Monday, August 19, 2019

A Window on the World

In the human race, mom certainly did not come in last. Smart, beautiful, resourceful and with a keen sense of humor, she got to work making a home for herself and me after my father left. Brother Mel had moved away before the end times. I envied him his distance from the nightly fights before Dad moved to Hermosa Beach. Mel lived at Knott’s Berry Farm and managed Ye Olde Mill Stream trout farm run for the Knott family by our friend Cole Weston. Mel got paid under the counter to stock the ponds and haul bags of fish food and teach kids how to fish on weekends. He had a room to sleep in behind the ticket booth and commuted to Marshall High School in Silverlake, Monday through Friday, driving his sea green mist Chevy. 

Mom had always voted with her feet. She found a job at The Lung Association in the Public Relations office. Conscientiously, she hired the same folks to work for her at home  as our neighbors hired. When Luis and Bess had to move back to Mississippi and could no longer serve as occasional handyman and monthly maid, mom turned to the wondrous being of Sue Jones whose ancestors were from Holland. Sue could've stepped off the page of a Van Gough  sketch, all knobs and bumps, with gnarly thumbs, fingers, elbows and knees. She always took off her shoes when she mopped the red cement floors of our flat-to-the-earth, redwood and glass rectangle of a house, scrubbing by hand with rags and buckets full of scalding, soapy, pine-scented water. Knurls on her toes turned as red as the floor, knees too.  She’d move wispy almost white tendrils of hair out of her face with the back of her wrist while she lectured me about life and laws of nature. 

Without Mel at home, and all my best buds moved away, my days seemed endless. I spent a lot of time in Sue’s company after school whenever she was there. 

Sue had a way of incorporating nature teachings pitched solely at me. Whenever she wiped the counters free of the teeny tiny grease ants that loved to make a conga line from their home in the wall to the butter dish, she would do so gently and with a prayer under her breath: May you come back as a beautiful butterfly. Hers was the first finger pointing me toward things beyond the day to day life I knew at ten years of age. God, angels, sprites and spirits were of the realm Sue Jones inhabited. Resurrection and reincarnation. In her book, bugs, animals, and people all had a chance at moving up some mystical magical spiral staircase of consciousness. I imagined a gauzy pastel chiffon draped circular staircase, every step filled with ascending critters of all kinds disappearing into the clouds as she spoke.

At twelve, I read a library book called The Astonishing Ant. From it I learned about societal constructs and hierarchies these six-legged creatures were capable of creating. There was a huge hill of black ants at the base of the four by four wood post holding up our mail box and another even more elaborate red-ant hill out back by the tall eucalyptus that was planted way before my parents bought the iconic John Lautner mid-century modern home in 1949. I liked to imagine in three dimensions the two colonies’ underground tunnels, rooms and nurseries. 

Quite a distance separated the tribe of red from the tribe of black ants, but I fed both the same snacks of 'Nilla Wafer cookie crumbs and tiny individual capsules carefully culled from oranges cut into quarters for my after school snack. Black ants were more socialized. They gladly accepted what was put in their path. Red ants walked around the orange capsules but hoisted the crumbs onto their backs to take down into the hole in the center of the crumbly earthen hill. Summer afternoons during the three years between my father leaving home and mom marrying Leo were spent, in part, exploring just what ants liked best.

The summer I found Ray Bradbury, I set out to read everything he wrote. I gorged myself on oranges and cookies and books with my foot wedged into the top-most V in the tree. My  shaggy bark reading room was high above the old playhouse that my father built for me when I turned four. Brother Mel used to smoke out in the play house. Mom eventually took it over as her writing space. From tree top, besides all the eucalyptus pods and crescent shaped leaves on the play house roof, I could see all the way to the Pacific Ocean - out beyond Miracle Mile and Century City. I’d read up there for hours, mostly R is for Rocket and Martian Chronicles. Something Wicked This Way Comes creeped me out a bit, but I could read Dandelion Wine three times a week, so intoxicating, it was. 

