Alienation

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The world today is cold and I am warm.
It’s not appropriate to vent my rage.
All long for spring – alone I covet storm.
I force myself to face this empty page.

The rags of fog we saw among the trees
appeared as banks of snow to me alone.
So why am I surprised at my unease?
How come I’m not accustomed to the stone
of brilliant solitude that beams within,
and casts my ego as a silhouette
of otherness, a pattern played on skin,
a mark of quarrel dark and intimate?

I harbor light a bushel cannot hide.
I’ll take me to my room. I’ll stay inside.

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Glitch

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The Internet’s delaying me today.
The information highway has a jam.
The bank denied, the airline blocked the way
to mileage plus, the email’s mostly spam,
and slow is navigation. I reboot
and fidget while the server steps to screen,
envisioning electrons in dispute,
for nothing speeds although the buffer’s clean.

I’m stymied, but I watch myself adjust.
It takes a quarter hour to accept
the consequence from some rogue speck of dust
or conflicts in protection systems swept
inside a programmed update. I’m okay
with ink and paper till the ‘net can play.

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Jerry’s Phone and Anne’s Bag

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I was raised by a precise man. My father was an engineer worthy of the term. His field was mechanical, but he acquired an electrical license in middle age. He understood all construction. He could repair most.

Dad taught me and my brothers to keep our stuff well and organized. Everything in its place meant outlines on the peg board for each tool. It meant emptying one’s pockets or purse into the same receptacle every night, so small things were always where we meant them to be. It meant not forcing electrical wires, understanding power switches, never slamming doors or stressing hinges. We wound wires and strings and belts and ribbons so they could not tangle.

Even our words were precise. Not in our house was a motor confused with an engine, or concrete called cement.

Dad raised orderly logical offspring, and rendered us unfit for living with others.

Really. Each of us has married at least once. Each of our spouses hated and abhorred our passion (they called it mania) for orderliness. And not just that. We don’t use subtext or act passive/aggressive either. We almost felt like we were on the spectrum when we had an interchange like this:

Me to my spouse: Have you taken out the garbage yet? (I’m asking because, if he hasn’t, then he shouldn’t bother, because I have more to throw away, and I can just take it all out now).

My spouse to me: Just a minute! (And he hurries to take out the trash, thinking that my asking was my way of reminding him, when in fact I was just seeking information).

Invariably in that sort of situation, I’d end up pissed off because I never got the information (and, I’ll admit it, I didn’t get to make the elegant move of picking up that other garbage as I went to dispose of the new stuff), and my spouse would seethe with confusion about why I was pissed off when, after all, he took out the garbage like I wanted.

I’m single now. As is my younger brother. The older one is still married but it’s a bad relationship with feet. They ignore one another. They just happen to both be committed to staying married, which as we know is the number one way to do so.

But this is about my neighbors. Anne and Jerry are next door, and it’s a good thing we’re not living together. They are even more unlike me than was my spouse.

They occupy two of the three condominium apartments to my immediate north. The third resident of their development is an elderly woman with a mean temper and an erratic attitude, and it’s a pleasure to be talking about a neighbor other than old Bertilda.

Anne is in her mid-60s and just retired from a special ed career. She’s a warm empathetic woman of medium height and average dimensions. She celebrated her retirement by having her ponytail cut off; now she sports slightly graying natural curls around her face to just below her jaw, and she looks a decade younger because of it. She’s not an engineer. She’s a sociologist. Anne tends to forget facts and misplace small possessions.

Jerry is about twenty years younger than Anne. He lives in the garage apartment of the address. He’s a gardener by trade, and maintains most of the common area property next door. He has also held positions as painter, housecleaner, apprentice electrician, and masseur in his quarter century of employment. He’s a typical polite punk drummer too, somewhat inked and liable to wear baggy long shorts and heavy laced boots. He cuts his thinning dark hair so close to his scalp he almost looks like a scrawny skinhead. He’s thorough at his trades, but he’s more of a free spirit than a technician.

I had interactions with each of my neighbors recently, and both seemed to illustrate our different approaches to organization.

