Archive of ‘california’ category

a social life

I’ve been thinking about friendship a lot lately. Partially because I finally joined the 21st century, Instagram, and am therefore bombarded with images of happy cliques; and, partially because I’ve just moved 3,000 miles away from the place I have called home for the past 15 years. It’s gotten me to this too real place of acceptance and clarity.

In your 20’s everyone is your friend: people from high school, pals from college, work colleagues, friends of friends. You take em all. It’s like a decade of fishing where you don’t throw any back.

Then, in your 30’s you start pruning. Weeding out the emotional vampires and the “all drama all the time” crew. Some of it happens naturally–an illness in the family forces some friends to step up and others to show their true colors. Marriage, kids–some fall away naturally. You switch jobs/careers/partners and you find yourself with fewer and fewer friends. Which is actually pretty great–you spend more time with the people you genuinely love and who genuinely love you.

So, you’re chugging along, happily, with your perfect little crew of good friends. Then, all of a sudden, you make this giant life-change. And, it’s the right thing and everyone supports you but distance. Distance, man. It’s real. Time differences and work schedules, bedtimes and familial obligations and just life. Life in a new place happens. You have to restart your career and re-acclimate your kid. You have to find (or maintain) that inner circle all over again. But, how?

There are a trillion articles about making friends in your thirties. My problem isn’t making friends it’s maintaining friendships. How does one find the time as an adult? How do you prioritize friends over family or over self-care or over laziness and fatigue? How do you balance it all? This isn’t one of those, “how can we have it all” questions. This is just a very real query: how does one find the time and energy to be social in your late thirties–with a partner and a kid and a house and a career?

Where are all those extra hours the enviable #girlsquads on instagram seem to have?

 

first date // past

“Where are we going?” I asked, trying not to sound too eager.

“It’s a surprise,” he said in that growly sexy voice. He was 18 and out of high school, I was 16 and in the thick of teenage drama with its extreme highs and gut-wrenching lows–up for anything, experimental, reckless and naive.

At a party, his hand had brushed up against mine when reaching for his beer. It was as if time had stood still. I closed my eyes and everything went in slow motion. The long stroke of his dark finger across the back of my wrist, the way his head cocked, his eyes meeting mine just for a moment.

We’d only ever hung out in groups. We’d stare at each other from across the room–his gaze intense with those dark, sunken eyes. Then he’d look away, engaged in conversation, sipping a beer, nodding in agreement. His dark jeans and motorcycle boots, that simple white shirt with the black leather jacket hanging loosely off his muscular arms. The thighs of his pants greasy from working on his bike, his jacket dusty from walking the trails. His clothes smelled like 40 ounces of Olde English. His breath, a pack of unfiltered Lucky Strikes.

The inside of his car filled my nostrils–musty, sweaty, the smell of a man, I thought. “How much farther?” I asked innocently. We were screeching down the windy back roads of McCourtney. I knew this road well–my parents lived way down at the end–past where anyone had ever been. Except Adam. Who also lived past the point where any towny would go. We were boondock folks. The real rural. I felt safe knowing exactly where we were. Next, we’d pass the animal shelter, then the horse ranch. Then, we’d make our way up to the highest point of the mountain–the dump on our left and the most magnificent sunsets to our right.

The road was pitch black at the darkest hour of the night. It was treacherous even in the brightest part of the afternoon on account of the truckers illegally driving these back roads to avoid tolls–big pickups with trash spewing out from under their loose-fitting tarps. Deer, rabbits, snakes, critters of all sort roamed these woods and were known for darting out into the gray abyss of pavement just as cars were coming round one of the many bends in the road.

Tonight there was a full moon and a mountain lion warning (there was was always a mountain lion warning.) “What are you doing?” I screeched with excitement and fear.

“It’s fine. I can see everything” he said, as his rough hand touched my bare knee. I felt warm between my legs. “The moon is light enough,” he assured me as my eyes adjusted to where the beam of his lights had been. We turned off to the left. Where exactly had we turned? My eyes hadn’t quite acclimated and I’d somehow missed the placement of the road we’d gone down. Had we passed the dump? Had we passed the ranch?

“I’ve never been down here,” I said, searching the trees for something familiar. It was a dirt road, narrow and completely isolated–not one house, not a single driveway, just a road that kept ascending. The trees were thick, we couldn’t see anything but the glint of moonlight off the rocks just ahead of us.

“I thought I’d show you something new,” he said. He looked at me, a crooked half-smile, “Are you scared?”

