Friday, December 29, 2006

Haiku - The Holiday 2006 Version


Sucked into candle scents,
which aromas do I crave?
Pine, berries, and warm sand.

Tree from Nova Scotia;
a gift from the Great White North.
Do we have enough lights?

Online shopping is grand.
In pajamas at midnight,
I think this is the best.

Lamb shanks, perfectly cooked,
For our dinner Christmas Eve.
Hey - we had carrots too.

It's not really a gift
but the love behind the gift
that so captures my heart.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Postscript: Last Fresh Hell Family Story


I began to reply to Stoic's brief comment on my last post but it turned into its own offering.

Stoic is correct; my last post did burn quite a bit coming out as opposed to my more light-hearted writing.

I think my father's illness and death was made more painful and confusing by definite walls deliberately erected whose purpose was to somehow shield us kids from the truth about our father's impending death but also shield us from the details of this very distasteful illness which simply wasn't discussed in society, at all. For my younger readers this may seem ridiculous and barbaric itself, but believe me when I write that it genuinely worked that way. At the time there were few "grief counselors" out there who specialized in this sort of thing, and of course nothing of the sort in the very rural Utah town in which we lived.

In addition to the societal constrictions and our geographical isolation, I'm sure much of this wall-erecting was due to the difficulty my well-meaning but emotionally distant mother has in expressing difficult feelings. Her favorite method of dealing with conflict, in icy Anglo-Saxon tradition, is to sweep it under the rug and pretend it doesn't exist. Hence, she was tasked quite heavily to constantly skirt the Daddy-shaped lump in the carpet. The fact that she succeeded so well and for so long is a testament to her continuing pathology.

Tangentially, it is common for divorced parents to wage subtle emotional battles, consciously or not, to determine the allegiance of their children. In a very real way, the threat presented by my father's lifestyle, so very different from my mother's, seemed hastily dismantled by his death. Which should have made my mother much more secure but which backfired on her dreadfully in later years, when 3 out her 4 children turned their back on her philosophy of life.

When Daddy died her distance from her feelings made it difficult if not impossible for me or my siblings to express our own sadness, confusion, fears, resentment, or abandonment.

We traveled to Denver to attend his memorial service (he was sensibly cremated) on my birthday, and were back at home by the time we had to go back to school. After the winter recess, when our friends asked what we had done during our holiday, I know we all made up a story or merely shrugged and reported nothing. No one outside our family knew what had happened, and I strongly believe we weren't convinced it would make a difference if anyone did know.

As I recall those few years following I despair for my younger self who performed so many silent rituals of grief that went nowhere, accomplished nothing, and were essentially useless. At the time it seemed natural to shroud myself in sorrow, draw swords against the unfair play of cosmos and thus emerge a fairly competent teenage fatalist.

I spent many years steeped in deepest denial - I knew friends and lovers for 10 years or more who had no idea my father had died at all, let alone when I was 13. It was only as I aged that I learned, painfully I might add, that to express the sadness and disappointment I felt about my father's death was perfectly allright - it was okay to feel, even as an adult, cheated of the chances which Fate had carted away from me with nary a backward glance.

Even now, at the 31st anniversary of his death, I weep. I have now outlived my father by nearly 10 years, and lately my sadness feels more profound, especially when I think of all he missed, all he would have wanted to do and know, and all he would have liked to have seen; he has two grandchildren who only have the very vaguest idea of him. Eventually all of us who knew him (even I, who barely knew him) will be gone and inevitably no memories of him will remain.

Because fatalism comes naturally now, I suspect that's the fate of us all.

Friday, December 22, 2006

Fresh Hell Bizarre Family Story - Why Christmas Is Tough


Tis the season to get a little morose, oui?

Long ago, as a newly-minted teenager thinking thoughts no more weighty than that of an errant butterfly, a Christmas came and went when yet again I and my siblings received only gifts from my father rather than a rare but welcomed visit.

Barely two weeks later we received a call from my stepmother, my father's second wife, who said my father had cancer and wasn't expected to live another twelve months.

I remember being shocked to my core and terrified nearly beyond words. We couldn't possibly know what was going to happen - to him, to us. It was as if that news swept away all normality and put in its place something else, the fear of the unknown. And it was not like it would be unknown forever; just beyond comprehension for a time, a reality which would prove to be the cruelest cut of all.

Once the shock of the initial news had worn off the realization of this unwelcome and horrifying future seeped into everyday life like a light filtered through dulled and filthy window panes. Of course we went to school and life went on - there were tests to take, games to play, teenage emotional dramas in which to act. We tried to make the best of everyday occurances. We tried not to think about our level of ignorance about the disease, and tried not to be appalled at the doctors' level of ignorance about treating the disease.

Thirty-one years ago cancer wasn't discussed in a normal tone of voice. It was hushed up, it was whispered; it simply wasn't talked about. The doctors, in their panicked attempts to halt cancer's slow but inexorable progess, proscribed treatment levels of radioactivity, most especially treatments involving cobalt, that are judged barbaric by the standards of the 21st century.

And it was all for naught.

The father I barely knew - the "golden boy" athlete who was the star of every sport in which he competed - a man who took his familial responsibilities seriously, possessing a razor-sharp wit and humorous mien, a man definitely ill-suited to my mother but at last in a loving marriage, a man reluctant to be a father, was reduced to nothing much at all, and was dead at the age of 36 the day after Christmas 1975, 3 days before my 14th birthday.

