During symmetry breaking there is less order and more chaos, and the fundamental characteristics of the universe are radically altered

Friday, December 30, 2016

Hiking day


Yesterday, Willem took me to the moores in the east of the country. It was bitterly cold so we bundled and layered. I wore long wool underclothes, a wool shirt, down vest, fleece sweater, and down jacket, silk sock liners, and wool socks, and still the cold tore through me as if I hadn't bothered. I know it's possible for the human body to withstand the cold; I've seen the videos of the "Iceman", Wim Hof, swimming through a field of icebergs with nothing but swim trunks. But I am made of different stuff than this, and always find the cold difficult to tolerate.
I was glad for the break. It has been a lovely holiday season and I've been so grateful to be away from work. Since the holidays began, Willem has scheduled dates for us: a bicycle ride to a Christmas market, tickets and 3D goggles for the new Star Wars movie, and now a 2 hour train ride and hike in a nature preserve. It was beautiful countryside and I want to go back when the spring returns with the fields of heather bright and purple. But even this dormant beauty is lovely in its own right.
Willem has been cheerful during the break, eager to spend time playing and enjoying life, but I should have noted the fatigue and strain setting in behind the eyes. Three miles into our hike, the exhaustion which has haunted him for weeks, finally caught up with him. It was growing dark and Willem kept choosing paths that took us further away. I suspected he wasn't doing it intentionally and I wanted to guide us back, but my cell phone wasn't getting a clear signal so I couldn't navigate easily. Willem must have misinterpreted my frequent check-ins with my phone, and he shouted. Willem is a kind and sensitive man, and only shouts when he becomes simultaneously exhausted and frustrated, but I hate it when he does this because it makes something inside me shut off. I also was forced to recognize Willem's fatigue and I became worried because his exhaustion isn't cured by a simple rest or a few hours sleep; and I had no clean way of getting him out of the nature preserve. He would need to walk out.
So we did. It grew dark and isolated; we walked down a long road and I saw movement on this hill above: the sleek, fast movements and shadowed form of a wolf. I worried about the lack of people here. In the distance, I could see the lights of buildings, but what would I do if Willem decided he could go no further?
By the time we made it to the train station, I could feel the shuddering tiredness of the man. He pushed himself to the breaking point. In the 28 hours since we've been back at the house, he can barely keep food down. I tried to feed him last night and he vomited everything up. Today, more vomiting. I wish I could do something.




Sunday, December 18, 2016

Christmas conversations

It was a silver brightness through the skylight that prodded me awake this morning. For 30 minutes or so I tried to fight it, but this was why I'd left the blind open. Today we were taking the train to visit Willem's sister, J, and I didn't want to set an alarm. In his sleep, Willem was humming. Sometimes he does that all night. He is musical to his core and although he cannot hold an instrument any more, the music seeps and drips out of him.
Yesterday Willem went to his home to do cleaning and I went shopping for Christmas gifts for his nieces and nephews. They don't have visits from Santa Claus here but I figure Santa will visit me since I'm American, regardless of where I live. I visited a Christmas market just down the street from me. So many people; bright lights, and a man in a bright red suit and white beard. I skyped my mom and dad while I walked through the market. Mom says that Corinne is coming for Christmas and that they will have a Christmas dinner with my brother tonight. She said she would visit me in Februrary. She said they planned to visit me for Christmas next year. I bought Willem a hand-knit wool sweater for Christmas. And I bought myself a hot handful of little pancakes with powdered sugar and butter.
I wrapped the presents on the living-room floor last night, and Willem smoked his e-cigarette, vapor billowing out of him like "Everyone knows what a dragon looks like" and asked me questions about my childhood. By the time I was finished, he was a bit physically wrecked from his day's labors. So we showered and went to bed. We'd meant to watch a movie or do something more. But this is fine, too. If it wasn't for Willem it would be a very difficult season for me. We do what we do.
We have a small tree which Willem collected on his bicycle because I asked him to. We have to trim the tree still. We'll do it tonight.
Now we're on the train. Outside there are clouds. A thick grey layer propped above us. The fields are a lush green and the trees are bare and crooked and bare. I see yellow uses and church steeples and the cozy gabled roofs of the villages.




Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Treaty

Treaty
I've seen you change the water into wine
I've seen you change it back to water too
I sit at your table every night
I try but I just don’t get high with you
I wish there was a treaty we could sign
I do not care who takes this bloody hill
I’m angry and I’m tired all the time
I wish there was a treaty
I wish there was a treaty
Between your love and mine
They’re dancing in the street, it’s Jubilee
We sold ourselves for love but now we’re free
I’m sorry for the ghost I made you be
Only one of us was real and that was me
I haven’t said a word since you’ve been gone
That any liar couldn’t say as well
I just can’t believe the static coming on
You were my ground, my safe and sound
You were my aerial
The fields are crying out, it’s Jubilee
We sold ourselves for love but now we’re free
I’m sorry for the ghost I made you be
Only one of us was real and that was me
I heard the snake was baffled by his sin
He shed his scales to find the snake within
But born again is born without a skin
The poison enters into everything
And I wish there was a treaty we could sign
I do not care who takes this bloody hill
I’m angry and I’m tired all the time
I wish there was a treaty
I wish there was a treaty
Between your love and mine

Monday, November 28, 2016

shift

Something is changing. Has shifted.
Broken bones. Never set quite right. But here I stand.
So different.
This new life doesn't fit into the narrative of my previous ideas.
"Meant to be" cannot be true if my life had to be destroyed to arrive here. Either that, or God is malevolent. Or unbelievably compassionate. Either model for the deity fits this data.
Eve and Tim are here with me. And it is so good to see them. Wrap my arms around them. Take them on the train. They were my family for three years. Every day I wandered into their home. I love having them in mine.
Willem is in my home now too. As persistent as any of the furniture. He has his ups and downs. I have my own ups and downs. But he is good for me and my "downs" are never quite as low as they once were. If I tell myself I don't need his cheerful goodness, the soft caresses and the singsong humming when he holds me, it is a lie. You hardly pay attention to breathing - but find out how much you love it when the oxygen is low.
"I think about where I would be if he hadn't come into my life and stuck around," I tell Eve.
"Oh god," she said, with a shuddering of her shoulders, a flapping of her hands. "It wouldn't be good."
And I know it. In so many ways I wish I wasn't in this spot right now. Because it has all the signs and symbols of the life I imagined for myself. But with a different cast of characters.
But I have a beautiful home. And a man who makes sure to put a hot water bottle between the sheets so my feet don't get cold.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Visitors

San came to visit last weekend. The weekend before that, my brother was here. It feels like such a gift to have them with me.
J came on a Friday morning and left on Tuesday - so I took Friday and Monday off from work to spend time. We visited the city, walking down cobblestone streets, visiting churches, and museums, eating pea soup and pancakes. We talked about his boys, about dad and mom, we rented bicycles and rode them through the rain and across my normal route to work. It was so nice and so sad to say goodbye.
San was only here a few days but they were also precious to me. Her brother came along and they shared my guest bedroom. I took them downtown on Saturday and then left them there early to head back home and meet up for Willem's mother's birthday. Afterwards, the group of us went to a concert - the composition of Willem's brother-in-law. San and her brother joined us and I had a small taste of being surrounded by family.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Munich

Back to work Monday. Tried to retain the scent and sense of self evoked by my brief escape.

Within those walls the steady heartbeat, ominous realization that this is what I do now. This is my commute. My office. My colleagues. My tedious, boring, never-ending, relentless work. External pulse I must follow. Discordant strike against my private heart. Inside, I am fighting back.

Munich. Wanted to see the city. Walk in the autumn air and maybe go for a run but felt too sick. Sore throat could go either way. Also I had work and, from her distant vantage point, the gremlin watched and monitored. Detailed, exhaustive e-mails; implications of my deficiency. I can fight it with my intellect and self-awareness but she wears me down.  I had to work. Had to finish the analysis. Did not visit the city. Stayed in my hotel room with the laptop open, ate a Kaiser roll from a local bakery, drank kefir from a local grocery store, and was hungry.

Munich. The last time I was here I was on my way to Garmisch. Planning conference. I ran with Dutch Marines in the snow. Before that, another work trip. And another with high alpine climbs. And once he drove me to Stuttgart and we visited Marie and ate German food and visited a military museum.

