Sunday, February 22, 2009

going... going...

My grandfather is dying. Has been for almost a year. He has end-stage lung cancer that they stopped treating about four months ago. He is 86 years old.

Right now, the majority of his remaining 7 children are gathered around him (his eldest daughter, passed of lung cancer in January of 2005), my sister KW is amongst the crowd. My mother will head to the family gathering sometime tomorrow as the vigil continues.

There is nothing for me to do, but wait for the wake and funeral. For the phone call to come with the inevitable news. It is a helpless feeling.

My father called me earlier today, shortly after his father received his Last Rites. The purpose of the call was to say my awkward and public goodbyes to a man who has been mostly enigma to me. I felt like crying, mostly because hearing the note of a break in my father's voice can inspire me to move mountains to attempt to salve his pain. I am never successful in my quest, but my father in distress is a motivator I don't fully understand.

I wanted to jump in the car and get there for the important part. For the departure. Funerals just don't make sense to me as a gathering place. Deathbeds seem more friendly-like. Am I bizarre? Maybe.

I wanted to get in the time machine and have one more real and lucid conversation with him, ask some questions I never got answered. That's the real problem with "one last time." By the time you know that's what it is, it destroys the spirit of the actual conversation. Assuming there can be one.

And, there couldn't be now, anyway. In a sense, I was too late already when I went out there over the summer - you can't ask existential questions of a man who has already been given a death sentence. It's just not done. Best to talk about the weather and hope your toddler doesn't deliver him a death-blow of a cold direct from daycare. That's how it felt. A polite audience on plastic covered furniture. No real connection with the situation. All bright natural light and photo ops for albums that my daughter will see when she is older. Proof.
From Charlotte's Big 4th of July

And, I'll always look at those photos and see a dying man. Not my grandfather. Not really.

He and I never had all that much in common. I don't think he understood a single decision I made as an adult. A quiet, introverted man, I think he found me to be a bit gauche, frankly. He wouldn't be the first.

When I was a teenager, I spent a lot of time trying to draw him out, to learn more about him. But, I felt it exhausted him. And, as other distractions entered the scene, eventually, I gave up on it altogether.

Now I am just bracing for the inevitable. Sad that I never found a way to grasp the essence of the man who shaped the way my father shaped me. Sad that I will have to watch people I love, be sad. Sad that there is nothing I can do to fix them. Or me.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Link Spree.



I visited a blog I found in LOM's follow-list, Color Me Katie, (who never fails to inspire me with her random acts of color) where I saw her High Five Escalator post, which took me to the Improv Everywhere site, where I relived my own Melbourne Fringe Festival memories of years ago, and thought of my friend Meg's project Display Purposes Only which I haven't forgotten that she sent me shirts for and I never, ever, ever did a damn thing with them. Oh, and I thought about being naked with 4.500 other people, which was still some of the most fun I have ever had. Thinking about Meg made me visit Land of Meg, which made me learn more about the blogger who made her think about Meg Later, Now. This made me curious about one of his twitters, which took me to this guy, whom I'm still confused about. Which also took me to Wunderings, which took me to Swiss Miss, who I spent quite a bit of time with, before she dropped me off at charity:water, which made me wonder what PJ thinks of this kind of water activism. Which made me look at their Twestival, which I forwarded to some people in the online marketing department at work, because I hadn't seen Twitter used quite that way before. Twitter always makes me think of Facebook statuses. Especially since I read this New York Times Magazine article about them last Sunday (which I found pretty unsatisfying for an interesting topic, but I still am thinking about the article, mostly the parts that were left unwritten).

Which made me check my friends' statuses - which made me notice that the quarterly journal that my poet-friend Mark edits has been updated, which made me read the work. Especially this work whose words and images were so powerful and made me think so deeply that I just didn't even know who to send them to... or why. Which made me think about the Newspaper Blackout poems of Austin Kleon, a link to which I posted for my poet-friend, and an image of one I sent to my newspaper man(see above). Oh, and I forwarded a link to another to a colleague as sound advice for a marriage.

All this linking managed to keep me in between productive thoughts for most of the day, in a zen-like state of surfer's bliss. Oh, and I changed my image on Skype, courtesy of wikipedia - Rocinante - Steinbeck's caravan. Delicious.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

growing

So, looking through all the old photos and videos, I saw CB and R and H grow up before my eyes all time-lapsey. I heard the bass notes start to enter R's timbre. I laughed with tears in my eyes at Charlotte's stilted language. I saw H grow inches.

I thought of how fleeting this time in their lives is. And, how much we've all grown together. This is the second year I've given my little buccaneers Valentine's gifts. I was surprised at how sweet it was to do something for the second time. Usually, I'm more blown away by the firsts.

Two nights ago, two small boys came one after the other into the kitchen for a big hug and a kiss goodnight. "Oh!" I said, startled before settling into a grin that ran the width of my face. C walked in a couple of seconds later and saw me surrounded by small arms, my lips buried in shaggy hair and he had the same reaction I did. "Oh!"

It was a first. Not the first time I've given them hugs and kisses goodnight. But, the first time that I was not the initiator. They wanted me. They sought my arms.

There is a sweetness to the repetition of new traditions, and a sweetness to the adventures into new frontiers of family-ness. It is the beauty of watching growing things, including my own ever expanding love.

Tagged


Land of Meg tagged me the other day, so I'm supposed to put my fourth photo in the fourth folder up on this here page. This is it. Me with CB in my apartment in Portland, Oregon circa April 2006.

Thank you Land of Meg for bringing me memories!
xx

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Six.

There are six reasons I am happy today:

1) I got up my gumption and still went to my masters program info session despite
- stinky armpits
- no parking which led to stinkier armpits
- running very, very late
- feeling very, very hopeless
- insane amounts of social anxiety
I got halfway home, after talking myself out of it - and then turned back around, double parked and walked in 45 minutes late like I knew what was what. And, you know what? It was worth it... because....

2) I got my transcript re-evaluated and now I'm eligible to apply for the alternative program I wanted!

3) AND I found out that the deadline for the program I want is a month and 15 days later than the other deadline

4) The weather is getting better - supposed to be 50 degrees outside in the next few days!

5) I am so lucky to be in love with the most amazing partner. Without C-Roll, I wouldn't have turned around. Not even a little.

6) 9 credits turned to six, just like that... I'm beginning to believe....

and it's a wonderful feeling.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Forcing

Today I woke up wrapped in my lover's skin and could hardly lift myself out of my deepest sleep. I dreamed long after I was conscious and felt delirious with tired bones all slack with exhaustion. There is a lot of tired in those two sentences - I think it's the dreary winter-ness. Or, perhaps it was the news I got yesterday. One class may keep me locked exactly where I am. And, I'm so tired, so defeated, that I don't feel much like fighting it.

Winter Blues.

When I was in college, I got the winter blues pretty badly. So badly in fact, that I would go to the tanning bed just to get my body to produce warmth. I only went once every couple of weeks, so it was definitely not an exercise in body darkening - I don't tan so well even in real light - but the artificial sunlight helped my mood.

Even the Sunday Sun didn't help my feeling of helplessness. I sat outside with a chair in the snow, closing my eyes and letting the warmth wash over me, I took supplements, I had water. Still, this exhaustion, unnatural in its tenacity. Honestly, I don't even feel like posting anything right now, but the only way to get past the roadblock of the winter blues is to force one foot and then the other, willing to do whatever you've got wrong, looking at every movement, small and large, as a triumph against your static nature.