Friday, November 18, 2011

Radio silence, no more!


Oh gee, look at that! ...decided to dust off this ol' 'thing.

I'm back on here only to say that a new blog is in the works. It'll be a lot more legit: topically driven, complete with book reviews, movie reviews, events, profiles, etc. A big girl blog! Look for a launch message by the New Year....

Stay tuned!

Friday, September 23, 2011

An ode to mascarpone OR "how I learned to just let go and fall in love with Benjamin Moore AF-20"


I found you. I finally found you after all this time. Amidst the disorienting flurry of 140+ white swatches from Benjamin Moore, I found you like an oasis in the desert. After 66 swatches and one entire week of deliberation, you saved me. I owe you everything, but most especially my sanity.

Oh, AF-20 how do I love thee? Let me count the ways!

I love your colloquial name. Mascarpone. Much more favorable than gross OC-85 Mayonnaise. Sure, I get confused with the placement of that pesky 'r' and I undoubtedly mispronounce you every single time I order another gallon but still. You remind me of your namesake cheese and I love cheese. So much. Almost as much as you. Almost.

I love your perfect white color. A flawless white white if such a thing exists. No purple drops like that weird OC-100 Palace White. Not dingy in artificial light like CC-912 Linen White. You are crisp without being stark. You are creamy and warm without a trace of color. Although, when I was painting in the early morning light I thought for sure you were yellow and I admit, you had me scared shitless. But then you tricked me by drying beautifully. Well played, Mascarpone. Well played.

Oh, AF-20, I love you so much I want to have you forever! I want to paint every surface in your beautiful, warm glow! I am a woman obsessed. I would drink poison and pretend to die so that you could drink poison and really die and we would be together forever. Star-crossed lovers, you and I.

Can't wait to see you in another room soon.
Love always,
P.

p.s. let me also take an opportunity to sing the praises of my very dear pet favorite, Benjamin Moore OC-117, Simply White. You don't have any gray like CC-20 Decorator's White. You are absolutely luscious for a clean, bright bathroom. Thanks to you, bathroom reading material is no longer necessary: I can sit and meditate on the beautiful walls instead.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Blush and Bashful.


Dear Benjamin Moore Paints:

This is what I want listed on the back of your paint swatches: "SIMPLE COLOR NAME: Cool undertones, will clash horrendously with yellows, etc."

This is what I get listed on the back of your paint swatches: "PEACEFUL FLUTTERING DOVE TAIL: OC-117"

So. Re-painting the guest bedroom and bathroom is officially on the list of to-do projects-- mostly because my mom is visiting in two weeks. In my mind's eye, I envision a light, bright -and yet warm- paint palette, flowing effortlessly from the 1940s cottage to the modern extension. [For the record: PB has given official stamp of approval of said vision]

We decided on a clean, white bathroom and neutral bedroom. Simple enough, yes? NO.

I spent an hour at Benjamin Moore, staring at a wall of colors. Oh, and don't be fooled: the "Color Preview" colors are almost entirely the "Classic" colors, but with fancier names. This is a fact, relayed to me by Jeremy, an actual employee of Benjamin Moore Paints. Anyway, what did I leave with? No less than 44 swatches of varying shades of white. White. Based on the fact that apparently, many of them are the same but with different names, I may have only picked up 6 different colors. Who knows....

All I do know is that I spent the rest of my afternoon with swatches taped to the bathroom wall. I would stare at the wall. Turn the lights on. Turn the lights off. Open the window blinds. Close the window blinds. Each time expecting one color to jump out at me. I believe in psychotherapy, repeating the same behavior with the expectation of a different result is a symptom of insanity...

And to make the process more enjoyable, the colors I was scrutinizing carried infuriating names like, "Palace White," "Simply White," "Snowfall White," "Glacier White," and "Atrium White." I feel "Simply White" was positively taunting me. Benjamin Moore, do you have a paint color called, "Blood-Splattering-Head-Wound Red"? Because that's what color the walls will be after the anxiety of choosing between 44 whites forces me to take my own life. Honestly.

All I could do was replay the Steel Magnolia pre-wedding scene in my head: "My colors are blush and bashful." "...Your colors are pink and pink."

Yup. Because when I look at "Vapor" and "Steam" taped to the bathroom wall I can't help but think, "White" and "White."

Friday, September 2, 2011

No.


GAAAAAAAAAAH. Let me paint a picture for you of a less-than-ideal situation:

  • Writer completes assignment, 3 days under deadline. Coming in under deadline means life is good: Writer smiles. Believes again in the magicalness of it all, that fantasies can be real-- Santa, Tooth Fairy, an actually funny episode of Glee.
  • 72 hours later, 4:00 pm on a holiday weekend Friday, Writer receives email from editor to this effect: "really liked your piece, but the lead felt contrived and doesn't get to the heart of your story. We really need to hook the readers...do you have a colorful anecdote from your source that you could inject into the story? I'll need the rewrite by Tuesday."
  • Writer then has desire to morph into killer kitty, complete with machine gun and wall of flames. Just kidding. Not really...
Now of course, I'll have the rewrite completed by 5:00 this afternoon (over achiever for life) and I'll send it along with a cheery note of how pleased I am to be of help! When really, I want to explain that no, I do not have a "colorful" anecdote from my source. Because in fact, I'm pretty sure the person I talked to was actually the color gray. Seriously, put me on the phone with a ding-dang-ol' Crayola and I would have gotten more lively material [SEE: post on 'How Not to Phone Interview] And because I would rather read a Dan Brown book [SEE: scraping out my eyeballs and brain cells with a shrimp fork] before calling the nincompoop non-conversationalist again, I will spin a magical tale of greatness from absolutely no new pieces of information.

