Waiting for a Train

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

A little work, some lunch, a shopping walk
are tasks that I’m required to complete
today. The positives: my brother’s talk
about his weekend, moving into heat
from brisk and chill outdoors, the sunshine warm
as kittens draped around my bending nape,
wherever I’m outside a break from storm,
and cotton clouds that swiftly shift their shape.

The benefits outweigh the pains today.
These Mondays mean more boons than I can ask.
I’ve launched the kids and now I get to play,
relieved that I no longer multi-task.
A sofa bed’s a compromise, you see,
that does two jobs with mediocrity.

Posted in Poetry | Leave a comment

Smoking

smoky

I took up smoking 50 years ago.
A little pot in high school started me.
Progressing to tobacco, deep and slow
as if it were the same commodity,
I purchased Winstons through my college years,
and switched to Players when I chose my mate.
Bronchitis was the price, and now there rears
the possibility of grievous fate.

For though I pushed tobacco from my days,
I kept on hitting pot in substitute.
Ignoring every symptom, wheeze and haze,
I’m yet postponing abstinence. Pursuit
of habit’s comfort takes away my breath,
and soon I’ll choose between reform and death.

Posted in Health, Poetry | Leave a comment

Emotional Looting

baltimore-sports-store-1

Misfortune is the sorry lot of some,
but here most folks I know contend with more
good times than bad. Experiences come
that send one soul to gladness just as sure
as someone else is thrust into despair.
Catastrophe contains a deeper root
that moves entire cultures. Then most share
the work, but there are always those who loot.

November last brought us a tragedy:
predictions shattered in a night’s surprise.
Although the wounds were struck politically,
the stabs were deep. And now the good and wise
are tender, sore and helpful since that date,
while verbal looters celebrate their hate.

Posted in Poetry | Leave a comment

Once Upon a Neighborhood

Warehouse Party Fire Survivors

I never really liked the block. Moving there in 1983 was a marital concession. I didn’t want to have it all my way; I tried give-and-take with my second spouse.

He was nine years older than I, born months before we got into WWII. I started five years after D-day. He was a Stanford grad, a Vietnam vet, and a Republican: about as opposite to me in those three areas as possible.

It seemed enough that he was willing to leave his first marriage and move to Berkeley. I understood his desire to get us out of my southside house (it was like he smelled the markings left by my first, and couldn’t abide them).

So I agreed to buy the house with him, on the other side of town. I was excited to move into it with him, even though it was a charmless edifice, on a too-quiet street, and the neighborhood was a bit yuppie for my taste. The block felt like a cul-de-sac even though it was a through street (with “traffic-calming” bumps). The neighborhood felt like a suburb in spite of its popular pedestrian shopping/dining corridor. I’ve lived in half a dozen Berkeley zones during my decades, and that one had the most strollers, station wagons, and birthday parties.

But like I said, I moved willingly. I even consented to the cold furnishing of the living room (the new house was almost a thousand square feet larger than the old, so we needed a couch, coordinating chairs, tables, lamps, all which we purchased one afternoon, upstairs at Macy’s, my beloved pointing at matching items as if he were choosing players for a pickup game of softball).

We and my two children moved in. My spouse fetched his two kids from Piedmont every other weekend and each Wednesday. We made a home.

Each of us had brought a baby into our blended family. Our younger children were four months apart in age and less than eighteen months old when we came to the neighborhood. So for my son and step-daughter that northside house was like a first residence.

The block was age-diverse, but all-white until we sold and moved away. We had a retired couple on one side of our house and an old woman with a live-in care provider on the other, but most of the other homes included kids. My daughter Allison immediately found a fellow seven year old diagonally across the street. She and Hannah would have an on and off intimacy for most of time we lived in the neighborhood. A year or so after we moved in, my son Sam became best friends with the boy who lived three houses west of us.

Nate was an odd little guy. So was Sam, but I was used to him. Both of them had anger issues. Neither was particularly coordinated or athletic. Each was probably gifted and maybe brighter than that. They were being raised by Jewish mothers. They were the babies in their families.

