends are the people I consider among a miniscule core of my very closest friends (as close as I think I am capable of getting, anyway). Although we don’t see each other often (even before COVID-19), there’s something about them that’s extremely comforting to me when I’m in their presence; or on the phone or Zoom with them. I wish we lived much closer together and could see one another far more frequently.

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Even amid all the visits and conversations and demonstrations that I matter to people who matter to me, slivers of doubt jabbed at me all day. People I’ve begun to think of as friends did not make contact with me as I might have hoped. But, it occurred to me, neither did I make contact with them. Yet maybe I had simply given up; my efforts, perhaps, had not generated “enough” responsiveness to satisfy me. Absurd! People have lives of their own. I should not and cannot expect everyone to make a point of caring for my tender ego every moment. I should not expect people to think about me and let me know it. Someone (but I don’t recall who) is quoted, roughly, as saying “You wouldn’t worry so much about what people think about you if you understood how seldom they do.”

Suddenly, it occurred to me that all I’ve written this morning is purely self-centered. And it occurs to me, as I think about that unpleasant realization, that most of my writing is. That disturbing fact suggests I need to have some uncomfortable conversations with myself and change my behavior and thought-processes accordingly. I must change myself so I get more satisfaction from learning about my ego-driven emotions than from indulging them. And I thought I knew, going into this morning’s writing, that I had begun to learn and take deliberate control.

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But yesterday was a delight in many ways. I mentioned in yesterday’s post that a friend from church, disguised as the Easter Bunny, dropped by. And I spent literally hours playing Words with Friends with my sister in law, who was sitting across the table from me as she slaughtered me, game after game. And last night I enjoyed a wonderful dinner with neighbors who served some of the most delicious lamb chops I have ever eaten. And I watched and listened to the minister from my church (along with some lay leaders) express thoughts and ideas that I found both inspirational and challenging. My little pocket of the world, mostly hidden from view of the people around me, was generally happy and deserving of my appreciation and gratitude. How can I preserve and protect those moments of appreciation and gratitude?

+++

On with the day. It’s almost 9 o’clock. Crap. I started this day very late (waking around 7:30 with a brutal headache) and I’ve frittered away part of it on self-indulgent drool. Enough! I will grab this day by the neck and squeeze until either it, or I, can’t give any more.

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Numinous

My mother, a career English teacher who earned her master’s degree in English, was something of a grammar Nazi. That, no doubt, is part of the reason sometimes I am so particular with language. However, I am happy to ignore rules from time to time, as well. Not long ago, a friend sent me a link to a column by Brenda Looper (Arkansas Democrat Gazette). Entitled “Break Some Rules,” Looper’s article touches on the differences between scholarly (prescriptive) grammar and and the grammar associated with the way language is actually used (descriptive grammar). While not overly specific about the variances between the two styles, reading Looper’s words are good reminders of the differences not only between scholarly and descriptive grammar, but the differences between written and spoken grammar. The written form is much more formal and tends to be more scholarly. The casual grammar of everyday speech can be utterly divorced from written grammar, regardless of whether  it is scholarly or descriptive.

All that having been said, I remain a bit of a language curmudgeon. I cling tenaciously to more formal, scholarly grammar and tend to hold what I consider “bad” grammar in contempt. But not always. And I do not always use complete sentences. Because…emphasis. And messaging. And so forth.

Writers and speakers, if they look hard enough, can find all sorts of ways to massage the language (English or otherwise) to suit the intents of their communications. Selectively breaking grammar rules can add enormous impact to messages. Rule-breaking can convey unspoken messages, as well. Intentionally saying or writing, in certain contexts, in ways that break grammatical rules can carry messages of contempt or, at least, unfavorably descriptive judgement. “Ain’t that the dickens?! He don’t know where his ass is at.” The writer/speaker, depending on context, either is: mocking the person quoted; judging the person a bumpkin, a hick; or bemoaning the fellow’s loss of a donkey. The real pros, who can use grammar to slide in double entendre messages by breaking grammatical rules, are cunning linguists. (Forgive me, I could not help myself; it’s not original to me, but I admire the classy crudeness it presents.)

