“I have just the thing to do with those chicken thighs that you bought,” called his voice up the stairs. ($0.99/lb family pack chicken thighs, bought in gross lot and broken down into four-packs, stuck into ziplocs. It is a measure of progress in the Waldorf/Statler Curmudgeon household that Waldorf now buys Ziplocs, after a lifetime of generic flimsy plastic bags and twist ties. Joan Crawford? Wire hangers. Me? Twist-ties. The freezer-quality ziploc, it is a wondrous multi-purpose kitchen gadget Worth The Investment, especially if you buy the econo-pack of 100 they sell at Target.)
“Oh? What’s that?” I was going to make them into a cacciatore-style dish based on a rabbit recipe I’d seen oh, whenever ago, from a columnist in the NYTwhosecookbooks I’ve coveted but never actually bought.
“A curry. You know, I have always wanted to make a curry, and yet, I never quite do.” (He seems to forget, he once did. There’s a jar of Major Grey’s still in the fridge. I think I was 10 when he made it, an elaborate dish out of the 1974 Joy of Cooking, because back then, that was what passed for an “international cookbook.” Over the years, despite multiple refrigerator purges, I’ve left the chutney in there as a science experiment, because as far as I can tell, the stuff simply doesn’t go bad. I tasted some when I first moved back in. Still sticky and completely sweet and disgusting, just like I remembered.)
“Sounds fine to me.”
I went back to reading, glad he was showing interest in the day. He’s had a bad cold and been very lethargic, plus out of it from the cold meds– he just sat there and played solitaire when I came in hours before with all the grocery bags and did nothing as I put them away. I kind of wanted to Hulk/Spock/superhero/rageoid metaphor of your choice-smash. Instead, I may have slammed the non-slammable freezer door rather vigorously. But by this time, I had calmed down. SSRIs are awesome that way. So is deep breathing.
Ah. He’d been using the paternal-indirect first tense, the one that actually meant “Would you please cook that curry recipe for me?”
I looked it up, stifling annoyance since I was feeling a little cold-ish myself, and he’d been lounging around all day, why couldn’t he do it? (Because I’m the better cook now, that’s why, he would say. I didn’t ask the question aloud.) Conveniently, it was by the same cookbook author whose recipes I’d been meaning to try. I put on my fleece and went out to get the cilantro at the corner meat market (we have one, it’s good, and they’ve actually got enough produce that fresh cilantro can really be had…) along with cat litter and some other sundries he couldn’t recall when I’d made the grocery list first thing this morning, then came back and started the curry.
No. Wait. I get ahead of myself. First, I set the table with this week’s flowers to myself. I also set it with the red provencal tablecloth I’d bought Waldorf for Christmas, after he very subtly said “I’ve always wanted one of those Provencal-type tablecloths from Williams-Sonoma.” In some things, he is direct.
Then, I brought the recipe up on the web browser of my beloved e-reader gadget, the one my husband kindly got for me when I said, not-at-all subtly, that gee, I would really like to drink my employer’s Kool-Aid, now that the thing came in color and had a web browser and had a touchscreen. (I still <3 it, even though we’ve got a newer, faster device.)
I engaged in the deboning of chicken thighs and marinating of meat in dry spices for the minimum half hour that the recipe called for.
In hindsight, I found the curry to be a little bit bland. That may have been because it only marinated for 30 minutes, but I think, too, it just wasn’t spicy enough for my taste. It was tasty– just not tasty enough. Next time, I would double the cumin and make sure to use a tsp. of tabasco (I used 1/4 tsp. this time), as well as the double the amount of fresh ginger and garlic. I would also make sure to use at least 2 tsps. of salt, since the recipe doesn’t specify an amount and I find that when you’re dry-brining meat, 2 tsps. is the minimum amount you need to get the flavor absorption going. I’ve been a bit spacy myself, though, and I only added a generous pinch of salt. It wasn’t really enough.
While the meat was marinating, I made the carrot raita. Really, this was the best thing about the recipe, refreshing and crunchy and sweet and tangy– and I added more tabasco to mine at the table, so it was also a little bit zippy. I did leave out the mint and chives, since my meat market didn’t have any and I pretty much loathe mint in any event, but I did chop some cilantro (pardon the fuzzy focus):
I added it to the raita right-a before serving. (Sorry.) It was awfully pretty, in addition to being quite tasty.
