Archive for December, 2007

A Lesson In [My] Confidence

We were installing a bathtub in a closet of a room next to my bedroom. The bathtub wasn’t a very nice one at all. If you tapped it with your finger, it sounded like a tin can. I had made a heavy case for a modernistic tub cast in brushed aluminum that I’d seen in a Vogue somewhere. It went almost unheard, but, I still think, we could have done better than that pathetic tin mold we ended up with. In effort to perhaps mask the tub’s inferiority, we lined all the walls surrounding it in sheets of white marble.

My father insisted on undertaking the entirety of the project, as he is apt to do if ever a household project comes up. Unfortunately, he isn’t terribly experienced or, even, talented, when it comes to such things as rounding edges and handling glue. I commend his desire to prove himself in the handyman arena, but at the time, I wished that he wasn’t practicing on my little bathroom. It was to be my sanctuary. My temple of (undiscovered) beauty. The globs of glue left untrimmed, the crooked drawers, and the uncovered sheetrock killed the vibe. As an effort to prevent any more damages than necessary, I took to shadowing my father while he worked. He gave me little jobs to make me feel useful. I watched his movements hawk-like for any carelessness or discrepancy.

When my time came to prevent error however, I somehow found it difficult. I suddenly understood why he was allowed free reign over the house from basement to dome. (Actually, we didn’t have a dome. There was a skylight in the attic though, and I’m sure if it went faulty, my father would by right up there, attempting to re-seam the glass.) He had a king-like air, very intimidating, that allowed for no questions in his practice. I watched him measure one wall, noting that he’d missed the ugly lip of the tub, which I was sure we’d want covered along with the rest of the wall. Shouldn’t I say something? Shouldn’t I say, “Re-measure so that the marble will cover that little fold of metal?” Instead, I made excuses for his oversight: “He’s measuring so sure and confidently. He must have meant to miss the lip. Maybe he knows something that I don’t. Maybe I just won’t say anything.”

When the marble came in and it was an inch short, I learned two things: 1) I should never second-guess my gut and 2) My father is not all-knowing. I began to notice how easily he’d forget, make a mistake, lose his temper. I fought every day to mold myself into his opposite. Our relationship during my teenage years were strained, and at times, explosive. Sometimes he would frighten me so badly, that every atom in my body would shake. It took every bit of will power I possessed to stand my ground and reply calmly, serenely (as I imagined Roald Dahl’s Matilda, my childhood heroine, would):

“You forgot that for five years of your life you ate your cold cereal with water before mom started bringing soy milk home, so forgive me if I don’t take you seriously. A woman isn’t a creature bred to obey. I am allowed to disagree with you. You’re going to have to learn how to take it without yelling and straining our relationship further.”

That was the spirit of any particular answer anyway. The arguments are too numerous to recall clearly. After each episode, I would go for a long walk, sometimes to the other end of town until my blood stopped boiling and my heart returned to my chest. Sometimes I would visit my grandmother, but more often, I would just walk and walk feverishly.

One evening my freshman year in high school, we had an argument to end all arguments (although it didn’t.). I found myself wishing that he would just haul out and knock me to the floor so I wouldn’t have to worry about that anymore. At it’s climax, all I could manage was, “You’re wrong,” before I left the house as quickly as I could.

I started running. A drag shut couldn’t slow me down. The town flew by in a flash and I found myself in the desert. I bounded over the brush and cacti like a rabbit. Dust caught every footfall and the sky had reddish-brown streaks above the mountains; like blood spreading and curling in shallow water. I found a dirt road and ran a good five miles before I stopped. I wasn’t angry. The old, furious adrenaline had left me a good two miles back.

I actually felt powerful. I ran home. It was dark when I got there.

He was about to ask where I’ve been. I could see him opening his mouth to say the words. He didn’t say them. My skin was emitting enough heat to make the mirrors and windows sweat. I was glistening like a marathon runner. I sent him a glance that said many things, but louder than the rest: “Don’t ever fucking underestimate me again.”

I knew two things that day. 1) I would never shake in his presence again. 2) I am stronger than I thought.