Anne and I decided to take a long weekend together. We made plans to stay three nights at a destination spa about fifty miles north of here. We booked facials and body scrubs, and two different types of massage.

Meanwhile, I arranged with Jerry to paint the interior upper floor of my little house. He accepted the job with satisfaction; he planned to do regular work during the day and then pop next door afterward for the necessary hours. I went over the rooms with him (two bedrooms, the sun porch, the bathroom, a hallway), and gave him our travel dates a couple of times. He was sure he’d be able to finish the work in the four days we’d be away.

The trip was good. The traffic was okay and the weather was perfect. The treatments were excellent although I’ll never do the “Japanese Restorative Facial” again. Maybe the slapping technique is good for the neuromuscular system, but it had me flinching. Other than that, the only flies in our ointment were the several times we were delayed because Anne couldn’t find something in her designer slouch bag.

Anne’s a little scattered under the best of circumstances. Sometimes I send her emails about our mutual neighbor, and she always misplaces them in her computer. I’ve given her the contact information for Bertilda’s caseworker/conservator so often that we’ve just tacitly agreed that I’ll be the keeper of that sort of thing. Anne makes other contributions to our relationship. Like creating and tending the little strip of garden between my place and her back door. Or trying new recipes and bringing me tastes.

But the bag thing is just asking for trouble. Anne favors form over function, when it comes to purses. She loves the look of a big leather sack, especially if it’s trimmed in braided skin of another color. The kind of bag she keeps buying costs a couple of hundred dollars even when on sale, and has one or maybe two interior pockets. She has to load it with enough stuff that it has a shape, and that’s always so much stuff that she then can’t find her sunglasses, or her readers, or her Pepcid, her pen, the lip balm, her keys. Time and again over the weekend, I watched her root around in that bag, grow increasingly agitated, dump it with some violence on her bed in the room or our table in the restaurant, locate at last the desired item, and then scoop, slide, and ladle all the stuff, even the paper trash and loose currency, back into the beautiful bag.

It cost me a little time, but it seemed to cost her more. She was frustrated and apologetic. I wondered what bag could be deemed so lovely that it was worth all the disruption. The third time it happened, I tried to show her all the pockets in my small messenger bag, but it seemed to only increase her rate of apology, and I could tell I wasn’t selling the idea.

We had a lovely long weekend, all in all, and we were just about to check out on Sunday when I got Jerry’s text. He was abjectly sorry, but he just realized we were coming home that day. He’d gotten confused. He thought he had till tomorrow. He wrote that he’d work on it all day, but the bathroom required so much prep that he’d need to finish the job the day after my return.

I was proud of myself. I didn’t get irritated. I fully accepted the fact that there was nothing that could be done. This demonstrated that the weekend was worth the time and money; I’d been carting around a strong tendency toward irritation lately, and that’s what I’d been working on healing while on the bodyworkers’ tables.

Jerry apologized again the next morning, while he spread tarps and I commenced restocking the bathroom shelves.

“I can’t tell you how nervous I’ve been,” he said as he popped the lid off the flat paint. “I’ve even been having anxiety dreams at night. I’d wake up and assure myself that you weren’t coming home till today, but I guess it never really set.”

“Wow,” I said. “That’s the kind of thing I’d write down on my calendar. Or in my phone, since that’s your go-to resource.”

“Well I don’t want to be a list-and-note person. I want to, you know, live more in the moment.”

I think my face showed some disdain. “What?” Jerry asked.

“Are you serious? Are you saying you’re willing to put up with nervousness and anxiety dreams, when all you have to do is off-load this data to something that isn’t your head? Jeez, Jerry, I don’t sleep that well, but at least when I wake up and my brain starts doing those monkey jumps I get to tell myself it’s written somewhere, and quiet down.”

“You make a point,” Jerry said. The surprising thing is that his facial expression suggested he was processing the idea. Then again, if I’m on the spectrum, I’m probably no good at reading facial expressions.

Go figure. I like these people. I think I even love them. But I sure don’t want to be them.

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Grump

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I wasn’t very civil yesterday.
I rose after a night of broken rest
and everything I noticed had a way
of generating discontent in breast
and snap complaint or argument in head.
I stretched my neck, addressed my hemorrhoid itch,
considered climbing back into my bed,
but groused instead – my neighbor is a bitch.

