In which I rebel:
Saturday, September 4, 2021
It's all a script, man
In which I rebel:
Sunday, August 29, 2021
Yeah, but what are we actually doing here?
The bad faith thing is such a serious problem, and it needs to be argued like a legal case (apparently). I can't tell you how many people pooh-pooh the existence of this, like it's only being perpetuated by a few bad actors. That's how it spreads, my friend. Even my closest ideological allies take this view right now, creating recurrent arguments between us. The description of this phenomenon requires the compilation of thousands of literal, real-life examples that happen every year, and that is just not my job. Even though I have all the capacity for such a painful passion project, the brain-atrophying effects of (I guess) social media and our anti-intellectual culture, plus the unending quantity of information to process, have made me apathetic and lazy when it comes to info gathering. Plus, better people are already on the job. A smart friend with mutual interests recently suggested we start a podcast together, and I stopped him immediately: "Do you realize the amount of research and vetting we'd have to do about every single thing we said?" When you're creating an artifact like that, you can't just bullshit, especially if you're talking about something like the topics we were discussing, which are all enmeshed with culture and history. I can't just talk about things the way I remember them, the way we do for fun in person. "Oh, shit, that's true..." he said. Hasn't come up again. Unfortunate, but that's the way it's gotta be. I wouldn't have said that five or ten years ago, but I also would have been more willing to wing facts and manipulate information to make my points, and after seeing what happens when journalists do that, I just can't. I'm not a journalist and no one is informing their choices by what I say, but the disingenuous ones have ruined everything for everyone. Like I said: bad faith. I can't stand myself if I misrepresent facts even if all we're talking about is Ann Richards' favorite restaurant. Or maybe that is something I could talk about...
The real challenge is letting go with people who are inextricably in your life, like family. I used to require that my extended family didn't misinterpret or judge me, because they actually are superior assholes, and predisposed to seeing other people in remarkably uncharitable ways. This goes for the sweetest aunt all the way down to the drug addict cousin. Once upon a time, I couldn't have that - couldn't have it recorded in anyone's social family memory that I wasn't as smart or formidable as they were. Of course, now that I've experienced them all on the flattened playing field of adulthood, I'm no longer worried about it. As time passes and dynamics change, I'm finding myself transferred to a more authoritative role, which feels weird yet appropriate. I see the old family bosses defer decisions to me, even the scariest non-parental members, and I'm finally old enough to accept that. It is the way of time. Plus I do know more.
Thursday, July 29, 2021
The internet is weird
It keeps you linked to people who would naturally pass off and be forgotten with time, or mostly. But now, you remain eternally acquainted whether you want to or not, and you continue to be aware of intimate aspects of their lives despite not really being friends.
I still talk to my tweenhood best friend, someone I never would have talked to again after our "final" adult falling out. Yet there she is. It's impossible to relate to her now, and I can tell she feels the same way, but we still kind of try.
We became friends in middle school, which lasted through high school and the first few years after. As kids, we were impossibly close, having created a siblinglike relationship in which we would talk for hours, paint each others' nails and go to the mall incessantly. That may sound basic, but we were goth so it's fine. She was outgoing and I was introverted and we jealously disliked each others' friends once we started going to separate high schools. Ending our summer that year and starting high school in different places felt like a big loss, or a breakup. We were both so trepidatious of what was to come.
Her mom was a Texan southern belle, all big hair and short skirts, tottering around in tall heels and tons of makeup. She was the opposite of my frazzled workaday mom, who had no capacity for frippery or meaningless dates with spray-tanned men. An intensely self-centered person, Jessica's mom would drive us around if it suited her, and I remember she almost got into a car accident once because she kept raising the backs of her hands up from the steering wheel to look at her rings, admiring how well they went with her long red nails. Her mom could never understand why (at 13), we two girls would only hang out with each other and never with boys. We used to ride together in the back seat of her Honda Civic when she drove us to the mall, and one day she pulled into a spot and craned around to us asking, out of the blue, "Are y'all gay?" Except it sounded like, "Are Y'ALL GAY!!!!?" Drawl in full effect. Jessica and I looked at each other and back at her and at each other again. "No?!?" we cried in unison. (not that it's a bad thing!)
Jessica and I went on to live together after high school. My dad had already met his current witch friend, and upon moving in with her, allowed me to take over his cute little ranch style on 10th Ave with all of the furniture intact, charging only the cost of utilities. I moved Jessica in, and our relationship instantly changed. She was never able to make "rent," which was probably like $200 each, and was forever pissing me off by bringing home random animals and men, never caring that I had to answer to my dad about the state of the house because he was liable to drive by or pop in at any time. He wasn't much of a jerk about it, but needless to say he didn't like that she brought everything from ferrets to the guy who worked at the gas station home, and those are just the ones he found out about. Eventually we were robbed, but the burglar somehow seemed to know to beeline to Jessica's room and steal her not insignificant weed stash. I kicked her out soon after, and she's ready to litigate that to this day. We don't talk about it.
I was a pretty straitlaced kid back then, and it was only during those days with Jessica that I first tried smoking weed. It broke my brain and I used to sit in my bedroom, swearing I could hear people talking and radios playing when the house was quiet and empty. My dad thought (thinks) the house is haunted and used to tell me, "Don't use substances here! It makes you vulnerable to spirits!"
