Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Tell Me a Story




This was true not so long ago.

Though I may be the only one who remembers.











"Daddy, tell me a story."

"I'm reading the newspaper now."

"I know, but tell me a story."

"Once upon a time there was a father who got really mad at his daughter for not letting him read the newspaper."

"A real story."

"All right. I see I can't win here. Come over here. Sit here. I'll tell you a story. Ok. Are you situated there?"

"What's 'shitshooted'?"

"That means you're ready for a story."

"I yam. I sitting, too."

"Ok. Here we go. Once upon a time there was a princess--"

"Dad, how come there's once upon a time?"

"What?"

"How come there's once upon a time?"

"Once upon a time? That's, well, that's what we say when we're going to start a story."

"How come? How come we say that when we're having a story?"

"Gee. I don't know. I guess because that's the way it's always been."

"How come?"

"I think because it keeps away the monsters."

"The big monsters, or just the little ones like the Keebles?"

"The furry ones."

"Like Marvin monster?"

"What's Marvin monster?"

"He's in the book."

"Well, I guess like Marvin monster, then."

"Can you tell me a story about mommy, about when she was a baby and she eated stewed carrots and there was diapers on her bottom?"

"I didn't know your mom when she was a baby."

"How come?"

"Because we hadn't met yet."

"How come you hadded met yet?"

"Because I was a baby too and we lived far away from each other."

"But you could just drive to see mommy."

"I was a baby and I didn't have a car."

"I have a car."

"I know. It's nice."

"But it doesn't go on the street because you don't let me."

"Little kids shouldn't be in the street. You could get run over."

"And then I was flat and you will sweep me with a broom."

"And I would be very sad."

"But maybe if I would be flat, I will go under the house and live there."

"I would still be sad. So you should stay out of the street."

"When mommy and you gotted married, did you want kids or did you just want to play? Grandma saided that you were too busy playing and that's why you waited so long."

"Grandma should mind her own business."

"I tolded her that."

"What did you tell her?"

"I saided Grandma should do her own business all the time like you say."

"Oh lord."

"Tell me about when mommy was a princess."

"I thought your mommy was the most beautiful woman in the world."

"She was a princess."

"She was to me."

"And then did you live in a castle?"

"We did. We had big dragons and horses."

"No, you didn't have dragons. Daddy. Don't be silly."

"Yes we did. I had a big one but he burned down the grocery store when he burped so I had to give him to the zoo."

"Daddy."

"The zoo in Philadelphia. It's far away but he still lives there."

"Daddy."

"His name was Ralph."

"Daddy."

"He was as big as this house."

"Listen to me, Daddy."

"What?"

"Tell me about when mommy weared the princess dress."

"What princess dress?"

"The one in the picture."

"You mean our wedding picture?"

"Tell me about how you went to the hospital and got me."

"Do you want to hear about the wedding or the hospital?"

"Tell me about how you sawed the doctor and he told you, 'I have a baby for you in mommy's tummy' and then you got me."

"When it was time for you to be born, it was late at night and it was snowing. And we had to get mommy's clothes and get in the car and drive in the snow to the hospital."

"And then did you see the doctor there?"

"Not right away. We had to wait a long time."

"And then were you scareded to be at the doctor for so long?"

"Well, we knew it was going to be ok."

"But mommy told me you were scareded of being at the doctor."

"She said that?"

"She tolded me that you were very scared of being at that doctor."

"Well, it was...it was...we didn't ever have a baby before. So we didn't know..."

"Mommy said that they came and took her and then you were scareded but you yelled at everybody."

"Things were going a little rough."

"Mommy says I didded have it easy on anybody."

"You were coming out backward and your heart was slowing down. So I made them pay attention."

"And mommy said you were yelling at all the doctors."

"I wasn't yelling so much."

"She said she was scareded so much and you made the doctors make me born right away."

"Well, it was..."

"Because you wanted me so much that you wanted me to come home right away."

"Yes. We did."

"Because you knowed it was me in there."

"Yes, we knew it was you."

"Daddy, I going to hug you now."

"Ok. I'll hug you back."

"The next time, when you want to be born, I going to telling them to get you fast."

"Thank you. That will be nice. Isn't it bed time yet?"

"No, it's not bed time."

