Showing posts with label nonfiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nonfiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

WHERE THE FORSYTHIAS GROW

Uncle Joe tells me that I was almost named after my grandmother Carmelina, as we rock together on his porch swing in Mentone, Alabama. We are drinking from Mason jars filled with the juice we made earlier. We shoved the ginger, apple, carrot, beet, parsley and cayenne pepper into the mouth of the maker, watching the sweet and spicy magenta juice drip into our jars while the pulpy waste oozed a rainbow of excretion into the garbage. Now, on the porch of his cabin, we talk about the past in New York. Uncle Joe is the sole living member of my immediate maternal family. I listen, and with my free hand I feed Blue, a downy puppy with black spots and powder eyes, slices of apple.

 “Carmelina,” I say out loud, liking how full it feels inside my mouth.

When I think of my grandmother, I think of her rubbing gin on my gums to numb the teething pain, or frying dough in a skillet to serve with powdered sugar and a baked apple for breakfast. I think of her cursing in Italian at the nasty ducks in the creek behind her sorbet pink Florida condo, or breaking leaves off the aloe plant in her front yard, slicing them open and aggressively rubbing the jelly all over my sunburned body. I think of her chasing me around the house with a spatula, or telling my grandfather to go to hell before kissing him goodnight.

But that all was before everyone started dying; I try to forget what came after, like when she began incessantly asking me, in Italian, if I was afraid of being alone: Hai paura di stare da solo? Hai paura? she’d ask. Are you afraid? But when my mother died on a Tuesday in spring, just as the forsythia’s began to bloom, Carmelina stopped asking questions. She stopped talking entirely. The last words I remember her saying were at my mother’s funeral, when she asked me what I was going to do now without my mother. Five years after my mother’s death from lung cancer, and a year and half after my grandmother’s from breast cancer, I still have no answers.

But I wasn’t named after my grandmother. I was instead named after my great-grandmother, Carmelina’s mother, Cynthia, who was born in Naples. I’ve only seen her in photographs, specifically a sepia one of her and her family – a husband and seven daughters – in Italy; not one of them is smiling. Cynthia is sitting next to her husband, both in separate arm chairs, while their daughters stand around them. She is large, in all black, and looks unsatisfied; she, too, died of cancer. The name Cynthia, I’ve learned, is the epithet of Diana, goddess of the moon, who is also known as the goddess of young, wild things, hunting, and bringing and relieving disease in women. None of these things about my name have ever surprised me.


*

“Your mother and I were born at 525 Wythe Avenue between South 11th Street and Division Avenue in South Williamsburg,” Uncle Joe begins when I start asking him about the early days in Brooklyn. He and my mother were born, in the 1940s, twenty blocks from where I currently live. In a small way, it makes me feel close even though I feel so far. “The area at that time was trolleys, the Schaefer Brewery, the East River and the Williamsburg Bridge within blocks,” he reminisced. “Running through fire hydrants in the summer on the cobblestone streets. Not many cars riding around the streets at that time. That’s what the area looked like. You’d get all the smells from the brewery, the hops, and the river. We lived in an apartment, a cold-water flat, which meant no heat other than kerosene stoves that we cooked on. I think we had hot water, but I’m not too certain where that came from. Our apartment was heated by a cast-iron stove, and we would get the kerosene from a fifty gallon drum in the basement. Grandpa would siphon out the fuel by sucking on a half inch hose and let gravity fill up our gallon can. I thought that was so cool, it was my first lesson in physics…and how to steal gas from cars.

“The apartment was a railroad flat. The bathroom was in the kitchen, you know, off the kitchen. It was a private little commode with a door. The kitchen had a large double sink and a bathtub. We took our baths in the kitchen! The tub had a porcelain top so it could be used to chop vegetables when someone wasn’t bathing. My mother made this little curtain to put around it, to disguise it. Everyone hung out in the kitchen. We would sit at the table and listen to the radio most nights. There was also a window out to the fire escape and I remember being able to smell the fig tree in the landlord’s backyard through it. I was a big sleepwalker when I was young, and one night your mother woke to find me out there on the fire escape, just chatting with myself. “There was a storefront on the ground floor of our building that gypsies would rent. I don’t know whether they were Spanish or Romanian, but they were really cool. I don’t remember any men, but I remember the women and the way they looked at me, like they could see right inside me. The looks weren’t harsh, but rather very sensual. It was a very magical world to me, but my mother didn’t want me going down there. There were tapestries and fabric all around; it was like being in a tent. The women would dress with a lot of jewelry and bangles, you know, and silk fabrics. It was just a very different and unknown world to me, so it was very magical and I enjoyed that. There was a gypsy boy down there that your mother and I liked to play with, he was around my age, and he got run over by a trolley at some point and died. It was really gruesome. I really think that’s when that family moved.