“No,” I lied, feeling my knees shaking. I let my arm hang out the open window. The cool air whistled around my fingertips, my palm stretched out like a bat soaring through the dark night. The sound of the tires kicking up rocks against the tinny underbelly of his car, the dusty smell mixing with all of his smells and the pine needles and the spring flowers–my head was filled and confused, drunk on olfactory input.

“You..” I started, sounding drunk and confused, “…smell good,” I finished. He smiled and sort of looked down at the steering wheel.

“You’re a weird kid, you know that?”

“Yeah,” I answered. “I’ve been told.” I tilted my head to the right, my ear filled with wind and my hair flapped against my bare shoulder.

“You cold?” he asked.

“Um, a little. Yeah,” I admitted, rubbing the goosebumps on my arms.

“Hang on,” he said as he guided my hand to the steering wheel, “hold this for a sec.”

“Adam, I can’t!” I screamed. “I don’t have a license…and, I can’t see anything!” He laughed. I’d never heard his laugh before. It was real. It was big and low and genuine. The kind of laugh that makes everyone around you giggle. And, so I did.

He yanked his jacket sleeves off each arm, leaned over and put it around my shoulders. “Kinda cheesy, don’t you think?” I asked. “I mean, the whole, ‘give a girl your coat’ thing. It’s very John Hughes of you.” We’d bonded over our love of eighties movies, Portishead and our parallel upbringing.

“Yeah, well, sometimes a girl just needs your jacket.” He looked at me through those heavy lids. His eyes a deep brown, his thick black rockabilly hair wind-blown and askew. He’d grown up on a commune too. He was the first kid I’d met who was like me–weird and too grown for his age–reflective, sensitive and unable to fit in anywhere.

“This is it,” he said. There were two other parked cars. He brought me to a lookout? I thought.

“It’s a little ways from here.”

“This isn’t really my thing. Where are we?” I asked anxiously.

“Come on, I’ll show you,” he whispered.

We walked, and tripped, up a rocky path for what felt like miles into a clearing. I could make out a structure–a stone building, a rounded arena or stage or…I couldn’t quite make it out. It was falling apart, there were huge chunks of rock everywhere. As we got closer I could see melted wax on some of the outer walls, red and black graffiti and movement inside.

“I don’t like it here. I don’t like it here at all, Adam. Let’s go.” I said turning fast, catching my bare leg on a blackberry bramble. I pulled at the long vine, scraping the thorns all the way down my calf.

“Hey, wait a minute..” I heard him yell.

I did my best to retrace the path we’d climbed–losing my footing every now and again. He caught up, started to say something and stopped short.

We walked in silence.

“What was that?” I asked, slamming the car door.

“I don’t know it’s just kind of a hangout. People go there to drink and chill. There’s all these weird, creepy stories about like seances and devil worshippers who like, do their magic up there or whatever. But, it’s just kids trying to freak you out.”

“It gave me the heebie jeebies and it’s weird and freaky,” I said breathlessly. I could feel the droplets of blood on my calf. I better not have stepped in poison oak, I thought. “And, keep your fucking lights on. I’m not trying to die tonight.”

He shifted nervously in his seat, gripped the steering wheel too tight and cleared his throat, “I thought you’d be into it. There’s a really great view up there. And, it’s spooky but in a cool way.”

“I get it, I’m not pissed. I just felt weird up there, that’s all. Thanks for taking off with me.”

The sound of the wind took on a different tone in the quiet of his car–eerie, cold, lonely. Adam seemed to be breathing his cigarettes, not so much smoking them. His inhalations were deep, reflective almost, and he didn’t bother to blow the smoke out so much as simply exhale it naturally.

Adam turned onto the long, dirt road. “I can walk from here,” I said.

“It’s far, it’s dark out, let me drive you.”

“No, really it’s cool,” I countered, in need of the fresh air and the moonlight and the stars and the solitary walk. He leaned over to kiss me–I let him. His breath was hot and smoky and he pushed his tongue too far down my throat. I pulled back, attempted a half-smile and said goodnight.

I stood still, in the light of the moon, at the end of my road and watched him reverse his car back onto pavement. Dust rose up where his wheels had momentarily spun out on the gravel. I watched as the red of his tail lights faded behind the second hill of our shared road.

me: a work in progress

Well, we all knew it would happen eventually. California gets everyone. It claims even the most pessimistic, meat-loving, vitamin-hating, trend-avoiding among us. It has claimed me. How do I know I’ve been transported to the light side?

