Sunday, September 10, 2006

endings beget beginnings

expiration date/mother/one year ago today

the thing to do when breath is alternating between shallow and shallow is to play in the kitchen. if i can play in the kitchen it keeps my hands busy and my emotions calm/balanced/serene. i am able to write music and lyrical pieces in my head. or pray over the food i am preparing, a habit i picked up long ago and kept by choice in my current behaviour system.
so, on this day, this anniversary, i invited my siblings to join us for brunch and decided to prepare our mother's midday favourite food items. i know the recipes by heart but i always feel like i need to verify them from her cookbook, in her handwriting. perfect penmanship, like that of other grandmothers, schooled in a way long forgotten - where the look, the style and precision of handwriting lent itself as another extension of who a person was. she was a very fashionable woman - very handsome and tall for her generation, with a buxom movie star figure. a natural blonde, (who helped the natural along in her latter years), she maintained an innocence that she insisted on keeping till the day she died.
chile con queso, fruit salad, sausage, bacon, croissants, fresh orange juice and champagne, wine or cocktail, (the alcohol that none of us ever got around to.)
after eating, we called her sister, my godmother and now the family matriarch. now SHE would have gotten 'round to the libations! she knows how to celebrate. although a bit reserved at the start of the call, she shot her own brand of enthusiasm to her nieces and nephew right through the phone wire. and i felt it. a tie, an ancestral bond that expressed itself. the voices of my sister and brother were genuinely animated, as they spoke to our favourite relative. as the telephone passed from one to another, conversations didn't really say anything at all, but all was said with intent, love for each other and a shared feeling - the one about missing her.



i thought of the place where we all grew up. the magic home where, for a while, the american dream took hold. where my mother cooked the best brunch i have ever eaten. where my brother, sister, parents and i ate together in harmony. where i learned the meaning of family. where my roots took hold. and as i sat, sharing a remembrance meal today, brother and sister with me, parents no longer in material form, with the man i love on my right side, i felt my mother agreeing with me that the brunch could have been better....croissants not quite crisp enough, meats...comme ci comme ça, but the chile con queso was a winner. she would have loved it.
she loved us. and we loved her.

Friday, September 01, 2006

windy city blues


well! a week ago today i flew to chicago and joyously reunited with my man. we drove to appleton wisconsin that night, woke up on a bright birthday morning - my aforementioned man's - and set out for the breathtakingly beautiful sturgeon bay. i was ecstatic to be back in such a very dreamy, yet very american setting; it's the kind of american place that one has a tendency to forget exists when in far more cynical places... after checking into the beach harbor resort, we prepared ourselves for the saturday night gig at the hitching post in valmy. a birthday bash for those born in august. it was a grand night. the music was exquisite and those in attendance were digging it!
the next day, back at the beach harbor, sunday boasted more music by even more musicians sharing the stage, a lot of 'cherry bounces', and a caravan over the michigan street bridge to the nautical inn, around 11pm, where more music was requested and played! we retired after 3ish in the morning...oh well, at least it was a little earlier than the night before...


the Bard was right. parting is such sweet sorrow. we were leaving for chicago on monday - first thing in the morning
...we left sturgeon bay at 3:42 in the afternoon...with much melancholy and resistance...even more so for my partner, as he had been living there for the entire month of august and loving it.
by the time we arrived in chicago we were, perhaps, not in the best of mental spaces to be in chi town. it was a hideous night. all i really cared about was leaving.
the next morning was all about hissing mist in the air, the bongo room for eats, and the art institute for visual pleasure.
a brief reprieve from the harsh city outside, the museum was astonishing. although i have been fortunate enough to visit museums far and near, monday was the first time i set foot in the art institute of chicago. at my love's insistence we made our way to the haystacks of monet, the bedroom of van gogh and much more in hasty fashion, due to the fact we both had separate planes to catch to
our home.


back outside the museum...

it was the 'hold your breath and hope you make the flight' kind of ride to O'Hare International. if you read the previous blog - 'why do i have to go to LA' ....friends, thAt was a cakewalk in comparison to the absurdity called 'commuting' in and surrounding chicago and they HAve the Ltrain! ...you are not in sunny southern california either. whew!
i do not know how these people do it everyday.
with a car to return to the car rental office and a shuttle to catch from there to the actual airline terminal at one of the largest airports in the world, the baggage and ticket check-in to go through and that final frontier of the orange alert security fear zone, with an extra helping of a 'i wanna get outta here' screaming voice in the head and the chances of actually not missing the flight...odds not in one's favour..., all i could focus on was the incredible art at the institute and the weekend of joy and music i had just experienced.
i think that might have worked some magic. against teeming odds, my partner and i found our separate planes on different airlines to catch back to our home that night. i think we are both still a little blue and still carrying around a pocketful or so of wanderlust but happy to be together, looking forward to the next adventure, the next place to take off and the next to land.