In Germany always there was him: the longing, the anguish, the inability to surrender hope. And so I am again. He is here, as I feel the resonant echoes of past pain in the autumn air. When I remember this, I welcome the pain because it has always been the Janus coin – and on the other face was exultant Joy.  And my anguish is still so deep because, in another world I am with him and my joy is equally deep. I like to know this. Even when it burns.

At night I dream of him and wake with the distinctive sensation that I have spent time in his presence and I still feel the residual sensation of soul, his laughter, his smile, his conversation, all sitting with me. Please don’t go away. Not yet. But it is a dream and it is gone. And I look at my life and I hate it because he is not here. I've become an eater of ashes. I love his ghost because it is all I was able to keep.

I call Willem once. Twice. Try to talk. But all I can do is suffer. He loves me. Doesn’t want me to suffer. I have lost the knack for artifice. I cannot reassure him. We do not talk long and I cry.
Meetings during the day. Charts and powerpoint and database checking. Logistics. Vehicle traffic. Projections on science payloads. Ascent and descent manifests. Coffee in little ceramic cups. Not enough coffee.  Dinner and beers with the folks from the other agency. Networking. Conversation and collegial laughter.

There were six of them. They were nice. But nice is not what I crave. I crave kin. I crave the passion and discourse of shared work that stimulates and drives me. But if I have lost him whom I love, I have also lost the work and camaraderie I loved. And this is a dull and lifeless shadow world. My new colleagues are excited to be in Germany, glad for the glamor away from satisfying lives with wives and children and weekend yardwork, want to eat Spatzle and schnitzel and drink beer and sauerkraut and, because I live in Europe and am not afraid to find things, they follow me and we drink far too much beer. They are only mildly interested in me - the way you are interested in a waiter while he takes your order. I am genial, try to pay attention to what they are saying but I might as well be a robot for all that I am able to form attachments to them. They are satisfied with this work and I cannot be.

Today, the friendly roly-poly one asks, “How do you like your work with MSO?” and I am caught off guard. Do I dare confess the abuse and pain? Tell them I am trapped in hell and eager for escape?

No.
 
I talk around the subject, change it quickly. I tell them about a man I went to school with who went to a federal penitentiary for stealing moon rocks. We move along. They drink their beer and I am friendly and engaging. I am numb.

We part ways near the Glockenspiel. American hugs all around. I have a flight to catch.


Monday, October 10, 2016

Cordoba

There was such peace in the Mesquita Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba. Willem and I stayed for hours and when it came time to leave, neither of us wanted to go. We wandered back into the cool darkness between the pillars, and through the pools of colored light on the floor. I meant to make a deliberate meditation, but this seemed unnecessary. It felt like a meditation to just be there. Afterwards, yesterday, for the first time in nearly a year, I felt part of my old joy and creativity stirring.
Tonight, Willem said, "I've felt that before. What was it? Deja-vu?"
Apart from the historical significance, I felt to cover my head, wash my feet. Even with the other tourists clustered around, snapping photos and talking, there was something of the sacred.
It seems that this reality has been worn thin by millions of souls and millions of prayers and the part of the spirit that recognizes heaven edges just a little closer, filling the heart with peace and a longing for home.
Last night, Willem paid for us to visit the Arabic baths of the Hamam. We were laid on a heated marble slab, rubbed over with rose scented soap and bubbles, scrubbed down, and massaged. Then we moved from one bath room to the next. Refreshment for the body as well as the soul.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

In Spain with Willem


“It’s not you – it’s not peeling an onion – but some similarity. I can’t make myself more clear.”
- Willem

Without the second-order effects of my stress to bother him, Willem is very funny when he’s relaxed. He quips jokes and lopes around on his long legs with a shit-eating grin. His version of problem solving is a lot like my dad’s. For example: he wanted to bring the whole loaf of bread with us today, along with a six-inch bread knife. This rather than pre-slicing the bread before we left the house.

We are hot during the days and Willam skirts the border between well and fucked-up. We’ve learned that he can stay cooler when he dunks his shirt in water. Usually a public fountain. He prefers this to a bathroom sink or water bottle. He is incapable of feeling embarrassed about anything. And everything is negotiable. So he takes off his shirt, wanders to a public fountain and dunks the whole thing. It drips and squelches as he puts it back on (he doesn’t wring it out first). Yesterday, there was the necessary shirt-dunking in the Royal courtyard of Alcazar and he was scolded by one of the security personnel. But his response to authoritarian reprobation is so good natured and friendly, the security folks can’t stay angry at him. 

Thursday, October 6, 2016

The first moments alone

Willem and I are on vacation. I brought him with me to Spain.  I need to get away. To run from the horror that is my job. I also want to give him this chance and he is so excited to be here. Everything is new. Everything is wonderful to him. And he is excited to be here with me.
We are trying to discover if our difficulties getting along are due to the stressful situation at work. He thinks so.
In part, the answer is "yes". So I'm searching for another job.
But I also feel something more fundamental that is difficult to ignore now that there are actual moments alone with few distractions. He reaches out to me, loves me with his whole soul. I see it in his eyes, in his face. I am so grateful for his love; grateful for the comfort he gives me in my pain. But I feel my inadequacy, the stingy amount of love I can give in return.
I am reaching to someone else - an involuntary action as necessary as breathing. Even if it is lost. Even if that relationship exists only in some shattered past. I cannot feel settled in this moment with those beautiful, kind grey eyes looking into mine. But when I turn to where I breathe, as I did just now when I ran alone, turn inward to the place in my soul where I am connected to another man, I feel right again.
How is this fair? How can I be here with this beautiful man and unable to be with him? If love was a choice, this would be the right choice because he is true. Because he is good. Because he is kind. Because he loves me.
Tell me what to do, God. Please.

Thursday, September 22, 2016

limbic system

"These past two weeks I haven't been very effective at work," I told her. "I can't focus."
"Of course you can't," she said, raising an eyebrow. "You're in danger. Your limbic system is activated and your prefrontal cortex is shut down. We have to get you safe."
Oh. Okay.
I thought persistent, low-grade terror was just part of living.

Monday, September 19, 2016

getting out

I'm applying for other jobs.
I'd rather not leave this place. I love where I live. I like so much about what I do. But the management is so heinous and I worry that this company won't want to keep me around if I continue to make noise about the illegal and unethical activities. I've seen this one too many times for my comfort.

Trouble is: I'm here now and I want to stay. It doesn't seem fair that I would be chased away by unethical people. Again

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Bully

It's strange to consider what I write here. Here is a picture of my internal life. I show the processing but do not log the facts that stimulate the thoughts.

My life lately has been difficult. When I arrived here, I believed that the long work hours and the subtle acts of aggression by my bosses were manifestations of insecurity or concern for the work. But they have escalated their attacks over the past months, and my life at work is hellish. 

I've worked for bullies before so I understand the game. And I never internalize the attacks so this mitigates the harm. But I am exhausted from the long days and nights of overwork and the constant nasty surprises. Furthermore, I am fearful that my gentle pushing back against the illegal behaviors has created enemies and I believe they will harm me if they can. 

No wonder I dream of fighting demons. 


Thursday, September 15, 2016

dream

A dream last night. So vivid it could be a memory.
Flying low and fast over the water, sun at my back, white tipped waves sloshing below me, towards the outline of a city. Racing beside me a shining companion. Angel. So maybe I am Angel too.
We speed under a suspension bridge spanning the wide expanse of water and, as we expect, disrupt a host of demon who take flight, erupting from below like ants from a hill, spewing towards the city in a giant black swarm.
A demon rises to the left of me. So close it startles me. His skin is mottled yellow and green, and smooth and hard as rock. His tongue is poison red and huge, pressing out of his mouth like a snake. He snarls at me, face twisted into a mocking grin.
I should feel afraid but I am not afraid. This is why I am here. Why we are here. We are hunting.
In flight, I fight him. Twisting and falling, rising in the sky above the water. He presses, bites.
Then my companion comes to assist, taking his arm, pulling him away from me. But the demon is strong and hurls him back.
"nice assist," he hisses.
Then I wake.

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Sunshine in September

The next week is supposed to be warm. After a sluggish spring and June and July that let me wear boots to work without discomfort, the Autumn has delayed and we have bright, warm, wonderful sunshine.

