I think it's quite clear that this was an excellent summer, and I'm sad to leave it behind, but--as always--I'm happy too. There's just something about first days, about the hope that comes along with them.
In August 2007 I packed up and moved to Maine, a state whose license plate identifies it as Vacationland. I'm now surrounded by signs that say CAUTION: MOOSE IN ROADWAY and 20-foot lobster statues. Oddly enough, this is also the second state I've lived in that claims to be the birthplace of Paul Bunyan. Coincidence? I think not.
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Life As I Know It Is Now Over
I think it's quite clear that this was an excellent summer, and I'm sad to leave it behind, but--as always--I'm happy too. There's just something about first days, about the hope that comes along with them.
Monday, August 2, 2010
One of These People Puked in the Bushes Outside a Wedding Reception (Hint: It Wasn't Me)
I never thought I'd say this, but cleaning vomit out of a car in high heels and a strapless dress at 1:00 AM is a pretty interesting way to end an evening. Especially after peeling a boy who is murmuring, "Baby, I'm so sorry! I love you! You know I love you, right? I love you! I puked in my crotch!" out of his clothes and putting him in the shower, then to bed.
But you know what? It doesn't matter. Both of us--the late-night puke-cleaner and the passed-out vomitter--looked pretty good when the night started.


Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Another Pink Torpedo Wedding
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Monday, April 13, 2009
If a Homeless Woman in the Subway Asks You If She Can Ask You a Question, JUST ZIP IT
My Easter trip to Washington with the Pink Torpedoes was a good vacation and an educational one, too. I learned many important things on my trip to Washington this weekend--thank you, Paul, the Midnight Trolley Tour trolley driver and The Smithsonians, but none of those lessons are as important as the lesson I learned down in the subway tubes.
I was coming off the escalator. I was in front of the rest of the girls, and when I came around the corner so I could walk down the platform and find a place for us to stand, I breezed past a woman--homeless, disheveled--and that homeless woman said, "Hey! Can I ask you a question?"
And, listen, here's the thing: when you walk past those little kiosks in the mall, that's what the people manning them are always quacking at you. Can I ask you a question? Can I ask you a question? And then they want to slather you with lotion or talk to you about state-of-the-art windshield wipers or show you how this one silk headband will change your entire understanding of the world of hair. So, really, the answer when they say Can I ask you a question should always be, by default, no.
Which is possibly why I had the immediate reaction to say no, which is exactly what I did when the disheveled homeless lady asked if she could ask me a question.
"No, thank you," I said, tacking on a little politeness at the end because that's what you do when the kiosk people start after you--because, well, we all know they hate their jobs and the lotion/wiper blades/headbands they are peddling, and they're just doing it to stay alive, so why not say thank you just to let them know that you've been there, you know how it is, and you feel their pain.
But a no, thank you was not what the homeless lady had in mind when she decided to see if she could ask me a question.
Suddenly, behind our group, there was a flurry of activity. A throwing of a fit. A burst of foul language.
"BITCH!" the homeless lady screamed.
At first, I didn't realize it was at me. I'd passed by courteously. I thought maybe someone else had offended her or someone around her.
"Hey," Becky said. "Hey! That homeless woman just called you a bitch!"
"Really?" I said. We were still walking. The platform was long and reasonably crowded, and we were looking for a place for all of us to stand together.
"Yes," Becky said. She turned around. "Oh Jesus," she said. "She's following us."
"YOU FUCKING BITCH!" the homeless woman screamed as she trailed us.
"Keep walking," Becky said. "Seriously! Keep walking!"
"What did I do?" I hissed. "I didn't do anything to her!"
"She's coming!" Becky said. She peered over her shoulder again. The woman was yelling in indecipherable syllables now. "She's telling other people what a bitch you are. She's pointing at you!"
"If we have to leave and come back down, we can do that," Steph said.
"There's an escalator up ahead," Becky said. "We can ride it up to get away from her. We can come back down later."
"WHAT DID I DO TO HER?!" I asked.
