Sunday, August 9, 2009

In retrospect, it was not a good day to artfully mutilate.
Today began with the news that someone close to me had died.
I guess to say Ed was close to me was a stretch; however, he and his wife owned the last house my ex-husband and I bought together.
Ed knew we couldn't afford a riding mower yet, and we needed one, having gone from a tiny square of grass to three acres. He came back and mowed for us for the first few weeks until we secured our own rider.
Ed was wonderful to our son, laughing at everything the four- and five- and six-year-old Hunter said as if each utterance was simultaneously the funniest and most clever thing he had ever heard.
Ed was a solid, dependable man who loved to work outside, who loved to build things or put things together or go out on his boat or enjoy the company of his family.
Ed was the second friend to leave us this year. Bill was the first. Bill was married to Marilyn, a former co-worker of mine, and Bill, like Ed, had been so good to my family. Bill had written a children's book and paid my son, then eight, to illustrate it. Bill, so ill with cancer at that point, had nonetheless commandeered the bail money to spring me from jail that terrible day last July.
This is getting mixed up in my head, but it was this jumble of thoughts that swarmed as I decided it was time to attack the bushes in the front yard.
I had been told to do it a week before by my aunts, and, since I don't pay rent on this house where my grandparents raised a family, I figure a few chores here and there are nothing in comparison.
Ed's passing this morning was the predominant thought on Bush One. Bush Two was Bill. Bush Three became Johnny Flynn, the grandfather who had lived in the house across the street from where I was savagely cutting, the grandfather I secretly adopted as my own before I developed a relationship with the busy, distracted man my grandfather had been.
The hedge clippers were rusty and reluctant. Manhandling was necessary.
The polite Clip, Clip morphed into Rip, Slash.
Bush Four turned into the lost relationships with my siblings, two of whom went to Chicago this weekend to see Lollapalooza together. Could I have gone? No way. Did they even think to ask? No way again.
My youngest sister, whom I had seen earlier that day, who went out of her way to hug my son, then cut a wide swath around me when I reached for my own hug.
Bush Five was the final obstacle between me and Bush Victory. I stopped to survey my work and realized that, if bushes were fingernails and I was a compulsive nailbiter on a binge, they would probably look like these nubbins. Bitten to the quick.
It was hot out there. Very hot. I was in my swimsuit, with towel tied around my waist, a vicious case of Swimmer's Ear ravaging my canals, sweat diving off me as if I were a burning building. My eyes felt like the only dry thing in my control.
It was Bush Five that wrenched the power from me. Bush Five opened the floodgates.
Bush Five remains untouched. There are some things I'm not ready to attack yet.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

The unchanged

I am different. As a day-to-day thing, I don't think about it, but at moments when my mind is wide open this awareness invariably finds its way into my mainstream conscience, where pop-ups like "I love doughnuts!" and "People suck!" reign.
In the four months I have been off work, things I expected to accomplish have fallen by the wayside (my vow to become an amazing juggler has only culminated in the reality of very short bursts of three-ball success; the promise of "Play the harmonica after watching this 10-minute video!" has somehow kept me from watching the 10 minute video. If it's only 10 minutes, after all, well, I could do that anytime!).
Many people have said, in that sage and somehow smug way, that this time was meant to be mine so I could find myself. The ways my days unwind are fairly straightforward - if Hunter is here, we swim and sleep and play computer games; if Hunter is gone, I try to sleep or stay at my friend's house to distract myself from the horrible, empty ache that fills my body and is so much worse than anything Pepto Bismol vows to fix. Mafia Wars has become my Pepto and is worthy of a whole blog in itself.
As always, I digress.
My birthday was last week and my sister, my sister who is entirely different than me despite our two parents in common, my sister who is 24 to my 34, my sister who is brilliant in all the ways I'm not and more, gave me a book. Not just any book, not a book on how to organize my life or lead with my head instead of my heart, but a book by our shared favorite author, Alice Hoffman.
This is the way that I will never change. Alice Hoffman writes of things that I find thrilling and beautiful and impossible. As a child, the only fairy tales I wanted to hear or read were Grimm's Fairy Tales, horrible, bloody stories sparing no details, stories that gave the promise of the fantasy but not without the horror of the reality. Hoffman's latest book speaks of these stories, even marinates in them.
The Story Sisters was released in June, but, being jobless, I was unable to afford the luxury and the library has not had it in stock or may not even have it at all. I have never asked. Fortunately, Shannon knew, and gave me the gift, as she has with so many incredible books before.
Love you, sister. No matter how I may continue to change, I will always love these books more than any other present.
To borrow my straightforward buddy Marth's phrase, "That is all.".