Today, Willem returned to his apartment to give a showing and I spent the morning cleaning up and baking cookies. I had a visit from a work colleague and her sons ate the chocolate chip cookies. I visited another work colleague to celebrate his wife's birthday. In the afternoon, after grocery shopping, I painted. A picture of a girl I saw in Tanzania once - in the port city of Dar Es Salaam. She is twelve- or thirteen-years old with thin arms and an inward smile. She wears a white collared shirt with the crest of her school on the left breast pocket, and a pleated black skirt - ridiculous in the Tanzanian heat. Her book bag is slung across her body.

I find it difficult to write about the things that matter to me. Africa matters to me. Last night Willem asked about the work  I'd done with APS and, as I discussed the last time Eve and I conducted SAMP in Cameroon, I started crying with the pain of the loss. I still have so many things to say - so many things I saw or understand a little more, or have wanted to capture. But I never seem able to sit and write and articulate.

Work is brutal so I don't often have time to think about the things I wish I was doing. But it does give perspective to remember that I once did something very well that mattered very much.

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Random malice

Someone beat the shit out my bike last night. It had a Kryptonite U-lock so it wasn't really steal-able. But it was more than a fair target for someone with a lot of rage. the front tire is bent and the frame was kicked so hard into the lamp post that there is a deeply grooved dent. It may be damaged beyond repair. I don't really know. I'll have to find a way to get it to the shop. I can't ride it so I'm not sure how I'll get it there.

I'd spent the morning singing songs from "Man of La Mancha" to Willem and driving him crazy - a sense of playfulness and goofiness I haven't experienced for a long time. But discovering this on the street when we unlocked our bicycles to take advantage of the sunny weather with a turn around the city - took the wind out of my sails. I know this kind of violence isn't personal - that is, it isn't directed specifically at me - but it gives me a sense that there is often something ugly lurking under the surface of a civilized society. Also, I feel discouraged to lose my source of transportation and pleasure - and to have another expense to manage. Fuck.


Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Miracle

Up early. 0530 before the alarm. Bathroom break, then back to bed. Awake in the dark. Thinking. Beside me, Willem is breathing. I reach out, touch his fingers. He responds, as he always does, with a happy murmur and sleepily snuggles up to me. I may snap and pull away, cringing from the intimacy because it feels like a hot shower after a sunburn, but this man never does - is never irritated by me. Its a wonder. I have to be careful with this. I am broken but he is not. I must not break him. The damage must not be allowed to spread beyond the boundaries of my own heart.

Up again at 0551. Brush teeth, take the trash out to the street. Put on the coffee to brew and the oatmeal to simmer. Choosing clothes for the day is always tricky. They go in the backpack and emerge in the locker room after the bike ride and shower, ready to wear. If I choose badly, I'm stuck with my decision for the rest of the day. I choose a long summer dress: one I used to wear in Africa during the graduation ceremonies in sweltering heat. It's supposed to be hot today.

There's enough time to wake Willem for breakfast and still make the train. So I prod him in the dark. I would be irritated to get up so early but he is not. He is happy to see me. Groggy, stretches his long arms around me, grins at my face. He is so pleased with the breakfast, he reaches across the table to touch my arm, hold my fingers.

He is tired. Not sleepy, but tired because he spends the small currency of his energy trying to improve the quality of my life. There is not much energy to spare. His disease is a bully, stalking behind him, shouting at him, shoving him down when he doesn't pay attention. I admire him; admire his strength of character, his stubborn tenacity, his courage. He came with me to the law office yesterday, insisted on answers. Loudly persistent when he needs to be.

Willem does my laundry while I'm at work. He fixes things. Climbs out on the roof to clean out the leaves. The broken window in the guest room (he put his elbow through last week, and we visited the ER for stitches) he wants to fix himself; won't let me call anyone else.

Willem is miraculous to me. His existence. And what he does for me. For my heart. He loves me with an open kindness that breaks me. I cannot love him like he deserves to be loved.  I know how I should love him. I should love him as I loved Sjors. But that is not possible. There is something wrong inside me that will not mend. I cannot look in mirrors. I cannot bear to have him look at me. He tells me I am beautiful and I find I hate the words, don't want him to say them. Look somewhere else, not at me. But he sees me in a way I have not been seen. After that first day together, he told me I reminded him of a statue in Florence by Donatello. Maria Magdalene. I have not seen the statue, but I have seen the photographs.

Saturday, August 13, 2016

the rage

I can't to this either. During the past few hours, I've spent time sorting my accounts and seeing where I stand: understanding that I am so financially damaged it will be difficult to repair without years of work. Of course I didn't look at it before. It is another wound and it infuriates me. I am frustrated and full of rage. Full of all the anger of a hundred aborted dreams. I remember why I came here. I remember why I let myself have a measure of forgetfulness and peace. I can't live like a tortured wildcat, clawing out at everyone that comes near. I have to find a way to let this all go. I have to let myself live in the "now" because I can't change the past. I can't know the future. I cannot look behind me because the burning is still too much.

here

No. This isn't what I wanted.

I came here because I wanted you. I closed the distance, left everything I loved to be here. To be near you. You have always held my heart. Against every instinct for survival, it is yours still.

Last night I dreamed that I had the baby of another man and, looking down at the tiny body, I felt indifference. Not love. Not tenderness. Guilt that I couldn't offer this deserving creature the natural affection of a mother. But not even guilt could overcome the feeling of wrongness. It only intensified the sense that I'd taken a wrong turn - leading me further from you.

I can't do this. I never could pretend that I was meant to be someplace else, leading the comfortable life of another woman. No wonder this battle at work feels tiring -feels that it isn't really my battle. I already fought my own war and lost. And now, without the comfortable presence of Willem to mute the screaming inside my own brain, I look around me and consider that everything I am, everything that is true and real inside of me is entangled with you. Entangled with the people I love. And I'm alone here. I am playing make-believe to think I could create a life without you.

I was meant to be working in Africa. I was meant to be building military maritime capacity, and inventing drugs with my SSNMR patent. I was meant to be next to you, knowing what it is to hear you breathe and reach out and touch you. And this path is so far off that mark. When I can close my eyes, live my life in the present and forget there was ever a meaningful, joyful past, forget the pain that came from the severing of everything I cared about, I can dwell in this valley of lotus eaters. But I don't want an opiate to soothe the pain. I want to feel it. It is real. It is raw and terrible. It is me.

Friday, August 12, 2016

familiar battlefield - unfamiliar ally

It's been a fight at work. How do I always end up here? Stumble on the unethical and illegal actions of other people and have to decide how to navigate the terrain. Now, of course. I'm more worried. With so many bridges exploded and burned to ash behind me I need to find a way to keep what I have. Once you let it be a "fight" everyone has lost anyway.

But I'm exhausted. The working conditions are excessively harsh and the hours are long and they leave me fried. I have no time or energy to do anything else. During the weekends I spend my time sleeping and pulling out of the ugly funk. I can't write or paint. I'm just tired.

Fortunately for me, there's Willem. I derive such comfort from having him in my life. He's edged so slowly and carefully into my daily routine, I hardly noticed at first. Now he's a permanent feature. I've been alone and had become suspicious and set in my ways. I am, of course, too fucked up by what Sjors did to be able to attach normally. Is it any surprise I have trust issues? But he stands there, touches me gently on the back, the arm, the shoulder, and sorts through the difficult, monotonous, or sad things in my life, and manages them.

Now its Friday night. Willem is out fishing with his friends and I'm tired and ready for rest.




Friday, July 22, 2016

Terug

You are back. So close I imagine I can feel you.
I have deeply conflicted feelings about your return.
When you were gone I knew where you were. If I didn’t know exactly, I knew you paced the same square footage every day.  I know what it is like to ride a ship: to see the silver expanse of ocean stretch to a smudged and shifting horizon. To hear the bells and calls, and feel the thrill of the daily battle rhythm; to know your shipmates and work in a team. I may never have that experience again but I remember. I can imagine you there.
Now you are back, as unconstrained in your movements as any person.
It Isn’t the unconstrained movement that bothers me, I think. It’s the unconstrained spectrum of possibilities and the likely outcome. Integrate from zero to infinity. Normalize the area under the curve to one. Give me your wavefunction. The height and breadth of your personality and choices and  I will calculate the expectation value that I might find you again: the man I knew you once to be. It is a very very low probability, I think.