"I think it is."

"Tell me a story."

"I'm going to tell you the story of a little girl who stayed up too late and her father locked her in her room until she was twenty-two years old."

"Daddy. Don't be silly."

"Time for bed, punkin."

"How come you call me pumpkin?"

"Time for bed. Mommy's calling. Let's go."

"Ok. Hug."

"Hug"

"Are you going to read the newspaper now?"

"No. I think I can't read the newspaper now."

"How come?"

"Because it's not important. Now go to bed. Scoot."

"What's inportants?"

"You are, sweetie."

"I not a newspaper, silly."

"Go to bed. Go on."

"Ok goodnight Daddy."

"Goodnight, sweet pea."

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

These Lives

What I want(because you asked)


I want to hear about the ones who died,
And why with trembling hand and chin,
You hide behind the smile,
That brought tears to your mother's eye when you were born.


I want you to know how by street lamp light,
Your face adorned in ghostly glow,
I imagine there was a time,
Or will be then,
We knew each other as those for whom the story goes,
The clock would not divide.


I want to tell you,
I've tried to cry,
And failing that, saved all of it for one split second,
Upon an ice clad hill so far away no one could hear,
Shouted to God to forgive such ignorance,
Or punish me with an answer,
And heard only million-year old wind.


I want to tell you this isn't a love poem,
But that which by the will of he who made me,
Requires by my hand to make from nothing,
What I can image from deep within,
The wake from where I've been,
And live no more.


my diary, Hughes Glacier, 2001




In 1996 Hurricane Fran flew over Cary, North Carolina on its way to certain death in the north Atlantic. Cary is so far inland they rarely make hurricane preparations. It had been fifty years since the last hurricane went through, and that one was a wimp.


Fran was force one when the eyewall went over my house in the dark gray haze at three in the morning. Sustained winds were in the eighties's of miles per hour. Gusts got to one-hundred ten. You have trouble standing in an eighty mile-per-hour wind, and you certainly can't in one-hundred ten.


We brought the children to the center of the house were there were no windows. They slept on the floor in the little sleeping bags we'd bought them to use when they went to pyjama parties. They thought it was fun to sleep by candle light.


I watched them sleep. I sat next to my wife keeping vigil, telling the kids to go back to sleep when the giant oaks fell and the thump of their trunks against the ground made earthquakes. We told them to go back to sleep when the tornado thundered past, a train off its tracks, howling like a disembodied spirit screaming through the long tube between life and death.


I couldn't protect them. I waited for the roof to fall in on us, and I knew I would throw myself over them at the first sign of cracking. I would try to die first.


The barometer needle dropped. The shrill wind drowned our inside voices. We could speak only in screams.


You can't run from a hurricane. You can get in your car and try to ford the flash floods and the tree limbs hurtling like artillery, but you have to make it for hundreds of miles, and you won't make it.


You can't escape the floods underground. The winds will destroy your flimsy wood home. Flip your car.


Across the street the pines had fallen into the houses. One had cut a slice through the Blum's two story home. It ripped a slit from the apex of the roof to the foundation. Mr. Blum fought to put a tarp over the gash. The wind took the tarp and Mr. Blum fell from the ladder. I was going to run out to help him, but he managed to get up and get back into his broken home.


We shone flashlights at each other across the road. Blinked them like "Victory at Sea". If only we could figure out how to make the blinks mean something.


When the sun rose and the winds died, I left my home in living color to step, reverse-Dorothy, into black and white.


Our neighborhood was destroyed. Homes in pieces. Roofs torn off. Entire sections crushed by trees. Cars flattened. Roads impassable, criss-crossed by five-ton tree trunks.


The horizon was different. Our little hamlet in the forest was now a broken village on a flattened battlefield.


I climbed over the tree trunks and stood in the center of my street, not knowing what to do. In the distance there was movement. Something sky blue, someone sky blue climbing over the fallen trees.


Doc Wheeler was in his hospital scrubs. We stood among the wreckage. It felt like the end of the world.


"We should see if anyone's hurt," he said. "You all okay?"


I told him we were. Our house had been spared major damage. All souls well.


"Good. We're okay, too," he said. "Let's go now and see if anyone needs our help."


He said, "our help," as if there was something I could do for anyone hurt in the disaster.





