Friday, October 8, 2021

C is for Crushing Life Changes

I woke up from a dream the other night with tears streaming down my face and my heart heavy in my chest.  I have no idea what I was dreaming about but the sadness was so real and so very crushing.  I laid there, wiping my eyes, shifting to get comfortable, and failing to remember what it is that made me so sad.  I would have liked to have given it more time and thought, but it was about 2 in the morning, and I am perpetually exhausted, so sleep won out over wonder.


If I am honest, and I truly don’t recall the dream, I know why I would wake up in the middle of the night crying.  But if I am honest, I have to admit things, and if I admit them, I can’t hide behind laughter and jokes, and if I can’t hide behind these things, then I am faced with what is making me so very sad, and if I have to face what is making me so very sad, I can no longer deny it is happening, and if I can’t deny it, well, I guess I just wake up crying.  It is very “if you give a mouse a cookie” where I am the mouse and the cookie is more of a gut-punch.


The fact is that in twenty-nine days, I will load my daughter’s car up with her and her things and move her to her dad’s in Dallas.  She will stay there for a month or so and then start at UNT in January.  This is a great thing! I told her she needed to do this great thing! I actually sort of two-hand pushed her into doing this great thing.  I did it because she needs it.  Her life, like so many others, has been on hold since about two months before her high school graduation.  I don’t want to be crass or insensitive and call it a casualty of COVID, but the class of 2020 and their hopes and initial dreams really took a beating.


So while I encourage this change for her, while I support it and nurture it, and help her plan to make it happen, I am so very sad.  This is the end to what was normal for the last almost twenty years.  Until the divorce, I don’t think I ever went more than a night or two without being with her or her brother.  I worry about her on her own, I worry about me without her here, and I worry about her brother who does not know a life without her physically present in it every single day.  They are currently dealing with their own feelings about this by arguing over who gets the PS4 and looking to me like Solomon to decide and I am like “split your own damn baby.”  

This really sums up their relationship.



I know that I have been lucky, so lucky, to have had an extra almost two years with her at home. Enough time to make me be really sick of the fact that she never changes a toilet paper roll.  She will take the time to perch a new one on top of the old one, but never switch it out.  I have had time to try to back away from her day-to-day and let her figure things out.  I have had time to get to see her as the adult she is becoming, while also tripping over her shoes and yelling at her to please bring down the ten coffee cups in her room.  It is a real narrow edge we walk between being very tired of one another and very dependent on the other in our normal lives. And if you know this person, you know she is amazing and full of potential she has never realized and won’t realize if I am still doing laundry for her because she knows if she starts it, I will finish it.  And I know this.  My brain knows this.  My heart, however, is very, very sad. 


When they were little, she and her brother used to snuggle up with me on the couch before bed.  One on my left, one in my lap.  They would smell like babies and bath time and they would giggle and watch shows with wide-eyed wonder and kick their footie-pajama feet and the world would be so good in that time before bed.  I miss this time. I miss innocence and wonder and make-believe and dress-up and her creating worlds to drag her brother through.  I miss nap time and ice cream melting all over their little faces before they even get to the cone.  And there is really no recreating this.  We all recently sat almost this close together on a flight and I did not feel happy and at peace; I felt annoyed and squished.


I miss them being  little and I am scared about her being gone.  Not for her; she will eventually figure it all out. But for me.  I am scared of not being needed, scared of being an obligatory phone call on the weekends, scared of being left behind. Scared of figuring out who and what I am supposed to be when I am down a kid and then another kid right after.  I really should have spaced them out better. 


So, there, I admit it.  I am scared and I am sad and I miss them being little and I don’t know how to plan for a life with just me and this is a whole mess on top of life and I am tired.  Someone please just get me a cookie. 

Saturday, July 24, 2021

Chapter Three

 It was hot outside at 3pm.  There was no shade and the sun beat down on the back of the man lying face-down in the parking space.  Sweat stained the back of his shirt and pooled at the top of his grey shorts.  He needed just a minute, just a minute to catch his breath.  His lungs labored and his heart hammered and he thought he might die and wished he might die and wondered if he had died and was this hell.  


“C’mon Chad!” the shrill voice climbed its way into his ears and gave him a shiver down his exhausted spine.  It was hell, he thought.  Definitely hell.


“Just one more set!” she chirped.


He would stand up if only to punch her in her fat face.  He didn’t hate her as much when Mark and Lisa were here, but when they weren’t, Lainey’s stupid face and shrill voice and non-stop chatter made him want to go back to spending his afternoons smoking pot and eating Cheetos.


Chad was never really sure why Lainey was there in the first place.  She dressed up in exercise clothes but he wasn’t sure he actually ever saw her move.  She seemed to take pride in holding the jump rope and providing a non-stop stream of boring chatter as she did.  Laying on his stomach and feeling the heat bake the sweat off of his shirt, Chad closed his eyes and prepared to push his aching body up one more time.  This workout had been no joke and every muscle in his legs and upper arms twitched and protested.


“No pain, no gain.”  Lainey cheered from her spot in the shade.  


