wolftree

i don’t look it but i’m strong. i’m a realist but i’m optimistic. i believe for as long as i can that things will work out somehow. i believe and believe and believe, and i stand strong and steadfast right up until i shatter. then i suffer and rage and weep and grieve like a maelstrom. then i usually drink myself blind to the land of dreams and wake up, spit out some teeth, adjust my crown and light my inner fire once more… and i believe again.

my dearest chimpy, i miss you still, i mourn you still. forever. you live in my heart and that is all there is. maybe one day we’ll meet at the wolf tree and my heart won’t miss you anymore.

https://youtu.be/BF-nZziUCCY

I’m trying

It’s December 7th and it just doesn’t feel like it. I’m trying to get into a jolly holiday mood but it’s tough this year. There are over 280,000 people dead of Covid 19 in the U.S. so far and that is a whole lot of grieving families. There are 20,000 people with cases severe enough to be in the ICU right now and many more infected. In many places around the country our healthcare system is close to collapse and we still haven’t even gotten to the post Thanksgiving spike. Cases are on a massive upswing while at the same time my library is continuing to open back up. This scares the hell out of me. I love my job, and I need my job, but if I bring Covid 19 home to my husband it is likely to kill him. Every time I see my mother, from 10 feet away, outdoors, masked, and brief, she cries and says she can’t take it anymore. She 74 with a heart condition and this whole thing has worn her down. So fa la la la la and stuff.

Still, I’ve been trying. We went and picked out a tree and set it in the stand… like a week ago… and it still has no lights. I set up our advent calendar and we keep forgetting to open the drawers and read the little slips. I got the kids involved in a bit of holiday baking, that went pretty well, everyone loves cookies. I played Christmas CDs and tried to keep things light and happy for a while. This was the most successful I have been at getting into the holiday mood lately. I’ll keep at it.

There are many cookies still to bake, there are some presents to be wrapped, we are all here together and as safe as we can be in these mad times. So well, bake, we’ll game, we’ll wrap up the presents, we’ll keep the wood stove going and we’ll get around to decorating the tree real soon. I can’t believe all the protections put in place to help people weather the pandemic will probably be allowed to expire soon. I just cannot fathom the heartlessness that would see a massive wave of evictions during this time of crisis and in winter. I can only hope the incoming administration will leap to the rescue of the American people and do everything they can to get help and relief to folks, and PPE and other critical support to our frontline healthcare workers. Too many people already struggle to get enough to eat, too many have already been evicted, too many are stuck in a whirlpool of tragic events, grief and despair. It’s all too much and I’m not personally facing these issues, yet.

At a Loss

My Uncle died yesterday morning, on his daughter’s birthday as if dying with so little warning wasn’t traumatic enough, my poor cousin. I’m heartbroken for her, her children, my other cousin, my other uncles, my mother and my aunt. He’s the first to go of his generation in my family. I am having feelings but I couldn’t describe them accurately if I tried. The whole thing is surreal. I didn’t see him often, maybe a few times a year in a good year, so it won’t change very much in my day-to-day world but it leaves a lot of things unsaid, unresolved.

There was a big upset when I was still little, at my grandmother’s birthday gathering, at our house. My uncle got very upset over something, supposedly he was jealous that my mother’s inexpensive present to Gramma got a bigger reaction than his expensive present, so this uncle grabbed one of my other uncles and took off. When they came back they had alcohol with them, beer I believe, and that wasn’t allowed at family gatherings for some reason, so my grandfather raised his voice at these 2 uncles and the uncle who just died grabbed his wife and kids and stormed off in a huff. He prevented all contact with the whole family for several years. I couldn’t see or talk to my cousin and I didn’t understand what the hell was going on. When he decided to have contact with the family again there was no explanation, no discussion, let’s just pretend all that never happened. That has never been good enough, it’s bullshit. I mean I know my grandfather raised his voice over the beer thing, and I’m sure that humiliation is why this uncle took off that day, but was all this idiocy started because my mother’s gift was more thoughtful and more well-received? That seems flimsy to me. Plus, my mother is the person who told it to me so it is immediately suspect. She lies like it’s breathing, like the lies she tells keep her alive, and she doesn’t admit anything that makes her look bad so there could be a lot of things she might want to hide. I don’t know though, and now I think I might never know.