Post-Tango

I work on precipitous angles
For your Grecian upper half-
Pounding like a drum-
To bend and cover my angles
Scraping the wooden floor
Like an actor, discovering the art of dying
Breathing over and over
A lullaby or monsoon.
Angles feverish, they cling like a child
The god’s face
Yours
Yours
Yours
Falls forward
A lusting lily in the rain
White and loud
My precipitous angles carve the wooden floor
The heart underneath is readying her escape
To dance in the storm
Arching with a
Fool
Fool
Fool
High on the tempest…
Wishing only for lips stronger and stronger
Colors brilliant and bold:
The hourglass wrapped in a white flag
Than search our bodies with desperate violence and disbelief
Happy! Rumi at the height of his passion
Happy! A new mother
Happy! Frames shaking with happiness
And ready to leave
Understand this cannot stop when the wooden floor is clean
We may sit composedly next hour
Remembering with hilarity
Our passionate young heads
But precipitously against my angles
A chest is pounding and pounding:
Fall in love again.

Baby, It’s Cold Outside

img_1542.jpg
My favorite part about Christmastime is the snow. Granted, snow isn’t always guaranteed, but it usually shows up with a few weeks to spare. Suddenly everything is a painting, with cute little houses burning like woodstoves on the inside and trees weighed down with icicles.
My least favorite part about Christmas is the green-and-red combination. This isn’t a smart fashion choice. Red and green and white? Just… stop. Actually (though the aforementioned is annoying and should be taken semi-seriously) my least favorite part are those stupid blow-up figurines in people’s yard. I mean, why take the trouble of rolling three large boulders of snow descending in size, finding a carrot and buttons for a “snowman” when all you really need is an air pump and a trip to Walmart for a perfectly porportioned Frosty? Why take the time or effort? Well you know what? Snowmen are supposed to be fun. They aren’t decorations… they’re memories. So here’s to the snowman balloons for singlehandedly obliverating memories and turning front yards into car dealerships. Fuck you.
a) Most disturbing thing ever seen: a balloon-nativity set, in which Mary was deflating and kind of looked like she was giving baby Jesus a blow job.
My younger sister Jessica summed up secure-lized Christmas pretty well after one strenuous afternoon of shopping (in which I managed one purchase and she had a present for every member of the family, as well as several extended members whom we aren’t quite sure how they’re related, her co-workers, the librarian, and carolers who might drop by). She said, “Christmas is not about receiving. It is about giving. Although we do receive, and receive it gladly.”
My second least favorite part is the moment at the Christmas party when you’re picking about the food and the host notices you’re bypassing the meat and says loudly, “YOU VEGETARIAN?” So then you know, you nod… nicely at first, than apologetically as her eyes narrow. “WHY?” She demands. Not wanting to start a nutritional, ethical and psychological debate, you say something like, “It doesn’t agree with me,” or “I need to still fit in my evening gown for New Years Eve. It was very expensive.” But it’s too late. Everyone within a 50-foot radius wants to talk about your lifestyle choices and how you can possibly live with yourself everyday.
All in all though, it’s been pleasant. There’s enough chocolate about to make a balloon out of me and The Bird and the Bee’s “Carol of the Bells” takes at least twelve days to worship thoroughly.

In A Constant State of Spring

For the past three days, it’s been snowing. The world looks so safe and fluffy. The snow, though cold and sometimes deceiving (as in, it masks the ice on the sidewalk, so when I wear my fuck-me red heels to a Christmas party, and the party in question is located in a house on a forty-five degree slope and the only parking available is the next block up in a tree, I either have to scoot around on my ass or use a gentleman’s arm and drag behind him like a drunk handicap) snow is the only thing that can really get me in the Holiday mood. Now I want to go shopping.

Last week when it was seventy degrees outside, I just wasn’t feeling it.

It makes my father happy too. With snow on the ground he can laugh and make this jab at me whenever he can:

“What global warming!? You bought silly that grocery tote. You spent hours protesting the coal plants. You’re  silly. Look at this frozen thermometer! It… can’t… hear… you!”

Then the sun comes out, and from here on, hometown is in a constant state of spring. Melted snow slides from the trees and everything glistens, reflecting the sun.

Everyone will be disappointed to learn that I’ve lost my camera. I’m not too pleased about it. I’ve also seemed to have misplaced the following mittens:

mittens

 Just keep an eye out.

I seem to be misplacing a lot of things lately.

Three days ago, I completely tore my place apart. I took down the curtains, the pictures, shelves. I gave away much of what was on the shelves. “We all go through our minimalistic stage,” he said. I just like the idea of limbo. My house represented a woman who doesn’t exist anymore. Now it is a clean slate, and I feel wonderfully free when I enter my rooms. They don’t define me… perhaps suggesting a fondness for Art Nouveau or orange. None of that. My space is being reborn and I’m shaking the sawdust off my feet.

Am I moving in or am I moving out?


Add to Technorati Favorites Blogarama - The Blog Directory
donate-paypal1.jpg