Oh my God, he would kill her.  Chad opened one eye, looked up at her, and for a minute pictured his fist punching her ample stomach and knocking the breath out of her.  He could actually feel his fist tighten and pictured it sinking into her flesh before knocking her back.  Her eyes would go wide and her mouth would form an O while the breath rushed out of her and for once, just once, she would be quiet.


Chad pushed himself off the mat, nodded to the neighbor pulling in next to him, ignored Lainey, and began his last round of burpees.  Fifteen to go and he would be done.  The key was to count backward.  Fifteen, fourteen.  He got to ten and wanted to stop.  Nine.  Eight.  It was rhythmic at this point: crouch, extend, drop, push, crouch, explode up.  Five.  He heard something but knowing it was Lainey, just focused on his choppy breath, the way the sweat streamed down his face, until three, two, and one.


Chad laid on his mat for a minute trying to remember how to breathe.  He could hear Lainey in the background and made a mental note to kill Mark and Lisa for leaving him alone with her today.  The three of them almost always worked out each afternoon but today they had looked secretive and said they had to go talk something over.  Chad hoped they weren’t breaking up. He liked Lisa the best out of all of Mark’s girlfriends.  She was funny and smart and liked fitness as much as they did.  She made a good roommate too; cleaned up after herself and never ate the last of something in the fridge.  And, if he was being honest, he loved seeing her in the morning with her hair messed up and sleepy-eyed as she reached for coffee in those short-shorts.


Ugh, if they broke up and Chad had to nurse Mark through another heartache.  The last girl who left took Mark’s heart and a lot of his money and to cope Mark kicked a soccer ball against the wall outside their apartment every single day for months.  Months.  Kick, smack, kick, smack, kick, smack.  He wasn’t sure how the neighbors never complained.  Chad was annoyed with the rhythmic slapping of the ball against the wall and he understood why it was happening.  


He pushed himself off of his sweat-soaked mat and stood up.  The sun was brutal and the sound of Lainey’s voice in his ear was also brutal and he was anxious to step away from both.


“Good job today!” Lainey said with a smile.


“Yeah, thanks,” Chad replied.  He busied himself with gathering his equipment and checking that he had picked up everything, started walking to his door.


“Um, would you want to hang out or something?” Lainey asked quickly.  She could see he was hurting to go inside and didn’t want to lose her opportunity. “Maybe get a beer?”


“Oh, no. I am not drinking this month, but thanks.”  Chad lied.  He planned to shower and sit on the couch with some beer as quickly as possible.  He moved to the door, twisted the handle open, and said “See you later” while stepping inside.  He didn’t want to give her room to suggest a show or ice cream or protein shakes.


He locked the door behind him, took a deep breath, and wondered again where Mark and Lisa had gone.  They were all religious about their 3pm workouts, walks with the dog at night, and yoga by the pool on the weekends.  Lisa had been the best thing to happen to Mark, and really, Chad.  She never told them to exercise or eat better, but watching her fueled them both to be better versions of themselves: Mark because he was afraid she would smarten up and leave and Chad because, really, he had nothing else to do.  He had lost fifteen pounds since she moved in and felt better than he had in years.  Mark sometimes teased that Chad got more action when he was fat and stoned than he did now with his trim stomach and tight muscles.  Chad would laugh and agree.  It was true.  He couldn’t remember the last time he had gone on an awkward first date or brought a girl home for the night.  Sure, sex would be nice, and he occasionally flipped through his dating app, but no one really appealed to him.


He stepped into an ice-cold shower and felt the salt, sweat, and stink of his workout sluice off of him.  He stood there and let the water beat on his head and face and wondered again where Mark and Lisa were and if he was going to be helping someone pack tonight or if they would have their usual Friday night of beer, a little weed, and a healthy dinner while watching someone’s movie of choice.  It was just so easy with the three of them, he really hoped Mark wasn’t messing it up right now.


Chad stepped out onto the rug and towel himself off in quick movements.  He could hear voices downstairs and wanted to see what had transpired.  Lisa had been such an asset in both their lives, he was going to be pissed if she was leaving.  The only thing she had been a little bit of a pain in the ass about was insisting that they get the complex to fix the human-sized hole in their living room wall.  Neither Chad nor Mark could positively say how the hole had gotten there but knew it was the result of too many drinks, too much time on their hands, and a failed sense that they too should be professional wrestlers.  They had laughed the next day as they picked up pieces of drywall from the floor and said they would fix it one day.  Lisa insisted she could smell things coming from the apartment next store. She could smell their trash and their fried food cooking.  She loudly complained every day until Mark finally put in a work order to have it fixed.  Other than being slightly unreasonable about that hole and the “smells”, Lisa had been great.  Mark had been his best friend since college, but it felt like Lisa was also his best friend. Shit.  He wouldn’t be just pissed, he would be sad if she was going.


He stepped into a pair of shorts and hurried down the stairs. Mark and Lisa were sitting on the couch laughing and drinking beer.  Chad felt himself start to relax; this didn’t seem like a breakup at all.


“Do not ever leave me alone with Lainey again,” he said as his way of hello.


Mark and Lisa both laughed and Lisa said “But did she hold the jump rope for you?”


“She talked and held that damn rope the entire time.  I wanted to punch her.”


