Shift from Faith

The 60’s and 70’s, God love them, were rife with fashion trends. So many influences from beatniks, mop tops, preppies, pret a porter, elephant bell bottoms, hip huggers, hippie dungarees, fringe vests, velour, embroidered prom shirts, platforms, spike toe boots, earth shoes and Adidas runners. It boggles the mind. Also boggling was how utterly ridiculous it looks in a backward glance to those days.

My childhood friend, Faith, was raised in a fairly conservative family, so clothing trends weren’t followed avidly or with chameleon-like change. Her mother sewed and made all the family’s clothes, save for her father: he had a uniform for work in the Postal Service. 

Despite Faith’s strict upbringing, she had a wild streak in her that I was more than happy to encourage. One summer’s afternoon, bored as planks, we schemed to wander out of the neighborhood to the waterfront, having to cross many streets with traffic. Our goal: procure soft serve cones. Having limited to no funds, we “permanently borrowed” money from my father’s change jar. Enough for three cones, with jimmies.

The afternoon heat made short work of melting the ice cream quickly, much quicker than I could eat it. It melted all over me, creating a Jackson Pollack effect on my white short set and sneakers. Faith had the foresight to wear a dark outfit, thereby avoiding any patterning on her clothes. 

I panicked, realizing I’d be caught in myriad crimes: questionable acquiring of money for this trip; biking too far afield from the neighborhood; and eating sweets too close to dinnertime. But the clothes were going to be the giveaway to this caper.

Faith said I could wear something of hers home and she’d sneak my clothes into one of her mother’s washes (hopefully with bleach). My sneakers were ok, because the chocolate that melted on them looked like mud or dirt, which would only get a routine rebuke from my mother.

We snuck into Faith’s house and I changed into one of her dresses, a summer “shift”. All would be well. I hoped. When I got home, my mother did a double-take, asking in one breath where did I get the outfit and didn’t I hate dresses (I did. Vehemently.)? I responded saying it wasn’t a “dress” dress, it was a summer shift and that I borrowed the shift from Faith.

“Why”? I hadn’t thought up a reply to such a direct, terse and logical question. I mumbled something about wanting to see if the shift felt cooler than shorts. Skeptical, but growing disinterested, she asked “And is it?”, and I said “Yes.” I quickly feared that she might take this as a green light to start buying me dresses and added “But it’s horrible for riding my bike”.

End of subject. I changed onto my own shorts and top and my mother said she’d wash and iron the shift to return to Faith. And my faith in my guardian angel increased by ten-fold that day. Consequences of guilt related to fibbing and theft would be dealt with in Confession— the magic erase sponge for all bad little Catholic girls’ souls.

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Simulated World

Why do these words strike a kind of terror in my soul? I guess it’s because of the sort of simulated world I find myself living in in 2020. Because of a global pandemic, we don’t touch other humans anymore. “Virtual Hugs!” is a normalized form of address.

Instead, we interface with computer monitors and we have total strangers “running” for our groceries. This is not the cool kind of “simulated world” all of us 6 year olds in the 60s dreamed of after watching The Jetsons. 

No, this is a simulation borne of disease, depression and deficient and possibly demented politicians. We huddle indoors and watch the world go by. No RoBo maids cook and launder for us. Food is available, but some strangers gets it an delivers it for you and we have to pay a $20 surcharge.

And now, instead of staying with the program until we as a world community are victorious over this virus, the Nut Job in the Oval is declaring a victory which no scientific, demographic or medical data support.

Instead he moves on to focus on “restoring” the economy. Get production up and running again (three words: meat packing plants). Money over lives. Greed and dualistic action over empathy and courageous leadership. Get out there and get back in the swim (15 words: 100 person Church service with one person with COVID exposing all the rest to it)!

I personally felt that he wasn’t the right person for the job in 2016, and God bless him, he hasn’t proven me wrong. I still shake my head. Hard. Hard enough to encourage a concussion.

Do I understand him as saying better to have more lonely painful deaths of citizens than to see a dip in the sacred stock market?  We live in a simulated world that would make Rod Serling’s head spin.

Less Divided

This could start as some dyslexic math problem. As a young student, I found the subject of math to be boring, infuriating, useless beyond addition and subtraction and an ill-equipped replacement for words (129 v. one hundred and twenty-nine). 

I learned a new word the other day: innumerate. As in: illiterate: cain’t reed or no eny werdz :: innumerate: 1+1= 6? 11? 1? I don’t really believe I’m innumerate ( I can add and subtract and divide numbers but that’s about as far as my train goes on the tracks of math).

The two teachers (nuns, both) who “taught” me math, Sister Corona in the 4th grade and Sister Mary in the 7th grade; witches, both. Of them I was fearful, anxious, cowed and embarrassed. They were of German descent, and it took little imagination to imagine them in another time as Nazi prison guards or Gestapo overseeing psychological torture.