They were also different. Nate was demanding. He often acted imperious. He was clearly the apple of his mother’s eye, and he had Debra wrapped around his little fingers. Sam was more the sulky type. He could dig his heels in and refuse to behave the way I or Nate requested, but he wasn’t bossy. And he wasn’t the pet of an indulgent parent.

Sam and Nate palled around together from the time they were about three, now and then, in the neighborhood, through their K-3 years, when they were usually in the same class at school and sometimes in extra-curricular activities together, like afterschool carpentry class and summer day camp.

When they bused off to fourth grade their friendship fizzled. They were nine years old then. Sam found a new friend in runty mischievous Yoshi. As far as I could perceive, Nate didn’t replace Sam. Over the ensuing decade I’d spot him on the sidewalk now and then, always alone and growing fatter by the year. Unlike Sam he was below average in height. Nate had social challenges.

My daughter babysat Nate and his brother a few times. I think the Wineberg kids were about eleven and seven and Allison was thirteen when she took those jobs. One Sunday night there was a problem. Like other families, the Wineberg parents specified one bedtime for school nights and a later hour for nights before a leisure day. Allison had no problem with Nate’s brother; Eliot took himself off to bed promptly. Eliot was a bright, intense, cooperative child. Our household could not figure out why Debra doted so on Nate when Eliot was right there being more interesting and loving, but so it was.

Nate disputed Allison’s authority. He insisted that Sunday was a weekend night, and that he was entitled to the extra time. Allison disagreed, but Nate refused to go to bed. He created his own little sit-in, on the family couch, where he ranted about his rights and berated Allison. “Just you wait!” she reported him saying. “I’ll see to it that you never work in this neighborhood again!”

When Debra and Mark returned home from their date night, Nate was still awake, angry, and on the couch. In a fashion typical of Debra (this was years before the term “helicopter parent” was coined), as soon as she saw her boy, upset, still up, on the couch, she dashed from the doorway to his side, murmur-crying, “My baby! Oh sweetheart, what’s wrong? You can tell Mama.”

Allison’s babysitting career proceeded without interruption, but she never worked in that house again. I and my kids have retained the memory because it’s rare and entertaining. The child was so precociously indignant. Like a little actor on a comic stage. The only other time I’ve witnessed such attitude was when my oldest grandchild, Allison’s boy Roscoe, broke the overhead light in the stairway landing, and that occurred about two decades after Nate’s little fit. Roscoe was six at the time, and we’d given him one of those thick rubber balloon-type balls, the one with a little holder/handle for the kid to grab while he bounces around. We’d all told him to keep it low, on the floor. We’d even said it could break something if it bounced on walls where pictures hung, or against a light or overhead fan. But he was six. Within minutes he launched his ball from the top of the stairs. The shatter of the glass light globe was crazy-loud. Shards peppered the carpet below. Roscoe was alarmed, startled, incredulous. “I want that picked up!” he commanded. “ImMEEDiately!”

The little assholes. But their episodes had different endings. We all laughed at our Roscoe. He made a fast feeble attempt to object, but I remember being surprised and proud that he let us laugh. Young Nate didn’t get that useful negative feedback. As far as I could tell, and my knowledge of him grew less as he grew older, Nate matured from a freckled overweight bright demanding loner child into a freckled overweight bright demanding loner teen, attended an expensive college across the country, and then either earned enough or was subsidized enough that he got his own apartment.

He wasn’t a resident of Oakland’s Ghost Ship, when it burned down last December. But he was a casualty. I suspected I’d hear about someone I knew; it’s hard to lose three dozen local souls and not discover a connection. It took half a week before I received the text from Sam.

I dislike telephone. So do my kids. We tend to text and email and follow one another on social media instead. But sometimes we have to talk. In the last year, between Sam’s job change, the wedding, and now the pregnancy, we speak more often. We text-arrange it, like we’re about to enter a business conference call.

We spoke about an hour after his text.

“Hey, Mom,” Sam said, “was I once best friends with Nathan Wineberg?” Sam doesn’t have strong memories from that neighborhood. When my second husband and I divorced after seven years, Sam lost his step-sister; I think he managed his grief by blanking out on a lot of details from the era. And a year after the divorce, I moved my kids out of that house.

