1990 was thirty years ago

After a high school friend remarked upon the thirty year anniversary of Ritual de lo habitual last week, I realized that 2020 is the thirty year anniversary of, hands down, the best year of my teenage life. Not that any stretch of being a teenager is wholly trouble-free, but even then I remember feeling like being fifteen in 1990 was pretty great. Was I primed to enjoy it so much by my childhood obsession with Beverly Cleary’s Fifteen, an early and perfectly perfect incarnation of the now-ubiquitous teen romance? Maybe. If so, I thank the book for preparing me to not miss a thing.

Thirty years ago, I had goofy friends, and the slightly older ones among them could now drive us places: diners, movies, each other’s houses. We had jobs, in places where we all wanted to be. The local pools, the pizza place with an arcade upstairs, the skate shop, the thrift store; we worked, and then we went to where our friends worked and hung out. We stayed after school for hours together, in the darkroom, rehearsing the school play. On the weekends, we gathered and performed for each other, in bands, at open mics. We spent days and weeks doing things like building skate ramps or setting up rehearsal spaces in garages, and then we spent days and weeks watching each other use them.

That year, thirty years ago, we all got crushes on each other and failed to realize that other people had crushes on us. We drove around en masse, in the beds of pickup trucks, crammed into hatchbacks or the massive back seats of our parents’ old cars. We wore amethysts on chains around our necks, drew on our Chucks, wore holes in our Vans, and kept the local record stores in business. That year, I fell in love for the first time, went to my first major concert, had my first job with responsibilities. I found my taste in music and in people; the people I laughed with then are the people I laugh with now, new friends who feel like old friends and my friends from back then who still crack me up over text. We lay around on each other’s couches, floors, beds, and porches at all hours of the day and night. Listening to Ritual, yes, but that year also gave us Flood, Social Distortion, Goo, Bossanova, A Brief History of the Twentieth Century, I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, the Twin Peaks soundtrack, the only song I know of written for a girl with my name, and so much more. At that time, I still had the few close friends of my youth around me, kids who liked me when I was plump and awkward, while I was discovering a new group of punks, theater geeks, skaters, and weirdos to love.

That summer I was fifteen, we spent three weeks with my grandparents in Ontario. The boys who lived across the street were instructed by their mother to entertain me, as a favor to my grandmother. I was right in the middle of their ages, and the older one could drive. They let me swim in their pool, watch Spinal Tap and listen to Queen with them in their basement, and tag along when they went downtown to the annual waterfront carnival and fireworks. I manufactured a crush on the older brother’s best friend, Marco, a kid who looked like he should be in a boy band and was so authentically Italian his foyer contained four kinds of marble and his mother tried to feed us something every time we stopped by to pick him up. In the afternoons, I read on the porch and taped songs off Detroit’s alternative rock station, something we didn’t have on the radio back home. At night, I pulled my grandparents’ kitchen phone through the accordion door and sat on the floor by the dining room table to talk to my friend Jay. I told him all of the nothing I was doing in Ontario and he told me all of the nothing that was happening in Indiana and made me miss it less.

When I watch the lifeguards at our pool, flirting and joking and being stunningly happy in the way that only teenagers at their summer jobs can be, I can’t believe how much time has passed. The year I was fifteen, I was more entirely myself than I can remember feeling during any other single year of my life. So many other years and time periods blur together, but I can remember 1990 so vividly, could tell you what I was doing and whom I was doing it with almost month by month. So many places and faces, so much of the time spent laughing until our sides split and tears ran down our cheeks. We were young enough to still enjoy being ridiculous, old enough to know there wouldn’t be very many more years of jumping off the roofs of sheds into backyard pools or sneaking up onto the roofs of our schools without turning into the sorts of townies we heard cautionary tales about.