In other words, I will employ my personal mission statement:

If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

What's in a name?


Today, I started instructing another writing class in partnership with Badgerdog Literary Publishing. I'm no longer with my Alzheimer's group in Westlake. Instead, I'm working on the East side at a Housing Authority complex, with a group of older adults. They're a completely different demographic: low-income, low education level and facing mental/physical challenges.

I only had two people in this first workshop. Amazing the ability of two strangers to humble me.

The two women I taught today reminded me so much of the Women's Adult Literacy Class I taught while in Ghana. The same bashfulness, the same eagerness, the same pride at picking up a pen and writing.

I was reminded today of how guilty I am (we all are) of judging people. Had I seen these two women at a bus stop or grocery store, I would have thought they were less than me. That's the truth.

But everyone has a story and no one is more important than the other. I was also reminded of that today.

We read My Name by Sandra Cisneros. We also read this poem by Eartha, a previous workshop participant:

My name looks like a globe.
My name is the world.
There is so much in it--
the flowers, the trees, the birds,
the fragrance,
the beauty that's within it.
The cry of a newborn baby,
the sound of my mother's voice.
My name smells like clay or dirt.
Soil, sod. It feels squishy and cool.
It's grainy and gritty.
My name smells like my Aunt Dora's house--
the smell of flowers and leaves and trees.
My name tastes like honeysuckle
and watermelon and fresh peaches.
My name is the color of red brown
dirt of West Texas.
My name means terra.

After reading this, Rosemary told me about how she could remember the smell of West Texas dirt. She and her twin sister were separated as infants; every six years, Rosemary would trek out to West Texas with her family to visit her. I never would have guessed....

Let me also mention that the woman who wrote that piece is completely blind. How often have I seen people walking with white canes and burdened them with my pity? When inside, they are carrying their own poetry, songs, ideas, experience, talents, life, love.

I have so much to learn.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

An odd couple.

+ =I love summer. It includes my birthday. And while --this year, anyway-- it does not include rain, it does include two of the best things to come off the vine: tomatoes and yes, hatch chiles. The hatch season is barely a flash in the pan and by the 4th of July, whispers of the coming harvest are buzzing around. While many hoard the peppers and freeze them, I choose instead to wait patiently every year. I think this makes me appreciate the arrival of hatch season better, plus it's a good excuse to put them in every dish I can imagine while it's possible. And being as how I've also never met a chocolate I didn't like, I decided to try my hand at combining these two loves (with inspiration from a spicy brownie recipe from Serious Eats). I gotta to say, the result is a delicious treat, better than the hatch brownies at Central Market. You can thank me later:

  • 5 oz. good quality dark chocolate (I used 100% cocoa baking bar from Ghiradelli), broken into pieces (also, you can substitute 1 oz. chocolate bar with 3 tablespoons cocoa powder+1 tbsp. oil, although I'm not sure you'll get the same fudgy consistency)
  • 10 tbsp butter, plus a lil more for greasing
  • 2 tbsp hatch chile, raw, seeded and ground (I used the hot variety. If the batter tastes a bit too spicy, that's fine, some of the heat bakes off)
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon (this will set a nice background flavor profile for your hatch to take stage)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 3/4 cup sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup flour
1) Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2) In a saucepan over low heat, melt the butter and chocolate with chiles, cinnamon and salt. Stir regularly and be careful not to burn your chocolate!
3) Grease a 9"x9" pan.
4) In mixing bowl, combined melted chocolate mix with sugar. Add eggs. When it's smooth, fold in the flour.
5) Transfer to pan and bake approx. 40 minutes.
6) For the best result, let your brownies "rest" at room temperature for several hours/overnight, before cutting. And devouring.

















Wednesday, August 24, 2011

How not to phone interview.


Goodness me, you're on a flip-phone! That's even more appalling than your terrible interview answers!

The month is closing, which means my deadlines are looming. Usually, I walk around the corner and set-up shop at
Flightpath Coffee (they make a mean Americano) in the mornings. But today, I had a phone interview and because I a) try to be professional and b) refuse to be that person talking loudly into a cell phone while in a public space, I'm working from home.

To accomplish said phone interview, I had to barricade myself into the office. The door doesn't properly close and it took all of 3 seconds for a couple of noses to appear, wedging themselves in the doorway and breathing loudly. My dogs will stop at nothing to be in a room with people. Their emotional dependency is truly astounding.

Mom? MOM?! I know you're in there! MOM! Wait..green carpet. Really??

At any rate, after I piled up a bin of Christmas ornaments and a couple boxes of spare kitchen tiles (where did these come from?) I settled in. While I prefer in-person interviews (conversation flows more naturally and you get all the great nuances in tone and body language) they're not always time-efficient and they don't work when your subject is 200+ miles away. Even so, phone interviews don't have to be all that bad....