Language is interesting, entertaining, and extraordinarily frustrating. And that’s just English. Imagine the grammatical armies protecting all the other languages!

Oh, remind me some time to continue this one-sided conversation. I should say explain about my life-long inability to diagram a sentence which, in my mother’s house, was very nearly a capital offense.

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Numinous is an adjective that means mysterious or surpassing comprehension or understanding. It was new to me when I heard or read it within the last several weeks.  Another definition suggests divine or spiritual. I’ll stick with the first one I mentioned (which, if one considers it carefully enough, clearly describes the second one). I think, though, the religious definition is the one more commonly associated with the word. I am not quite sure why I think that, frankly, but if there’s a “definition contrast-compare-rate—and-rank” service, I believe its analyses would correspond with mine.

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Impure Fiction: His Perspective

To say it was disappointing would be a gross understatement. She did not notice I was nude. Naked. Had no clothes on. Nekkid as a jaybird. Wearing only a birthday suit. Clad only in a bag of skin. Sin ropas. Nackt. Desnuda. Naken.

But I hid my disappointment. I tightly embraced her when she reached me after shuffling, in my far-too-large slippers, across the kitchen linoleum. The embrace sparked a diminution of my disappointment, causing a short embarrassment, instead.

She noticed. “What? You’ve been naked all this time? I thought maybe it was my imagination.  Must be nice to be able to walk around the house nude, now that you’re no longer a working stiff. You’re enjoying retirement, I see.”

Her reference that it was nice to be able to walk around the house nude was made in reference to the fifteen-foot tall floor to ceiling accordion glass doors that stretched forty feet across the west wall of the living area.

Well, at least casual acknowledgement was easier to tolerate than absolute oversight.

Clandestine Broderick had been my initial wife, the first of several to follow. We met in high school and had several intimate moments but, within the first thirty minutes of college, forgot them and lost touch with one another. I did not think of her or see her again until I was twenty years older; I married her when I was thirty-eight, the night after our twenty-year high school reunion. Which coincided with our twentieth high-school-aged intimate liaison (completely devoid of sex, by the way). Though the marriage lasted only thirteen months, it was an education for me. And for Clandestine, I might add. Twelve months of the deaf, dumb, and blind leading the deaf, dumb, and blind and one month of practicing perfection. Unfortunately, the perfection was practiced by both us us, outside the marriage. It took just a month to undo twelve months plus twenty years.

Twenty years later, after the forty year reunion dinner, Clandestine suggested we finish the evening with a drink at my house. I obliged. My fifth wife, since Clandestine, had moved out roughly two months earlier, so I was feeling a little, shall we say…in need.  Clandestine could not hold her liquor any better forty years post-graduation than she could on graduation night or twenty years later. Nor could I. The result was the unclothed disappointment.

Clandestine had slept with me the night before, after intense foreplay led to perfection. But perfection never lasts. Memories of snoring and stopped up sinuses gnaws at their edges. Recollections of extraordinary flatulence and using a bent paperclips in lieu of floss or a toothpick, too, sully the color of perfection. And memory, itself, changes from a shade of brilliant white to an ancient pale yellow, awash in brown smudges and grease stains. My memories of Clandestine were more forgiving and appealing, I think, but I cannot remember what they were. Inhaling very high volumes of smoke from a burning reefer blew my memory out of my head, where it resided, to my left foot, where the ingrown toenail on my great toe tends to let memory leak out into the atmosphere. I’ve often thought other people could inhale my memories, floating around in the air. And, if they can, someday I will be unspeakably embarrassed when someone like Natasha or Edward or Priscilla or Merriweather inhales that air. But I digress.

“Would you like to have coffee on the deck? It’s beastly hot out there, but the umbrella protects you from the worst of the sun’s rays.”

Clandestine responded to my invitation with bedroom eyes and a slight twist of her head and neck.

“Only if you promise to relax me on the chaise lounge after,” she purred.

I have to admit that the deck, forty stories above street level with a magnificent view of the Pacific Ocean, was the ideal place for  outdoor sex. No voyeurs could see what was happening on the deck, even with binoculars.

“Clandestine, don’t you think it’s time you got dressed and went home?”