 I don’t really want to write to you about me anymore. I haven’t been able to write to you for some weeks now. Something so live and vital in me has gone dormant. Some hope has burned too long and is nearly out. I taste tar and ashes in my memories now. The woman you once knew is gone.  I reach back to touch her, confident she has followed me here, want to feel her warm hand and sense her sure footsteps, and find only emptiness on the path behind. 

Saturday, July 16, 2016

concerned

I'm worried about my friend. She texted me two days ago with bad news about her health and her job. I need to talk to her. I miss her. I love her. I worry about her. I need to know she's okay.

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Just stop

I came home from work on a Wednesday.  Early. Especially to meet up with Willem. Only an hour to spare before Mara picked me up for a run.
He made me porridge. Big pot on the stove.
"What is porridge?" I ask. Oh. Just oats.
"You need carbohydrates for the run," he says.
I try to be calm around him. "Everything is fine here," I say with my body, with my voice.
Even when it isn't fine.
I've been exhausted. Burnt. Spent.
Willem takes me by the shoulders, looks at me earnestly.
"I'm afraid you're going to die," he says.
I laugh. It isn't a good laugh. Comes out breathy and insincere.
"Afraid I'm going to die? What do you mean?"
Willem is tall and he is thin. Almost unnaturally From a distance, in a hooded sweatshirt, with his long gangly limbs and loping stride, he can pass as a teenager loitering. Up closer, his cheekbones jut out and his hazel eyes rimmed in grey betray his age. He is 37. One year younger than I.
"You're going too fast," he says. He reaches for words, "I know that circumstances at work have been bad; I know you have Lynn and me here. I know you're strong. You can last longer than most people. But you need to stop. Just stop."
So I did. Took a few days. Away from everything - even him.

Lynn and I have been traveling. Seeing as much of life as we can. Yesterday we went to a flea market and a museum on the Resistance movement during the war. I'm breathing again.

Friday, July 8, 2016

Long silences

For years I've used this space to process. Everything.
Recently this has become more difficult.
I want to find my way back.


Monday, May 23, 2016

the Now

Already, the day is done and the darkness falls on the wings of night (in Longfellow fashion). It's ten-o-clock and I've promised myself I would actually go to bed. Not at midnight or 0100 when my mind finally succumbs to my fatigue. Then I'm left with only 5 hours or so of sleep and this is not enough - particularly when the gap accumulates.

It rained today. I changed the bicycle saddle last night and put wax on the chain of my bike - but the rain was so excessive I gave up the effort of the 13 mile ride and simply took the train to "V" station and rode my second-hand clunker bicycle with the tilting seat and broken kickstand the 5 miles in the downpour.

I ran on Saturday. with the club. Afterwards, bicycled back home with "F", a nice guy who shared coffee and then came around for a turkey salad lunch at my place and helped me hang mirrors and pictures.

I've been listening to "The Sudden Appearance of Hope" by Claire North. (I'm a big fan of her work - even if this wasn't her best writing. "The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August" was excellent.) The concept is interesting: Hope Arden is forgettable. Immediately after interacting with anyone, the other person forgets her - forgets the conversation and her existence. So her relationships are one-sided and short-term because the other person can't remember her long enough to form an attachment or be impacted by their interaction. It's an interesting concept and perhaps a bit more resonant because these are the relationships I form. Of course I can talk to my family and friends - but they are far away and my relationships are so short: the man next to me on the train or bus; Maya who is my running companion on Saturdays; the women in the gym locker room in the morning who chat with me while we shower and get ready for the day; the men at the music store who sell me guitar strings and give me coffee and try to talk me into buying the electric piano; and the dozens of people in coffee shops and restaurants with whom I chat comfortably, and then leave as easily. There is only this moment. This now. Now I am interested in your SCUBA diving lessons and the man you like at work; now I am interested in your dog; now I am interested in your mathematics course in college; now I'm interested in your love of baking. These relationships are unfulfilling but they are what I have and so I cling to them.  At some point, a few of them may grow into something more. But now, tonight, I am alone.

 My apartment is full of boxes. My mind is also full of boxes. It's better to be alone when you would just spend your effort apologizing for all the clutter and knowing you don't have the energy or time to sort things out just yet.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Glimmer of interest

Work. International. Compound or campus. I keep calling it "the base" because my mind is so geared to military structure I can't conceive of any fenced in place with security guards at the gate and flags as anything other than a military base. If I'd had my way last year I would be on a military base in Afghanistan or Iraq, and not bicycling to work as I do now, listening to audiobooks and watching the summer burst out around me.

Groups of Ex-pats cluster together as though shielding themselves from the culture. Today I had lunch with the Italians, feeling strangely at-home with their gestures and expressions and the quality of their jokes. Afterwards, we had coffee together. Of course we did.  What is lunch to an Italian if it isn't chased down by espresso afterwards?

Fabio, with his usually exuberant bush of curly hair looking more streamlined and tamed, said, "My wife set a trap for me. She left a piece of cake on the table and, like any fat person, I sat down to eat it. When I reached for it, she cut a hole in my hair. So then I had to let her cut all of my hair."

Of course, in addition to being Italian, they're all scientists and engineers - so we talked about recent Sci-fi/fantasy television, and about recent science news: the second successful penis transplant, and the upcoming head transplant. All these men had a surprising amount of knowledge on this bizarre topic.

This hasn't really been the job for me. Long hours and more tasks than I can reasonably manage - but nothing that requires I use my brain. I'm occupied, but not engaged. I've held out - returned to the tedious, relentless tasks, hoping for some improvement. I gave up my work because I thought I had this job in October - but didn't actually get to start work until February and spent more than five months without pay or expectation of work. I make 20% less than I did at my last position - and that job required only 26 hours per week. This one takes at least double that - often 55 hours or more. When I worked in Italy, my salary was 2.4 times this. Sometimes I get sick to my stomach thinking about what I lost.

Then I remind myself: this was my choice - and I never choose the obvious path. I didn't come here for money. Sometimes I forget why I came, or I remember and try not to feel hopeful since my reasons are so unreasonable. Instead, I focus on the beautiful apartment, the gorgeous commute, the long bicycle rides and the creative efforts I'm doing again in the evenings. I paint and write and bought new strings for my guitar. At work I'm glad to be doing something completely different.

Yesterday, I made a new friend at work: the director of an adjacent division. She and I chatted for two hours about processes and objectives and I began to feel a glimmer of interest. I think I may be able to redefine this work. I may be able to turn it into something I can get excited about. This brings a sense of relief, even as I get back to gun-decking. Maybe there will be something else in my future.


Monday, May 16, 2016

Assessment

They wanted an equation. 
Children of industry; grown fat in military quantities.
Measure us, they said. How tall? How fast? How many? How much?
Tell us the breadth of our reach; the completeness of our dominance.
Excessive in their self-evaluation. Stingy in their trust and will to partnership.
But a relationship is not an equation. Except that it sums to zero when you invest money, and demand faith as compound interest. 
The only machine you can purchase here is fed by coins and its cogs will stop when the lucre fails, or easily change hands with a higher bidder.

This is a marriage, a dance. Not a game. Not an equation. I trust you, when we run up a mountainside together, chanting in the African heat, trust that you will bring me safely down again.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Island hopping

One week ago I was back home in Pozzuoli. God, I miss that place. Walked down to the waterfront, strolled along Via Napoli. Ate dinner at Acqua & Farina. I stayed at Villa Avellino - where Eve used to live and where I spent my last few days in the country.

The visit had the possibility of bitterness - and that first night it overwhelmed me as I walked, tired from the day in Rome and long train rides south. I was here. I lived here. My work was so important (it seemed then, and still seems now) and it was important to me. This was where I truly was me. I existed. I was real. I mattered.  My work mattered. How could god allow people to strip me of everything? How could people I trusted be so cowardly and cruel? How was it possible that my programs - that SAMP would be cut off before it had a chance to grow? So many things I wanted to do and I was stopped. I've recovered none of it in the intervening years. Nothing that has come since seems to have mattered at all. I spoke with god, arrogant as I am, as though he was across the table from me, and the taste of my wonderful, long-craved food was seasoned with anger and pain. Why did you let this happen? What the fuck am I doing now? It was a mistake, I thought, coming here. Now I work programs that matter too little to me for people who want too much of me and I resent them for their relentless requirements.