Unless
you do any of these things:
  • Pick your nose: Okay, okay, I'm not sure anyone has actually done it but I think it's happened before. I can just feel the nose picking through the phone.
  • Surf The Interwebs, check your email, Twat (Twit? What the hell is it anyway?), check-in on Four Square (again I ask, what the hell is it anyway?) etc. I should not hear clicking from your end of the phone. It is not allowed. Unless you live in a magical typewriter factory where the machines operate themselves, the only typing sound should come from me, and that's only because I'm taking down (word for word) the drivel coming out of your mouth.
  • Pace around incessantly. I'm guilty of pacing while on the phone. I get it, really I do. But if you're walking around your house/office/local high school track at such a brisk clip, you become difficult to understand and worse, I become uncomfortable at your heavy breathing.
  • If we agree on a 10:00 a.m. interview time and I call you at 10:00 a.m. sharp, at least try to muffle the sound of your sheets as you answer the phone. I know you are still in bed. Oh, and I also know that "can you call me back in ten minutes?" Is really code for, "sorry, although your magazine is profiling me, I didn't feel it necessary to set my alarm clock for 9:55. Why do that when I have a writer to call and wake me?! hah! But now that I am awake, I've really gotta pee and have a quick glass of water to hide my gross-morning-voice, k?"
  • When I do call you back ten minutes later, don't be outside or in the car with your windows rolled down. I shouldn't have to point out that you sound like you're in a wind tunnel.
  • Finally, don't be wildly unprepared. Please? I always give a generous 48-hour+ notice and the specific topic of the feature/interview. Perhaps I should start giving detailed lists of every single softball question that's coming your way. Honestly, when I tell you the interview will be about how you spent your summer raising champion golden unicorns, I shouldn't have to sit through you 'umming' and 'ahhhing' when I ask you to tell me about a typical day raising champion golden unicorns. Just sayin. Yes, I know that while I know how to talk in copy/sound bites and enjoy public speaking, not everyone does...still, try to help a sister out, will ya? Because what should be a breezy 250-word article is now like pulling teeth for me.
Why, yes! I did spend my summer raising champion golden unicorns! Let me tell you all about it...

Please take these 6 lessons and learn from them... Because every time a phone interview goes well, a journalist gets it's wings.


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

A crazed love letter.

Dear Rain,

What happened to you? What happened to us? I was pretty excited last Friday. I mean, you were supposed to show up on Saturday evening and stay through Sunday. Okay, okay, you were only going to be one inch at most, but I'll take what I can get. You'd feel so good, I know it. I even made a list of all the super-special things I would do while you were around: sort laundry, mop the floors, finally watch Highlander III on Netflix PlayInstantly. To seal the deal, I even washed my car.

I told everyone you were coming for the weekend and I'd probably be holed up. Well, now you've just embarrassed me. Not only did you not show up in Austin, I actually read that the Texas air is so hot and dry, your tropical storm actually evaporated when you hit land. So. It's true then. You never really intended on being here in the first place. LIES.

I thought we had something special. I thought it might be the beginning of a beautiful relationship. I don't understand what I did wrong. I guess you were too busy giving 7 inches to Chicago the weekend before. CHEATER.

The truth is, I'm desperate. It's been so long and I just can't remember what it feels like to have you on my skin. Never again will I curse you for ruining my hair, forcing me to walk groceries to my car without an umbrella, or making my dogs smell like they rolled in the moldy, decomposing intestines of a very large rodent. I take it all back! You know how it is, sometimes in the moment we all say things we don't mean. Right?

Anyway, you know where to find me. It's 108º out there today so if you could please, please find it in your heart to take me back, I promise I'll never take you for granted ever again.

Love,
P.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The State Fair Rule


I just spent 72-hours at the Writers' League of Texas Agents Conference here in Austin. My first one and I left motivated, educated, and perhaps a bit stunned at the not-dying-anytime-soon popularity of all things Vampire....

I also found that, like children, writer alone is crazy. Writer(s) in large groups are insufferable. All jokes aside, I learned and learned and learned all weekend. I made a couple wonderful connections and had a promising agent meeting (will not reveal details for superstitious fear of jinxing my good fortune). Here's what people in Literary Land taught me:
  • Don't try to hand an agent your self-published book in the continental breakfast line. Painful (yet polite) public rejection will ensue. When said agent asks you to send it to his office in NYC, do not persist. This will only lead to strangers yelling, "he doesn't want to pack it on the airplane!" while giving you the look The Benevolent Agent is probably suppressing. This is painful for all to witness.
  • Be careful making friends with the registration desk ladies. They will bring over the media guy with the video camera and peer pressure you into filming a sound-bite for the website. You will not be given prompts or talking points, making you appear extra ridiculous on camera. The Ladies will say this is, "what you get for being gregarious and normal" in a group of people who, apparently, are not.
  • Begin branding. Now. Gone are the days of the reclusive, brilliant writer pounding away on a typewriter, cigarette dangling from mouth, in the woods, Paris, or New Jersey. In fact, those days probably never really existed. Either way, it's all about creating a platform and marketing yourself to within an inch of your life.
  • When the Gods of Making Books Happen smile upon you and you are granted a 10-minute session with a literary agent, for pete's sake, dress the part. Yes, we writers are creative artists, probably a little bit tortured, but publishing is a business. When you get the chance to pitch face-to-face with an agent, do not wear anything that you would wear to the State Fair. No exceptions. Your outfit shouldn't make anyone inexplicably crave funnel cake or want to guess your weight.
  • Finally, when The Agent utters those three little words that positively send your heart aflutter –"send me more"– offer a firm handshake, smile, try not to pee your pants, and absolutely do not forget to send a hand-written thank you note.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

A hot disaster.


Today, the Littler One and I went on an "adwentcha" to the Zoo. We met up with the Older One and her summer day camp group. Yes, these summer months will see me only caring for one child that is not my own, rather than two. Accordingly, my happiness level has recently and notably increased two-fold...

