Sunday, January 12, 2025

Futile Awakenings

 It’s been a while since I shouted at the nightly news while my husband is making dinner, or, howled during morning drive-time segments all alone in my car. 


“No one can't hear you,” my husband will chuckle at these fruitless attempts to counter whatever incredulity makes me fume. No doubt some outrage I might have assumed was satire if it wasn’t announced on a network that had once prided itself on reporting facts.


The headlines from papers of note that fulfill the wishes of a "Pitchbot" jokester:   


“President-elect Trump and his allies have spent four years trying to change the narrative around the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. capitol. On "The Daily," our reporter talks to one of the rioters.“


Serious news is near-impossible to decipher in the modern moment.


Those days seem so far in the past, especially since journalists have turned into scolds reminding audiences they have an obligation to report “both sides.”


In the weeks since the election, I have stepped back from close reads and my usual media transfixation. So my silence is owing, in strong measure, to attrition.


Soon enough his voice will be everywhere again. The swollen vagaries whittled into downright lies with sharpened points. Nails in our collective coffins, We won’t be able to avoid it. 


But more than the annoyance of his continuous gushing stream and lack of conscience, it is the people around him who pose the most risk. 


People who already have the spotlight; people who have blinded us with the foolgold of big ideas.


Like Elon Musk, who, after backing the America-First guy, unabashedly bashes the talent and skills of American Workers, saying out loud that companies like his require international workers on limited visas; people who can’t quit and retain legal status. 


People like Mark Zuckerberg, who, on Tuesday, announced that his company, Meta, would end its TFG-era of professional fact-checking, trying to spin the ability to deceive as fundamental to free special. He even had the audacity to stake a claim that he formed his company to give people a voice. 


He must think we have forgotten his once lofty goal, creating Facebook for rating the appearance of women around campus. 


"We're also going to tune our content filters to require much higher confidence before taking down content," Zuckerberg said. "The reality is that this is a trade-off. It means we're going to catch less bad stuff, but we'll also reduce the number of innocent people's posts and accounts that we accidentally take down."


Pandemic denialism leading to snake oil cures, political conspiracies sending armed rubes into family pizza shops, and other swindle-based threats against civil society draining life savings …. will flourish while the head honchos that dust their hands of moderating against chaos rake in spoils of its monetization. 


I don’t think we deserve a country that is cannibalizing itself because some folks realized the horror and called it out. 


The rest of us will need to wake up and realize the danger. We can’t avert our eyes forever.


Sunday, January 05, 2025

Fueling station

Almost there. The crossroad is up ahead. 

Will I? Won’t I?

“Ugh. …”

I throw on my car’s directional indicator and hang a right into the gas station, where I will throw my New Year’s resolution — which I toasted with a healthy smoothy in a silly glass picked out by my children  — out the window.

“Yes, I guess I will.”

It may have seemed like a last-minute decision to the motorist behind me, but I had been considering stopping at this particular convenience location since I drove past it a half hour earlier.

I was on the edge then: It was well past noon and I hadn’t yet eaten. It may be well past dinner before I get home to a proper meal. Perhaps a little caffeine would hold me over.

I certainly didn’t need the kind of fuel I craved, which I had successfully avoided earlier only because I knew I’d be turning around and going back in short order.

Judging by the service apron, with the gas pumps all vacant and the parking spaces around the store completely occupied, I had the feeling I was not alone in my gut reaction.

But I kinda knew this place. Not particularly well, yet I’ve been here before. It’s not fancy, but it has some bells and whistles. The coffee is good, and once you navigate past shelves packed with pared-down versions of grocery store staples (at elevated prices), and wire racks filled with single-serve, cellophane-wrapped commercial bakery snacks was a window where a real, live person made salads and hot and cold sandwiches to order.

There were even a few tables that were mostly taken with people waiting on morsels.

I didn’t need much, I thought. 

I could find something, anything, to grab and just go that I might be able to masquerade as healthy.

I stood in front of the coffee maker to give myself time to consider the options while I worked on caffeine. I poked my finger at the screen to make it come to life and perused the options: Espresso … Cappuccino … Latte? 

I didn’t want anything that fancy.

A little panic creeps in when I don’t see the option of plain coffee but I remember what a person should do in just this situation, and begin to relax. I selected a size for my beverage and its coordinating cup from an upside-down stack, plunking the thing down over the coffee maker’s spillway before I selected ”Americano” and then “Brew.”

A fragrant and foamy liquid spilled forth into the cup, I can now turn my attention back to this mid-afternoon perk up still has me feeling peckish.

A hard roll would do. Perhaps a muffin leftover from the morning commute would be just as nice. Not a whole sandwich.

