Monday, November 5, 2012

Day 5

For each day of November, I am going to post an excerpt of the novel I'm working on for the next 30 days through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). The goal is to reach 50,000 words in 30 days. And, go!


When my mom moved back to her hometown, she rented a little room on the same property owned by her friends. I loved it there. It was a little bohemian enclave. They had fruit trees and it was there that I learned to love loquats, which are a little fruit similar in flavor to a peach. There was more seed than there was fruit, but that didn't keep me from repeatedly eating so many that I made myself sick. 

Pat went to high school with my mom, and he and his wife, Jenny lived in the main house. I remember Jen was particularly excited because she had just bought a blender. She couldn't seem to stop talking about it, and offered to make us all kinds of delicious beverages and smoothies. 

I decided the only way she’d stop driving us all crazy over the fucking blender was to steal the blade out of it. I buried it in the garden underneath the steps of our bungalow.   

It turned out I was wrong; stealing the only part that made the blender operable only made Jen talk about the blender more. 

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Day 4

For each day of November, I am going to post an excerpt of the novel I'm working on for the next 30 days through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). The goal is to reach 50,000 words in 30 days. And, go!


While I waited at the counter of the veterinarian’s office for our older dog’s medicine, I quietly cried. I had taken her in because she has been coughing. 
And while I worried that she might have pneumonia, I was completely unprepared for our vet to call me into the back office. 

Her expression was very serious and our dog is kind of sketchy - so I expected a lecture about how they couldn't x-ray her lungs because she wouldn't let them. And by the way… it’s going to cost an additional $400 to put her under general anesthesia to get the images of our dog’s lungs.

It wasn't any of those things. Our dog has tumors in her left lung; two large one’s for sure, plus a couple of questionable areas that are likely tumors as well. She has The Cancer.

Grief is a strange phenomenon. My daughter once said that if she is crying about something and is sad, it makes her think of all the things that make her sad, too. Maybe because she’s my daughter and I think she is brilliant – but out of the mouths of babes, right? I find this observation very poignant and very true. So I got to thinking about what makes me sad: the disappointments in my life, the struggles that I've had with addiction/alcoholism, the frustrations of being a parent and the major life upheavals. 

I heard a man remark about a 13-year old boy that he went through rehab for addiction with, who had one of the craziest lives he’d ever heard about. The 13-year old told him that “everyone has a story. The thing is not to fall in love with it.” I heard that line over 10 years ago and it has stayed with me. It’s one of those ideas that get me where I live: Everyone has hard times. This is where resilience and the ability to let the past go come in.

I've told the women I help with addiction and my own children that our experiences are like currency. They are what make us appreciate the goodness in our lives - and hopefully the hardships we endure can be a way to be of service to others. It runs along the lines of ‘better to comfort than be comforted’.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Day 3

For each day of November, I am going to post an excerpt of the novel I'm working on for the next 30 days through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). The goal is to reach 50,000 words in 30 days. And, go!


My junior year, I had another English teacher named Rick Mokler. He turned out to be my one of my favorite teachers in high school.  He was my English teacher for next two years - and during one semester I had him for two different classes. I adored him. One time he assigned a writing project where we all were to describe the same, common place thing: a high school locker. It was a lesson in details. “Write your piece until each word is perfect.”

I worked up some details in my mind. I wanted to include graffiti, but I also wanted it to seem accurate and not contrived. My favorite band was Van Halen - but in this case, for whatever reason, it just seemed inappropriate or unlikely, too obvious. I settled on ‘Jimi Lives’ as the graffiti on the inside of the locker door. Although I had an appreciation for Hendrix, it would have never been something I would have written. This somehow felt like a small sacrifice not to name my own favorite band, and that act made it more authentic. 

When all the assignments had been handed in and graded, Mr. Mokler chose his favorite to share with the class. And without saying it was my work, he read it aloud to everyone. There was a short pause and then one of the cool surfer guys said, “Someone in this class wrote that?” 

I was already crimson from the reading and when Mr. M announced it was my paper, the whole class turned to look at me.  I was embarrassed, and totally thrilled to be acknowledged as a writer. 

Friday, November 2, 2012

Day 2

For each day of November, I am going to post an excerpt of the novel I'm working on for the next 30 days through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). The goal is to reach 50,000 words in 30 days. And, go!