Thirty years ago, most of the pain and grief and heartbreak of our teenage lives was still ahead of us. We hadn’t yet broken each other’s hearts, or lost friends to suicides and addictions, hadn’t had to make choices about abortions and marriages. We hadn’t destroyed or lost friendships, made relationship-ending mistakes. We weren’t yet judging each other for our choices to leave or stay, to change or remain the same. All that was still to come, but before it did, we had an amazing year together.

Bicycle Race

We have acquired a bicycle. Another bicycle, I should say. The sprout’s first bicycle is much loved and will live on as a yard bike, but it became undeniable that the legs had outgrown the space. Biking with your knees around your ears is entertaining for a block or so, but once the warm weather hit a new bike was clearly needed.

Having waited until peak bicycle purchasing season and not having access to a store, acquiring this bicycle was harder than last time, when we entered a store, chose a bike, and purchased it. We wanted a purple hybrid: not available anywhere on these internets. We wanted another color of hybrid: nope. In the end, we went to the website of our local bike store and chose from among the options there, landing on a lovely charcoal black model evocative of the wide-tired bikes our favorite vigilante. I decided not to worry about how soon we were going to have to replace this bicycle with an even taller one and focus on the success of procuring any acceptable bicycle at all.

A condition of this new bike purchase is that my partner is now going to ride along on explorations, rather than trot behind on foot. Limitation one: he doesn’t have a bike. I have a bike that I can’t ride anymore due to my joints, and I’ve been trying for a couple of years to convince my partner to accept the use of my bike on permanent loan. The bike is much beloved, named Pearl, is covered in stickers, and has traveled to North Carolina and back to DC in an AIDS Ride. You can see why he might be reluctant to accept responsibility for her well-being. Bikes don’t like languishing in basements, though, so I convinced him to take her out on the road after determining that everything is in working order following the tune-up I got a couple of years ago when I was still pretending I might ride her again. (A recumbent bicycle is in my future, just not my very near future since I think you have to be over 67 to qualify for one, based on whom I see riding them around.)

Which brings us to limitation two: my partner suffered a very bad bicycle accident as a teen and has avoided biking since then. Since he’s an exceptional parent in addition to being a generally laudable human being, he adjusted the seat, slapped on the helmet we bought for last year’s trip to the shore, and off they went. Tonight’s ride was only a few blocks up the road, around and back, just for them to test the waters and get the feeling of the new taller, heavier bike. We need a little more comfort with the changed weight of the bike when slowing down on hills before I set the sprout loose on the whole town, but I foresee many longer bike rides in their future. If we can figure out the least populated times of day, we might even use the bike rack to travel over to the wider and more scenic Anacostia river path.

Watching my partner head out with the sprout was bittersweet. I loved seeing him conquer his fears and I also wished it were me on the road with them. Maybe I’ll get that grandpa bike soon after all.

I want to ride my bicycle, I want to ride my bike.
I want to ride my bicycle, I want to ride it where I like.

Surprise! Sunchokes

Today we went out to the yard to get started on the annual effort of beating back the weeds and giving the garden beds edges again. Over the past couple of years, volunteer sunflowers have blown into our back garden from the yard of the neighbor down the alley. At first there was just one, then a few more, then last year they kind of took over. Today I decided we would weed most of them out before they got big and leave just a little patch for our kid to enjoy. (We all enjoy them, they’re just in the part of the garden where they get to plant what they like, mostly consisting of plants I don’t like that I’ve weeded out of other areas and my child has rescued from going into yard waste.)

The first thing we do is walk around and decide on how many plants will be allowed to live. Then we start pulling out the extraneous sprouts. Or, I should say, we try to pull them out. They are tough and require some tugging, when I finally do get one to come out, it has a little rutabaga attached to the bottom of it. Which is confusing. We get a trowel and start digging around more, and all of them have these tubers on the bottom of them.

Which is when I realize that they are sunchokes. Jerusalem artichokes, native sunflower with edible tuberous roots renowned for their habit of taking over any space you give them. Oops. I guess I should have put more effort into identifying the variety of sunflower that first year when I noticed that it got ten feet tall and didn’t resemble any of the other native sunflowers we had around the yard. Or even the year after that, when I noticed that our neighbor down the alley had dug out the patch of them that used to line her driveway for no obvious reason. (I guess we now know the reason.)