“You sure were,” I answered. “I don’t think you two were soulmates, but you were both challenging personalities and marginalized by your peers. It was like you collapsed into one another, for company. I think Nate was the kid you clobbered with the 2 x 4, that time you got kicked out of after-school carpentry.”

“I thought so. And I remember he threatened to blacklist Allison.” I could hear a smile in his tone. Then his voice deepened. “Nate Wineberg was one of the people killed in the Ghost Ship fire.”

“Oh shit,” I said, which seems to be my consistent first verbal response to death news.

“Yeah. It’s weird. I haven’t seen the guy in ages. Apparently he turned out all right. He was some big honcho in international film.”

“Hmmm.”

“I don’t know what to make of this. I mean, I’ve helped build warehouse spaces like that. I really believe in collaborative-type arrangements. What am I supposed to conclude?”

“Oh honey,” I blurted. “Don’t stop loving collaboration. Or warehouse spaces. I don’t want to encourage undue caution, let alone paranoia, but please please PLEASE tell me you’ll identify the exit path before you use any stairs.”

“Yeah.”

“You know, I never noticed till I listed the old house,” I said, referring to the home we shared after the Nate neighborhood, the funky creekside cottage where I settled as a single mother and finished raising my offspring. “One of the real estate reviews pointed out how odd it was that the staircase wasn’t visible from the front door.” (You entered that residence into the living room, and had to cross it and the centrally-located dining room before getting to the bottom of the redwood staircase). “I never realized till then that all other multi-floored homes show the stairs at the front door. Obviously this is not about appearance as much as it is about egress.”

“Wow,” said Sam, and I could hear his tone changing from sadness to interest. “I never realized that either. Huh.”

That was it for our phone call. Sam and I have not mentioned Nate since. But I read the obituary.

Now, of course I agree we should speak well of the dead. And I’m sure an obit is not supposed to equal a biography. But still…

The words reminded me of Facebook posts and real estate photos. The spin was so positive it made the encomia sail like frisbees. In the same way that no one’s life is as feel-good as it looks on social media, and no one’s microwave is as wide as it looks in a staged photo, there’s no way an internationally-acclaimed success could make such small ripples.

In every photo, Nate is alone. There’s no mention of where he lived or even what work he was engaged in when he died. The funeral was well-attended, by old neighbors and family friends.

Posted in Fiction, Neighborhood | Leave a comment

Obvious

imagesCA83IVMY

Six months after divorce, I patronized
the neighborhood café we used those years.
The owner welcomed me with glad surprise
and asked if John still drank. It now appears
each time he fetched us treats, he’d down white wine –
a glass or three fast-drunk. The cake and flan
were covers for more booze – by 8 or 9
his eyes would tear; companionship was gone.

And after death, when I informed two guys
who used to work with him, each blurted first
“Was alcohol involved?” I recognize
at last how much he doomed himself with thirst,
and marvel that I never noticed then
the flaw so well-identified by men.

Posted in Poetry | Leave a comment

Nine Inches

pdx-snow

My daughter told me Portland has no plows,
for snowfall seldom sticks. She said a mere
two inches and the infrastructure bows.

Quadruple that and pavements disappear,
a tram derails, the buses pop their chains,
and sunny icy days ensue that freeze
the snow that can’t be swept off. Nothing gains
good purchase; nothing moves with aim or ease.

And then we witnessed humans acting smart,
for everybody slowed and looked around.
Perceiving hazard summoned forth the part
of us that takes considered steps. We found
a whole community in movement slow
enough to gambol and enjoy the snow.

Posted in Poetry, Weather | Leave a comment

Meditation Block

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

The route from home to BART has pleasant views,
a gentle downward slope, infrequent stops –
it’s sustenance for senses, walking news,
but Alcatraz to Woolsey has no shops.
Pedestrians like me, who people-spy,
will find a house attractive but prefer
to witness interactions, like a fly
upon a wall – they serve as fancy’s spur.

So most the way’s a feast for eyes and ears,
where merchants open doors and people flock
to purchase goods and gossip – all but here –
the stretch I call the meditation block.
For seven minutes now I’ll peer inside:
my aim an empty mind and balanced stride.