The night before my dad died he fell trying to get out of bed to go to the bathroom. The cancer ate him so bad his legs didn't work anymore, but he was stubborn. The last shred of any man's dignity is in being able to make it to the toilet alone.


And he fell on the two yards of carpet between the edge of the mattress and the bathroom door.


I had been staying in the bedroom that used to be my sisters', sleeping on one of the old beds too small for a six-foot man, so my feet hung in space off the back of the mattress. I didn't realize it was a loud thump that woke me up. Sleep had gone so fast I scanned through my dream memory like it was real life.


Then I heard the groan and I ran to his bedroom.


Without my glasses all I could see in the blue-white moonlight was something child-sized writhing on the floor like a creature from a Lovecraft horror, or a character from the X-files come to haunt my waking nightmare.


But I didn't stop. Sheer momentum brought me to it. I slipped my arms under it, Pulled it slowly, shaking, to its feet.


It was like a baby bird, trembling, a loose collection of bones draped in thin skin, tiny bits of life clinging to it like melting snowflakes.


The strongest man I knew said, "Look what's become of me."


I helped him into the bathroom. I lifted the toilet seat for him, and held him while he peed.


In my mind the words, "This is the man who is responsible for my life. This is the man who built my bicycles on Christmas morning. This is the man who nearly got into a car crash racing to the hospital so he could be the first to see my newborn daughter."


And in that yellow sixty-watt incandescent tiled daytime I wanted burn down the house. I wanted him to die so he wasn't that way anymore. I wanted to crash my cars and blow up the Brooklyn bridge.


When I got him back in his bed he said, "This life, Joey..."


Then the drugs knocked him out. But I was full of hurricane, the pungent spray of sap from shattered trees, blood from the splinters, fear of the falling night sky.


Because I could not forget there is no help, I did not sleep for days.




We walked through the valley, alone for hundreds of miles, a prehistoric landscape visited by so few people there were no footprints on the soft still earth. Around us the ground was scarred in frost heave's deep polygonal grooves outlined in white traces of snow.


She had grown up in poverty. Lived in doorways. Abandoned cars. School busses. The only time she'd showered or bathed was when a school friend invited her home, and the parents insisted. Somehow she was smart enough to finish school. College. Land a job with a major newspaper, and then a well-known magazine.


She had money, but no use for it.


Now we were both in Antarctica, hiking the Taylor valley, taking pictures, her for her major magazine, me for myself, my kids, anyone who would look.


"The whole northern hemisphere could disappear in nuclear war and we'd never know," she said.


I snapped a couple of pictures, trying to keep myself from imagining a horror my family could endure without me. No--if there was going to be a nuclear cataclysm, I'd be best off evaporating with my wife and kids than hiding out at the bottom of the earth.


"What a life," she said, stepping onto a boulder the size of a small car. "You come here, you feel just like a kid again."


"All this is here whether we are or not," I said gesturing to the glaciers, the ventifact stones, the frozen lakes, imagining I'd said something profound. But she squinted when she looked at me, and so I know I was missing her point.


"You know how many people in the history of the world have been here?" she asked.


"Not many."


"You can count them. They're all numbered. We know who they are from the time Scott first discovered this place to now."


"Cool," I said, or something equally unattentive.


"Do you know what it's like growing up with nothing?"


I told her I didn't. We weren't rich, but we had things. Always.


"Of course you did," she said. Then she started walking. I followed her in silence for about a half a mile, not wanting to disturb her. Something had struck a nerve, and I was hoping it wasn't me. I had a good childhood. Considered myself successful. Maybe that was getting to her.


When we got to the base of an ancient blue ice glacier she stopped and stared.


"When I was young, I never knew we were poor. I thought everyone lived like we did. I never felt I was missing anything until I grew up and saw how other people lived. Then I wanted clothes and toys and my own bedroom."


I lifted my camera. I wanted to be as quiet as a stone. I wanted to be ice.


She took pictures of the miraculous nothing of everything around us.


"You might feel lost, but you never are. You have everything, you know?" she said, taking my picture against the backdrop of the void from which we would never return.




The first time I saw the woman I married, I knew I would.


I was seventeen, drinking underage in a sleazy dive called "Down the Hatch" in Highlands, New Jersey.