That is until I found myself amongst 14 children under the age of six, all wearing neon yellow t-shirts. Other than the three teachers, I was one of two "parents" that chose to come. Now I see why: child alone is crazy, child(ren) in large groups are insufferable. However, they had their moments of cuteness (I think there was one) and, perhaps most surprisingly, their moments of astute wisdom. Here is what humans who will not legally drink until 2027, taught me this morning:

  • When the big peacock poops on the deck of the Reptile & Amphibian house, it's called a Poop Deck. No relation to naval architecture and superstructures of ships.
  • If you're very hot and sweaty, you should "take a little dip in ice cold water."
  • If you're the kid who shouts at everyone for mispronouncing "jaguar," you're destined to be an endlessly irritating grown-up. Fact.
  • If you're the kid who calls the small boy with a gap in his teeth "Mister Annoying Pants," you're destined to be an enormous asshole. You will also get lots and lots of girls.
  • Roosters will eat American cheese. So will peacocks.
  • When a lemur raises his tail, backs his butt up to you, and makes a (misleadingly) cute snorting noise, walk away. Better yet, run.
  • At the Axis Deer, it's okay to pick up the light brown pellets from the ground and feed them to the deer. Don't touch the dark brown pellets.
  • Pushing friends is never okay. We do not push!
  • And, if you can't keep your hands on your own body, you have to move away. *can we make this a sign to post in bars?*
  • Tigers in enclosures are not scary. But in a hypothetical situation, a tiger right next to you is very scary.
  • Also, Murphy has sunglasses, Chap-Stic, and sunblock in her monkey purse. Just so you know.
Murphy also told me that she was sweaty, thirsty, and "a hot disaster." And in this 100-degree heat, sister, I couldn't agree more.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Tree of life.


A couple weekends ago, I went back home. Not North Texas where most of my family now lives, but the place where –after an exhausting labor for my mom– I came into the world. McLean, Virginia. I've not been back since we left in December, 1992.

I took PB with me and we walked around old Chesterbrook Park. I remember the sound of slapping sticks on bark, the trees where we built our world. The woods don't look quite the same, but that's ok. The smell hasn't changed. Wet leaves and damp dirt. Next time you cut into a raw potato, hold your nose up to the flesh and that's the smell of my childhood.

*A disclaimer here: I'm about to break blog rule #1 of brevity and #2 of emotional detachment. But some things are worth telling in long-form. And any writer (or journalist, dare I say it!) will tell you everything is subjective, everything is touched by our experience...

When I was a little thing in Virginia, I watched some black and white movie with my mom – Jimmy Stewart or Carey Grant, can't remember– in which the protagonist lives with his mother well into adulthood. I had recently learned I had an older sister, whom died as a baby, and I struggled to understand how that could be. Only old people died. So I told my mom I would be young forever just like the movie and would never move away. I would live with her and dad forever.

"Of course you'll move away. That's part of growing up," she said.

Well. If that was growing up, I didn't want any part of it. The thought of moving away from my parents, and my siblings growing old and all of us one day dying sank my little heart like a stone in the ocean. I decided that 4 years old was plenty for me thankyouverymuch and I would stop right there. It was a simple enough solution and I was astonished at how easy it was to outwit my mom and the rest of humanity! My goodness, hadn't anyone thought of stopping time before? So for the next year, my family had to keep up the charade that I was 4 years old, long after my 5th birthday.

More than twenty years later and I still question how can this be? How can it be that some of us live and some of us die too soon? Do we ever really die?

I called my parents to ask where I could find my sister. My mom said, "Fairfax Memorial Park. That's where Michelle lives." Of course, of course, of course.
Lives. I felt embarrassed for asking where she was buried. Do parents ever bury a child and leave them entirely there? Do any of us? Graves are for the living, a place marker. But no grave can hold a spirit. I believe in reincarnation but even if you don't, we never really die.

I think when we left Virginia, the Memorial Park was our last stop on our way out of town. Or was it? Did I make that up? The Alzheimer's people I work with sometimes fabricate memories to fill in missing holes in their past; it helps them make sense of things. Did we really stop to say goodbye or was I a second grader trying to make sense of my world and death and family and leaving?

Now I found her headstone and did the first thing my hands commanded: I cleaned her off. On my knees in the grass, I swept away the dirt and leaves. Instinct. Then I sat back in wonder at how connected I could feel to someone I never knew.

And then I struggled. What conversation do you have with someone you've never spoken to? I did my best and left her a note:

The family loves you. I bet you would have been beautiful. Mom and Dad still miss you everyday, especially in pictures.
Your sister,
Phyllis

I was sad to leave her there with none of our family around. But that is where she lives and –like my Mom and Dad– I will have to take her with me, even if I still don't know why some of us live and some of us go too soon.

PB said, "I'm happy she has a tree. If you think about it, she's part of it now as it grows, she's in the ground and part of the roots."

And I think that is how my sister would be. Strong, able to weather the storm. Blooming, healthy, changing, growing. Reaching and striving for more.

Sister, I'm so happy you have a tree.



Thursday, May 5, 2011

The magic of Three.


Some things are so disheartening, so awfully frightening, you just have to laugh– Alzheimer's disease, global warfare, reality television, Ann Coulter.

But the reality is, more than 5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease today. 14% of all people over the age of 71 have some form of dementia. Alzheimer's could steal the minds of 1 out of 8 baby boomers, and by 2050, 959,000 people could be diagnosed each year.

Still laughing?

But things like Alzheimer's, MCI, and dementia inspire me. They inspire in me a sense of urgency, an immediate need to take down people's stories, before the memories disappear with time. I've always been a storyteller, and there is no greater joy for me...a well told story transports us, challenges us, and stirs our soul.

Last week, we talked about nostalgia. Mostly, I just sat and listened to the random memories but I also heard from participants that life was simpler years ago:

There were 3 makes of car. Ford, Chevy, Buick.
There were 3 television stations. ABC, CBS, NBC.
There were 3 churches in town. Methodist, Baptist, Church of Christ.

Before television, people sat on the porch and talked to each other. Or kids listened to the radio and used their imagination. You could try and pull pranks in the neighborhood, but someone would always say, "Eugene Smith, I'll tell your father so you better think twice!"