Christ. But maybe it did. After I kicked Jessica out, I used to lay in bed alone in the house at night, freaking out about the 50 year old windows that trembled in the wind and how easy it would be for someone to get into the house. I had nightmares all the time and used to wake up at 2 AM, scared out of my mind after fighting with ghosts and demons in my dreams, and drive across town to my boyfriend's house to get away. I'd back out of the driveway consciously refusing to look ahead, frightened that I'd see a gaunt face watching me from between the blinds at the big bay window. I told that story to my dad years later and he said, "And you're still skeptical? Have you ever acted like that in any other place where you've lived?" Well, no. I can remember every supernatural nightmare I've had since then on one hand.
We still regret that he sold the house, both he and I, not least because it's probably worth three times what it sold for in 2004. The one thing he and I can agree upon without reservation is that we both still think about, and dream about that house on a regular basis 15 years hence.
Speaking of never learning, Jessica and I moved in together about 6 years after I kicked her out of our house on 10th ave. This time we were in our mid 20s, living in a falling-down bungalow in the Maple-Ash neighborhood of Tempe. What a strange little house that was, painted and repainted, rented to broke kids for decades, ages, eternity. The front porch would have fallen down if you bumped into it. I just looked at it on Google street view and it's still the same. It looks like cold weather to me, because we only lived there in winter. Looks like the house is still a kid-shithole with a dresser on the front porch. I thought about driving by it when I passed through Tempe this year for what felt like the first time in decades and certainly the first time in seven years, University looking somehow the same and somehow impossibly different, but decided against it. What's to see. So many weird memories in that square mile area. What a fucking weird place and city and state.
But back then, I was forced into the role of motherly scold, chastising Jessica for the sink full of food-encrusted dishes or when I would wake up in the middle of the night to find strange men in our living room. Always someone different, always someone sketchy as hell. I would keep my cat in my room and lived in that tiny space almost exclusively after a while, to avoid. Also because she was known to leave the door open when she left for work. I may be persnickety about how I want my house to be, but that was a literal issue that left me wondering if she was trying to be awful. She still couldn't pay rent and we had to break our lease when she lost her job. I remembered all of this recently when I broke into an old Livejournal I kept during that period, in which I bitched about her incessantly, and aired our grievances to my strange group of internet and real friends.
Here's a sample. Shittiness preserved for honesty, Regrets include never capitalizing, which is sort of hard to understand now. I can't believe how many friends I used to share this kind of private stuff with. Anyway, from Feb 6, 2009:
MY ROOMMATE. LOST HER JOB.
i won't go into the 250 ways she has utterly fucked me just since november. i'm all talked out on this subject. i am both shocked and unsurprised by this, though, as i have been awaiting her latest shenanigan more and more each day. it's been almost two weeks since the last. that would be a record amount of quiet time from her, but clearly she was just saving it up for something really spectacular.
she has no plan. she has no savings. she has no severance package. she is in debt. she has not paid me for the last 2-3 various bills. i have very little cushion to support "us" (UGH THERE IS NO US) against this due to having covered 70% of her bills for 2.5 months. it's a strange place to be in, as i both do this without hesitation owing to the fact that all utilities are open on my credit, and without excessive anger or freakouts, both because i expect it and because i now have anxiety anyway and won't stop once i let myself start. so i feel quite like a doormat. a doormat who has to cover herself by supporting the dirtbaggiest, most irresponsible fool ever.
so i'm hiring ken volk to break my lease, and i am counting the moments until i can eject this malignancy from my life forever. i get frantic emails from her about how she wished she could tell me face to face, at which i scoff, and how she "loves" me and so on and so forth. what is with this shifty stupid obsession with DIRECT COMMUNIQUE. how direct is it that i get a phone call at work 48 hours after an event has gone down informing me that there is SRS BUSINESS to conduct and don't get mad, but that she does not want to discuss it until we are together in approximately six hours. i don't accept this. that forewarning. absurd! additionally, i am not concerned with someone's approach, tone or buildup. i'm concerned with the facts. "i wish i could have told you in person," she says. biiiiiiitch i would conduct all of our interactions via txt msg if only i could.
so anyway. it's all very problematic, but ridding my life of her in a permanent manner in a much shorter amount of time than i was expecting (march 1!) is so relieving that i almost don't mind at all.
Regarding the writing, there are so many early tells in there that I'd never do now. The words "shenanigan" and "dirtbag" were heavily in my rotation back then. There are a lot of really specific numbers in here, too. Unnecessary.
And yikes! in general. But she was actively ruining my life at the time, and this isn't shit when it comes to a bad review from me. I feel for that girl back then, and I don't mean myself, I mean Jessica. She was so chaotic! She was used to it, but I wasn't. And while she was bitchy and defiant as hell then, I see now that she was in a strange pattern of disorder that doesn't reflect her true character, which does seem to crave stability. She was just too damned wild, and raised without a real center. I was definitely not able to be sympathetic about it then and I still wouldn't be if she were my roommate today, but I still feel kind of bad. Sorry, bro. We kind of hated each other for a while. If only our now-selves could send money back to our younger selves, for security when there was none. I wish I could go back to those days and TCB.
Ah youth. RIP, kidness ours.
Wednesday, June 2, 2021
Rude Opinions about Entire Decades
I used to hate the 70s. Just the whole decade. Everything about it. The clothes, the music, something about its being a big time for my parents kind of turned me off. I particularly thought the way men looked in the 70s was kind of vulgar.
I assume a lot of these opinions came out of my childhood habit of flipping through my mom's photo albums. There were quite a few of them, each with a different floral theme printed on a faux leather cover with thick interior pages, already yellowed, definitely not acid-free, each encased in a loud, crackling plastic cover.
