Elevation

gingko

Is this relief I feel at feeling great?
Or satisfaction after exercise?
For here’s the pressured holiday I hate
that never gave me any good surprise,
and only yesterday I bore a load
of office work, domestic chores, and pain
my children nurtured as I walked a road
I never tried, in clearness after rain.

Could it have been the lakes of ginkgo leaves
I witnessed yellow in December light?
Or liquidambar standing on concrete
with stems like masts? Such scenery relieves,
and weary is awakened by the sight
of red regattas standing on the street.

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Thinking Outside the Icebox

rain

The raindrops cling to spider limbs of trees
like diamond pussy willows upside down.
The heavens glower heavy in the east
while western light is mounting, but the frowns
the folks exhibit as they drive in storm
will never find a home upon my face;
the chill of winter walking makes me warm,
and rain is what I love about this place.

Why do they drive as if they’re getting wet,
when I am walking at my normal speed?
And how is it so many are upset
and sad in winter, when the season feeds
my spirit with invigorating cold
and dashes me aware like 5 years old?

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Friday Morning Before Xmas

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I wandered musing in the morning rain,
my fantasies afloat above my head,
on automatic pilot to the train
that pulls me to the office from my bed.
The drizzle ticked a patter on the black
umbrella roofing me with arching spears:
the atmosphere was silent, wet and slack,
that belled around my cheeks and in my ears.

I didn’t notice many things today,
but limited my vision with a roof
of fabric stretched upon a lacy frame.
Contained within a little moving room,
I wandered musing in the morning rain,
while habit pulled me westward to the train.

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Tease

gingko

The liquidambar leaves are sidewalk sails
that float immobile on the wet concrete.
The ginkgo leaves replace their green with trails
and lakes of yellow on the winter street.
The raindrops hang like crystal chandeliers
from leafless branches stretched against the sky,
as if a thousand sterling silver tears
were caught about to fall from Nature’s eye.

The shortest day will be upon us soon
(beside its complement, the longest night),
when scarce do several hours pass from noon
to setting sun, and precious is all light.
Now teasing Nature, as she shrinks our days,
bestows on us her very softest rays.

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Another Bertilda Sighting

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I haven’t mentioned the neighbors on the other side of Anne. That’s probably because Ken and Jill are quiet, and normal, and not noteworthy. They live in a medium-sized house on the north side of the three-unit condo arrangement that houses Anne, Bertilda and Jerry. From where the creek turns into our back yards to where it plunges under the street, the order is my place, Anne’s, and then theirs.

Ken and Jill are remodeling. Their kids have left the nest and they’re adding a deck and reducing the number of bedrooms from four small to two big and a home office. They’re also having some sewer work done.

So there’s a portable potty and a pile of gravel on the edge of their driveway. That driveway abuts Anne’s place right at the edge of the front yard. The yard is common condo area, but crazy Bertilda thinks it’s hers because she sometimes weeds there.

Anyway, I’m writing about the gravel. It’ s mostly in a neat pile, on a big tarp of black plastic, on the concrete end of Ken and Jill’s driveway where that meets the sidewalk. Over the weekend we had some wind. And maybe a few dogs who trod on the gravel pile. Bits of it have migrated off the tarp.

Well, Bertilda has been sighted out there more than once, long handled shovel in hand, relocating stray gravel back onto the pile. She goes at like a fireman stoking the burner in a steam engine.

The first time was two days ago, mid day. She grumbled at me about the “damn neighbors – the noise is bad enough – now we get to deal with their fucking garbage.”

Then it happened this evening. Just before dark I headed out to the sidewalk to meet a friend for a walk and dinner. Bertilda seemed happy at her shoveling. She acted like it was a regular task of hers and asked me, pleasantly, if I was going to work.

I ran into Anne when I came back from dinner and mentioned the latest idiosyncracy. She told me I had seen nothing, yet. Ken and Jill have received regular complaints from Bertilda about noise and dust (the work is quiet and neat, as far as I can tell). This morning Ken answered the doorbell to find a flaming paper bag of cat shit on his front porch. He’s not calling anyone, but he’s positive about the perpetrator.

Anne heard the story from Carol, Jason’s mother, who lives with her son and husband on the south side of my house. The creek doesn’t run through their yard, but down the side between them and me. Carol and her husband are in the psychotherapy field, and totally dedicated to raising their not-very-normal boy. Jason is at least on the spectrum. Personally, especially after the fire, I think the kid has the marks of a junior psychopath.

Carol is the Mother Teresa around here. She thinks Bertilda deserves nothing other than compassion and accommodation. Then again, she’s never been the target of Bertilda’s hostility. At this point Bertilda acts like Carol is her best friend.

So at the same time that Carol filled Anne in about the cat shit incident, she told Anne that she had taken up Bertilda’s offer to tutor Jason in German. The two of them seem to get along together, she explained, and Jason can use any help he can get. Surprisingly, Bertilda seems able to teach. Even Carol joked that it might keep her off the streets. We’re all cautiously hopeful. Everyone is a little more comfortable with Bertilda walking away from the diminishing pile of gravel.