The woman kept coming, and we kept moving down the platform, and finally there was a space for us to duck into, and we took it. The girls swarmed around me. I was wearing a swingy pink coat. I was a walking bulls eye, and they needed to take my visibility down a notch.
I refused to look behind me. Sometimes the best way to calm down the crazy is to ignore it. If the crazy fire isn't stoked, isn't fed, isn't fanned, then it usually sputters out. I was hoping that by not turning around and acknowledging the woman who was telling the rest of the platform what a horrible cunt-y bitch I was, then maybe she would get bored of trying to provoke me and trying to get me to say something to her--which was, in reality, is what started it all.
"What did you say to her?" Amy asked.
"She asked if I could ask me a question, and I said no, thank you!" I said.
The girls blinked.
"Jess," Steph said, "when crazy-eyed homeless people say things like that to you JUST. WALK. AWAY."
"Right," I said. "Got it."
Next to us, a guy our age who had one of his arms up in a sling but was still managing to bury his nose deep into a novel, glanced our way for a second and then moved over so we could come stand farther back, next to him, far away from the edge of the platform. He smiled once and went back to his novel.
We stayed there, carefully obscured, and waited. I never once turned around to search out the shouting woman, and she stopped shouting and that was that. We got on the train without incident and found seats.
Once the train moved away from the now-empty platform, Becky leaned over and said, "Wouldn't it be funny if she came storming through the subway cars right now?"
"Uh, no," I said.
"That's what happens in the movies," Amy said.
And we all turned to look at the dark space between the subway cars as the train bumped along through the tubes.
Of course nothing happened. Of course she didn't come storming through the tightly-sealed door with her finger wagging in the air and a rain of bitch-bitch-bitches coming out of her mouth. Of course she didn't stand on a seat and announce to the entire car that this girl, this girl right here, she is a big skanky bitch.
Instead, things went along just the way they should have, just the way we could have hoped for the time in Washington, and we spent the rest of our it boning up on history, eating as much food as possible, talking about weddings, weddings, weddings, and doing things that the Pink Torpedoes always have and always will do. Things like these:
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Abe Returns to the Mothership
Comfortable on the Fourth, originally uploaded by Stuck in Customs.
Tomorrow morning, the other Pink Torpedoes (minus Anne--we'll miss you!) will get in a car with coffees, snacks, and a bust of Abraham Lincoln.
It's the first official PT vacation, and we're going to be spending time touring monuments and museums, gazing at cherry blossoms, and eating Easter candy.
I will also busy myself by being consumed with wishing that The West Wing were still on television and still taping in D.C. so there would be a small chance I might happen upon a crew shooting one of those scenes where Bradley Whitford roughs up some Congressman on a random D.C. street. There would be nothing better. If, for example, I ever got to be this close to Bradley Whitford, I would pass out and die, and Amy, Becky, and Steph would have to take me up by the heels and drag me back to the hotel where they would be forced to revive me with smelling salts and a belt of vodka.
Here's hoping we find them shooting a top secret reunion special among the blossoms. I am not above rushing the set. Not one bit.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
It's Times Like These When I Really Wish I Owned Photoshop
Anne is getting married.
Steph is getting married.
Their boys did so well. Anne's engagement happened by a giant tree--and if there's anything Anne likes more than science, it's nature. And trees. Giant trees you hike to admire. Her boy asked her under a giant tree if she'd like to be his wife, and she said she would.
Steph's boy changed into a special shirt before he came out to ask her if she'd like to marry him, and Steph couldn't stop saying, "Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God." And then her parents came through the door with balloons. They'd been in on the whole thing.
Those boys did well. And now two more Pink Torpedoes are on their way to getting married, which will bring us to a total of three out of five. Amy and I are bringing up the rear, but she's close, close, close. So if you want to place bets on who'll be the last to go, the safe money is on me.
But I'm okay with that. Especially if it means that I, in my official Wedding Zeal, my official I-Wish-I-Had-a-Wedding-to-Plan effervescence, get to do things like this to test some things out, to see just how beautiful these girls--these girls who've been my friends since we were in elementary school, since we knew who was kissing whom behind the cubby-holes and who was peeing their pants on the circle at snack time--are going to look when they come down whatever type of aisle they're going to set up:
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
We're Just That Chic
She smiled at us. "Did you guys just come from seeing Sex and the City?" she asked.