In the morning, it was difficult to get up. Too much bitterness washed down with wine had soured my mind. But I opened the door, smelled the sea air and Solfotara, and heard birds that only sing their songs in Italy, and a measure of peace stole over me. I showered and grabbed the next ferry off the mainland. I stopped in Procida first. Procida is more rural and less commercial than the other islands. The heat of the day began to build and the stone streets and brightly painted houses, roses, lemon trees heavy with fruit, and everywhere the sounds of the ocean, made me remember myself. I was here. Pieces of myself were there, in the air. I breathed them in.


Friday, May 6, 2016

Rome

The train hurtles. Rumbling. Shaking. Gaining speed. Flickering light and shadow. Vestigial Roman aqueduct out the window parallels our southern journey. Red-brown crust, remnant of an ancient engineering feast that unsettles and shifts the imagination and then makes it soar.

Today I stood in the Pantheon. In the center with the perfect circle that the Romans drew: a clear path of sunlight. Beauty that outshines the pious paintings mounting the walls and dusty saints lurking in alcoves: insecure religion painting its signature on the secular perfection. Caked powder and garish lipstick on a five-year-old beauty pageant contestant.



Up with my alarm at 0800 to drink in as much of the city as I could. I bicycled past the Borgia galleries (save that visit for another trip), the Zoological gardens, the Borgia gardens, then down, down, down. Spanish Steps, Trevi fountain was being vacuumed by maintenance workers. I chucked a coin in anyway.  The Pantheon, and towards the Roman forum.  I ran out of time. Checkout was noon and it was 11:30. I raced back along the winding and one-way streets, fighting traffic, trying to find the hotel.

Showered and checked-out, I walked towards the bus stop and stopped for a cappuccino and chocolate cornetto. At the last minute decided on a taxi instead. And maybe different plans. Maybe not the train station. Maybe I cross the Tiber. Maybe I can find my lawyer’s office again and maybe he is still there and maybe I can speak with him. Find out what happened with my case. 

He exists. The office is still there. He was out, but his assistant spoke with me and he’s promised to track it down. No hope of any help. That died long ago. then what? Curiosity, I guess. Did it simply disappear? If so, why?

There are purple and gold and bright red flowers everywhere. I love this country. I love it in the Spring. 

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Mr. Portugal

Oh I'm fairly confident you're using a VPN and throwing your IP address wherever you want. But I like to think that you're in Portugal. I was there in December, interviewing for a job. Lisbon. I enjoyed the atmosphere. It reminded me of Naples (a little). What a fabulous little memory.

When I imagine you're in Portugal I think you're Gerritjan  and I feel quite friendly towards you. Oh, I understand you're monitoring me, and I know that I've been fucked over twenty-five ways until Friday. But I enjoyed working with you in Dakar, and running with you in Garmisch, and then working on African Winds with you in Den Helder. We had a really good working dynamic and I thought you were wonderful to hang out with. I thought we were friends. When I met you I had been so sad and driven for so long, and you made me feel a little better.

I'm sick tonight. Bad cold. I left my bicycle at the gym at work because I wasn't up for the 13 mile ride through the wind and the rain with this fever and stuffy nose. I was planning to make the trip but then a nice Italian man named Vinnie offered me a ride home in his Mini Cooper. Vinnie loves living here. He has a motorcycle, and a boat and a German Shepherd.

I had so many things to say to you. but I'm too tired now. I don't have any cold medicine so I downed some Whisky and aleve and I'm heading to bed. The party is still going on outside. I can hear it from my bedroom but I'm done. Goodnight.

Monday, April 25, 2016

Bright skies

I was up at 0630 and biking the 13 miles into work before I had a chance to think about it. So nice. The sky was cold and beautiful and bright. It made my eyes hurt. I'm listening to Matt Ridley again - but irritated he's wasting his time with philosophy instead of giving me the biology fix I've come to expect from him. C'mon buddy, you wrote "Genome" in the 1990s. Surely you can give it an update!

I'm making friends with the other women in the locker-room. The women who bicycle into work, like me. Neat company. Mathematician from Uruguay who studied General Relativity for her graduate thesis. A Dutch physicist working on her PhD and fighting with her graduate advisor (don't we all?); a German woman who does near-earth observation with satellites.

Stopped by for take-out on my way home. I'm coming down with a head cold and wanted soup. Didn't really occur to me before now: the Vietnamese place is neighbors with the sex shop. I could stop by for Pho and a strap-on dildo without ever going out into the rain.

Still too lonely for my own good. I meditate and do yoga and go for long and glorious rides in the sunlight but I am too alone. Extroverted personality traits tend to stretch and expand during enforced solitude and I find myself chatting up the girl opposite me on the train, the man next to me on the bus, the biologist at the coffee machine, and the artist in the hallway. I go to running club so I can punish myself with an 8 mile jog and have someone to talk to while I do it. Pretty much anyone who will take the time to look at me gets an earful. And god forbid someone actually touch me. I'm hungry for human contact. Two weeks ago, when I met the young physicist during a bicycle ride in the rain and we went out for beers in the cold, I said goodbye with a hug that lasted far too long.

I'll be fine, I know. It's just the empty spaces in the transition. This is just another transition.

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Bad idea

I went back this evening. Don't know why. In a way its easier not to pretend that there is something good that can come out of my being here. Some reason I ended up here that is independent of him - of either of them. Visiting museums, walking along canals, meditating on the train. That I can somehow rise above it all. So when I just let myself ride a train in the twilight, to the streets where he might be, I feel like a bird migrating home. Relief. But then I'm there, walking to doors I am shut out of. And then I know I've made a mistake because the ancient pain roars into life - not dead. Sleeping pain that feels like anger, too - because the face of this pain is anger. It screams into the grey sky, "why?"

I want to believe there is some meaning to the pain.  This was what I told Hilde those weeks ago during lunch. Always inappropriate - talking about religious belief with your boss. Particularly when it seems she doesn't like me very much.
She said, "I don't need there to be a god to make the universe any more amazing."
"I don't need god for that," I replied. "I need to believe that suffering isn't meaningless. If there's a god, then something can be redeemed from pain."

God was silent tonight, as I walked along the farmer's field in the rain. Or, at least, I couldn't hear above the chaotic echoes of memories and questions that were never answered. How do you let someone go if you never understood why they are gone?

I can't think my way out of this one. I've tried to deploy reason. This is the purpose of my writing here. And writing it. And now it is sent and there is nothing more to do. To know. Did it reach him? Did he read it? Did it matter? Does he still exist? I will never know because he will never come. Because this prayer could not find wings strong enough to move my god of improbabilities.

It was a bad idea to come. No answers here. Only reminders of a loss that has never healed. Of a future that died in its infancy and which I carry in my arms. Grotesque to other people. Spectacle. Horror. Put it down. There will be others. Walk away. But I can't - any more than set down my arm and walk away. It is part of me. You are a part of me. You, bright spirit. Keeper of my heart. You walk beside me in the rain. You sit with me by the lake and this - this is your hand in mine as I weep.

My heart raced (as it races every time I think of you) and I couldn't calm it down to sleep. I meditated, desperate for rest, and at last drifted. In my dreams I am suffocating in the well of a dark ship, or falling from a great height. And then, before I woke this morning, swimming in the ocean, skimming the surface as though flying, trailing my fingers across the taut, rubbery skin of whales that rise beneath me in the waves. And he is beside me. And there was joy. This thing in my arms is not dead, I say.  Not dead. No more dead than my pain. Sleeping.




Friday, April 1, 2016

Friday evening

There was fog outside the windows of the train, clambering across dark fields and pressed into ditches – the stealthy movement of soldiers making for the front line. The rising sun had not gathered enough heat to burn it away and so I, taking my exit at the small town of "V" with my train pass interlaced between the fingers of my left hand, felt the damp and the chill, and stepped onto the platform. The time on my phone read 0721.  

My second-hand bicycle was where I’d left it: perched on the racks between a tangle of bicycles that looked more like wire hangers spawning their ungainly progeny in a closet than transportation. The kickstand fell loosely down more than a month ago, scraping along the pavement as I rode, and I’d secured it with packing tape because my long working hours left me little time to visit a bicycle shop or make the repair myself. What couldn’t wait, however, was my front tire, which pressed into the asphalt like a pathetic balloon weeks after the party.

The hand pump was only partially successful and took all the time I wanted to spend at the gym, so I eschewed the free weights and made quick use of the showers and hair dryer before rushing into work. I have a nasty cough these days- it’s lodged in my chest and refuses to leave in spite of antibiotics I coaxed from a local urgent-care doctor on Monday. So I wonder whether the bicycle ride is a wise decision.  But I ride anyways.