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Mid Day

midday sun

Eleven thirty, and I’ve done enough
so far today to take a break deserved.
Four hours straight I’ve spent in doing stuff
for others more than me, and so much curved
our path beneath the winter morning sun
that I have shrunk my shadow to a speck,
but come approaching noon the shrinking’s done,
and I’ve another chance to self-project.

That often am I duly authorized
to dance before my shadow in the glow
December makes. A chance is hardly prized
when it comes daily twice, but even so
I’ll take a timely opportunity
to value all the chances given me.

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Cold Brew

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Is there a tonic quicker than the cold
upon my face, while leather warms my hands
and walking feet? The morning air is bold
as crystal, sharp and clean, and it commands
brisk attitude from what was weary me.
It polishes my cheeks with icy sting
and coaxes open eyes to clearly see
through tearing chill the edge of everything.

And what’s the tranquilizer that can top
the evening I have built myself tonight?
Alone within my living room, I stop
the usual, attend the firelight,
and start the music over, while I sit
among the purple candles I have lit.

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Waikiki

Outrigger

Transitioning today to Waikiki,
we ready for the traffic and the crowd
that gathers at the Cheesecake Factory,
the flares of tiki torches, and the loud
and bass-less music rising from the bars
that perforates the beach like scattershot,
the waves of brand-name stores, the tides of cars
and taxi cabs, the sidewalk polyglot.

It’s called the capital of paradise
but nobody can argue it’s the best,
unless the score depends on mai tai price
and luau shows and time-share talks addressed
to people so commercially confused,
they can’t tell if they’re anxious or amused.

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Alone Unlonely

Haleakala

Our three-day stay includes a rental car,
and we have driven south of here and east.
The island’s small enough we can’t go far,
but we’ve explored aquaria, increased
our height from level sea to see a star
observatory – miles high at least –
and we can’t tell where all the tourists are;
we wander unmolested, unpoliced.

The kitchens we select are never loud.
We’re driving where we want with little stress.
Perhaps the western beaches have the crowd
and maybe sunset luaus host the mess
of lumpy shoppers, flowers in their hair,
but we’re enjoying tropic solitaire.

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Disruption

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“You know what they say,” I intoned. “Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.”

Margaret snorted. There was no way I could interpret that as agreement. And she’s a professional. I looked up and listened.

“That’s just not true. Or not often. It’s kind of like child abductions – way less common than you’d think. When a kid gets snatched it makes the news. All the kids who are safe at home and school are not interesting to the viewers. So yeah, sometimes a victim survives and triumphs and is stronger and wiser for the experience. But most of the time, especially nowadays, abuse leads to psychological disability. At least.”

“But I…”

“Yeah. You were one of the lucky ones. And then wasn’t now.”

“That sounds negative,” I said. “Are you sure you aren’t falling into Hendersonism?”

Margaret chuckled before responding. “Hendersonism” is our name for the condition that occurs when a specialist has been in her field for so long that she begins to see everyone through the warped lens of her own experience. We named it for Jack Henderson, an OB/Gyn I used to know who was a fertility specialist. He was a business client of mine and he once told me that no woman over 40 should even attempt to conceive a child. He seemed oblivious, even after I mentioned it, to the fact that only women who had trouble conceiving were consulting him.

“I don’t think my perspective is skewed,” Margaret responded. “I’m just saying that most abuse victims don’t develop the strength to, for lack of a better phrase, rise above. The few who do, become noteworthy. And I’m convinced the few are getting farther between. We live in a sick society growing sicker.”

“Wow. Them’s fighting words. Let’s walk.”

Margaret and I grew our friendship out of the therapy room. She was the best and therefore last of my son’s child psychologists; when his therapy was concluded (a radical concept) and we retreated from the regular appointments, the empty space slowly filled with dinners and walks and talks as she and I got to know one another and grew close. We shared an interest in health that made us compatible about exercise, fiber, and certain nonfiction books. In fact, our walk destination yesterday was the nearby bookstore, one of the last independently owned shops in our region.

I worked in a bookstore when I was in college. It was my favorite job ever, although it paid minimum wage and was not a sustainable career. I had to leave it for the financial district, but I never lost my love of bookstore environments. So I mourn the death of the industry. I hold my Kindle with uncramped hands and mixed feelings. In the same way that I was compelled to get a cell phone because telephone booths disappeared, the extinction of bookstores forced me to acquire an e-reader and shop Amazon.

“So what about the heroic stories?” I resumed when we got to the sidewalk. “Just last week I read about an abuse survivor who is scoring big time as a motivational speaker.”

“One in a million.”

“Me, too?” I can’t describe my childhood as abusive exactly, but a combination of circumstances created an environment wherein my needs were not met. My mother had no time or patience for me, and was contending with her own undiagnosed depression, and my father, sometimes an amazing loving guide, was generally too busy with his work and too trusting that Mom knew what she was doing. I’d gotten a deep perspective on my own childhood while peripherally participating in Alex’s therapy, and I’d slowly, miraculously learned that (1) I was blameless and (2) it was too late for Mom to mother me but there was a way I could mother myself.