I also made some basmati, adding some salt, butter, white cardamom pods smashed with the butt of my knife, and tabasco to the water.
After I’d browned the onions and chicken like the recipe called for:
I started some frozen peas, tarting up the water with equal pinches of salt and sugar and a small knob of butter. Because it’s curry, and you’ve got to have peas. (Well, Madhur Jaffrey may have something different to say about that, but not at the places where I get takeout.)
The rice came out nicely fluffy & moist.
I don’t recall where I read the trick or the ratio (maybe Mark Bittman?), but I used 2 1/2 cups water to 1 cup of rice, didn’t bother with rinsing, and turned the heat off while there was still some water left to be absorbed into the rice, maybe with 3–4 minutes left in the cooking, and then just left the lid on while everything else finished up. I’ve found this trick works with pretty much every kind of rice that I cook (jasmine, Carolina, Uncle Ben’s, veeeeery occasionally brown), and that way I don’t burn it.
The curry looked pretty, too.
It was tasty enough with a little more salt and tabasco at the table. If I’d had fresh limes, those would have been improving as well. Following my lead, Waldorf surreptitiously added both to his dish, then helped himself to seconds.
“That’s a pretty good curry you made.” I do a pretty good deadpan, sometimes.
Waldorf nodded. “It is. More cumin or something, next time, I think.”
I agreed. “You could toast the spices a little bit longer, maybe.”
He forked up another mouthful and chewed. “Maybe I could.”
I’ve been on staycation this week– I have ridiculous amounts of vacation that on my cruddy retail salary I can never use up and go someplace useful, and I’ve been feeling more than a little bit burnt, that whole recent wicked bad depression thing to the side.
So– I stayed home, helped the electrician find the wires in our old (1901) house’s walls, did streaming Netflix (that Stan Lee, he may be on to something with that Marvel dare I say franchise?) as I glutted myself on the BBCSherlock Series 1 and the pre–Avengers movies (superheroes and shit blowing up YAY, although Iron Man 1 was by far my favorite), start/read/finished a whole bunch of books (George Mann’s The Affinity Bridge and The Osiris Ritual (steampunk Victorian mystery series with a smattering of romance), W.S. Merwin’s The Shadow of Sirius (poetry, oh, I love Merwin so), Jaimy Gordon’s Lord of Misrule (amazing, a little hard to slog through until you get into it, but the voices and the world that she builds, it’s like McCarthy’s The Road in the challenge it presents to the reader but it’s so very rewarding), dipped some more into The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis (the perfect bedside book, really, because it’s big and yet the stories tend to be very short), and discovered a poet called William Matthews via The Writer’s Almanac, whose Selected Poems I downloaded onto my Nook (his poems are taking my breath away, daily.) Then, I totally wallowed in Naomi Novik’s Temeraire series through #4, because you’ve got to have a little Napoleonic naval captain and his sentient, literate dragon fantasy-action-adventure to break up all that serious reading.
I also saw The Artist. If you don’t see any other Oscar-nominated movie, see this one. There’s a dog, who does all the silent movie dog things to utter perfection. And James Cromwell. (Worth the price of admission alone.) And John Goodman. (Also worth the price of the ticket.) But oh. Oh. The main actors. And the story. The silent movie paean, while still being utterly modern. It’s just– everything that they say and more.
Yesterday, I met up with Jen from Knitting Interrupted. I’ve been meaning to meet up with Jen for, oh, I don’t know, I’d say … forever. She lives about a three hour drive from my house and so it’s long enough to give serious pause– and she’s got two boys, so her making the haul up to my place is even more of an issue. But. She’s moving to Florida, so there, that was it. The fire under my butt to drive the six hour round trip to see her. Because the thing with this blog thing is– we’re all friends who just haven’t met yet, and I’ve known Jen practically since the start of my blogging, back when I used to do this more regularly and was funnier, cooked more, whined a lot less, and was better about minding blog etiquette, including visiting commenters’ blogs, commenting back, responding to comments– you know. Blog 1.0 stuff, not to drive traffic, but just because it’s simple good manners. I need to do more of that.