Each photo was inevitably either washed out or blurry, with weird textures and rounded corners. They showed pale blue, almost white Arizona skies punctured by ranch style homes backing up to craggy sparse mountains. I saw so many familiar faces living in a world where I didn't exist, my gangly-legged mom with long hair, surprisingly handsome uncle in a shearling jacket, and grandma with her Vidal pixie cut and a miniskirt, all captured in shots with dogs I didn't know, cars I didn't know, entire houses I didn't know yet where my whole family lived. I think I felt left out. My mom's small family is such a unit now, particularly the grandma-mom-me trine that it felt shocking to see a history they shared that didn't include me.
I saw photos of my mom's frumpy friends as 18 year olds, lying by water in Mexico in a beach towel tangle of long brown legs and sunbleached hair. I recognized Teri, Sally and Janeane because I played with their kids, and they sure didn't look like that anymore. Furthermore, all of my mom's old boyfriends looked like Greg Allman. I remember feeling suspicious, stabbing my finger at a picture of some shirtless bearded blonde guy, leaning on a car and smoking with my giggling mom next to him, "Who is this?" "No one you know," she said. I remember meeting that guy in person years later, shortly before he died. I watched my mom interact with him, easy familiarity mixed with awkward change, and the way she still called him Kimmer (Kim) while he and my uncle helped us install her dishwasher. Somehow the same, somehow so old.
A lot of my mom's old friends really clung to their 70s vibes for years, even to the present. They kept their shaggy hair when it wasn't ok, and their clothes, though contemporary (I assume) still somehow reflected their high school days. I didn't like them as a kid, particularly the in-laws from my uncle's common law marriage to my mom's best school friend. I realize now that that was probably at least partly from my dad's shit talking them, calling them "Slopehead" trash, his nickname for anyone from Sunnyslope. Yanno, like my mom was. I didn't realize til years later how snide and snooty my dad was about her friends. In childhood, they had inhabited different social classes, and I didn't realize how much my dad had (likely unconsciously) clung to his.
My aunt-in-law's brother had some decades-long "joke" with my mom about how he was her husband, though they'd never really dated. He was a sleazy guy with a smoky jackal laugh who'd stand around in the street in front of his mother's house on holidays, drinking beer and getting in fights with passing cars, and I remember rolling my eyes to the point of damage any time he crowded my mom to laugh about their HILARIOUS old joke. I saw him a few years ago at my cousin's Christmas party and walked off in the middle of a conversation after about two minutes, leaving my mom to deal with him. "Thanks," she said later.
"He's your husband."
This song always felt emblematic of the old days that I felt skeptical of. I found it cheesy, embarrassing to even hear. I couldn't stand it. Many years later, while watching the British show Back in Time for Dinner, I heard a snippet of it and suddenly it felt familiar, charming and very sentimental. I've liked it ever since in one of the more remarkable about-faces of my life, but it always somehow reminds me of those old times, belonging to others. I still love Todd Rundgren.
After that, the photo albums just transitioned to the same pictures over and over, me naked in a bathtub or lying walleyed in a crib. My dad grinning and flexing a giant bicep in front of a Winnie the Pooh wall hanging while I dangled headfirst from the other arm.
It's funny to me now how much I disliked all of my mom's friends. Heidi, my mom's post-Slope best friend, lived in Phoenix back then, and she seemed to clock my attitude before I was old enough to even show it. She'd stalk around her pool in a bikini and a deep brown tan, her perfect blonde hair gleaming with sun-in, and made me learn to dive at 7 or 8, telling me it was a life skill. It was for her, a trust fund kid whose goals included beaches and suntans and dogs and little else. I didn't want to dive and she'd call me out each time I hesitated, asking if I was a chicken or what, forcing me to line up beside her while my mom would shrug with a smile from a pool towel and look away when I glanced to her for support. Heidi would show me where to put my feet and how to put my arms up and arch my body forward before awkwardly splashing into the water following her perfectly smooth dives. I didn't realize til years later what a dream queen she was, and is - beautiful, strong, opinionated, a little scary. Her husband still says the way to get good at things like tennis is to "play up," which means play against Heidi. Bougie dynamics.
In the following years, after they moved, I would hear Heidi say, "Oh tell her to get out of here," through the receiver when I'd go tugging on my mom's arm while they were on the phone, whining or asking for something. Heidi has no kids and no chill for them, and I learned to be quiet and act right around her on our visits to California because her adult-style ribbing shocked me, and I tried to stay off her radar. Now she's my other mother and we spend all of our holidays together in Texas. Heidi's the bouncing baby girl from Austria.
Conversely, and for no rational reason, I always liked my dad's friends, a motley group of former 70s coolguys who transformed into dads in white sneakers, but each of whom retained some legacy chopper or truck from or similar to the ones they had in their younger days. These old guys would inevitably roll some bikes out to their driveways while friends were over, so that they could stand around and talk interminably while I played in the yard or eventually grew tired and fell asleep somewhere. But, they didn't seem committed to reliving the past or particularly sentimental about it, and most of them simply embraced their new normcore lives instead of clinging to past selves. Perhaps they didn't feel that they had peaked in high school, unlike my mom's lame fake husband, who definitely did. So anyway.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Is astrology real?
As much as I had wanted, at a younger age, for hippy dippy alternative "sciences" to have any bearing on my life, redefining ideas that I thought were set in stone against my will, I think it's just bullshit. I bristle every time a certain friend sends me a link to a horoscope, which is often, but I haven't had the heart to say anything. I think people only turn to this shit when they're unhappy, so snootily informing her that her five minute distraction is stupid is more than I'm willing to do.
