Solace and Bourbon

The disinhibition of alcohol is a factor in Mad Man Don Draper’s genius, fictional though it may be.  That is not to say that the cruel things it makes him do don’t far outweigh any benefit bestowed on his creative life, but booze does loosen the tongue.  Don reserves his expressive gifts for those who can pay.  When he staggers across the threshold of the home where people wait hopefully to receive expressions of his love, his drunken persona is terse, stern and withdrawn.

Word play was the eternal game in our home.  No alcohol was required to fuel this fire – my parents’ craving for recognition supplied all the combustion necessary.  Mom and Dad each had their version.  My mother indulged in what I have come to call the Fantasy Business game, obsessively tweaking, out loud, names and tag lines for enterprises she hoped to start to further her creative ambitions.   A walking thesaurus, my father could no more stem the urge to enjoin any given word with its synonym, than the sea could kiss the shore goodbye, adios, syonara.

Participation was mandatory.  While other children were being trained to be mommies and daddies and well-adjusted capitalists, the Holy Grail in our home was never, never anything half so real or pragmatic as family or money.  The quest, the mission, from which all graces flowed, was le mot juste.  An unspoken belief as powerful as any religion, Marv & Barbara’s confidence that finding the right thing to say, and the right way to say it, would unleash some jackpot reward  (of what, I can only guess), was touchingly innocent, and heart-breakingly misdirected.

These days, I find myself on that quest again, returning perhaps reflexively to the elusive promise of words.  The stakes are deeply personal.  Like a grain of sand wedged into the slippery folds of my consciousness, grief has elicited a need to describe where I am, made urgent by the fear of becoming even more lost.  (Ironically, the search for what to say is as “found” as it is possible for me to feel.)  The nacre of words both soothes and transcends the irritation, even as it hides the initial pain.   Protective, secretive, the layers themselves are where the value lies, not the seed.   The pearl reveals what has happened to the oyster, but we’ll never see that annoying pebble again.

And what’s next for the poor oyster, who dies giving up the pearl?  Now there, Don Draper and I see eye to eye.  Delicious with bourbon.

Ruminations on Greyhounds & Pre-Schoolers, or “What Do You Have in Your Mouth?!”

Being un-childrened is an outsider status, and no matter how compassionately observant your comments may be, it has been my experience that some parents feel entitled to object unkindly to any comparisons you may make between raising children and gaining the cooperation of dogs.  (You can easily guess how I came by this insight.)  I take it for granted that no one will mind if I compare myself to both young children and my greyhounds, and so here goes.

Whether slicing the world into clickable bites, or re-translating the expectation “Put Your Lunch Box Away” into its component actions, I have personally found it a tremendous relief to realize that I am no less perplexed than my dog, or some of the 3 year olds I have lately met, by the higher order expectations which have loomed over my life these 46 years.

The phantoms of storms, the smells that don’t smell right…don’t I feel equally helpless when faced with sudden events that, in the moment, seem to threaten my survival?  Bigger brain, indeed.

Pre-schoolers set no less high a standard for understanding what you want from them than any dog I have met.  Unless you know that cleaning up the sand box starts with putting down the shovel, or that the time for sharing is NOW,  how can the task come to anything but tears?  Thus have I, too, misunderstood the signals of social realities, distracted by shiny gum wrappers while everyone else was putting away their toys.

Anxiety and shyness may be displayed in obvious ways by both dogs and human anklebiters, but natural programming to please the bigger dogs/humans, and fit in with the equal dogs/humans often masks uncertainty with subtler behaviors (or non-behaviors as the case may be).  Faced with a world that is largely meant for another species, young children and dogs can only hope for true communication between themselves and the People in Charge.  On both sides of the fence, guess work is rampant.

Recognizing the anxiety that lies just beneath the surface does no harm, although it seems to bother a lot of people to acknowledge its influence.  As children, my dear parents never had any such indulgence of their anxieties.  Indeed, it is clear that one of the bonds they shared was to have learned at a very young age that they could show no vulnerability, lest they run afoul of the needy adults who dominated their homes.