The ride from the train to work is 5.3 miles – plus or minus .2 miles (so says my GPS). It takes me 33 minutes on a lazy day and 26 when I’m racing to catch the train. I almost always listen to an audiobook. In recent weeks I’ve re-visited Le Carre after The Constant Gardner, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, there was Smiley’s People. When I first encountered Le Carre in 2011 I studied him the way some people study language: trying to understand the world he came from – hoping that he might provide the key I could use to unlock Sjors’ cage and let him out. Now, with halting fluency in his mother tongue, I realize the only truths Le Carre really tells are human ones: betrayal, deception, fallibility, and the bewildering pain of love. “In the Spy trade,” he writes. “We abandon first what we love the most.”

Now, I read about Shakespeare again. Not the Stratford-upon-Avon  buffoon who duped the world  - but Edward DeVere – the 16th Earl of Oxford, whose sharp wit, literary genius, intemperate nature and tumultuous life generated the world’s greatest greatest literature. I read about Edward DeVere long ago and now I think I’ll make a project of him: re-read his plays, memorize his lines, and visit the places he visited: Paris, Venice, the Croatian coastline, Palermo, Sicily, Genoa, Milan.

I’m very alone here. I truly realized my isolation after visiting Lynn in Scotland last week. It was good to have people around me who knew and understood me, who loved me and wanted to touch and hug me (last night, out of desperation to be touched, I accepted a hug from a man during a festival who sported the sign, “free hugs”). Lynn and I visited Edinburgh Castle and I joined in with her husband’s family in Edinburgh and Alyth. We  had Easter dinner together and visited a nearby 5th century church.  On my last night in Scotland, we went on a “Ghost Tour” at the Cow’s Gate vaults where I heard a howling noise I thought was part of an elaborate sound system but which Lynn and Dan refused to say they had heard. We also visited the Covenanter’s Prison where 1200 Scottish men were held after a Scottish rebellion against King Charles and who spent the Scottish winter in the impossible conditions and died from exposure.


I’m at a restaurant/bar now. Its in the city center – on my walk home from the train station. I stopped here on my way home from work, drawn like a moth to the flame of human interaction. I had a very nice beer (the beers are often very nice here) and an appetizer. But I’m impaired already and asked for something with lower alcohol content. I do want to run tomorrow morning, afterall.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Running

I joined a running club yesterday. I've been running for years - but always so slowly I couldn't ever consider myself a runner. When I was living in Naples I would go on long meandering runs with Grady or Shelly - along the waterfront or out to Baia and around Lago D'Averno. During the winters in DC I would take a long run on a Saturday or Sunday - along the Potomac on the Mt. Vernon trail - ten miles or so to a restaurant I liked and then, sweaty and tired, take the train back home. There was one marathon once - the Las Vegas Marathon. I was impossibly slow then, as well.

But slow or not, I want to be where there are people, to make friends, and run with a community. Also, maybe there's the tiniest hope that I'll become faster if I'm training with other people.

The club is three miles away from my apartment and the route will become familiar in the next few days and weeks and months.

A trainer named Tom introduced himself and he quickly folded me into his group: two men and a woman who were all recovering from various injuries. My ankle still isn't fabulous yet so this is a good group for me. We went a total of three or four miles together: intervals and drills and strength training. My cardio is working okay - the daily commute on the bicycle ensures this. Afterwards we showered, and ate sandwiches and drank coffee together. It was nice. So normal. I have this great hope of leaving pain in my past - in building a normal life with the calm that other people sometimes seem to have.

Today, the sun shone and I ran errands: grocery shopping and clothes I need for work. It's too early for bed yet but I think I may go to bed anyway. I need to recover. With the long bike rides and running, I'm very tired.

I felt throughout the day that I should reach out to Edward. I'd like to. I long to have a normal conversation - to see his face and hear what he has to say. But I didn't. Why not?

I'm afraid he'll say no. I'm afraid he'll say yes and I won't know what to say when I see him. I'm afraid he'll tell me the truth and the truth will be unbearable - that it will make me go dark again. Worst of all, I have a crisis of confidence in myself. I'm too ugly. Too changed. The years, worry, and medical procedures have made me heavy and the pain has burrowed into my face: networks of intensity and sorrow. The irrational part of me insists that only beautiful people are deserving of love and I've lost my beauty.  If I was still beautiful I could have confidence in the encounter. But I don't want to be pitied and I don't want to pity myself. What if Edward tells him how ugly I've become? So, god help me, I stay away.


Thursday, March 10, 2016

riding and meditation

I take the train and then ride my bicycle into work. The ride is nearly six miles and takes me half an hour. The wind is often very strong across the fields and there is some effort. I pant and push and try to draft off of teenagers who make it seem effortless. Oh well. It's my first week of this and my body will become stronger. It is only Thursday and my GPS tells me I've ridden 42.6 miles since Monday.

The spring is shouting to make itself heard above the cold. Sometimes the frost covers the ground and kisses the faces of the yellow daffodils who wilt and withdraw for a time. The next day, when sunlight shines brightly cold though a bracing blue sky, the crocuses and hyacinths open up their mouths and kiss the air. There are birds everywhere. In the trees, with cheerful piccolo sounds, or on the water: ducks and swans and white-beaked blackbirds.

Sometimes I listen to audiobooks while I ride. While Dad was here, I listened to Claire North novellas. While I moved into my apartment, I listened to Neil Gaiman's Graveyard book. Then, sad to finish up the new territory and unable to settle on anything else, I returned to John Le Carre. The Constant Gardner, contrasting the hot sun of Nairobi to the biting wind that burned my fingers as I rode. Today I started Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy again and greeted George Smiley as an old friend.

What I do is tiring: the bicycling, the moving, the changing of my life, my circumstance, my friends; changing fields; learning material I never thought I'd need to know. I'm often so fatigued that my eyelids droop. And I'm often so ravenously hungry I descend on food like a starving seagull. When I'm not at work I'm alone. Too far removed from my intimate circle for their company, and too distrustful to reach out to anyone I know who could support me here. But there is a city full of people and I will begin to collect them.

Meditation is a good way to keep the panic at bay but sometimes I feel it anyway. The fear that I will loose this too. This is the danger of loss: you understand your own fragility. You know your own mortality and it becomes dangerous to have things you care about because loss will sidle up beside you and whisper in your ear, "don't be too attached. I can take this, too."

Monday, February 29, 2016

The lake

It was a day of trying to reconcile irreconcilable things.

This morning I put my road bike in the back of my rental car and drove north. Through a flat country with fields and blue sky and distant spires.

North is where I've felt prohibited. Yelled at. Why are you here? Why did you come? North is where I ceased to be me because somehow I'd been distorted by someone else's nightmare. North is where they were, nestled in a life with the man I longed to be with. North is pain.

But North is also where I met two little boys and played with them on a playset next to a bright lake. That memory is good and true and I will not be kept away from it because of remembered prohibitions from another incarnation.

So I came North.

The lake is 3 miles in circumference. I jogged, lame as I am with this still-painful ankle. And it was beautiful and peaceful. And I thought, I know why you came here. I understand this small piece of you. 

Then I took out my bicycle and rode across farmer's fields into the labyrinthine streets of the brick suburb where people live crammed side-by-side and on top of one another. And I became lost and scolded by the natives and claustrophobic, and unable to find my way out, and glad when I did get out. And then I understood you a little better. I knew that you felt trapped, too. I knew you felt you couldn't get out.



Tonight I talked to Lee. She's been avoiding my phone calls, although I didn't know it. The part of my brain that reminds me about the awful things that have happened in our family has switched off - breaker triggered by the bright patterns of flickering pain.

But she didn't switch off.

Brave. So brave. She met with him (although he didn't tell me that they met). Two meetings in fifteen years by my count. This was awful for her.

"We can't tell anyone," she told him, echo of the plea he made when she was 8-years old. I'll never do it again. Please just don't tell anyone. "It would kill mom and dad. It would kill Jane. I can't have anyone else suffer. I know it isn't fair to him. He should be able to tell people, too. So Now I'm part of this secrecy again. It's separated me from Jane. I can't talk to her."

I'm a believer in truth. But this truth has buried me, too. And I'm more isolated from Corinne than I've ever been, and wonder if I can find a way to come across this chasm. If I could not know. Not feel this truth, would I? Yes. No. I want it to not have happened. I want it to be un-done. But that's different than ignorance.