Today, I learned that my mother cannot whistle. I was astonished. Not because she can't do it, but because I had no idea. What else do I not know about this lovely, complex person with whom I shared a body for nine months? Who cut my sandwiches into triangles?

Here's a challenge: get with someone dear to you (phone, email, or face-to-face) and ask them to tell you something most people wouldn't know about them. Or ask them what their morning routine is. How do they take their coffee? Ask them anything. The important thing is to write it down. And do it over and over again with other people.

There is disappointingly little resources for this sort of thing (I smell a personal project in the air!) but here are a couple sites to get you started:
Bicentennial Family History Project
Grub Street Memoir Project
GaGa Sisterhood
StoryCorps

Because if we don't tell each others stories, who will?


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Ship in a bottle.


Sometimes, these guys just make me laugh. After the success of our mother/father prompt, we continued with mothers, grandmothers or other important women. One of our participants was sure to let us know that "Men are complicated. Women are incomprehensible." Fair play.

Carl told us about his grandmother:

She was a devoted, rigid Mennonite who never touched a drink in her life. She made homemade dandelion wine for medicinal purposes only. Grandma only drank it when she was sick. She seemed to have a cold year-round.

Gene told us about his mother, who traveled alone across the Atlantic Ocean at the age of 12. I believe she was coming from Lithuania. She wore a card around her neck with all of her information, in case of accident.

I hear about Gene's mother and I wonder about our own voyage. I wonder about the journeys of this group around me. What happens when our mind sails off? Are the waters uncharted? How do we navigate a ship we once knew so well, that seems intent on betraying us?

When we struggle to remember names, faces, if we took our morning pills, what then? Who do we become? Are we the ship in the bottle, isolated, trapped, alone, solitary? Or are we out in the open, tossed among the waves? Is there a lighthouse to guide us home?

I have heard before that caring for someone with Alzheimer's is a dual-death. First, the person you knew dies as their brain function and memory fail. At some point, comes the death of the body. It is agonizing.

I also choose to believe it is hopeful. Because some day my mind and body will also die. Maybe suddenly, maybe not. But when the time is right –the winds strong and waters calm– my mighty sails will billow up. And while there will be many people mourning on the shore tearfully saying, "There she goes" as I sail away, somewhere on the other side –on a distant shore– there will be others saying, "Oh! Here she comes."

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Hewwo Muddah, Hewwo Faddah


As we continue working with those battling Alzheimer's and MCI, recalling past memories has proven a jackpot of words. Last week, we started with a simple prompt of, "I remember my mother...I remember my father..."

If you don't read much Sandra Cisneros (one of many great Texas writers), you should. Her writing is not always beautiful but it's unfailingly wonderful and real. When I read her work, for some reason I feel she does very little self-editing. She just says it:

Papa Who Wakes Up Tired in the Dark

Your abuelito is dead, Papa says early one morning in my room. Esta muerto, and then as if he just heard the news himself, crumples like a coat and cries, my brave Papa cries. I have never seen my Papa cry and don't know what to do.

I know he will have to go away, that he will take a plane to Mexico, all the uncles and aunts will be there, and they will have a black-and-white photo taken in front of the tomb with flowers shaped like spears in a white vase because this is how they send the dead away in that country.

Because I am the oldest, my father has told me first, and now it is my turn to tell the others, I will have to explain why we can't play. I will have to tell them to be quiet today.

My Papa, his thick hands and thick shoes, who wakes up tired in the dark, who combs his hair with water, drinks his coffee, and is gone before we wake, today is sitting on my bed.

And I think if my own Papa died what would I do. I hold my Papa in my arms. I hold and hold and hold him.

Carl wrote about his father:

I remember my father as a strong and powerful man.

He was strong in his opinions and support. He knew that the French were the cause of all the German people’s problems, if not the cause of all the world’s problems. He also defended me from abusive authority figures, high school principles, or bullies. He taught me how to defend myself. Yet, he always had a soft, large heart.

My father was powerful physically. He could work hard in his garden all day and still have energy for a full night as a punch press operator. I love my father.

Something about hearing those last four words from Carl struck me. Maybe it was his dignified voice that boomed like the walls of a canyon. Maybe it was his long, white beard. I'm not sure. But it reminded me that no matter how old we get, we are always someone's child. What a simple thing to forget. Like it or not, those who brought us here can never be un-parented.

I think Oscar Wilde said it best:

Children begin by loving their parents. As they grow older they judge them. Sometimes, they forgive them.

I remember my dad was always the best at getting splinters out from the soles of my feet. He took the task very seriously: narrowed eyes looking through glasses at the bottom of his nose. By his furrowed brow, you'd think his internal dialogue was something like, "Clip the red wire. Only the red wire...or was it the green wire?" Even now, I am amazed at how such a large man could be so ginger in handling my little be-splintered footsies. Like water balloons that might otherwise burst in the wrong hands.

I remember folding laundry with my mom. This was something passed down from her own mother– folding laundry together was a time to chat and catch up. Mom would dump the clean clothing onto the sofa and we would set to folding it all for placement in the basket. Sometimes there would be something on TV, sometimes not. But she would sit there –back perfectly erect in that posture particular to ballet troupes and my humble mother– and her expert hands would send the smell of warm cotton up and into the room. The best part was always putting clean linens on mom and dad's bed, when she would hold on to two corners, before letting the flat sheet fly. My little sister and I would dash underneath as the sheet billowed down on us. I thought that must be what it felt like to fall from the sky, parachute all around.

I like that Carl said, "I love my father." Present tense. That love will always be present tense.

I may not ever have a booming voice, but someday I too will be very old. I will have long, white hair. And still I will say, "I love my father. I love my mother."