It was an awesome visit, not in the least because her precocious boys treated me like a visiting anthropologist and needed to show me Everything That They Do during their homeschooling day, at least until her oldest got bored with me until he wasn’t. : ) I’ve yet to meet someone I’ve known through this blog (or, with a few I-knew-it-would-be-like-that-in-advance exceptions in my online dorky fandom adventures) who hasn’t been someone with whom I could just sit down and say– “Yeah. This is cool. You’re even more you than I already thought you would be.”
We talked of many things (though not ships, shoes, sealing wax, cabbages or kings), including the ups and downs of blogs, the proliferation of content delivery means (FB, G+, Twitter, Tumblr, blogs, Livejournal) and how it can all just get overwhelming in terms of what to keep up with and the decision of how much information about yourself to put out there. We talked about self-editing when we post, the desire to be fair, and the fact that the Internet Contains All Useful Things, so the pedagogy about memorization and rote knowledge is something that maybe educators should question– though I do love, love my books, not just my Nook (which is bright and shiny and awesome and lets me carry more books than I can ever read in a week in my bag), and there’s a secret part of me that believes in belts and suspenders and lives in fear of the Zombie apocalypse and eyes the Storey’s Country Skills and otherbooks of that ilk at work with booklust bordering on weirdness. (What? I don’t eye the back corner of my Dad’s yard and think CHICKENS and then check the zoning laws. I totally don’t.) I mentioned how I’ve been mulling over this interesting NYT article in terms of my own FB feed and trying to decide how to use my G+ feed, since I don’t, really, and I don’t Tweet or Tumble at all and have no desire to, and the “ham sandwich” posts on FB? IDK. I need to condense stuff, figure out what I really want to say, and not Use All The Platforms just because they’re there. I need to figure out who I want in my FB, whether to link my blog there, rethink my “anonymity” here, where I backlink this blog. I need to prioritize my content. God, that sounds fucking pretentious. But isn’t winnowing one’s online accounts an extension of life, deciding what levels you want to engage your relationships on? And then doing it, because that’s the hard part…
We talked about our various life changes, the universe, everything. It was great, and far too short a visit, considering that I’d have to brave traffic on the way home– but also because I was starting to feel a little aaah these kids are really adorable but boy they want a lot of interaction Jen is a HERO gee I really love Jen a lot this is a great conversation I kind of really need to leave now and process all of this input before I explode. I wish like hell I hadn’t put my visit off for so long.
On the ride home, in the rain, as I listened to Florence and the Machine’s Ceremonials, Foo Fighters’ Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace, then flipped radio channels and waited to see what the radio gods sent me (I do love it when they send Diana Ross)– I mulled over the theme I’ve been thinking about a lot recently– denial and self-denial, even when there’s no reason for it. Those emotions/coping skills are separate from fear/anxiety and attendant procrastination, though I’ve also got those in spades. But it brought up the question, one I wrote down on an index card and posted on a corkboard I have on my wall, along with other things I try to look at and inspire myself with (including a nifty, nifty Dalek washcloth Jen knitted for me).
What are you waiting for?
I’ve been writing here about how I’ve felt lonely– that’s no one’s fault but my own. I have lovely friends– all of you, and in real life, and I do socialize, do make appointments so I get the hell out of the house and out of my head. I need to make more friends, however, single ones I don’t know from work or from my marriage, because in the end, I’ve got to re-learn how to put myself out there. It’s been a long time since I’ve been on my own, without any buffer. My edges are raw. I have no pretensions that it won’t be anything but painful and awkward, and that sometimes I’ll have to shoot someone an email (or a blog post) after that says “It’s not you, it’s me.” (Oh, HAI, Jen.) I am someone who takes a long time to open up for all that I blah blah blah here– but these posts, too, are carefully crafted, and I do leave things unsaid. (Yeah, hard to believe.)
I can be anxious and twitchy when meeting new people, even ones I’ve known online for years. I get overwhelmed in large groups pretty easily, and whether that’s a cognitive thing or a function of shyness or my anxiety, well, I don’t know. I just know I need buffers, sometimes. When my brother-in-law used to hold his big Thanksgiving turkey fry-up, I’d go hide in the kitchen and carve up the turkeys because that gave me something on which I could focus– and I only then had to make small talk with the few people who could fit around the carving board, so– whittling down my options to something I could handle. My husband is charming and funny, able to make small talk with just about anyone, and able to draw me into the conversation with what I always felt (and still feel) was overly effusive praise of my merits. I’m not all that sterling, and his praise of me always made me feel squirmy because my self-esteem issues aside, I’m just not that awesome. Still, though. Going to events with him was far easier than going alone.