We looked around the table. We were confused. What about us seemed like we'd just come from the Sex and the City movie?
We told the waitress no. Becky and Amy and Steph said they'd just gotten off work. I'd just come from an afternoon of chocolate chip pancake-eating at the diner where the Boy From Work and I used to wait on farmers and their mustached wives.
"Oh," the waitress said. "It's just that you guys are dressed so cute, and now you're here to drink martinis. We had a lot of that kind of thing--girls getting all dressed up and going to see the movie down the street, then coming here for Cosmos--when the movie came out. I figured maybe you were doing the same."
"No," we said, "this is just us."
Most of us had already seen the Sex and the City movie. Amy and I went the last time I was home. In fact--and I am not even remotely ashamed to admit this--I bought advanced tickets so we could attend opening night. And while I did slip into a pair of purple satin pumps, I did not do myself up like most of the other women at the packed movie theater. Many came dressed in gowns and wacky dresses, in stilettos and giant costume jewelry. It was quite the experience. Everyone was so into it. People yelled and gasped and talked at the screen like they were talking to real friends. "Oh no, Carrie!" some of the girls shrieked when she was having another disaster with Big. "What the hell are you WEARING?!" others yelled when Miranda or Carrie strutted onto a street wearing something truly hideous. And during the wretched heartbreaking Big moments, the whole theater was damp with tears. I had never heard so many women sobbing at once. It was the most interesting experience I ever had in a movie theater.
But to be compared to the girls who went all out for a night out on the town with their best television girlfriends didn't really offend us. In fact, we thought it was cute that we were confused for girls who'd glammed up to go see the Sex and the City girls when we were actually just glammed up for the sake of four hours of martinis and giggling about people we went to high school with. We're just that habitually silly, that habitually chic.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
The Ways of Grief
Everything felt wrong, so I got up off the bed and started throwing things into a suitcase. I packed too many brown shoes and no black ones. I packed wrinkled sweaters and mismatching underwear. I packed a toothbrush. And then I drove. I drove the nine hours through misting-raining-pouring Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York.
While I drove farther and farther into the night I had to keep myself awake, which meant I had to keep myself interested, involved, perked up. I spent a considerable amount of time thinking about my brother's eventual wedding--which is strange and weird and wrong--and, before I knew it, I'd moved through an entire state and written a speech I want to give at my brother's wedding--a speech that ends with Bad English's "When I See You Smile" swelling in the background. I amazed myself with how sweet and sentimental I was able to be on the Thruway at midnight, but, really, it shouldn't have been such a surprise. I was delaying the inevitable. I was trying not to think about why I was driving home, what it meant, what was going on, and what it reminded me of.
It reminded me of my grandmother's death.
I haven't really talked about my grandmother's death before. She died the month after I moved to Minnesota for graduate school, and her death was a surprise but not a surprise. In those sickeningly hot summer months before my move my grandmother's body slowly started giving out. There was something wrong, and nobody really knew what it was. She was tired all the time, and she often complained of her bones aching. It was a deep ache, she said, one that she could feel in the deepest parts of her. The ache was dull and moist and constant. She thought maybe this is what it was to grow old, that she would never feel right again. But it wasn't growing old, and it wasn't just the way things were going to be from then on. It was cancer, her second time. This time it was cancer in her bones, deep down, all the way down. Her first time had been closer to the surface and had taken one of her breasts. As a little girl, I was confused why my grandmother's lingerie drawer was filled with bras that were generously padded on one side and not the other. But at twenty-one, I was no longer confused about cancer and what it meant. This time I was angry.
When I'm angry and hurt, I don't do so well. I cut myself off. I shut myself down. I become a verifiable brick of a girl. Nothing gets in, nothing gets out. I am stone. I am red, red stone, glowing with the heat of my rage.