There was a band playing. The song was Getting better, by the Beatles.


She walked in with a friend who recognized the guy I was with. We were trying to be inconspicuous, gleefully swilling ilicit light beers in a dark corner.


The women came over to us. We bought them beers because their fake ID wasn't as irrefutable as ours. We drank and talked about going dancing.


I couldn't take my eyes off her. When she looked at me I saw my whole future. I smelled baking bread and saw Christmas tree lights. I poked myself with baby diaper pins. I bought her glasses of chardonnay and drove her to surprise parties.


She tried to teach me to dance, but I was hopeless. She laughed at me on the blonde hardwood floor, the band playing song after song while I sweat rivers trying to mimic her steps, moving like an ostrich shot in the foot.


I wrote her love poems. I wrote her stories. When she was gone I ached for her and music came out my fingers.


I wrote our wedding song and coached the band we'd hired how to play it "right".


We've been together twenty years. I've seen every line on her face form and deepen. I've seen her crying in pain giving birth. Spent days in hospitals with her, surgery upon surgery. We've bought houses together. Driven through deserts. Hurt each other. Tried all the sex we could imagine. Sat through endless weddings together, funerals for countless family members and a couple of close friends.


I know the smell of her breath at midnight. When I press my ear to the mattress, I hear her heartbeat.


"Did you ever think it would turn out like this?" I asked her at breakfast. The kids were out of earshot. They had scarfed down their yogurt and orange juice and were collecting their books for school.


My wife got worried. That was the kind of question a husband asks from deep within a mid-life crisis, right before he runs away with the 25-year old blonde who can't tell you the name of Jimmy Carter's vice president.


She scowled for a minute. "You know, it's never any different."


I said, "When I was a kid there was this song, 'What's it All About, Alfie?' It was on the radio all the time. It was my mom and dad's theme song. Everytime something disappointing would happen, my dad would lose a job or something expensive would break in the house, my dad's moment of philosophical introspection was to look at the sky and say, 'What's it all about, Alfie?'"


My wife drank her coffee and went back to her crossword puzzle. She'd heard a variety of versions of this story for most of our life together.


"But then he died," I said, trying to figure out what I was feeling, how to say it, and whether it was worth the trouble. It took a few seconds of listening to the kids rattling around in the hallway, pushing and shoving each other on their way out the door to school. I wanted to complete the thought.


She already knew I didn't want to be like him, and that I was afraid I couldn't help it.


"I don't think he ever figured it out."




Every night, before she goes to bed, my youngest daughter finds me and kisses me goodnight.


The other kids gave up the practice when they got older. This one, almost a teenager, never did.


No matter where I am or what I'm doing, she waits until she can come to me quietly, and says goodnight, and kisses me on the cheek.


"Goodnight daddy."


"Goodnight sweet pea."




Tuesday, December 01, 2009

High School Reunion




My high school alumni association has tried to get in touch with me for years. The only address they had for me was the one in the student records. My mom still lives there.


"Mater Dei wants to invite you to the class reunion," my Mom says.


"They weren't exactly my best days."


"They keep calling me. Can I give them your number so they stop calling me?"


"Please don't give them my number. Tell them I was sucked up by a tornado while storm chasing in Oklahoma. Tell them you think I'm in Oz."


"I see them at church every Saturday night and they ask me about you."


"Tell them I'm wintering at the South Pole and am subsequently unreachable."


"Why don't you tell them yourself?"


"Because then I wouldn't be unreachable."


My sister lives in the same house as my mom. So does my brother-in-law. He was in the same high school graduating class as me. They go to the reunions.


Richie says, "You should consider coming to one. Brian Williams came to the last class reunion. He said he remembered you. You should come to this one."


Brian Williams is the anchor on NBC News now. In high school he was a tall lanky guy from the track team who was one of those in-between guys. Not a jock. Not in the "cool" crowd. Not a geek. Not a loser. Just one of those guys we went to school with, like me and Richie.


Richie installs gas furnaces in Newark. I run an international engineering team. Brian Williams is on TV every day and flies on Air Force One. Life has taken us all in weird directions since high school.


I ask Richie, "What would I say to people?"


"What do you have to say?"


"What did Brian Williams say?"


