Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Thanksgiving Toast (Almost)


I went to light the (gas) fireplace this weekend and it ended rather badly. I am really glad I told Missy to go stand on the other side of the room. POOF! Big puff of flame. My eyebrows and eyelashes were singed, plus all the hair on my arms and around my face. I actually asked my 5-year-old, "is my hair on fire?"

I have burns on my hands and wrists that hurt. I put lavender on them. It is helping.

People at my old job used to wonder why I didn't take advantage of the free flying lessons. Well, duh. It's because of stuff like this. I can't even light a stinking match without torching myself. I am sure the flight lessons would go well.

The kids' dad went to St. Louis for a few days. It makes sense… he has no job, no unemployment insurance, and no interviews on the schedule. I'm willing to bet this week's chewing gum money that somehow, there's a hotel room involved, too. That guy loves hotel rooms.

In the meantime, I am looking up recipes for fish. I hate fish but I need to eat it more for the health benefits. I wish I liked salmon. Now that's a fish that gets the job done.

My mother fell again. I can't afford to fly back East, so her attorney is paying for my travel. It does not look good. They said she is speaking gibberish. I am bracing myself.

Thanksgiving. Thoughts of Brenden.

And Then There's Brenden

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Gleaning

Found this one filed under, "Water is Wet", crossed-referenced with "Sky is Blue". People obviously need food.

I found the visual helpful, too.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Haldol Hal


I did go back to the personals. Found out what a CD is.

A few of the personals seemed interesting, but I think I need a break. I am just tired of everything being difficult and I am really, really flawed. I am tired of hiding that, too. I don't expect to meet someone flawless, but the general level of disturbia is profound. It takes a lot of energy to protect yourself.

That guy Will was f-ed up. The other guy - the one who was sending me movies of himself - was also f-ed, but in a different way. I suspect they both had plans to cage me in the basement of an abandoned farm house.

Recently, a guy named George wrote a succinct ad and I answered it. He responded and sent me his phone number. Having learned my lesson from Crazy Lee, I did a reverse lookup. Googled his name. Found he is looking for a room mate in his luxury town house. The ad for a room mate references his web site. So I went there.

Uh-oh. The web site is a chaotic word salad of accusations about people broadcasting his thoughts, rants about vitamins, and theories about Barack Obama's geneology.

I quote from the most coherent bit:

"Dumb people try to act rich and snotty, ie police with dumb ass MBAs, country hillbilly wanna-be idiots grow mustaches to become 'salesmen'? Talk like idiots, idiots will believe other idiots and very few are genius like myself...Some people say things and I just listen and do the opposite. Fat girls from the Internet try to talk sweet and sexy on the phone. Other normal-cute-sexy girls just talk normal...At the gym, every month or so, they put up a sign that the steam room does not work. Someone poured water on the thermostat and broke it. It's just a lie...."

This is somewhat alarming, don't you think? And as alarming as this is, I can tell you that normally, I would be insulted by the part about the fat girls on the internet. But that's my insecurity. You see how flawed I am? But I've had therapy, so I remind myself that I haven't talked to him on the phone yet, so he cannot possibly be referring to me. Right? Besides, I am only about 10 lbs. overweight. Who would bother to mention this on a web site? It's not worth the trouble. Twenty pounds, I could see. But not 10. You would barely notice 10.

Do you see how tiring this becomes?

I think George is off his meds. My guess is that he has paranoid schizophrenia. It doesn't go well with low self-estemm. Alcoholism, yes. Insecurity, not so much. If I were the alcoholic that Will imagines I am, I would be a good match for George.

He must take Haldol. But only occasionally, like when he *really, really* needs it.

Angry Will


I was corresponding with a writer named Will for a while. He was ok, until I went grocery shopping one night without checking with him first.

It went like this:

We had arranged to talk on the phone, but we didn't set a specific time. I just said the kids would be with Dad, so I would have some free time to talk. He called me at 6:00, 6:30, and 7:30. I left work at 5:30 and took the kids to play therapy and then to Dad's. Then I did some food shopping. I got home at 8:30. I saw that he had called and I didn't want him to think I was blowing him off, so I called him back as soon as I got in. But I didn't listen to his messages first.

Anyway, he sounded very annoyed. It took a while to talk him down. He said something like that he thought I was playing head games. I assured him that I'd had to pick up some stuff at the grocery store, that it was my first chance to run errands.

He seemed argumentative, even when I agreed with him. He commented that my "thought patterns are kind of unusual" and that it was "a strange experience" talking to me.

I really didn't know what to make of that. Mister, if you think it's strange talking to me on the phone, you should hang out with me on a Saturday night. I'll blow your fucking mind.