One of my favorite authors is Haven Kimmel– and she wrote a book called The Solace of Leaving Early, in which the main character, who’s had a breakdown, (crankily) falls in love with another misfit. I don’t recall the exact passage and whether she’s trying to explain it to someone or just recollecting some time– but there’s this pitch-perfect bit about leaving while the getting is good and she, the shy person, is still feeling engaged, even though the evening/event isn’t nearly over.
I’m going to find that passage and write it on the Corkboard of Inspirational Stuff, because next week I’m going to my first support group meeting for divorced and separated people and I am terrified, even as I inwardly snark that it’s AA-Divorce. I bookmarked social groups for single women looking to make friends, single and divorced loser ladies, my self esteem says, but. Baby steps. I will eventually try them out. I will. Really.
If the meeting gets overwhelming, I can leave early. But at least I’ll have gone. And who knows? Maybe it won’t. Either way, I can try. I can leave early. I can always go back. But I won’t meet the friends that might be there if I don’t go.
My friend Becca is the editor for a local Patch paper here in the Boston area– and she put together this lovely, lovely video a la “When Harry Met Sally” about what it takes to make it through marriage. One of the oldest couples talks about it taking 100% and 100% and– oh. It’s just perfect, and full of advice that works whether you’re married or not. Happy Valentine’s, all. May you have a wonderful day.
The choice of what to take, what to leave—it was excruciating, trying to figure out what went in the box(es). In the end, it was essentially arbitrary, because I tried to be fair and leave my husband things he could use or might have some attachment to—yet. I had to be fair to myself—take the things that I’d bought or were mine or were things that damnit, I wanted or just would use more– because we weren’t talking about it, and wasn’t that the crux of the problem, afraid to ask, afraid to answer, and not understanding even when words did make it out into the air? I felt ground down, crushed by all the decisions I’d made and would have yet to make in the future once I’d moved out, once that part of the leaving was done—but still, I had to figure out—which wine glasses to leave? Which ones to keep?
I did the dishes as I waited for my little brother to arrive with the truck. I’ve no idea why—probably to stave off the sobbing that began as I stood on the sidewalk and regarded the way all my things, whittled down, hardly filled up U-Haul’s smallest—I lost it when there were only four boxes left still to load, and my poor brother, he tries, but emotions? He deals with them differently than I do, and his back patting was awkward for both of us, though he knew I needed his sweaty hug at the moment. Before, though, I was washing the dishes and staving off crying at the ridiculous thing I noted at the edge of my vision—the microwave read “End,” a punch to the chest. I’d never noticed that ever before, not in the years—years—that we’d owned the thing. Dishes were always his job, since I did the large part of the cooking and shopping, and if I’d ever registered what the microwave gave as a final message upon completing its nuclear task, it wasn’t ‘til now that I saw. Understood. Knew.
It was ending. Really.
I looked around what had once been my kitchen—and now would no longer be, though maybe there’d be a conversation later on about the butcher block, a gift from my dad when we first started out, but it wasn’t like I had someplace to put it and loading it up, that would be spiteful—and no. I hadn’t missed anything.
Except.
My pepper grinder, the blonde one, the tall one, the one my dad gave me when I got my first apartment, moved out of my Mom’s house and started law school and we went to the Crate and Barrel at the Chestnut Hill Mall because a girl’s got to have freshly ground pepper in her trousseau—it sat in its place next to the stove. It was the first of many knives, pots and pans I got over the years—and I packed most, though not all of them back up when I moved.
I’d thought to leave it—a gesture, I don’t know of what, maybe just that he’d need to grind some pepper, it’s not like there weren’t other Lucite grinders in the house— but in the end, no matter how much I’d changed, how much I still am planning on changing, that one blonde oversized pepper grinder has seen me through more microwaves, more ends and beginnings, since I started to try to be an adult. I grabbed it. Held it. Put it in a bag of odds and ends and distinctly thought to myself—fuck it. It’s my pepper grinder, part of who I am, that cooking thing that sometimes I do when I can get up the interest, not be so wrapped in my head that I can’t express my interest, my love for others by melting some butter, heating a pan, chopping some onions, seasoning to taste.