I didn't handle my grandmother's illness well, and since then I haven't been able to deal with similar things in any way that even remotely resembles "good." What I did was this: I went through the motions. I drove to the Roswell Cancer Institute in downtown Buffalo once a week, and I sat at my grandmother's bedside. I brought her books and stories I'd written. I prattled on about the newest TV shows, what she was missing. I picked up the tiny pencil the hospital gave out--the type handed out at golf outings--and helped her choose what she wanted to eat for the rest of the week. I asked questions like, Do you want the banana cake on Wednesday, Grandma? How about the pork cutlet for Thursday's dinner? Doesn't that sound good?
Never once did I say anything important. I didn't say, This is unfair. I didn't say, You can't go. I didn't say, Please don't leave me. I didn't say, I haven't been very nice lately, and I'm sorry.
I never told my grandmother I was sorry. And I had many, many, many things to be sorry for. These were not good times for my family. We'd recently had what I refer to as The Worst Christmas Ever, after which I adopted the general strategy of ignoring my grandparents' house and thus my grandfather who was, at that time, not a very nice man. Because I was ignoring the place where he lived, I was also ignoring my grandmother, and grandma wasn't happy about this. She kept sending letters begging me to forgive, to forget, to come home, to come see them, to spend some time in her kitchen like I usually did--just sitting at the table, hanging my feet over the edge of the chair and painting my toenails. She wanted to make me a sandwich. She wanted to mix me a cup of Loganberry. She wanted to pick through my nail polish container and comment on all the strange colors--purple, silver, orange, green--but then stroke one of them onto her own toes so she could wiggle those brazen toes in the direction of her friends, tell them it had been her granddaughter's suggestion.
But I didn't do that. I went on being angry and punishing everyone because of it. I hadn't spoken to my grandfather in months and months by the time my grandmother landed in the hospital, which made things uncomfortable when I came for visits. My mood was not improved when I sat slumped in a chair in the corner of the room, watching my grandfather treat my grandmother like she was a princess, a queen, every kind of royalty that ever lived. I thought it was terrible of him to go on like that--to pretend he was something he so clearly was not. For twenty-one years, I'd watched him berate her in public, tell her she was stupid and useless, tell her no, no, no, you won't go here, do that, leave me in this house without dinner on the table. He yelled while she was making food, while she was driving, while she was shopping, while she was telling stories.
After my grandmother died, my mother told me grandma had wanted to leave him years ago, but those things weren't done back then, and she'd stayed for the kids and because that's just what you did. Always. I couldn't stop thinking about that. I couldn't stop wondering what it must have been like for my grandmother to stay with a man who, just for kicks, just because it was fun to watch, made his children move the wood pile from one side of the driveway to the next several times a season, all while he sat inside with a steaming cup of coffee in one hand and the newspaper in the other, all the while telling his wife the mashed potatoes better not be lumpy like they were the last time. I don't blame my grandfather completely for the man he was--after all, he was raised by a woman who, once when my mother was very little, brought her down to the creek bed with a pillowcase full of squirming kittens. My great grandmother handed the pillowcase to my mother and told her to drown them, and do it quick. My mother couldn't. My mother wouldn't. And so my great grandmother snatched the case from my mother and did it herself. When my mother turned her head so she wouldn't see the little paws breaking the surface of the water, trying so desperately to paddle, paddle, paddle back to the shore, to life, to warm, dry nights in the cow barn, my great grandmother grasped my mother by the chin and turned her head back toward the water, to the drowning kittens, and made her watch until they were all dead.
My grandfather often told stories about how great of a woman his mother was. He loved her, said she was a great lady, a real class-act. And so it was easy, then, to place a little blame on her, to see what she had done to him, what she had made him. But it didn't make me any less angry, any less evil toward him and, just because she got in the way, my grandmother, too.
But it was more than just me being angry at my grandfather for what he'd done and said. That wasn't the only thing I had to be sorry for. I'd also been a real cocky girl for the last year. I was so full of myself--college educated, succeeding, winning scholarships and attention, getting accepted to grad schools in several different states, writing my way out of western New York and away from my family. I waltzed into family gatherings like I was a real big something. I sat around saying witty things and acting like I knew better than everyone. I was not a good daughter, granddaughter, or sister back then. I was floating through that year on a cloud of my own accomplishments.