“As kids we played on the docks because the river was very close by. I remember almost stepping on a water rat one time. Another time I tried to climb the fence, it was probably a six-foot cyclone fence, to get underneath the Williamsburg Bridge. They had it all fenced off. I think I was climbing to get to the outside of that fenced off area and I got hung up right on my wrist, and there I was, hanging on the fence where the metal came together at the top. I had to pull myself off of that. I think that was my only injury. Oh, and falling on an old broken bottle in one of the old houses. We often played in vacant homes that were not boarded up, ones that were ready to be torn down…”

My uncle continues, but my mind wanders. I realize those same streets, those same buildings and waterfronts he is reminiscing over, were explored by both me and my mother in Brooklyn, only fifty years apart. I first moved to Brooklyn in the summer of 2006, not far from the old Domino Sugar Refinery, on South 3rd Street. The old brown brick buildings were closed two years earlier, but for 150 years they produced, refined, shipped and received sugar on five blocks along the East River. My friends and I would often ride our bikes there, late at night after we got bored with drinking cheap beer in dark bars, slicked with sweat and hoping the waterfront would cool us. The streets smelled rancid with steaming garbage and the sweet decay of whatever bloated matter made its way to shore. We’d lock our bikes and drunkenly shimmy along the barge on the side of the shipping and receiving building, our arms spread like wings along the red bricks, until we found ourselves at the back of the factory and standing on a narrow ledge of concrete above the water. We’d sit on the ledge, kicking our legs over the river that sloshed between the beams below. The Williamsburg Bridge came in and out of focus to our left and the city gashed the river with wounds of yellow light. Above it all was a pathetic marquee of sparse stars. “I hate it here,” we’d all say at some point, never sure if we would make next month’s rent, or how much longer all this idling would last. We never meant it; we choose to be unhappy. Someone usually brought a flask of shitty whiskey to pass around. It burned our throats and we would cringe, we but we knew it would soon glow warmly in our chests. That much has stayed the same; we no longer have to choose.


*

Together Uncle Joe and I go through the family photographs I’ve brought along with me. I show him one of my mother and me lying in a linen hammock in our backyard. It was August and my mother’s legs were bared in white cutoff shorts, and those legs are now mine. She held up my year-old body, all baby fat and curls, kissing me on the lips. The summer was lush; honeysuckle and forsythia bushes reached toward the sun in the background, growing taller each year, ever-upwards. The photograph it is a non-memory; I don’t remember it. I look at it and think, This is not my life, this is not us. And then I look back on the memories I do have, and I think the same thing. Sometimes I find myself walking through the streets and I’ll see a certain eye or the profile of a nose, or hear a voice or laugh of a stranger and feel a burning in my throat. There’s something there, a glimmer in an inflection or a look. But they are not us.

What I do remember is this: Some years after the photograph of my mother and I in the hammock was taken I would pluck the honeysuckle flowers and suck out the sweet nectar while gathering stalks of forsythias for my mother. “They grow for you,” she would say when snipping the ends on an angle and placing them in glass vases around the house. “For Cynthia.”


*

When I returned to Brooklyn, I rode my bike toward 525 Wythe Avenue. I went south on Kent Avenue, along the East River, making sure I passed the Domino Sugar Refinery. Over the past couple of years a small waterfront park has been built next to the shipping and receiving building. Grand Ferry Park is small, unassuming, with nothing more than a few benches, some fenced off grass areas and a bed of rocks covered in graffiti on the shore. The wooden barge that we once drunkenly balanced on is still there but no longer accessible, not even illegally. The wakes of boats ripple toward the shore and slosh between the beams of the barge; this much has stayed the same. A sparrow chirps. Trucks beep as they move backwards. An old yellow raincoat hangs out of one of the blackened, broken windows of the building. A shredded life vest is crumpled between the shore rocks, its foamy insides exposed. Beyond this building is another, the main sugar factory, which is actually made up of three connected buildings. This was once the Pan, Filter and Finishing House, the most notable of all the buildings. A sign outside the House on Kent Avenue reads, “Domino Sugar/Welcome to the American Sugar Refinery Company/Brooklyn Refinery.” The buildings are made of dark brown brick, arch top windows with peeling green sills, and two smoke stacks are pointed toward the sky like a rifle. Its entranceways were once painted blue and yellow, Dominos trademark colors; I think of photosynthesis, of sunlight turning thin air into saccharine.