Pepper is one of the oldest and most frequently used of all spices, right up there with salt. It heightens flavors, but it also preserves. Every time I look at my grinder on top of the shelf over my Dad’s gas range, much less use it to add spice to some dish—I’ll remember. Middles and endings, but also—beginnings.
The span of ribcage and collarbone displayed over a tank top or other low-cut shirt by a woman with very small breasts. Said woman may even dispense with wearing a bra on occasion.
Usage:
“Dude, check out that clavage on the chick with the Browncoats cami. She’s pretty cute.“
“I don’t know, man, she’s kind of skinny.“
“Nah, man, I dig a gal with visible ribs.” (ed. I originally wrote something crasser here and then changed my mind… it’s my blog, I can write from my id if I want to…)
Alt. usage:
“I love that new sequined tank from Old Navy on you. It really shows off your clavage. You have such nice skin.“
“Thanks. I really love your new jeans. They really show off your ass(ets.) That cute girl over there is checking you out.”
She Curmudgeon: attempting to embrace her skinny minnie look in 2012, buy pants that fit, and displaying lots of clavage at a bookstore somewhere.
I joke that my Dad is the picture of curmudgeon when you look up the term in the dictionary, and in my head, it’s true. But I’m not easy to live with either, these last months and more. (The bipolar diagnosis was really only official confirmation of the coaster one rides when you roll with me on a regular basis.) You could call me moody, to put it lightly. Subverbal at the end of a workday, often. Don’t ask me for input on supper (much less ask me to take over the cooking of it at 8:30 at night when I walk in the door because I’d rather have cheese sticks and whisky) at the end of a long mid-shift. And don’t prompt me for conversation at table, much less expect me to continue my explanation after Dad in his Waldorf mode interrupts me with one of his rants about how the world should be rather than letting me continue with my explanation of how it actually is (much less how my day went) …. No. Like a puppet whose strings have been cut, I fall back into the habits of childhood, feeling disanimated and slumped, at least when I don’t have my full crank on and give back my best Statler, my own internal eighty-year-old fully engaged as we have at one another. (And yes, there are parts of the house upholstered with gilt fringe and velvet, in case you wondered.)
So there are times when I say “No. Never mind.” I don’t always have it in me to yell at him for interrupting me yet again or going off on a rant at the stupidities of the retail world in general or my store in specific—because I don’t have the heart to explain how I’m yet too heartbroken to muster the courage to find someplace new, someplace where he thinks (and I don’t disagree) I could put my legal/intellectual skills to better use but where I– on days where I am less inclined to think I’m a general failure and yet—think I will be challenged enough, paid more and yet not be too stressed to burn myself out before I can recognize (unlike the last time(s))—“Hey. I’m getting burnt out.” Having a conversation with him about the camaraderie of other-job-misfits, my fellow manager-nerd-artist-heroes, the tiny victories of real customer service, the thrill when the thousand small gods of bookselling help me find the answers the customers need and get all the stock out—those are lost on my purely intellectual papa, a man who’s never lived outside his own head or heaved freight for an underpaid living. The gardening pickaxe, the gentleman’s heirloom tomatoes, the power tools in the basement… that practical know-how, transmitted to me and used up cherry pickers and girders and in too many shitty college and grad school apartments to count as I rewired Salvation Army lamps and re-sanded and repainted floors and ran new phone extensions– they are all transmissions of knowledge, of sorts, an expression of love in its way. He can’t just come out and say so—but he can show me something he thinks is useful to know.
It’s why I don’t have it in me to yell at him for repeating the behaviors I found so hurtful (intentional or not, and I knew that they usually weren’t but habits—goddamn them to hell…) in my husband, and because—after all—isn’t it often the truth that we marry our fathers? (“It takes us until we’re at least forty-two to get over the things that happened to us with our parents,” he announced one night at supper, recounting a conversation he’d had one day at work with a coworker. “Forty-two, hunh?” Waldorf sipped his horrid caffeine-free Diet Coke. “Give or take a few years.” He knows. We just don’t talk about Waldorf v. Statler outright that often.) I do, at other times, try to mention when I am calmer, less overtly hurt, that I find it hard to respond to certain ways of his behaving because of (whatever reason du jour). He tries. He tries awfully hard. He buys gluten free brownie mix for me, and buys my protein bars. If I show the vaguest interest in something concrete, he is an enthusiast for it, even when my energy flags (and then I feel guilty about disappointing him… a bad circle to get in. Still, though, he tries.) So. I try in return.
