What am I doing?

What I have done since I last wrote a post:

Had dinner at friends’ houses twice
Had friends over for dinner once
Hung out the wash 5 times
Made breakfast, lunch and dinner almost every day
Saw Much Ado About Nothing in in a tent in Vancouver with daughter and 2 grandchildren
Browsed the Anthropology Museum at the University of British Columbia with daughter and grandchildren
Watered vegetables and flowers and harvested  squash, beans, beets, cucumbers and tomatoes
Drove 2 hour drive to Whidbey Island for family dinner with daughter, son-in-law 5 grandchildren, visiting daughter-in-law, grown grandson and wife and great-grandson and Jerry
Varnished 15 picture frames that Jerry made for my upcoming show, put the pictures in the frames with hanging hardware.
Signed all the pictures for the show and finished 2 of them.
Played Mah Jongg 3 times.  Didn’t win.
Cleaned the rental apartment 3 times after visitors and renters.
Walked the dogs with Jerry every day.
Hung the show with Ingrid and Sharon.
Watched 1 lecture of the Teaching Company course “The Early Middle Ages” every night.

What I have not done: written a post.  But I will soon, I promise.  As soon as the opening of this show is over.

Posted in Day to day | 13 Comments

The best laid plans

My friend and Mah Jongg buddy Diane started planning the wedding a year ago.  That was when she booked my rental apartment for some of the guests.  Her husband’s daughter was to have a commitment ceremony here on the island with her long time partner.  There is a pretty old church here and a lady minister.  The church and the minister are progressive leaning and theologically liberal; they welcome gay and lesbian unions.  The island’s fundamentalists have gone their separate ways and started their own “chapel” at the Grange.

Lummi Island is a favorite setting for summer weddings.  The weather is almost always good in August, cool and sunny, and the scenery is stunning. Diane groomed her yard to perfection and reserved a number of tables and chairs from the mainland to set up the reception dinner in her the back yard with its view of Hales Passage and Mt Baker.  The front yard, with its view of Legoe Bay and Orcas Island, was where cocktails would be served.  Her cozy cottage would not be large enough for 70 guests.

The first sign of trouble was when the ferry broke down in early June.  But after about a week it was fixed temporarily.  Then, suddenly, the county decided to advance the date of drydock, the time when we have a passenger ferry only, from September to early August.  That meant there would be no way to get the tables and chairs across the water.  Quickly Diane booked the Grange for the dinner.  Cocktails would still be in the yard, front and back, and she borrowed some vehicles (our van was one) to transport people the mile ride to the grange.  She hired John Granger‘s elegant buggy and trotters to take the brides and their attendants to the Grange for the dinner reception.

A week before the wedding, at Thursday night Mah Jongg, Diane was beginning to be nervous about the Saturday weather.  The long range forecast had been predicting a 30% chance of rain for some weeks, but the odds still seemed good.

She was worried, too, about where all her house guests would sleep.  She could utilize some sofas and tents in the yard.  But the mother of the other bride had announced her intention to bring a Muslim exchange student she had befriended and he was prevented by his religion from sleeping on the floor or in a tent.  Diane didn’t know what to do about that.  I was surprised at the tent prohibition — I thought Muslims sometimes lived in tents — but I suggested the futon in my rental apartment which Diane had already booked.  In the end the Muslim exchange student didn’t come, so I didn’t get to write a post entitled “The Muslim Slept on the Futon.”

On Thursday morning before the wedding day Mike came by to borrow our van and get some additional flower pots for the decorations.  He showed us his to do list which Diane had printed out.  Diane’s pre-retirement job had been to plan routes for the Seattle buses.  She was a planner.  Mike’s list was timed to the hour and color coded for grandchildren to engaged in certain chores.  The list was pages long.  He said it actually saved him.  He didn’t need to think, just follow instructions.

The weather, which up to then had been perfect, was beginning to look iffy.  It was overcast.  They were predicting showers for the wedding Saturday.  Saturday came.  It was raining, hard.  Mah Jongg players called each other, saying, poor Diane, hope it clears.  I went out in the rain and cut bunches of hydrangeas and sweetpeas to take to Diane for use as Grange decorations.   As I delivered the flowers to her house Mike emerged looking harried.  He said, “Diane’s still at the Grange.  I forgot to take the meat for the dinner out of the freezer last night.  Now I have it in the bathtub in hot water, thawing.”

A few minutes later Diane came by my house for flowers.  I said, “ I took them to your house.  Sorry to hear about your problem with the meat.”  She looked horrified.  “Problem with the meat, what problem?”  I explained.  “Oh my God!” she said, and rushed off.  It was raining really hard.

Afternoon came, and the downpour intensified.  Jerry and I had been  invited for cocktails and dinner, so I called Cathy, who was helping with the cocktails, to ask whether I should skip that part, since Diane’s house was really too small for a lot of people.  Cathy said come.

The house was jammed but everyone was jolly.  It is astonishing how many people can fit in a small space.  John Granger was taking grandchildren and others on rides around the island in his carriage.

The brides in John's carriage

The brides

There was lots of wonderful salmon, smoked for the occasion by Steve Thatcher.  Everyone looked happy, and the brides were both radiant.  They each have 4 children who were there and having a ball.  Joy, the tall bride, had on a fitted strapless wedding gown that clung to her marvelous figure.  Donna, Mike’s daughter, the short bride, wore white leather motorcycle pants and a lacy shirt. She had a yellow daisy in her hair.  The brides and all the attendants wore dark glasses with white rims.

The happy couple

The happy couple

Dinner went off without a hitch.  The meat had thawed in time, and catering was done by some island neighbors.

Cathy and Russ in the dinner line

Cathy and Russ in the dinner line

The Grange was overflowing with flowers and gladness and there was dancing in the rain on its new deck.

Dancing in the rain

Dancing in the rain

Among the many toasts was a thank you for the new Washington “Everything but marriage” law which provides the same legal status as marriage to gay and lesbian couples.  That law is under attack in this fall’s election; there is a ballot initiative to repeal it.  I wonder why the people who are behind the initiative want to prohibit others from such happiness as I saw on that rainy August evening.

Diane and Mike

Diane and Mike

Posted in Day to day, Romance | Tagged , , , | 19 Comments

Have bloom, won’t travel

Our front door

Our front door

The end of July and it’s a cool summer.  This morning the temperature is 54 F. Clouds will burn off in a couple of hours, then the afternoon will warm up to about 70.  Flowers like this kind of summer.  I love flowers.  Jerry says I over do the flowers.

Above is our front door.

And here’s where we sip wine in the late afternoon if it’s comfortable to sit in the sun.

Our patio

Our patio

If we want shade we use the back deck.

Our back deck

Our back deck

Crocosmia

Crocosmia

Lillies

Lillies

Daisies

Daisies

Geranium

Geranium

Phlox

Phlox

Rose

Rose

Sweetpeas

Sweetpeas

Lobelia and coreopsis

Lobelia and coreopsis

Poppies and lobelia

Poppies and lobelia

Fuchsia

Fuchsia

Some vegetables grow well in cool weather.  I have more lettuce than I can use, but not much luck with arugula.  It bolts immediately.  Yellow zucchini are do doing nicely.  We should have some for dinner tonight.  I haven’t figured out a good way to cook the zucchini flowers, which I know are supposed to be a delicacy.  I have harvested one artichoke.

I’m growing my veggies in half whisky barrels.

vegetables

vegetables

Jerry has built me the cutest little greenhouse.  Tomatoes hate cool weather, and the ones in the barrels grow bigger and bigger with no tomatoes.  So I splurged and spent $15 on a big plant to put in the new greenhouse.  It has lots of green tomatoes on it.

I can’t go off on trips and leave all these flowers and veggies.

