Nicholas Ray (Photo credit: www_ukberri_net)Portrait of Martha Graham and Bertram Ross (1961 June 27) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
THIS WEEK LANDS ON poets, writers, musicians, photographers, directors, visual artists, composers, choreographers, actors and the untitled and unrecognized that squeeze in between. Kipling, Salinger ( my all-time favorite) The Rolling Stones,ย Mozart, Chopin, Opera, Salsa, Beatles, Stieglitz,ย Nicholas Ray,ย Kandinsky, Johnny Mercer, Martha Graham Balanchine, and James Dean. I left out about seventy-five of my favorites.
Composition VI (1913) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)They were all lovers before they were artists.
OUR ARTISTS IN HEART travel mentally and physically through life with all the windows open; awaiting a sight, sound, or feeling that draws them to their art. The feelings are what count on our life ledger.ย I have to thank Billy, my first love at fifteen. He was an artist of music, Gothic charcoal sketches, comic humor, and life. He opened my window to the arts.
That life ledger is always in the red because an appetite of feelings, and emotions eventually depreciates the spirit. Some of us rise above, and the flow of printed green paper comforts that spirit, but emotions continue to dominate all the success.
I have to write this in short sequence, as I am moving between a rigid reckoning of a forever ending TO ONE MY LOVES.
Page 525. Terrified to post this but it is Sunday and I’m brave on Sunday. The book is fiction, first-person, and close third person so you’ll need a jogging suit to read. Based on true events.
Greta let the moment of the village rescue stay with her, like a new pet for as long as she could hold on to its beneficial ointment, away from what she calls her immersion into self. She gives me examples that illustrate her obsession with matching outfits in her closet.
Itโs a bedroom she converted into a dressing room. Thereโs a single bed against one wall, a cabinet where she stores the winter boots, and an eight-drawerFrench nouveau dresser and mirror. She sits on a chair facing the windows so she can watch the trees live through sun, wind, rain, and snow. Across from the chair is the bed. She diligently arranged her summer pastel skinny jeans on the bed, and next to that row she arranged the T-shirts, camisoles, and shorts. Itโs quite practical considering Greta as she has admitted to me half a dozen times, that she was born without common sense or practicality. At the base of the bed, she lined up her shoes, the slip-ons, the flats, the pumps stuffed with tissue paper to preserve their shape, and the wedges. After a breach of sanity, she goes into this room and visualizes outfits and color matching like someone might play chess. โ It does have a purpose, this way I visualize without wrangling with hangers and you know it just takes too much time when youโre in a closet.
‘”These days I look at them as if they belonged to someone else, I mean the red suede with gold heels that I wore on a New Yearโs Eve of gaiety and not since, the black velvet pumps that always make me feel dainty and light. What care I give to all these garments when in the other part of the house, Dodger was descending into a financial coma.”
ย Greta did not acknowledge the few months before his departure that he was riddled with abject unfulfilling tasks, bills, and construction jobs that no longer fed him purpose and accomplishment. She did not notice that his slacking posture on the front porch, head lowered and staring out without any body movement was a sign, she in fact despised it and walked away. ย In the last few months, all of this seemed to rise up like a curtain before a play, in a theater and she witnessed his insolence and his silent howl for help. ย
The irony of her activity is that she doesn’t go to the events that she plans on going to wear the outfits.
I ROSE AT 3:00 AM to turn the heat on, pick up my writing journal, and discern the weekโs theme. I wonder for a moment if I should boil water for tea or coffee, and settle on decaf. The street is hollowed like a tunnel, the light of day is shining in some distant country, and the sky appears tinted with primer. Somewhere someone is dressing for work, breathing by the tick of the clock until he or she ( canโt figure out the right pronouns) must report for work.
The draft of sleep lingers in my eyes, and my feet shuffle on the wood floors while I grind the beans and think through the remains of the week. There are themes to our lives. Sometimes a year, sometimes one single day launches the theme, or it may just tumble into our path unexpectedly and replace whatever we were holding on to dearly, and deliver something unpleasant, like sickness, or separation. The sensations leading up to my theme jilted my creativity, and the pages I wrote were jammed with contradictions, maybe they still are.