"He said,'Hi. Nice to see ya.' He shook everyone's hand. He sat for dinner with me and your sister. It was nice. Like the old days."


"I don't know about you, but I had a pretty rotten time in high school. Richie. You remember -- nobody actually liked me. I hung around with the public school kids."


"Nobody remembers a damn thing. They all think they liked you."


"But they really didn't."


"It's fun. I'm telling you. Seeing all these guys with gray hair. It's a scream."


"We have gray hair, Richie."


"Like I said. It's a scream."







My high school alumni website has an obit page.


I scanned through it. I recognized all the names. Some of them, well, we always figured they wouldn't last too long. Others are a surprise.


"Look at all these dead kids," I say to the blonde haired girl.


"They're not kids."


"I don't have any compartments in my memory where I know them as adults. They're all kids in my memory."


"You're living in the past. You should go to a reunion and see how everyone turned out."


"-- Sharon Luchenbach. I can't believe she's dead. We used to sneak Mars bars into study hall. I asked her to homecoming and she wouldn't go with me. Actually, nobody would go with me."


"I find that hard to believe."


"She went with Bill Harold. He was a wrestler."


"No. That nobody would go with you."


"You didn't know me then. Girls didn't like me. I asked three different girls to the junior prom. It took me nearly a month to get up the courage to ask each one."


"By then they had other dates."


"They were waiting for certain guys. They all wanted to go with John Gianni. They told me. They asked me if I could get John to go with them because they knew I sometimes hung with him. I took my sister's girlfriend. She was a Sophomore and was dying to go. She would have gone with me if I had ulcerous leprosy."


"Don't you think you're overstating things just a little?"


"You weren't there. It was awful. I was so happy to be out of there, I didn't ask anyone to sign my yearbook at graduation."


"Sounds pretty petty of you."


"Look at this. Jennifer Mason. Gone. Good lord. I think I asked her to one of the dances. She wanted to go with John, too. Can't believe she's gone. My God...Craig McCanns. Damned nice guy."


"It's bound to happen."


"Bill Pigett..."


"Cut this out. Read something else."


"They keep bugging my mother. They want to rub my nose in my high school persona."


"Is there any possibility they just want to stay in touch because...ahem...they actually liked you?"


"Nope."


"What in the world happened to you in high school?"


"It was awful."


"Come on. Tell me one thing."


"Gimme a break. I have PTSD. I don't remember any of it and it's never coming back. It's sealed in the inner reaches of my psyche and giving me high blood pressure."


"Just one thing."


"No way."







The only person of my generation I know who liked high school is my brother. He was immensely popular. Girls swooned over him. He dated a different girl every month. Sometimes two at a time. Everyone liked to be around him. He was magnetic. Funny. Always getting into situations that could become good stories later.


He organized my bachelor party. Got me so drunk in the first half hour that I passed out. They took me back to my apartment and tossed me in the bedroom.


I'm told my bachelor party was great after I got dropped off. Even now I have a sketchy picture of what happened that night.


"I remember your sister's fiancee ate a Heineken bottle," says one of my friends who was there and is now living out here in California. We were sitting in his back yard at his house in the hills overlooking the bay and San Francisco. I was on my second boilermaker - Boddingtons and Macallans.


"Not Richie," I say.


"Nah. The biker dude. What was his name?"


"Don."


"Yeah. He was pretty colorful. Must have been shitting blood for weeks. Can't believe he didn't wind up in the hospital. He divorced your sister, right? Ever hear from him?"


"My mother says he's selling tires in south Jersey."


"I remember he drove away with some girl on his bike. I think she was naked," he says. Then adds, quickly, "It wasn't your sister."


"I've heard. That's probably both good and bad at the same time."


"So you've said."


"The alumni association wants to know where I am."


"Engineering School? Don't tell them. You'll never stop getting the calls for donations."


"Too late for that. They already have me. This is the high school."


"So?"


"I don't want to talk to them."


"So don't."


"They won't leave my mother alone."


"So talk to them."


"I hated high school. I don't want to relive it."


"How can you possibly relive it? Do you know how long ago that was?"


"Maybe you don't know me. I can harbor a grudge for a really long time."