Sunday, March 27, 2011

How not to write.


I spend a lot of time writing and editing. An inordinate amount, really. As of late, I've been editing submissions for a small publication here in town, both fiction and non-fiction. I also have to say here that I am utterly stunned at people whose life goal is to finish their Master's and pursue a PhD, yet cannot construct a sentence. I mean, it's bad. Astonishingly bad. I know a guy –nice guy– who is on that particular path, and wears the same, sweaty, Grateful Dead t-shirt every week and is about as articulate as an uncooked chicken wing. That is to say, not very. Yet PhD is on his list of attainable goals. Huh? I once seriously considered a doctorate, but decided against it. I think most people should, in the interest of societal decency. But I digress.....I am always learning –and not the perfect writer, by any stretch– but allow me to recommend some things to writers submitting for publication:

  • One exclamation point is enough. Actually, don't use them at all. Really. "I couldn't believe it!!!!!!!!! I got a pony for Christmas!!!!!!!" Is never a good idea. In fact, I try to avoid exclamation points at all costs, even in dialogue. Your writing should create a tone and voice without needing that much help.
  • Don't give me a prologue, timeline, or excessive detail. Does it really matter that it was Thursday, May 24, 1971? Probably not. Or perhaps you could work this into the story via scene setting? Please? Also, it probably doesn't matter that the narrator makes six dollars an hour and spent three dollars on breakfast and has $936 in savings. Listing these things is especially bad. I. Don't. Care.
  • Show me, don't tell me. I'm so sorry to hear that Johnny was devastated. Now what else are you going to say for 4,000 words? Show me devastation in facial expressions, dialogue, physical movements, internal dialogue. Anything but one solitary sentence.
  • Don't tell a story from the point of view of an animal.
  • Don't write your entire story in italics. It gives me head-hurt.
  • Don't use the same distinctive adjective twice in one paragraph. It probably wouldn't hurt to put an entire page between them, in fact.
  • Cliches are ok, as long as you put a new spin on them with dynamic characters...but then they wouldn't be cliches, would they? I know the little girl who's daddy ignored her will grow up to be an alcohol-addicted-attention-whore. I get it.
  • Never put words in all caps. I know Elizabeth Gilbert did it in Eat. Pray. Love. and she's laughing all the way to the bank, true, but it still annoyed the shit out of me when she did it. Please see bullet #1 re: exclamation points. PLAIN OBNOXIOUS.
  • Run-on sentences and fragments are excellent. But only if you know what you're doing. Proceed with caution.
  • Listen up, literary journalists: I adore you. I am one of you. We get to be more subjective than news journalists. But please, please avoid going into an overly-emotional diatribe. For god's sake keep your writing clean, tight, and focused. Thank you.
  • Most importantly: remember, all rules are meant to be broken.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Oranges, and ice cream, and snow skis, and time.


Usually, I don't post an entire poem if it's especially long, but this one (from our workshop last week) is too good. Besides, it's dead without all the moving pieces:

Oranges
By Gary Soto

The first time I walked
With a girl, I was twelve,
Cold and weighted down
With two oranges in my jacket.
December. Frost cracking
Beneath my steps, my breath
Before me, then gone,
As I walked toward
Her house, the one whose
Porch light burned yellow
Night and day, in any weather.
A dog barked at me, until
She came out pulling
At her gloves, face bright
With rouge. I smiled,
Touched her shoulder, and led
Her down the street, across
A used car lot and a line
Of newly planted trees,
Until we were breathing
Before a drugstore. We
Entered, the tiny bell
Bringing a saleslady
Down a narrow aisle of goods.
I turned to the candies
Tiered like bleachers,
And asked what she wanted–
Light in her eyes, a smile
Starting at the corners
Of her mouth. I fingered
A nickel in my pocket.
And when she lifted a chocolate
That cost a dime,
I didn't say anything.
I took the nickel from
My pocket, then an orange,
And set them quietly on
The counter. When I looked up,
The lady's eyes met mine,
And held them, knowing
Very well what it was all
About.

Outside,
A few cars hissing past,
Fog hanging like old
Coats between the trees.
I took my girl's hand
in mine for two blocks,
Then released it to let
Her unwrap the chocolate.
I peeled my orange
That was so bright against
The gray of December
That, for some distance,
Someone might have thought
I was making a fire in my hands.

We started with the prompt, "I remember..." pretty simple, but effective. We asked what this poem reminded them of. A group with memory/cognitive challenges means we frequently go completely off the tracks, but that's ok–

Carl remembered the prestige of having a nickel in your pocket -all the candy you could buy- and an old ice cream maker on a summer day (like I said, we get off track). For those of you who have no idea what such a thing looks like, please see photo above. Some of my fondest childhood memories are churning ice cream. Only ours was kind of wonky, so one of the younger children (read: me or my baby sister, Clare) had to sit on top of the churn while it was being cranked. We'd fold up a swim towel so our butt cheeks wouldn't freeze. This story made Carl laugh. He has a good laugh, like a story book.

Lee told us about a time he was skiing in Switzerland and got lost. He ended up crossing the border into Italy. I've spent a significant time living in places where I plainly do not belong, speak the language, or know how to count the currency. My first trip to Amsterdam, I wandered into the Red Light District where I was offered cocaine and a chance to prostitute myself. I think maybe snow skiing into the Italian Alps would have been nicer.

I'm listening to these stories and wondering if it's just me, or are some of the participants looking older? I swear Vic is suddenly aging, but still I hope it's just me. I want these people to be timeless, to go nowhere. Because they may not always stay on task, but what they remember is golden to me. Golden because it reminds me that sometimes life isn't about sticking to the path. It's about getting lost and figuring it out. And if we didn't get lost, would our paths ever cross?

