Friday, August 21, 2009

Days of Summer

Thanks to the fuckers who smashed my windshield to steal my GPS. It made me feel even more alone in the world than I already felt. It was also one more thing on a long list of things that went wrong this summer.

I got laid off.
I had another in a series of steamy love affairs that went no where.
My computer died and I lost all my pictures.
I found out I need major dental work. Bone loss, extractions, implants- that kind of major.
My finger got infected and needed to be cut open- the whole experience was really traumatic.
My cat got cancer.
I took in a stray cat that hates it here.
Someone hit my car and took off.
My car got broken into.
My GPS got stolen.

And of course, there's the usual stress that I live with- I wont get into that here.

But what Ive been taught is to be grateful.

My basic needs are met.
I have hope.
There is great possibility. Always possibility.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Unbearable Lightness


The book 'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' says "It had taken 6 chance happenings to push Tomas toward Tereza". In other words, 6 things went awry and put them at the same place at the same time. Happenstance. Serendipity.

6 is the lucky number and here's why...

1. The photography class was full. I was fifth on the waitlist. Class is at 7pm on Friday. The office closed at 1PM. I call at 12:40. Someone had just called to cancel ten minutes earler. They dont have time to go down the waitlist so they let me sign up.

2. On the way to class, I see an art installation called Wheel Questions. Its interesting and I decide to email the artist, Johnnny, and see if he needs a volunteer. I find out on his website that he also owns a data company and I know a programming language he needs help with. I have plans the weekend and we decide to meet on Monday.

3. On Saturday, my 10AM vet appointment goes till 12:30 even though it was suppose to be only an hour long and I dont get home till after 2PM. My plans for the day are messed up. I decide to nap and then go to Harvard Square at night and hear the street musicians.

4. The woman who needs a cat sitter cant find anyone with the key to her place, so I need to drive into Cambridge to get it, which will ruin my plan to go to Harvard Square. I try several times to reach people with a key in vain. On the way into town, I decide to try one more time and reach someone who can let me into her apartment.

5. I decide to call Johnny on the fly and see if he wants to meet up tonight instead at Harvard Square. He's home and availvable and agrees. We meet, have coffee, talk business, go for a walk and part ways.

6. I wander around the city. My feet hurt from new shoes and an unexpected walk so I look for a new pair. Then tt gets too late to go to the bookstore I always go to so I head back to my car. I guess you know what happens next...

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Memories of Summer


I don't remember a lot about my childhood, just bits and snippets. I know that every summer we went to Florida- June, July, and August. Each time, my parents were determined to buy a condo and we spent a great part of our summer condo hunting. Some days we would go to the hotel pool or the beach and when the rain came in the late afternoon, we would go to the mall. Other days we would look at condos and houses. I remember the Florida heat, sitting in the back seat of the rental car and the times I didn't want to go in another house or condo and chose instead to wait in the car. The heat never bothered me. I remember getting so hot that I got goosebumps and thinking that you could get so hot that you got cold.

At night, we would drive around expensive neighborhoods, to catch a glimpse of well lit living rooms and manicured lawns. My mother would ogle over the large chandeliers in the foyers and I would chime in and say "Look at that one." I would feel good when my mom agreed. My father would say things like "Look at that, she's a beaut. Do you think we would be happy if we lived there?" and when he saw a kids on bicycles or playing ball, he would say "look, you could be friends with them if we lived here." It was a constant world of make believe and what ifs and fantasy as we tried to picture ourselves living in those neighborhoods, walking those streets and befriending those people.

I was a quiet and apparently neurotic only child with a great ability to amuse myself. As we tromped from real estate office to real estate office, I would collect the business cards, much in the same way that I collected stickers. Each office we would walk into, I would discreetly go from desk to desk and take a card. I had a huge pile of them, at least 100 or 150. I would alphabetize them, first by last name within each brokerage office and then by the brokerage office name itself. At first the cards were in a coffee tin, that I had decorated with stickers, but eventually they made it into a burgundy red photo album with gold trim, similar to the one I had my sticker collection in. I spent hours organizing the cards on the gold-trimmed sticky pages.

When I look back, I see the organization of the cards as a way to gain some control of the chaos all around me. Looking back, I realize how bizarre my parents behavior was- all that condo hunting and they never even bought anything. It doesn't make sense. They had the money. The hotel costs alone would have justified buying- 12 weeks of hotel fees plus all the meals out. I don't understand it. Was it fear of commitment? Or more likely that my dad was more content with the distraction it all created, the excitement of it all, the possibility, like playing make believe.