My new greenhouse

My new greenhouse

Besides, I live in vacation land.  I paint on the beach.  Part ownership of a beach and some tidelands came with this house.  The other owners of the beach don’t live on the island — in fact I don’t know who or where they are.  I don’t use the beach much except for occasionally digging clams there.  This summer we have bad red tide, so the clams are not eatable.

Our beach is across the road from the property of an elderly couple, the Grangers, old time residents. The street I live on is named after them.  Most people assume that beach belongs to them, so if anyone wants to moor a boat there they ask the Grangers, who obligingly say sure.

That suited me fine until recently.  While painting on the beach I observed that there was constant traffic on it.  There are six or seven row boats, canoes or kayaks stored on it, lots of people walking there and a whole flotilla of boats moored off it.  A transient was sleeping there for a while, and kids drink beer and smoke pot there.  I asked my lawyer daughter if I had liability for any of this and she said if there was an accident I could.  She advised me to post it with no trespassing signs.

I am sad to do this.  I believe that all beaches should be public property.  But since this is not the case, I suppose I shall have to put up those unpleasant signs.

Here’s the beach, looking north.

Our beach

Our beach

Here’s the painting I did on the beach.  It looks south and is a view of the adjoining lot.

Painting done on our beach

Painting done on our beach

Posted in Day to day, Island life | Tagged , , , | 24 Comments

A life lived by impulse

When I first began to blog I wrote an account of Jerry’s and my late life courtship.  I only had a few readers then.  This is part  I of 2 posts written almost 2 years ago.  I thought it would by interesting to re-post it as a contrast to the story of John.  I think it shows that you can be foolishly headstrong and sometimes get lucky.

Jerry and I met via the internet. In my long life I have had some romantic misadventures and 3 failed marriages. When I signed up for Match.com I was not looking for a husband, but I had been entirely alone for the 3 years since my quite reprehensible part time partner had died of cancer. I thought it would be pleasant to have a companion for trips, theater and dinners. I have to admit, I met some weird and not wonderful elderly guys through the internet.

When I took the ferry to a distant island to meet Jerry, a recent widower, I was ready to give up. His experience with internet dating had been similar. We had exchanged a few emails, and he said he would meet me on the mainland and take the ferry over to his island with me. I told him what kind of car I would be driving, and he said he would wear his orange hat. Right there I felt a qualm. Orange hat? A guy who wears an orange hat? As I locked the car in the ferry parking lot I saw, lurking by a telephone pole, a tall, lanky slightly stooped old man wearing an orange baseball hat.

It was a long day. I was feeling nervous and blue, and he was guarded and subdued. He was nice, and he tried. After lunch (hamburger, no wine) we toured the island, and then I went with him to his house for tea. He had built his house entirely by himself on top of a doublewide trailer. He and his wife lived on the newly built second floor while he removed the trailer bit by bit from the inside of the first floor and then finished that floor.

His wife had had a passionate interest in collecting things, and she was in an Arts and Crafts phase when they furnished the house. Many of the things she accumulated had value, but I was not familiar with the period and didn’t relate to the décor. His politics, libertarian/conservative, were different from mine, classical liberal. He was not interested in travel. He said his marriage had been a good one, and his wife had died only 3 months before. I thought, he’s looking for a replacement wife. I thought, not me, babe.

I went back to the mainland on the 4 o’clock ferry. It was a long trip, 1 ½ hours, then an hour drive to my ferry. I felt tired and discouraged. I had an email from Jerry saying that it had been a good first meeting and that we should meet again. Here is, in part what I responded:

“I want to tell you what a nice day I had with you. You are an intelligent and gentle man, and we had lots to talk about. But I have to say that I do not see romance for us in the future. A friendship would be a thing I would value. I’m afraid that isn’t what you are looking for, and I know that I would not fill the real need you have for an intimate life companion.”

I told him I thought he should spend more time mourning his loss before making any life changing plans.

He responded, in part:

“I am of course disappointed. I also thought it was unlikely that we would have a future. For my selfish interest I need to be with a lively woman, do a few things with her . . . Then think more seriously about the future. I need something between my recent past life and what ever the future is going to be. I expect that you do not see how you fit into this. What else can I say?”

His reply to my suggestion that he wait before changing his life was:

“I have come to realize that I am not going from one marriage right into another. I do not need to mourn anymore. I need to do some living. After you left….there is a real live woman.”

Flattery often works.  I wrote back:

“Let me think this over. I like you very much. We might try again, but I couldn’t let you hope for anything long term, and I had no idea that a fling would be your cup of tea. Falling in love would be a bad idea.”

We negotiated a visit to my island. I wrote “…not sure when, but soon. You come here, have dinner and we’ll see what’s next. No promises of anything but good food — and some wine for heaven’s sake!”

It was a fine summer evening in late June 2006 he arrived at my door without a bottle of wine because I told him I would provide it. I didn’t trust him to choose the wine. I judged him to be a meat and potatoes sort of fellow. Sometimes I like to cook fancy food, but steak and mashed potatoes makes me happy too, and that’s what we had.

It was a lovely evening.

A week later he said he thought he should go home to mow the lawn.

Here’s some of what I learned during that week. He had started flying when he was 14. He paid for his flying lessons with money he earned repairing radios. While he was in college he homesteaded in Fairbanks, Alaska, and made his own airstrip. In his 40’s he flew solo from Victoria, BC across the Atlantic to London, England, and back, in an air race. In Alaska he flew commercially as a bush pilot. He had taught physics at the University of Alaska and done research on the Aurora Borealis. He owned an electric company, which he ran single handed in Manley, and he started a telephone company there as well.

During that week I was designated driver for his colonoscopy, although it turned out he didn’t need a designated driver. When the Doctor offered him sedation he remarked that the last time he had done without. The doctor said, “We can do that,” so Jerry walked out of the exam alert and hungry.

My 14 year old British granddaughter was coming to visit and I thought this was an appropriate time for a break from my new romance, so Jerry went home to mow the lawn. I planned to take my granddaughter to Vancouver to see some Shakespeare plays in tents by the river. My British grandchildren love Shakespeare.

I kept finding reasons to telephone Jerry. In the end he came to Vancouver with us, but because his hearing is not what it used to be, he had trouble following plot twists and understanding Shakespearean English.

I began to think that falling in love was a possibility, and that marriage might not be out of the question.

What changed my mind? Was it partly some way in which our minds connected? We both had training in science; mine in biology, his in physics, and we thought the same way about the world and how it works. All four of Jerry’s grandparents were Finnish, and Finns are noted for thriftiness with words, but despite his Finnish roots we talked for hours. There was a lovable quality about him that I can’t define. What can I say? He is an adorable man. I am always comfortable with him, and he always seems to be so with me.

Jerry has been emotionally drawn to the north all his life. Perhaps it’s those Finnish genes. He grew up in California. In the army he was sent to Fairbanks, Alaska, and soon after he was discharged he went back. He went to the University of Alaska on the GI bill, and later became a researcher at the Geophysics Institute there.

On the side of his island house he had carved in the shingles the shape of a goose.  “It’s flying north,” he said wistfully. I said, “Why don’t we take a trip to Alaska?” He had not been back for many years, but the next thing I knew we had a copy of the Milepost and were packing the van. We drove the Alcan Highway.

Before we left, having known each other for about 6 weeks, we had decided to get married, but had not decided on a time. I thought my 5 children would need a lot of convincing. I knew their collective response would be, “Oh God, what’s Mother doing now!” Perhaps next year, I said, since much planning would be involved.

I think it was somewhere in the vicinity of Dawson city that Jerry said “I wonder what you have to do in Washington to get married. The last time I did it in Alaska it took 3 days.” I said nothing, but I was thinking.