After that, the holiday season was never an easy time for me. I suspect in many ways it still haunts me, because there is a real and seldom touched part of me who longs to curl up snugly within the traditions of my very young childhood and revel in their solemn wide-eyed innocence, and another part of me that is older, sadder and wiser who flings open wide the doors and takes to heart the adage of "eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die". For who knows what tomorrow may bring.

The somber me and the skipping me will always be playing at tug of war, I fear, and in turn during every holiday season I seem destined to play host to both.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006


There's a new meme out - you take the first sentence of the first blog post of every month of the current year - a somewhat random sample of 2006 and perhaps discover an overall pattern within one's blog posts and then ergo one's blog. And even though I wasn't tagged I thought I'd give it a try. I cheated a little and included the first few sentences or paragraph if it made sense.

January 4 -
Fear was the defining feature of the New School of Propoganda, first developed in the early 21st century.

February 3 -
We haven't had a good dose of Fresh Hell lately, thus, it should be rectified.

March 1 -
It's an unfair fact of life that women who work in "beauty industries", while not entirely exonerated from creating and perpetuating the media myths about the way women should look, are as much as if not more at the mercy of those same myths.

April 4 -
Another whirlwind of activity way away from the blog, and very little inspiration is left in its wake. Yet, there are still a few gems

May 5 -
Buying a car on ebay- seriously, this happened to a member of my family. This man has a habit of putting incredibly low bids on cars he'd like to own, hoping all the while (and trusting) that a much crazier person places a higher bid and wins the auction. Well, the highest bid was his and the car now must be bought. (This is not Mr. Fresh Hell, by the way - he'd be pulverized by a meat tenderizer if he played that kind of game.)

June 6 -
When I was younger I thought I was a fair judge of popular culture - the things that I thought were fairly cool also popped up on others' radar.

July 6 -
I have been working on some future posts but have also been mucho distracted-o by the highly engaging World Cup. It's been great fun to follow and hopefully, "les vieux"*** will prevail and France will win

August 7 -
I'm back - just returned from Algeria last night. We had a lot of fun and I have so many adventures to relate. Jet lag and I are currently best buddies, so I'll post more as the week progresses.

September 5 -
Right now I feel like a bubbling inchoate mass of anger directed towards the current Administration - the mess! It never ends! And I find myself asking the age old question, "Who's going to clean this up?".

October 3 -
As I can't for the life of me think of anything witty or interesting to write, I decided to render the last few dramatic weeks in a series of haiku.

November 1 -
Some years ago, Cupcake Emeritus' wife contracted cancer.

December 7 -
In no order of importance, memory reliability, and with names/identifying details mercifully kept anonymous unless it was something I actually did, which I have no trouble confessing, here is a random sampling of Office Holiday Parties Past.

No huge pattern to report, other than my fondness for haiku, interest in travel, my near pathological dislike of cleaning, various episodes of writers block, some topical outrage and a Cupcake.

Which pretty much sums up 2006 for this blog.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

This Week in Its Briefs - The Flannels


1. In Cupcake News: Cupcake Emeritus is convinced that even though he's practically retired, he still can't do anything without me. He makes a half-hearted stab at trying to get tasks done on his own, especially computer work, but I'm now convinced he'll be 100 years old and in a wheelchair and I'll still do all his online shopping.

2. The holidays are revving up everywhere, and my skills at my own online shopping have increased exponentially. I've spent very little time in actual brick & mortar stores, and much more time parked in front of my computer in my slippers, merrily shopping away. So much more civilized.

3. Family crises abound, so I expect blogging to be light for a while. I'm having trouble finding things to write cogently about. I keep calling my muse, but I suspect it's enjoying a three-day bender in exotic climes, as there is no answer at all.

For my wee, odd and beloved group of readers: if I don't get a chance to write again before the holidays, I wish everyone the kindest and gentlest of seasons in which their dearest wishes will be granted. Health wealth and happiness to all in 2007.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Office Holiday Parties - A Blog Jog Down Memory Lane


In no order of importance, memory reliability, and with names/identifying details mercifully kept anonymous unless it was something I actually did, which I have no trouble confessing, here is a random sampling of Office Holiday Parties Past:

1. The party where the Chief Financial Officer was so drunk that he fell and broke his wrist while walking home from the party. He told everyone that he'd slipped and fallen in a patch of ice; no one believed this explanation as the night in question was perfectly clear and dry.

2. The occasion when a co-worker and I smoked a joint on the way to the party, which was held at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York. Pleasantly be-numbed, we wandered around the giant hotel for a good half an hour looking for the correct ballroom. When we eventually got there, we were so overcome with the munchies that all we did was stand at the buffet and stuff our faces with food. I don't believe I said a word for two solid hours.

3. The "office premises" party where not only did we have a live band playing on the 16th floor (you could hear them in the elevators beginning at the 11th floor), but a female co-worker and I xeroxed our bra-covered bosoms and taped the copies to the CEO's office door. Embarassing to admit, true, but no one but she and I ever knew what we did. Ah, the sweet volatile mixture of copiers and alcohol.

4. The party when a female co-worker literally collapsed from a surfeit of drink and had to be poured into a cab; I rode with her to her apartment, asked the driver to wait, plopped her on her sofa and sped back to the party - in my haste to get her safely home I'd forgotten both my purse and coat. I assured the driver I'd be right back for money and damn if the man wasn't waiting outside the venue for his payment. Got a right good tip he did, too.

5. The company where the official holiday festivities mattered far less than the "after party"; the breathless anticipation of being invited by the coolest group of people to join in the sequence of late night/early morning bar-hopping, securing one the ritualistic day after bragging rights and the mother of all hangovers.

Good times all.