The Things We Buried (apologies to Tim O’Brien)

One of my resolutions this year, and sooner rather than later, is to find my desk. My desk hasn’t gone anywhere, but in the past couple of years with the publication of my novel, Alabaster Houses, and all the subsequent non-writing activities required to publicize it, I have gotten surprisingly little work done on my current novel, and absolutely none of it at my desk. At the same time, our empty nest has undergone a population explosion. Lots of returning, reproducing, and relocating has been going on here. As more and more of our household items have had to be moved, sifted through, re-designated, or given away with each new arrival and departure, the loft that was once my office has become a purgatory for displaced belongings.

Recently I’m feeling the yearn for routine again, coffee in the same place at the same time, the slow slog, the tedious work of writing a novel. It’s time to sit my ass down on a hard plank of a chair, plunk out black letters onto a white page for several hours at a time and intermittently stare into space. That sort of work can only get done at my desk. Time to find it.

At first my desk remained visible. Shipments of books arrived and were placed on top of piles of research and binders with early drafts and more book shipments and boxes of promotional materials. I spent some time traveling, and my desk became a dumping station, shrouded under piles of paper and books and boxes that may or may not have contained things I should or should not have been paying attention to. Then it became the mere backdrop to the pile of things I was storing in front of it. Later, that portion of the room where my desk had first been accessible, then merely visible, then vaguely locatable became the forgotten area behind the space that I could no longer get to where I had stored some things that I no longer remembered if I did or did not need, because they were barricaded by the stack of things that I definitely needed but had no current room for anywhere else in our house.

So what do I find on the way to finding my desk? Lots of outgrown baby equipment. Since the publication of my novel, my grandson has fast forwarded from a preemie to an infant to a toddler. He has shed just about as much molded plastic, rubber, and enamel coated metal as he’s shed skin cells. We have baby-sized containerization technology that swings, rocks, bounces, rolls, sings, whirls, blinks, whizzes and sighs.

I find old, unopened bills. The thing about bills is, you never get sent just one. Fail to pay it, and new ones arrive punctually every month. I open this one and find a twenty month old invoice for something I must have eventually paid, since I’m not in jail, but who can remember these things?

I find lists made to myself for things I was supposed to do that might or might not have gotten done. I find books I meant to read but haven’t, articles I meant to read but haven’t, clothes, whole wardrobes in varying sizes and conditions, folded, bagged and ready to pass on. I find boxes of beads, threads, craft books, my Bedazzler with scraps of studded, beaded, and dazzled fabrics waiting to take shape. I find a stack of picture frames in advancing stages of disrepair. I find an endless supply of things I always need but can never find- pens, pencils, notepaper, binders, folders, paper clips, packs of light bulbs, two cans of Endust, several random, unmated book ends, a box full of colored coat hangers. I spy an art easel slumped in the corner, crates full of old textbooks, school handouts, and lesson plans.

I find a cat. To be honest, I recognize this cat; it belongs to us, but who knows how long it has been hiding in this particular box waiting for me to shift the lid a little. It springs out with a screech from the middle of a pile.

I find a crate full of old Marine Corps cammies and dress shirts. A box of model cars, a plastic crate labeled “Vital- Do Not Throw Out!!!” full of my married daughter’s old bank statements, college tuition statements, employment pay stubs and high school theater Playbills. A box of old cds, letters from various girls, foreign coins, ticket stubs, photographs, a belt buckle, a broken watch band, an incredibly expensive school ring still in the box, some individual, unmatched socks and one old pair of graying briefs.

These are the vestiges of the life that has been waged around this space, the peripheral and sloughed off artifacts of heroic efforts, daily grinds, unexpected upheavals, well deserved advances, and the simple but unstoppable passage of time. My loft office, perhaps because of its availability or disuse, perhaps because of its proximity to the entrances and exits in our home, has become a repository of clutter, but clutter that, on closer inspection, as all clutter inevitably does, tells a story.

