While your heart still beats
The pavement was slick and there were
potholes and too many trees by the side of the winding
road. The first to go were two juniors who were cutting
school, doing what teenage boys do, driving too fast,
maybe drinking or passing a bowl while the tires
screeched and the car fishtailed. They ended up upside
down in the creek that snaked by the road. They died.
There were others in high school who died in car
accidents, too, though at this point I mainly remember
the names of the survivors (thanks, Facebook,
with your updated images of people from the past).
Since my grandmother
died, I’ve
developed a strong sense of mortality, of my own, of
other peoples’, of the various cats and dogs that
have been in my life. Sometimes it hits me more than
others, generally when I’m feeling low and isolated,
when the sun hasn’t been out in weeks. It doesn't
help that I've been spending an hour or two a day
writing out the details of illness and death for my
novel manuscript. And I’ll have dreams about these
people, the
dead from high school, usually as represented by
David Anderson, the last one to die, the one who
made it into the yearbook, a ghost by the time the
book was printed.
There are other “deads” as my son calls them, like
Carolin, a friend from college who had some sort of
birth defect that we never discussed. She’s been gone
for seventeen years, sometimes still visits me in my
dream version of our college dorm. My grandfather shows
up less and less now as I deal with the past, though I
am sometimes reminded of how much there is to deal with
(another nod to Facebook, where people who knew me
peripherally during one of the darkest times in my life
show up, and I remember just how bad it was and I want
to die with the memory).
As I was wrestling again with that long-ago past,
something that I keep thinking should be a “dead”
itself at this point, as I was having a good cry after
washing the dishes Thursday night, Nora, our Russian
squirrel hound, came clicking into the kitchen. She
likes to comfort the sad and inexplicably lonely,
especially if it involves a pat or two for her. I knelt
down to stroke her chest and was struck again with
memory. There I was, ten years old, in what used to be
my grandmother’s room, petting Greta the miniature
schnauzer. Greta's fur was warm and soft. She groaned
as I scratched behind her ears, reached out a paw as if
to say "Don't stop." At the time, I was struck with the
exquisite transience of it all, the way a heart stops
and the lungs give out, the vulnerability of our soft
bodies and delicate skulls. Disease creeps in. A car
slams into a tree and then into you. You ignore the
deep cough until it is too late. No matter the
trajectory of the story, we all know how it ends.
Greta was killed by a hit-and-run driver when I was in
seventh grade, about six months after we left my
grandfather's house for Wilmington. He let her out when
he was getting the mail. As he limped to the mailbox,
Greta trotted to a neighbor's yard. She was halfway
across the street when a car came tearing past and
knocked her into a ditch. Either the driver didn't see
her or didn't care to stop and my grandfather caught
only a glimpse of the car's tail lights. It was the
violent conclusion of Greta's brief story.
I knelt in the kitchen, my arms around Nora, and added
up the dead. I felt their hands in mine, the touch of a
gentle paw, the sound of a meow. Greta and I sat
together in the dusty sunlight, her eyes brown and
serious, her heartbeat strong. Sidney played a game of
capture, batted at the pencil I pushed under the
door. Louise
curled up on the
dining room table, a dog pretending to be a cat. I
brushed against a boy in a hallway as he ran by,
late for class. And my grandmother croaked out "Tie
a Yellow Ribbon" while I giggled from the swing that
hung from the maple tree. Even the tree is gone now,
but like the rest it exists in my memory, in the
stories I tell.
I held Nora tighter, tried to appreciate the moment,
knowing I would think about it when she was gone. And
the sweetness of it almost killed me.
Top photo by Jane Underwood,
Writing Salon
mistress and photographer extraordinaire.
Bottom photo by Mr. T from Nora's first week with us in
2003.
After writing this prompt and struggling with various
versions of it for the blog, I got out my senior high
school yearbook (theme: "A Unique Blend." I had
forgotten that high school yearbooks had themes), just
to check on some of the facts. There was David
Anderson, still in with the living seniors, but at the
front of the book was a dedication to three other
people from our class who had died, two of them in car
accidents: Pat O'Donoghue, Rob Klaczkiewicz, and Joe
Lombardino. There were others who died while I was at
school, specifically those upperclassmen in the first
paragraph of this post, though I could have some of my
facts wrong about the accident. They died in the
mid-80s, well before our lives were digitally
monitored, before you could have a Facebook page even
after death. The fact that there was no trace of these
young men made me sad. It was almost as if they had
never existed.
The slog and drag of the humdrum

Here are the things I don't write
about here:
My son's colds and coughs
Chores, like vacuuming up the fur, dust, and sand that
accumulate pretty quickly in a house with three cats, a
dog, and three humans
The laborious process of rewriting my novel (well, I
may mention this in passing, but not in great detail,
since that would send all of you to snoreland, but it
is indeed laborious, like work-on-the
same-three-paragraphs-for-six-or-seven-hours laborious)
The difficulty of writing something that is long-term,
of continuing through it without the instant feedback
of blogging
Cooking dinner whether I want to or not
How we're
figuring out where the kid will go to school for
kindergarten in the fall
Tips and tricks for keeping one's
sanity after weeks of rain and afternoons inside with
an energetic four-year-old
Coping mechanisms I use to see us through one of Mr.