Years ago, when I was feeling a revitalized wish to become engaged with intangibles of meaning, I considered trying to force myself to believe in some kind of candle-burning secret-living lifestyle that allows one to assume that raising the aesthetic values of your home and surrounding yourself with the right stones will somehow change your fortunes. I have never really been able to believe in anything after childhood (and I only believed in scary stuff then, like things following me up dark stairs or hiding under my bed or hanging outside of my windows at night). There were a few years in which I basically only read ghost story anthologies to the point that I'm surprised I don't believe in more nonsense now.
In high school, I went through a time where I would burn all the candles and incense, accidentally melting scented wax into hard mounds in the carpet. I would read all the Llewellyn books and wonder about all the intangible things, and still my life was the same as it would have been otherwise, except it was infused with a temporary quasi-belief that made it all seem more meaningful and malleable. Maybe that is the great benefit of mysticism - the sense of potential that it lends, because maybe.
I guess that was fine for a while. I didn't waste too much time on it because it all happened during that brief interval that occurred upon first feeling grownish, but before having a job or a car or dating. Those things do much to banish the spirit world.
One high school Halloween night during that in-between age, this fantasy realm was expanded to include Ouija boards.
Our friend had brought the board on a teenaged walkabout, one of those nights when we all left our homes during sanctioned hours that crossed over into darkness, and played with the board in a local neighborhood park. Nothing happened, but when the group dispersed, the board was shoved into my backpack instead of going home with the friend who owned it.
The next weekend, my friend, the ringleader of our limited boundary-pushing, found the board relegated to a lonely corner of my bedroom, and asked for a game. We played, nothing happened. We played another time, something happened. I, faithful to the game, laid my fingers lightly (you might say as a feather) on the planchette. It began to surge around the board, telling stories and calling each of us out, saying I was the quiet one, ringleader Megan was the sexy one, friend Becky was the slutty one. We laughed and put it aside. I was sure Megan had controlled the dialogue because she controlled everything in our micro society.
Eventually, as our friendship solidified, Megan came to my house more and more after school, and we would play with the board to kill time before she had to go home. It always turned into two-sided exchanges between the spirit and Megan, and I would keep my fingers on the planchette only out of eye-rolling hospitality. One could never play with the board alone. I began to feel sure that Megan was either intentionally creating the conversations by consciously or subconsciously moving the planchette. All of the conversations were slanted to suit her ego, I noticed, as were most of her interactions in life.
One day, Megan crawled out of my second-floor bedroom window to sit on the roof and smoke. We had been playing with the board and it had gotten tedious with lots of Q&A by the time she decided to take a break. I stared at the wall for a few minutes, bored, and once I noticed she was lighting a second cigarette, I pulled the board closer and jokingly put my fingers on the planchette, saying, "We're going to talk about you, Megan..." The planchette moved lazily and slowly and didn't respond to my questions. Suddenly, it jerked around a little. It was 4 pm, a bright and sunshiney after-school afternoon, so I didn't feel scared, until the planchette suddenly started spelling words. "C-A-R-I-S-C-O-M-I-N-G" Cariscoming? What the hell did that mean? I was repeating the letters aloud when a knock on my bedroom door made me jump a foot. I dashed the board under my bed, slammed the window shut on Megan and opened the door. It was my mom, home early.
Need I say it? My mom's name is Kari. CARISCOMING, Kari's coming. Using the board was strictly banned in our house, and I had already been firmly instructed to get rid of it. Not only that, she wouldn't exactly have been pleased by 15 year-old bad girl Megan smoking on our roof. She didn't want her on the roof, in the house, or in my life. Megan, what a biography that could be. The point being that warning me of my mother's ascent up the stairs was quite relevant to my situation at the time. I could have been grounded, for god's sake.
I had felt no "presence," no hairs sticking up, no tingling, no fear, and yet this thing had apparently actually happened. How did it know my mom's name, but not the correct spelling? Why wouldn't it say "mom's coming" if it was my own unintended doing? I don't call her Kari, never have, even at the height of my mutinous disrespectful teens. I call her "Ma!" like a civilized daughter, like Dorothy Zbornak.
So all I'm saying is it's complicated. I don't believe, but that actually happened.
I was taken to church by old women on occasion, but it was early enough in life that the visit was a success if I just kept quiet. My grandma brought paper and an 8-box of Crayolas on those occasions and set them down on the pew. My cousins and I would kneel on the tile floor at St. Francis and use the pew seats as desks. After that, donuts outside. I remember bonding with an ex once when I told him the only thing I liked about church was the donuts. He's dead now. Nice guy.
Years later, while visiting the same grandma's house, my best cousin and I would wander over to the yard at St. Francis and remember. It was just a couple of neighborhood streets away. A couple of times, we went inside (remember when I was talking about those "before times" when you're big enough and have no occupations, but all the opinions?). One afternoon, I noticed the pen sitting on the guest book in the anteroom of the church. It was a cheap Bic, but taped to it was a tiny printout of the words, in Old English font, "Thou Shalt Not Steal". I put it in my pocket immediately and my cousin and I cackled wickedly about it as though we had performed a heist. After that, we went and lay down in the pews, staring up at the blue and rainbow stained glass ceiling of the church, inlaid like stars. We were innocent and just kids, and we still enjoyed the beauty of the sight even though we were technically there as trolls. It is a nice place to hang out, a baroque yet vaguely Spanish 1950s Catholic dream palace. We were run off the premises soon after.