It's about sharing the story. It's about ice cream churns. It's about all those lovely, simple things that tie us together. The memories that maybe have nothing to do with anything, or nothing to do with each other but –across generations– make us laugh nonetheless. It's about oranges, and ice cream, and snow skis, and time.

That is what it's about.



Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Intuition.


This morning, I spent two hours with an intuitive. *cue my parents rolling their eyes* I won't go into all the details, but I will say I left feeling energized, confident, inspired and lighter. Mostly, I just listened to what she was sensing, but she did ask me a couple things. Without being prompted, she felt strongly I had a connection to Africa and should return soon. I told her I had wanted to do return this year, but "put it on the back burner" as they say. She asked what I was afraid of. I told her I am afraid of failure, of shaky finances. She asked me for evidence.

"Evidence of what?" I said.

"Evidence that you can't. Evidence that you cannot create and do. Evidence that it cannot be."

I was stumped. There is no evidence.


...here's a short bit she left with me, and I think we could all use it:


TRANSITION

Don't resist your destiny.
Don't fight your way to it.
Tell the universe you are ready and waiting for what is next.
Then surrender.
Be still and listen.
Allow a moment of quiet everyday so you can hear.
Be ready.
Be open.
Allow and create.
If you meet resistance or experience pain, you veered off path.
Stop and listen again and again.
Move only when it is time.
There is no need to run to or from.
Float to what is next.
Invite in your destiny and then practice gratitude with grace.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Color me pretty.


As a kid, I entered the 5th grade science fair. My experiment was a foray into psychology. I titled my project, "What Color is Your Mind?" and set out to study color associations in the human brain. I took several large pieces of colored paper and would asks subjects to say the first word that came to mind with each color. I wanted to see if any trends emerged. For a ten-year-old, I felt pretty darn ahead of the curve. Innovative even. But I didn't win. In fact, I'm pretty sure I was beat by some asshole whose parents made an erupting volcano with baking soda and vinegar.

Last Thursday, we talked about color in our workshop. Here is an excerpt from the poem, Colors Passing Through Us, by Marge Piercy:

Here is my bouquet, here is a sing
song of all the things you make
me think of, here is oblique
praise for the height and depth
of you and the width too.
Here is my box of new crayons at your feet.

Green as mint jelly, green
as a frog on a lily pad twanging,
the green of cos lettuce upright
about to bolt into opulent towers,
green as Grand Chartreuse in a clear
glass, green as wine bottles.

Blue as cornflowers, delphiniums,
bachelors' buttons. Blue as Roquefort,
blue as Saga. Blue as still water.
Blue as the eyes of a Siamese cat.
Blue as shadows on a new snow, as a spring
azure sipping from a puddle on the blacktop.

Cobalt as the midnight sky
when day has gone without a trace
and we lie in each other's arms
eyes shut and fingers open
and all the colors of the world
pass through our bodies like strings of fire.

We wrote about colors and emotions. Wayne chose red:
"Oh, to be red! Burning bright with excitement for yesterday, today, tomorrow...striking out for adventure. Red."

I hope we all have a little bit of Red in us. I think back to my science experiment so many years ago and realize that I also narrowly lost the 5th grade spelling bee. Everyday that year, I would read and memorize one page from the spelling bee book. Every single day. I loved words, I loved spelling, and I really wanted to win. I got into the top five. I'll never remember what word struck me out (although I'm pretty sure it had at least eleven syllables and a couple silent Xs) but the kid after me stayed in thanks to the word "crutch." I couldn't believe it. Crutch. What a jerk.

So sure, maybe my life has had more than a few near-wins –or complete failures– as most would say. But you learn to keep on. You learn to continue burning bright with excitement for yesterday, today, tomorrow. To keep striking out for adventure.

You learn to be Red.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Dancing Queen and my 7-year-old Self.


Last week was all about dreams. Why do we need them? Where do they take us? What happens to dreams unfulfilled?

As I wrote with our participants, I thought about my own dreams when I was little. What did I want to be when I grew up? I remember always desperately wanting to be a writer, often a veterinarian and –for a brief period– an actress (though hopefully one without a Vicodin addiction or sex tape). How wise my 7-year-old Self was. She knew exactly what she ought to be doing. But somewhere, the very grown-up curse of self-doubt took hold and for a few years, I put my 7-year-old-self (along with the rest of me) into a box. While I busily attended to "being realistic" and "building security" that little yellow-haired dreamer story teller sat quietly in the corner. She knew the truth. She knew that to say she "enjoys writing" is tantamount to someone saying they enjoy having arms and legs. Without words I am crippled, an amputee.

But perhaps if I hadn't spent the past several years trying to be something else, I wouldn't have had all the adventures I did. Finally, I have started taking seriously the desire of my 7-year-old Self and I can't help but thank her for her patience.

I wondered then, what the 7-year-old selves of my workshop participants might look like. Were they still in there, quietly waiting? We read a poem, by Langston Hughes:

As I Grew Older

It was a long time ago.
I have almost forgotten my dream.
But it was there then,
In front of me,
Bright like a sun–
My dream.
And then the wall rose,
Rose slowly,
Slowly,
Between me and my dream.
Rose until it touched the sky–
The wall.
Shadow.
I am black.
I lie down in the shadow.
No longer the light of my dream before me,
Above me.
Only the thick wall.
Only the shadow.
My hands!
My dark hands!
Break through the wall!
Find my dream!
Help me to shatter this darkness,
To smash this night,
To break this shadow
Into a thousand lights of sun,
Into a thousand whirling dreams
Of sun!