T's business trips
My political views
Natural disasters
The pros and cons of having another child
The perhaps impossibility of having another child
My anxieties about the quality of my writing and the
wisdom of my current career choice
RIght now I'm stuck smack dab in the slog and drag of
the humdrum. The novel is taking precedence over the
blog and I don't feel like I have enough time to really
shine up any of my short pieces of fiction for this
space. I'm not sure that many people want to read the
fiction anyway. It seems that most readers are
interested in my personal pieces, either angst from the
past or my depressive musings on current life. Not that
my current stuff is all darkness, exactly, but I think
my views are cloudier than the average person's, cloudy
with a little patch of blue sky that expands as I
examine it, which can make the whole process hopeful, I
suppose, in a Jennifer Trinkle sort of way.
It feels as if my mind is preoccupied, that it is
working on something. I just need a few hours with a
keyboard to find out what it is. But who has the time?
I'd rather work on the novel or maybe that just feels
like the right thing to do right now, a necessity, a
way to lose myself in words and justify my existence.
So I'm not sure what to put in this space at the
moment, but I know my mind will crack open again and
offer itself up for material. In the meantime, I may be
posting more short writing prompts, or perhaps
reposting some of the oldies but
goodies.
We'll see.
Image: Everyday me, as recorded by
my computer.
Swann song

I miss the tall ginkgos with their rotting fruits, the
way the berries felt beneath my feet with just enough
crunch, a pleasure to step on. The sidewalk was covered
with ginkgo leaves, too, bright yellow fans dampened
with the rain. A storm had come through the night
before, had knocked the leaves off along with the
fruit. The air was full of the smell of them, acrid,
rotting, sweet.
We were lost and I was defensive about it, but if you
were going to be lost, this was the neighborhood to be
lost in. The street was tunneled in by wide brick
rowhouses, voluptuous Victorians with turrets and
whimsical windows accented with stone. Each house had a
set of black iron steps, shiny and slick,
one-two-three-four, up to the entry. The steps made
little caves over doors to English basements, a term
which conjures up mold and damp and a view of other
peoples’ ankles, the angling of a dog’s leg as it
releases a spray of urine against low iron window bars.
He got angry with me after I got angry with him and we
had an embarrassing fight in front Martha, a hissy fit
that revealed more than we intended. A tense moment
with the map revealed my mistake and our luck: we were
three blocks from Adams Morgan, a short walk to a few
cold beers and a platter of Ethiopian food. The three
of us marched from Swann Street to 18th Street, walked
uphill against a thin wind. It was getting dark, people
were bundled up against the cold. We walked without
talking, single-file past the homeless, the crazies,
the young people with their know-everything attitude.
And then we shared a meal with all the awkwardness of
something being over, knowing we had years to go before
it would really end.
This is from
a Round Robin prompt this week, my (slightly edited)
response to a very different
photograph.
Photo by Antediluvial.
I serve in this fashion

I trace an outline of my daughter’s hand on thin tissue
paper. The paper is pink as cotton candy and her hand
is limp. She is asleep.
I’ve spent the last weekend tracing her limbs and torso
while she sleeps, working my way up to her delicate
head and wispy hair. I just want to catch an idea of
that hair, a tendril here, a mass of frizz there. In
her sleep her toes flex like a dancer
en
pointe. I
follow the stretch of the arch of her foot, sweep up
the ball to the tip of her big toe. Elizabeth stirs and
tenses as the felt-tipped marker grazes her flesh, but
I am stalwart and stay the course, capture the foot for
posterity’s sake.
Elizabeth is three years old, red-haired and long of
limb. Her knees are like mine were when I was her age,
stretched and knobby all at once, awkward joints
connecting leg bones. I can already see how her hips
will jut out at thirteen, will buffer themselves in fat
and muscle. Buying pants will become almost impossible
for her, will become a source of frustration, and she
will start to wear slimming flat-front trousers with
wide legs no matter the going fashion. Her skinny legs
will protrude from an ample rump, those now-slight hips
will grow to temporarily house the wide skulls of
ten-and-a-half pound babies. She will slap the first
man who remarks on her child-bearing hips and then she
will marry him and bear two children in three years.
They will exhaust themselves with fights over money and
discipline. When she discovers that he's been sneaking
out to Bible study meetings and is on the road to
becoming born again, Elizabeth will leave him. I'll
take the family in, my 26-year-old daughter and her two
preschooler boys, will put aside my plans to redo the
upstairs in preparation to sell the place. She'll be
practically unemployable, her only experience being
reproducing and windexing the glass off the windows,
running a vacuum cleaner across the floor so thoroughly
that you could eat off of it. It will be as though she
were a teenager again, the petty little fights over who
left what dish in the sink without washing it, her
stealing my cigarettes and popping diet pills so she
can stay up all night. I will wonder what happened to
my golden years, my "me" time. She'll get an earful
every night.