It didn’t have to be an eight-count package of doughnuts … the kind with the freakishly uniformed-shaped crumbs on top, which also had a sort of Franken-Flavor, cinnamon, and sugar was actually a hybrid berry.

But there it was -- a blue and white box of crumb-topped ring cakes … floating out as if visiting from someone else's memory --  just to the left of where the coffee cup lids were stacked.

In a minute, the box would be at the cashier’s counter next to my coffee. And then on the seat beside me in the car.  

 Will I have the willpower to eat just one? Save the rest for my resolve and the teenagers who still possess a youthful metabolism.

It's possible. 

I'll just need to stop in half a mile (just before the pizza shop) and put the box in the trunk. 




Sunday, December 29, 2024

Feast or famine

You’ve done it again! Another holiday season is on the wane. Congratulations! 


If you are anything like me, you are putting your house back in order. You’ve no doubt instructed the children (if still living at home) to take all the things you remembered to wrap up to their rooms and find all the other things you forgot you had bought as you are taking the new vacuum cleaner your husband bought for …. himself … around the house just to drive that dirt home.

You know … this model has a quiet function?”


No matter how you managed, you managed. And that’s reason enough to celebrate.

Hopefully, it was different than last time.


I say, hopefully, because I know that it was. Nothing ever stays the same.


Which, if we think about it just enough, can lighten some of the burden.


Did you skip a step this time? Perhaps you left some decorations in the storage bin or untangled yourself from that extra strand of holiday lights. 


Maybe you made one fewer dessert for the big dinner?


Or maybe … like us … you started something new. Like making your Big Night into a Feast of Seven Potatoes …. “Because we are Irish and dad hates fish.”


I thought about this as I searched for fridge space; the inside of which is packed tightly with things leftover from other dinners, and the outside now dotted with magnetic derrières of farm animals thanks to my daughter and the sense of humor she certainly inherited from my side of the family. 


My uncle, at another Christmas decades past, would have made a joke about politics being all about horses’ asses in wordplay: “Defeat goes over defense before detail.” 


My mother, his sister, would have spent hours making a plain cheesecake just for him, and my father would have spent seventeen minutes constructing a tiny sign of a Santa-hatted skull with crossbones out of a shirt box, a toothpick and the tail-end of the Magic tape.


We may have had stressors, but we didn’t have strife.


We didn’t make a cheesecake this year. 


It seemed a little too rich for our blood, which is already loaded with more than enough cholesterol to warrant the prescribing of a statin. 

Statin, I say the word over and over, tricking myself into believing it is just like a lovely fabric that feels good when fashioned into pajamas.


Still, there are enough riches for ample embarrassment.

 

The numbers of gifts may be fewer in quantity but their complexity and cost has increased on a relatively expected trajectory. 


We want for nothing. Not even time to waste. And as we recline in front of the flatscreen, settling in for “Love Actually,” it is abundantly clear we have plenty.

“EIGHT IS A LOT OF LEGS, DAVID!”


As the room echoed with movie-line dubs, I flipped through a box of index cards written out in my mother’s handwriting. Some things were familiar. The cheesecake was there. As were some other special desserts she made on occasion. Some recipes were foreign, like “The President’s Mac and Cheese.” 


Perhaps, that one, like so many recipes in my folder of printouts, had been an idea that’s time never came. 


We were alike in that way.


Also alike in the recipes that were glaringly absent. Like her recipe for beef stroganoff and potatoes au gratin. Things she made so often, she didn’t need instructions.

Truth is, we do want for some things.


Perhaps, a few years from now it will be recipes for our Feast Seven Potatoes.


Sunday, December 22, 2024

No Good Deed

“Happy BIRTHDAY!”


This was a most auspicious occasion. On this day my Ittybit, a child born to me roundabout YESTERDAY, reached the age of majority.


The phone seemed to know what an epic moment this was. Because at its whim, balloons took flight while the letters I had carefully spelled out undulated in a crescendo of animation; each one becoming bold for just an instant before tripling in size, and finally, settling back into a standard sentence-like formation.


It was like a tiny party in the ethosphere.


It was also a little sad. 


This was the first birthday in her whole little life she has spent away from home … away from family. … away from me.


And even though I may have had grand plans to surprise her with something elaborate and exciting – like one of the many classroom-sized birthday parties of her youth –  it wasn’t something I was able to wrangle since the timing and logistics of her new adult life aren’t within my power to commandeer.


As it should be, I realize without lament.


Still, I want her to know we are thinking of her, but with something isn’t just some nebulous thought. And so I scour the internet for a gift she will like, and that I can schedule for delivery at a precise time on The Day Of All Days.


I land on flowers. Which makes me kind of giddy, I’m not going to lie.