Thoughts begin to form and ruminate, what is important? The theme of my week began when I finally was in the Dentists office. Itโs been a year, and at sixty that was enough. Now Dr. FX’s office calls me every six months because I am over sixty-five. Still canโt really grasp my age. When I was thirty-something sixty-eight seemed very old. Do you remember that?
Dr. FX is the Music Man dressed in a white tunic. When he comes into my cubicle, he sort of prances on his toes and gives me an elbow safe bump.
โ Hello, oh I see,โ as he looks into my mouth that has been open too long and my cheeks start to stiffen. The hygienist takes that white suck-up tube out of my mouth.
โ She has some tarter that I canโt remove so I suggest she come back because her gums are so sensitive and nonvaccine her for the water treatment .โ
Dr. FX nods and bounces out of the room. Now she begins to sort of authoritatively advise me again that I have serious tarter. I think this is the third time.
โ I think I got a little lazy flossing during covid.โ
โEveryone did.โ
โAnd I also started snacking on those crunchy health bars at night.โ
โThat wouldnโt cause that.โ
Now I am ready to leave and Iโm elated to get out. The receptionist starts talking and advising me about Dental Insurance and she leaves her desk and meets me in the waiting room, and starts stretching.
โ I have to do this as much as I can, sitting in that chair all day long.โ
โOh, of course,โ I raise my arms and swing my hips beside hers. I walked out into a day of clouds and a peek a boo sun feeling a mood change, a spark of energy from a few moments of improvisational dancing. We all crave an irreplaceable swarming of joy, that comes unexpectedly. I was awakened to my detachment from feeling truly alive.
Writing with a pen is so different from the keyboard, journaling is always with a pen, but columns are on the keyboard. I understand what tranquilizes all the peripheral complaints, mental pains, and wounds that lie dormant or at least manageable. Without thinking of the tormented hours, I think of the comforts of exhibiting my life on paper. My desk is sealed into a corner of the bedroom, next to a double pane window (original 1885) forty feet in length. It is not the act of writing with pen and paper moving along at a steady rhythm; itโs the activation of the heart and mind, collaborating to unravel the relevant from the irrelevant. To reach this state of matrimony a writer needs not a Tuscan Villa, or a Moorish Castle, but experiences that flake off the skin, or recall of the experience that gives it relevance.
I return to the porch for one more gulp of landscape that I share with the stars. The street is unfamiliar, a temporary scene like a bus stop, and I am merely waiting to move on. Some of the neighbors are friendly, some have no interest, one kind of spies on me when he thinks Iโm not looking. Thereโs a reason for that but itโs too much of a separate story right now.
If I continue to roam around the task of writing this story, the intensity of irritation will escalate, my neck and shoulders will not loosen, my walk will be feigned, my smile forced, my heart longing for padding, my ego striving for recognition in the wrong places, and my soul roaming the hallways at 3:00 in the morning. I read a quote the other day on some website, to paraphrase: When I’m writing I know I can’t do anything else. The theme of the week is to bring back LouLou, a clownish, spirited, curious, joy seeker.
This is a previous post (2011) that I am re posting for new readers.
MY FAMILYย history was brought to life in an unpublished memoir.ย ย The stories lived on during a long arduous journey of research and trying to get published.ย ย Sometimes I read pages to get close to my parents.ย I squeeze in between them like a ghost, hear their voices, and see their expressions.ย If I remove the outside world, the hum of the hotel air-condoning , the delivery trucks, and speeding motorcycles,ย I can remember swimming in the pool with my mother.ย I see her bathing cap strap pulled down across her chin, her red lipstick, and her one-piece strapless bathing suit. I can see her freckles, and her long slender arms backstroking as she swam.
Early in 1960 my father decided to build a swimming pool in the backyard of our house on Thurston Circle.ย I had just completed swimming lessons and asked my father for a pool. Years later he told the story: โMy little girl asked for a pool, and I built her one.โย ย I think he built the pool for my mother.ย ย He was under investigation with the FBI and Department of Justice, and spent most days in court defending himself against a deportation order to Russia.ย ย Subpoenas, arrests, and trials were routine events that tied my parents together against a world of misunderstanding.ย After eleven years of nail biting suspense, my mother just wore out.ย The pool was built with the intention of removing my motherโs anxiety and sadness.ย ย My father designed the shape of the pool around the original pool at the Garden of Allah, a highly scandalous Hollywood hotel apartment that attracted starlets and gangsters in the early 30โs.ย I know this tiny detail from photographs Iโve seen of the Garden pool.ย ย More obscure details surrounding the building of our pool were found reading his FBI files.