We stayed in Whitehorse, Yukon, on August 3, 2006. It was Jerry’s 74th birthday. In his youth, Jerry said, if he stopped in Whitehorse he would go out in the evening to watch the bar fights. Today Whitehorse is a modern, sophisticated town, with some of the old flavor nicely preserved in its architecture. We stayed in a comfortable Chinese owned hotel with the decorating oddity that each of the 2 queen beds in our room had identical paintings hung over them. Before going out for Jerry’s birthday dinner we had a celebratory glass of wine. I said, “I wonder if it still takes only 3 days.”

So it was decided. This would solve all the problems of arguments with children and unwanted advice from friends. I could do what I liked, no matter how crazy and risky, though I never had any sense that what I was planning was anything but completely sound. Jerry’s character so combines authenticity, honesty and caution that he always makes me feel safe.

We stayed in Fairbanks long enough to begin the paper work to get married. Actually, it turned out to be 3 working days, and with the complication of getting Jerry’s friend, Bea, appointed to perform the ceremony, it took a week. So we signed the papers and went to Manley Hot Springs, Jerry‘s Alaska home, 150 miles west on a gravel road.

We were married in Manley. We stayed in a cabin without indoor plumbing, so we had a bath in the hot springs before the wedding.

The hot spring bath

The hot spring bath

Bea officiated in her pretty yard, and the guests were old friends of Jerry’s. I didn’t know any of them. It was, for me, a brief few days of life without a complicating past.

the ceremony

the ceremony

I knew I would soon have to go home to face the children, and others, but I could put it off a little longer because Jerry had booked the Alaska ferry from Haines to Prince Rupert. Those days became our Honeymoon — the only one I ever had.

After the ceremony

After the ceremony

Posted in Memoir | Tagged , , , | 24 Comments

John’s death and funeral

Inevitably, as time passed, John’s physical condition worsened.  He was supposed to have palliative chemotherapy, but in this instance the British Health system showed its weakness.  The wait for his evaluative appointment was too long.  When we were finally notified of an appointment Peter was unavailable to drive him.  The clinic was about 15 miles away, so we were provided with a taxi.  John was so ill it was difficult for him to walk when we got there.  The clinic was old, dilapidated and chaotic, but I managed to find a wheelchair.  When we finally saw the doctor, a young Australian, she told me that he was so ill the treatment would almost certainly hasten his death.

After he gave up walking he would dress in the morning and sit up on the bed with his radio, tape player and other electronic toys spread around him, wires criss-crossing the bedspread, and he entertained himself until he got tired and slept.  Twice I collected his children and a couple of his grandchildren for an afternoon meal of sandwiches and salads.   That seemed to make him happy, but he didn’t have enough energy to  talk much.  He sat and smiled.

The tumors were spreading all over his body.  The cancer was in his lymphoid system, and he could see and feel lumps on his torso, neck and groin.  His voice was reduced to a whisper; the doctor told me a tumor was growing on his recurrent laryngeal nerve.  But he still managed to talk on the phone to Beatrice and Louis.

I asked him if he had any wishes with respect to his funeral.  He said he would like all his children to be there.

Sometimes he was confused. Once, when I came back from a ramble with Fluffy on the back walking trails, he said to me, “You look different.”

“What’s my name?” I asked.

“Gwendolyn,” he whispered, “You’re my mother.”

Another time he said, “Are we dead?  Are we stuck here forever?”

John claimed he was not a believer, but he was afraid death was not final.  He and Beatrice had studied “A Course in Miracles” together.  I don’t know how much of it he absorbed, but one day, near the end, he urgently whispered something that at first I didn’t understand.  Finally I thought I heard “C of E”.  “Oh,” I said, “Do you want a clergyman?”  He nodded vigorously.  So I put in a call to Sarah and the family Vicar.

During the last days Sarah often stayed with me all day.  John slept most of the time, so we talked and talked.  Sarah was a capable, intelligent woman in her late 40’s.  She was small, dark, not really pretty but trim and nice looking.  She had married late but happily to a man with grown children; she had none of her own.  We talked about John and his escapades.  She was bitter about his treatment of her mother.   She couldn’t fathom his attraction for women or his need to collect them.

“Why did he do it?” she asked.

I said:  “I think because it was the only thing he was really good at.”

“Well,” she said, “He was a good father to me.  He saw me through university.”

The district nurses now came morning and evening.  John took a lot of pain medication which constipated him: that had to be dealt with.  He was incontinent and could no longer walk to the bathroom, so he needed some washing up every day.  It was hard work for the nurses who were patient, cheerful women.

I was getting tired.  I slept in the double bed beside John because I was afraid to leave him at night to sleep in the other room.  He might need something and he was unable to call out or walk.  He tended to be more restless at night, even though he now had a morphine pump.  The dose it delivered was low.

One night he kept trying to get out of bed.  I was afraid he would dislodge the morphine pump, and if he fell on the floor I would be unable to pick him up.  Even though he was not a large man, and by this time looked like someone from a concentration camp, I couldn’t lift him.  The district nurses had said we could call them anytime, so I did, at about 2:30 in the morning.  I was told there was no nurse available, but there was a doctor on call who would come.  I continued to try to calm John and keep him in bed, and ultimately succeeded in getting him quieter, but by no means asleep.  At about 5 in the morning there was a knock on the door. The doctor was African and spoke with a heavy accent.  I explained the situation to him and took him into the bedroom where John was lying rigidly still in the bed.

“How are you feeling, Mr. Ash?” the doctor asked.

“Fine!” said John, smiling cheerfully.

I told the doctor how agitated John had been all night and asked him to please give him something to calm him down.

“I can’t do that,” he said, “the patient says he is feeling fine, and if I give him something it might send him off.”

“And so?” I said.

“I’m not here to do that!” he said with indignation and he left in a huff.

As soon as he was gone John began trying to climb out of bed again.  At 9 o’clock in the morning he finally succeeded in pulling out the morphine pump and getting out of bed.  He immediately fell to the floor, and as I was struggling to get him back on the bed Sarah came in the back door and the district nurse came in the front.  It was a pretty terrible scene.  There was blood all over the place from the morphine needle he had pulled out.  The nurse and Sarah lifted him back to bed, and the nurse stayed until she could get authorization to increase the morphine.  She tidied him up, changed the bed and she, Sarah and I had a chat.

They were both concerned about me.  I was really exhausted.  The nurse said she would get a practical nurse (or the British equivalent —  I can’t remember the hierarchy of nurses anymore)  to stay with him at night so I could sleep in the other room.  Sarah said she, too, would stay the nights until he died.

The morphine dose was increased and John fell deeper and deeper asleep.  That the afternoon the vicar finally showed up, though I had called him 4 days earlier.  I found him smarmy and I was not impressed.  He went to John’s bedside and talked to him for 20 minutes.  Sarah and I stayed in the living room.  When he came out I said I doubted that John could hear what he said, but the vicar opined that one never knew how much they understood.

The night nurse was sweet.  She was a pretty African woman. She sat bolt upright all night beside John’s bed, never shutting her eyes. I got up from time to time to look in.

On the third morning, after the night nurse left, I was in and out of John’s room, putting away some laundry.  His breathing was irregular, sometimes shallow, sometimes gulping.  I was in the room, putting some things in the dresser.  I closed the drawer and turned around to look at John; he was still.  Gradually I realized that he was dead.  I called to Sarah who was in the living room.

I phoned the Doctor’s practice and asked for a doctor.  Sarah called the undertaker with whom she had made prior arrangements.  A doctor came, a woman we had not seen before.  The undertaker came.  He suggested we say our goodbyes before he removed the body.  I did so, and then Sarah and I went out to the back parking area.  We did not want to see the body bag leave.

I called my daughter and asked her to come and get me.  Sarah began to empty drawers.  She piled up his clothes, t-shirts, socks, underwear and trousers and carried them out back where she tossed them, neatly folded, into the dumpster.  She was still disposing of her father’s personal belongings when my daughter arrived.