“THIS is PERFECT!!!!” (Yes, in my mind all those exclamation marks and capitalizations appeared along with a fist bump I probably executed in real life after entering all my credit card details). I didn’t think I could go wrong: I know her favorite flowers and her favorite color scheme. And I know they would be a gift – even from her parents – that she would adore in the moment and for the seven to 10 days they are guaranteed FreshTM.


Of course, what I didn’t know was where she would be during the 12-5 p.m delivery window. The plans she told me about, which included a work party on her actual birthday and two more days of her internship afterward, which lead me to assume she would be at work, and that I could safely send it there.


Worst case scenario, I thought, would be that she misses the delivery and receives her flowers the next day.


But no … the worst case scenario is that she is assigned to work from her dorm that day, and she has conveniently taken the day after off, just in case the results of her evening of welcome-to-the-excesses-of-adult-beverages leads her to a morning filled with stomach upset and a throbbing brain trying to escape the confines of her cranium.


*Phone rings* (THIS IS IMPORTANT BECAUSE CHILDREN NEVER USE THE AUDIO PART OF THEIR PHONES UNLESS SOMETHING IS TERRIBLY WRONG).


I take that back … THE WORST CASE was that since she signed an NDA for her job, she didn’t mention that it was a clean facility where deliveries of cut flowers would be frowned upon.


“MOM! MOM! OMG MOM. FLOWERS. CAN. NOT. GO. THERE!!!!”


“Yes. Your mom, who loves you, just handed you a HUGE problem on your birthday. … But don’t worry, I will fix it.”


Somehow.


And somehow … after six phone calls to the florist; three text messages to the delivery driver, countless minutes on hold, and finally a herculean interception by one of her coworkers … I have fixed what I broke.



Sunday, December 08, 2024

Past, Future and Presents

The deadline for submissions of pictures for the high school yearbook was at hand, and the boy had pushed off deciding.


I didn’t want to pressure him  … again. But this felt like a momentous occasion and I wanted him to take it seriously.


He was keen to make cheeky jokes about his future, binging on beer and games of chess at college as he slouches toward adulthood.


In addition to The Official Portrait SelectionTM … There was also the matter of a message from home, consisting of an uplifting missive about this milestone and a photo from his childhood.


Now, some of the blame was mine, of course. It didn’t help that despite taking a bazillion photos during his formative years, I hadn’t managed to create physical albums for him to thumb through. Instead, I had to comb through The Cloud and find a smattering I could send him through text messaging.

“Just pick something. I don’t care.”


To which I replied with the inclusion of one particularly ADORABLE picture of him (age 6) displaying a copy of The Dangerous Book For Boys with his scrawny, Sharpie-tatted arms akimbo; and wearing a newsboy cap sideways (so it gave the impression of a beret).


“OHMYGODNO!”


How prescient of me, Right?


Two things can be true simultaneously: 1) High School IS NOT the best years of your life, and 2) You may stumble on this dusty yearbook in an old cardboard box some decades from now and thumb through its pages with a minor amount of fondness.

 

Because in the words of everyone’s mother since time immemorial: “You never know.”


This is why when he narrowed the parameters of what he would consider an acceptable image from his formative years: Infant or toddler photos only – no evidence he had ever attended school. And nothing - NOTHING - that could be construed as having any degree of foresight into his temperament. The happy, silly-faced boy who matched the ideal of a happy childhood … was just too embarrassing.


He sat at my side as I fired up the computer, and began scrolling through the old online archives.  

There was Newborn Him, wrapped burrito-like in a blanket … one eye squinting.

And Infant Him propped upright in a basket … the other eye squinting.


Oh, and Six-Month-Old Him reflected in a mirror, his tongue sticking out like a rascal who was going to be (Capital T)rouble. 


“OMGODSOCUTE.”


“Did you ever take photos of me that were just … I don’t know NORMAL?”

I quickly swiped past the one of Toddler Him howling in delight just before dropping a cell phone into the dog’s water bowl.


That’s when I landed on a photo of Toddler Him and His Papa, my father. It harkened to a scene in my head from "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening." The two of them snowshoed, trudging along a cross-country ski trail. They had exchanged hats. My dad had the boy’s Nordic earflap hat perched on top of his head, while my son struggled to see through the vintage ski cap that made Anabel Moriarty famous.


We were both silent.  In my mind, the picture could have been a scene out of a Robert Frost Poem: My father with my son, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening. 


Whose woods these are I think I know.   

His house is in the village though;   

He will not see me stopping here   

To watch his woods fill up with snow.   


“This is the one,” he said with a catch in his voice. "You can send that one ...

“Unless you find one of us together at the pub with a beer, playing chess.”  

Sunday, December 01, 2024

Many happy returns

 “I chose wrong,” said the boy as he strode through a crosswalk, dodging cars and trailing behind. The three of us, now in full jog, were headed toward a wall of sliding glass doors. Truth be told, her brother hadn’t needed much convincing. 