So reveling in loathing never earned,
I spread my judgment out and captured work.
I criticized my colleagues. Then I turned
the scope on family – my bro’s a jerk,
and Mom’s too narcissistic by a mile.
It cost eight cups of coffee for my smile.

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The Last Supper

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A week from Friday, when the world may end,
believers will abase their souls in fear,
and I’ll be having dinner with a friend,
discussing how my daughter’s acting queer.
We’ll drink our wine and sample Southern food,
observing both our birthdays while we sit,
but all our talk will concentrate on rude
behavior, foul words, obnoxious snit.

The world may end before we pay our bill
but we’ll enjoy the evening anyway,
for we’re experienced at tragedy.
We’re old enough to watch a tantrum spill
and let the puddle settle where it may,
and let existence end, if that’s to be.

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Yule Trial

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I guess I lost an earring yesterday,
a favorite pretty valuable to me.
And I have been so frantic – that’s my way –
I’ve singed my pants and comforter. You see,
I’m lately far too busy to be smart,
too loaded with responsibility
to have the time to rest or read my heart
or head or body needs. Serenity
is foreign and impossible right now;
I can’t escape my own velocity.
If I were ever calm, I don’t know how
to resurrect its shape, and harmony
remains a state I hardly can remember –
I hate to shop off-line, and it’s December.

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A First

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If I have ever written verse outside,
I don’t remember when. But here I sit
in sunshine, at a table, modified
by garden foods and exercise to fit,
protected from all vehicles and phones.
I haven’t a complaint or grief to list;
I’m active every morning – heart and bones –
and afternoons I nap or bend my wrist
to let my right hand hold this pen and move,
to try to write a sonnet in the sun
that I imagine no one will approve,
for it’s of no account, about no one.

Composing it felt nothing like a chore
and sweet, because I’d never tried before.

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Many Happy Returns

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My mother is a wizard at returning merchandise. Like a builder who gets more gratification from demolition than construction, she seems to enjoy returning more than acquiring.

When I was young, I’d often come home from school to find her tentative purchases. She’d pick up several items when I needed one, and as I tried them all on we’d choose the keeper. Then she’d dash back to the store and return the losers. She performed the same home service for my brothers and dad, but she always got more kick and merchandise from the girls’ departments.

It wasn’t fun. She was pushy about the process and her comments could wound. But it was better to endure her return service than to accompany her to the store. Nothing was more embarrassing than shopping for clothing with Mom. She thought she could tell in ten seconds whether the stock was interesting enough to tempt us. If we entered the store she was quick, uninhibited, and judgmental to the point of humiliation.

“Lydia,” she’d instruct loudly with her doubtful face, as she scanned my body for flaws, “you just can’t wear separates that cut you like that. You have to remember to choose one-piece outfits and vertical lines.”

It was worse when she summoned help. I’d be stuck in the overwarm dressing room, and she’d stand with one foot in the cubicle and one foot out, so anyone passing by got a shot of me in undies. She’d clearly loudly insist that we needed a bigger swimsuit bottom for me, to wear with the smaller-size (sighs) bra top.

But that was when I was young and embarrassable. If there’s one thing my brothers and I had to learn from hanging with our mother, it was to get over embarrassment.

Mom still returns. Sometimes the centerpiece of her day is to take something back to Macy’s or Nordstrom. At the least, she’ll threaten to return and rebuy something she’s purchased in the last month, in order to get an adjustment to the current sales price.

What’s troubling me lately is how she’s taken to giving back gifts. Not to the store, but to the giver. Or worse: refusing them, in a sort of preemptive return.

Like when her neighbors came by with Christmas fudge. Fran and Bill are twenty years younger than Mom and act filial. They showed up in matching seasonal sweaters and Santa hats. They chorused “Merry Christmas!” when Mom opened the door, Fran holding the holly-decorated plastic plate in front of her like a trophy.