It is true, the world is full of Jack London dogs who bound into the wilderness with eager self assurance, and Lassies who, I will acknowledge, should be allowed to vote.  But the charming ability to please is no guarantee that the heart is full of confidence, and the knowledge, conferred by my dogs, that this secret lives in my own heart, has blessed my life in countless ways.  And if their shy, dignified reticence has made me a better listener to your mouthy toddler, then that is just too damn bad.

Help Wanted

Where ya been, Brenna?  Oh, you know, in my head.

A few weeks ago I stopped posting to this blog, though I have kept writing.  I felt disconnected so abruptly from my intended topic – the shadows of grief in my life since losing my parents this year – that I have hardly thought of anything but this interior schism ever since. Where once the mercy of connection between my heart and my world brought the grace of purpose to my introspection, I suddenly heard nothing inside but, “What’s for dinner?”

What happened was that I broke up with my job.  Though, if I remember the break up rules correctly, when the other party doesn’t notice you are gone,  calling it a break up is a technicality.  Having long since understood that my main client would never heed my safe word, were I to be able to squeak it out, I made my escape passively, by not signing up for another round of “Don’t call us child, we’ll call you at 6pm Friday to tell you we don’t need you Monday, 7 out of every 8 times we have you on hold.”  And no, no one else is waiting to take me to the prom.

At first, I thought the shift from the previously tuned in me to the suddenly blank me was due to euphoria, caused by hearing at my part time jobs that, you know, they liked me.  I worried to think that happiness or relief could be somehow to blame for this sense of isolation.  It has taken a few weeks to realize that shock, not happiness, had hip checked me off the field where, for once in my life, I felt I could contribute something from my heart to others, with no fear that my inadequacies disqualified me.  I felt so sure that grief was an equal opportunity.

To have come this far in life with so little to show professionally is my failure.  To have finally identified work that I loved, and want to excel at, so late in the game, and to have received such lukewarm response, so much indifference as I have, is my grief.  A grief I was trying to end by separating myself from its most recent source, but like an infinite nesting doll, I have only revealed yet another infernal grin.

I think when our own survival is threatened, big G grief takes a holiday.  The emotional airlocks seal up when it is our own death we contemplate, or in this case, the death of a dream deeply yearned for.   Maybe I need a little memorial plaque, or divorce papers – something concrete to cry over or set on fire.  But as sure as God made little green apples, friends, what I absolutely need is a Job.

Walk Softly and Go to the Right Playground

Just seeing me made her scream.  Not cry.  Wail.  For half an hour.  One third of the 90 minutes there were before, as her after school substitute, it would be my job to escort her, plus two other toddlers, to the afterschool playground.  I know who of us was scared-er.  She was; but not by much.

She didn’t need her teacher to tell her what was going to happen.  She knew who was missing – the correct after school lady.  She knew who I was – the stranger who didn’t belong.   When she saw me go to the door, and heard me tell the other two kiddles to line up, the screaming began again.  Cajoling was out of the question; neither of us liked this situation, and we were both stuck with it.  I put on my “I mean business” voice.  “You have to go to outside with me.  Would it make you feel better to hold your friend’s hand?”  “No!” interjected between body-racking cries.

Who knows how far it is between an open door and the hallway outside?  If you have tried to move 3 toddler to whom you are a stranger, you know it is a very long way.  If one of them is screaming, it is to the moon.  If you don’t know that there is a front playground, and you try to take them to the playground in the back that you are familiar with, it is like time travel and not the good kind where you wind up with Eric Bana.

We had gone about 12 feet before I knelt down next to her, holding back the other toddlers, or so I hoped.  She was wailing just as much, attracting attention throughout the entrance lobby.  But she had stayed with us this far.

“You are doing so good!” I told her, bluntly, without any pandering.  “I am so proud of you!”  The screams paused for a split second.  A little window opened.  Before that moment, I don’t think it had occurred to either of us that you could be screaming and doing great, simultaneously.  “You are doing a great job.  I’m really impressed!”  It was true.  She was my hero.