My father accused the pool contractor of being an informant for the government. ย One sunny afternoon he marched him out of the house. I was hiding behind a drape when the confrontation broke out. ย I recall the big shouldered contractor running from my fatherโs threats. ย Most likely an FBI agent was parked outside and ย followed the man after he scampered out.
The pool was finally completed in mid 1961.ย ย There are photographs of my mother and I in the pool; her smile is radiant and naturally composed.ย She and I swam everyday.ย My fatherย loved to swim too, but he was busy with court proceedings and meetings.ย Before the year ended my mother filed for divorce, the house burnt down, and I was released from childhood. I donโt regret those events any longer.ย They were steps that shaped my character, and what brings me back to the topic of growing up with gangsters.
The best memories of my childhood are in swimming pools and restaurants with gangsters and gamblers.ย They were part of the family, and when they were around my father was on very good behavior, and my mother defenseless against their irresistible humor, pranks, and generosity.ย ย She just sort of glided in and out of activities, and helped me ride the vibrations.ย ย She didnโt laugh out of herself like I do, and she rarely yelled.ย ย The older I get, the less I seem to be like her.ย Maybe the passage of life experiences determines which parent you will take after. Had I married and had children, maybe Iโd be more like her. Since I get into all kinds of tricky situations, and throw the dice, I need my fatherโs strength more.
Over the years, I have forgotten some of the dead reckoning discoveries I made about our family history.ย Still nothing compares to reading about my Aunt Gertie.ย She was my fatherโs sister. Until I read about her in the FBI file, I didnโt know she existed. I havenโt figured out why my father left her out of our life. According to the FBI files she was a remarkably loyal sister. Gertie was the one who confronted the federal agents when they arrived at the family home in Winnipeg, Canada.ย She pushed my grandmother out of the interview, and spoke for the family.ย The agents showed her a recent photograph of my father.ย ย She told them that her brother left home when he was twelve and they had not seen him since. ย She could not verify the identity of the photograph because almost twenty years had passed.ย The agents left without any evidence and continued to search for the birthplace of my father. Every time he was arrested, he entered a different birthplace.ย He named Chicago, New York, Detroit, and Los Angeles.ย His origins were discovered through a letter that his mother had written when he was fifteen and confined to a boys reformatory.ย The letter was turned over to the FBI, and that is how they discovered his parents lived in Winnipeg.ย The government could not deport my father to Russia without verification from his family. Eventually my father won the battle. He was granted citizenship in 1966, two weeks after my mother died.
Gertie died after my father. I donโt know if they corresponded over the years.ย I have learned enough about my father to know he was protecting her from further harassment.ย Maybe if my father lived longer they would be coming after me.
I was there a few days before I noticed a figure darting from one sea-lion to another. He gestured for me to follow but I couldnโt catch him.
He caught me by surprise from behind and wiggled over to me.
โLetโs eat. Iโm starved.” The Thinker dove down then up above my head. He cupped his fins around my head and pulled my hair.
โWhere you been my Fins?โ I asked.
โWhy?โ He said as he let go of me.
โ Itโs just a normal question?โ
โI donโt answer those kinds of questions. I am building my sand castle! Wait till you see it–itโs going to blow you away. Everyone will be blown away!โ
โExciting! Iโm so happy for you. Will you show me?โ
โ Maybe. Don’t look at me like that. Your eyes, they draw me in. It scars me. I donโt know what to do with you little one. Who are you?โ
He lowered his eyes and sucked in his gills.
โI really love you. I mean I want to be with you forever!โ
You should make a book of shells and tell their stories. ”
” You’re right! I know their stories too!”
” You could make a lot of money.โ
” I donโt think about that. When I need money I just ask for it and it comes. All you do is count what you have. ”
” You think that!”
“Yes I said it didn’t I. ”
We carolled between starlight nights and crimson sunsets on the rock porch exploring varieties of sea mates. He used his fancy fish feet to get us into private ceremonies, and parties. The fish authorities didnโt bother us at all. We crashed into a party of penguins, and we werenโt eaten alive. My eyes were always on the thinker; as pleasurable anticipation bubbled inside.ย In the morning he read to me from his bible, and watched the seagulls. He drove me in many directions, unfamiliar ideas, and habits that got me to thinking so when we swam we were always talking.