The only feeling I had was tiredness.  I called home to discover that my granddaughter had totaled my mother’s car.  My daughter called back for me (I couldn’t face talking at that point) to make sure nobody had been hurt.

I began to phone the other women.  I did my best to get all the children for the funeral, but Amanda and Emily couldn’t find the money for tickets, and they would not have had time to get passports.

Beatrice and Louis came and Isabelle came.  Leon came with Melloney.  David came from France with his wife and of course Peter and Sarah were there.  That was 6 out of 7.

Sarah arranged the funeral to be less than a week from John’s death.  It was held at a crematorium about 30 miles from my daughter’s house.  She drove me and we started out more than 2 hours before the appointed time in order to be sure to be prompt.

The A420 is the road we take to Oxford and beyond  It is a major truck route.  Suddenly it was closed in both directions and all traffic was detoured through the middle of Oxford.  There was no other way.  I called Sarah on the cell phone and told her the difficulty.  I said I was afraid I would be late since there was a massive traffic jam in Oxford.

It was a white knuckle ride.  First we inched through Oxford city together with hundreds of trucks, next we raced at high speed along motorways and country roads.  My daughter is normally a safe and cautious driver, but she had to speed if there was any hope of getting there before the service was over.

When we arrived the vicar, the same one who came to John when he was in a coma, was in the middle of delivering his eulogy.  It must have been a chilly morning, because as I sat in the pew, shaking with nerves, fatigue and sadness, Peter wrapped his coat around me.  I saw Beatrice and Louis at the back of the chapel.  I don’t remember much about the service.  The chapel was full of people I had never seen.  I think they must have been Sarah’s friends.  There was a coffin on a platform in the front partially surrounded by curtains.  At some point during the service the curtains automatically swished shut around the coffin as it slid out of sight — presumably to be cremated.  We sang “Abide with me.”

Afterward Sarah had a reception at a nearby pub.  She told me that some people would be coming back to her house later in the day, but asked me not to mention it. She didn’t want Beatrice or Melloney.  I think Melloney came anyway.

Both gatherings were on the dismal side.  At the pub I talked to Isabelle who was there with her partner.   She is a pretty woman and she has a diamond set in one of her front teeth.  I never remember anything she says because I get distracted by the sight of the diamond.  I talked to an intelligent man, perhaps it was Sarah’s husband, about biology.  At some point Beatrice said loudly, “John was a bastard, but we all loved him.”  That did not sit well with the Brits.

My daughter and I drove home to her house late in the afternoon.  When we arrived my teen aged granddaughter was watching television.

“Did you hear the news?” she asked excitedly.  “This morning a chicken lorry turned over on the A420, and they had to close it because there were 2000 chickens running all over the road.”

Posted in Memoir | Tagged , , , | 15 Comments

The strange story of John, continued

This is a continuation of The strange story of John begun in an earlier post.  As I wrote the history of John’s final months I found it was getting too long for one post.  The final days will come in another installment.

He called me from England.  He was in a residential Hospice with terminal bladder cancer.  He said, “Get over here.”

His daughter, Sarah, drove him to the airport to meet me.  It was a damp spring morning with a watery sun.  He looked pale and thin.

We drove to the tiny apartment he had shared with his wife, Sheila, until she died.  This was the place I would spend the next 3 months; a place where I knew nobody but John and 2 of his children, Peter and Sarah whom I had met once before.

Sarah had cleared the apartment of all Sheila’s personal things. The only signs of her were framed pieces of her needlework, neatly done from standard patterns of flowers and birds, before arthritis prevented her from holding a needle.  A collage of photos commemorating Sheila and John’s “ruby” (40th) wedding anniversary hung over the bed in the larger of two bedrooms.   Later I saw a photo album with pictures of their celebratory cruise along the east coast of the US.  Sarah told me they both hated it.  About the time John and Sheila had been married 40 years, he was conducting affairs with 2 women, each of whom he lived with part time.  He “traveled a lot for his business.”

The furniture in the apartment was sparse, with few ornaments or books.  There was a brown leather sofa and chair, a big TV, a small dining table and 4 chairs.  There was a washing machine in the tiny kitchen and in the back parking area there was a clothes line and a huge dumpster.  I did the cooking, laundry, and dealt with the rubbish.  A cleaning woman, Jenny who had cleaned for Sheila, came once a week.  She was a good looking woman in her 50’s.

The apartment was part of a large recent development (the Brits call them estates) with various levels of housing, from small apartments to small townhouses and a few well kept duplexes.  Little streets wound around in a confusing maze with a bit of green common here and there.  The gardens were tiny and mostly well kept, with roses, flowers and ornamental bushes.  Behind the complex was an equally confusing tangle of walking paths between back gardens and alleys.  The development was about a 20 minute walk from Leighton Buzzard, an ancient market town.

Peter, who was unemployed, came sometimes and drove us to the shops.  Sarah came on weekends at first, and later, as John got sicker, she took time off work.  Otherwise, my transportation was my feet.

I quickly got acquainted with the British health system.  John’s doctor’s practice was a couple of miles away, on the other side of Leighton Buzzard.  We saw the doctor at his office once, and after that he came to the house.  In England they make house calls.  The district nurses came when we needed them.  Toward the end one or two nurses came every day.  There was also a Marie Curie cancer nurse from a private cancer charity.  She checked in once a week to see how things were going and to talk. I felt he was well cared for.

The main difficulty was with prescriptions, mostly pain pills.  The practitioners were quite willing to allow them, but there were a lot of rules about getting them.  I can’t remember now exactly why, but I had to walk to the medical practice to get a prescription, then walk to Boots Chemists to have it filled, and usually they had to send out for it, so I had to walk back to town to pick up the pills.  Prescriptions couldn’t be called in the way they are here in the States.  I got a lot of exercise.  I also walked to town to get groceries when Peter was unavailable, and sometimes I went to browse the book store and get knitting wool.  There was a good wool shop in Leighton Buzzard.  I went once a week to the post office to get John’s pension check of L110.

It was a good walk, past council houses, small shops, the fish and chips shop, across a bridge over the Union Canal at Linslade.  The canal was lined with residential and transient narrow boats.  They interested me, and one day I read in the free newspaper that was pushed through the mail slot once a week about a boat that had been broken into by a vagrant and burned by a fire he started.  The boat had just been refurbished by its owners as their retirement home.

My daughter lived in a village about 30 miles away and she came occasionally.  I took the bus through lovely English countryside and sleepy villages for a day visit to her a couple of times when Sarah stayed with her father.  For a brief period I had my daughter’s poodle, Fluffy, with me while she visited the States and I took him for long walks through the pathways overlooking back gardens of the development.

I guess this sounds quite ordinary, but I felt as if I had been dropped into somebody else’s life on another planet.  Nothing was familiar, nothing could be taken for granted.

Soon after we arrived the district nurse and the Marie Curie nurse came to see that John was settled in at home.  Peter and I stood outside in the sunshine talking to the nurses.  I asked them how long they thought it would be.  Of course they didn’t know, but one said, “the next three weeks will tell.”  I wondered what that meant.

The first week I was there John was well enough to walk down to the convenience store, 10 minutes away.  We would get a bag of chips, a Coke and a newspaper.  After a week he was not strong enough for such a long walk.  I tried to cook things he liked to eat, but mostly, though he would think he fancied something, he could only eat a bite or two.  He listened to the radio.  He liked a program called “Desert Island Disc” which interviewed famous people and got them to pick music that they would take to a desert island.  He followed the Archers, the world’s longest radio soap.  We watched some TV;  Wimbledon tennis was on for a while.  As the days passed he slept more.