“You know, Frank, you’ve turned into an unadventuresome old man. Where’s your…je ne sais quoi…your thirst for unbridled passion and dangerous thrills?”

How could it be, you might ask, that I married for the first time when I was thirty-eight years old, but by the time I reached fifty-eight years old, I had just discarded my fifth wife? I would respond by saying it was easy; I averaged just under four years per wife. That performance gave me three years before I might have gotten the seven-year itch, had I been counting.  It may have been a strategy to avoid infidelity. Unfortunately, that did not work, in that the average number of illicit affairs was about four per year, itch or no itch. You can calculate the numbers yourself; roughly eighty illicit sexual liaisons, give or take a few.

Impure Fiction: Her Perspective

With a name like Clandestine, I was bound to be teased. Even though I pronounced it Clandesteen, almost nobody else but my parents pronounced it that way. My parents were cruel psychopaths who tortured their one child mercilessly in ways Child Protective Services either ignored or treated as “normal.” There was nothing normal about my name and they knew it. And there was nothing normal about my father’s habit of walking around the house in the altogether. Well, it was normal to me because I was a kid. But, still, I found it vaguely improper, primarily because of what my friends thought and said. And he reveled in my discomfort when he displayed his wrinkled manhood while standing at the kitchen island.

“Want a peach, Baby?” he would ask as he groped himself absent-mindedly.

That was Dad. My role model. Along with Mom, who kept to herself most of the time, hiding in the master bedroom, which was absolutely out-of-bounds for us kids. I rarely had kids come over after school because the few that came reported their surprise to their parents, who spread the word and prohibited their children from ever again darkening the door of the Broderick household. But that all changed with Frank.

My experiences with Frank McKracken were both memorable—delightful in some ways—and nightmarish. On our six-month anniversary, he sent me a dozen red roses and he took me out to dinner at The Gregorian, one of the best steakhouses on the west coast. Located about five miles north of Gualala, The Gregorian attracted a rabid following all the way from the Bay Area to the border with Oregon. But two days later, after the roses and candle-lit dinner, I caught him in bed with one of my girlfriends, Omega Swartch. Omega was not the only one, though. Apparently, I later learned, he found some of my other girlfriends just as impossible to resist. And they found his allure more important than their connections with me.


And that’s an unfinished off-the-cuff attempt at writing a deviant, modestly erotic vignette that stops suddenly and with no warning; utterly incomplete. The question, of course, is whether it should be finished, discarded, or set on fire and thrown from a bridge near the Norwegian coast. I’m tempted to continue writing her perspective, which I imagine will be radically different from Frank’s. He is, obviously, a self-centered lecher who discards wives with wild abandon. But who is Clandestine, at her core? Really, is she brittle or is she as flexible as thick steel? And how does this semi-erotic vignette play out after a breakfast of hash-browns and thick links of habanero and chicken sausage? Maybe I’ll revise it, taking myself out of the equation as Frank’s first-person narrator and, instead, presenting the story in third-person. Or maybe I’ll simply abandon this story because of the lack of feedback (yes, I’m involved in casting about for guilty consciences).

+++

I’ve long had another story in the back of my mind about a guy who was named Angaroo by his thoughtless parents. He earns a nickname, Anger; an appellation attached to him both to mock his given name and to acknowledge his response to incessant teasing by children whose parents should be locked in prison cells for parental negligence. Angaroo’s experiences during childhood and beyond might explain his actions one day, weeks after his thirty-third birthday. One day before that fateful day, the Black Friday after Thanksgiving, Angaroo disconnected and emptied the automatic fire sprinkler system that protected shoppers and staff in a big box store. He then hooked up a pump to the fire sprinkler pipe to force pressurized gasoline into the system. A hour after the store opened, when it was jammed with Christmas shoppers, Angaroo drove a tanker truck around the store, stopping long enough at each entrance and exit, to drench the door and its surroundings with gasoline. He then lit the fire. Six hundred shoppers perished in flames.

This brutally vicious and violent story probably will never be written, if only because it is so horrendous. In fact, it doesn’t even belong in my brain.