Good news: we have free food growing in our back garden! Bad news: we have (yet another) plant taking over our back garden! I think this now makes five natives I’ve introduced to the garden that have tried to take it over in some way. In the front, we currently have an aster that is OOC and due to be dug out; a couple of years ago it was something I forget the name of that formed a carpet and tried to crowd everything else out. In another part of the yard, it’s a different kind of sunflower that is smothering my favorite rose. Let’s not forget the milkweed, which, while much wanted and loved, still requires constant effort to keep it limited to the places we want it to grow.

The only thing we know how to make from sunchokes is latkes. Sunchokes are a perfect substitute for potatoes if you cannot eat white potatoes and still want to celebrate Hanukkah with friends. Time to get down the electric griddle, rewatch my child’s favorite holiday song video a million times, and Skype in our friend who is the latke expert, who usually does the actual frying for us, for some on-the-fly coaching!

Document

A few weeks ago, when I was getting extremely anxious about this virus but it seemed like nobody else was, I had the strong desire to hear “Exhuming McCarthy.” That song was one of my favorites as a young teenager, right at the point when I was growing into what what would become my permanent taste in music.

At that time, we all bought our cassettes from Von’s, the shop that occupied several connected store fronts and sold everything we needed as teenagers: books and magazines; records, cassettes, and later CDs; t-shirts, smutty cards, and gag gifts; and what can only be described as hippie shit: polished slices of geodes, statues of animals and wizards, decorated wooden boxes with hidden doors made in Poland, crystals and semiprecious stones, silver jewelry, that sort of thing. I didn’t have as much money to spend as most of the kids I knew, but once I was old enough to get a part-time job at school, I put almost all of it toward music.

I probably bought Document because of “It’s the End of the World…” or maybe just because that’s what we all were listening to. However, in the midst of the (first) Bush presidency and the start of the (first) Gulf War, it was “Exhuming McCarthy” that became my favorite song, with its scathing indictment of the hypocrisy of corporatist politicians. (It would be many more years of education and activism before I would grasp what it meant to be “addressing the Realpolitik.”) The more years I spend in DC, the more it rings through my head at times of government failures, never more so than when Democrats invariably choose not to use what power they have to fight for us.

This month, rather than turning to the internet, I dug out my old cassette and put it on while I worked. After all these years, Document is still an excellent album. It’s rare these days that I have the patience to listen to an album all the way through; I’ve been spoiled by decades of the ability to skip around on CDs and find online only the song I want to hear at that moment. That day, I just put the tape on and let it go. In doing so, I was reminded of why this was a favorite album, why bars of it come back to me at the oddest moments, why I listened to it over and over until I can still sing along to the whole thing thirty years later.

From the first distinctive notes of “Finest Worksong,” I was back in my high school bedroom, full of enough indignant energy to carry me as far as I needed to go. I have been so demoralized by the last ten years of governance in this country. This year may be the one when we truly see how far “it could always be worse” takes us, but I have learned not to assume we have hit rock bottom. Being confined to my house while the world drowns in its own lungs, though. This is taxing. It’s hard to maintain a determined revolutionary spirit in the midst of so much worry.

We’re all turning to the arts to sustain us, but it was necessary for me to remember the power of music to awaken and energize rather than only soothe and numb. To remind us of who we are.

Landed gentry rationalize. Look who bought the myth.

We are the followers of chaos out of control.

There’s something going on that’s not quite right.

Crazy, crazy world. Crazy, crazy times.

Singer, sing me a song.

We Shall Overcome

Every year my child’s Quaker school celebrates Martin Luther King Day with a peaceful march through the surrounding neighborhood. The kids make signs, talk about Dr. King in big meeting, and share poems, songs, and skits about his life and work. The march concludes with the whole school standing together and singing “We Shall Overcome.”