I like tea. That is, in fact, an understatement. I LOVE tea. I drink it every. single. day. This is not a joke. I literally drink tea every day. With freaking coconut milk! And locally-sourced honey! Oh, god. It’s too late for me. I don’t know how or when it happened. But now, there’s no going back. I crave it, I buy special large mugs for it. Only black–for now. But, who knows. At this rate I’ll be sipping Yerba mate out of a coconut shell with one of those stupid metal straws. I mock it now but I’ll be singing it’s praises in six month’s time. Mark my words. California has made a mockery of my entire personality.

Second piece of evidence: as if the tea weren’t enough. I take vitamins. Yes, vitamins. Supplements. I buy them at the hippie co-op where it always smells like sweat, even in the winter. And they have to put up a special sign that says, “No bathing suits allowed.” Because, somehow people need the specific and explicit instruction. That’s right, they need a separate sign (in addition to the classic one about the shirt and shoes) that stipulates that you also may NOT wear just a bathing suit into the store. Here’s the thing, this is not a beach town. And, this store is nowhere near a body of water. How is this something that needs to be spelled out for people? Anyway, I take supplements now. Because I guess I’m old and my body needs extra help. But, shit, I still hate them.

Third piece of evidence: I stopped eating gluten. Among other things, I have a “diet” now. Like, a diet that isn’t, “eat whatever you want, whenever you want it.” I don’t always adhere to it’s strict guidelines but when I do, I feel miraculous. Damn it to hell. It’s true. Turns out with all my medical issues, a dietary change was part of the puzzle. Recommended and initiated by my doctor. But still, now I buy goat yogurt and read ingredients on packages. I hate those people.

So, it’s official. I have fully acclimated to California life. It took ten years to be considered a New Yorker. Even after fifteen I felt sheepish referring to myself as “from” New York. It took less than two years to become a Californian. There ya have it.

 

hello, again (written in a fury whilst battling pneumonia)

So, it’s been nearly two years. Here’s what happened…

I moved across the country and got swept up in excitement and planning–packing and unpacking, organizing and searching and life was hectic for a good long while. I started a new job and moved into a new house. My daughter started at one school. Then moved to another one. We traveled a bit, my back issues returned. I hit some health road blocks and made a bunch of changes in my life. Trump got elected and it drained all hope from my body. I fell into a very real depression and went on medication for the first time in my life–to treat my mental and emotional state. And, then, there were a million other things in-between.

So, here I am. Devastated and still reeling about the state of our country and our political landscape. Losing my mind over having a daughter and feeling so scared for her future every day.

I almost started blogging again but didn’t really know how to address the way I was feeling. I didn’t feel that I could accurately articulate the sorrow and fear and lack of hope. I still don’t feel qualified to discuss the state of our world and the myriad ways in which people are affected by our current leaders. But, needless to say, it is a horrifying time to be anything but a rich, white, Christian, cisgender, heterosexual man.

There are plenty of great websites with links to all of the things you can do to be a part of the revolution. Whether it’s time, money or power you can part with–there are many ways to get involved. I have found that feeling like I’m doing something (whether I am or not is a trickier conversation) has been the only thing to get me out of bed. I have joined and contributed and volunteered and written letters and made calls and marched through streets. It’s never enough. But, it’s something.

I am living in a privileged bubble out here in small town, California. We are not all so lucky. This man is ruining lives, endangering communities, and undoing so much of what has been done to embolden and empower folks who have been disenfranchised, abused and silenced.

So, I go to work. I teach middle school now. And, I talk about race and class and gender and sexuality and politics. I talk about the power of language and what it means to be an ally. I assign books by women and people of color. I discuss the need for windows and mirrors in literature. Books should be a reflection of ourselves, our lives and experiences and realities. They should also be a window into the realities of others–folks who don’t look, live or exist as we do.

I start GSA and Ally clubs, bring LGBTQI training to our staff and push for changes to our handbooks to ensure the safety and security of ALL students. I take my kids to environmental film festivals and put up signs on my door that piss off the Trump-voter parents in my class. I keep my political viewpoints to myself but make it known that I am against bullying of any kind at any level. I tell my students that they are powerful, that they can change the world. I read I am Malala aloud and explain that it is up to them to find and fight against injustice. To speak up and speak out.

