When writing an invitation to
conference speakers, proof read the specifics. Perhaps some would prefer a one night
stay to the one night stand offered.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Parent's Worst Nightmare...
A couple months ago as I pulled into space 304 at the train
station to head into the city when a vivid memory rolled over me like a movie
preview starring a neighbor family.
Their younger son Evan was three months older than Alex but
a year ahead of him in school, split because of the birthday admissions
deadline. He lived two houses away but further in actuality, split by a
creek that divided the street. The boys caught turtles in that stream of the fork of the Chicago River, rode bikes to the park at the
corner and hung out in our basement rec rooms. When they were too little to
stay by themselves, Andrew, Evan’s older brother babysat the younger boys. A
year or so out of high school, long after the family moved and the boys no longer socialized, we heard Evan
died of a drug over dose, followed only a couple years later by Andrew. Tragic.
Every parent’s nightmare… my nightmare.
As I turned off the engine and gathered my briefcase I
wondered how his parents were doing. I wondered whether they were still
together. I wondered whether they were alive. I wondered whether they were
broken. I wondered if they could ever disagree without using guilt. I wondered
what it must be like for them when reminded of a son. I wondered whether
they changed jobs or moved out of state. I wondered whether it was possible to
ever feel... I couldn't find a word that ended that thought... I couldn’t even
find the word.
Locking the car, my mind moved on to counting change for the
parking fee and crossing the tracks in time to catch the southbound commuter.
Downtown, I waited for the traffic light to cross the street into my office
building. I felt a tap on my right shoulder. There stood Evan’s mother, smiling
at me. Looking as I remembered her. “Mary. I can’t stop to talk, I’m still
working out in Vernon Hills and I’m on my way to get a passport, we’re heading
on vacation. It’s nice to see you.” I took a gulp of air. “Have a good
one.” They hadn't moved out of state. She smiled when she saw the mother of one
of her son's friend. She was taking a vacation.
Fifty steps into the building. I needed
another breath. Did I conjure that meeting?
I’ve stewed about seeing
Betsy for weeks. In moments of hard facts, I view it as coincidence. In moments
of ethereal, I see it as synchronicity… still coincidental but with meaning.
Figuring out the meaning continues. That
morning, the thoughts and mind-pictures of their family, especially Evan
appeared clear and in focus. My brain ran through the questions about the
wellbeing of his parents like a litany of my own fears. Would I kill myself?
Could I face a spouse without blaming? How would I feel to see my son’s
friend’s or even their parents? Work… how could I even think? Vacation… for
what? Seeing her, her smile, her demeanor, her act of moving forward simply
verified her existence, but did not answer my questions.
In the time since seeing Betsy, I read Joan
Didion’s, The Year of Magical Thinking and
learned how she got through the year after her husband dropped dead as they sat
down to dinner. I am in awe of such clear writing when the death of her beloved
touched and muffled every aspect of her existence.
Today, I’ve been able to connect dots to a
point of understanding that there may be a choice in how to act in the face of
the worst of worst experiences. I didn’t know that.
Now, if I could figure out, how I conjured
up that meeting, that would be a cool outcome of this experience. Synchronicity
happens frequently to me. I am still working on it.
p.s. I’ve read many books and articles about
death, but The Year of Magical Thinking is by far the best description of
someone’s experience of the first year after. Here is the review from the NYT The Year of Magical Thinking
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Movie Titles Poem - In Theaters 9/7/12
Me, branded Queen of Versailles, you, Dark Knight… rises.
We’re intouchables, beasts of the southern wild... avengers.
We’re intouchables, beasts of the southern wild... avengers.
A premium rush, but, hit and run expendables 2.
Cold light of day, hope springs in 2016 Obama’s America. A bourne legacy.
My favorites this week?
My favorites this week?
- Intouchables
- Beasts of the Southern Wild
- Bourne Legacy
- Sleepwalk with me
- Hope Springs
Thursday, September 6, 2012
In One Person - John Irving and Sexuality
“We are
formed by what we desire. In less than a minute of excited, secretive longing,
I desired to become a writer and to have sex with Miss Frost—not necessarily in
that order.” —from In One
Person John Irving’s 2012 book.

I
know heterosexuals. I know gay men and gay women. Here and there I’ve attended
La Cage kinda variety shows and been amazed by cross-dressing entertainers. We picnicked dressed in Gay Nineties attire in Lincoln Park ringside to the first Gay Pride Parade in Chicago. Volunteering
with homeless youth at the corners of Belmont and Broadway, weekly I talked with several transgender
teens. And throughout a term of a writing class, a man with a strong masculine name transformed… his hair
from white-walls to chin length, his skin from spikey beard to soft, his voice
from deep and dark to light and airy, introduced himself one evening with a name gentle
and feminine. As a girl riding my bike to school, playing baseball and
basketball, I found pride, strength and differential in being a “Tom Boy”. In college, newly born birth
control, selling at $.99 a pack allowed sexual freedom. During those years, curvy child-bearing hip models made way for a boy hair and
boy hip Twiggy. Of my friends who chose office careers rather than to stay home with
children, few took a husband's last name when they married. While every ladies
magazine at the time pondered, can we have it all? We did it anyway. Fashion for working women included manly suits, wing tip high heels, neckties and bow
ties. I wore them… with lipstick, eyeliner, perfume and pretty underwear… expanding my masculine, maintaining my hold of feminine. Or, so I thought.
Feminine
and masculine… All in One Person questions the definitions, allows possibility,
challenges my beliefs, offers me ways to think about differences and honors the
idea that people include both with limitless expressions of their sexuality.
Connecting
the dots… All in One Person may be fiction, but Irving’s very imagining validates my belief of being
multidimensional… it honors a whole self and allows me to honor the possibility
of others and their whole selves.
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