I tried with my husband. It didn’t work then, though the open questions of when I should have realized what and what and how I should have tried will be questions I’ll ask for … who knows. Right now, I am trying to set them aside and just say—I tried. I don’t imagine I’ll get that far with my father. But I can at least say my piece and (sometimes literally) retire the field if I get too aggravated. Sometimes, I even get an apology in the morning, even if I get a splutter or an accusation of sulking at the particular moment when I put my foot down and say no. Stop it. You hurt my too-tender, stupid bipolar feelings. I would like to not sulk, not to retreat into my clamshell or get sullen or slam things—but short of that, at least being honest is something better than saying nothing at all and working myself into the sneaky hate spiral.
He said not long after I first moved back in—“I wish there was some way you could find to not feel things so badly.” I know that it’s part of it (at least, that’s what I’m hoping that’s what I pay my therapist for), aside from the whole thing of being bipolar– though where the pathology ends and my inherently romantic and sensitive, anxious personality begins is an Ourobouros, a Gordian Knot, an Icarus no matter which inept tradition I try to analogize to. I am too sensitive to his brusqueness that is nothing but his habit of living alone and his own social ineptness. I am too sensitive to the fact that everyone has their own shit and the universe is generally indifferent. I know it’s not about me 98% of the time. And yet, that’s precisely what hurts so very much, and why that Auden poem is both exactly right and totally wrong. I have been both the more loving and the more indifferent (entirely self-involved/depressed/obtuse/take your pick) party. It hurts, either way, to realize, later, that the people about whom you’re supposed to care have been ignored when they needed attention—or at least that’s how I feel. And I feel it intensely—prolongedly. Too long—and yet, I’ve not so far in these 37 years, learned quite yet how to stop caring so long or so much.
He’s said, too, that he would have done better if he could be more patient with people or make some effort to like them—but at his age (pushing 70, hard) he’s not likely to change. There is something to be said for the Irish personality type/essential belief that work occupies a soul and one should simply keep one’s self busy—but down time will happen, and he’s prone to loneliness, too. I know that I am his only real friend. I need to buck the hell up and force myself to conversation despite the fact that I feel crushed, often. The mere fact that I’m not committing suicide because it would probably give him a heart attack finding my body isn’t enough. I need more self esteem, damnit. (Rereading those two sentences makes me laugh-snorfle-cry. I think that’s probably good, at least the laugh part.) I need to pretend to be cheery until I can learn to do it again. I need to be more patient even when I am depressed and exhausted and feeling heartbroken, still, over something I need to just—not ever forget because you don’t forget love and the way that it hurts when you no longer love and are loved in the same way you were at its first blush– but that it shouldn’t spoil the memories of that first blush, either. I need to accept that there are new stories to write and that while this one didn’t end happily, it doesn’t make it a bad story, not overall. I need to accept that this story is over, and I’m starting a new one.
Aren’t all stories love stories of one kind or another, either the finding or losing, the having or lack, the loss or the gain or something the cycle of all of those things? There are all kinds of love, all kinds of ways it can be subjected, objected to and objectified—but those people and things we desire and loathe and thus form our actions in response to—of course we write our stories as ballads of love.
“Love’s awfully hard,” he said, about a month after I first moved back in and was willing to actually talk a bit about things. He never came out and asked, and I wasn’t ready to volunteer very much. He never pressed. “Marriage is one of the hardest things two people can do. You have to not be too hard on yourself if it doesn’t work out, because there are two people in it, and if you’re both not pushing toward the same point, even when you’re both trying…. And if there aren’t children….” He shrugged, looking off to the side of my face in the way that he has of never looking straight at me that he has when discussing emotions, because they make him squirmy. “You have to take some time off and know that loving another person is just rough.” And then we went outside and hacked the privet hedge in the front into shape.
So.