I encouraged his children to visit.  His son David came from France and Sarah and Peter who lived nearby were often there.  Leon, his son by Meloney (a black woman originally from Jamaica) came a few times, and Isabelle, daughter of Erika, came from Germany once.   Leon and Isabelle had not known each other, and they knew very little of the other 3.

Melloney came a number of times and gave John massages.  She annoyed me by giving him a book about an alleged government conspiracy to withhold cancer treatments.  I didn’t want him to lose faith in the people who were caring for him, but I shouldn’t have worried.  He paid no attention to the book. He and Melloney had many giggles together as she was giving him “treatments.”

At first John seemed uneasy about what people might think about all this.   After all, he had maintained a lifelong fiction of being a conventional husband and family man who “traveled a lot for his business.”  He dropped the pretense abruptly one day when the doctor was chatting with us in the living room. The doctor asked John how many children he had.  For the first time I heard John say, “seven.”

After that he was open with the nurses and other visitors about his life.  I think he was surprised that people accepted this calmly, though with considerable interest.  People found John charming.  He was intelligent, affable and friendly.  And he was dying.  One of the district nurses who had been coming for a couple of months was scheduled to go on vacation shortly before he died.  She knew she wouldn’t see him when her vacation was over, and her eyes were wet as she said goodbye.  The doctor, a pleasant man in his mid 40’s with a badly scarred chin, enjoyed talking to both of us, and I found that he and I read some of the same books.  When he saw the novel I was reading,  “Spies” by Michael Frayn, he said, “I don’t mind telling you, that’s a good book.”

When Jenny, the cleaning lady, learned the truth about John’s life she was astonished (or she claimed to be — I had suspected that John had designs on her).  She said, “Why, I always thought of him as the perfect gentleman.”

John frequently talked on the phone to the mothers of his children.  Beatrice, the mother of the 10 year old Louis, called from the States once or twice a week and she and John spent hours talking.  Erika  Isabelle’s mother, called several times from Germany, and he talked to Amanda, the mother of 6 year old Emily, who lived in Seattle.  I left him alone to say what he wanted to them, and I suspect that he told each of them that he would love them for eternity.  He often talked to Louis on the phone.  He loved Louis very much; I think Louis was the favorite of all his children.  He tried to phone Louis a few days before he died, but at the end it was difficult to hear him and his mind was wandering.

Sometimes he would look at me lovingly and say, “How did I get so lucky?”  Once he said, “I should have married Erika.”  That was after talking to her on the phone.

After 2 months I was scheduled to go home.  My ticket which had been bought with John’s frequent flier miles couldn’t be changed.  I had thought there was no possibility that he would live longer than 2 months.  Besides, I was worried about my mother who lived with me and needed care.  I had hired people to stay with her, but I felt I should be there myself.  I told John and Sarah that I had to go.  John said he understood, but I could see he was frightened.  He said, “It’s sad we have to part.”  Sarah found a nursing home where he could stay until the hospice had a bed for him.

As it came close to the day of departure I wavered.  I told Sarah that I couldn’t afford a new ticket, and she immediately said that she would buy me another.  The day before I was to go I told John that I would stay with him.  For the first time in days he actually looked happy.  He lived another month.

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Dancing with Plotniks

I spent 4 days in Juneau, Alaska over July 4th visiting my friend Gwen.  The 4th was her birthday.   About once a year I take a trip without Jerry, usually to see one of my children.  In a way this was the same kind of trip.  Gwen is sort of a surrogate child.  She was born in 1957, the same year as my second daughter.  She’s like one of my kids, except that I can talk about sex with her.

I had never been to Juneau, but I had lots of expectations.  I saw myself dining on luscious king crab that had never been frozen.  Or hiking on scenic mountain trails overlooking glaciers.  Maybe I’d see a bear.   Perhaps go fishing.  But I know that often things don‘t turn out the way one imagines, so I was not surprised when it was all quite different.  It rained steadily the whole time I was there.  I did not see a mountain, a glacier, or a bear.  King crab was not on offer.

View of Juneau from Douglas Island

View of Juneau from Douglas Island

Gwen’s friend, Barb, together with her entire family had gathered in Juneau to celebrate the marriage of one of the huge Plotnik clan. The young people in question had been married since January, so this was just the party part.

On July 2 there was a picnic (under a shelter) with a good fire.  Gwen and I were invited and Gwen’s husband, Shawn, provided a large king salmon that he had acquired while fishing.  That is, he didn’t actually catch it himself, but in some barter exchange he became its owner and he donated it to the picnic.  There were also hot dogs, hamburgers, a variety of salads and vodka spiked Jello cups in various colors and flavors.  The latter were covered with a big sign that read, “NOT TO BE EATEN BY CHILDREN.”  For the children there were s’mores.

Lots of children dashed about, playing in the chilly rain.  There were dogs of all sizes, patrolling for dropped hot dogs or other dog delicacies.  Shawn’s fishing pals, a group of jolly young men, joined the party.

I met Sandy, the matriarch.  She is a little older than me, a small, energetic lady who had 2 of her daughters and six grandchildren staying with her in her small house.  She has seven children in all, 4 daughters and 3 sons.  There were innumerable grandchildren, including the newly married couple who were the object of the festivities.  The logistics of moving groups of Sandy’s descendants around for excursions were formidable.  And it continued to rain.  While I was there we had 3 lunches out, visited the excellent little museum, shopped the multitude of tourist shops containing items like furs, gold, carved bone objects, and Russian toys.  We visited the Alaska State Capitol Building where Barb was keen for us to see the special marble in one of the ladies rooms.

Anne and Gwen at the Capitol Building

Anne and Gwen at the Capitol Building

We didn’t get to see it, however, because it had been converted into a men’s room.  All of these excursions included at least one, and usually several, Plotniks.

Gwen and I wondered whether we should go to the formal party on the 3rd, the “reception” which was to be held in the Armory.  After all, our connection with the bride and groom was tenuous.  When we heard that fresh oysters were to be flown in from Kake, Alaska we said YES.  We thought it would be okay, since Shawn had provided the big fish for the picnic, and Barb is Gwen‘s best high school chum.  Gwen and Barb had stayed in my guest apartment a few months ago when Gwen was in Bellingham for medical appointments.

I was honored to be included in this warm and joyful group.  Of course there were some tensions.  Gwen said that with Plotniks there is always drama.  But the cousins had a grand time together, playing, dancing, eating and chattering.  Ex-husbands and ex-wives mingled amiably.  Barb’s reclusive sister, who declines to speak to some of the family, was persuaded to appear at the last minute for the family group pictures at the reception.  There is solidarity within this family, young, old, tall, short, some richer than others, some brimming with good health, some less well.  Rocky, Barb’s sister and mother of the groom is the picture of glowing health.  She teaches fitness classes and has a figure that should be the envy of a 20 year old.  David, Barb’s brother is married to Misha, a sweet round woman who has severe arthritis.  David and Misha smiled and held hands throughout both parties.

The master of ceremonies and the proposer of toasts was a big girl with bushy stand-up hair, dressed in men’s clothes.  She is one of Sandy’s grandchildren.  Her partner was a fine looking young woman dressed in a form fitting black dress and 3 inch silver heels.  Gwen says she looks just like Bristol Palin.

Ah, the oysters! They were piled high on a table with knives and towels.  Guests opened their own.  Kind young Plotniks opened some for me, but after a while I had eaten so many that I felt embarrassed and decided to learn how to open my own.  I did learn, and I think it’s a fine skill to have acquired.

Oysters opened by my

Oysters opened by my

The other food was almost as good as the oysters.  The Plotniks are Jewish, but there was plenty of shellfish.  There were scallops with a lovely seaweed relish, shrimp in little cups of gazpacho, chopped smoked salmon on toasts and asparagus wrapped in filo pastry.