+++

I’ve spend most of this Easter morning with my sister-in-law, playing Words with Friends. Then, a friend called to ask if I was home so the Easter Bunny could drop by. She came shortly thereafter, bearing a little gift box with goodies she had made, along with some traditional Easter bunny chocolates, etc.. She is among my favorite people; so incredibly thoughtful and so much fun to be around. If she weren’t happily married…she’d probably find someone far more appealing than I with whom to spend her time.

I have yet to shower, which is becoming urgent in that I am going to my neighbors’ house in about an hour for dinner. I shaved early this morning and planned to shower after my sister-in-law left, following our Words with Friends game. But we continued playing and talking about nothing for hours!

My Easter fiction vignettes should not be considered Easter vignettes. Instead, they should be considered flush fiction, the kind of incomplete garbage that belongs on rolls.

Enough of this. It’s damn near 3:00 p.m. and I have to get clean and presentable.

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No More Mistakes

NOTE: I received communication from a woman who is related to some of the people whose names I originally included on this post. She asked me to remove those names.  Inasmuch as it was never my intent to cause anyone any concerns by including their names, I have removed the names below. Suffice it to say I remain interested in whether I have any African ancestry in my long, convoluted history? 🙂

+++

Yesterday, I posted a rather silly comment on Facebook, ruing the fact that I was robbed of my Mexican heritage by having been born an Anglo. My “silly” comment, though, was based on my real admiration for and appreciation of all positive aspects Mexican culture. But after I posted my silly comment, I began to wonder whether there may be Swinburns in Mexico (aside from my brother) who were born and grew up there. These potential Swinburns, I reasoned, would have absorbed the Mexican culture naturally, regardless of their skin tone or ancestry. I planned to explore more about this on waking this morning. Before I thought long about looking, I stumbled upon a Swinburn who was born and grew up in XXXX, XXXX. She is a Black woman whose name is XXXX Swinburn. Judging from her photos, she is somewhere between her late fifties and her mid-sixties. I have been unable to determine, yet, whether Swinburn is her maiden name; I’m still looking (the only other Swinburns on her friends list or on friends’ lists are:

  • a very young (late teens?) White girl;
  • an adult male (who may be in his forties?);
  • XXXX Swinburn (from XXXX but now in London, England), a Black woman (I think) but not sure which person in the photo is XXXX. XXX’s list of friends on Facebook includes:
  • XXXX Swinburn, a White woman in England.
  • Also on XXXX’s FB site was an image that shows XXXX (either the mother or one of two girls), all of whom are in the loving arms of a White man.
  • XXXX Swinburn, details unknown except that he is from XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

During my search, I’ve discovered that XXXXXX’s extensive friends list represents a rainbow of people from all over; mostly Africa, but I came across one in Indonesia.

As I considered this surname journey, I also remembered that I have a Facebook friend, Annette Swinburn, who ostensibly was born in Leipzig, Germany but grew up in Chile (or was it Argentina?). On FB, she shows her current city as Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia.   Her first language is Spanish, but I believe she is fluent in English and she may be fluent in German; she worked for Red Bull at one time, I think, and may still. But her last post was from Bolivia in April 2016; that worries me.

I found plenty of other Annette Swinburns, mostly in England (England is absolutely lousy with Swinburns—they’re everywhere). One, who lives somewhere near Canterbury, posted a review (no longer visible, apparently) about Sundowners Gay Bar. Another one (or the same Annette Swinburn) was named HR Consultant of the year in 2007, where she represented Deloitte. And yet another (or the same one) received an award or recognition of some kind in connection with her discernment about a specific wine; it may have been a South African wine.

XXXX, I can tell from her posts, is fluent in English; it may be her native tongue. Oh, my, have I gone off the rails again? I was hoping to learn that I have Black blood-relatives from my ancestral home in XXXX, but it’s beginning to look like that’s not my ancestral home. Although I do not know for sure.  But wouldn’t it be spectacular if there were a way to demonstrate, without any room for error, that everyone on Earth is a blend of African, Asian, Anglo, etc., etc., etc.? Wouldn’t it be great to be forced to acknowledge that, ultimately, we’re all the same, regardless of skin color, country of origin, or language?