This march is one of my favorite parts of the school year. I’m not the only parent who makes time to come and walk with our kids, reading signs and singing together as we march. I was surprised to learn a few years ago (but really should not have been) that most white people my age have not seen Eyes On The Prize, did not study the Civil Rights Movement in high school or college, and therefore do not know so many of the Movement songs that I associate with marching, protest, and MLK Day. I love looking around the circle to see so many caring faces, from the littlest kindergarteners to the oldest teachers, and hearing such a variety of voices lifted together in celebration, defiance, and hope.

This year, I was struck very particularly by “we are not afraid.” I realized, as I sang that assertion, that I am afraid almost all of almost every day, to some degree or another. I am afraid of acting and not acting. Afraid of the consequences of my choices and the impacts of things outside of my control. Afraid for myself, for my family, for my neighbors, for the country and the world. Afraid that the past that dogs my heels will never stop impacting my present, driving my future.

What does it mean to stand in the face of illness, disability, white supremacist capitalist patriarchy, violence, imprisonment, and fascism and say, “We are not afraid today.” How can we reasonably be anything other than afraid?

It is a well-worn cliché that bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in the face of it. Our children are barely old enough to touch the edge of what they will have to bear in this world, and still it is so much for so many of them. All we can do is keep going, one step after another, while raising our voices together, choosing not to be controlled by fear.

Ordinary World

My therapist says it’s time to write the truth about myself and my life. Apparently, being seen is one of my last trauma triggers. Looking at the way I assiduously avoid sharing the things I care about most, I can see it. Avoiding, hiding in plain sight, that’s my talent. Speaking up so loudly about other people and social injustices makes it seem like I’m fully here all the time while I carefully (what’s the word we hate?) curate what’s seen about me.

This isn’t meant to be a true confessional verbal dumping, although who really knows what would come out. More of an honest accounting of how I got here, and where here is. Health, trauma, recovery from chronic stress and PTSD, living with chronic illness, and ultimately thriving. I’m not fixed or cured or reborn, but I am turning some kind of corner in my life. My acupuncturist tells me I have a second life coming: I’m different than I’ve been and there’s a whole new experience of the world for me to step into.

The thing is, I’m afraid to step into it. Irrationally (still) afraid of explosive rages, accusations of selfishness and misrepresentation, emotional manipulation and blackmail, and just generally being in trouble for speaking. For competing for space, air, attention (because of course it’s all already allocated to others, none free for me). For daring to believe that what I think or create or experience is worth sharing, is as valid as anything else by anyone else.

Writing this gave me the stress jitters. I wanted to scream, cry, and delete delete delete. Then I read it over and it’s really not that dramatic. So, in a new blog, I might write more thoroughly about stuff. (Vague much?) No gimmicks, that’s another part of my marching orders. No hiding behind songs or other people’s words.

I heard this on the radio this morning, and (after reminiscing about seeing them in concert at Purdue with my Purdue crew) I thought, “Sure. Why not. What’s the worst that could happen?”

Living In The USA

This morning I ended up waiting at the lab with an older man, both of us queued up for blood draws from the phlebotomist who’s excellent at taking only one try to get the vein. My neighbor in waiting was clearly a lab regular too and as we sat there we got to talking, as my gran would say.

He’d joined Kaiser the year I was born and it had seen his family through major surgery, a premature baby, and the sudden arrival of his own chronic illness nearly 30 years ago. Still only tentatively mobile after my descent into acute illness two years ago, I wholeheartedly agreed that without Kaiser I’d be dead too. Maybe not today, but much more seriously ill and in serious decline. My doctor was the first to really take seriously all the disparate symptoms and weirdnesses I’d been dealing with for 30 years. Without her persistence and diagnosis, I’d be struggling to get appropriate treatment for the myriad secondary troubles that my underlying condition cause.

