Monday, April 18, 2011

Twenty Years

I wrote this on the anniversary of the first kiss I shared with my husband, more than twenty years ago.



We met in college, in English 101. He sat beside me, a quiet Adonis of bronzed, sculpted muscles and too-long hair that had been bleached blond by the Arizona sun. I had no interest in athletic men. I scoffed at his friend from high school—Barry, the volleyball player—who sat in front of him and asked how many pounds he could bench press now. Such physical pursuits were beneath my notice. I far preferred my books to his biceps, convinced anything that took time away from studying was pointless. My opinion of him was easily summed up in two words: stupid jock.

“Nice shoes,” was the first thing he ever said to me.

I can’t even remember what the shoes looked like now. Black pumps would be a good guess. I was a weird kid and never favored the torn jeans and ratty shirts of my grunge-loving compatriots. Starting college at sixteen had been an intimidating experience, and even though I’d had a year of it under my belt by that point, I still donned my professional, “grown-up” clothes like armor.

I mumbled my thanks and tried to determine if he was making fun of me.

When he voted for my story, I decided he’d been serious about the shoes. Our teacher had assigned us an essay to write—the best submissions would be read aloud and the class would select a winner. I was so proud when my story had been selected. His story had been chosen, as well. But he voted for mine and nudged Barry to do the same. I won. And my opinion of him began to shift.

It was another story that changed it entirely. He showed up for class one day, and a tattered copy of Stephen King’s “The Talisman” sat atop his duffel bag. I loved that book. I’d read it twice.

So had he.

We started out talking about that book, and we just never stopped.

I had a free period after English class, and he made a habit of walking with me to the library. We’d grab a bagel and sit in the building’s open-air atrium, beneath the towering fig trees, until we’d grown hoarse from sharing tales of our past. That little square had to have existed in some otherworldly realm, where hours passed as seconds and preconceived notions shattered easier than the glass walls reflecting our images back at us.

My initial impression of California-muscle-moron couldn’t have been further from the truth. A quiet farm boy from Idaho hid inside the jock exterior. The hours spent lifting weights were as much to hone a fine physique as to escape an undesirable home life.

We came from vastly different backgrounds, but we shared more than I had thought possible. The youngest children of broken homes, we’d both moved so frequently we had mastered the art of packing boxes by ten. The reluctance to make new friends had been a survival skill, yet neither of us seemed willing to raise our shields now. A levee had been breached, and it would never be rebuilt.

I will always remember the day of our first kiss. We had driven to Estrella Mountain Park, to the southwest of Phoenix, and had parked beneath the trees. Old, weathered mesquites stretched their low branches across the desert, their feathery leaves dipping in the breeze to skim the scorched sand. My man leaned against the smooth wood where branch met trunk, fingers threaded behind his head. His loose tee shirt fluttered in the breeze and revealed scars that lead to more stories, more revelations of a past best left behind. At some point, we abandoned tales of what had been and dared to imagine what could be.

Warm November sun dappled our heads, heated our skin, and lingered even as he drove me home. We stood in the driveway, and he told me he wasn’t interested in merely dating—he wanted something that could defy the odds, defy our history, and last forever. He wrote his phone number on the back of a gas station receipt, and then he kissed me. He was Big Red gum and black cherry flavored Clearly Canadian water. I remember little of his technique or style. The Earth didn’t move and the Heavens didn’t open in song. I probably wouldn’t have noticed even if they had—I was a very sheltered seventeen-year old, and this was my first kiss. Ever. I was far more concerned with where to put my nose and when, or even if, I should open my mouth. I dropped the slip of paper with his phone number and frantically searched for it after he’d left. It’s in a keepsake box now.

It’s hard to believe twenty years have passed since that day. I shouldn’t be surprised, considering how many ways I can mark the passage of time. We’ve changed states, changed houses, and changed jobs. Our minds have expanded along with our waistlines. Friends have come and gone. We’ve lost people we loved, and we have created new life.

It hasn’t all been wonderful. There were times when I was so unhappy I contemplated unforgivable things. And I know he never imagined how low the lows could be. We have struggled over finances and fought over every topic imaginable. Yet it is little things that have somehow seen us through—a thousand shared jokes no one else would understand, countless small triumphs against an ocean of adversity. Our love has shifted along with the tides. The first blush has definitely faded, but something strong has appeared in its stead. Something safe and sturdy, with the kind of roots we had once only dreamed of.

On days like this, it is fun to remember its origins.

If I close my eyes, I can still smell the sun-baked desert, the sharp notes of creosote over the dense layers of mesquite. I can hear the succulent branches of the palo verde trees stirred by the dusty breeze. I taste Big Red gum and feel his denim jacket beneath my fingers.

I am seventeen again.

And anything is possible.


Thursday, September 10, 2009

Older, But Not Wiser



The city that never sleeps.

The defensive headquarters of a nation.

An empty field in rural America.

Eight years ago, the world held its breath as nearly 3,000 souls were stolen in the name of hate.

September 11, 2001: The largest attack by a foreign entity on American soil. The New York fire department lost 343 members of its force, while the police departments of New York and the Port Authority lost 23 and 37, respectively—the largest loss of emergency responders in a single event in U.S. history.

