All Is Calm

Finally Friday! And I’m absolutely wiped out, so I turned to Holidailies for a prompt. It said “Share your best advice for surviving the holiday season.”

My best advice is to learn how to say “no.” I think what stresses most folks out about the holidays is that they feel like they need to say “yes” to every invitation and every bit of crafting, decorating, and baking. This year I said yes to a few things, initiated plans, and put up a tree for the first time in 10 years, but after my salon visit tomorrow, it will most likely be “no” for the rest of the weekend.

Speaking of decorating, here is one of my most cherished ornaments, one from a set of four that my parents broke up to give to their four children. Each ornament was a different color—red, yellow, green, and blue—and we each got one in our favorite color, except for me. My favorite color is purple and there wasn’t a purple one. At first I felt a little left out, but then it occurred to me that yellow was my mother’s favorite color.

A Christmas ornament featuring an angle holding a hymn book.
Yellow was my mother’s favorite color.

She was definitely an angel to me this year, what with the heart attack and all. I remember saying “I want my mother” at one point while the EMTs were working on me. If you’re in health care, you know that’s not a good sign: People often ask for their mothers when they’re about to die. And I did feel like I was about to die, enough so that I said as much to the EMTs, thanked them for trying to save me, and finally said “goodbye.” They told me they were going to lift me, and the next thing I knew, I was in the ICU trying to pull out a breathing tube.

These days, hospitals don’t keep you for long after a heart attack. Aside from insurance companies giving them a hard time about paying for more than a few days, it’s largely for a good reason because hospitals are not all that safe. There are all kinds of pathogens there and it’s easy to pick up a hospital-acquired infection. Still, I was pretty weak when I got home, not to mention sore and a bit anxious about being alone so soon after such a catastrophic event. What if I had another one? What if I died in my sleep?

But then I heard my mother’s voice, clear as a bell.

“It’s not your time.”

It was like she was sitting right next to me. I also felt my father’s presence there, and heard him say “No, sweetheart, it’s not.” Inigo was there, too, softly nudging me back from thoughts of my own mortality.

So far, so good.

And now for tonight’s state Christmas tree, New Jersey’s. This one is going out to two people, Andrew and Kathy. Andrew was my boss at Most Favorite Job, one of those rare gems of a manager who knows how to bring out the best in others and appreciates both the benefits and the necessity of downtime. To this day, he’s a dear friend and someone whose sage advice I always heed. There’s one line of his that stays with me when I’m in a chaotic situation, “Bend like the reed.”

I’ve known Kathy since the early 90s. We worked together at the job I had before I became a contractor at the USPS. If you’ve ever seen thirtysomething, she was the Eliot to my Michael, the creative graphic designer to my uptight writer. Yet we were cut from the same bolt in that neither one of us took it personally when the other said to do something. If she told me I needed to cut a few lines to make something fit, I’d cut a few lines. We’d sit together and try a few edits. “Try this phrase. No, that phrase. Perfect.” If I needed her to move something on a page, I’d tell her and she’d simply move it. And then we’d go for a beer after work. Kathy taught me the art of being calm, too: One of my favorite Christmas memories is of her sitting on the living-room floor of my then-apartment, patiently detangling lights for my tree.

Best part is, neither Andrew nor Kathy got mad when they told me they were from New Jersey and I asked “What exit?”

New Jersey's state Christmas tree, 2023.
New Jersey’s state Christmas tree, 2023. Click to embiggen.

Sunday Stealing: Pink

Doing some Sunday Stealing today.

1. Do you tend to have a guilty conscious?

Sometimes I wonder if I didn’t give Inigo enough of a chance to heal from his leg injury before I took him to say goodbye. But he was in pain, his quality of life took a deep turn for the worse because he couldn’t walk or climb, and I sensed he wouldn’t come back from it. As one friend said, freeing him from pain was a final act of love that I could offer him.

2. Do you still have your wisdom teeth?

No, and that’s actually a Christmas story, as I had them taken out over a winter recess while I was in college. That was also the year my father cut a gash in his hand sawing the trunk of the Christmas tree. We made quite a pair sitting on the couch. My mother said she was running an infirmary.

3. Peanut Butter – creamy or crunchy?

I like both but usually get creamy.

4. Get up off your butt. Take 5 steps. Which leg did you start out on?

Right.

5. What color is your favorite kitchen utensil?

Wood.

6. Did you watch the Michael Jackson memorial/funeral?

No.

7. Do you know anyone who graduated from high school this year? Were you invited to their graduation party? Did you go?

Nope.

8. White with black stripes or black with white stripes?

Zebras are black with white stripes.

9. If we were to call your 6th grade teacher, what would they say about you?

“She’s very bright and a joy to have in the classroom. She enjoys science and English.”

10. Can you draw a perfect circle?

Nope, but I can listen to them. LOVE this song. A friend once cracked a joke that this song might be the first time Maynard James Keenan wrote something in a major key. The sound is ridiculously happy considering the subject matter, which is the stupid ways humans spend their time and money when we could all die tomorrow. I love the hat-tip to Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. (TW: There is one scene of suicide, and the whole thing is about nuclear annihilation. If you’re easily triggered, watch the second one, which is just dolphins swimming.) Bravissimo hip hip hooray!