I may attempt to send a message to XXXX through Facebook; she might ignore it or she might be delighted by it. Who knows? It’ s worth a shot. Maybe. But I’m worried that her last post was in 2018. I hope they’ve just lost interest in Facebook.

+++

I slept long and hard last night, though I awoke at least four times during the night. Each time, I uttered something loud and long before deciding it was too early to get up. I was asleep again in a heartbeat. Before arising in earnest, though, I had a long, meandering dream in which I was a returning student at the University of Texas in Austin. The environment looked very different; the campus had grown enormously, covering several thousand acres. The dream seemed to have begun at the tail end of a lecture of some kind, held in an enormous auditorium. Though I was in the audience, I also was to teach a class and I needed to find the dorm in which I was to be housed. I also needed to find my student mailbox; I told someone I had failed to locate my mailbox the year before. No one could tell me exactly how to get to the student mailboxes. But the professor from the lecture spoke to me about cleaning up pools of water into which trash and used equipment had been thrown; that had to be done before I searched for the mailboxes. The search involved stopping in several coffee-shop-type places, where dogs roamed freely. Each dog had a tattoo on its belly and I think I was to view and record each tattoo. Finally, at some point, I thought I was in close proximity to the UT tower and the Co-op (the latter which may or may not exist any longer). But as I looked up, I could see that the tower was far, far away. And then someone told me the student mailboxes were located about twenty blocks east of the tower. And then I awoke and tried to determine whether the night had ended. It had, almost.

There was much more to the dream, but it was mixed up in ways that I cannot explain and I think parts of it were repeated several times. Dreams confuse me; one day I think they consist of unrelated snippets of experience that have absolutely no “meaning” and the next I believe they represent unresolved issues that, though hard to comprehend, might be vital in understanding one’s emotional dilemmas. And another day I may have a completely different perspective. Bizarre is the word I think I used early this morning to describe last night’s dream.

+++

Yesterday, I visited a medical dispensary and bought some very expensive goods that presumably will ease my troubled muscles and nerves and tendons and the mind to which they are all connected. We shall see. At least the goods will bring an unearned smile to my face and will drag laughter from my throat. I also went to a favorite Tex-Mex restaurant and had a nice meal of tacos de lengua and tacos de barbacoa. It was the restaurant’s environment and the meal it served to me that prompted yesterday’s silliness and longing for my Mexican heritage.

+++

I could spend all day today being utterly, completely, thoroughly lazy. But I have to make a bunch of phone calls on behalf of my church, informing members of an upcoming vote and urging them to vote, preferably in favor of the proposal (to fund a completely new website, built by professionals to present the site structure a team of members collectively decided on). I rather loathe making phone calls on behalf of the church, mostly because I generally do not like talking on the phone. But that’s not always the case. Sometimes, phone conversation can last hours, but seem like only minutes. Especially, though, I find telephone sales calls unappealing. And I suppose that’s how I view these church calls. They’re necessary, but only because we cannot be sure members would read or understand our message if sent by email or text, my preferred modes of communication.

Today, I’d rather have a friend over to sit and chat all day. Someone whose mere presence would be enough, but with whom conversations and mindless chatter might be perfectly comfortable. Hmm. I guess face-to-face communication is my real preference; COVID has almost made me forget that’s an option.

+++

Feeling distant and discarded this morning. Disconnected, I guess, is more descriptive. That is not to say I feel either sad or depressed; it’s more that I feel unnecessary. How does one “feel” unnecessary? Hell if I know. It’s just the best descriptive word I can think of. Even though I’ve written about ancestry, human connectedness, and strange dreams, none of that feels relevant right now. I am just going through the motions of human irrelevancy. But. of course I do not think humans are irrelevant; we just think we’re more relevant than we really are. If a friendship or love life or sense of self comes apart in a thousand tiny, splintered, impossible-to-repair pieces, we can just ricochet off the walls of the life that confines and tortures us until we find a spot on that wall lathered with adhesives. Those little spots capture us, once again, permitting us to pretend everything is as it should be. As if “should” has any basis in reality or relevance. We’re adept at making mistakes about who and why we are. We rarely give a thought that the planet on which we live could be erased, almost in the blink of an eye, from the memory of the ever-expanding universe.