Crumbs and peelings at the bottom of the tree were the only evidence of human activity outside our house. If only my mom had looked up, she would have found me. I much preferred not to be found. By then, Peter and Angelika's mother had died and the twins' dad moved with them to their family’s summer home in Running Springs. Jacky moved from the bottom of our hill on Avon Street to Santa Monica when we were in fourth grade. Julie was the first of my best friends to move from Echo Park all the way over to Miracle Mile off Wilshire Boulevard. From my tree perch, I fancied I could see her walking home from school… if only I had a telescope.

By thirteen, I'd outgrown 'Nilla Wafers and segmenting oranges, but found both colonies of ants liked dabs of butter and sugar that fell off my toast on which I slathered layers and layers of both until the creamy coating was almost as thick as the bread and spread evenly crust to crust. I was taught not to waste crusts, so they got slathered extra high and often to the delight of the ants, little chunks would fall into their domain while I watched their scurrying forms heft many times their weight. 

In seventh grade, Rhonda Dunstan became my new bestie. She lived all the way down Echo Park Boulevard almost to Sunset Boulevard. Our mothers would drive us most often to one another's homes for playdates. Sometimes we’d walk. Our favorite thing to do was to buy penny candies at El Batey liquor store near the corner of Morton. We’d walk from her house to El Batey, use our allowance on candy, and climb up onto the garage roof of the apartment building next door to hers and eat every bit of what we bought. One day, we'd gotten what we thought were giant purple grape-flavored jaw breakers for our thirty-two cents to share equally. Eight jaw-breakers each at two pennies a piece. Our eyes widened at the same moment when we discovered the center was soft gooey grapey-good gum! We giggled and chewed, giggled and chewed. One ball after another. Purple spit ran out the corners of our mouths and dripped off our chins. Whatever possessed us to think of throwing the wads of partially chewed purple gloptiousness onto the neighboring garage wall, I do not recall, but throw them we did - small chunks at a time. All told, there must've been two-dozen globs of purple gum wads randomly decorating the expanse of otherwise beige stucco.

One of the neighbors was a fink. Rhonda's grandmother confronted us when we went inside. No use denying it. We were purple from face to knees. She said someone had just called her saying she saw us throwing stuff at the wall and now we had to clean it off. I took a page from Sue Jones book. We got two bowls of hot soapy water, rags and a step ladder and whistled while we worked. We also wrote a note to the nosey neighbor apologizing (that was gran’s idea) for our lapse in sanity… or something as high-falootin. 


I told Rhonda I hoped Miss Nosey Neighbor would come back as a beautiful butterfly… and soon!

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Dear Diary

Dear Diary,

This blog I keep (mostly) is about Birth, Death, and the Stuff In Between. That offers a pretty wide open range of topics.

Once in a while I get political. 

Dropping a bomb on NRA Headquarters would be my best political act today, except then I'd become one of them. Them, being the strong gun lobby folk who won't budge an inch on bump-stocks and machine guns. How DARE the Wayne La Pierre's of the world hold the rest of us hostage because of their fear of losing one scintilla of their "Right to Bear Arms.” The Second Amendment says nothing of assault rifles. It was put into the Bill or Rights long before anyone invented machine guns and assault rifles.

How dare anyone make children suffer. How dare sickos make immigrants suffer at the hands of our white supremacists and in the hands of our racist culture. We ought to be ashamed of ourselves for not booting out the Dumpling Donald/Dumping the Trump years ago. You cannot have free speech if that speech incites violence. It’s like yelling fire in a crowded movie theater. POTUS’s rhetoric does just that… incites and makes dangerous most public gathering places because those inclined toward expressing their hatred, bigotry, and ignorance hear the dog-whistle Trump uses regularly to keep us just off balance enough so he can continue to dismantle Democracy. That seems his greatest agenda... after making himself and his friends and family fabulously wealthy. I would love to see his tax returns.