And so my grandmother spent the last year of her life losing me. She would've gotten me back, of course, if only she'd been around. Eventually, I would've come back down. Eventually, I would've been myself again. But that never happened for us. I never came around the right way until after she'd gone.
My mother called me at 8:30 AM on a Monday morning to tell me my grandmother had died the night before. I didn't quite understand what she was saying--after all, the last thing I'd heard was that my grandmother was being moved that night to a rehabilitation hospital where she could recover from the chemo in peace. She'd made progress. She'd responded well. She was ready to take a step closer to home.
But this is what happened: the paramedics bundled my grandmother in blankets and the wheeled her out to the ambulance that would take her to the next hospital, the one with bright colors and flowers and balloons and cards that spoke of recovery. On the way to that hospital, my grandmother dozed, and then her heart gave out. It was weak and tired and weary from all the chemo--it was, after all, its second time around with cancer and all its treatments and exhaustions. The paramedics tried to revive her, but they couldn't. They couldn't. My grandmother died right there, so close to recovery, to a next chance.
When my mother told me these things, I collapsed in the hallway outside my roommate's bedroom. Megan was there in a second, and she had me in her arms and she was petting my hair and my back and telling me it was going to be okay, but I knew it wasn't. I knew my grandmother had just died, and I'd never get the chance to tell her what I really felt--that I was an awful granddaughter, that I was ungrateful, that I had ruined the last year of her life by being so hateful and spiteful and cold.
I flew home for the funeral. I spent three days in town. I did the wakes and the funeral, but I remember very little of that time. What I do remember exists in scattered, dark places in my head. I remember the casket being closed. I remember making a photo collage of my grandmother's favorite pictures. I remember hearing her older sister weeping in the hallway, her surviving brothers, too. I remember my grandfather pacing and saying, How can she be gone? Why was she taken from me? I remember my best friends coming by, bringing their ow mothers and baked goods. I remember Amy's mother's bar cookies, which were, at the time I ate them in the parking lot of the funeral home, the best things I'd ever tasted.
I remember the funeral. I remember my father standing in the back row. I remember standing next to my cousins and hearing each one of them start to weep--one, two, three, four--until the weeping reached my brother, and he broke down too. All around me there were people sobbing. Aunts, uncles, cousins, friends. I didn't cry, though. Never once. I stood there like a stone, like a pillar, like a brick that let nothing in and nothing out.
I was the only person who didn't cry at my grandmother's funeral.
And today, that's what bothers me the most. I don't understand why I wouldn't let myself cry. I wanted to--absolutely I did. I fought to keep the tears in. I tipped my chin up and I concentrated. I said, You will not cry, you will not cry, you will not cry until the urge to cry passed. When it came upon me again, I would steel myself and say, No. No, no, no. And I didn't.
These are the things I thought about on the drive back to New York. I hoped and prayed that my friend, my sweet girl, the one who is so terrifically kind and thoughtful and wise, would not do what I did, would not harden to stone while people filed in to pay their respects, press their hands against hers, and whisper, I'm so sorry.
At her father's wake, I didn't do well. I didn't do what I was supposed to. I found it hard--like I always do--to find the right words to say. There's an awful lot of guilt attached to being unable to find the right words to say. I'm a writer, and I feel like it's just something I should be able to do, something I should be good at. I should have a phrase or a sentence or a thought that is just right, that says everything that needs to be said and nothing that doesn't. But I always dry up in those moments. My tongue becomes a dead, awkward thing in my mouth, and I walk away feeling like a failure, like someone who has brought no comfort whatsoever.
But what I know is this: you don't remember what people say. You just don't. Afterward, you will remember only a haze of things, shapes of people and items that were in the same room as you. There was a coffin, of course, and flowers and people. But if pressured to recite what was said to you and by whom, you won't be able to do it. Or maybe that's just me, a stone-girl, the one who can't process and let herself grieve. And I hope above all other things that my friend, one of my oldest, one of the ones who will be around forever, just lets herself breathe, lets herself be, which is one thing I never remembered to do.