The only other shit I'll cop to, supernaturally, is this crazy house. Now that I'm so far removed, I don't believe as much as I used to. But I remember how that felt, and, as my dad pointed out to me once, that I've never been afraid like that in any other place. I know this is blowing holes in my claim as a skeptic, but you can walk and chew gum at the same time.
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
DNA & Me
I know DNA tests are so bougie. I struggle between "this matters less now than ever before" and honest, self-centered curiosity. And, as I'm finding, it's even more interesting to see how inaccurate the oral histories and assumptions based on little more than a surname are in the face of data.
That's the real story here. People are constantly making reference to their ethnic heritage like they have any idea what it is, and like it has bearing on their lives. "I'm Italian, so I yell, you know?!" I guess? You're probably adopted, you don't know. It's inevitable that people want to categorize and box themselves, but I'm so interested in cases where whatever you thought you were is not what you are.
Friday, May 22, 2020
Disjointed Memories of Animals
He doesn't even notice animals. He visited recently and looked surprised and suspicious when my cat jumped onto the couch and sniffed her way over to him. He leaned away with a vague expression of disgust, then patted her head with his fingers splayed out and said, "I paid tribute to you in your home. You go away now." Shoo wave.
Something clearly happened to him in childhood. Something bad.
My dad was the same way. For years, he endured his partners' pets. He was neglectful of our dogs, shrieking at them to SHUT THE FACK UP every time they barked more than once, and in his darker moments, he'd hit or kick them for offenses. I may be lucky that those are the worst memories of my childhood, but they do suck. He loves to tell a story about how I got bucked off a horse who then primly trotted over to him. I ran over, crying, kicking up dirt. "Don't hit her!" "I wasn't going to," he said, shruggingly surprised that I would even think that. "It was your fault." Then he made me get back on her, because he saw that in a movie. I shakily endured it for two passes around the pen, then got off authoritatively. The afternoon at the barn was done.
It's not that he didn't like animals. He did. He just didn't treat them well in a consistent manner. There were always dogs and cats in his house growing up and he and all of his siblings speak wistfully of their black lab, Susie, as though she was a person. She was the smartest dog of all time, she saved our lives, blah blah blah. All four of them and my grandma insisted on this, so I believe them, but it was so over the top. She did apparently save their lives, though. Two of my grandmother's cats were fighting in the night in the late 60s and knocked over a lamp that had been left on, doutbtless waiting for one of the rotten siblings to come home. The hot bulb burned into some delicate fabric (likely a doily) and set the couch on fire. The living room began to go up when Susie ran all through the house, barking, and woke the family up who put out the fire.
She's the only childhood pet he talks about except for the hated cats. Later, he and my mom had an ugly black poodle named Ty, and I have photos of him putting panties and my toddler t-shirts on Ty and feeding beer to her while he carried her on his hip like a baby. Ty had just come around one day, so they took her in, but it turned out she was actually someone else's dog, and my mom cried when they had to give her back.
My mom was always picking up stray dogs. We'd pull over on the way to school or grandma's house and she'd load some dog up and bring it home. They didn't usually stay long, I don't know why, either she took them to the humane society or found their owners. She stopped doing that after she picked up a big German Shepherd who was covered in giant green ticks. I remember them as the size of olives. My dad came home from work, put his hand over his face when he saw the dog, but immediately named him Rufus. Rufus would lay on the back patio as I pried the ticks off his body with a butter knife while the neighbor kid winced in horror. Unfortunately, Rufus attacked the girl down the street while we were playing in the yard one after-school afternoon. A strange look came over him and he was on her in a second, biting and tearing at her chest. I just stood there, screaming hysterically. My mom came running out clutching a cordless phone just as the neighbor kid's dad dashed in through our gate and wrested the dog off her. She had to have surgery. I don't know what happened to Rufus and I guess her parents didn't sue us. After that, my mom had a strict "no screaming unless you are in trouble," rule, and chastised me over and over for shrieking around the yard while playing, because it raised the panic in her throat. Sorry, Ma.
Sidebar: My dad has come around to loving dogs in his elder state. Not other animals, but dogs. He and his common law llorona have had a series of ill-fated pitbulls over the years, the recent best of which was Pinky II (really lazy dog-namers), who died of cancer. To his credit, he sought formal healthcare for Pinky, but he also did shit like rub her head with olive oil and hang a piece of pink quartz from her collar, because he read it in some mommy blog about treating the spiritual aspect of your dog's cancer. I mean, whatever makes him feel productive, but this is why the man votes Trump and believes aliens built the pyramids. He's basically an antivax mama grizzly, but for dogs.
My grandma's backyard is a literal pet cemetery. I need to ask my dad who the first animal to be buried there was - it might've been Susie. [Update: Dad: "I believe that it was a German Shorthaired Pointer in 1969. There were cats that far back also."] My grandma was very pragmatic about animals, as a farm child, so this is surprising. Then again, farm folk do tend to bury their dead on the property. To her, cats were for barns, dogs were for passive friendship, but you don't lose much sleep over either one, except in rare cases when they're special. When I was very young, she had this massive Chesapeake Bay retriever named Arthur. Arthur was a gross and unfun dog and my cousins and I love to talk about him. He had lumpy fur in the way of the Chesapeake, and I think he came from the pound. He was grossly overweight, truly a massive dog, and he would jump on the couch and army crawl into my grandma's lap while she cursed and admonished him for being too big for laps, and certainly old lady laps. Arthur had various illnesses and a pesky recurrent case of fleas. She would "dip" him regularly and then slap my hand away when I tried to pet him. "No honey, he's poisonous right now." I don't think Arthur was buried in the yard, probably because my dad just said no, it was too damn much.