My daughter doesn’t know words like, “asshole, racist, imbecile, narcissist, bigot, chauvinist, etc.” What she does know is, “bully and stinker.” Those are the worst words in her vocabulary. But, if you heard her refer to Trump as a, “Stinkin, stinker, bully, potty, poo, pee-pee-head, meanie” you would think she had just uttered the most obscene profanity known to womankind. Her face gets scrunched up and serious and her body tightens, her fists pump in the air and she is mad. She’s actually mad. She hates this man. She hears NPR in the morning and listens to us talk in the evening. She picks up on conversations and nuances and body language. And, we talk to her about him. We tell her in words she’ll understand. He is a bully–to all people, everywhere. He is not smart. He doesn’t care about our planet and he’s not a nice person.

I am not in Trump country. But I’m not not in Trump country. I’m in 50/50 land. So, it’s been a divisive year in an already divided community. And, striking the balance between respecting differing belief systems while still holding folks accountable for what they are ACTUALLY advocating for is difficult…and, incredibly important. Particularly as a teacher and a parent and a woman and…a freaking human. So, I do my best. There are some days when I completely fail. And, others where I am so proud of myself for the thing I said or didn’t say or the conversation I had with my students.

I am out of the denial stage, the intense anger has faded, depression is on the mend and so I’m left with (un)acceptance. I accept that it’s real but refuse to accept the reality.

Short story: I’m back.

small-town etiquette

It’s amazing how seamlessly I can ease back into the ways of a small town. There are  unspoken rules. Rules that you don’t even know you are following until you find yourself amongst folks who smile at you and talk to you, who engage and acknowledge you. Then, all of a sudden it’s as if you never walked with your head high, eyes glazed and forward, pretending not to see. To look but not notice, to be close but feel so far from any human contact.

I wouldn’t have been able to articulate it if I hadn’t been away for so long. I’m quite sure people just do these things without even knowing that they do them–the way we, in New York, live in tiny spaces and acclimate to being surrounded by humans without feeling claustrophobic or intimated or just completely overwhelmed all the time.

You just figure out what everyone else is doing and then you start doing it too. Sometimes with a certain amount of self-awareness (okay, I know I am supposed to wave at this person so I will do it even though I really don’t want to) and sometimes we just slowly turn into everyone else (I am not sure I can break the habit of saying New York’s “on line” for California’s “in line” when queueing up.)

So, here’s what you do if you live in small town, California:

1. Outside the city limits, on your way down the river basin, for example. Or, on a trailhead just outside of town–The rule of thumb is to wave to anyone who passes. On bicycle, on foot with the dog, with the baby, in a car, doesn’t matter. Everyone gets a wave of acknowledgment, of hello, of “we are in this together.” Everyone.

2. Once you are back within the city limits, the etiquette is–To smile and/or say hello. Maybe even a stop-and-chat, depending on the circumstances. Waving would not be appropriate within the city limits. Basically, if you’re on a dirt road, you wave. If you’re on a paved road you assume normal behavior. And, by “normal” I of course mean talk to people and pretend you know everyone even if you don’t. In small town, California everyone’s a neighbor.

how do you choose

One life from another? One path, one career, one place to call home?

I’ve never been one for metaphors. I’m sort of a you-get-what-you-see kind of a gal. I’m all easy-to-understand colloquialisms. Direct. Simple, even. Literal. I lack mystery, I lack intrigue. I don’t write poetically, I don’t even know how to. I end sentences with prepositions. And start them with conjunctions. I’m not eloquent and that’s okay.

Moving back to my hometown is so bittersweet. On the one hand, it’s exactly what I want and I can’t imagine a better life than the one I can lead there. On the other hand, leaving New York somehow feels like some intense failure. Leaving New York without having accomplished…I don’t even know–some level of success, fame, fortune, something!

I have not lived in my hometown as an adult. Ever. So, realistically I have no idea what to expect. It’s possible that we will be earth-shatteringly, ridiculously, unbelievably happy there (I hope!). But, it’s just as possible that we will get there and be like, wait what? What the fuck is this?

You weigh these giant things (housing, transportation, family, education) and make pros and cons lists and try to imagine where you and your family will be happy and inspired. And, then you just jump. You stop thinking about the lists, you stop concerning yourself with all the things you’ll leave behind and focus, instead, on all the things you have to look forward to.

Then, in a state of total confusion and anxiety, you remind yourself that it is not wise to focus solely on what will be better or else you doom yourself to disappointment and depression. For, it is true that you will be overjoyed by the ease of grocery shopping. But, you will be equally dismayed by the non-co-op prices that will keep you from ever buying spices or fancy cheeses again.