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I went to a poetry reading Sunday afternoon with some writing buddies. It was not something my beloved would stay awake for, so he sat this one out. His surgery is coming up Wednesday to rebuild his right thumb joint and move some tendons around to hold it all in place. Twelve weeks later, Dr. Chin says Mark’ll get some Physical Therapy  sessions. Then we'll see how he's recovering. If all goes well, Mark may elect to have the other thumb joint rebuilt. A full year in recovery mode sounds daunting but really is just a hiccup in the long arc of a life. Aren't we lucky to live in an age when such miraculous treatments are available??!!

My beloved came to watch folk dancing Saturday night. It was my second time joining in at a nearby venue where Circle Dances are taught. Not yet ready to dance on account of his hurt paw and sore ankle, Mark watched this time. Soon, we hope he may give it a try. We used to enjoy folk dancing together very much. He would meet me at Silverlake Parks and Recreation Center on his way home from Hollywood. I came from working downtown and we'd meet up to dance, then caravan home to Studio City separately on Thursday evenings. So much fun. It was in the days when I was making Banana nut bread for Garden of Eatin’ - a little health food restaurant on Echo Park Boulevard.  We once calculated that I was losing only a dollar and a quarter per loaf, contrasting the cost of ingredients and gas to deliver the breads with what the restaurant owner was paying me... not counting the time it took to cook and deliver! Ha ha ha. Short-lived career. 

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Once upon a time there was a funny dog named Fairfax. His owners were Mark, Melinda, Mosa and Megan. When she was two years old, our daughter Megan couldn't quite pronounce the dog's name, and called him Fucka. Older sister Mosa was outraged at what she knew was a “bad word” coming out of Megan’s little Kewpie Doll mouth and tried to get her sister to say the dog's name correctly. 

"Megan, say 'Fair.'"   

"Fair."  

"Megan, say ‘Fax.’"    

"Fax."

“Megan, say ‘FAIRFAX!’" 

"Fucka." 

Giggles ensued, which reinforced Megan's mispronunciation. They tried this exercise many more times, with increased glee and giggles. 

So it was that Fairfax came also to be known as Fucka.

Devlyn, the granddaughter at ten years of age loves hearing family funnies like this.

She has been asking for them repeatedly each visit here or when we’re in the car en route to one of her many lessons… horseback riding, piano, or homeschooling art or math lessons with her dad…

Friday, we had her here at our house. Our daughter Megan, who knows now how to say Fairfax, had driven up from San Luis Obispo area for a visit with us Tuesday and Wednesday. She helped us out with a combination crossword / jigsaw puzzle that's been languishing on the dining room table, where we left it stalled-out for months. Gran’Pun and I got re-inspired with Megan's enthusiasm and worked on it intermittently through Thursday night after Megan went home. Dev came over Friday morning and was impressed with the progress. She had helped solve the crossword portion of it and put in many pieces months back, when the putting in pieces of type-face clues was quite a bit easier than all the black and white letters of the crossword boxes and we all got frustrated with it. 

Friday, we three worked on it for a good forty minutes or more, then she put in the last few pieces by herself to our great delight. Dev got that sense of accomplishment so satisfying to both us Grandies and to her Grand Self.

She also had a horseback riding lesson on Friday, which I took her to after a trip to the zoo, where we saw Luca, the jaguar - sleeping. We saw one of two adult wolves. Four young pups are still hiding in the den. (Probably watching re-runs of Rin Tin Tin on TV.) We saw bison in the distance, bears close-up dancing, or sparring, or engaged in foreplay - hard to tell, and six wonderfully graceful giraffes with the dorkiest sweetest faces. Gotta love giraffe’s eyelashes and “smiles."  

To the tiger in the zoo, Madeleine just said, “Pooh, Pooh!” Tigers seem best suited to sleeping. Watching their stripes expand and contract as they breathe entertained D for about ninety-seconds. Then off to the baboons and bunnies. 

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Weekends are for lounging. So we only washed both cars, dusted and vacuumed the house, and watered the garden. Then we read a lot. 


Time to start a new puzzle… or finish the thousand piece giant view of the Golden Gate Bridge and Bay! Oy Vey! Come back, Megan!