When the factory closed in 2004, there was talk of the buildings being torn down and replaced with condos. In 2007, the Landmark Preservation Union designated the Pan, Filter and Finishing House as landmark status, but not the syrup station, the building with the iconic neon “Domino Sugar” sign that can be seen from Manhattan. Some years ago, someone from the neighborhood hung a red neon sign on the side of the House that faces Manhattan; it still burns red and at one time fully read “Save Domino.” As if all it takes is a sign to keep anything standing.

I continued riding for several more blocks, my legs continuously peddling, and stopped on the corner of Wythe and Division. I walked my bike along the odd-numbered side of the street, where they skipped from 481 to 531, and stood for a long time in front of a three story yellow brick apartment building, numberless, that seemed to have been turned into offices. A sticker read “Do Not Fall in Love” on the gray metal door; it swings open. A woman around my age exits.

“Hey!” I called after her. “Excuse me!”

She turned around, unexpectedly smiling.

“Do you know what number that building is that you just came out of? Is it 525?”

“That building?’ She pointed to the one. “No, my office is 52 but I don’t know the building number.” She flipped her long black hair to one shoulder and cocked her head toward the same side. “Why?”

“My mother,” I said, nervously, suddenly feeling like a fool for thinking this building would still exist. “She grew up in 525 and I’m trying to see if I can find it.”

“Oh, that’s so cool,” she sighed, “but I don’t think it’s this one.”


*

 When I rode home, I stared at the sun. When I closed my eyes, the sun was still there; a glowing red in complete darkness. When I opened my eyes, I hit a grate and found myself on the ground, and then I found the floater in my left eye bobbing along, like a flea moving across the backdrop of a cloudless sky. I’ve come to learn that floaters, the small black dots that float across your vision, are dead cells that you are seeing microscopically, and are caused by staring at the sun, always drifting in the periphery. One day I woke up and the cell was just… gone. I can’t help but wonder to where.

I got off the ground and rode home. I unlocked the door to my building, walked up three flights of stairs, and unlocked apartment number three. Inside I saw what I recently always see: plastic forsythia’s. Uncle Joe hid the fake flowers in my luggage when I left Alabama, so that when I opened my backpack on the plane they expanded and reached out in every direction. One of the branches poked the woman sitting next to me in her gut. She rolled her eyes; welcome to New York.

On Google Maps, I looked up 525 Wythe Avenue. I clicked on “street view,” which would show me the exact building. Everything looked the same as it did an hour ago, except the little pink bubble that pointed toward the approximate location was pointing at the middle of the street. I looked closer and saw that it pointed to a manhole cover. A. Man. Hole. Everything is shit, I thought, if all that’s left of my mother’s life in Brooklyn is a manhole. 

But then I thought this: how strange.

How strangely things have changed over time. How strange that Uncle Joe has forgotten all the memories I want him to remember, the one’s that I make up in my mind of how I imagine my mother’s childhood was, the non-memories. How strange that my mother’s birthplace is gone, a hole in the middle of the road. I’ve always viewed manholes as the only visible reminders that there are things beneath these streets, things underneath this city that we will never get our hands on. Because maybe we don’t need to. The remains we seek aren’t always physical, evident things; the more pertinent remains are the ones we can’t touch, because they will always exist. The memories. The smells. The ghostly reminders. Maybe what we need has always been here, hidden under the surface, someplace untouchable, miles below a Brooklyn manhole. And maybe it runs even deeper than that.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Yesterday, Today & Also, Tomorrow (an excerpt)

In 1688, Swiss doctor Johannes Hofer identified a new disease that had become an epidemic throughout Europe. The disease was a mania of longing, an illness pregnant with the need to return home. 