Posted in Neighborhood, Poetry | Leave a comment

Landing

12levittown.CA01[1]

Approaching San Diego from the sky,
I’m staggered at how wide the place has grown
in 50 years. Through airplane glass I spy
a million houses, each a planted stone,
aligned as if in labyrinth. Somewhere
a center is, but I don’t have a thread.
Addresses ribbon like a winding stair;
I think about the residents instead.

It’s hard to comprehend so many lives.
Each house may shelter joy or agony.
While someone suffers pain, another thrives,
and I can’t process such disparity.
I’m overwhelmed with population stress –
too much variety to well express.

Posted in Poetry | Leave a comment

Overdone

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

“I tell you, she was beside herself!”

“I would be too. Imagine finding your child like that.”

“Linda isn’t exactly a child.”

“Oh come on! What is she: sixteen? How would you feel if you found Melanie passed out in the bathroom?”

“I’m not going to let her use those things. And she hasn’t started yet.”

“I can’t believe they sell them to unmarried women. Have you tried them?”

“Me? No. There’s only one thing I’m letting in there, and I’m not even crazy about that.” My mother giggles. “I use good old-fashioned pads.”

I’m eavesdropping. It was not premeditated. My mother is having coffee with our across-the-street neighbor Ruth. They’re discussing what happened to Linda Fortier, who lives next door to Ruth, when Linda tried using a Tampax. I’ve just turned fourteen and haven’t had a period yet. I’d kill to have a period. I’ll use whatever, when I get a period.

I happened to be on the way to the utility room toilet when I overheard their words. I like that one because my brothers don’t use it and won’t bug me if I read in there for awhile. Now I pause to listen.

“I bought a box once,” Ruth announces. “I remember taking it to the bathroom and pulling out a folded-up sheet of information and instructions on really thin paper. I couldn’t handle the anatomical illustration. I opened one little package and I was so put off by the cardboard tube and the string that I just never went further. Imagine walking around with a string dangling!” I hear her put her coffee cup into its saucer. “Did you say Melanie hasn’t started yet?”

“That’s right. And I’m concerned. She’s fourteen now. If she doesn’t start in a few months I’m taking her to the doctor.”

“I’m sure nothing’s wrong,” Ruth murmurs. It hadn’t occurred to me that something could be wrong. I skipped third grade so I’m younger than the other kids in my class. I guess I suspected I was behind the curve, because since we got to seventh grade we’ve had to yell “sponge” in PE roll call, to indicate that we won’t be showering that day because we have our period, and a year ago I started faking it by saying “sponge” every four weeks, unnecessarily. But that was just so I didn’t stand out or invite any questions. I never thought a doctor would have to be involved.

Mom and Ruth are on another subject, and I’m no longer interested, so I proceed to the bathroom. But I remember their words. Three months later I finally “become a woman” in my mother’s view. She slaps my face gently when I give her the news. She tells me it’s a family tradition. Her mother did it to her. It’s about me keeping my rosy cheeks as I age.

I don’t ask for tampons at first. I’m so relieved to be a normal girl and not have to see the doctor that I accept the pads and belt my mother buys for me. It’s an awkward rig, but this is the early 1960s – I started eighth grade wearing a girdle to hold up the stockings I insisted Mom buy me for special occasions. There are still many advances to be made in comfortable women’s wear.

A few months later I beg my mother to buy me a box of Tampax, and she does. I take the box with me into the bathroom and lock the door. Mom normally won’t let us lock the bathroom door but she acts like she doesn’t notice. I sit on the toilet, open the box, unfold the paper inside, and read it. Then I follow the instructions.

Piece of cake. No problem at all. I can’t figure out what made Linda Fortier lose consciousness, but I don’t think it was tampon insertion.

There was one other Fortier bathroom incident from which my mother tried to learn. The family went on a three week vacation the following summer. As I heard it, they put the toilet seats down when they left. They (and my mother) were stunned to find mold growing in the toilet bowls when the family returned. That’s all it took. From then on Mom advised us not to put down the toilet seat lid, ever.