I love my husband very much. And he loves me. And I know him well in some ways, and he likewise. And in other ways, both of us have failed to know one another in critical ways, either because we have changed, or because we never knew one another as well as we hoped, or because we were scared to tell one another about the scariest parts of ourselves, or because we were or are scared to know what those parts are and share them, and they have to be shared if we’re going to move forward. We had lots of fun. Laughed. Showed up places dressed in the same colors. Finished one another’s sentences, often. Tried to give one another considerate gifts. And yet, the story ends sadly because once we discovered the facts, we discovered that the things that were scary about me and the scary things that I needed and learned about me were not things he could know, no matter how well he knew and loved me (and was often the more loving one, oh, he loved me and loves me so well, better than anyone else has, even Waldorf) in so many other ways—and those things were decisive. We couldn’t just go back to our corners and hack privet hedges until the next morning because at some point, we’d gotten past the point where that would be useful. I could tell the story as a Russian-length novel with all the banalities of everyday life and worries about property, or Eliot-esque in the ways in which people change, age, fail themselves and the people around them, Flaubert-like in the hyperbolic obsession with feeling and striving the heroine has, though the parallels aren’t so close upon too close a scrutiny (no infidelity, for starters) and I wouldn’t like anyone to compare my husband with poor, put-upon, oblivious Charles.
So when the person who I love the most in the world doesn’t love me in the ways that I need to solve that story’s problems, that story has to end. A new one begins. It’s not a sequel. Call it a new chapter—whatever—but there’s a discontinuity as I break both our hearts and wallow a while and Waldorf and I elbow each other as we try to make room for each other inside this new novella of curmudgeonly grumbling about who fed the cat and who’s going to make dinner and why can’t you put the spatulas back where they belong even when Waldorf can never put them anywhere but in three different crocks his own self. Meanwhile, I reread the book of my marriage and try to learn lessons about how I should proceed differently in the future– without dwelling too much on the happy parts that will make me cry because I am lonely, or becoming too bitter about the things that didn’t work and so I could be angry at me or at my husband (two to tango and all) as I remind myself– books are for learning, not just enjoyment. I try to tick off the lessons.
Asking for help. Speaking my truth, even if it’s of anger and hurt. Doing things for myself and not waiting for them to be done unto me– even if I think others should know, even if I have asked. Being grateful when the nice things do happen—and not expecting them otherwise, because—indifference is the norm, and I shouldn’t let it reduce me to tears, though often it does. I’m awfully lonely, and not just because I miss my husband. But there are things I can do to remind myself that I am deserving.
To wit, I can buy my own flowers.
Every week. Without fail. Sometimes two bouquets a week, if I can afford it. Symbolic and therefore inherently meaningless in some meta sense? Yes. Symbolic to me, and therefore subjectively meaningful to me? Absolutely.
I like flowers. I like watching them unfold and all that possibility happen. Yes. They’re going to die, such ephemeral things. But while they live– oh, but the beauty. I like watching them across their life cycle, even like watching them in their dishabille as they wilt and flutter and die, dropping their petals and browning, like a debutante developing wattles and liver spots as she becomes a matron—but the fine bones of her coming-out photo are still visible under it all.
Waldorf has never asked about my flowers—but at my birthday, he gave me a Waterford vase. “For your floral habit,” he said.
And not every week, but some, he brings me home tulips. Or roses. Or cheap daisies or mums. I fill them with white flowers a lot, because I love how they glow against the crystal. It isn’t a vase I would have chosen myself, but Waldorf’s old-fashioned lace-curtain Irish and a Waterford vase is part of a lady’s dowry, I suppose. It’s a vote of confidence, too, I guess. I still get dowry presents.
Those semi-occasional grocery flowers (and the replacements for the protein bars of mine that he eats, the Friday night dinner dates that we keep) offset the grumbles and sighs and interruptions, the feelings that I’ve become a worry and disappointment—feelings that, if I said them aloud, he’d probably refute but which I’m not (not yet) brave enough to be a Statler curmudgeon and get testy about, state my piece and my intentions as a way of getting my nerve up to actually do it. (Would that it worked that way, hmm?)
Along with the camera (that Waldorf bought me, because I like to take photos) I need to do a better job about taking pictures of my weekly flowers. It’ll remind me not to miss a week. And to use my camera, because if I can’t have a long conversation with Waldorf with eye contact that says—thanks, Dad, I love you, too?