“Oh honey, thanks,” my mother reported saying. “That’s so sweet. But you know, I don’t eat fudge. I’d hate to see it go to waste. Why don’t you give it to someone else?” I know about this because Mom described the scene to me over the phone. She seemed satisfied, proud even, to suggest a better home for that fudge. I imagine Fran’s dismay at this needless rejection, and I marvel that my mother doesn’t have a clue.

And that was Mom trying to be sensitive. When she gives back my gifts, sometimes she uses words like “stupid” and “nonsense” to argue how senseless it would be for her, well-meaning as she is, to suppress her opinion about keeping the item.

I can’t think of a time I’ve given my mother a gift that she’s kept. I thought I’d finally succeeded last year, when I presented her with a comfortable warm jacket. I’d bought the same style for myself and I knew how perfect it was. For her I selected different colors than mine, neutral tones like she always favored (Mom is the queen of beige). She seemed charmed when she opened the box. Grateful even. It was at least a week before she confessed to me that the jacket didn’t really suit her. She loved it but wouldn’t be wearing it, and she was sure there was someone else I knew who could use it. She brooked no argument. She pushed the garment into my hands and changed the subject.

I found a home for the jacket, around the torso of an old friend. But I noted how much it hurt when she returned it to me.

This year I may have carved an inroad. My younger brother came up with an idea for something we three offspring could give her together. Mom asserts that her hearing is fine, except that she builds up wax her otologist removes every three months. She claims that she only uses the closed captioning on her TV set when she’s watching BBC: to understand those accents. But every time we visit, there the captions are, on sports, news, whatever. And both of my brothers (technophiliacs like Dad was, scrambling to acquire the latest in entertainment equipment) assert that her TV audio is poor. So first one brother and then the other recommended that we get her a new auxiliary speaker, designed to improve TV audio quality. I leaped aboard that plan.

I don’t know what made Mom suspicious, but she raised objections. “You kids don’t have to buy me anything,” was the sweet opening. But then: “That’s stupid.” And “I told your brothers I don’t want that nonsense.” And finally “You’d better not.”

I felt my dander rising. But I got control of myself. I still can’t believe it, but instead of reacting as she pushed that old button, I said, “Oh come on, Mom. That sounds ungracious. And you’re not an ungracious woman.”

She went silent. As in: receptive.

Encouraged, I said, “I don’t know what you think we’re up to, but why are you resisting? Obviously we’re talking about some sort of equipment. Are you concerned that you won’t have space for it? Or that it will be another item to learn to control?”

“That’s it,” she said. “I have enough remotes. You know, Lydia, I’m not a youngster any more. I don’t want to learn another system.”

“I hear you,” I replied. “Remember when the boys bought me that Amazon TV thing? It must have been three years ago. They’ve taught me how to work the device at least once a year. It’s still sitting on my side table. I’ve never used it. I kind of hate it.”

Suddenly we had rapport. By the time we ended our phone conversation, she was using terms of endearment. Believe me, it isn’t often Mom calls me Honey.

My brothers and I are proceeding with the speaker gift. But they’ve agreed to set it up as an automatic accessory that Mom never has to control or tweak. We’re cautiously optimistic.

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Cozy

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At 6 a.m. it’s 33 degrees
outside, and clear as polished leaded glass.
We’re tempered by the bay – we seldom freeze –
but still I’m glad to goose the natural gas
to toast ceramic logs to radiate
to warm my room while flames delight my eyes.
Today’s a little respite in the spate
of family demands and client cries.

And rain or shine I’d take it for my own –
this crystal clarity is added good.
Intending to enjoy myself alone,
today I’m planted in this neighborhood
as if I were the central root. I tuck
my feet beneath my seat and thank my luck.

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Elder Wisdom

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My 34 year old invited me
by text to call him: I.R.T. we spoke.
He asked about his oldest friend – did he
once like that neighbor? Yes. And then he broke
the news: the kid was lost in smoke and flame
the night the Ghost Ship burned. Although it’s now
near 30 years, we knew and said the names
of mother, father, brother.
“Tell me how,”
my son then asked, “I have to treat a space
collectively created? I’m a fan
of real collaboration.”
“Any place
can be a threat” I said. “Remain a man
who isn’t paranoid, but notice where
the exit is, before you climb the stairs.”

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