No More Mistakes

The sun shrunk into a black dwarf overnight,
its surface—once a cauldron of molten time—
cool to the touch, unimpressed by the
passing of irrelevant moments and planets.

Somewhere, the sun’s twin will take the cue,
it, too, drenching its healing heat and light
with darkness and ice so cold even electrons
and neutrons cower, deathly still, in corners.

Mother Nature, that leering beast born of
misunderstanding and mindless fury,
witnesses with cool detachment the rupture
of the fabric of a thousand galaxies.

Father Time, Mother’s doddering companion,
watches the cloth as it tears, aware
of the meaning of this monstrous mayhem:
there will be no more minutes, no more mistakes.

And in light of all that, is it a mistake to think about the possibility of a multi-cultural heritage as something meaningful? So what if we’re forced to acknowledge that we’re all the same? Why is it relevant that, regardless of skin color, country of origin, or language, we’re all part of the human race when, at any moment, the sun could shrink, leaving us to turn into instant icicles?

Once again, I fell asleep at the keyboard, the pinky of my left hand pressing on the “z” key and creating a lengthy expression of a symbol for sleep. So many zees.

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Ach!

Libido. One of the definitions of the word is:

all of the instinctual energies and desires that are derived from the id.

Id is defined as

the part of the psyche, residing in the unconscious, that is the source of instinctive impulses that seek satisfaction in accordance with the pleasure principle and are modified by the ego and the superego before they are given overt expression.

Pleasure principal is:

instinctive seeking of pleasure and avoiding of pain to satisfy biological and psychological needs.

I find it interesting to explore the relationships between id, ego, pleasure principal, libido, etc., etc. because the entire mass of ideas is based not necessarily on reliable, verifiable, demonstrably valid data but, instead, on interpretations that are influenced by assumptions and beliefs. In other words, it’s all conjured by our minds as we attempt to understand things that may be unknowable. We may never truly grasp what drives us to think, feel, want, dislike, etc., etc. But we prefer to think we know, even when we don’t or can’t. The word “instinctive” is interesting in connection with the definition of “pleasure principal” because it acknowledges (or asserts) that we do not control certain of our urges but, rather, are controlled by them. We’re animals, in other words, just like other animals. We’re creatures just like birds that fly north and south during specific seasons; if we had wings, we might migrate without thinking of why we are doing it. “We just have to fly; it’s an instinctual urge.”

I do not know just why these thoughts are on my mind this morning. Perhaps it’s simply instinct that drives me to think the way I do. But maybe humans’ instincts are groomed and cultivated by what we think are our more advanced intellects. But maybe not. I’m enamored of the possibility of knowing “why” in almost every situation, every circumstance. It’s not really a possibility, though, is it? It’s more of an impossible dream, a wish so frail and tenuous that I’ll never know; it’s just a desire that always beyond reach.

+++

After getting my second COVID-19 vaccination yesterday, my emotional energy outpaced my physical energy by a factor of five. I did not realize this until I attempted to move the gargantuan queen-sized bedframe from the garage into the house. My physical capabilities paled in comparison to the amount of energy necessary to accomplish the task. Not one to give up, though, I contacted Bob (not the dog; the handyman). Unfortunately, he said he would be unavailable until sometime late this coming week. So, I decided to ask my delightful neighbor couple, approximate ages of 73 and 80, to consider helping me move at least a portion of the mass of dense wood. Long story short: the entire bed now resides in its proper place in the house and the neighbors survived the ordeal; I am not sure I did. I feel pain in parts of my body that, until yesterday, I did not realize could hurt. Muscles in my chest and side and back apparently were stretched far beyond their limits during yesterday’s ordeal. I am relatively sure I tore tendons, shredded muscles into ruined tissue, and snapped major nerve groups into pieces. This is the second time in a week that I have behaved as if I were a powerfully muscular 23-year-old, only to be forced to acknowledge that I am much closer to an advanced state of weakened geezerhood. I guess I survived the night, though. Multiple overnight trips to the bathroom to pee suggested to me that the physical exertion involved in moving the bedframe must have wrung all the liquid from my muscles into my bladder.