They laughed again and Chad smiled as he took a sip of his beer.  God, it was just so easy with the three of them.


“Sorry man.  We just needed to figure some things out.  We won’t leave you again.” Mark said 


“Everything okay?” Chad asked.


“Everything is great!” Lisa said and smiled at him.  God, she even managed to smile with her eyes, he thought.  She was so pretty and fun and he really loved when she laughed how she threw her head back to let all the laughter out.  Okay.  Enough, he admonished himself.  Roommate, best friend’s girl, enough.

They settled back and sipped their beers and talked about their weeks.  They finished one beer and then two and the conversation just kept moving.  They talked about Lainey and her jump rope, the things they wanted to do this weekend, and spent a lot of time laughing and discussing the weird people at their pool.


Usually, by this time, someone would start dinner and someone else would pick a movie, but tonight the air in the living room was charged with a sense of something pending. Something big, something that would be both so very natural and so very shocking.  Chad wasn’t sure if it was just him who felt it, so he kept quiet but felt the air around him change and the beating of his heart intensified.


Finally, Lisa stood up and smiled at Mark, and said “We should go upstairs now.”


Mark quickly finished what was left of his beer, set it on the table, and said “It’s definitely time.”  He kissed her on the cheek and headed up.


Chad sighed and started thinking about what he would make to eat.  Maybe just order something instead.  He was scrolling through his phone when he heard movement and noticed Lisa’s feet standing right in front of him.  She reached for his phone and set it aside and he let her.  She pulled him up from his seat and stood so close to him, too close to him, but not close enough to him.  Her hands on his arms were warm and she was so close that he could smell her shampoo and count the freckles on his nose.  He was frozen.  He wanted to touch her, wanted to pull her to him and crush her against him.  He could barely breathe.


Lisa just smiled.  She moved her hands up and down his biceps and smiled when he flexed.  Chad didn’t know what to say or think or do.  He stood there waiting for her to tell him what this was.


Lisa traced her fingers over his chest, down his stomach, and stopped at the waistband of his shorts.  He inhaled sharply as her fingernails traced the outline of his incredibly erect penis through his shorts.  He couldn’t make sense out of any of this and he didn’t want to, he just wanted her to never stop doing that.


Lisa stepped back, smiled, and said “You should come upstairs with us too.”  She moved to the bottom of the stairs and yelled up “Coming!”, but stopped as she stepped onto the first stair.  Chad watched her turn slightly and smile at him once more.  “Coming?” she asked and stretched out her hand.


Chad found that he couldn’t speak.  He had no words, but he didn’t need them. His body took over and he stretched his own hand to meet Lisa’s and clasped together, they began climbing the stairs. 


Wednesday, July 14, 2021

You Know How to Do This

 She laid there, exhausted. She was currently always exhausted. She glanced at the clock, at the wineglass on top of it, and groaned. Drinking wine in a bed on the floor was the only time she found stillness these past two weeks. So much had been done, had to be done, loomed around her waiting to be done.  But that bed, on the floor, in the middle of an empty room, was the perfect place to sit, exhausted, at the end of the day and drink a very full glass of wine.


The packing was done.  Her life, the kids' lives, all in boxes that were taped and labeled and waiting to be unopened in a new place.  Twelve years of living in a house purged, donated, and boxed over the past ten days.  She was exhausted.  His life, well, what he had left behind,  lay strewn in open boxes in the dining room.  She wasn’t sure what he wanted to take, to toss.  He wasn’t there when she was packing.  When was he ever there? Friends had helped her box, fed her, listened to her, and poured her wine as they busied themselves in her kitchen, the garage, the attic.  A house was too much for one person to pack.  Especially when she was just exhausted.




She knew she needed to get up but she felt glued to the bed.  Two more minutes.  Two more and she’d move and start the coffee and start the day.  The last things crammed in their bags and the animals captive in a room so that they wouldn’t escape during the commotion of feet and voices moving and shouting.  She was too old to have friends moving her, but they offered and she was just so tired.  Yes, please, she had said.  I am just exhausted, she had said.  They had said of course she was, smiled while their eyes looked sad, asked what else did she need?


It was a lot to go to work, to stand there and try to teach a room of students.  Often, they had to ask her the same question two or three times until she heard them.  Sorry, she would say, I am just tired today.  “Late night, huh, Miss?” they’d laugh and she’d say “I wish” and laugh with them for a minute until the smile felt weird on her face and fell.


  It was a lot to hold her kids at night and tell them it was all going to be okay.  They definitely did not believe her and she wasn’t so sure she believed herself right now.  Their anger, their confusion was too much to look at and their sadness made her not want to get out of bed.


Shit, she needed to get out of bed.  She moved to sit and as she looked around this bare room remembering the first time they had spent the night in it.  No curtains, no blinds, a wall of open windows, and a night sky that seemed endless.  Their time here seemed like it would be endless as well.


She felt the tears, not in her eyes, but only when they escaped and pooled over onto her face.  She pushed herself up but then sat back down.  She didn’t want to do today crying, but she could.  She could do a lot while crying.  So much in fact she looked for her journal and a pen.  She needed to write this down, to remember all the things she could do while crying.  Maybe if she wrote things down, they would get out of her head.  She sat up straighter and began scratching out the truths that she knew all too well.