"Apparently. By the way. Your brother told me his 20 year high school reunion was a total blow out. The restaurant had to kick them out at 2AM. They were dancing on the tables. Even the spouses got along. They all needed to get cab rides home. You went to the same school, right?"


"Yah -- but he was three years behind me. My class was different."


"Why didn't you go to your reunion?"


"Why bother?"


"I heard Brian Williams was there and everyone had a great time. You could have talked to Brian Williams about what it's like to hang around presidents. The guy goes to war zones and interviews combatants. He has to be interesting as hell."


"Brian-- who?"


"You know, your brother has a lower blood pressure than you -- by a lot."


"How the hell do you know that?"


"He tells me. He tells everyone."


"Goddamn it."


"You really need to find a way to make peace with this whole high school thing. It would be good for you."


"I take pills. They lower my blood pressure."


"People would like you more."


"Thanks."


"I'm not kidding. I may be the only person who can stand you. By the way, there's more of that in the refrigerator."


"I'm switching to Guinness."


"Go get your own. All the ones in the refrigerator are for you. Nobody here touches the stuff. On your way back grab that bottle of Stag's Leap."






Ravi comes into my office, arm outstretched. In his flat open palm is a bright orange fruit, the size of a doll's head. Shiny and smooth.


We usually speak every day for the better part of an hour. We talk about technology. We talk about customers. Sometimes we go to lunch and talk about our childhoods. I grew up in [New Jersey]. He grew up in India in a town whose name I can't pronounce.


He was poor. He was determined. He came to America without any money. He got off the plane and just wandered out of the airport to find some friends he knew had moved to somewhere in California.


I admire Ravi for all he has done for himself and his family. He built his entire life. He didn't give up.


I don't like to tell Ravi about New Jersey. We had too much. We had heat and electricity and sewers. We didn't have to have an entire family working in near slavery to get us into school.


When Ravi comes unexpectedly it is to complain about something. Or he comes in to warn me about something about to happen. He's my canary in the coal mine. He's watching my back.


My mind is bracing for impact.


The water supply is contaminated with arsenic. Everyone's getting smallpox. The Russians accidentally launched all the missiles and we've got 30 minutes to live. They're turning off gravity.


His hand is steady. His pose is awkward, but comfortable. Like something Boticelli would have painted that he would have had to pose for, remaining still for days.


The fruit is iconic. I think of that word as if it is pushed into my head from above. Icons mean something, I think to myself, like someone says it to me.


"Do you want a persimmon?"


"I like persimmons." I take it. It's cool and heavy. Organic. Living evidence the earth tries to provide.


"We have a tree. I came out of my house and it fell onto my head. I thought of you."


I was speechless, so I did what speechless people do.


Ravi says, "Most people don't like persimmons. Yet there are so many trees around here."


"Some are good," I say.


He says, "Well, there was something I wanted to talk to you about."


Here it comes. Aliens have crashed all our computers. Ravi stares at the ceiling. He looks out my window. He examines the map of Antarctica I have on my wall to remind me I once breathed the air there.


He says, "No. It's Fred I have to talk to. See you."


He leaves my office.


Leaves me holding the persimmon. In the middle of my e-mail. In the middle of the phone calls. In the middle of the worrying about tomorrow's meeting. I am not typing or talking to someone. Just holding an orange globe. Had you said to me an hour before, "In an hour you will be sitting in this chair holding a tree fruit," I would have said you were crazy.


Then the impulse. I went on line and typed my address into the alumni association website. I gave them my e-mail address.


I looked at the obit page and thought about the kids I knew who are dead.


We look at obits so we can sneer at God. I'm still here. You didn't get me.


I thought about Jennifer. She turned me down for homecoming dance. Nobody remembers that but me.


How much is now lost forever, gone with them?


Ravi pokes his head in my office. "Now I remember what I was going to say."


"Are they firing all of us?"


"No, it's the thing you said yesterday about your old classmates. You know I went back to India, to my old school."


"How was it?"


"We have saying. It doesn't really translate. It's sort of like, 'This is the way it is. You got all the way here. Be happy about it.' We all take different paths, you know?"


"I think so."


"You worry too much. You know that you have nothing to worry about."


I thank him. He winks and leaves.


This guy who grew up on the other side of the earth from New Jersey.


Came all the way around to the other side of the world to hand me a persimmon.