+++

My sister-in-law sent me a text this morning at 5:30, saying she did not feel so good; I assume she’s responding to the COVID vaccination (she, too, got her second shot yesterday, an hour or so before I went to get mine). At the time of her text, I felt the same. But I don’t think my discomfort was vaccination-related; I think it was the physical manifestation of the stupidity related to moving the bed.

+++

All I remember of last night’s dream is that I ruined a cassette tape, spilling the long strip of magnetic tape from the container into a spaghetti-like mass and accidentally breaking the flimsy strip. I think I was in a grocery store, but it may have been a library. I was chastised by a woman—either a librarian or a produce clerk—for ruining the tape, which was somehow related to either learning a language or producing a computer program. And on the periphery of the dream were dogs.

+++

I learned from my neighbors, the ones who helped with the bed, that our Easter dinner will consist of lamb chops, asparagus, and rice pilaf.  They invited me quite some time ago to join them for Easter. They’re not even remotely religious, as far as I can tell, but they tend to observe some Christian rituals, yet without any of the religious trappings of those rituals. Interesting, that. At any rate, the mention of lamb appealed to me, even though I still have a lot of leftover leg of lamb in my refrigerator. I think I’ll freeze the leftovers, delaying my planned Shepherd’s Pie to some time in the future. I am a passionate fan of lamb, especially lamb cooked very rare and touched with the flavor of garlic. Last night’s dinner consisted of a bit of leftover rare lamb, flavored with a touch of crushed dried mint leaves and heated just slightly. I should have had some vegetables, but I was too lazy to bother; my meal last night was a testament to the allure of carnivorousness.

+++

It’s already 8:30. I’ve not yet showered, shaved, or eaten breakfast. The day is attempting, with little success, to erupt from its molasses-like emergence. I need to help it along. Bran flakes and milk, which can be prepared and consumed even in a mindless stupor, await.

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A Post With No Name

Yesterday was the last official “class” that dealt with spiritual practices (AKA  “deeply introspective and appreciative examinations of the world and sometimes moments of unspeakable gratitude”). But there was talk about continuing the group as a means of prolonging the conversations. And that sounds interesting. While I’m generally unimpressed with “woo-woo” sorts of emotional exercises, this online class was different. The more I participated, the more appealing it became. And, for some reason, yesterday’s class sealed the deal for me; daily and/or weekly, monthly, annually, etc. intentional emotional and mental (and, in some sense and in some cases, physical) spiritual practices can be extremely useful. Meditation or yoga or a hundred other means of focusing on being present and feeling gratitude for elements of life seems to me, now, less “woo-woo” and more fundamentally powerful. Who knew?

+++

Leg of lamb, potato, salad, and broccoli. That was last night’s dinner of champions. And there’s a monstrous amount of lamb left for future meals. I’ve been wondering this morning whether the taste combination of lamb and bacon would be appealing? I suspect it would be. I may give it a shot later today or one day soon. The lamb was tasty, though I do not think it measures up to New Zealand lamb. Last night’s lamb was proudly American and proudly “natural.” I was pleased to see that the package was not marked “unnatural.” Thought that might have piqued my interest a bit more.

+++

Today is the day. COVID-19 vaccine shot number two. The day of invincibility! The day I will tear off my mask, wander into a crowded right-wing gun-fanatic demonstration, and take a deep, deep breath. Okay, only the first sentence is true. I know I’m not becoming invincible today, nor will I take off my mask and mix with crowds of dimwits. But it sure will be nice to get that second shot behind me. And in two weeks, I’ll feel like I might have dodged the bullet for a while yet. I hope. I’d like that to be true of everyone I know. And those I don’t.