โYou need to lower your voice. Make it deeper.”
โWhy?โ
โTrust me.โ
One day he swam me to a blow-hole.
โIโm not sure I can get through as easy as you do.” I said.
โDonโt say that. Follow me.” so I followed. I’d waited a long time to see the sand castle. As we expanded our gills and soared upward, my eyes searched for the castle.
โYou see it? Isnโt it spectacular?โ
โI see the sand yes, but where is the castle?”
โYou don’t see it? Come onโreally. โ
โNo my fin. I don’t see anything but piles of sand.”
โ Look beyond the piles. You have to see between the lines. You donโt get it do you? You only look at whatโs right in front of you. Thereโs castles everywhere; huts, hideouts, back alleys. ”
โIs this what you mean by patience?โ
โ No! This is conciseness of the universe. Weโre not alone you know. The skeletons and ghosts are here.โ
โ Have you seen them?โ
โ The water of Santa Fe is as crowded as pavement. Iโm telling you what no one else will. You should thank me for that. Iโm handing you the key to the universe.โ
โ How about the key to a warm place to rest and food?โ
โ Youโre such a brat. Come on. Iโll take you
to shore.โ
I met his power posse; and they all assured me they could reverse orย promote anything I wanted.
โIf you are ever in trouble call me. I can fix it.โย the Thinker said.
โ Like what?โ
โ Whatever you ask. You want to live forever under our safety net. You have to trust me. Youโre a city cougar with a Range Rover and a brick house above water. Come on–donโt you see that. Most of the fish hate you. You need me.โ
His eyes narrowed into dagger like bits of darkness.
“Iโm not a cougar. You are the first young exotic fish Iโve swam with.โ
โ Oh really. Thatโs not what I heard.
โ What did you hear?โ
โ I know about you?โ
โ Really. Then tell me what they say?โ
โ Youโre impatient, aloof and swim alone. ”
โ Iโm not like that always.โ
โ Well I know, Iโve seen inside you.โ
One day he emerged as a sea monster, holding empty bottles and wailing. I felt a rush of empathy and covered him with my body. He wrestled in pain for days and then when he surfaced, he was wearing a different face, and his touch was absent. His teddy bear eyes were like bricks of strength.
โ Iโm not coming back.โ He said
โ Why?โ I pleaded
โ Wrong question.โ
โ What did I do?โ
โ You donโt see my castle. I canโt be with you. All you think about is lobster and hotel vacations.โ
โ I havenโt had lobster in years, or a hotel vacation.โ He swam away, just as suddenly as he appeared.
It was like a knife severing me from one place to another. He despised me. His curiosity and mischievous cleverness triumphed over affection and companionship. His splashes exploded into monsoons of tears inside of me. I returned to my brick house and closed the drapes. Every night I danced and cooked. I sat on the porch in a spray of solemn sunlight and didnโt miss the waves or blow holes. Iโd missed my dance music, old movies, journal and sanctuary of comfort. I made him vanish with a vow.
As I cut his sunflower from my yard, placed it in a vase and said, โwhen the flower dies so does my love for the Thinker.โ The sunflower died yesterday. I pulled off the wrinkled yellow petals and scattered them in a planted pot. Maybe he will come back as the beautiful sunflower I once knew.ย But I know he won’t. Love is in all of us. How we give it and cherish itย is unique.ย I still have my love. No one can take that.ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย
IF YOU DON’T SHARE YOU DON’T CARE. I’ve just started recommending a few of my wordpress pals, and their writings. I still resist the word blogging because it sounds like slobbing. Web writers are amazingly talented, from all over the world, and all ages. I’ve learned about the cultures through their stories from: India, Russia, Brazil, Ireland, Scotland, Europe, and the Middle East.