He finally asked, "Am I making you uncomfortable or nervous?" I told him he wasn't, but that maybe we'd gotten off on the wrong foot with the misunderstanding about when I'd be in. The truth of it was that I was very uncomfortable and didn't even want to meet him. He sounded like a big whining sissy who wanted to pick a fight. Anyway, I made plans to meet him thinking I would probably break them. I got off the phone with him and listened to the three (count 'em) messages he'd left.

#1 - Hi. You're not there. I guess I am calling too early. Oh well. I will try later. Click.

#2 - Wow. This is weird. You're not there. You said you'd be home. Ok. Wow. I wonder what's going on here? Whatever. Click.

#3 - OK. I'm trying again and you're not home. I guess you're playing head games with me or something. Do you have some kind of drinking problem? Is that what you meant when you said that you had a dark side? I guess you're drunk right now. OK. Well, this is the last time I'm calling. Click.

Yeah.

The email shove-off:

Will,

I just got a chance to listen to your phone messages and I am uncomfortable about getting together on Saturday. I am going to pass on the opportunity to meet you.

Please do not contact me again.


Rhetorical question of the day: Where *are* all the good guys?

Answer:

1. They are young.
2. They are married.
3. They are deceased.

I would really rather be alone, or with a cat.

Lee

I turned off the phone in case crazy Lee calls. His real name is Mike. But he changed it to Lee... I suspect when he got out of the prison psych ward. Anyway, FedEX called this morning. Someone sent me flowers. I refused them. I have no idea who could be sending me flowers, except for Crazy Lee (Mike).

Crazy Lee was actually sending me movies of himself. Not porn or anything; just movies of himself talking to me.

"Hi. This is my car. I'm outside the bookstore waiting for it to open. It's 10 of 9. I'm saying a prayer for you now (crosses himself, closes eyes). Here's the traffic on the highway (turns camera toward highway). Oh, look, there's a Subway across the street. I love meatball sandwiches from Subway! And a jewelry store. Maybe we can visit there some day!"

Whack job.

Crazy Lee told me that he was retired. But he was only 47, which I found strange. I asked him how he managed that. Did he get bored? What did he do with his time? He had plenty of hobbies, he said. He didn't need to work. He had bought Microsoft stock at just the right time.

Ahhhhhh. I see.

He was calling me pretty frequently, so I did a reverse lookup on his phone number. Phone listed in his father's name. OK, so he lives with his father. Did a look up on the address.


BLDG ON LEASED LAND IN GRAND VIEW MOBILE HOME PARK/6213 DECATUR ST SW DESC AS LANDS ALL IN THE SE & SW STR/LB

Ahhhhhh. I see. Microsoft stock.

Sheree told me to say that God spoke to me from a cloud and told me not to date men any more. Goodbye. So I did that.

I'll let you know if he stalks me.

What I Didn't Know


I used to think of racism as a white problem - you know, what I learned in college; that it was up to white people to educate themselves, do the inside dirty work that causes racial hatred, and purge the world of racism. I honestly thought that a lot of white people – not all, but a lot – were beyond the race thing. Americans, I mean. Particularly young people. They seem to have an ease (as opposed to dis-ease) about race that my generation did not have. While that may be true - I don't know any more if it is or it isn't - I have to say that I didn't grasp the level of pain that Black people in this country were living with. It seems to be a sort of cumulative pain. Like stress, you can release small portions of it from time to time, but it never really leaves you. You just live with it. It's a collective experience.

I wanted to say that it's like understanding hunger, even if you've never known it personally. I remember in the 1980's, when Ethiopia was whithering under a catastrophic famine. Night after night, we'd see heartbreaking images on the news of hungry, dying children. It made an impression. After all the fundraising was tallied up from the developed countries in the West, it appeared that the Republic of Ireland had far exceeded the other nations in per capita contributions. In other words, despite the high unemployment, relative poverty, and political strife in Ireland, its people had responded the most generously to the victims of famine in Ethiopia.

Famine and Ireland. You don't hear too much about that these days in America. But talk to anyone in Ireland about what it's like to be hungry, or in want, and the response may surprise you. Irish people fear hunger. Even generations after the famine. It's a collective experience. A collective pain. In the bones, the psyche. A catastrophic trauma, I would imagine.

The pain of Black people in this country didn't come to my attention until Barack Obama was elected; until it actually happened and the celebration began. I had had glimpses of it; I've been around a while, and I can open my soul enough to listen, to let another person's pain register with me. I thought I had done that. But on this particular issue, I was ignorant. Just ignorant.