When I got to grade school, I was asked to write a story about spring. The Easter bunny seemed a likely subject, but most of my other classmates where already writing about him. So I penned the story of the little known Easter Worm. He wanted it more and worked harder than the bunny because of his disability – what with having no limbs and all. My carefully handwritten story had the honor of being stuck to the fridge with magnets for all to see - alongside my recipe for homemade pizza dough that included detailed directions to ‘pinch the crust as high as mountains’. My mom loved both these stories so much. Although I wrote them over 35 years ago, we were talking about them as recently as 2 months ago.

When I was older, I was prone to ear infections and missed a lot of school. During one of my prolonged absences, I decided to write a story and took a legal –sized pad of paper and pencil with me everywhere I went.  The story was about a runaway girl and her pony, and they are stranded in high tide against the bluffs of a beach. Riveting, right? I guess I have a story after all.

My best friend and I were totally horse crazy, and to that end I spent hours of time playing with model horses, playing ‘horse’ at school – which involved lots of galloping around and whinnying, and endless road trips imagining a wild, black stallion running alongside our car, trying to catch a glimpse of the small girl in the back seat. I had an ongoing dialogue in my head about the fantasy horses that I owned and the wacky situations we got ourselves in, while I drove our neighbors crazy as I played hand ball against the side of their apartment for hours: ka-chung, ka-chung, ka-chung.

I’ll end my qualification with two short anecdotes from high school. I’ll elaborate in greater detail later but when I was 16, I got sober. I had an English class where we were required to keep a journal. Our teacher would scan the journals, just to ensure we were actually writing and not just repeating a single word over and over: bewbs, bewbs, bewbs, bewbs.
 
Obviously, I love writing - so this was a fun, easy requirement. I also found that journaling was very cathartic and I wrote out my beginning experiences as a sober alcoholic. I took the teacher at his word, and also figured no one would be interested in what I wrote anyway. That is, until he returned disclosed that he’d read every word. I was more than a little sketched out – but also flattered…in a creepy way. He’d been touched by my experience and told me that he was rooting for my recovery.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Day 1

For each day of November, I am going to post an excerpt of the novel I'm working on for the next 30 days through National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). The goal is to reach 50,000 words in 30 days. And, go!


I am participating in the National November Writers Month, and I have a goal to write just under 1,700 words daily. The word goal is to help me write my first novel and the guidelines are to write anything -even if I don’t have an outline or specific idea. Something good is supposed to come out of all this.

And the other thing? I’m not supposed to edit.  Forget the number count; not editing as I write will be the bigger act of discipline.

Several of the people that I know who are participating in NaNoWriMo, as it’s fondly referred to - have a seed of an idea for a book; a general outline or a theme. I got nothin’.

It made me want to qualify somehow – why would I do this? The answer is simple: I’m an only child and I grew up without a television.  So, if I have anything going for me - it’s scads of creativity, patience and determination. I like to spend a lot of time alone, and most importantly… I love to read.  My best friend was also an only child, although she had a TV. She also had a great number of things that I never had: a lava lamp, a four-bedroom house with spiraling staircase and a dachshund.

We spent an enormous amount of our time together reading.  Beginning with the horse books: Billy & Blaze in the various hardcover adventures… I especially loved CW Anderson’s illustrations, Misty of Chincoteague, The Black Stallion series. We loved comics: Richy Rich and Archie were favorites, but we also read Ranger Rick and Mad Magazine. Much of the Mad Magazine humor was lost on me – too many references to stuff I didn’t understand. We moved onto the pre-teen and teen stories: Nancy Drew (we didn’t ready Hardy Boys, however – we saved that strictly for the TV show we watched at my friend’s house, so we could fawn over Shawn Cassidy and Parker Stevenson), Paula Danziger and Judy Blume. We read all of the VC Andrew Flowers in the Attic series, which was just brilliant and pure trash.

If I really wanted to split hairs, I’d say that my mom is partly to blame for any qualifications that I may have to write a book.  She is the most well-read person I know, literally – she is reading constantly always. Her home is filled with books, and her Kindle discovery was like giving the gift of sight to the blind, or in this case – the gift of the bookless a book. She instilled the love of reading in me and it is a tradition that continues with her appreciative and adoring grandchildren. Every visit, she takes them to the local bookstore and they each get to pick two – just two! books. It’s a wonderful tradition and a whole lot like heaven for them.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Yellow Car

When our daughter was around three years old, she was obsessed with yellow cars: Where were they going? What did people who drive yellow cars like to eat...bananas? If we saw a yellow car when we were driving, she would ask me to follow them. It made for a thrilling experience every time we saw a taxi.