"This isn't the whole picture," I told Lee, praying that my words are truth. "There is always darkness in a painting. But it isn't the whole picture. We are more than our pain. We are also love.  We are profound and beautiful love and hope and joy. There is brightness, too."






Sunday, February 28, 2016

Keys

I met the agent this morning at 0930 - she was waiting for me in the apartment I've agreed to rent, made a deposit and first month's rent (all on credit. Everything's on credit these days. I haven't received a paycheck since October and so make a plea to my future self to be merciful and pay my bills for me). It isn't the top floor, but I worry it won't be an easy climb for mom when she comes to visit. This evening as I made multiple trips up the stairs with big blue IKEA bags and bookcases, I remembered a time after knee surgery when stairs seemed to be some hellish torture device.

Now that I have the place, I'm eager to move in. Of course I don't have furniture. I gave it all away when I moved out of DC. So I'm trying to get a bed. Every bed store around here has massively high prices and their beds all look the same. I have no way to compare quality. So I bought a mattress and I'm hoping I can find a reasonable frame.

I rented a car and drove about 60 miles east to some furniture stores I found online. The first one was in the middle of "Furniture Alley" with multiple stores in the same neighborhood. I rushed into the first building I found so I could seek out the restroom. And I stopped dead. The enormous warehouse was filled with baby things. In order to get to the toilet I had to run the gauntlet through "baby-carriage" land, filled with pregnant women and their boyfriends/husbands, and soon-to-be-grandparents milling about.

By the time I got through I was shaking and my heart was slamming into my ribs. My face in the bathroom mirror was flushed hot red.
"This is stupid," I told myself aloud. "Aren't you over this? Just fucking get over this."
I hadn't eaten for hours so I parked myself in the store's cafe. I ordered a salmon sandwich, paid,  and drank a cappuccino while I waited for the sandwich at a table.
Clusters of pregnant women and their families were pressed around me. I kept my face to the window. But it wasn't tolerable. My stomach churned. I found I was holding my breath. I left before the sandwich arrived. Hungry, but glad to be outside again, with the bright blue sky.




Thursday, February 11, 2016

Sleeping Tiger


My dream last night startled me.

Michael  is with me, helping me to find Sjors in a labyrinthine city. He's also saying something about electromagnetism: about how there is such a thing as a magnetic monopole but that it's terminated in the moment of its creation. I'm distracted and worried and he, frustrated with my inability to pay attention to what he's saying, leaves me. He's smiling, eager to return to San, and as he drives away on a motorcycle, head bare, sunglasses on, cutting across traffic, I call after him, "Wait! Please don't leave. I'm listening". 

But I'm alone, frightened and walking down a foreign street, unsure how to find Sjors. Then someone says to me, "Just breathe" and I look down and see that a lioness is walking beside me, giving me strength. As we walk, sometimes my fingers are in her fur, and sometimes I'm the lioness. 

Now I'm beside a vacant lot, overgrown, surrounded by a waist-level chain-link fence. There are wild animals inside the fence, barely caged and I see, most frightening, a giant tiger. This terrifies me, but I notice that its sleeping and I feel relieved but uneasy. I know that all I must do is get past the tiger before it wakes and notices me and I desperately don't want to be noticed. The area I'm walking through is also thick with brambles and they're scratching me and pulling at my clothes as I try to move quietly. I try not to make a sound. 

Friday, February 5, 2016

Dream

I had a really beautiful and peaceful dream last night. I don't know why this particular dream would surface in my subconscious, but it was an articulation of all of my deepest desires and wishes - and it left me with a feeling of calm that followed me throughout the day.

In my dream, my family was together - the whole clan, Of course we haven't been together for nearly two decades - so this feels unbelievable. But there was no apparent distress or discomfort in our association, and it felt that there was reconciliation between people in some improbable way. Then, deepest of joys, Sjors was in my dream, too. It was the only time his appearance in my dreams was not a fraught and distressing event. Unlike other dreams where he's shouted at and berated me, this time Sjors came to me with deep understanding and love. He told me he had read everything I'd written. He said he was so sorry for everything I've been through in these past years. He kissed me and we made love. It was so deeply calming and beautiful and I remembered what it was to make love to him - the sense of completeness and rightness and depth of feeling. It was an act so different than any commercial definition of "sex" I don't think it could ever be placed in the same category.

All day long I've held onto the loose threads of dream memory that, lingering, cling to my waking mind. I don't know why I was so fortunate to have such a lovely dream but I'm grateful for it.

Tonight, as I had dinner with JB I was struck by a realization. JB likes to emphasize how unfair everything has been for me. It was unfair that I lost my work in Africa, that my Command didn't stand up for me, that my then-boss had additional reasons for wanting me gone and didn't defend me, that my Company retaliated against me,..and so on. When he talks, I feel that it should tap into some deep source of personal rage or resentment, that I should feel bitter. But tonight I realized that I don't feel this way.

When I returned to DC in 2013, I did so with the intention of taking back what was lost. I wanted to take back my work in Africa, my reputation, my salary. I wanted to claim every ounce that had been stolen and to turn around and say, "you didn't affect me. You didn't matter at all". Of course, years later, I can't say that. The truth is: I'm finished professionally. I have no income, and no ability to work here because of the bang-up job that happened to my clearance. I'm massively in debt and my programs are dead.

But material and professional success were only some of the things I lost  in 2013. After what the MIVD (and my own leadership) did to me I also lost my ability to trust people. I lost my innocence, and my hope. I was constantly full of rage and bitterness.

The past 2.5 years have been tumultuous but these experiences, for all their pain and difficulty, slowly purged the anger and bitterness from me. Furthermore, I learned to trust people again and I have an abundance of beautiful relationships with people.

If it was god's intention to give me back what was taken 2.5 years ago, I'm glad he didn't waste time giving me money and professional adulation. I'm glad he gave me back my soul.




Monday, January 25, 2016

her

I want to talk to her. I miss her. Whenever something's happened in my life, she's my first call. But when we're on the phone now, she seems a million miles away and I don't want to stay on the phone long. I find excuses. For the first time in my life I can't look at her. I want to fly to see her, but I also don't want it. What do I say? How can I walk the tightrope across this divide?

I've lost my best friend. I can't figure out what to say to her. She must feel so abandoned and I don't know what to do. I've always been honest with her, always managed to confront every issue - but this is something else. She chose not to tell me. It makes me see her differently, shuts me off from her. Can something like this take away decades of trust and mutual support? It must be unbearable for her. It's unbearable for me.

Who are you? In this agony I reach out to you. Besides you, only Marie and Lee know. When I see you there, I alternate between rage and peace. Rage, because you remind me that nothing I do is private and that I'm always at risk for having my life blown apart again. But then I sometimes feel relief because having you know what is happening makes it more bearable somehow. I let myself imagine that you are Sjors, reading my words as you once did. That you still care. That you are still there for me. Why do I so badly need you to be Sjors right now? One more agonizing fantasy.

I continue living as if nothing had happened. I make plans, cook dinners, help little boys in and out of their snowsuits. It snowed today.


Thursday, January 14, 2016

January

Boys had vomiting and diarrhea last night and so stayed home from school today. The tummy aching was enough to cause moaning and choruses of "I want my mom," in various degrees of piteousness that ranged from genuine to truly melodramatic. I had the fortune to be able to leave the house and get work done in a coffee shop around lunch time but returned home to babysit for a few hours.
Love the kids but, fed up with cabin-fever, they were little monsters. Had to physically carry Loftin to his room on my sprained ankle. Rational discussion with a six-year-old seems like it should be a feasible thing but was, in practice, not.
Me: "Hey buddy, I need you to look at me."
Him (head lolling about like a bobble-headed toy): "yuuuuuuuugh"
Me (taking his head in my hands and facing him towards me): "Look at me. Look at my face. I'm serious. I need you to make good choices. Do you think you can make good choices?"
Him (lolling his eyes and knees wobbling so they collapse beneath him, forcing me to release his head which then also wobbles unsteadily): "Yeeeeeeeeeeaaahhhsssssss"
Sure.
Me: "Do you think that you can stop teasing your brother if I let you come back out in the living room?"
Him (jiggling and wobbling and throwing himself onto the floor): "I want to be goooofy".
I'm trying to remotely access a university account to do calculations but the software isn't loading properly. Very irritated by that. I feel impotent. I can't get anything done properly. I can't develop my research and  I can't protect my invention with international patents because I can't afford it. The deadline is March...May? I can't remember. Then the international placeholder expires and anyone can infringe on what I've done. The elation of receiving the U.S. patent in October is dulled by the knowledge that my investment of time and money during the past ten years will go down the drain because I can't afford anything. The lawyer's invoices are in a stack by my computer. I don't even bother opening them because whether the price is $9K or $15K it doesn't matter. I can't afford to pay anything. I couldn't afford to go to the fucking hospital for an x-ray when I fell off a mountain. Now, I can't even run and get fit again after getting fat with hormone injections and inactivity.
I realized today how tired I've become. Not recently. Not because of exertion or lack of sleep. No. This is a different tired. Its set in so slowly I barely noticed it: a gradual realization that this is what life is going to be now. I don't get to develop any of the work to which I've dedicated the past decade of my life. I've lost time and, worse, I've lost the ability to trust and attach.
God, what a fucking disaster.