You know how to do this.  You remember the weighted sensation of your heart as it sinks to the very bottom of your chest.  You know that pressure that makes your lungs constricted and your breath is limited.  You know how to do this.


 Your head is like a vise and your eyes leak.  You wipe the moisture away from your face and realize you didn’t even know you were crying. You think you will always be crying.  Your sinuses ache and your nose runs and you don’t care.  All you know is that crying makes it better, makes it worse, makes others uncomfortable, and you don’t care.  You are so fucking sick of crying and yet you say you don’t care.


You don’t care about much.  You try to eat because your stomach tells you that you are hungry, but your stomach is a liar.  You aren’t hungry.  The smallest amount of food makes you cramp and ache and feel full.  People tell you stories and you react properly but you have no idea what they are talking about.  Maybe later you will see you did laugh at the right time or make the right sounds.  Maybe you forget it even took place.


You wish you could forget a lot that took place.  You wish the day could be like the two minutes it takes to wake up where everything has been forgotten and nothing hurts and your chest is not heavy.  But it’s not.  You wake up and remember.  Your body takes over before your mind catches up.  You stand up and gravity has never been more real.  You step heavily on feet that can barely inch across the floor.  Your shoulders are too much for your frame and you stoop, head bowed, spirit forgotten about; left in the bed for tomorrow’s two minutes.


You dress, you brush your teeth, you smile and nod.  You can do a lot while crying.  You do your job, you try to do your job, you do something.  You are here.  You are physically in this room yet taking up so little of it.  Your voice is a whisper because it is being choked by memories, by wishes, by what you thought would happen.  


You are afraid to open your mouth.  Afraid a torrent of words will come out and splash onto the floor and make puddles so wide and deep you will never get back.  Because there is no back.  There is just here and here is painful.  Here cuts.  Here hacks and tears and bleeds.  Here shreds and you lay eviscerated, emptied, and scarred.


You let your heartbeat and twist and squeeze within your chest.  You let your eyes drift off into space because if they drift into your head, you will start crying again and you are so fucking sick of crying.  But you remember this.  And if you remember this, then that means that you have survived this.  And if you have survived this before, surely you can survive it again.  You know how to do this.


She took one final look at her words, wiped her eyes, and said “You know how to do this”.  There was coffee to be made and kids to wake up and last-minute things to do.  She was exhausted, but she could do this.  She had to do this.  She knew how to do this.


Thursday, July 8, 2021

Chapter Two

Chapter Two


“Daddy!”

“Daddy!”

“Daddy, look at what I can do!!!”

“DADDY!!!”


“What?” Jimi looked up from his phone and peered over the top of his sunglasses.  


“Daddy! Look!”


He looked at his daughter standing in the shallow end of the pool and sighed.  She was constantly requesting that he look at this or that and honestly, she hadn’t done anything yet that really impressed him.  She was wearing a floaty still for Christ’s sake and she was almost eight.  Jimi was sure other kids knew how to swim long before eight.  That one girl with the curly, red hair was definitely younger than Ellie and she was swimming on her own and underwater already.  Jimi looked again at his daughter wondering what the hell he should be looking at.  All he could see was her standing on one leg and bouncing.


“Wow.  Really balancing there.”  Jimi made a note to talk to his ex about this swimming bullshit.  She really needed to get swimming lessons for this kid.  He sighed thinking about having to talk to her as he knew he would be met with “Jimi, I work two jobs.” “Jimi, can’t you take her?”.  There was a time when he loved hearing her say his name but now his name in her mouth annoyed him, as well as the whining that always followed it.  “Jimi, I can’t do all this on my own.” ,  “Jimi, you promised you’d take her an extra night.”, “Jimi, blah, blah, blah.”  He couldn’t remember the last time he really listened to anything she had to say.  Probably the night she told him she was pregnant and he felt the world crash in on him.


“Daddy, come swim!” Ellie yelled while jumping up and down.


“In a little bit. I’m working right now.”  Working on my tan he thought as he closed his eyes and leaned back.  Well, and his highlights.  He had put lightener on the tips of his hair before heading out to the pool.  He heard her yell Daddy one more time but he kept his eyes closed and just sighed.  Fatherhood was exhausting.  Ellie was with him every other Saturday afternoon until Sunday morning and it was all he could do to entertain her and not count the hours until Britani picked her up again. 



It was so much easier when she was a baby, Jimi thought.  Ellie was cute when she wasn’t screaming and he had really enjoyed walking her around the park in her stroller. God, all he had to do was lift her out and hold her and the women flocked to him.  He’d scored more and with much less effort in Ellie’s baby days than in all his years of dating combined.  He had noticed that the attraction of a kid seemed to wear off around age six; Ellie seemed to be more a nuisance than a lure to women he met.  