Symptoms included: 
Nausea
Loss of appetite 
Brain inflammation 
Cardiac arrests 
High fever 
Maramus (a severe protein-energy malnutrition characterized by energy deficiency) 
Suicidal tendencies 
Pathological changes in the lungs

“One of the earliest symptoms,” wrote the Swiss doctor Albert von Haller, “ is the sensation of hearing the voice of a person that one loves in the voice of another with whom one is conversing or to see one’s family again in dreams.”


My mother died on a Tuesday in spring, just as the forsythia’s began to bloom and the world ached to be lush again. She had been struggling with lung cancer for exactly one year, April to April; the diagnosis swept in and then swept out her life in the same transitional breeze. I knew the end was coming but refused to look, like when the crispness of fall disappears and winter blows in; I closed the shades and tried to ignore the spin of the planet.

This past May I met with a friend for coffee. We walked along the East River and, as flecks of condensation formed around the waxy lip of my cup, David told me he could no longer remember the sound of his mother’s voice. This is something I could never forget, my mother’s voice when I was young and curled up into the soft space along her belly, hearing her voice transform into a midnight croon. That sound, right before you fall asleep, that’s like hearing things underwater or from inside the womb. Or when I was older, and she would call me by my first and middle name when I was being fresh. Or just simply “My love” whenever she pleased. I can still hear it today, in the voice a friend or a stranger, in an inflection, in a face distorted by the glow of the sun; they make my throat rise and burn. These apparitions, shimmers of nostalgia and longing, do create a pathological change in the lungs.

_ 

Cures: 
Leeches 
Warm hypnotic emulsions 
Opium Purging 
Returning home 


We drive through the Pennsylvania countryside at the beginning of a change. In front of us is a spread of freshly turned trees still clinging, with little hope, to their greens. When I look at the trees I smile and think, “You can’t stop them from dying when the red begins to run.” When I look at the driver, he smiles. I think, “I’ll miss all of this when it’s gone.” A boombox on the dashboard slips around with the rhythm of the highway, falling into my lap once or twice, and someone from inside it sings along with us. There are also cow bones on the dashboard: a row of teeth, a joint, a shoulder blade perhaps. The teeth are unlike ours. They are attached to a curved jawbone that looks like a permanent arc of a smile, or a frown; it depends on where you are in the van.

_

Nostalgia was once considered a disease that needed to be cured, a hypochondria of the heart. During the French Revolution, doctors believed nostalgia could only be cured by terror. They based this on the Russians treatment of nostalgia by the Russian army in 1733 as it ventured into Germany. The General threatened, “the first to fall sick will be buried alive.” All complaints of nostalgia ceased. 


We go to therapy to get inside our own heads. We are paying someone to lead us to answers we already possess; we have the doors, but we need the keys. My therapist tells me that sometimes the things I say are very sad, but I think they sound just fine. When I tell her I’m in love, but can’t stop thinking about the things I will miss when it’s gone, she tells me I’ve one upped myself. I laugh at this, and then I laugh again when I say I hate these things about myself. She asks me why I do this, why I laugh at painful things, and I tell her it’s because I’m nervous. So, when I tell her I can’t stand the thought of losing someone else, I smile. When she points it out, I say it could also be a frown, depending on where you are in the universe.

Monday, October 25, 2010

READING NEXT WEEK

This is a nonfiction reading I'm curating at STOREFRONT'S Literary Thursday next week! Four graduate students (three nonfiction writers and one social worker) will sweetly read aloud to you.




THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH AT 7:30 PM

Tim Gomez
(an MFA student in creative nonfiction at Sarah Lawrence, staff writer for Cinemablend.com, taco lover)

Stacey Kahn
(MFA student in creative nonfiction at Sarah Lawrence, assistant editor of nonfiction at Epiphany literary journal, license plate tallyer)

Kathleen McIntyre
(social groupwork student at Hunter, editor of The Worst zine, an absolute phoenix)

Cynthia Ann Schemmer
(MFA student in creative nonfiction at Sarah Lawrence, Habits of Being zine, biggest sweet tooth around.)