I expected that Barack Obama would get elected, but something in me didn't want to count the proverbial chickens before they were hatched. It was exciting, but I kept thinking that some weird voter fraud glitch was going to happen, some Rodney King hanging chad ACORN-related meteor was going to strike the bureau for Voter Fairness and the whole election would be invalidated. In lieu of martial law, Oliver North would assume the presidency until the government could resuscitate or clone Ronald Reagan. You know, that one-in-a-million mentality.

When Obama did get elected, I was relieved to finally see it happen. For many reasons. On many different levels. I sighed a huge sigh and went on with my day, relieved that the election madness was over. I wondered in the back of my head how Black people felt, but my experience of voting was a personal one. It had nothing to do with anyone but myself, my choice. Anyway, when the election results were announced, I imagined that Black people in this country had to know for sure that some of us are trying to do the right thing. Barack Obama wasn't elected by accident. People – *a lot* of people – (white ones, I mean) had to think their vote. They had to show up, and they had to cast a ballot. They had to stand behind a curtain - all alone with nobody watching - and actually pull the lever. In private. Again, with nobody looking. And people did it. They did the right thing. Part of me even wants to say, they let love win.

It's a good start.

The post-election euphoria feels kind of strange. It's as if an unspoken dialogue has occurred, a truce of some sort; as if the air has been cleared of something fetid. You know, the vague smell of something going bad in the trash. You don't know exactly what it is – so much has been thrown in the bin over the years. It's just time to take out the trash and start over. None of it is salvageable.

I hadn’t realized that so many people thought they would not live to see the day when a Black man was elected president of the United States. I hadn’t realized that I felt that way myself. For that reason alone, I am grateful that this has happened. I am even more overjoyed to see elderly Black people experience this. They deserve it, least of all for what they have endured.

As always, though, I feel compelled to make the political a personal matter, and I hope you will indulge me. There are freedoms that I enjoy that the previous generation was not fortunate enough to experience. And then there are experiences that the next generation may have that my generation cannot.

Late in the summer, I met a man that I liked a lot. He's Black, in his late 50's. His name was Richard. He had been married to a mean lady for 28 years, so we had quite a bit in common - like involuntary cringing at loud noises. We got along well, and I felt safe with him; appreciated, like a woman is supposed to feel when she is special to a man. We went out several times, and everywhere we went, people were especially gracious to us. It surprised me a little, but I thought maybe they can see that we like each other. People are nice to you if they think you are a cute couple.

We had long talks. His mother was a lot like mine – the kind who would hug you and kiss you and then smack you on the head for getting lost in Sears & Roebuck. He told me a story once about how his mother didn't eat for two days because there was not enough food in the house to feed her and the kids. So the kids ate. She didn't. My mother was like that.

We both liked the same kinds of books and movies. Flea markets. Weird humor. And oddly enough, we both also had a bizarre interest in Sasquatch sightings. How often does that happen?

Invariably, though, every time I talked to him, he would ask me what my ex-husband would think of me seeing a Black man. I told him I didn't know, or care for that matter, but I think that may have been a mistake. I don't think I reassured him enough that I didn't give a rip.

"It's one thing for there to be a new man," he said once. "But it's a completely different thing for there to be a new Black man."

"Really?" I asked. Maybe I was being naive.

"Have you ever dated a Black man before?" he asked. I hadn't.

He also asked several times what my children would think of him. "I don't know," I said. "I haven't introduced them to anyone I've dated. I haven't really dated. I'm trying to protect them. They've had a lot of losses."

We were quiet.

"But they might call you brown instead of Black,” I offered. “They do that sometimes."

I laughed. He didn't.

"What about your friends?" he wanted to know.

What about them? I thought. I told him I thought they'd be fine.

"What about yours?" I asked. "And your family?"

He shrugged. Yeah, they'll get over it.

I didn't see what the big deal was. I just liked him. You see, I'm too old now to care what anybody thinks. I've been unhappy too long.

Soon after that conversation, the phone calls from Richard stopped dead. I thought maybe he’d had a heart attack and died or something. So I called to make sure he was OK. He was fine. He just couldn't handle a relationship with a white woman.

Me. A white woman. Go figure.

It's funny, ever since Barack Obama was elected, I have been half expecting the phone to ring and for it to be Richard. “Hey, ever since we voted for change, I figured it was OK to call.”

But it hasn't.

I am hoping that it is true what I have heard many Black people saying, that everything is different now. You know, life will be BB (Before Barack) and AB (After Barack). I hope it is, for my sake and the sake of the next generation. Everything, and I mean everything, needs to change.