“You too. I’ve never met anyone like you. People think you’re all about intelligence, and sure you have that, but your strongest qualities are extreme willfulness and kindness.”

I basked. Immodestly, I agreed with her. And I treasured her for noticing the kind part of me.

I found Margaret through my best friend Mellie. I needed a therapist for my little boy, and Mellie has had an (adult) lifetime of it. She’s well connected in the community. I’ve got my doubts about her guy (who doesn’t have critical observations about her best friend’s therapist?), but I can’t forget he connected us to Margaret, who helped Alex thrive (and incidentally me too), and then became a friend.

Mellie also knows endocrinologists. She presented with Type 1 diabetes when we were 35, and I was assigned my customary role (established shortly after we met and became college roommates) of reading the science. So I’m not unfamiliar with the pluses and minuses about insulin, and was therefore conversant, halfway to the bookstore, when Margaret opened the subject.

“Most people don’t realize it’s a hormone,” she began. “Sure it serves a vital purpose, but based on the reading I’ve been doing, I’m convinced that a huge part of our culture’s problem is that we’re all OD’ing on it…”

“But how could that be? I mean, except for people like Mellie, who inject it – did I ever tell you about the time I tried to kill her with it? I’m joking of course, but we were away at a weekend spa, and she didn’t bring her cheaters to the dining room and asked me to draw up three units for her. I wasn’t used to the needle calibration and pulled 30 units instead. Haphazard Mellie plunged the needle into her thigh before she realized what I’d done.

“Talk about an emergency situation! I ran for the orange juice while the staff called the ambulance. Poor woman had to spend the whole day on a glucose drip.”

“Shit,” Margaret commented. “That was probably harder on you than on her.” I nodded. “No: we’re almost all getting too much insulin. Do you realize that average sugar consumption has gone from like 35 pounds per person per year, when we were born, to over 140 pounds per person per year now? All that sugar means huge glucose loads in our bloodstream, which require huge insulin responses. Not to mention the other ingredient in sugar: unmitigated fructose to stress the liver and add fat to the system.”

An invisible lightbulb flared above my brain as I made a connection. “Wow,” I said. “I remember the only and best big long-term study about what causes complications in people with Type I. The conclusion linked all the problems to high insulin levels…”

“Yeaaaa-uh. And guess what? Folks on high-carb, low fat diets (meaning: people with high serum insulin levels) experience notably more depression and suicidal ideation.”

“Which is known to be prevalent among insulin injectors, too!”

“Worse than all that: insulin promotes cell growth, including cancer cells and brain plaque. It tells the body to store everything but glucose as fat, and then makes the brain crave more glucose. I used to subscribe to the standard assumption that obesity is self-induced: a matter of poor choices. Now I see it as broken metabolism. True disability. Reversible, but not easily. Especially when like 98% of food sold to us is laced with added sugars.”

“This is sounding bad.”

“Un huh. You have to check out some of the books I’ve been reading. It started for me with Teicholz’s Big Fat Surprise. All about how “science” has been lying to us since WWII. That wiped most of the knowledge I thought I had out of my head. Then I did Lustig’s Fat Chance. He sent me looking for Yudkin’s Pure, White & Deadly, which was billed as hard-to-find (written and suppressed in the 1970s), but was a one-click purchase on Amazon. Let’s find one or more of those titles today. I’ll soon have you off sugar and refined carbs, too.”

“How is it, off sugar?”

“Easy. I was prepared for an adjustment period of two to four weeks, but after decades of reserving calories for a little fine chocolate every night, it was like I was done with it. Never looked back. Don’t want it. Here we are.”

We turned into the bookstore doorway. It was pleasant in there, with a comfortable small crowd of browsers and good natural light. But we didn’t find any of the books. There was one about gluten and brain disease, but Margaret told me to stay away from it unless I wanted to fill my shelves with supplements.

We were discouraged but not surprised to come up empty. We knew we’d have to turn to Amazon. The deck is stacked so many ways.

I like to think I’m an alert, focused person, but what happened next humbled me. It didn’t kill me, but I don’t think it made me stronger either. As we exited the bookstore, mumbling together about being forced online, an elderly driver accelerated toward us. I saw the SUV angling from the street toward the tile and glass storefront, I understood somehow that the geometry was wrong, but I didn’t react physically. It was Margaret who got it. She yanked me toward the street about two seconds before the front of the car smashed into the store. The impact shattered the glass and even took a big chunk out of the tile.

We’re okay. One pedestrian had a leg broken and two store customers were hit by flying glass. The driver, a man in his 80s, had not had a medical event. We heard that he confused the accelerator for the brake and then panic-reacted by yanking the wheel the wrong way.

The adrenaline dissipation was uncomfortable. But appropriate. And far better than too much insulin.

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