Monday, January 11, 2016

busted up

I dreamed about you last night. Its been a long time since you've shown up in my dreams. And I kissed you there.
What a thing to do. Why now, I wonder? Where are you?

Hiked today. Along the Millcreek pipeline trail. Beautiful day. Crisp blue sky and deep snow from the recent storm. 1.5 miles in slipped, twisted my ankle, and tumbled down the slope. Arrested the fall but could tell immediately the ankle was bad. Sat in the snow, took off the boot and watched the swelling. Felt the bone, not convinced it isn't broken. Put the boot back on while I still could. Couldn't stand for the pain so I just sat there. No cell-signal. Not really dressed for being stationary in that level of cold - my gear only worked as long as I was moving. Decided it was best to try and walk while adrenaline was pumping. If I waited, I might not ever be able to get out on my own steam. Hobbled off the mountain like a badass. Like a screaming, swearing, crying badass.

Marathon training's gonna have to wait. Fuck.

Friday, January 8, 2016

Walking on trails with boys


I'll look back on this time and wonder why I wasn't perpetually amazed and grateful. How often does life give a gift like this? People who love and care about me, time enough to explore the relationships, time to find the next path, and the chance to hit "pause" on something that has pained and troubled me for years. 

Last Friday, J-dog and I took the boys hiking on the Pipeline trail up Millcreek canyon. I packed a thermos of hot chocolate, bags-full of chips and grapes and oranges. The boys are still too young to tolerate the long trudge, and Dean was out of gas long before the journey's end. But it was fun nonetheless. Loftin threw himself enthusiastically into every snowbank, and he and I staged an ambush for the slower members of our crew. 

Today, I came home from the gym and showered. 
Dean, wearing a mask, said, "Why did you make yourself clean?" 
"Because I like to be clean," I said. 
"I like to be STINKY," he shouted and launched himself onto me. 
How the hell do you not love that? 

I had a morning video-conference with a potential employer. Its comforting to discover that they're planning to integrate me onto their team. Its nice to think I'll have a real-person job soon. Its been years since I was paid to do work I cared about, and this is good and interesting. After months of income-free living, maybe I get to step into a different life. 

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

FIVE plus SIX

The surgery was at 0700 this morning. 36 hours before, on day 10, I'd triggered with 10,000 IUs of HCG. It had taken me some time to find a distributor in the valley on Saturday and the pharmacy who finally sold it to me was only one of two I could locate. My estrogen levels were nearly at 1200 - an excellent indicator, and far better than my numbers last time.

There is no part of my body I recognize. For the past six weeks I haven't been allowed to run or play hard. I've had 78 subcutaneous injections of hormone in my abdomen which have made my belly and legs swell and distend. I've had ten ultrasounds, two surgeries and one emergency-room visit (in Portugal). I've completely decimated my retirement account, paying doctors and pharmacies and laboratories and anesthesiologists $15,000 at a time when I have no income or prospects...

...and I don't regret a thing.

 I have eleven vitrified eggs. Eleven pieces of me preserved in liquid nitrogen that have the prospect of becoming people someday. Children of my own.

The past five years have been so sad. So full of loss and betrayal and pain. I couldn't bear the thought of losing all my hope for having a child of my own in another five or seven years of continuing pain. And now I don't have to.

I have eleven eggs. No matter what the future holds, no matter the acceleration of life and its inevitable tight times and disappointments, I will have a child. The statistics are good. For one child I need to cryo-preserve ten eggs because fertilization rates for eggs is 50% and successful implantation is less than that. So eleven is good. Perfect. I will have a child someday.

During this round, the doctor waived her fee and I had to pay just the $6000 for the drugs because the last time around had such a difficult outcome: by day 8 there were only two viable follicles and the outcome crushed me with its weight. In the end, she collected five mature eggs - which was better than we hoped, but still not the right numbers. "I can do better than this," she told me. "I want to try." And she was as good as her word. I didn't pay her a cent and today's surgery was free. She collected thirteen eggs - and six were good to vitrify. Five plus six. Wonderful.

There is some core of sadness that has been eased today. Some glimmer of joy on the horizon. Nothing in life has happened as I planned or wanted, but then in the heart of the night, I find Grace and Intercession. And these are beautiful things.


Sunday, January 3, 2016

Hours in DC

It was an early-morning flight to DC. Corinne and I were out the door and on our way through the dark and fog to the airport at 0330. Poor Corinne never gets any sleep - and my flight time was a particular bummer. It was good to spend time with her, for all that she is the "zombie mother" and I am hovering in the personality-free zone, occasionally riled into passion by the stress of trying to make this process work at a distance (phone calls, finding new doctors, new pharmacies). I also enjoyed the doodlers. At last they warmed to me and I to them. They made me happy.

The trip to DC was unplanned. I needed to root around in my storage unit and find an official document for a potential employer (of all things - my Masters' diploma. Never mind that they have my PhD diploma already in-hand). I couldn't stay long because I had a doctor's appointment on the 31st. So it was an 0600 Jet-Blue flight to DCA and a Delta-Skymiles fly back to Utah the following morning at 0700.

 Shelly was nice enough to pick me up at the airport in DC and I was irrationally happy to see her. She's a lovely person with a generous heart ready to invest. It's a rare person who shares freely and I was grateful for it.  We stopped for croissants and coffee before driving to the storage unit. I worried it would be a terrible ordeal, but I'd organized the place far more efficiently than I recalled. Even the bicycles were nicely lined up. So it was the work of moments to locate my file box, find the file, and send a photo image overseas. Afterwards we went to her apartment, dropped off my bags, then walked to a local Italian restaurant and bookstore in Dupont Circle.

Shelly had to leave at around 3PM and so I spent the rest of the day walking around the city in the misting rain. I stopped by the Natural History museum and ate dinner at my usual sushi joint before moving back towards Shelly's apartment.

In Utah and Florida I feel stifled, unclear. Foggy. It's difficult to make myself do any of my favorite things. When I was working in Italy and Africa, I felt on-fire, alive. I loved my work and it drove me. In DC, there's at least some passion and a sense of hope. It isn't as though my business or life was actually successful in the city, but there is such a feeling of promise - the certainty of something good and interesting right around the corner. I was glad to feel that again before I came back to Utah.

Dad picked me up at the airport in Salt Lake City and we drove straight to the doctor's office. It was kind and generous of him, but I was worried that the improperly-shipped medication had lost all efficacy. I hadn't visited a doctor since the baseline appointment. My anxiety made me short-tempered.
Dad said, "there's a guy in my choir - a physics teacher. I was telling him about you and he's agreed to go out to dinner with us. I figure it's always good to meet new people."
"Is this guy single?" I asked. "Are you trying to set me up on a date?"
"Well, yes," said my sweet father after a hesitation. "Its worth a try."
I should have put the pieces together, realized he was trying to solve the problem he sees me working on through these treatments. In his mind its so simple. But it isn't simple.
"Thanks," I said. "I appreciate what you're trying to do. But I can't. I'm sorry."

Today is day 10 and the numbers are good. Much better than the last go-around. I check in again first-thing tomorow. And then they decide.

Left side:

  • 10.5; 11.2; 12.5; 7.4; 8.2; 12.9; 10.1
Right side: 
  • 19.7; 20.4; 11.4; 7.8; 15.0; 16.7; 9.6
What shall we name you?