In July of 2001, my mother-in-law died in her sleep. What is it they call heart disease...the silent killer? Our family was in total shock. My husband and his siblings were rocked to their foundations with sadness and grief. It was one of the hardest times in my life, and it was heart wrenching to watch my husband grieve for his mother. She was 61 years old. 

Here’s where things get bizarre: the day before she died, my mother-in-law had bought a brand new car. It was a small sport utility and had 12 miles on the odometer. The car was yellow.

The night she passed away, she  called my sister-in-law and left a message, telling her that she just bought a bright yellow car; everyone would recognize her car when she was driving around.

The car was one of a thousand details that our family was left to try and deal with. Since the car hadn't been off the dealership lot for more than 24 hours when my mother-in-law died, my husband asked me if I would contact the dealer and make arrangements to return the car.

Of course, nothing is simple. A passed before I was able to call the dealership. By that point, I was told the loan was ‘in the works’ and regardless of having a death certificate, the estate was responsible for the car payment. Had my mother-in-law lived three more weeks and died after turning 62, a reversal would have been granted because she would have been considered elderly and a special policy within the company would have gone into effect. 

What the hell?! Grief aside, it was one of the most ridiculous, unfair, and frustrating situations I've ever been involved in.

None of the siblings needed a new car. And of course, there was the color: it wasn't a soft yellow...it was a full-on school-bus yellow.  After some discussion, “Well, we could have it repainted…?" my husband and I decided to buy out the other siblings' debt and replace my 10-year old car. I felt conspicuous as hell at first driving the yellow car; any lame driving error I made was magnified by the beacon of yellowness. Once we were back home and trying to settle back into the rhythm of our lives after my mother-in-law’s death, I looked into the cost of repainting the car but it was too expensive. The Yellow Car stayed yellow.

We had a lonely, older neighbor who would occasionally make the long walk over from three houses down. He would knock on the door to chat or stand at the edge of the driveway to make conversation. However, he was alone without a spouse or family for a reason: he was insufferable.  He’d offer landscaping advice: “Why’d you dig those trenches so shallow?” He would ring the doorbell when the baby was sleeping, which would set off the dogs...and then ask why it took so long for me to come to the door. He would drive down the street, and then stop in the middle of the road to try and make small talk with a neighbor on foot, while his ailing truck idled and belched fumes onto the street.

When we brought Yellow Car home after a heart wrenching week, our neighbor made his long walk down and to ask me why I bought a car that color. To make matters worse, he was hard of hearing – so I found myself yelling information that ordinarily would have been spoken in a quieter, more reverent tone: “MY MOTHER-IN-LAW DIED! THIS CAR WAS HERS! I HATE THE COLOR!” The whole situation was so outrageous on so many levels that I no longer dealt with our neighbor from that point forward. I believe in being kind and giving people the benefit of the doubt, but I also believe that just because someone is older doesn’t give them the right to be a tool.

It turns out there are advantages to having a yellow car. A woman changed lanes suddenly and sideswiped my car; afterward she made the lame statement, claiming that she didn't see me. Um, no...I’m driving a freaking highlighter.

My old car was a white sport utility. There was a dozen times when I’d walk out to the parking lot to a sea of white sport utilities and have no idea where I’d parked my car. With Yellow Car, I no longer have that issue: HERE I AM! SECOND ROW, THREE CARS OVER!

Yellow Car making friends
The older I get, the less I believe in coincidences or kismet, but it gives me comfort that my mother-in-law would have wanted me to drive a newer, safer car with her young grandchildren. It’s been over 10 years since she died. After all this time, I’m somewhat nostalgic and sad to see the wear and tear on Yellow Car: peeling vinyl from the inside of the door, the rubber track that sits around the door frame falling off, stripped knobs and ripped leather. The car has grown on me and it feels like one of the last tangible connections that I have.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Fortune Cookie


Oooh! My fortune reads, "Your love of small purses is one of the many things that make you more endearing."