Saturday, December 24, 2011

The Weir Dudes


My three sons have long called themselves by that name; they've made movies that are available on YouTube, and last night, they worked together to try and solve some crossword puzzles. That is what this shot captures.

As you could probably guess, I am impossibly proud of these three young men, aged 17, 30 and 15, all so tall and beautiful and brilliant, and kind, sweet and loving, each in his own way.

Of course, as their father, I also worry about each of them, and their vulnerabilities, which I can only too clearly see.

One way or another, I've been sort of like each of them in certain details, yet never anywhere near anyone of them in their total loveliness.

But I will say this, as the purported Super Weir Dude, though none of them have yet given me that title (hint, boys) -- I do think I could probably still (for a while yet) beat any of you at word games, should you care to give me a run...

-30-

Whispers of a Dying Year

It's easy to see that this year, like all others before it, is determined to come to end, quite quickly now. I don't want to characterize it one way or another, as good or bad.

It was complicated.

Another year like it simply cannot follow. Some things must change. Two years ago this time, I would never have predicted what 2010 would bring. I will never consider 2010 to have been a good year, for it was a disastrous year.

As years go, I despise its memory. As a year, it betrayed my trust and left me talking to myself.

Given all that, 2011 represented a holding pattern -- a year of standing still. Others would not agree and would say I moved ahead resolutely, accomplishing much. For my family, it was a year we can collectively be proud of.

But for me, another year best forgotten, more or less. What might suit others, for perfectly good reasons, doesn't cut it for me, or for what I expect of myself.

There was some good writing that emerged from these fingers tapping this keyboard -- I'll allow that much.

But nothing great or memorable. Nothing likely to last in any meaningful way. That I made our limited resources stretch to cover the essentials is fine, I suppose, but I expect more of myself, really.

Of course the economy sucks. We are in the midst of historical readjustments. Our expectations for the future cannot match those of our past.

They can't. The future can never be what the past was, let alone what we imagine we remember it to be.

The very nature of memory is romantic. Story-tellers are romantics; I used to be at once a story-teller and thus also a romantic.

Unless prompted, I rarely tell stories any longer. I'm no longer convinced anyone wants to hear them, outside of my closest family members.

With them I still joke and recall the past, both the ancient past and the more recent romantic versions of our collective family history.

As the paternal keeper of our past, and the elder, I have a certain responsibility to them to get the stories straight if they often were crooked in nature, or at least I think they may have been crooked in real-time.

Life never proceeds in a straight line. Here I am, long after everyone else around me is asleep, pecking out letters and words -- why? Is it that I sense how time evaporates and takes all meaning with it, like echoes from a tunnel when you exit, blinking into the bright sun of everyone else's reality.

There are those who would be surprised that they still play starring roles in our family stories. They would conclude, logically, that they would by now have been written out of what we share with one another, but a family like ours -- a family of writers -- doesn't work that way.

Just because you die or split or try to become a stranger doesn't mean that we don't remember you, that we don't know you, that we do not know how to fit you into our shattered mirror of reality as we have known it, from all sides now.

Families like this one don't work that way.

I may be the elder and the keeper of the story but that doesn't mean my stories hold the most weight. No, every other member of this family has her or his own version, and if you listen carefully enough, you'll pick up on that music.

You can come. You can go. But you can't stop the family music.

What's that? I thought I heard an echo of someone, of something. Ah. It's easy to see that this post, like all others before it, is determined to come to end, quite quickly now.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Holiday Gathering








Early Morning Walking

Dropping the car off for service and walking back home through the Mission, past the workday city waking up, with coffee the fuel of choice among my fellow pedestrians. For days, workers have been trying to fix various leaks in my flat; by last night the main culprit, a leaking water heater, was gone, replaced by a new model.

Three other kitchen sink-related leaks were fixed by installing new equipment as well.

The banalities of daily life.

The mechanic called with a revised estimate upward. Out for another walk, to the supermarket, with the kids still sleeping in, when he called back yet again, this time with worse news.

The bill now climbed over $1,000, putting a serious crimp into my holiday plans.

Back out for another walk, with my daughter, to the discount store, where I bought her a winter coat.

Soon after, walking again, now with the boys, to get Mexican food for lunch.

Finally, in late afternoon, when the car was ready, we packed and headed out of town, eastward, to join up with the rest of the family for the holidays.

***

Worrying but hoping for the best for my brother-in-law, who underwent surgery in Ann Arbor. Concerned for the strain on my sister as well.

***

Along the freeway, part of the flood of cars headed east, we cut through the Delta in the dark. Adele came on the radio as we neared Sacramento.

My two oldest grandsons, aged 4 and 3, came running out of the front door as we pulled up. "Grandpa!" they yelled, with their arms spread wide, running down the sidewalk in greeting.

-30-