When his sister, freshly back from college, asked if he wanted to join us for some pre-holiday shopping, he smiled slyly and asked, “Whose car are we gonna take?”

“Dad’s. He’s joining us, too”

The menfolk were game even though she had warned them the quest would involve all manner of things that she knew might be irritating; things like darting to various goods stores, sorting through women’s clothes and cosmetics while visiting one particular department store she would insist on pronouncing with a flourish. 

Her brother would chaff at the sound of it. 

We laughed. He laughed. And the doors swung open. In we went — our family. 

I grabbed a handbasket as she perused the first bank of merchandise … an island of misfit toys.

Their father was the most self-protective; he grabbed a double-decker cart, declaring his mission would be to corral all the things we’d managed to forget during three trips to the grocery store over the span of two days and headed toward grocery items.

The boy hung back as if straddling a fence … should he go with us past the “unmentionables”  or should he go with his father toward electronics?

The Ys disappear… only to reappear In phone calls seeking our locations, and then in person a few aisles later. 

“Again, I feel like I have chosen the wrong path,” the boy announces as he tugs at the handle of the basket I am lugging around, indicating by a delicate force the universal language of chivalry.

He will make himself useful by carrying the load.

 “I CAN ALSO show you the forty-six-thousand-inch TV dad would like SOMEONE to fit down the chimney.”

And so we spent the better part of an afternoon chasing each other down aisles looking for hot chocolate and cozy socks. 

Fielding phone-call requests for guidance from the pet food department (yes, Virginia, there is a Kibble Clause, and also there is more than one aisle of dog food brands).

Sending text directions to the store, and more specifically, the parts of the store we had migrated since last he saw us.

And recreating the viral videos we’ve all of the shoppers in search of something fantastic …. Like “a reindeer sculpture that is tiled in disco ball mirrors but rolling on its back” … and finding the very last one in stock.

Of course, we left most of the stores empty-handed. Somehow, the joy we had of being together shopping barely translated to sales. But all was not for naught.

We had broken the ice. Gotten our feet wet in the shallow end. And retreated to a warm car and laughter.

We may not have said YES to the faux-topiary dog sculpture made almost entirely of astroturf, but we managed to cross a few things off of the list. We even found a few reasons to make a happy return. 


Sunday, November 24, 2024

Read ‘em and sweep

The girl’s face lit up my phone smack-dab in the middle of a random Tuesday.

I didn’t panic. 


I switched my audio to speaker and perched the phone on the edge of a table so I could continue to push a broom with both hands.


I had been doing busy work … pushing dust and debris into little piles around a cement floor as I waited for a technician to arrive, who would tend to the more necessary work of the enterprise. 

She had been texting me with a litany of minor annoyances while I pecked out a word or two between sweeps. 


I understood that she had been struggling with registering for next semester’s classes and that she was taking a break from one of forty-seven thousand other things she does in any given week. She just needed to let off steam.


“Chell-ooooo,” she sang with a relaxed and happy tone, signaling that this rare phone call was more about efficiency than venting end-of-term grievances. “It’s just easier to talk than type,” she said with a labored sigh. All the words she had planned on typing would have cramped her hands if not necessarily her style.  


Of course, I was overjoyed to hear her voice.


She seemed in a good place: excitedly annoyed about the reality of her surroundings and wanting to debrief. There are so many glitches in this eternal matrix of matriculation. She unleashed a torrent of words that, had I been fluent in … *waves hands wildly* …  whatever it is she studies that is well above my Intelligence Quotient.


She is a wonder, and I have no doubt she will figure out the snags in her system.

I thought about the beauty of her enthusiasm as she flitted from topic to topic like a bird gathering seeds.


“Oh hey, check your phone. I’m sending you a picture.”


It’s a snowflake. The kind that’s folded and cut out of simple office paper. It is hanging from some artificial greenery with a loop of white curling ribbon. 


“What is that?” I ask, ready for the most obvious answer to be her response. “A snowflake, you dork.”


She is still able to translate Mom pretty fluently.


“Work has an angel tree. I always had so much fun when we’d pick them off the tree at school.”

She picked someone she understood completely: A teenage girl who needed a hat and gloves but wanted make-up and the funds necessary to shop for herself.


“The saddest things I think I ever saw were the gifts we volunteered to wrap from the well-meaning folks who donated to church fund drives. Regifted cosmetic sets with little-girl colors or dried-up old nail polish testers. The add-ons or freebies, that are only meant to entice consumers to upgrade their purchases. Nothing would have been better.”


So she is spending her lunch hour and part of her savings to build a care package out of the things that are rarely discounted. Perhaps it’s just stuff, but it’s also a welcome distraction while she’s waiting for her tech support to arrive.