These are two examples of lessons I learned about the need to ignore my mother’s advice. Dad was more wise and rational and patient, but he could be an idiot too. I was extremely nearsighted. My eyeglass lenses were thick and heavy and by the time I was fifteen, I wanted contact lenses more than anything in the world. Dad wouldn’t give the okay. He kept harping on how hard it would be for me to adjust to them, how fickle I am about what I say I want, how likely I’d be to give it up after he and Mom paid for the contacts. He made me wait till my first year in college before giving in. I’m sure I’ve telegraphed this last phrase, but I had no trouble adjusting to hard contact lenses. I think there was a day or two of a scratchy eyelid feeling, and that was it.

Over time, I came to distrust my mother’s advice. In addition to enjoying the convenience of tampons and regularly closing the toilet lid, I ran my own tests about going out less than twenty-four hours after a fever stopped, letting more than a week go by before washing the bed linens, eating foods after their “best if used by” date, enjoying sex (the woman told me never to let a boy put his tongue in my mouth, for starters).

Again and again I concluded that Mom wasn’t correct. Just recently, I opened a jar of wheat germ that advised me it would be best used by late 2006. That jar had been in my refrigerator since before then, airtight. It looked, smelled, cooked, and tasted just fine. A year ago I popped the cap on a bottle of Negro Modelo that had been in the back of my fridge for a decade. It tasted a little off at first. But I left the open bottle on the counter and tried another gulp ten minutes later. It was like the air-exposure allowed it to reconstitute. It was fine.

I laughed at both events. It’s not hard to conclude that no one is running tests on ten-year old wheat germ or beer. It’s like when meds are prohibited for pregnant or nursing women: that’s not because of experimental results – you’re not allowed to run a clinical test on a bunch of gravid or lactating women! Folks who slap on these “use by” labels are just logicking through a subject. And they’re not correct. They’re thinking too simplistically, like when people who are trying to cut back on sugar avoid dry wine or hard liquor, concluding that because sugar was fermented to make the booze, the drink is still sugar-full (it’s not…alcohol is metabolized more like a fat).

I mostly disregarded Mom. And I mostly regarded Dad. Yes he was wrong about the contact lenses, but in other cases he was correctly informed or able to do his own reasoning. Dad was a mechanical engineer. He also acquired an electrical engineering license, and he understood stationary structures, but he was mainly a mechanical man, and he was thoroughly an engineer. He’s the person who told me that the word comes from the same origin as genius.

What I learned to appreciate about engineering is elegance. A well-engineered design will not be overbuilt. The engineer will choose the equipment and design that will serve the purpose, and won’t add unnecessary reinforcement. Sure there can be redundancies and backups, but there won’t be three-inch nails if one-inch screws will do the job.

In my middle age I kept company with a brilliant impulsive individual named Lawrence. He’d answer to “Lawr” but never to “Larry.” He’d also answer to “Sudden,” because that was what his parents and sisters called him when he was young. Lawrence had a major case of Attention Deficit Disorder before there were meds for it.

He grew up anyway. But he made choices that avoided consequences from his distractibility. He became a stone mason and partnered with an extrovert who could make all the appointments, render all the estimates, and remind Lawrence, at least daily, about where he had to be. So Lawrence worked in the trades; he picked up a lot of information about construction. From non-engineers.

When we were friends, Lawr did some repairs and a few improvements on my house. In all cases, he overbuilt. He never admitted it, but he was always unsure about structural integrity unless he used a bit more bracing or other fortification. He hadn’t been able to handle the school time necessary to learn elegance.

So he concluded that more must be better. Like my mom. Like so many I meet.

Posted in Fiction, Melania | Leave a comment

Spinner

maxresdefault-1

In memory, a tiny dancer twirls
upon a mirrored surface, to a waltz.
Her tutu, hair, and toe shoes are a girl’s
first fantasy – the princess/swan exalts
what fancy later horse and wedding wins.
But first this music box has center stage –
the molded-plastic ballerina spins,
and viewing I review my early age.

She wasn’t beautiful, but good enough.
Her colors were extravagantly pink.
And I was dazzled by her balance, rough
determination, lack of switch or link.
She seems familiar who was then unknown:
a ballerina formed to dance alone.

Posted in Poetry | Leave a comment