I never was able to sleep on a school night when math was the next day, especially when we were assigned “word problems” homework. You know, the old: “If Danny was headed northeast to Chicago and would arrive at 6pm driving 60 miles an hour, and Charlie drove 1/5 mile per hour slower starting from someplace in Canada with poor signage, what was Danny wearing? Wtf?!

Did I miss a secret clue? Did I need a slide ruler? I’ll tell you what Danny was wearing: prison stripes because he shot a nun that taught him math in the 4th grade. Good for you, Danny!

So much time of sleepless nights, and adult therapy might have been avoided if I only knew then that there’d come a time in the distant future where anyone could “do” math, with the help of the objectively aloof “Mr. Googlees” and the “Interwebs” nin   .

What You’re Hearing

“What you’re hearing is the raspy mating call of the male Kudu in must.” “What you’re hearing is another set of lies attacking the character of the Governor of Michigan.” “What you’re hearing is a live performance of Turandot from the Met.” “What you’re hearing is the sound of a foghorn calling ships into the harbour.” “What you’re hearing is the same noise your dog is hearing, albeit experienced very differently by the both of you.”

So many sounds to enhance the video tracks of our lives. When I was a kid we’d play a borderline macabre game where we’d ask each other if we were only able to have one sense, what would we choose? This was a hard one for me. I couldn’t decide how despondentI’d be if I had either no sight or no sound. Could I handle blindness easier than deafness? Sight was always edged our by hearing. It is a precious gift to me and is the ultimate defining sense of my life. I couldn’t comprehend giving up all the sounds of my treasured music. Or the angry crash of waves on the beach. Or the torrential rain pounding the roof during a midsummer Texas storm, or a dog’s cry of happiness, or my wife’s measured breathing in sleep, or a river’s gurgle during a snowstorm, or ice cracking or eggs frying, or the soft hum of the engine of a BMW, or a glass breaking. 

Or all the myriad voices I’ve heard or had to listen to over the years, some transmitting comfort or fear, or warning, or pleasure. Or disapproval or disappointment. Or pain or ecstasy. Voices in unison or voices alone. Voices in conversation. Sometimes comprehended, sometimes just sound without meaning. Sounds of Silence. Make a Joyful Noise. Do You Hear What I Hear?

What you’re hearing is just what you need to hear.

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Pay Attention

SO, who’s Attention and why do I have to pay her? And for what? For tension? Tension should be paying me rent right now because she’s an occupant in my head. Just unadulterated tension. Tension caused by the slow heat churning up for the unbearable Texas summer. Having to cancel family trips for celebrations. Tension surrounding this whole COVID-19 wave of bereavement, fear, and lack of national leadership. How about being tense about the new adage : “if you fly, you may die”.

No more air travel for the foreseeable future. I can’t remember the last time I was without an upcoming plane reservation. I am now. Grounded. Far away from the ocean in the summertime. Tension about how I might get there? When?

I may lose adult restraint and just start driving to my northwest star. And sit on my beach at the best hour of the day, around 6 pm when the shadows start to lengthen and the pitch of the sun turns the sea into a brilliant cerulean blue. And the lilting cooler breezes begin to tickle all around you. And the sound of the waves begin to soften and the gulls get quiet and you take note of far off voices of families washing the sun, surf, and sand off of their bodies in the outdoor showers, after which you swear you’ve never felt fresher in your life.

And if the prevailing breeze is right, your olfactory senses will be amused to the point of delight with the scent of charcoal catching fire, meat sizzling on the grille and garlic being sautéed oh so gently.

At this hour, on my beach, I am blanketed by all of these. And there’s gratitude for the day, peace on the walk back to the house under majestic oak and elm trees, and anticipation for my own outdoor shower, and fresh fish on the grill with corn and tomatoes. 

These instances and their unfolding are when I feel reality in its purest form more than any other time of the year. No tension. No problems on-island. No fearful or enigmatic futuring.

Just the moment, strung on to the next moment, looking forward to another perfect day on a perfect island 30 miles out to sea that offers gifts of relaxation and serenity. Heed well, these feelings. They’re free. No payment necessary.

Thirty Five Year Friendship

If I was dyslexic, I might read the above as “Year Thirty Five Friendship”. What would immediately tweak my memory is Year 35. My mother was born in year 35; 1935. If she hadn’t been taken so soon (by whom and to where is open to question or argument), she would have lived longer than the 64 years we had with her.

In short, she died from cancer of the esophagus, because for the majority of her life, cigarettes were her best friend. I’m told she started her friendship with tobacco when she was young, 15 or so. Smoking was cool then, an entree into a different social strata that carried sophistication and urbanity.