The reason it was too damn much is because there are two St. Bernards buried back there, and my dad dug both of their graves. Conductor and Ally. These psycho dogs were the center of my uncle Mark's heart, even though Conductor hated children (except for Mark's kids) and legitimately rage-charged me more than once when I was under 3. What did I do? I've always been hurt and embarrassed that Conductor wanted to kill me. Mark has continued to buy breeder St. Bernards and they have continued to attack his family, the most recent one nearly tearing his adult son's face off about ten years ago. They still talk about her lovingly.
Anyway, Conductor apparently had a heart attack and died, perhaps because he lived in Arizona and was a St. Bernard. Conveniently, he was at over at grandma's at the time. Mark collapsed, weeping, useless, and grandma called my dad, who sighed and put his shovel in the back of the truck. He dug a grave for a full sized male St. Bernard where the flower bushes go at the perimeter of the yard. A while later Ally died, and my dad buried her back there too. My dad has always been given the manual labor jobs because of his size, always been asked to beat up his siblings' enemies (literally into contemporary times - fyi he won't), and yeah, he does kind of resent it. Then my cousins started bringing their dead to grandma too, who would point out to the increasingly limited empty spaces in the yard, and they'd bury their cats and dogs and birds and frogs accordingly. None of my pets are in there because my mom thought their pet cemetery was gross, and there are no places left except for in the middle of the yard anyway. That would violate the only rule: you don't damage the grass.
My aunt lives there now and I want her to make a map of the graves.
And those are my weirdest pet stories. Poor old Vaughn died today with his mate Gilby, and it's nice that they got to take that trip together so neither would miss the other. Vaughn was a little silver runt that I found on Craigslist. He was living with an Indian family. When I came over, the mother called out and clapped her ringed hands, "Puppies! Puppiesss!" and 8 tiny, fat, ear-flapping baby dogs came racing into the room. I picked Vaughn up and that was the rest of the story. The first thing my cat Fatima did was slap him in the eye, which squinted for a week. Despite being treated well (other than by Fatima), he was extremely timid and he was terrified of doors. I still think my mom or my grandma (it wasn't me) accidentally shut him in a door once, but no one's talking.
Friday, May 15, 2020
Pam and Dean
Back in the 90s, my dad met someone at work. He was single after a short and tumultuous marriage with crazy Nancy, the woman who came after my mom. (I shouldn't be so cavalier with the c-word; she was, but it was "straight up mental illness" as Tracy Jordan would say.) Nothing to laugh at...
Nancy was a real handful and that's a whole other blog post. My dad came out of it battered and humbled, but it wasn't long before he met Pam. Pam was short, beautiful and jovial. She laughed loud and often. She was instantly disarming, even to a constantly off-put 14 year old who was no longer interested in being nice to parents' new partners. Pam was cool, and none of that coolness had burned off as she entered what must have been her early 40s. How did she retain it? She just did, because she was just, cool.
Pam was from LA, a big Mexican family with all of the 70s East LA trimmings - brothers who died young from gang-related shootings, other brothers who bought and sold lowriders, an absentee alcoholic dad, allegedly haunted homes where her mom would yell at the spirits to stop turning the lights on because they were driving up the utility bill, and grandmas who practiced santeria behind closed doors with their girlfriends. She was kind and sympathetic to a silly awkward kid with no allegiances, and she loved David Bowie. I could listen to her talk for the rest of my life. And I wish she was still here.
She and I used to stay up late at my dad's house. Ever the homebody badass, my dad would usually retire to bed before we wanted to on a Saturday night, and Pam and I would sit crosslegged on the couch and watch TCM while she told me about her lively past. Eventually he'd get up and inform us testily, "I can hear you in the bedroom, you know."
She managed to be a friend and a steadying influence in spite of her quasi-parental status. When I was most critical of my dad, when I was most critical of the world, she always had something thoughtful to say that I hadn't considered before, and was able to remind me of the inherent goodness of my dumb parents without discounting my feelings.
Dean died this week. That's why I'm writing this.
When I first met Dean, I was a little sad. My dad and Pam had been broken up for a couple years by then, but managed to stay friends as he usually does with the exes. He was already with La Llorona and I couldn't wait to watch Pam watch her to see what she thought of the new woman. I disliked LL at that time (want to say "still do" but she ain't the worst person I've ever heard of after this year). LL was rude and smug and cold, and she didn't want me around. I was evidence of his past life, which was verboten.
At the time, Dean worked for the Wrigley Mansion. He was the primary caretaker, maintaining the property year-round, but especially in the summer months when the house was shuttered and the bar, Jeordie's, was more quiet. The occasion for our gathering was July 4: From the porches of the Wrigley, you could see firework shows from Tempe Town Lake as well as downtown Phoenix. We went there to enjoy the views, and for the adults to have a few drinks. I was surprised and pleased to see bats flapping around the upper patios in the dark, because the house was all surrounded by green space, and wondered aloud if they were considered a nuisance to be got rid of at Wrigley. Dean said they had a place in our ecosystem just like everyone else. Oh, Dean! My dad probably would have tried to poison them.