And, so. Life. Life at its very best and its very worst. Present becomes past and future becomes present. And, past becomes present in my case. If you get what I mean. Oh, it’s all so confusing and a jumble of emotions. And soooo muCH STRESS! Just gobs and gobs of it. No matter how much you plan ahead. No matter how far in advance you begin the process of packing up your life and purging your past. No matter how many outings you make in preparation for the big goodbye. No matter how many farewells you amass. It will never be enough and it will always feel like too much.

And, so. You can’t win. Or, if you look at it in a different light: you can’t lose. If it will never be enough, stop trying to make it so. And, then magically, the stress sort of falls away. We will be back in New York–this is not the last time we will be in this city. And, in fact, coming back as a tourist allows much more room to do all of the things you want to do when you are stressed out and working too hard and overburdened by a crazy life. Tourists have all the time in the world. Nowhere to go and everyone to see. So, tea at The Plaza a la Eloise will have to wait. The famous Brooklyn Pizza off the J street Q train can happen next year. Whatever. It’s fine.

For now, it’s all about getting out and enjoying the process (as much as is humanly possible). And, let’s not kill each other in the process, husband. Okay? Because wow, people aren’t kidding when they say moving is tough on a marriage. All those big decisions and two people–each with their own attachments and ways of dealing with stress, each with their own expectations and ways of communicating. And, wow. It’s not easy. It is, in fact, quite difficult.

 

things i will love about (small-town) california

  • access to water: lakes, rivers, oceans
  • access to deserts, forests & towering redwoods
  • a backyard
  • a house
  • driving a car
  • buying beer and liquor from the same place
  • buying groceries, toothpaste and tylenol from the same place
  • the glorious california produce
  • being near family
  • camping
  • hiking
  • the fresh air
  • open space
  • evergreens
  • dirt & mud
  • dry heat
  • cool evenings even in the summer
  • a slowed-down pace
  • people smiling at you

oh, boy

so, i’m having one of those days. you know the kind. maybe i’m having one of those weeks, even. where punctuation just seems superfluous and getting dressed feels like an overwhelming task. forget showers. and, who needs makeup these days? i don’t know exactly why. moving stress. pressure to see people and do things. keeping track of way too many things in my brain: moving van, packing materials, medical records, refilling prescriptions, selling this dresser, giving this shelf away, bringing these four bags to the thrift store, bringing this box to the used book store, scheduling dental appointments, finishing up work tasks, doing all those last-minute new york city must-do things! it’s just too much. and, we’re trying to be all on top of shit by packing early but really we just keep spending time with our friends because…when will we see them again?! and, you know, we’re not cooking enough and we may have gotten rid of our plates a tad too early and we can’t replace the grapeseed oil because how can we go through a bottle in 3 weeks but also HOW WILL I MAKE POPCORN?!

so, i think it’s safe to say that the stress has officially gotten to me.

i’m not sleeping, i’m eating a lot of chocolate and my belly has that constant butterfly feeling like i’m about to get onstage and perform.

we got a tree. i thought it would make me feel all, in-the-spirit and festive. i just keep looking at that thing with total animosity. it’s got a real attitude problem, let me tell you. it’s just sitting in the corner of our livingroom being all beautiful and put together, staring into our chaos and judging. it’s a judgy little fucker, i mean it. tall, perfectly “tree”-shaped (some might say a bit too perfect, really. i mean, come on. show off), it’s all sparkly and calm and it just stands around. doesn’t offer to help out or pick up. it’s not doing any of the cooking and that bitch can drink! i mean, we are filling her bucket up at least once a day.

so between my judgy tree and the million tasks i’m attempting to stay on top of and still working full-time and a toddler who is becoming less and less comfortable with her dwindling book collection…things are about to get real. like, life is changing in a huge way ‘real’. like, everything you have known and everything you thought you wanted is about to be in your past ‘real’. like, the place you ran from, the place you thought you would never return to is about to be your future ‘real.’ and, truthfully it all sounds a bit terrifying. wonderful and filled with potential. exciting and exhilarating. and also gut-wrenchingly terrifying.

convenience

We spent the weekend in a cabin in upstate New York where the water was non-potable and came directly from the nearby lake. We had to brush our teeth with bottled water and skip washing grapes and carrots–preferring a few specs of dirt and grime over “beaver fever.” So, of course this was just some tiny inconvenience in our very privileged lives. It’s so easy to focus on the small, first-world problems we encounter in our daily living (I am all too guilty of this!) but damn, it just takes one small disruption to my safe and simple life to knock me on my ass and get me thinking about the bigger picture. People have real problems in the world–like, trying to survive. Meanwhile, we flush drinking water down the toilet on a regular basis.