So I’ll remember him best for that, for taking my cousin away and not allowing us to see each other or talk to each other for years. I’ll remember him too for being one of 2 uncles who utterly ruined the piddly-ass, bullshit gathering we had to spread Gramma & Grampa’s ashes, several months after they were killed. I will remember him for not allowing a single moment of silence, of reflection, not one single moment for so much as one meaningful word before he and my other uncle unceremoniously dumped my grandparent’s ashes into the river, not even allowing all of us to arrive on the bank. “They didn’t want any funeral!” He and the other uncle snarled when everyone expressed shock and dismay over their actions. I am still furious every time I think of it. I waited months, there was no funeral, no memorial, just as my grandparents wanted. I wasn’t the only one who expected a moment of silence and perhaps a little sharing of memories, nothing formal, nothing to violate their wishes. My memories of him are not fond ones. The brother who always leapt to be his partner in crime also remains not one of my favorite people. The both of them have always seemed to me to be harshly rules-oriented people without the kindness that can make such people decent and good. There seemed to be no mercy in their strict attitudes. Other people have had different experiences of my late uncle, and of the one still here who always helped him. I’m glad.

I guess, not having known him well enough to have anything much beyond these stark experiences, I guess I won’t really mourn him. He wasn’t much a part of my life and most of what I remember of him isn’t very pleasant. I feel like I should be sad to lose him but I only feel sad for the others who lost him. I guess they had good times with him, good experiences, happy memories. I only have what I mentioned above and fleeting memories of brief shallow conversations at family gatherings, and briefer, perfuntionary hugs. I never had a real conversation with him so what could I find to miss? For myself, not a lot. For my cousins, they lost their father and I hope that he was a decent one. I hope he was kind and patient with them, I hope there is a lot to miss. I hope he was a good husband and A tremendous loss to my aunt. I hope he was thoughtful, kind and supportive to his little family. I hope he is missed and mourned. I wish I had seen his good side, been allowed to know him more, it’s too late for that now. This is what I have and I’ll do with it what I can.

All those moments will be lost in time…

People die every day. I don’t know why I wasn’t expecting this one but I really wasn’t. Rutger Hauer is dead. I feel like I’ve heard an old friend I fell out of touch with has died. I remember right where I saw him first in Bladerunner when I was 15. We’d bought tickets for something else and snuck in. It was an awesome flick, still is. Talking about the movie afterwards my friends and I dubbed him “That Johnny-Perfect guy” because we hadn’t caught his name in the credits. I’ll never forget the feeling that washed over me when Roy howled like a wolf or the crystalline perfection of the “tears in the rain” scene. A few years later I’d see him again in Ladyhawke, a movie I adore for the story while cringing at it’s utterly inappropriate soundtrack, I love him in his role of the hopelessly cursed knight, Navarre.

After high school, with our vast restaurant-job-earned wealth, a friend of mine and I scoured movie rental places for any movie he was in. I’m honestly not sure if I’d call what I felt any kind of crush it was more a sort of fascination. I’m pretty sure he’s not in the running for Greatest Actor of All Time but there was something spellbinding, at least for me, about what he brought to each role I saw him in. Something about the way he wore all those masks that I couldn’t ignore even if I’d never be able to say what it was. He was brilliant to watch and I could rarely look away if he was on screen. And, gods, was he in a LOT of movies over the years. I honestly haven’t kept up with all his work which gives me much to still look forward to. But it’s very sad to know he’s gone and he’ll never make another film again.

So many of my favorite actors from my youth have gone and usually I’ll post something sappy on facebook acknowledging their passing. But Mr. Hauer is special because he was kind of my secret. I couldn’t say a word about him after Blade Runner, because sneaking into R rated movies was more than frowned upon in the house I got through childhood in, but I was silently waiting, hoping to see him again in something I’d be allowed to see. There was no internet back then for me to just hop on to look up a list of his films. I don’t know if there was anywhere we could find out that kind of information in the 80s. The best there was were these cheaply-made books, sort of film omnibuses or something, where you could look up movies by title. Try finding all someone’s work like that, OOF.

Anyway, I’m glad I can just pop into IMDB now and spend some time catching up with my old friend. I’ll probably do what I always do and save one film, or one last episode of a TV show he was in, and never watch it. I have trouble saying goodbye, trouble letting go, letting death have the last word…. well, trouble admitting death has had the last word. Goodnight, Rutger, I’ll miss you.