His access to the home and grounds meant we could wander this historic site as we wished, and Pam walked me through the hallways of the former private residence, taking care to point out golden photos of Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Bette Davis and my other favorites meeting Wrigley family members over the years. She knew me so well. She took me through the "crooked hallway" in the master suite, where she believed a haunting existed. She was pretty superstitious, and believed a ghost lived in my dad's house too. Well, there was at least one suicide in there, so, yanno maybe.* La Lorona got drunk and jokingly tried to ally with Pam against my dad and Dean, and Pam just laughed and later told me, "What a party girl." It was her benign and generous way of dismissing her even though she wanted my dad to be happy with someone, even if it was someone like LL. Or maybe she just saved her trash talk for other people.
Dean was a good surrogate dad to Pam's sons, mostly grown but still needing something. Her youngest boy definitely benefited his traditional-yet-kind-yet-bemused teachings about life. My dad, by contrast, had challenged them, tried to emasculate them, being jealous of Pam's attention to them. He was so jealous of her affections that he couldn't understand their importance to her, despite having his own children and knowing they were put in the same situation with people other than their parents. I'm sorry, and surprised he didn't learn more from her.
In later years, when things changed in catastrophic ways, Dean nursed Pam through multiple brutal bouts of cancer. She moved back in with him after a pre-cancer separation, lost her hair, and he tended her attentively. I didn't find out about her illness until near the end, and I was devastated. She was only 50. FIFTY. This is no time for Sally O'Malley. The best person in the world was struck with life-destroying cancer at 50? What the hell makes sense at that point? Or any point forward? We went to her birthday party at her oldest son's house around this time. She was up and about in a headscarf and I tried to get time with her, but I looked around and quickly realized that the house was filled with people as much or more in love her than I was, and that's a lot to say about a love that starts in adolescence. I hung back, not wanting to bother her, and she looked tired.
I saw her again in hospice. Thankfully someone called my dad when she was approaching her last moments, and he called me. I was in my mid-20s and out with friends when I took his urgent call, when he told me she was dying. I went home immediately and slept for a few hours before visiting hours at the facility. When I saw her in her sad hospital bed, it was striking, disturbing, painful and awkward. She looked small in her hospital bed. Her close family was all around and I felt like an interloper despite their friendly inquiries. They had been on watch for hours, days, and finally were bored enough to want to casually engage.
The next night, I drove to her hospice, but instead of going in, I parked by her window and stayed in my car. I was too embarrassed to trouble the people inside, but wanted to be around. She had no idea, but it made me feel better. She was gone soon after, thank god. That still sounds so sick and wrong, ten years later. The shock of loss dulls but can occasionally be sharp after a long time, too.
The sound of a violent door slam echoed through the church while her brother Manuel spoke at the podium, and he subtly turned his head and said, "Hi Pam," before continuing his speech. I don't go in for cute "They're with us," shit like that, but then Manuel told a story about how Pam's brothers called her "Slam" in her teen years because she was always pissed at them for something, all these rude gross boys around, punching her or sticking their fingers in her ears or nose in their tiny family home, and she'd go to her room and slam the door as hard as she could, cracking the frame, when she was mad. How I love her. How I wish I could have protected her at any stage of her young life. I would have killed someone.
And now Dean's gone to cancer too soon as well, but at least he lived to his full life expectancy. I don't know the details. But I think of his big charming face and smiley light blue eyes, filled with humanity, and I remember what it was like to talk to him.
--
*I guess I wrote this 10 years ago about the alleged haunting of the house on 10th Ave. Don't even remember writing it. Oh age.
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Nature not Nurture
She's about 5 years older than me. She is a beautiful blonde ex-military lawyer who competed in beauty pageants in her teens, because this is a tv show. To say she's a "Type A" could be understating things, but she's still fun, with a dark sense of humor and punishingly dry delivery.
I met her a couple of times as a kid, but I got my first taste of her personality in my mid-twenties. I hadn't seen her since 1993 and had no contact information for her, so I googled her and emailed her at work. I have got to go back and find that cold call email - "hi hello I think I'm your sister". I wanted to reach out to her in general, but I had an excuse: I had just quit a job, and at 4:59 on my last day, I sent a scathing all-staff email, attacking the owner of the business and various of his employees that I had a problem with. Yes, it was "unprofessional"; no, I didn't need the reference; no, I wouldn't do it now and yes I am still glad I did it. Every time I see people I worked with then through a Phoenix friend, they mention it. My bestie Andrea printed it out and tacked it to her cube wall. And it was justified, they were terrible, it's a very long story but I promise you, it was probably the least unprofessional thing that happened in that office.
And to tell you what kind of guy ran this place, I had the girl in HR delete my address from all of her files. Because they absolutely would have come to my house. They were bodybuilding psychopathic frat guy sales dudes who live in a full-on Mad Men world, punching each other across their desks, renting chickens to chase in the office, going out for happy hour and ending up in jail. Has a work superior ever said, "I want to fuck you," casually, at work, when you pass them? Call me when you have that job. I'll write your quit email.
So anyway, that guy threatened to sue me over the email. Libel. Stupid, but he kept a lawyer on retainer and lived to harass other people. I sent the email to my sister and asked if he had a case. She loved the aggro shittiness of the email, which was my first indication that she was, in fact, my blood. Her professional opinion? I was probably fine, but that doesn't mean he couldn't file if he wanted to.