I grew up in California, which means you grow up water-savvy and water-conscious. Even after fifteen years in New York City, I still cannot fill a bathtub more than half-way, leave the tap on while brushing my teeth, let the water get adequately heated before hopping under a shower head. If there is a drip it must be remedied immediately, dishes are washed with as little water as possible, washing machines are stuffed to maximum capacity to minimize the total number of loads–I’m pretty sure that last one is a really dumb idea.

The point is, I have mass amounts of water-phobia. Yeah, I’d call it a phobia. I get sick to my stomach, a nervous twinge in my gut if I leave the water on for too long. I guess it’s from growing up with that consciousness–with the idea of conservation being ingrained in me from very early on. The strange thing is, I cannot pull up one memory of someone telling me to turn the water off, to be more careful, to take shorter showers. I can’t think of one single instance from my childhood of an adult lecturing me on water use. Which leads me to one of two conclusions: either the habit was formed by implicit modeling, or I blocked out those memories for whatever reason.

I am inclined to believe it is the latter since there are giant chunks missing from my brain. Although, I suppose it is possible that it was simply through living in one way when it comes to water–never questioning or testing that boundary–that I picked up these habits. And, perhaps they continue due to a physical inability to dislodge them as well as a cerebral propensity toward them. I don’t know. But, I do know that heading back west will not change much in terms of my water consumption. It will not be a difficult transition because I have not been able to rid myself of the constant nagging in the back of my brain, saying TURN THAT TAP OFF!

memory

When I was little my mother used to play this game with me before bed. Most nights we were left to our own devices, my siblings and I–brush our teeth, put on our pajamas, read one book, turn out the light–but on the occasion that she was available for bedtime I would beg her to play our name game.

I really have no recollection of how frequent or infrequent these evenings were. They all sort of blend together into one singular experience. Me, lying face up under the covers, my mother hovering over me, sitting close enough that I can feel the warmth of her body against mine. It’s dark and I’m cuddling my favorite brown stuffed bear, or was it red?

“Good night, George,” she would say. I would stifle my laughter and shout, “I’m not George!” She would look confused, furrow her brow, lick her lips and look toward the ceiling. “Oh, you’re not? My mistake. Good night Marianne,” she would say. And, once again I would howl with laughter. This would go on for four or five names before she would finally settle on mine. “You are my daughter and I love you, whatever your name is.”

There were only a few moments when I truly felt my mother didn’t know me. They were during these seemingly random episodes of intense anger and fear–when, out of nowhere, she would look around and think that everyone was trying to harm her. She didn’t recognize anyone or anything, she didn’t know where she was or who she was. They wouldn’t last more than half an hour but they were traumatic and frightening events where I often had to elicit help from strangers because she would get so out of control. That marked the end of our outings to parks, restaurants, the movies–it was too risky to be alone with her in the car, impossible for me to restrain and carry her myself if and when she lost her faculties.

During these episodes I would try to soothe her–I would breathe deeply and make eye contact. I would hold her hands and hum and reassure her. I would remind her who I was and that she was safe with me. But her eyes were wild and her nails would dig into the undersides of my wrists, she would kick at me and curse, spit in my face and call me vulgar and nasty names. Words I had never heard come out of her mouth. Then slowly, slowly, she would come back to me. Her features would soften, her grip would release. She would smile and hug me and make jokes, hiding behind her large sun hat and marching around like a clown–as if nothing had happened–she would just come back into herself and any memory of the episode was gone. As if it never happened.

I would often think about our bedtime rituals after these episodes. Was it a game? Was she pretending at not knowing me just as she had done all those years ago? Was there some small part of her, screaming to tell me something, even as another part of her brain took over? Were the words she spoke and the words she thought the same? Did the actions she wanted to take get lost somewhere between her brain and her limbs–get reversed and scrambled and turned violent? Was there thought, was there understanding–or just instinct? Did she think I was someone specific or just someone who wanted to hurt her? If we weren’t in her favorite public garden, where were we? If I wasn’t me, who was I? But, these were never questions she could answer. The episode would pass and she would be docile again. Non-verbal and goofy, smiley and loving. As though her actions could express her every desire and emotion. Except when they couldn’t.

1 2 3