The wailing reappeared briefly, but its spell was broken.  A recognized friend appeared from the office, and together we went to the right playground, where the kids had, of course, tried to take me all along.  I was too flustered to operate the childproof gate; my rescuer had to do it.  Finally on the playground, she found a more familiar face, and eventually calmer,  moved out on her own to push a tricycle around the concrete trail.  When she was in earshot, I named it to the other teacher, letting her overhear.  “(insert real name here) is really brave!”  I said.

Later – half an hour later – I saw her looking at me from the safety of her tricycle.  I caught her eye and waved unobtrusively.  She smiled at me, and pushed on.

 

 

Morning Drive Time

Amid the hairpin turns of the last year’s emotional terrain, there have been a few constants – coffee with friends, my sister’s always gentle and dignified problem solving, and crying in my car on my way to work.  In the dark pre-dawn, when the gas station and Starbucks are my breakfast and reason for living,  my routine has evolved to a sacred ritual.  Engulfed in the sounds of whatever the musical academics at WORT are playing, and triggered by ghostly landscapes veiled in fog or frost, I have been hurtling toward Milwaukee, crying.  (You can fill in your own joke here…really, you don’t need my help.)  Often, I cried on the way home as well.

In the first year of mourning, I think, alot of people cry spontaneously, over apparent nothings, but I have never been that kind of crier.  If I am crying, you can be sure it is me I am feeling sorry for, not you.  It was not self pity that fuelled my morning cry time, however.  These tears welled up from a source I can’t name.  Not sorrow, not fear, not even regret.  Possibly relief, and certainly an experience of awe and finality.  I looked forward to the time spent in the 190-horsepower V-6 womb with my companion of honest, undifferentiated feeling.

My lachrymose friend stood me up last week, however, and fickle as I am, I didn’t notice until Thursday that I had driven 16 hours, dry-eyed.  Although some might call it progress, I can’t say I am happy to have turned this corner.  I had wanted to make more of this time, hoping, I think, to redeem myself from the tangle of choices which have defined most of my adulthood.  And maybe that has happened, and I just don’t know it yet.  But the morning mist has yielded to bright sun, and the glare from the highway is a pain in the ass.

surrender, chuck

my favorite way to fix pot roast:

arise at least 12 hours before dinner time.

place 3 or 4 pounds of the greasiest chuck roast cut you can find in the crock pot.

flick some salt on it; smear with grainy mustard.

put on the lid and – now this is important – turn the crock pot ON to LOW.

go about your business.  come back in 12 hours. the meat looks sinister and black.  this is a sign that it has surrendered, and become as meek as room temperature butter.  it is now safe to eat.

p.s.  if your crock pot is less than 10 years old, the recipe reads this way:  take your crock pot.  put it in your car.  drive to your favorite thrift store.  place your crock pot in the donation bin; you won’t be needing it anymore.  (the lowest cooking temperature on slow cookers been raised to placate the attorneys, and is now useless to deliver the lazy death pot roast requires.)  go to the small appliances aisle in the thrift store.  pick out a crock pot that looks like your mom’s – any shade of burnt orange, avocado, gold or ducks with ribbons around their necks will do.  purchase it for not more than $10.  drive home.  proceed as directed above.

p.p.s.  after completing step one, it is acceptable to go back to sleep for as long as you can get away with it.

It Pays to Listen to Yourself Sometimes

“Those hollyhocks make me think of my grandmother, and not in a good way,”  commented my friend Liz as we gawked our way through a local art gallery.  Since I never expected to hear Lizzie say anything negative about her grandmother or hollyhocks, I took a closer look at the painting in front of us.  I wanted to like the picture, too.  Big sprays of hollyhocks, part Flemish still-life, part nineteenth century sentimentalism, composed with modern simplicity.  But something was definitely wrong.  After a few moments, I said, “Liz, I think its the frame.”  Surrounded by antiqued black molding, this poor pictured looked more entombed than framed.  These hollyhocks are dead by now, said the smooth, unadorned wood, and they deserved it. We both shuddered.  A gold frame, we agreed, was the necessary antidote.