+++

I wrote a long letter last night (typed, not long-hand) to a young woman I met only once, around six years ago. After I met her, we became Facebook friends, though neither of us follow the other’s posts very often. That’s where the letter thing came up. I saw, in the rare post that I actually saw, her request for people who would like to get a letter from her to let her know. She said she would write and mail a long-hand letter to them. I doubt she expected me to respond, but I did. And she was true to her word. She wrote a four-page letter, written on stationery with a plant theme. Last night, I finally replied to her letter (though it wasn’t really the kind of letter you “reply” to, in that it was just sort of newsy). Whether she will respond to this one I do not know. It’s not important. But I rather enjoy personal letters, on paper, delivered through the U.S. Postal Service. There’s something especially intentional about them; they take far more time and energy (and money) than email and text, etc. Physical letters, whether hand-written or typed, are appealing to me in part because they deviate from the form-letter swill that pours into my mailbox on most days. And because they represent the writer’s intention to communicate in a way that transcends the meaningless drivel that often comes in the form of electronic interactions.

+++

I thought of you last night. But you knew that, of course, though you may not remember. Memory is such an unreliable place to store recollections. You’re never sure whether you recall actual circumstances or whether, instead, you remember events that took place only during vivid (or indistinct) hallucinations or fantasies. You knew you were on my mind because my actions offered irrefutable evidence of the fact. Nothing untoward; just obvious and improper, if we accept the social mores of our time. And more than a little embarrassing—not to you, to me—now that I recall what I said, and in light of those damn social mores. These were not spoken words. They were word symbols, formed with components from the alphabet. Symbols that, collectively, revealed things about what was on my mind and that I hope do not cause you discomfort or unease.

From whose mind did the words from the preceding paragraph arise? Was it mine, or was it from a character in a screenplay? Or might it have been just an actor, exercising his vocal chords during a silent rehearsal? Or might the words have be transcribed from a brain-scan recording made more than two hundred years after the death of the person responsible for crafting the message? The paragraph’s content seems vaguely inappropriate and, possibly, with slightly erotic overtones; but only if you’re a mind-reader. And I often think you must be. I can tell from your smile. Or from the look of embarrassed discomfort on your face. What name am I calling you today? Phaedra? Ariadne? I think Aphrodite is a far more appropriate moniker; beauty, after all, is in your genes. And, as my old friend would say, in your jeans. Ah, you see where this could be going! We’ll have to watch out, lest Nurse Rached takes a fancy to handing out lobotomies in response to overnight travel through mental labyrinths.

+++

His name is Bob Mayer. He was president of an association I once managed. But not in the dream. In the dream last night, he worked in an odd corporate complex involved in business consulting in the financial world. I drove to the corporate complex, miles away from everything, and was led to a tiny, one-car tram on a sand-covered track, where I was instructed to sit. Once seated, the tram took off, heading through an elaborate series of doors hidden behind sliding file cabinets, safes, kitchen cabinets, and an assortment of other forms of camouflage. When the tram stopped, at the far end of an outdoor track a good hundred yards from the main corporate complex, I was told to sit in a chair and wait. I put my briefcase down and waited. Soon, another tram came to pick me up; I do not recall exactly where it took me, but wherever it was, that’s where I met with Bob Mayer. Bob reminded me that I had been interviewed earlier (but it hadn’t happened in my dream, I’m sure) and asked how it went. I told him I did not know. He assured me it went well. He told me the wrong answers I gave were understandable, since I had never been involved in the business before. Apparently, I had earned the job, but I did not recall whether it had been offered and I was concerned that I had no idea of the pay; not even a range. Suddenly I realized I had left my briefcase out on a distant track. And just as suddenly, I was there, relieved to find the briefcase was still there. And that’s all I remember. Although I can feel little shards of the dream stab into my brain from time to time, though the jabs are not sufficient to retrieve any recollections. Dreams are odd beasts. As are dreamers.

+++

Codes are systems used for brevity or secrecy of communications. Not necessarily hidden, they sometimes scream that their messages must be deciphered and understood. But in some cases, codes don’t seem like codes. They seem like natural, normal communications. Or unnatural, abnormal communications. The National American Code Talkers, so revered for their contributions to the American World War II effort, used their facility with an almost lost language to communicate important information; information that made no sense to people who did not understand.

Okay, I’ve written enough strangeness to last me through the day. Some of what I wrote could get me committed for a psychiatric evaluation. I hope that doesn’t happen, but if it did it might provide more fodder for my writing. Maybe even fairly lengthy fiction. Time will tell. It always does. So, here it is; it’s time I’m finishing up this trip through my mental desert with a post with no name.

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