I asked the sky to send the Thinker.ย Then itย rained in southwest furry,ย small white knots of hail and dark feuding winds. The thinker heard and whistled to me. It was a sweet flutist tone, and he appeared in black and grey, the silver lining of his head like a crown of light. Flashing the boyish grin, he opened his wrestling toned-warm fins to my goose bumpy arms, and I swam along side tentatively. Even though it was my chime, I was unsteady, unwilling to climb on his back, so we swam on our toes, around my house, and the Plaza. We battled sharks from Beverly Hills, whose fins were frozen from love and kindness; we faced one of our own school, who would not lend a dollar on good faith and loyalty for their Merlot Cabernet fish oil, and we strung pearls around each other necks, with a clasp that is easily unhooked. The current drove us through three more days of rowing backward, sleeping quietly without intertwinement, and meeting as friends instead of lovers. The absence of touch, struck like a lightning storm. I didnโt see it coming, and I may be wrong. To read the Thinker is to understand his language; a circumcision of predictability, logic, or reasoning. Like a tsunami, uncharitable waves of enlightenment he doesnโt even understand drown his soul. I understood that he airbrushed my appearance, and dropped deep into my eyes as they widened for him. I blushed before he engulfed me, and pressed my undertow. If tonight was the last swim because of a storm I didnโt see coming, or understand. It is because my eyes blurred by his presence. The tide goes out, but it always come back. Sometimes it touches where we left off.
On shore the land felt liquefied and unfamiliar without the sensual spark swimming along side me.ย The leaves glistened above my head, like golden gems you’d wear on a necklace. The Santa Fe river sang its song over rocks, branches and brush, while white butterflies and birds fluttered an awakening.ย I passed cafes, watched couples and families luxuriating in the sunlight, Canyon road art hawkers snapped photos, gallery owners chatted on the courtyards.
The stage of comfort as picturesque as a postcard.ย I was outside the activity.ย I rushed home, passing people who walked as if lost, and shoes stuck in tar.ย Thoughts trotted like ponies all going in different directions. No path had an answer, or a reason, or an understanding of our endearment.ย
The Thinker swims close by. Sometimes I feel him soaring past me, glancing for a moment, then he’s gone. The house is quiet, doors and shades closed. My nakedness is wrapped in blankets and the aroma of pumpkin spice from a candle.ย My stage is empty, no audience ofย any sort. These areย the moments when examination of behavior, discipline, and self-honesty rise aboveย the solitude.ย A woman of lovers rather than husbands, beckons my heart to open to the odyssey ofย love.
I appreciate all the new followers from the THE THINKER story. Thank you for
The throw of the dice this week lands on the tip of the diving board. The pool was serene and powdery blue and I was enticed by the sensual shift of waves and sunlight. ย I took a leaping dive off and swam for eight weeks.
Beneath the surface glaze I held my breath and when I opened my eyes there was a man sitting on a rock, posed as The thinker. I asked him what he was thinking and he said, ‘the universe brought me to you.
I shimmied at this rhetoric of mysticism and then suddenly, he swam towards me and wrapped me around his back. I held on to strong neck and ran my fingers through his mane of hair. We floated away beneath the weight of reality,ย beyond limits and caution.ย Weย swam towards the underbelly of Santa Fe. All kinds of sharks, sweet dolphins, brainy lobsters, wondrous whalesย and tasty little shrimps.ย We swam with them in a pack and chided their gossip and questions.ย ย Swimming with the underworld fascinated me and I hung on as we passed through darkness and luring beasts of prey.
Soon we were alone again and fondling; almost oneย from head to toe. My breath sieged into his and we swam through layers of fantasia.ย ย Suddenly he leaped forward andย couldn’t hold on.ย I was dropped off on a rock that splintered my skin. I watched as he soared above me and waited for his return.ย I was so cold that my eyes blurred and shut.ย When I opened them a lazer like light appeared in the distance and pulled me up to the surface. My arms wrapped around the raft and familiar hands took hold of mine. Friends paddled me to the shore. I can’t seeย the Thinker anymore but I see him in the memory; swimming towardsย uncertain adventures in livingness.
The throw of the dice this week lands on adventures in contemplation. Before the day begins to intersect with my solitude, I sit at my desk in a pre-dawn crystal of clarity. Only the light from a candle shines on a journal of hand written notes. I walked outside to asses the damage of a devilish storm that ravished the night. Leaves dropped from trees and the street is slick with the residue of the storm. Autumn is rising from dormancy; she is painting the leaves pumpkin and cranberry, while impregnating the atmosphere with the perfume of seasonal change. The inversion seeps into my pores.