Maybe it was time to have another baby.  Jimi tossed the idea around for a second before dismissing it.  More money to pay out a month and what if this kid took up his free Saturday? No way.  He’d get women on his own, he’d just have to work a little harder than holding up a cute baby.  No worries.  His exotic pet shop had always been a real panty-dropper and he knew that would continue.  Women loved men who owned weird shit and he not only owned it, he sold it.  His shop, “Getting Tail”, continued to do well despite his partner who liked to smoke his share of the profits.  Jimi loved watching women come in and giggle at the name and then walk up and down the aisles of exotic pets.  He would wait until they stopped at the snake cages before venturing over to see if they needed any help.  Snake innuendos were sure to happen and Jimi made a killing in that snake aisle, both in sales and in getting dates.


He peeked up and saw her bouncing still in the water and talking to some people with kids.  Great!  She’d be fine for a while.  He rolled onto his stomach and sighed.  Jimi couldn’t stop thinking about this party one of his Hinge hotties had asked him to go to tonight.  Since Britani, Jimi never dated just one woman at a time.  Too much emotion, too little freedom, and too much pretending to be interested in whatever these women did.  He liked first dates, he liked first kisses, and he lived for the first time he had sex with someone new.  The first time was the best and even though he might stick around for a week or two after, it was the first time that always thrilled him.  Even the boring ones were still thrilling.  New bodies were where it was at!  Jimi’s business partner and roommate had been with the same woman for five years and swore it was still the best sex he’d ever had.  Jimi didn’t believe him at all even though he’d heard them through the wall separating their rooms and had to admit it sounded like it might still be good.


Jimi sat up and looked at his watch, 7pm.  Ellie wouldn’t go to bed until 10 or 11, whining more and more with each passing hour.  God, he really wanted to go to this party though!  He was guaranteed new sex and he couldn’t stop thinking about it.  He’d tried to get Britani to keep Ellie tonight but she wasn’t returning any of his texts or even his phone call.  God, he hated her.


“Daddy!”

“DADDY!”


Jimi was startled out of his Britani hate-spiral by Ellie’s shrieks.


“What?” he answered


“Daddy, I’m hungry.”  Ellie whined.


Jimi looked around and saw that almost everyone else had left the pool and started to get up.  This kid was always hungry.  Hungry, tired, sick, annoying.  The last time he’d had her, Britani brought her to him feverish and small with a cold.  He was pissed and afraid that he’d catch it, so he had loaded her with Benadryl and kept her asleep most of the weekend.  


“All right, grab the floaty, and let’s go.  I’ve got some pizza leftover from last night.”


Ellie grasped for the pineapple float but it slipped out of her hands and shot over towards the deep end.  “DADDY!!!  I can’t reach it!  DADDY!!”  Ellie started sobbing in the shallow end of the pool, looking hopeless.




Oh my God, Jimi thought, she’s just like her mother: can’t do a damn thing and is always crying.  “I’ll grab it, let’s just go.”


Jimi paused to grab the float as Ellie climbed out and met up with him.  Her nose was running and her hair was a stringy mess tangled down her back.  She wiped at her nose with the back of her hand and then reached out to hold his hand.  He jerked his own hand back quickly and patted the top of her head instead. He hadn’t brought a towel and as they walked into his apartment, Ellie complained she was cold.


“You’re cold?”  he asked.  


Ellie nodded and held her arms close to her chest as she sniffed.  He was sure it was just the cold air conditioning and the fact she was dripping wet, but what if she was sick again?  Ohhh, he thought.  Yes, what if she was sick again?  What if he had to give her Benadryl and she slept the next ten hours like a drunk coming off of a bender?  What if she slept so soundly she never noticed he was gone and he could go to that party and be back before she woke up?  What if he gave her just a little bit more than Britani said he should give her and he could take his time with the Hinge hottie?


“You know, Ellie, you look like maybe you’re getting sick again.  Run and get pajamas on and I’ll get you some pizza and medicine.”


Jimi heated up a slice of pizza and poured Ellie a glass of water and a generous amount of Benadryl.  He messaged his Hinge hottie that he’d be there after all and that he had plans for her.  She instantly messaged back “Can’t wait!”  


He smiled and a minute later his phone beeped again with her asking “When will you get here? If it’s too late, I might have to get started without you.”  Jimi groaned.


“Daddy, I’m done,” Ellie said. She stood there in mismatched pajamas, holding up her empty plate, and waiting.  Her eyes already looked heavy and her shoulders seemed to droop with the effort of holding that plate.


He took the plate from Ellie, watched her lay down on the couch, and quickly typed back “I’ll be there in twenty.”




Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Prologue and Chapter One



Prologue


The complex sat off the road and was fenced in wrought iron all around.  The gates opened and closed slowly, moaning and creaking as if attached to a rope, a turnstile, and one beleaguered person walking round and round.  They opened at 6am for the day and remained agape and the complex accessible until 6pm when they slowly slid shut.  Even then they were more for show than anything else.  If you waited at the gates long enough, someone was bound to drive up with their magic pass and as the gates slid open, you could slide in too. 

The buildings themselves were made of various brown bricks and tan siding and were so neutral and non-descript that they easily faded into the trees, the pool, the neighborhood.  The parking was adequate, the landscaping was green and abundant; its flowers changed out seasonally so gradually that no one was really sure when they had changed.