“I just don’t know what people do without health care, it’s terrible,” he said with a deep shake of his head. “They’re always telling us this country is so great.” “It’s unconscionable,” I replied. They die, was what lay unspoken between us, both seeing too easily how we could have been on that road. Even now, with access to health care, the costs of actually using the care I need to remain functional prevent my family from participating in social life in so many other ways. We delay home repairs, to the detriment of local businesses and laborers we employ. We don’t take vacations, eat out, or go to the movies or local shows. Our lives are constrained. But every single day, as I take my pills, see my caregivers, and prepare the specialized diet I need to maintain, I am grieved by the knowledge that others with my condition don’t have even these options. While I am fortunate to have the household income to keep going, they are suffering, struggling to survive, and dying.

We moved on to trading war stories, literal stories of wars neither of us were in: my grandfather playing soccer on a stop in Kenya during World War II, his own story of avoiding Vietnam by having terrible vision. (“We are not going to give you a gun!”) The phlebotomist wondered if we had just come there to hang out, and my neighbor quipped that all we were missing were the drinks.

There are so many ways in which people are dying in this country every day. War, hunger, lack of housing, lack of medical care, police brutality, pick your poison. All of it so unnecessary.

Kombucha

The past few weeks have been day after day of unwelcome events large and small, ranging from a police shooting three blocks from my house to a detached squirrel tail in the backyard.

Today, though, the sun was out and it’s finally become cool enough for long pants. Perfect radio in the car weather and for once the radio did not disappoint. I heard this song and instantly loved it. I stand by my theory that the world of music fans can be divided into alt-rock-banjo and alt-rock-keyboard. It’s no secret where I land in this divide.

When I texted my oldest friend to ask if he’d heard it yet, he listened and then said, “I guess I liked it better when it was called Beck.” He’s a grouch. This is a bop. Way better than any breakup song ever written for me, that’s for sure.

Not Thinking of You

It’s April, chickadees. We made it to the first day of the first full month of spring, when the weather and the calendar begin to agree. It’s the first day back to school after spring break and the beginning of National Poetry Month, which has me simultaneously exuberant and pensive.

What better mood for an old favorite by Diane Ackerman about both spring and loss, from I Praise My Destroyer, which also happens to be the first book of poetry on my recently alphabetized shelves.

*

Not Thinking of You

Yes, the hot-blooded sun
yanking crocuses up upon their roots.

But no, your wild unbridled eyes
galloping hell-for-leather into mine.

Yes, the bloom-luscious magnolia tree
drunk with pale, brandy-snifter flowers.

But no, my spine’s soft riverbed,
which you again and again and again kissed.

Yes, the fog rolling in off the lake
at nightfall, under the tolling of the stars.

But no, the blur of our knotted fingers.
No, the well water of your deep-rolling kisses.

No, the love-brightened room you fled
for the tight, local orders of your life.

No, my whisperless bed when you’d gone,
where I lay till dawn opened

red arms on the horizon and, in my chest,
nothing like day began breaking.

*

So many things to not think of in spring. The lover who abandoned you. The friend who betrayed you. The neighbor who snubbed you, the coworkers who are incompetent to the point of sabotage. The wretched state of the world, all the ways we destroy each other. The accumulation of hurts and heartaches and the beloved substances we use to numb them.

Don’t think of any of it. It’s April.

Children

It is impossible to celebrate Independence Day with children in cages. Children taken from their parents and shipped across the country and given to strangers. Children who traveled alone to what their parents believed would be safety held in jail rather than released to relatives or community members.

It is impossible to celebrate, to turn a blind eye to the barbarism and brutality of what we are doing. Even for one day. For one afternoon. What we are doing is horrific and unforgivable. We have permanently harmed tens of thousands of children out of sheer love of cruelty.

They say that when you love someone far away, it’s a comfort to look at the sky and see the same stars and moon that shine on us all. When I see the American flag, I see the same flag that flies high above all of these camps and prisons. There is no honor in that, nothing to respect. That we have done to ourselves.