I am struck by how easily our lives have continued and prospered without any of these things, stored, lost, or forgotten as they have been over the years. Money has been spent replacing some of these things. I am chastened by that. But most of what lies here signifies the passage of a stage of life, a time when my children were younger, more vulnerable, when I had more time to pursue artistic hobbies, a time when I labored at something other than my writing, a time when I labored at my writing, and now, a time when the success of my labors has moved me on once again.

I wonder if people who are relentlessly orderly, compulsively organized, have opportunities to take stock of their lives in such massive, physical chunks. Although the accumulation of disorder on such a large scale leaves me longing for some personal improvement, this is the way my life is lived- in a rhythm of ebbs and surges, and I find value in both seasons.

I also find my desk. A new season about to begin.

Processing the Latest Development…

Last week, my life took a sudden turn. I’m still trying to think of appropriate metaphors to explain the impact this has had on me, but none of them work. Seismic shifts, blinding storms, whirlwinds, tsunamis, these are all disasters of one magnitude or the other and this change in my life is not a disaster, not for me. Other comparisons, Dorothy stepping from her house into Oz, Wendy discovering Never Neverland, Gulliver meeting the Lilliputians all evoke images of the fantastic, the magical, the otherworldly, and there is nothing remotely magical or otherworldly about this development. So the best I can do is to say that overnight, my life has changed from a much anticipated and long awaited drive in an idyllic countryside to a high speed, rubber burning, bullet dodging car chase through urban streets.

That’s what it feels like at least.

Last week, my husband and I were enjoying scouting the lay of the land as empty-nesters (albeit koo-koo bird empty-nesters, since two of our four kids have boomeranged back home, our youngest, a freshman in college, is home for holidays, our oldest brings her toddler over for babysitting three days a week, and my mother has moved in)…so although our home is not exactly empty, everyone living here is a grown-up. We can leave them. We enjoy leaving them. We leave them on a regular basis. Whenever we want. For as long as we want. Laughing as we go out the door.

Three days ago, Thanksgiving morning, we became the grateful, and greatly fearful, guardians of a fourteen year old fresh out of options for such a short life. She is depressed, anxious, and possibly still suicidal, but I really feel like she is the sanest person in our household. It was her circumstances that were crazy. She is a survivor. Just barely.

I am instantly back in long familiar territory. Braces, morning and afternoon school drops, friends, doctors’ appointments, clubs, sports, three square meals, homework, curfews. I can do this in my sleep. I am also instantly floundering in completely uncharted waters. Suicide watch, pharmaceuticals under lock and key, vitamin deficiencies, cutting, someone else’s child who I don’t know like the back of my hand, whose moods I can’t read, whose inside jokes are outside of our history together. The good news is, maybe we will have some time before snarky, sullen responses and disgusted eye rolling sets in. We have no baggage. The bad news is, how will I keep vigilant enough to know if she’s in danger? I don’t know this child.

I’m trying to live completely in the present. I can’t have expectations of raising her. I’m rooting for her mother. But I can’t be less than a hundred percent in. Her very real and actual life may depend on our commitment. Recovery, reconciliation, and forgiveness- I want these for her, but I also want to protect her from soul-killing imitations. Today I saw genuine and spontaneous joy in one of her smiles. I’m greedy. I want more, but I feel like a thief wanting more. That smile should have been witnessed by another mother. I have been blessed by such a big and consuming family life, that I feel ashamed to throw my whole lot in with another woman’s child. I don’t want to be like King David when Nathan warned him of having everything and still coveting the meager blessing of another. Still another part of me wants my old life back, and knows that when, if, Hannah returns home, I will be relieved. Every day that goes by, these two conflicting emotions will each only grow stronger. How do I live with either one of these desires except to wholeheartedly embrace the present, and trust that every tomorrow is in better, more knowing hands than mine?