* STOREFONT is located at 16 Wilson Avenue, Brooklyn. *

Sunday, October 17, 2010

LETTING SUCH THINGS HAPPEN

Mindy jumped off the balcony that summer. She flew three stories to the parking lot below and laid herself out like a cherry pie smashed on the blacktop. I watched from above as my boss peeled her warm fuzzy body off the ground, my eyes like two Red Hots. We would have to build a higher fence. We would have to call her owners. We would have to say, “Your dog is dead,” but we would not say, “We train dogs with behavioral issues, not self-esteem issues.”

In weeks to come, Linda, the owner of the boarding and training business she ran out of her Sunset Park apartment, would also lose Willy, the Weimaraner, on the Upper East Side; he would bolt out of the back of her mini van and up Third Avenue. She would try to step on his black dragging leash, but would instead trip and fall to the pavement. “Somebody grab him! Please! Grab that dog!” she would yell. I would make colorful flyers showing Willy with his big gray elephant ears that would read, “HAVE YOU SEEN THIS DOG?” But no one called.

I decided I did not want to work with someone who, although relatively well-known in dog training, was capable of letting such things happen. Linda’s apartment was small and ill-equipped: the dog facilities were larger than her actual living quarters, the two spaces often colliding. There would be dog hair in the dinner bowls and coffee mugs, urine on the floor of the bedroom, and old dog food bags filled with granola for breakfast.

Linda was built like a bulldog: shoulders thick, jowls swinging and stubborn as hell. She expected me to clean up after her, like wash her crusty dishes that mingled with dog bowls in the sink and launder her menstrual covered bed sheets. I ignored these requests daily and told myself I would quit when I had acquired enough of my own dog walking clients in Manhattan and rid myself of the unrelenting days of putting up with her miserable Ibizan hounds. There were three of them, a gangly gang with impossibly long legs and ears like fennec foxes. They would taunt the smaller dogs and try to bite me as I shooed them into their crates. Linda barely lifted a finger while I was there. She mostly sat in front of the computer brushing her long black hair and managing to get more mashed potatoes on the keyboard than in her spitty mouth.

The day finally came when I had no choice but to quit when I saw Linda’s breasts. I refer to this moment at the “boob pop,” a defining moment in my self-respect through someone else’s humility. I had been out on the balcony hosing away the dog shit, the smell of bleach stinging all the openings of my face, when I had started to cry. My mother had only died two months before, and since I worked six days a week, I had little time to see my family. I dropped the running hose and went to find Linda. She was inside, sitting at her computer, in nothing but a lavender terrycloth robe and her wet hair making curlicues on the sides of her face. When she saw me crying she invited me into her bedroom where she sprawled her large body across the bed with one of her hounds on top of her, with his body between her legs and his head on her stomach. She rubbed the dog’s belly as she told me she knew about the death, but she was waiting for me to come to her. I asked for some time off, thinking there was no way she could deny me grieving time. Unfortunately, she told me, things would be way too busy in the upcoming weeks to allow me any time off. She would say this to me completely deadpan while I stood before her, smelling like bleach and dog shit, and could feel myself about to lose control. That was until the dog abruptly leapt off the bed, flinging Linda’s robe open to expose her two gigantic breasts like a second set of merciless eyes between us. I stared at them, and then at her, and let out a laugh that I could only imagine resonated with her for weeks to come.

I quit then and there, and a few weeks later I would hear that she let another dog turn into pie.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

WHEN YOU ARE BEING SWALLOWED

The conductor breathes into the microphone:

KSHHHHHHH We are being momentarily held at this station while authorities come to remove an unclaimed duffel bag from the train. We are sorry for any inconvenience and will be moving shortly. KSHHHHHHT


And then the ding of arrival. The jarring sound of automatic sliding doors opening and closing repeatedly. But we aren’t moving. We’ve been ‘momentarily’ held at this station for a half hour. I tell myself that inside the duffel bag is a puppy, not a bomb, and what is all the fuss about? I try not to think about a bomb strapped to a puppy as I drink my coffee.

“There is no bag!” yells a man at the back of the train car. “If there was a suspicious bag, authorities would have shown up already. I call bullshit!” He is small, like a survey pencil, and being subdued by a bigger man in a brown leather jacket.

“Taaake it easy, pal” says the leather man.

“You take it easy, pal,” says the mini pencil as he pushes his way off the train.