The least Statler can do is take some damned pictures.
I was at my hairdresser’s (among a kajillion other things yesterday including a colonscopy and celiac biopsy YAY that was not fun) yesterday and the client before me was hanging around hogging my time to hang out with my cool hairdresser when she said something that will allow me to forgive her. She said– “My mom’s dog won’t stop licking her plush velvet sofa. And she’s okay with that.” The face she made in the mirror was epic.
HOWDOYOUNOTMAKETHATTHEOPENINGOF A BOOK?
And a few weeks ago there was a very silly “that’s what she said” exchange that really only made sense if you were there except just to say it culminated in the very silly concluding purchase that followed between my fellow employees– if, say, I was a female hapless Bradley Cooper type and one of the other guys in the conversation was Zach Galifinakis and then the third person was Betty White, and Betty White was buying a hot stone massage kit, and Zach Galifinakis said– “Come on, where else are you gonna get a hot rock massage for under ten bucks? You’d have to roll down the side of a volcano.” And Betty White shrugged and said– “I bet the volcano would be a pretty fun time.”
I think we need to start a site. I don’t know. Call it novel first lines. Like, plot bunnies, free for adoption. People can post good one liners or scenarios or other ideas, and other people can just go and comment. Or steal. Or write national book award winners, and they’ll owe it all to that velvet-licking dog.
(Or maybe it just needs to be a site called Random Crazy Shit People Say. And then people can meme it, make pictures and backgrounds and tshirts and shit, and then I can quit my retail job and become an Internet mogul off the eavesdropping skills of the world.)
But the dog with the velvet thing really did happen. The hot stone massage exchange, too, though my eyes aren’t nearly as twinkly as Mr. Cooper’s.
Shame is only worth feeling if there is blame.
No one learns all there is to know of themselves
over a lifetime,
much less all there is to someone else.
You can try.
Sometimes, it just doesn’t work.
It doesn’t mean that sometimes,
you didn’t know me better than anyone else.
This last time, you reminded me of things
I forgot and needed to know.
Darling (you are) if I am crushed by our failures of mutual trying,
if I am not the rock I imagined,
then I am going to stop being ashamed of
how long I’ve wallowed in the crushing
if you will agree– you loved me better than
anyone else has so far.
If my tears moisten the aggregate and
rock-dust that’s left in the rubble,
I won’t feel ashamed that I forgot for a while
that the Romans used concrete to build roads.
Roads we use for new journeys, even if we look back.
And all of a sudden he took an unwarranted turn — im– pulsive, convulsive… And it ends this way: He has not been forgiven, not that he wants to be. What he wants is to know what he saw, that it was– n’t theatrics.
I don’t know what I think about forgiveness, because I worry about theatrics on my part, even as I think, all these months later– yes. I will mix all those worries and convictions into the concrete and see where the road takes me.
1) you (meaning I, I use the distancing second person here) can call your shrink and finally admit “I am having strong suicidal ideation, I want to take all my pills, I have to take lots of my benzos in order to get through work, I am afraid to go home and be alone, the only thing that stops me right now is the thought that I will give my father a heart attack” and then have a detailed conversation about all the reasons (and non-reasons, because the fact is, yes, you’ve got a lot going on, but the fact, too, is, you’re also just crazy and it’s grey out and winter) you feel so hopeless and helpless with a fairly low threshold of sobbing and a reasonable level of ability to think about it more clearly once I’ve finally been able to say– yeah. I really want to do it, but I’ve been very, very, carefully rationing myself to just the meds I am supposed to be taking. And then they give you more pills, except this time, magically, you don’t have the urge to take all of them all at once. And there’s a new pill. (You pray.)
2) how long it can take to realize 1).
3) how much of a difference it makes to hear someone say “I would really miss you if you did that,” or “I really wish that you wouldn’t” or “you seem really blue, are you okay?” and the overwhelming, overflowing sadness and joy that provokes at the same time, and how afterward, you berate yourself for withdrawing inside your head and not telling someone or even asking someone to say– I feel really helpless and hopeless and heartbroken and lonely. Would you please tell me I’m worth something? But then you remind yourself not to berate yourself too much because, hey. Sometimes, you’re crazy. And if that’s not okay, well, it’s still okay, if you know what I mean.