The complex was a mile from a school and as such, had an abundance of teachers living within it.  They complained that the rent was a stretch but that you couldn't beat the commute.  You saw their cars dotting the parking lot, school parking passes hanging from the rearview mirror.  You saw them hurriedly walk from those cars to their homes trying to not talk to students on the way.

During the colder months, most occupants of Le Ecole, as this complex was named, stayed indoors; their patios empty save for the diehard smokers who didn’t fear cold or lung damage as they stood and smoked and quickly went back inside.  It wasn’t until the days grew longer and the air suddenly spoke of summer that you saw what was normally kept indoors.  

The early morning hours of a Saturday or Sunday were ripe for people at their oddest.  Half-dressed occupants scratched at their bellies as they stood bleary-eyed letting their dogs sniff and paw at the grass.  Couples’ voices raised up and over their privacy fences about what went wrong last night, five years ago, the day they got married.  More often than not, you could also witness the awkward goodbye of a night no one had planned.  Men in their boxers walking down women in their yesterday clothes.  It was too painful to watch as these men turned their lips and let these hopeful women kiss their cheek instead.  

In the middle of all this lay the complex’s pool, shimmering in varying shades of blue, depending on the day and the chemicals swimming within it.  The pool was surrounded by its own fence, no lock, and many signs warning that there was no lifeguard on duty, no glass was allowed, no pets at the pool.  What it didn’t warn about was the people who would trickle out of their homes to gather around.  People one didn’t know lying in the sun, swimming with their children, and bringing with them glimpses into the world that went on in their apartment.  If you were very quiet and uninterested in making friends with your neighbors, you could learn a lot by sitting quietly and pretending to read.  Often, what you saw at the pool was more interesting than what was printed in any book.  



Chapter One



They were quiet and kept to themselves.  They were not here to make friends and they didn’t even feign pleasantries to the other people around them.  The man was stoop-shouldered and small as if he had spent his life cowering and hoping not to be noticed.  He moved quietly, spoke in a whisper, and never raised his head or even his eyes in passing.  


The woman was different.  She was quiet in an angry way.  Her long, orange hair erupted from her head as if it was trying to escape and she never walked; she took long, punishing strides every time she stepped.  She would look straight through anyone who attempted to catch her eye and had no issues with walking too close to someone and not acknowledging them.  She would walk by her neighbor’s window ten, fifteen times a day, trampling the grass and ignoring the walkway three feet away.


When you saw their children, you had hope that a child’s natural curiosity would force them to look up, to smile, to acknowledge the dog walking by them.  However, the children had been warned with harsh words and angry tones about strangers: strangers would take them away, dogs would bite them, other children would bring them to adults who would take them away.  They played only with each other and spoke only to their parents.  The girl was a replica of her mother with angry orange hair and eyes that never once looked anything but cold.  The boy was a sturdier version of the man, his preschool body belied by the way his eyes watched but never seemed to wonder.  Often, you would hear them exclaiming in their language with childish enthusiasm and for a moment think that they were just like the other children in the complex.  Your unreturned smile and their look of cold indifference soon reminding you that something just wasn’t right.  


The man was terrible at parking his car and that might have been enough of a nuisance to talk about.  He was forever backing up over the lines one way or the other and making it impossible for the cars next to him to open their doors.  It wasn’t his inept parking that had people talking though; it was the sheet that hung in the back seat windows obscuring any view into the rear of the car.  People found this odd because their children weren’t babies.  Were they allergic to the sun?   Neighbors wondered this aloud to one another until the day they saw the entire family ribbon dancing in the grassy area by the pool.  Watching the ribbon dancing removed any remaining doubt that this family was not quite right. It was the parents who took turns ribbon dancing while the other filmed and the children busied themselves in the grass and with rocks as children do.  It was a beautiful sunny day and many people were out to enjoy the sunlight but were steadfastly ignored by the entire family.  They danced too close, their ribbons sailing over the head of others, the kids pushing past anyone in their running path.  Never once did they acknowledge anyone else on the grass.  They had eyes and ears only for one another.


Their language sounded harsh and impersonal even when the mother was softly talking to one child or the other.  No one could quite figure out what they were speaking and this led to even more confusion.  Where were they from?  Was this haughty indifference a cultural thing?  Was their inability to make eye contact some sort of xenophobic superiority?  German and Israeli were ruled out as their words didn’t sound guttural enough.  Some swore it was French, but it was too guttural to be French.  Russian?  Pennsylvania Dutch?  All countries and known dialects were offered but no one except the four people in that family knew what they were speaking.


They celebrated unknown events on odd days.  They dressed in white T-shirts and white baseball hats and stood outside their door clapping and laughing, their excitement drawing you in even as the man’s hunched shoulders and the woman’s dead-eyed stare said to stay away.  Was it a religious holiday?  What was that object on the door?  They huddled together on their stoop and smiled and sang until someone dared to pass by.  They drew even closer together, each parent touching one of the children, everyone silent until the stranger had moved on.  Once alone, they stayed close but smiled and resumed singing.


Singing was a big part of whoever they were.  People were shocked when strangers stood in a circle around their door singing lustily one day.  They know people? This question answered when their door flew open and the family stood there and joined the others in singing and laughing and even more shocking when they stepped back to admit the singers into their home.   