An attractive older fellow in a business suit sitting to my right makes eyes at me, and we smile at each other as we shrug. I take a bite of the bagel with cream cheese in my lap and suddenly feel self conscious about eating on public transportation. I put the bagel back into the brown paper bag and close my eyes. I think about Baudelaire and fall asleep.

*

“Holy shit, look at that!” yells the woman sitting in front of me. My eyes open and we are moving. We are passing over the Harlem River Bridge now and gray smoke is billowing from below us like the dirty cotton insides of a stuffed animal. In a matter of seconds, I cannot see.

“Wow,” says the woman to the elderly man sitting next to her. “This is something. I wasn’t here for 9/11, so…Wow.”

“Oh, fuck you,” I mutter under my breath.

“Excuse me?” The woman’s yellow frosted head pops up over the back of her seat to get a better look at me.

I look out the window and the gray fibers begin to pull apart.

“I said, excuse me?!” Her arms push down on the head rest as her upper body lunges toward me, but I ignore her. Through the gray I can see water and I can see fire; hundreds of blue and orange arms maniacally waving at our train, a little too excited to say hello.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

HABITS OF BEING ON RE/VISIONIST

One of my interviews (along with some photographs) from Habits of Being has been featured on RE/VISIONIST, an online publication created by the students of the Sarah Lawrence College Women's History Graduate Program! Excitement!

You can check the article out here: Sister, Fear Has No Place Here.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

HABITS OF BEING ZINE


HABITS OF BEING is a combination of oral history interviews and personal writings that have a common theme threaded throughout. The idea is to blend the personal with the historical, to explore the past, and to compare our habits of being. This first issue includes interviews with three women from SuBAMUH (Ohio women's intentional community) and three related personal stories.

Send mailing addresses for a copy!

habitsofbeingzine@gmail.com

Thursday, May 20, 2010

APRIL 18TH 2010

It’s a well-known fact that female praying mantises bite off the heads of males during intercourse; they fuck them and immediately kill them. It’s considered sexual cannibalism. I consider it a sane reaction to an insane situation. The males pump more vigorously after they’ve been beheaded, which makes me hate them down to their gooey core. The truth of the matter is that the females would rather be eating, so the males often engage females in a courting dance in order to change their interest from devouring them to mating with them; it’s a manipulative distraction. As if they have any idea what’s good for her, or any idea what they are getting themselves into.

* * *

Where I am now is in the woods of rural Ohio. No one is allowed on this land but women, so I don’t mind so much that I have to co-exist in a cabin with thousand of ladybugs. The place is covered in them, their little red cloaked bodies moseying along every surface or hurrying through the air with rice-paper wings. They wait up for me to come home, nestled on my pillow until I gently brush them away and turn my back. They guard the screen door that’s falling off its hinges. They swim in the toilet, meeting their ultimate end in a swirl of piss and shit, and they congregate under the sponge on the sink. I look out the window and there they are, spying on me from the outside. They must expect to have meals with me because every time I go to pour myself some cereal they are awake and waiting at the bottom of the bowl, or resting on my avocado, or getting impatient on the lid of the almond butter. As I sit with my laptop, they crawl across the screen and stop right in the middle. You never pay attention to us anymore.

In the UK, they are called ladybirds. How much more delicate and classy! Yes, I like that name so much better. The name is derived from paintings of the Middle Ages that depicted the Virgin Mary wearing a red cloak. The spots are said to represent the seven sorrows and the seven joys of the Virgin. The ever-virgin. I see nothing but fourteen sorrows there.

I sit at the small table in the cabin and reread Rebecca Solnit’s book, “A Field Guide To Getting Lost.” I open to the page where I left off last and find a ladybird’s carcass between the words, “blue” and “distance.” The blue of distance. It refers to the blue that lingers on the horizon, that moving blue that’s the color of longing and desire. It represents the things we will never obtain, the changes we’ll never see, or perhaps the things we already have and are willing to discard in order to hold on to that feeling. We can travel through the sky, but we can never live in it. Herein lies the reason we love tragedies more than comedies. You can never touch the blue on the horizon, and you like it that way. We linger on; some thing’s are always far away.