We were oggling jewelry in a different room, when Lizzie gasped, “Brenna, look at the flowers in the gold frame!”  Hanging above the jewelry case, another painting by the same artist had been given the royal treatment.  Swirls and ridges seemed to extend the voice of the painting outward in a final, expressive flourish.  “Oh, I’m so glad,” I said with relief.  “That other frame made me sad.”  It surprised me to hear myself say it (and possibly surprised the gallery owner who was sitting 10 feet away), but it was true.  That other frame had made me very sad, indeed.

The thought has stuck with me.  Re-framing problems in our mental viewfinder is the foundation of all self-help.  Grief’s inscrutable dimensions defy such cozy containment.  Its scale is overwhelming:  life, lived and unlived, both yours and another’s, encompassed in its entirety. Normal frames are not only inadequate, they are downright insane.  No silver linings; no live and learn; no better luck next time.

As I struggle to find some equilibrium with this ravenous new, psychic entity, my regular life goes on, buffeted by pressures that I can scarcely define, let alone rehabilitate with snazzier molding; yet today this very solution demonstrated its power in unambiguous terms.  Like words resonating in a dream, my mouth spelled out something my heart wanted to say but I was too dumb to hear.  That frame made me sad.  No kidding.  It pays to listen to yourself sometimes.  You might just learn something.

At The Master’s Feet

Waiting for me on the same dictionary page as the word “grief,” was a welcome definition of joy:  greyhound.  With eloquent simplicity, the entry explains, “Greyhounds can run very fast.”  Indeed.  They are certainly the fastest land animal that doesn’t live in an artificial natural habitat, surrounded by a mote to keep them from chomping on the gazelle next door, or your succulent arse.

In my experience, however, it is in greyhounds’ skill at training humans where their true genius lies.  Their retiring demeanor, even diffidence, exudes a promise of relationship, should you prove Worthy, which every girl who has ever played hard to get can confirm is very powerful.  Thus did they hold me enthrall, and bend my will to theirs.

Katy came into our home in the winter, snuggling into a life as indoors as possible.  Her personality was passive enough that she allowed Bumper to eat her food without any protest we could discern, so we segregated their feeding locations.  Katy was assigned the threshhold of the hallway, where carpeting reassuringly kept her feet from slipping as she ate.  All was well, as winter turned to spring, notwithstanding firmly discouraging Bumper’s stealthy attempts to retrieve food that, by rights his, had mistakenly ended up in That Other Dog’s Bowl.

And then, one day, Katy abruptly refused to eat.  Talk about leading a horse to water.  Mealtime after mealtime, she stood at the threshold, staring mutely at the tempting morsels in front of her, then at us.  We petted, cuddled, ignored, did everything except eat the food ourselves, and I have no independent confirmation that Craig didn’t try.  Katy rejected her bowl, and its contents, in favor of hunger and as much affection as she cared to endure.  We even threw Katy’s food away in front of her, a strategy guaranteed by the wonderful Dr. Patricia McConnell, to scare any dog straight.  A less food motivated animal there never was.  Katy went to bed with everything she wanted: an empty tummy and unlimited affection.

Morning came, and we began again.  With the windows open to let in a spring breeze, the Chef prepared a delightful repast of yogurt and kibble, greedily gobbled by a Certain Yellow Dog.  Katy sniffed hers, and looked away, standing so tensely still that she quivered.  Argh.  As I stood in the doorway, I caught a slight flicker in Katy’s gaze, from my face, to a spot over my shoulder.  Following her glance, I saw it.  The ceiling fan.  In the wintertime, it had been Dead.  Now in the spring, it was Alive and Scary, looming over her food like a predatory bird with countless wings of death.

Immediately, I switched it off.  The blades slowed to a stop.  Katy continued looking up, making sure the Threat was Gone.  At last, she lowered her head to her bowl.  Gently, so very delicately, came the first nibble.  Nothing Bad Happened.  More food, more enthusiastically.  Soon, it was all gone, and finally time for the real reward:  snuggles in the hallway.

Katy was clear.  That Thing was a Threat.  And until it was vanquished, there would be no reward for either of us.  She demonstrated beautifully the hardest behavioral reinforcement approach to master, negative reinforcement.  Usually confused with punishment, which is the delivery of a painful consequence for a behavior, negative reinforcement is a sort of reverse psychology, where removing a negative stressor becomes the reward.  Like undoing the top button of your pants, after Thanksgiving dinner.  Ahhhh…..