The woman knew, and the man quietly knew too, that they were getting too many looks, too much interest generated in their small family.  They laid in bed and spoke in hushed tones as to not wake the children sleeping on a small mattress at the end of their bed.  The man sat up, his weary shoulders supported by the wire-framed headboard behind him, and rubbed his tired temples with his fingertips.  The woman lay on her back, her orange hair spread out like a wildfire on the pillow.  We have to go, he said.  I know, I know she whispered, even an apartment is not anonymous enough.  Oh, but he was tired of moving, of leaving, of changing, but as he glanced at his love in the bed, and the children softly snoring and moving in their sleep, he knew he would move a thousand times if he had to.


Over the next few days, the woman strode by windows faster, more hurried, more purposeful than ever before.  She marched the children to and from the car and back carrying bags and boxes and items no one could see behind their packaging.  The man moved slower, more carefully, his shoulders seemed to bow even farther forward as if every step he took required him to push the air ahead, shoulders first.  His mind was running with too many thoughts to keep noticing how he was leaving the house. He didn’t mind the glasses perched cautiously on the end of his nose and he even left the house in his love’s lavender shorts and didn’t notice until she told him much later that day.  He looked down and laughed and she laughed with him and as they hugged in the emptied kitchen, he felt calm for the first time in days.


The children knew something was happening despite the woman’s best plans to keep them busy and occupied.  She planned picnics and swimming and crafts but she was preoccupied and absent-minded and their questions became too much.  She yelled, harshly, and they cried, copiously, but she couldn’t stop worrying in her mind.  Her heart threatened to explode with love for the man and these children but there was just so much to do between then and now.  There was no time to think of love and no time to spoil these children.  She put them to work cleaning corners and blinds and they fell quiet with their questions and expressions.


Friday night the man came home driving a large camper.  How is he going to park that, the neighbors wondered?  He parked it crookedly along the fire lane and left it there for two days.  The children ran in and out of the apartment and camper, calling to one another in words no one understood.  The woman marched belongings to the camper and marched herself back to the apartment to retrieve more. 


Early Sunday morning, the man and woman woke early and carried the sleeping children and the last few belongings to the camper.  They would get coffee on the road and let the children sleep as long as they could; there was no reason to say goodbye to this home when a new one would be waiting.  A new one would be waiting whenever they wanted now.  The camper was their new home and they could move it anywhere they wanted and whenever they wanted.  The anonymity they craved and fought for was here on this small home with four wheels.


The man looked over at the woman and smiled.  She touched his hand lightly and laughed a soft laugh of relief.  Their eyes met and as he looked in them he remembered how much he had always loved her.  He loved her now in their family years, and he had loved her in their twenties when they had come to America broke and desperate to share their lives together.  He had loved her in their teens when they were forbidden to love and determined to love at the same time.  He had loved her when they were children and he would love her until they were too old to remember anything but each other.  He started the camper and inched it slowly away from the curb.  He glanced at his love one more time and knew that he always had and that he always would love this woman.  He would protect and defend her and their children and no man, no law, no religion could ever keep him from loving her; this woman, his wife, mother of his children, his best friend, and his sister.



Sunday, June 27, 2021

Here's Your One Chance, Fancy....

 I fancy myself a lot of things: a good mom, activist, well when it's convenient, feminist, and super funny when I have had a few drinks.  In the past year or so, I have taken to fancy-ing myself as a writer.  Like a real writer who wrote not just to opine or to complain but one who wrote because the stories just welled up inside and had to be released.  A real writer who writes for money and fame and purpose.  But, in my typical fashion, while I was creating this part of my identity, I did absolutely nothing about it other than fancy it.  And to be fair, it's been a year.  We have all lived this year, so I don't need to explain.  Teaching, coaching, parenting, dating, living in a pandemic.  Doing all of those things in a pandemic.  God, someone should really write a book on how to do those things in a pandemic.

One way I coped with being cooped up last summer was to write stories about the people in my apartment complex.  The lives that I imagined they lived and not one of them were very flattering.  It is hard in many ways to go from living in a house to living in an apartment surrounded by weird people you didn't choose to live in and I took their eccentricities and my boredom and wow, I live among vampires, and bad parents, and incestuous couples.  I sent them on to my mom who sent them to her sisters and I am a real hit with white women over 60 that I am related to.  But does this make me a writer?

I also found myself writing about divorcing.  About raising kids who were so angry and sad and disillusioned.  About my own anger and sadness and disillusionment.  I didn't share much of this because it was so personal that I had to write about it from a second-person point of view.  But I wrote words that were true and painful and freeing.  But does this make me a writer?

My stories also made their way into the new world of dating.  Shared experiences made funnier, weirder, and explained by my brain and received well by their intended recipient.  But as we shared that experience and laughed about what could be and I just took it a little further and gave these people names and jobs and a penchant for murder, does that make me a writer?