Eventually she will go back to nursing school, will
find a new place to live and get a job. One of the
night-shift orderlies, an atheist, rational and
compelling, will seduce her with stories from his
service in the Persian Gulf. He'll move in after their
third date and will start whipping that fatherless
household into shape. The boys, teenagers by this time,
will be desperate to escape the two of them, sick of
the discussions of Ayn Rand and the tyranny of other
people's gods. There are other things that will keep
them away, the sounds that leak from the too-thin walls
of the tract house, the atheist's cries in the middle
of the night followed by the low dove-coos of their
mother soothing him. They will visit me for dinner
almost every night and I'll serve them roast beef and
potatoes, spaghetti and meatballs, fish sticks and
french fries. Sometimes one of the boys will sleep on
the pull-out couch, his brother in a sleeping bag on
the floor.
But for now Elizabeth is a little girl with chubby feet
and dimpled elbows. Her neck is thick, strong muscles
leading to an unremarkable chin that dips out blandly
from under her lower lip. Her dad and I are still
debating about whose nose she will have. All children
have cute button noses. It takes the hormones and
stretching of adolescence to reveal the nose’s true
nature.
Pictures of Atlantis

This is a record of young love and wobbly stability.
There's Mr. X in male cheesecake pose, lying in front
of the newly-planted impatiens in the backyard of our
first Columbus apartment. Here's Loudon the
sheltie-dog, a ball of fluff, on his first day
home. Sidney
and Zoe appear as
young kittens, playful, flexible, and sleek. In one
set of pictures, Mr. X and I pose separately, each
of us holding a champagne glass and wearing the
dark-lensed glasses that came with my grandmother's
50s-era sunlamp. We look like goons, but that was
the point. And then there are the shots of our
wedding, that great party we gave, where his
relatives filled the space and made it joyous while
mine were reserved and inward, quiet in their
happiness. These photos are relics of another time,
part of my life but outside of it, too.
As time went on, Mr. X and I took fewer pictures.
Fifteen months after we were married, we both got jobs
in Washington, DC and life got much more stressful. Mr.
X clashed terribly with his incompetent boss. Our
living situation wasn't comfortable. The basement
tenant in the house we rented, a man named Dewey Wayne
(I've since forgotten his last name), had an intense
personality. Dewey Wayne had sold his house in Raleigh
and put all his money into a move to DC, which included
paying a year's rent in advance. He had a habit of
leaving his front door open while he took his dog on
walks, which was his business, except that his place
was connected to ours by a door that we couldn't lock
and our neighborhood wasn't a good place to leave doors
open. The washer and dryer for the building were in his
apartment and he freaked out (rightfully) once or twice
when we walked in on him, unannounced, to do our
laundry.
Then there were the rats. The backyard, a rectangle of
bare dirt dotted with ratholes, held a thriving rodent
commune. We had a parking space out by the trash cans
and the rats began to use our car as storage space,
something we discovered on our way to the grocery store
one weekend. As Mr. X pulled out onto 15th Street, the
engine began to smoke. Over the course of our
ten-minute ride, the car slowly filled with the odor of
roasted, rotten meat. We rolled all the windows down
and covered our noses with tissues to filter out the
smell. When we pulled into the parking lot, Mr. X
popped open the hood: two smoldering pork rib bones had
adhered to the carburetor. The car stank for weeks.
Later a rat actually chewed its way into Dewey Wayne's
apartment ("I came in and there he was on top of the
refrigerator, munching on a bagel. Like Mighty Mouse,"
he told us).
Mr. X and I finally fled the rental after five months
and bought a house in Takoma Park, Maryland. The night
before the house inspection, our car was stolen from
our street, though it was recovered somewhat unscathed
a week later. In the meantime, Mr. X's job had gone
from horrible to intolerable. His old position in
Columbus was still open and they were happy to take him
back. On the weekend of our second anniversary, only
eight months after we had arrived in DC, he returned to
Ohio. There were solid reasons for him to leave that
had nothing to do with our marriage, but it was the
beginning of the end, or at least I can mark the final
slide with this event. We were doomed from the
beginning.
Mr. X is remarried now. He and his wife have a child on
the way. We haven't spoken in a couple of years, though
we are Facebook friends. And while the past is always
present for me in some way, I don't think much about
that time when I was young and in love and it was all
fresh and new, when I was with someone who was my loyal
protector, when I was learning to be an adult without
drama. I wasn't good at living without drama and still
courted it with alcohol and arguments, with cruel
remarks and coldness, but there was an underlying
sweetness to the relationship. Mr. X helped pull me out
of my childhood, was the first person to hold out his
hand.
The only evidence I have of that time is some paperwork
and photographs. We had no children and the last living
pet we shared is fading fast. There are no friends in
common with which to reminisce, to verify that it all
happened. But I'm still not sure what to do with the
artifacts, the pictures that show the world that we
created for a brief moment, now submerged in
memory.
Image:
Champagne on our first anniversary, Columbus, November
1996. I still have the glasses and -- strangely, but
coincidentally -- my son just fished them out of a toy
box this morning and put them on, even though he hadn't
worn them for months.