My mother was 16 when she graduated from high school. She was bright. She possessed a quick and logical mind. She was a latin scholar. She was quick witted. She had a dream to become a pharmacist and so applied and was admitted to the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy. But my grandmother, in one of a very few mistakes (in my opinion) that she made in her life, told my mother she couldn’t go. That she was too young, that it would be better to work for a year.

My mother got a job as a telephone operator, you know the ones that wore a headset and pulled cords and pegged them in to advance communication. She had exceptional hand-eye coordination (excelling in high school sports enough to consider becoming a coach herself). She was an ace for the job.

She also was a natty dresser and exuded a strong flair for personal style. And she was beautiful. Not in the “everyone thinks their mother is beautiful” sense, but universally attractive. She was a part-time clothes model, as well. She was a platinum blond, short haired, blue eyed knock out. She had it going.

As she collected paychecks from her full time job, she realized some of the power that gave her: freedom to buy clothes and makeup and nights out and cigarettes. Not surprising to anyone, including herself, she never looked back to Pharmaceutical College. She was fully committed to Ma Bell and her new crowd of older friends.

She was hooked up on a blind date, by my uncle, her boss at the phone company, with his younger brother, an officer in the Military Sea Transportation Service. It was love at first sight (but this is a yarn for anther time).

They married when she was 21 in 1956, and she took on the role of housewife and then mother four years later when she had me. She did what all young women were expected to do: staying at home, raising children, keeping the house clean and tasteful and waiting for her husband’s shore leaves.

She grew distant from her friends who still worked, her mother worked full time, and the people in other two apartments in the triple decker were in-laws all, including the brother-in-law, the former boss who fixed her up with her now husband. She was lonely and wondering no doubt about her decisions and sense of purpose, as do all 20-somethings.

She did have one benevolent friend with whom she kept constant companionship: a pack of Pall Malls. Together they grew the friendship until the friend had no more time for her, and cut her off, literally.

What a price she and we who loved her paid for that friendship. They were besties for life. And death.

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Food Stamps 

My first real paying job was a check-out girl in a small supermarket in Massachusetts.I was painfully shy, 15 years old and petrified of making a mistake. “Scanning” was about two decades away in the future. We had cash registers with melmac greasy number keys  and a huge key to enter each item priced. I always hit it harder than necessary; I liked the feeling of power and that finality of the register advancing the paper tape, ready for the next action.

I became confident and proficient at my job and was one of the top cashiers in the store, even without looking at the keys. I also bagged my own groceries with the precision of a 7 year old working on a Lego starship: cold items with cold; produce with apples on the bottom and parsley on the top; a Jenga-like construction of boxes (rice, cereal, jello). I took pride in packing well, not making the bags too heavy and ensuring that the customer would arrive home with her eggs intact.

On one of my shifts, Jackie, who was also a cashier at the store, got off early and was checking out a few items before going home. She came though my aisle with a few items, bread, milk, spaghettios and a carton of Newports. I rang her through and as I entered the carton of butts, the manager drifted over to my register not unlike a hunter who was tracking his prey. He was the manager and co-owner of the store. Pot bellied, bald, black teeth from the pipe he constantly smoked, half shaven, and a lisp so pronounced that you’d get sprayed if you were within 7 feet of him.

He pounces up at my right and wriggles behind the cash register yelling “Did you ring up those cartons of cigaretes?!” “Yes I did.” Then he yelled for the benefit of everyone in the store “Jackie! Are you again using (lisp) food stamps (lisp) for this (lisp) carton of cigarettes? (lisp) You can’t use (lisp) food stamps (double lisp).”

“That’s against the law!”. He didn’t call the police, but he made damned sure that everyone in the store heard what he was saying. He told me to “void” the cigarette ring and total it. I did and Jackie peeled just about the entire amount of food stamps for so few groceries. The manager went out of his way to shame her and her face showed it.

Jackie gingerly pushed the carton back to me and asked for one pack of Newports. Not wanting another “void” on my shift, I didn’t ring them up until I knew that she had the money to pay. I would have rung them up myself but cigarettes could no be sold to minors, especially by minors.

Jackie searched through her ripped pleather purse, hoping to find enough coin that would complete the transaction. So, with with a ratty dollar bill and a pile of coins, she bought her pack of cigarettes. I felt miserably small in that moment. And sad for Jackie and her family who depended on her as the breadwinner 

The manager continued to glare at me and at Jackie to make sure that he didn’t lose one penny in revenue. I hated the smirk he wore as Jackie fumbled her groceries, coins and self esteem into a bag. But even though Jackie knew better than to buy cigarettes with food stamps she couldn’t help but try. Monopoly-money