11. What was your favorite scratch & sniff sticker scent?

As a child, root beer. As an adult, gardenia. I found these Filter Fresh sheets that you can attach to your air filters and the “Scratch for Scent” sticker on the gardenia one smells just like the perfume my mother wore in the ’70s.

12. How many light switches and electrical outlets are in the room that you are in right now?

One light switch, three electrical outlets, and one defunct cable/landline phone outlet.

13. Do you know sign language?

Just how to spell my name and how to tell someone to eat shit and die. No joke. Back in college two of the girls at the end of the hall were legally deaf and they taught me that.

14. Do you step on cracks in the sidewalk?

Not intentionally.

15. And the sheets on your bed look like….?

White with white stripes.

Time and Flight

Hello, Holidailies!

I know more folks do Holidailies than Horrordailies, so perhaps I should just give a little run-down of 2023 so far. This way we can get it over with and move on to better things because friends, unfortunately, this year has been hands-down the most painful year of my life. To review:

In February I witnessed gun violence.

In March Inigo and I said goodbye.

Also in March I was nearly killed by a drunk driver.

In April I popped three discs in my back and was incapacitated to the point of needing a walker, a steroid shot in my back, and a couple of months of physical therapy.

In October I had a massive heart attack, which meant I had to cancel two trips in November, one to England and one to Finland.

And just this week they cut 21 positions at my workplace.

The one amazingly bright moment in the year was a trip to Warsaw with a friend, where I met more friends and got to see my favorite band, Poets of the Fall. The trips to England and Finland would have been more of that friendly and musical goodness, but yeah, no, not just a few weeks out from a heart attack.

But other than that, 2023 was horrible, so I’m ready to kick it right on out the door. Thank goodness for friends and birds.

Speaking of birds, I have a rocking Birdie Balcony Café going on. Birds come and go all day long, from dawn past sundown. I can never seem to get decent photos of them because they get spooked if they see me, but here are a few Mourning Doves, AKA MoDos. They didn’t have a reservation for the table, but okay. Things here are first come, first served.

Three doves on a table.
Three little birds: Every little thing gonna be all right.

There are usually anywhere from three to eight MoDos sitting on the windowsill, table, and balcony railing when I wake up in the morning. They eat with a flock of Sparrows that come for breakfast, then everyone flies off until about 10:30.

And lemme tellya, they all stalk me.

When I went out on the balcony this morning, Sparrows, Northern Mockingbirds and a male Northern Cardinal were in the tree outside my living room window waiting for their mid-morning feeding. They usually come back again around 2:00, bringing the MoDos with them. The Sparrows and MoDos come back around 4:30, and then the MoDos come alone around 6:00, after it gets dark, for dinner. Sometimes the Cardinal also comes by during twilight.

They’re ravenous, too. I just bought a five-pound bag of birdseed last week and it’s almost half gone. Same for a 1.5-pound bag of peanuts. I put crushed, shelled peanuts on the windowsill and the Mockingbirds know that if the Peanut Lady isn’t in her living room, they can tap on the metal part of the windowsill and she’ll appear. While they’re simultaneously eyeballing me and chowing down, I throw whole peanuts in the shell down for the Blue Jays, Crows, and squirrels. It’s like a second job for me, heh.

They keep me company, and for that I’m grateful. I have a huge apartment and it’s kind of cavernous without Inigo. I miss the little guy tremendously, but he has left his imprint on this place and although he has moved on to other things, occasionally I do still feel his presence here. He comes to visit at random times, just to say hello and leave a warm spot on his little bed in his house, which is still in the living room with the door open. When I’m super low, he comes to comfort, landing on my back and spreading his wings over my shoulders in a hug. Sometimes Jimmy the Green Cheek comes with him and lands on my shoulder. Sounds crazy, but I don’t care.

I remember thinking last Christmas that it would be Inigo’s last one. Now this is really strange, but last night the thought came into my head that had he not hurt his leg and needed release from pain, that the day of my heart attack would have been his own day to pass. I don’t know where that thought came from.

Have you ever seen the German TV series Dark? It involves time travel, but not in a hokey Back the the Future kind of way. (You know, because it’s dark.) It’s all about the nature of time, destiny, whether actions are free will or ordained to happen because there is more than one reality and you take the same actions over and over again in each one. There might be minor differences between timelines and realities, but your general story arc produces the same results.

Maybe watching that series had something to do with my thoughts. I don’t really understand quantum physics, time-bending, or things like Schrödinger’s cat, but if there is more than one reality, maybe that heart attack was the pain of Inigo’s passing in an another one. Heaven knows when we said goodbye in this reality, it physically felt like a kick in the chest.

Really, they ought to drum me out of science writing, with theories like that. But who knows? I don’t believe in any gods, but plenty of prominent scientists talk about things like time, other universes, and other realities. If there is science to the concept of multiple realities, I’m all for it.