And for a time, the nation united as never before, inspired by stories of heroism and hope. Strangers helped each other. Volunteers mobilized. Support came from the far reaches of the globe and from right next door. We donated supplies, we called our families, and we hugged a little tighter that Christmas. And we swore we’d never forget.

The bumper stickers have faded now.

Hate still fills our airwaves, not in newsfeeds from foreign channels, but from within our own borders. And it has turned viral, feeding upon fear, spread by those who would capitalize from a polarized nation. We have abandoned our manners, forgotten the very meaning of the word "respect." We bicker over healthcare. We spin controversy from a simple message meant to inspire our kids to stay in school.

The rhetoric is everywhere. And it is just as hostile—it is filled with just as much hate—as the 19 terrorists who carried out their attacks eight years ago.

How quickly we forget. How easy it is to become complacent, to feel safe in the absence of danger.

Anniversaries are important, if for no other reason than they help ensure we do not forget. And on this anniversary in particular, there is so much more we can do.

We can refuse to be swayed by hate. We can vow to question every single word we read, to consider its source and examine its agenda. We can learn to recognize terrorism in all its guises—from Al-Qaeda hijackers to hecklers of handicapped women at town hall meetings.

We can stop the spread of ignorance—truly, we can.

I have faith in us. Do you?

Goodbye, Mosley

This is an ode to my old house, written when I was feeling rather melancholy about leaving. Catharsis in 730 words.

Goodbye, Mosley

I know it’s just a house.

Just a shelter from the elements, and not an overly impressive one, at that. Even to my untrained eye, it is obvious the architect cared more for cheap construction than design elements. For some people, a house is nothing more than bricks and mortar, yet our little dwelling cannot claim such lofty ideals. It has but one half-wall of masonry in front, and that serves more decoration than function. Simple lumber provides the only real support.

Before the siding was replaced, there were rats in the attic. And not just any rats—zombie rats. We found a dead one in a trap once, its little rat-brain eaten by its friends, leaving nothing but a hollow, rat-skull bowl. The creepy factor alone was enough to prompt calls to pest control and siding contractors. Until they arrived and work was completed, there was nothing to do but load the traps with more peanut butter.

Zombie rats love peanut butter.

There are a thousand things I meant to do to this house. Now that it’s empty, they jump out at me: the gaps where the baseboards still need to be caulked; the gouges in the wall where I got a bit too zealous removing the wallpaper; the crack in the ceiling, along the drywall seam.

If I squint, I can still see the holes in the wall where the baby-gate was attached.

And that’s when it hits me.

These walls have seen more of my life than any others I’ve known.

They held me up after my mother died, when the tears wouldn’t stop and the effort to walk was more than I could manage. They watched us bring our newborn daughter home from the hospital and set her tiny, sleeping body on the bed. They must have seen the terror on our faces, must have realized how unprepared we were when we whispered, “What do we do now?” The house answered as best it could. The doors seemed to stick less when she was sleeping, and the holly outside her window quadrupled in size, ensuring no intruders could enter.

Our baby grew into a child in this house. It feels so wrong to stand in her room now. Where is the Winnie the Pooh wallpaper border we hung when I was pregnant? Where are the Tinker Bell murals that decorated her playroom?

The empty rooms echo with my footsteps instead of her laughter. Safe, neutral tones have replaced the vibrant green walls and purple trim she loved so much. I know it had to be done—what buyer would make an offer on a house with such ludicrous colors? But it still feels like a betrayal, like I’ve destroyed a piece of her childhood that can never be recreated.

There are more memories waiting for me in the bedroom. Sleepy morning kisses, watching the rain pelt the windows. Candlelit nights and soft sighs. But these are private memories, best left unwritten. No one will know the games played in this room. The house will keep our secrets.

I walk to the living room and stare out the window, and I’m struck by how barren the patio looks without my overgrown jungle of plants. The ash tree will drop its seedpods soon, but now it will be someone else’s mess to clean. I’m relieved, yet I can’t stop the sting of jealousy as I picture a stranger sitting beneath its branches. Will they wrap themselves in a blanket on chilly autumn mornings and sip their coffee, as I did? Will their eyes watch for the flash of red from the cardinal who winters in our yard? Will their spirits lift when they hear his song?

The image before me blurs, and I know it is time to leave.

Time to say goodbye.

Goodbye to pool parties and plentiful parking, to crazy neighbors and crooked walls. Goodbye to an insanely large closet and an annoyingly small kitchen. Goodbye, messy tree and sweet, melodious cardinal. Goodbye, zombie rats.

Goodbye, Mosley.

I turn my key in the lock for the last time and allow myself one look back. I see much more than an empty house. Behind the cracked, peeling paint of the front door I remember thirteen years of laughter and tears, of hopes and dreams. Thirteen years of fights and reconciliations, of sorrows and joys, of highs and lows. Within this simple shell, there were births and there were deaths.

But above all, there was life.

I know it’s just a house.

Just wood and nails that cannot see my tears or hear my whispered thanks. I offer both anyway.

Thank you, Mosley. We shall miss you.