Her true parentage had been called into question by everyone in my family for decades. They felt that she didn't look like us. Her mother had been a wild 70s biker bitch, "an alley cat," my dad said. The alley cat of your choosing, you mean. The family enabled his total neglect of her with that excuse, so obviously a relationship between us had never been fostered. By the time I was an adult, I was prepared to err on the side of caution and treat her as though she probably was family. I was so fucking furious when I realized that the two of us had grown up a handful of miles apart, never knowing each other. This created a divide between my dad and I that was actually worse than the later one that resulted over Trump. I didn't call him for nine months, and he never knew why. By the time I got over it such that I decided to continue our relationship, I didn't want to litigate it. Why bother with someone who not only shies in terror from visceral interpersonal confrontation with family, but over a situation that no one can fix now?
This little cabbage patch turned into a bad bitch |
Many years passed before she reached out to me to ask if I wanted to meet up while she was in Austin on work. I had no idea what to expect, and was so nervous, like I was on a date/job interview/parole board hearing, but it was instantly easy when she showed up at the restaurant. We talked for hours, and it felt like talking to myself. I was shocked and thrilled that we had so much in common, and of course it's the crappy things that are the most endearing. She shared story after relatable story about her work life, her married life, we compared our behavior during fights with partners and laughed. She is so much more savage than I am, and I love every second of it.
She's brilliant, reads voraciously, there's nothing she doesn't seem to know about, and she engages in culture high and low. I can't believe how fast she reads, it's shocking. She's intimidating yet gracious and kind, full of funny stories, endlessly critical of other people but surrounded by a wide group of close friends, with many fulfilling friendships with women. I just approve.
She and our brother and I met together for the first time last year on a trip that I facilitated, in Portland. She and he had never met or talked, ever. Didn't even know about each other for ages. I told him about her, and he was incredulous. Knowing that she does exist in a fairly heteronormative world of kids and PTA meetings and professional work environments, I tried to warn her that our brother could be a little different in his interactions. He's a wonderful, sweet person, but sometimes he deliberately alienates people to test them. He tries to shock. He succeeds, because he is fucking dark too. I was sort of worried that he'd do those things to her if she read as too establishment for him - she's got money, she vacations in Europe, she's raising children and her husband's family is the definition of midwestern normal. He was so nervous about meeting her that he kept telling me, "We'll still have fun on our trip if she doesn't like me. Maybe we can hang out without her some days." He was so concerned. So I warned her, thinking she and I were the most alike of the three.
Wrong. They instantly bonded. They connected thoroughly, mostly over similarly bad experiences had as children. While they had very different early lives, they were both trapped in situations that were sometimes comically terrible, other times just real terrible. They laughed and one-upped each other with stories of parents who were neglectful at best, often abusive, and the absurd situations that lands one is as a kid. I, by comparison, am too normcore for them. I get it, although that feeling is a new one for me. I watched their relationship evolve and deepen by the minute, and hanging back felt like the only right thing to do. I complained wryly to friends that they became the best of friends and forgot all about me, but even then it felt a little much to protest about it.
A month after our visit, she texted me to ask, "Who is Rosemary (lastname)?" I said, that's our dad's cousin. She said, oh funny, 23&Me says she's likely my second cousin.
I was right. She is our goddamn sister and I knew in 2010 after one email.
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Arranging and rearranging its feathers in the rain
I did not think that I had matured at any point since, ever, but I apparently have. Or, failing that, I'm just less committed to maintaining my edge. Now I'm just old and reasonable.* Also, reading back on the problems and experiences of a person in their 20s is bizarre and hilarious, and sort of alienating. Who is this person? Even reading about this life is a bit more than I can take, much less living it, and that's why the changes associated with age are so necessary. People may dream about being young and attractive and interested in everything forever, but isn't it just exhausting? Wouldn't you rather just die? (edge activated) So much time spent agonizing over the personal life. Do elderly people just not care about anything at all? The amount of concern and baggage that I have dropped in a decade would indicate that there will be nothing left to care about in another one.
me: god i hate when people know i like them.
Laura: I do too but only because as soon as I know someone likes me, I lose interest in them
Laura: and I assume that is universal to some extent.
Laura: I think it depends on the person. I think some people who aren't used to being crushed on are so dazzled by the idea
me: oh probably
me: but i don't want them getting dazzled on my fucking dime.
me: i have to keep up my distance and mystery here.
Laura: LOLOL
Laura: you can't always be that one though.
me: haha. ah, fuck every person.
I'm glad I didn't get "fuck every person" tattooed on myself back then, because it would have been appropriate.
I listened to an interview with one of the oldest women in the US years ago. She said her happiest years were in her 60s, and her worst were in her 20s. Why can't we just enjoy ourselves when we are in peak condition and have few responsibilities? I'm sure some people do. Old-me would say those people enjoy themselves because they're too stupid to realize what's wrong. Now-me is just like, I do not care if they're enjoying their lives or not. Time to complain about how many times I see baby yoda every day. No, he is not cute.
Improvement?
There are a lot of funny, shocking things in the emails that I had forgotten about. My new (too late) fixation with privacy on the internet prevents me from pasting anything here, and I should probably go back through this entire blog and delete every identifying thing so that...what? What's going to happen? I'm going to get outed for writing ten thousand crappy posts about myself? Someone's going to tell my dad I made fun of him on the internet? He knows! Or if he doesn't, he should. Do these data mining companies trawl for old information or just current? Bad things can happen, of course, but will they? The data I produced back then is largely useless, I think. You can't tell what I was buying or voting for for the most part. And what else is data for. What is a Youtube video of Sylvia Plath reciting "Black rook in rainy weather" paired with a picture of the moon going to tell the Russians about me, other than I was goth-basic and 26 years old.
*Not true, but truer.