The band began to play.   First Sandy stood up with one of her sons.  Then the kids began to dance.

Kids on the dance floor

Kids on the dance floor

Rocky and Sandy dancing

Rocky and Sandy dancing

Bristol look-a-like on the left

Bristol look-a-like on the left

I am shy about dancing, as my children in their teen years used to hoot with laughter when I danced.  But the band was good, the beat was enticing, and I thought, I don’t know these people and who will care if I look foolish.  So I danced until I was out of breath.

Joey and me dancing

Joey and me dancing

For me it was an all time great party!

The next day was Gwen’s birthday.  Of course it rained.  But Alaskans enjoy themselves rain or shine.  The Douglas parade took place as planned.  The marchers wore boots, raincoats and carried umbrellas and Shriners protected their fezes from the elements with shower caps.

Shriners in the rain

Shriners in the rain

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

Douglas parade

That night we had a birthday dinner with Gwen’s parents. The next day at the break of day I flew home to a heat wave.

Posted in Alaska, Day to day | Tagged , , , , | 18 Comments

My tenuous brush with the literati and how I got an A- from Nabokov

I don’t know the names of many movie stars, or other entertainment “celebrities” I don’t watch TV.  I get my news from NPR and the Economist and the New York Times, and I read The New Yorker and Science.  My idea of a celebrity is probably someone who has been dead for quite a while, like Margaret Mead.

Recently in Science there was a review of a book (The Trashing of Margaret Mead by Paul Shankman) which trashes Margaret’s trasher.  Mead wrote a book, Coming of Age in Samoa, which I read during my brief sojourn at Radcliffe College. (Actually, it was Harvard but in those days the fiction of separate men’s and women’s institutions was still maintained.  And we did have examinations in separate rooms.)  I read it for a course called “Peoples and Cultures of Oceania.”  It was an easy read, and it idealized the casual attitude toward teen age sex in Samoan culture.  It turned out later, according to Derek Freeman, that there was no such casual attitude, and poor Margaret was being hoaxed by her informants.

Now it seems, Dr. Freeman bent his facts, and although some of Mead’s information was incorrect, her ideas about adolescent development in diverse cultures were seminal, and she made important contributions to theories on the relative importance of nature and nurture.  Freeman was promoting himself by discrediting Mead’s work.

Reading this made me think of the time I met Margaret Mead and discussed adolescent development with her.  It happened at a cocktail party, I think in the early 60’s when I was a young mother.  The party was at the home of Jack Kemper, then headmaster of Phillips Academy in Andover.  Andover is where I grew up in the house of my aunt and uncle, Bart Hayes, who headed the art program at the academy. I was visiting them and so went to the party.  Margaret Mead seemed like a very old lady to me — I guess she was in her 60’s.  She was heavy, walked with a cane, and had short bobbed hair.  She was no beauty.  She seemed quite content to talk to me, and though I didn’t know much, at least I had read one of her books.  She told me that when her daughter was a teenager she had sent her to live on a Kibbutz in Israel.  She said there they had “sensible” attitudes about sex.

Another of the literati, Michael Chabon, might qualify as a celebrity, since every time he writes a book he gets interviewed on NPR.  I feel a tenuous connection to him and he’s not even dead.  He is a novelist, and sometimes he writes op-ed pieces in the New York Times (see the above link).  I feel connected to Michael because, though I have never met him, I was a pal of his father, Robert Chabon, when we were in college together at The George Washington University majoring in zoology.

I used to study with Bob Chabon and another pre-med student, Joe Mankowski.  I was a little older than both of them, was already married and had kids, but we went through many classes together and had a collaborative rivalry about grades.  Of the three of us, Joe was probably the smartest.  I call him brilliant.  He was a recent immigrant to the US, from France where he and his family had hidden in the woods throughout World War II because they were Jewish.  He had not attended high school, and when he began at George Washington he didn’t know enough English to check in to chemistry lab.  By the time I knew him he spoke fluent English.  Joe generally got the highest grades.  Bob was keen to avoid being beaten in test grades by me, since I was both non Jewish and female, and he usually, but not always, achieved his goal.  All three of us got A’s, it was just a question of the difference between, say, a 93 and a 97.

Sometimes we had advance information about what might be on a test and we always shared because it wouldn’t gratify to get the highest grade because of some advantage not associated with superior intelligence.  We might, for instance, hear what questions were on another section’s test.  Or you could get last year’s test from someone in a fraternity.  Somebody figured out that Dr. Desmond gave the same lab tests in histology (the study of microscopic anatomy of cells and tissues) every year.

Here I need to explain for those who never had a lab test like this how it worked.  About 30 microscopes would be set up at lab tables around the room.  The test paper would be one sheet with 30 numbered blanks.  You would look at the specimen through the microscope and identify it in the numbered blank.  There was a buzzing timer that would sound every minute for you to switch places.

It puzzled me that Dr. Desmond would use the same key year after year.  It would only take a few minutes to scramble it and make a new key.  But Bob was convinced that it was a good idea to memorize the old key.  He urged me to do it, but I refused for the first couple of tests, because it just seemed ridiculous to memorize a list of randomly ordered terms.  I studied in the usual way for the tests and Bob duly got higher grades by memorizing last year’s tests.  For the third test I finally gave in and memorized the stupid thing.  But I also studied the slides.  We started the test and I realized immediately that it had been changed.  It was a completely new test.

The lecture preceded the lab period.  Graded test papers would be placed at our lab stations before the lecture, but the door was locked and we couldn’t see them until after the lecture.  Bob used to race upstairs to the lab to look, first at my paper and then at his, to see who got the highest grade.  Usually he was pleased to see that his was the higher score.  On this occasion we arrived together and I looked at my paper — 95.  I looked over at Bob.  “What did you get?”

He shook his head ruefully.  “The reverse.”  I asked what he meant, looked at his paper and saw — 59.  He hadn’t been able to forget the memorized old test.

Nevertheless, we both got A’s in the course.  Bob and Joe went on to medical school and became doctors.

So as I listen to Terry Gross interviewing Bob’s son Michael I remember our old friendly rivalry.  Michael is a novelist, a Pulitzer Prize winning novelist.  My daughter wrote a very fine novel.  (It is called Outward and Visible Signs — I hope I don’t get into trouble for revealing this in my blog.)  Then she became distracted by life; raising children and earning a living.  She says Bob won the contest of successful children novelists, but I think she’s at least as good a writer as Michael.  And I like his books.

It was an article in the New Yorker made me think about Nabokov, another well dead celebrity.  The article was about a the Berg Collection of rare books in the New York Public Library.  The marginalia specialist of that collection, Anne Garner, was displaying some examples; books owned (and written in the margins of ) by people like Ted Hughes, Coleridge, Thoreau, and Mark Twain.  One was an anthology of New Yorker stories owned by Nabokov in which he had gone through the table of contents and graded each story.  He was a tough grader and had given only 2 stories A+: one by J. D. Salinger and the other by Vladimir Nabokov.

I’ m back again in college, at Harvard.  I took a course in the 19th century novel.  Although I am a 20th century woman, the 19th century is my literary period.  I love the novels of Austen, Hardy, Elliot, Trollope, Dickens etc.  These are the books I read and reread when times are tough.  Bear with me for a minute, I’m getting to Nabokov.

The course was a disappointment.  The Professor was only so-so, and he had no contact with students.  They were divided into sections with graduate student leaders and graders.  My section was conducted by a weasely little sourpuss man.  I guess he was young, but at 19 I thought he was old enough to be untrustworthy.