Today I am at a coffee shop writing this because I feel that a real writer would write in a coffee shop while sipping hot coffee and using the free Wifi.  I have both coffee and Wifi at home but I felt compelled to come here.  Instead of editing the stories I wrote or finding a way to meld the stories together, I am writing this blog.  I tell my students all the time that writing is a process but I seem to be ignoring this process myself.  Also, wouldn't a real writer be able to write without relying on Grammarly? 

Free Wifi, $4 coffee.

I often write because the words get built up in my head like a logjam and I need to let them go so I can do other things.  I am pretending that after I write this I will attack those stories with gusto and get them polished and published by the end of summer.  Will that make me a writer?  What if I send them out and they get sent back?  What if I never polish them up or send them out?  If I spend the rest of the summer watching crime dramas with a strong female detective and British accents, relying on those stories and not mine?

I like to write because it gives me tremendous joy when people tell me they like my words.  I like to write because it is an escape.  I like to write because I can create worlds where they don't exist.  I like to write because it lets me express what I cannot always say.  I would also like to write because I am a teacher who makes $48,000 a year and it would be great to supplement that with something that didn't make me wear an apron or leave my soul at the door.  I fear living in smaller and smaller apartments with fewer windows with each passing year.   I am picturing one light bulb hanging from the center of my apartment and cats waiting to eat my face when I fall down dead.  That's actually too depressing to keep writing about. 

I will always write.  When I was eight or ten, I wrote my mom a terrible song about clowns for her birthday.  And sang it.  God love that woman; she pretended I gave her a million dollars.  I wrote terrible poems in high school that made the yearbook and now introduce my lessons on poetry.  I write this blog because, well the words are piled up like a logjam.  And I guess I will write stories whether or not I ever publish them because they are there in my brain and prevent me from resting.  Maybe I will never make money from writing or take a jump and try.  Maybe I just continue to write for me and for my fan club of aunts.  And when asked about my hobbies while interviewing for some terrible second job where I have to wear an apron, after yoga and eating dark chocolate, I will say "Writing".

  

Friday, January 15, 2021

Pivot! PIVOT!!!

 You know that episode of Friends where they are moving the couch and it gets stuck on the stairway and Ross just keeps yelling “Pivot!  PIVOT!” in increasingly desperate tones?  If that is not the mood for teaching in this 2020-2021 school year, well, I just don’t know what is.  


Maybe it goes beyond teaching too, maybe it is how we have all been asked to live life, but y’all I have changed directions so many times, I am nauseous.  Or maybe just heartsick; they present the same way.


I am weary of Zoom classes where no one turns on their camera and I am talking to a screenful of black boxes.  And not black boxes like on airplanes where they are full of information. Black boxes with names of kids who might be there or may have logged on and left; we won’t know until I end class and see who’s still there when they have been told they can leave.  I am told to be engaging, to use new technology, to make lessons fun!  I could stand on my head and juggle fire and that would not be engaging.  Students are tired of being online too.


Work remotely, no you can’t work remotely, that doesn’t count.  Wait, though. Remote learning counts when it could be a snow day.  Work from school and teach to in-person and online kids at the same time and here, step behind this plastic shower curtain that will keep you safe from contagion.  Sports are cancelled, but, wait!  They are not cancelled. Some teams are cancelled.  Wait, that’s not happening either.  Wear a mask on the field, mostly wear a mask on the field.  Always wear a mask on the field.


Aren’t we next in line for vaccines?  Where are all the vaccines?  Yes, old people and 1B.  Of course.  Are we 1C?  Was that just a rumor to get us back behind the shower curtains?  And not a real shower curtain.  I am sitting at my desk with yesterday’s clothes on and a beanie on my three-day-unwashed hair.  And I am only sitting at my desk because some applications require you use school wifi even when school is not open.





All the acronyms that make teaching painful are still on for this year. All the tests, all the professional development, all the observations, and boxes to be checked still need to be checked.  How about new ones for this year?  Only cried on camera once today? Check.  Stays up to date on grades and attendance? Check.  Modulated tone to represent hope and passion while feeling beleaguered and defeated?  Check!


This week was especially hard.  I feel like teachers and students alike have settled into that this is it.  I doubt we will be back to school for real this year and I am trying to find the reserves to power through five more months like this and the kids are too.  No, this is not ideal, but forcing open schools and all of us sharing this air and being superspreaders isn’t ideal either.  I miss actual students in my classroom.  I miss their ridiculous ideas and the way they could make me laugh that just does not translate over zoom.  I miss watching kids work together in groups, even when they hate group work. Breakout rooms are no match for some desks pushed together or the excuse to sit on the floor in the hallway and work.  I miss the smell of coffee permeating the air on the third floor and lunch with my colleagues at our crowded lunch table.  I miss the live sharing of stories, the sense of togetherness, and the knowledge that we were making a daily difference somewhere that day.


I’ll continue to do what we are all doing: pivoting, changing, adapting, powering through.  I just wanted to say that I am so tired and I know that you are too.  I also know it won’t always be like this and sometimes I remember to tell this to other people when they are having a bad day.  I think I just forget to tell myself.  So, for all of us who need to hear it, IT WON’T ALWAYS BE LIKE THIS!!!  And maybe, just maybe, all that pivoting and twisting and turning will give us rock-hard obliques!