Nadine shared with us her desire to be a dancer. She seems to have come from a family that thought very little of her, and has spent many decades in a marriage that extends that tradition of belittlement. She always wanted to take dance lessons, but everyone told her that she couldn't so she didn't. And then she said this:

"I will take dance lessons. I don't know how I'll afford them, but I will. I will get the money and I will learn how to dance. I will practice and practice and then I'll be on stage. One day, we will clap our hands and cry together. I will not give up, no matter how old I get."


During the break between workshops, a woman started talking to me at the coffee table. She was some sort of volunteer with the church [where the workshop is held]. She asked if I had ever worked with children. I replied that yes, I also work with 4th graders. She laughed and said, "they [my beloved older people] aren't very different from children, are they?"

I wanted to punch that bitch in the face.

But all I could muster was, "I disagree." before I walked away. Sure, I know we all regress and that someday (God willing and the creek don't rise) I too will need taking care of. But no, it's not the same. Old is not the same as infantile. Even if we are just children inside aging bodies, no it's not the same.

More than anything, I hope Nadine knows it's never too late to become what you might have been. It's never too late for the 7-year-old-self.


Note: photo comes from inside cover of Tuesdays with Morrie, by Mitch Albom. Everyone should own a copy. Or three.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Love is a many-splendored thing.


There is something funny about being the youngest person in a room full of people talking about love, but that's exactly how I spent yesterday morning. In honor of Valentine's Day (really, will Hallmark just go ahead and trademark the stupid thing?) Neena brought exercises involving that great, ever-moving target called Love.

We looked at the underbelly of Love with Mad Girl's Love Song by Sylvia Plath (poor Miss Plath lived quite squarely in the underbelly...I mean, she put her head in an oven for crying out loud) but also the quirky, sweet, irresistible side with Love Poem by John Frederick Nims (incidentally, Mister Nims never put his head in an oven).

After reading and discussing the poem, Carl said, "if it's normal, I don't want it!" We asked him to elaborate:

"One of the things I love most about my wife is that she's wack-o. She is colorful and unusual. Never boring. That makes her more beautiful."

I learned many things that morning, encouragement and caution alike: I learned to never marry someone whom you want to change, you have to just marry the person as they are. I learned you do -contrary to popular opinion- have to say you're sorry a lot. I learned that after the initial infatuation, reality will set in, but from that you can create an exciting, fulfilling grown-up sort of love. I learned that sometimes, your partner can be a real pain. Sometimes, they might drive you crazy. But after I listened to Carl and then watched as Vic's wife slowly made her way over and gently put in his hearing aid (which he refuses to turn up, for the record) and he sent her off with a kiss and genuine "thank you, my darling" I also learned that sometimes -if we're willing- we can't live without each other.

Love Poem
John Frederick Nims

My clumsiest dear, whose hands shipwreck vases,
At whose quick touch all glasses chip and ring,
Whose palms are bulls in china, burs in linen,
And have no cunning with any soft thing

Except all ill-at-ease fidgeting people:
The refugee uncertain at the door
You make at home; deftly you steady
The drunk clambering on his undulant floor.

Unpredictable dear, the taxi drivers' terror,
Shrinking from far headlights pale as a dime
Yet leaping before apopleptic streetcars-
Misfit in an space. And never on time.

A wrench in clocks and the solar system. Only
With words and people and love you move at ease;
In traffic of wit expertly maneuver
And keep us, all devotion, at your knees.

Forgetting your coffee spreading on our flannel,
Your lipstick grinning on our coat,
So gaily in love's unbreakable heaven
Our souls on glory of spilt bourbon float.

Be with me, darling, early and late. Smash glasses-
I will study wry music for your sake.
For should your hands drop white and empty
All the toys of the world would break.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Thursday, Favorite Day.


Well, it's official: I'm in love with the participants of my Thursday workshop. That means Thursday is my new favorite day of the week. You can pretty much anticipate a weekly update relating to this group...

Per the usual both classes had me laughing out loud. The nice thing about them is that they're too old to give a f**k about what they say. I admire this. It's honest. It's endearing. Often it's funny. Sometimes it's sad.

In one exercise, everyone chose a random (blank) postcard and wrote the message that it inspired. Carl bemoaned the bad food in England where "they have a hundred religions and only one sauce." Vic, who is in another group, is tenacious, outspoken, and likes to question everything. EVERYTHING. Por ejemplo:

Me: "My name is Phyllis. We'll be doing some creative writing today."
Vic: "Why?"
"Pardon? Why what?"
"Why is your name Phyllis? Who named you that?"
"Umm. My parents named me Phyllis. After a friend..."
"Oh, well that's very nice. Now what exactly do you mean by 'creative'? And why writing?"

and on and on and on we go. Anyway, we read a poem by Charles Bukowski, Bluebird. The exercise was to write what was in their own hearts. A lot of the responses were funny (a rascal) some poetic (a herron) but I really loved Vic's because it surprised me:

He said: I have joy in my heart. Because I am 80 years old and that is older than my mother and father lived to be. I could live to be 100. I feel good.

Bluebird
Charles Bukowski

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too tough for him,
I say, stay in there, I'm not going
to let anybody see
you.

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I pur whiskey on him and inhale
cigarette smoke
and the whores and the bartenders
and the grocery clerks
never know that
he's
in there.

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too tough for him,
I say,
stay down, do you want to mess
me up?
you want to screw up the
works?
you want to blow my book sales in
Europe?

there's a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I'm too clever, I only let him out
at night sometimes
when everybody's asleep.
I say, I know that you're there,
so don't be
sad.
then I put him back,
but he's singing a little
in there, I haven't quite let him
die
and we sleep together like
that
with our
secret pact
and it's nice enough to
make a man
weep, but I don't
weep, do
you?