I spot a baby praying mantis crawling across the kitchen table and close the book. She’s the length of a toothpick and visibly nervous, crawling slowly among a congregation of ladybirds. She’s uncertain how to behave in front of the other ladies knowing that she will inevitably sin, according to their standards. But she will do whatever it takes to survive: abandon, destroy and hope for the best. With no idea what’s to come, she lives up to her name: She raises her front legs and prays.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

EAT HER DUST (revised)

We formed a hushed audience to the absurd spectacle in the parking lot of the funeral home where the service for my great Aunt Margie was held. Her sons and daughters, my aunts and uncles, stood in an anxious circle waiting to grip a handful of ashes from the swindled urn. Someone, an uncle I presume, had stolen the small gold box from the altar when no one was looking. Someone else, a logical aunt perhaps, catered the impromptu event with small white conical paper cups from the water cooler. Huddled together, a grieving football team, they shouted and elbowed over her dusty parts. My father whispered, almost completely silently mouthed, all of his words to my mother: This is your family. A freak show! A dozen grieving lunatics scooping their souvenirs like Italian ice. My mother nervously sucked her thumb, a habit carried over from infancy. My eyes expanded like inflated balloons. We would have watched with our jaws dropped, but we feared the swirling ashes. We didn’t want to accidentally eat the remains or be unwillingly spoon-fed by the wind. We just didn’t want to taste her. When my mother removed the finger from her mouth, glistening wet, she took my hand and walked me towards the car. I could feel the warm saliva pressed inside my palm as I counted my steps, a nervous habit carried over into adulthood. I climbed into the backseat and smoothed the skirt of the black crushed velvet dress with a slick palm. The clinging gray flakes (maybe her pancreas, maybe her heart) smeared across me like finger paint. My words were never whispered, never mouthed, and only thought: I've never touched anything so dead.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

TRUE BLUE BOOK








Here are some photographs of the book I had made of the interview with my father. Also, I had to remove the Fortune Society interviews for the time being. They first need to be cleared with the interviewee before being made public. Eventually!

Friday, March 26, 2010

HER HOME

The exterior is completely the same.

Picture this: Purple crocuses with open mouths spewing yellow stamens, huddled close and side-by-side, grow in front of bushels of evergreen shrubs. They have grown in the finely manicured front yard since I can remember, pushing their way into the soil like thumbtacks to protect the ground from the effects of gravity. The front walk leading up to the purple guardians looks like the aftermath of a quake. Bricks that read "Hanson," "Potomac," and "Lifetime" awkwardly bubble from the ground, trying to fit in, trying to find a comfortable space amidst the chaos of weeds and roots. The walk leads to the door, accompanied by the weathered gold address of 254 hanging diagonally on the rainbow of brown bricks covering the front of the house (the 4 is uneven, always has been, always will be). On one of the bricks, in between the front door and the gold letters, is a thin-lined wavering heart, scratched in with a safety pin years ago.

The interior is nothing like I remember.

My childhood bedroom, up until I was thirteen, was on the first floor of the house and regretfully located between my parent's room and the bathroom. It was painted a pink antacid and adorning the walls were plastic balloons forever suspended in artificial flight. Against the back wall towered a wooden canopied crib, in which I slept for longer than I’d like to admit. I had an issue with falling, with waking up on the hard wood floor; my hands were always tucked under my chin as I lay curled and bruised. In the mornings I found my toes stretched out from in between the bars at the foot of the bed. I would often wake to a Schnauzer licking each toe as if they were ice pops melting in the summer sun, his tongue working furiously as if they would soon disappear. Or my father’s thick fingers, like scarred breakfast sausages, tickling each toe mercilessly. Or, I would wake to a debilitating cramp.

And every morning I would have to climb out of the crib. On my better, more adventurous mornings, I would pretend as if I were an escapee bound for freedom. Sometimes I had to flee the grips of a snarling witch; other times a prison guard, and once even an unwanted lover. I would grip the bars and exclaim, “Somehow, someway, I will leave this place forever!” or “You’ll never get away with this!” or, to prince charming on the other side of the bars, “Please wait for me!” (And he always did). On my more irritable mornings I would shove my chubby legs in through the bars and cry out for help, pretending I was stuck, vying for attention. The Schnauzer, Barney, would scamper in and gently set his wet mouth down on my foot, his yellow teeth softly gnawing on skin and bone. A love bite. Apparently, I wasn't yelling loud enough (something’s are always far away).