Two term papers were required.  I wrote the first one on some broad philosophical subject.  My uncle, who was trying to convince me that I had a future as a writer and not as an artist, was full of enthusiasm for my paper.  The weasely little graduate student gave it a C+.  I was stung and mortified.  I was not accustomed to C’s.  His only comment was that the subject was too broad!  The next paper I resolved would be limited to something really narrow.  One of the books for the course was Dickens’ Bleakhouse. Reading it seemed an endless, though pleasant, task.  My second paper was entitled: “The Use of Coincidence as a Literary Device in the Novel Bleakhouse.”   The weasely grad student gave that one a B+.

Toward the end of the semester my boyfriend, Pete, (later my husband and father of three of my children) was in trouble for a paper in a course in Russian Literature he was taking under Vladimir Nabokov.  Pete was a graduate student in the Russian Affairs program.  The night before his paper was due he hadn’t even decided on a topic but wanted to write the paper on Crime and Punishment.  I had never read Crime and Punishment (still haven’t), but I said, “Tell me the plot, and perhaps we can adapt my paper on Bleak House.”

He told me the plot, and with my B+ paper in hand I dictated his paper.  He typed, I talked.  It took all night.

Nabokov gave “The Use of Coincidence as a Literary Device in Crime and Punishment” an A- !

It’s fun to remember the little triumph of my salad days.

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What shall (should) I write about?

What shall I write about?  That’s a question I think about whenever I sit down to work on a post.  What’s the right kind of thing to put on a blog, or rather, what’s the right thing for me to put on a blog.  There are things that seem just too mundane to write about — like washing dishes or mowing the lawn.  But even those can be made interesting if treated by a really skilled writer.

I need a break from the strange story of John, and perhaps that was getting close to things I shouldn’t write about.  Will my descendants really want to know about their ancestor’s foolish love affairs?

So for the time being I’ll change the subject.  Today the subject is what shall I blog about?

Jerry and I have had some social events lately which we have enjoyed immensely.  We went to Friday Harbor on San Juan Island where Jerry used to live.  There we had lunch with an old friend of his late wife, Susy.  The three of us sat at a table for 2 hours in a little café at the San Juan airport.  The café is called Ernie’s, but it is run, single handed, by a Korean woman who makes good hamburgers and various Korean dishes.  The walls are decorated with photos of vintage airplanes, some with Ernie flying them.  The windows look out on the runway, so we watched the Cessnas and other small planes as they landed and took off.  The friend, EB, is a little younger than us, and is a brave woman.  She had 2 sons and lost both of them, 1 year apart, in automobile accidents.  She is divorced.  But she is eternally cheerful, laughs a lot and spends her time with friends, in her garden, and making quilts.

I could blog about EB.

We took the dogs for a walk on the beach, a beach piled high with driftwood and surrounded by orange California poppies.

California poppies

California poppies

I took some pictures of the patterns in the driftwood.  I was thinking of Marja-Leena’s blog and the wonderful pictures she posts of patterns in rocks and sand and leaves.  I was trying to think of the world as abstract beauty, or to transform the image by changing the scale to micro.  I could post some of those pictures.  I could show that I find it difficult not to make form from whatever I see.

On the beach

On the beach

Jackson Beach, Friday Harbor, Washington

Jackson Beach, Friday Harbor, Washington

A little later we sipped wine with other friends, Paulette and Doug, at their house on a little dirt road far from the main road, where their dogs can run free without worries about traffic.  Paulette is a master gardener, and we toured her garden which includes a small lake, stocked with trout, and a waterfall, built by her husband, that circulates and partially purifies the water of the lake.  The four of us talked about geology, about the flooding from Lake Missoula at the end of the last ice age, about bears and guns, about wine and dogs and mutual friends in San Juan and Manley Hot Springs.  We talked about my blog and the reaction to it by some residents of Manley.  We talked about John McPhee (his book, Coming into the Country, is about Eagle, Alaska,) and the reactions of Eagle residents to what McPhee wrote about them.  While we talked we saw an osprey dive into the lake, fishing for trout.

Yellow irises and water lillies

Yellow irises and water lillies

Then Jerry and I had dinner at an elegant little restaurant, Duck Soup Inn, because it was the fourth anniversary of the day we met.  We shared a scrumptious appetizer, smoked oysters with a garlicky butter sauce;  I had duck breast and Jerry had beef brochettes.  Paulette and Doug called the restaurant and treated us to wine and the oysters.

So I could blog about these things.

Or I could blog about an article I read in the Economist about the prime minister of Canada.  I bet that 9 out of 10 people who live in the US couldn’t tell you his name.  I take an interest in Canadian politics because Jerry and I drive through Canada once or twice a year to get to Alaska, and I live only 20 miles from the Canadian border.  Besides, a lot of my blog friends are Canadian.  The Economist says he’s like George Bush’s twin.  He’s an evangelical oil man and follows policies that the tea baggers would like.  And, like Bush, he’s a spender, spending money on silly things like constructing an artificial lake for the media at the up-coming G-20 meeting, complete with fake canoes and recorded loon calls.  Now I’ll reveal his name: it’s Stephen Harper.

Or I could blog about any of 3 articles I read in Science:  One was a genetic study of various groups of Jews — showing that they are related genetically as well as by religion.  Or about an article on the hormone oxytocin, the hormone that is secreted during childbirth and lactation, and how it makes mother bears protect their cubs fiercely.  Or another report about Polynesians coming to the new world before Europeans, an article called Beyond Kon Tiki.

Or I might blog about the 60th wedding anniversary party that we went to.  It was for Karl and Polly, held on the wide deck of the octagonal house he built for her.  The house, and the deck, have a view of Puget Sound and the Canadian islands. The sun was shining; Karl and Polly’s daughter sang “Long, Long Ago” and their granddaughters played the violin and viola.  Karl made a little speech about a dream he had. He has had a life-long romance with flying, but gave up his ultra-light when he turned 80. He dreamed he was saying goodbye to airplanes and airports; as he walked away from the airport he came to Polly standing by their car, and felt a sudden flood of happiness.  He knew that marrying her had been right.

At that party a woman called Elizabeth came up to me and said, enthusiastically, “I read your blog all the time.”  I thanked her.  She paused, and said, “You write about such intimate things — I mean, I couldn’t — well, what makes you want to write about such personal things?”

I said, “I’m not sure, but I think it has something to do with being honest.”

Since then I have thought more on this.  Some people write political blogs.  I care a lot about politics, but I am not sure I have anything original to say about politics.  Some people write poetry and put it on their blogs.  I write poetry too, but for some reason I am much shyer about revealing my poetry than I am about revealing my life.  Some people write lyrical things about flowers or sunsets or travels.  Some write about their children or their grandchildren or happy times with their partners or husbands.  There may be hints of trouble, but they are often not openly stated.  Too much chance for embarrassment or hurting someone.

I try to take care not to hurt, but sometimes I fail.  I am surprised that what some people find hurtful are things I think are trivial.  I write about my own life.  I have not always been wise or successful.  I think I have had an interesting life, and I want to revisit it in lots of different aspects.  I would like my descendants to know what it was like to live in my time, and I don’t want to gloss over the difficult parts, or my own weaknesses and failures.  I often wonder about my grandparents and great grandparents, people I knew or heard about.  I would like to know the truth about their lives.

So I put a lot of it down.  I’m not really brave enough to reveal my every mistake or embarrassing moment or ugly episode, but some things, like the story of John, are in a way cautionary tales.  What real difference will it make if someone is shocked by my small revelations?  The whole thing, after all, is an experiment.

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The strange story of John

I met John on an airplane in the year 2000.  I was flying to England, in business class on frequent flyer miles.  As I stowed my bags I remarked to anyone listening that the plane was very hot.  A short guy with fluffy gray hair two seats back said, “That’s because it came from California.”