Stormy weather

Baltimore, where I live, and sit writing now, is bracing for the “Perfect Storm.” As in communal disasters of every shape and form, I am mainlining information from my syringe of choice, CNN. It’s going to be terrible, ie: “perfect”. And even though it looks, as of today (Sunday evening) as if Baltimore’s hit will be a little less terrible than it might have been, meaning our flood surges will be manageable and property damage may not be as widespread as it could have been, Baltimoreans will nevertheless be pretty damn grouchy over the next few weeks and I will be one of the most supremely grouchy of all. Because I heard today on the radio that our area is looking at a possible two weeks without power.

I do not choose to get all twitchy and psychotic when I have no electricity, I just can’t help it. I have developed an extremely high tolerance to large quantities of comfort. Light, food, warmth? These are just your base levels of comfort. People were actually able to meet these needs before they had electricity. I have no idea how, but I’ve heard about it. I, however, have lived my entire life under the influence of electricity. My mother used electricity when I was in the womb. I’m like a crack baby; it’s in my genes.

Don’t misunderstand me. I can withstand some levels of hardship; like I tell my family, having FIOS and being a customer of AT&T are character building. But when it comes to my mental health, in spite of the marvelous advances in pharmaceudicals, I admit that moderate levels of advanced comfort are required for me to maintain my equilibrium. I feel shaky even writing about it, but this storm has the potential to inflict massive damage to my psyche.

The worst part is knowing what lies ahead. I’ve been through this before. The first twenty-four hours I will coast on the residual effects of electricity already in my system. My hair is glossy and blown out, my clothes are clean, my appliances charged and able to sustain long periods of use. The inital crash will also trigger some extra adrenaline and endorphins that see me through. Candles, flash lights, batteries, fire in the fireplace in the winter, late hours drinking wine with the family outside in the summer. It’s not so bad. The first day I have hope.

The second day, I’ll be jonesing a little- making phone calls to see who has electricity, where I can get some, when my own supplier will be back up and running. Third day, I’ll still be flicking lightswitches when I walk into a room, phoning my supplier every five minutes like a love sick fourteen year old. The clothes I wear will be the ones I wore yesterday and slept in last night. Withdrawal is starting to drag me under. By the third day nothing in my house will get put away, dishes will lay where they were last used, clothes will be draped on furniture and sluffed into piles on the floor, cans, wrappers, bottles will litter my suburban homescape.

Fourth day, I will congregate in communal spaces with the other suffering junkies; we will stare into space, share our meager rations, and trash talk our supplier. Fifth day, I will look exactly like the street lady downtown and won’t give a rat’s ass. I’m a writer. I don’t have an office to work from. Inside our house, nightfall arrives at 2:30 in the afternoon. I will spend long stretches of the day in bed.

Day six, I will be angry, bitter, a little delusional. I resent that there are places in town, friends, neighbors who are getting their regular electricty; and I’m not talking about the weak-willed phonies with generators. Please. Don’t even talk to me about generators. Generators are like methadone. People with generators are still in the grip of their suffering, still wanting sympathy, still clogging up the supply chain with their selfish needs, and won’t even appreciate the purity of the rush when they finally get their fix. Day six I will be plotting revenge.

I got straight once. I took my four small children to South America to live in a city on the edge of the jungle one summer. The city conserved power by never turning it on. I went cold turkey for the first week or so, thought I would lose my mind but didn’t, and then came out the other side. I was happy to have a lightbulb that sometimes worked. I used it to iron baby clothes. I would sit outside our apartment in the scummy, humid evenings and mend socks by the light of the moon. I was happy. I was happy. Then I flew home to the United States. Being back in the United States was like a hallucinatory mind trip to paradise. So, of course, I started using again.

So here I sit, staring into the abyss. This storm is coming, and all I can do is wait. You can shame me all you want, but I’m telling you it’s going to get ugly.

My name is Lara, and I’m an addict.