Eventually, the canopied crib was replaced with a day bed: white flowered tubing with pink and blue painted flowers hugging a single mattress. It was here I would discover what a self-induced orgasm was at the age of six years old; I thought I was a genius. Here my mother would walk in on me masturbating to a cassette tape of janet. by Janet Jackson ("Throb," track 10) with my pale pink ballet stockings around my knees. Here I would write numerous notes to my parents in the event that I should unexpectedly die in the middle of the night. "I'm Sorry Mom, I'm Sorry Dad," they would read. Here I would pull a pillow down on my face until I came up for air choking. And here I would take out my self hate on a blue stuffed bear by punching him in the stomach repeatedly because he would never be as good as the pink stuffed bear. Never.

(The room has been torn down and joined in lavatory matrimony with the adjacent bathroom to create a larger space to shit, piss, whatever. My father’s new throne.)

When I turned thirteen, the last of my two brothers had moved out and I was given his bedroom on the second floor. Large and baby blue with nooks and spotlights, I decorated it with lyrics written in Sharpie marker on the wall. The black ink read, “Is it wrong to wish on space hardware? I wish, I wish, I wish you’d care,” or “My cunt is built like a wound that won’t heal.” There was an L-shaped desk with filing cabinets and a typewriter on the surface. In the corner lay a box spring and a mattress (I still only sleep on a mattress on the ground) covered in green sheets and a husband pillow while sheer tapestries of bright green and venetian red billowed from the ceiling above like lime cherry clouds floating over me while I dreamed. It was in this room I lost my virginity, a clumsy five minutes of figuring out the simultaneous motions of two bodies. It was here an ex-lover tried to kill himself with a pair of black fabric scissors, spitting and crying as I bear hugged him to the ground from behind. It was here I truly fell in love for the first time, seven years ago, and still haven’t completely fallen out of it. And now it is here that I dread. It's the one room that hasn't been renovated. The walls still have the lyrics, the desk still has the typewritten pages, but the room itself is now used for storage: boxes of faded photographs, a plastic Christmas tree, birthday cards and elementary school paintings, my father’s endless towers of coins. Some things will never, ever change.

* * *

Here is something: I visit with my father recently, absorbing the changes I dread and the changes I pray for. I don’t go upstairs; it’s only filled with terrible specters of the past looking to squat my brain. I piss in a spot where I once used to sleep and I move like a praying mantis through the unrecognizable. As I am about to leave, my father tells me a story (he’s good at that). There’s a young priest, an old friend of my brother, who has a twin brother, although I am unsure who is who. He probably feels the same way about me, although I am just one. The priest calls my brother, after not seeing him for a few years, and asks if my father is having construction done on the house. The priest had a dream, like we all do, except he remembers his: my mother, in all her ghostly lucidity, came to him and told him to tell my father she really likes the changes being done on her home.

Monday, March 22, 2010

TRUE BLUE: FONZI TYPE HOOD



Earlier this month, I had a paperback book printed up of the True Blue interview to give to my father for his birthday (and he loved it). The website I printed the book through, Blurb, lists the book on their website so anyone can buy it. What do you know! You can check it out here.

* * *

Cynthia: Before we get to the police stuff, tell me about how you met mom.

Dad: Oh, I met mom in junior high school. H. Frank Carey High School. Actually, I met mom on Valentine’s Day. It was a Valentine’s Day dance at St. Catherine’s of Sienna in Franklin Square. I wasn’t Catholic, I was Lutheran. Mom was Catholic. She just stood out of the crowd. She was the one woman I was looking at, a young lady, she was fourteen-years-old and I was fifteen. I asked her to dance and we were dating ever since. We dated all through high school. Junior high school and high school. I was twenty-two and she was twenty-one when we got married.

Cynthia: You got into a lot of trouble in school. Can you talk about that?

Dad: I used to cut class a lot. I hated English, now I love English. I love history. At that time classes just didn’t interest me. I think boys mature at a much slower rate than women do and at my age, at sixteen or seventeen, the only thing I was interested was pretty girls. So I was out of school a lot. I did graduate, though I was in a lot of trouble. I got suspended several times. And (laughs) I remember my assistant principal saying to me one day, he says, “Well, you don’t look like you’re college material, but I bet you become a cop! Most of you hoods, you Fonzie-type hoods, become cops.” (Laughs) And sure enough, I did.