Accomplishing this complex feat of behavioral shaping with what amounted to batting her eyelashes, Katy revealed how keenly she was observing me, waiting patiently for me to listen to her obvious communication.  People are So Thick.  From her, I learned that my dogs, watching constantly for signs that Good Things were about to happen for Dogs, missed nothing they wanted to see.  A new world of minimalist communication opened up to me.  Standing in front of Bumper, as he lay on the couch, I would silently catch his eye.  Raising my eyebrow, and tilting my head bestirred him to stretch luxuriantly, and disembark his throne.  Time for walkies.  It was enough, and all that we needed to say to each other.  I’ll open the door.  You do the rest.

Birthday Presence

I wish I knew what you were grateful to your parents for, but I don’t.  Here are a few of mine.  Happy 86th, Dad.  I love you very much.  Thank you for the wonderful presence:

Standing sideways in the waves at the Fullerton Beach
Miyako Shoko Doo
Always having a pocket knife
Chauffeuring
Spaghetti sauce
Chicago
Trying to understand
The Winking Buddha
Shoe polish and shaving cream
Skipping
Kipling and Thurber
Ballet lessons
Finally saying I was an artist
Buying shirts at the Salvation Army 3 for $1
Teaching me to open the door for strangers
The twenty bucks

Grief is the Word

A predictable aspect of grieving my parents, which surprised me nonetheless, is the re-runs on the grief channel.  By which I mean that the memory of another major parting has been rattling its chains at me like Jacob Marley’s ghost.  Except, in this case, Scrooge’s theory that the apparition is just a bit of undigested beef is entirely apt.

The relief of knowing what to name the emotions which have marked my parents’  “change in life status” (how do you like them apples?) has a reassuring certainty which is, in itself, comforting.  A friend who lost his dad a few weeks after Mom died asked me whether I felt the same physical pain he was having.  Oh, Honey.  Yes.  Thus we travelled on, each along different paths perhaps, but with the same rain falling on our heads.  By naming grief, I gain admission to a club which no one, not even Groucho Marx, wants to join until they can’t avoid it.

Naming and words are the white blood cells of our emotional immune system.  Despite any debate over its stigmatizing effects, most people intuitively sense the powerful relief of labeling.  We want to know what we are dying of.  The potency of this unseen force to transform us from victim to, at a minimum, host, is compelling proof that intangibles can dominate our lives as mercilessly as any physical coercion.

It is no exaggeration to say that this word’s absence left a hole in my life as profound as the loss it might have neutralized.  What about grief that goes un-named?  What permits us to name some losses grief, and disqualifies others?

I lost someone.  I didn’t think I would ever love anyone, and then I did, and he didn’t and that loss, in my world, was as much a death as I had ever known.  But no one offered me the word “grief,” and why would they?  Don’t all young people fall in love, and then bounce out of it like four year olds jumping on the mattress?  Sure, they might bump their heads, but the candle is so worth the game, their enthusiasm cannot be cured.

Pressured from all sides, internal and external, to lay aside my loss and recover, my feelings emerged in actions and decisions that still make me cringe.  Therapists diagnosed “low self esteem,” but believe in myself though I might, the persistence of an engulfing sadness and pain only compounded my problem with my failure to get well.  Eventually, I surmised how I was supposed to act, and got a divorce from my heart.  If only.

Implicit in grieving is submission.  Some may erroneously set time or depth limits, but as a rule most human beings expect grief to make them feel as badly as they ever will, for longer than they really want.  This capitulation to feeling, and the companionship of fellow sufferers, may be grief’s only rewards, but they are richly fecund.  Exclusion from this clubhouse, for lack of the password, is true isolation.

Which has me asking, do I need more grief in my life?  Do we all?  Is it grief, not depression, that plagues us in heretofore unheard of numbers?  Does this fearsome word, as universally understood as hunger, absorb more than its fair share of behaviors that don’t serve us, wielding the power to restoring our psychic and spiritual selves to their natural business of working to make good things happen?  Because once the diagnosis of grief is on the table, there is only one more thing left to lose, and that is Time.