I had an aisle seat next to a large black woman who was sneezing and reading a book on black power.  She did not want to talk.  I don’t sleep on airplanes, and the incessant sneezing would have prevented me anyhow.  The short guy got up and stood near the service area with a drink of water.  I thought he looked interesting, so I got up as well.  We chatted.  He told me he had a house in Forks, Washington (an odd place where it rains all the time) and one in England, that he owned a software company, that he had 3 grown children, had been divorced for 17 years and had not had any female companion since but was looking for someone now to travel with.  We exchanged email addresses.

A few days after I arrived at my daughter’s house in a little English village I got an email from John suggesting that we get together.  I cautiously proposed lunch with my daughter and me at a place of his choosing.  We ultimately met at the pub in my daughter’s village where he treated us both to an elegant lunch.  We found him to be charming and friendly.  My daughter said that in her opinion he was too short.

That was in June.  John and I corresponded by email during the summer and our paths crossed again in the fall when I made a trip to New Zealand to visit cousins.  I had a 5 hour lay-over in Los Angeles and met John there for lunch.  Later in the fall we took a trip together to Borrego Springs.  I was in love.

John said he had rented his house in Forks and would look for a place on Lummi Island.  I went to England for Christmas and he stayed in my house while I was gone.  I called him every day, but for some reason was unable to reach him for a few days around Christmas.  I have now forgotten his explanation of that, but I was troubled.  After I came home we went to Port Angeles to pick up his things (consisting of a number of boxes of tools and papers) at a storage unit.

He went back to England a week or so later and we kept in touch by phone and email.  I could never call him directly.  He said he did not like cell phones and he had a Seattle phone number, a service that took messages.  He said this was because he traveled so much for his business.

The pattern of our life became this: John would come to Lummi for a few weeks and then leave for a business trip.  Sometimes he would be gone for a couple of weeks, sometimes a couple of months.  Most days we spoke on the phone or emailed. I actually didn’t mind this arrangement.  I was independent, and I liked having some time to myself.  My friend Ria said, cynically, “He’s the perfect man, always gone.”

As time passed I became more and more uneasy about his life and past.  The business was murky, and it devolved that, (contrary to what he first told me) he had had several romantic episodes in the past.  One with a woman named Cynthia who worked for him in Chicago, and one in Seattle with a woman named Beatrice who he met on an airplane.  Both, he said, suffered from bipolar disorder, so he took a great interest in books and articles on mental illness.

One night I couldn’t sleep because I was worried about all the inconsistencies of his stories.  I was sure there was something more I should know.  At four in the morning he told me of his son Louis, 9 years old, in Forks.  It turned out that the house in Forks belonged to Beatrice.  Louis was their son, and he visited him regularly, though (he claimed) he and Beatrice were estranged.

During that period I made frequent trips to San Diego to visit my 95 year old mother.  One afternoon when I was there my cell phone rang.  A woman with an odd English accent asked for John.  I said, “He’s not here, he’s in England.”  The woman then said, dropping the English accent, “This is Beatrice,  he’s not in England, he’s here with me.  I found this number in his wallet.”

It was touch and go for a while with me and John.  I told him that he could choose.  Either me or Beatrice.  I said, “I don’t share.”  He chose to stay with me, and thereafter Louis visited us on Lummi.  Beatrice got married.

I became a snoop.  I went through his papers, and there were a lot of them.  Old emails, old records, legal documents, diaries and scribbled notes.  I learned his shorthand.  Detecting became a major pastime for me.  One day I found a paper with names on it.  There was Beatrice, Cynthia, Sheila (his ex-wife), his daughter Sarah, sons Peter and David and the name Issy.  I demanded to know who Issy was.  “Oh,” said John, “she’s my daughter, Isabelle.”

Isabelle’s mother was Erika, a German woman who had lived across the street from John and his wife.  When John separated from his wife he and Erika lived together but never married.  Erika had gone back to Germany with Issy when Issy was a teenager.  Issy was grown up, married and had a son.

And there were 2 more.  Emily in Seattle was the youngest.  She was only 6.  Her mother, Amanda, had been Louis’ baby-sitter.  John had impregnated her while she was baby-sitting his son.  At first he denied being her father and told me some far-fetched story about her parentage.  By this time I hardly believed anything he said.

Amanda and Emily came to visit us when Louis was here.  (I insisted that John get Beatrice’s permission for this.)  Amanda is a lovely person. She lives on disability but is educated and intelligent; she spends her time taking care of her daughter and volunteering at a shelter for feral cats.  Emily is a beautiful child.  She was very shy with John.

And finally there was Leon.  I found a note that said “Leon’s birthday.”  I figured out who Leon’s mother was.  Her name was Melloney.  She had been a business partner of John’s for a while.

By the time I discovered Leon two more important events had occurred.  John’s business and John himself had been sued in England by Ericsson, the Swedish cell phone maker, for work contracted and not done; and John was diagnosed with bladder cancer.  He and his business were bankrupted.  He was ill.  He had to have all his treatments for bladder cancer in England because, when his business went under, he lost the private health insurance with which he provided himself through the business.

By this time I had discovered that he was not divorced at all, but lived with his invalid wife when he was in England.  They had been married for almost 50 years.  One day when Louis was visiting he asked John where he stayed when he wasn’t on Lummi.  John said, “I stay in England with Sheila.”  He was beginning to tell the truth.  Sheila was crippled with arthritis and confined to a wheelchair.  She also had serious heart trouble.  While John was with me, and when Louis was visiting she died suddenly.  John sat, white faced, at the kitchen table when he got the news.  “She was just a kid.” he said wearily.  He himself was dying.  The cancer had spread.

He had radiation treatments in England.  They were said to be palliative since metastasized bladder cancer is incurable.  The treatments were in Oxford and he and I stayed with my daughter for the 5 weeks the treatments lasted.  During this time I met two of the children of his marriage, Sarah and Peter.  David lived in France with his wife.  Sarah and her husband and Peter came for a meal and we all sat in the garden at my daughter’s house.  I met Melloney and Leon as well.  They visited twice and we went to her house.  Melloney was a handsome black woman, originally from Jamaica.  Leon was a lanky, melancholy teenager with dread-locks.

The radiation treatments made John sick.  He never quite recovered from them, and I am not sure they prolonged his life.  He lived only 11 more months.

Issy was the only one of his children that I had not met.  She didn’t know how ill he was.  He kept saying he would call her, but he never did, so I called her in Germany.  She spoke perfect English.  She was concerned.

The above events took place over a period of 4 years.  You will ask why.  Why didn’t I get rid of him right away.  Why did I let myself be fooled for so long.  And when I found out what made me continue with such a person.  The answer is I don’t know.  I loved him and he needed me.  He was frequently a charming companion. We enjoyed many things together, and he was fun at parties. He was a good cook, he did chores, he ironed.  Before he left on his “business trips” he ironed all his clothes.  Beatrice once said to me, “You knew when he got out that ironing board you were in trouble.”

He was certainly a reprehensible character.  He spread his seed around recklessly, fathering children he couldn’t possibly care for.  He loved them intermittently, and he was proud of them, but he was completely irresponsible.  He lived on women.  He wasn’t expensive to keep as his needs were simple, and he tried to do some work — like painting, gutter cleaning, general maintenance — to compensate.  And I have to say it was interesting.

When he got really sick with cancer, around Christmas time, he went back to England.  He had a small apartment there that had belonged to his wife, but her will granted him the right to live in it until he died.  He hoped to recover enough to be able to return to Lummi for a while, but he only got worse, and eventually he had to go into hospice — there was a residential one near his apartment.  Issy came from Germany to visit him there and brought with her his grandson, Christien.

He called me and asked me to come; he didn’t want to stay in hospice; so I went.  He and Sarah met me at the airport and we drove back to his apartment.  He looked thin and ill.  I thought it would be only a few weeks.  He lasted almost 3 months.  The account of those 3 months is my next post.

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