While shopping at Whole Foods last week, for my first stockpile of chicken tortilla soup, I noticed expressions of contemplation on faces. Not in the choice of their groceries, but a characteristic of preparation for winter. Pumpkins, firewood and potted mums have replaced the outdoor display of flower baskets and lavender.ย The silence will blanket time beyond the hours of sleep. This is when contemplation is given the freedom to spread over my thoughts and feelings. September marks the disrobing of summer; as if the float of festivities,ย parties, and outdoor markets were moved into storage.
Last week was the beginning of the new Year on the Jewish Calendar, Rosh Hashanah. Unlike New Years for the traditional American, is a time of contemplation and reckoning of ones faults. We are asked to examine our behavior and plant new seeds of integrity from within.
โAnother popular practice of the holiday is Tashlikh (“casting off”). We walk to flowing water, such as a creek or river, on the afternoon of the first day and empty our pockets into the river, symbolically casting off our sins. Small pieces of bread are commonly put in the pocket to cast off. This practice is not discussed in the Bible, but is a long-standing custom.โ Excerpt from Wikipedia.
What I do is to take my emotional and physical wardrobe, and move it from the closet in my casita, to the upstairs storage closet. The skimpy and sexy finery are replaced with turtlenecks, leggings and wool. The emotional wardrobe, is pressed down to the fibers, so it can be studied. In this examination, the reflection of myself is not as important as it has been, the stubble of age has bitten me but not in a bitter way. It has burned down my childish selfishness, insistence of acknowledgment, intolerance of behavior unfamiliar to me, and detached me from the wayward choices made by our government. I used to work with the news turned on and the volume down.
This summer, beginning just after my adventure in Malibu with my friend Chantel, my grip on aloofness towards Santa Fe,ย frustrations associated with publication, and narcissism dissipated. It is possible that one month in the company of Chantal, her vibrancy and generosity softened my reserve. In the last four months, Iโve at last given up tightening against the unmanageable forces that intersect with me, and meet the pleasures of humanity in nakedness. I stood in my doorway, shaded by trees and shrubbery, naked – simply to feel the sensation. In return for this placation of behavior, I was invited by my vacation rental guests into their gatherings and parties; a wedding couple and their twenty-five guests included me in their after party. We cajoled, roused, sang and danced until my neighbor, JD, shamed our festivity and ordered me to shut the party down. It was one-thirty in the morning. I wrapped my arm around his neck, and whispered, โOh, you are so right; I will take care of it. Donโt worry.โ JD, a man with twenty- three civil complaints for noise ordinance disruption against the La Posada Resort across the street, replied โWell LouLou, if you donโt, Iโll have to call the police.โ I hugged him tighter, and said. โOf course you will, and you have every right.โ This is not the behavior that guided me last year. I returned to the party and made the announcement to the guests, who were by now leaning against the walls, drinking shots of whisky in bowls, and I said:
โ Party to dawn kids, but keep your voices down.โ The lights went out at four-thirty in the morning. When I left the house, empty bottles, uneaten meals, flowers, shoes, and scarfs scattered everywhere. This disruption of my polished tidy home would have erupted me into a silent rage a year ago. After they checked-out, my new pal and assistant Marc, entered the house. Stepping over pillows, popcorn, sticky wood floors, and into a kitchen of stained counters and food crumbs; a counterfeit of my dear old hollering father shouted;ย ‘ This is outrageous. Theyโll pay for this!’
โ Stop. We were part of it. It was a wedding party. What did you expect?โ
โWhat the heck is that? Marc said pointing to a clump of food stuck to the wall.
โ Looks like salsa and chips.โ I said with a sponge in my hand. By the time we reached the rooms upstairs, I too was chuckling. Two days later the houseย converted from slipshod to spotless.
The spell of silence has now been broken. The sidewalk blowers stir the leaves, doors open, the clatter of buffet trays wheeling down the street from the kitchen at La Posada pushed by employees in white jackets, swipe greetings, and converse in Spanish. My birds are screeching for more seeds, and the candle is just about burned out. The unknown outcome of our state of affairs in government and society has padded me with extra elasticity, tolerance, and love. Maybe our collective kindness will intercede with the poisonous bitterness and vengeance that titillates through the news.