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How I almost killed my brother before he died January 17, 2008

Posted by Merujo in family, humor, illness, memories, silliness, TV.
8 comments

Saturday is my brother Ed’s birthday. He would have been 55 this year. Double nickels. Riding the AARP train. Eligible for the senior discount. Eating the early bird special.

But it didn’t work out that way. He’ll have been gone two years come June. Not a week goes by when there isn’t something that happens (or something ridiculous I see on TV) and I think, “Oh, man – gotta call Ed and tell him about that.”

And then, I remember.

Can’t do it. No more phone calls.

So, I store away whatever that tidbit is, hoping there’s someone else who will appreciate it at some point.

Ed had a messed up sense of humor. When I was a kid, he was the one who enjoyed terrifying the living shit out of me, hiding in the dark under the stairs, waiting to grab an ankle, or bellowing outside my bedroom window at three in the morning in a demented basso-profundo, like some demonic opera singer, straight from the seventh level of Hell. He also enjoyed just the plain old weird shit this world offered us.

Like the spongmonkeys.

Remember the spongmonkeys?

Sure you do. You may have tried to block them from your memory – they were freaky-looking things. Creatures that looked genetically wrong and sang in raspy falsettos and wore silly hats.

Originally, the spongmonkeys were the totally random and messed up creation of Joel Veitch, an English animator. The world may never know why, but Joel crafted these things and had them sing a song called “We Like the Moon.” If you missed it, here it is, in all its inexplicable glory:

Kinda f’ed up, huh?

But much, much, much more f’ed up is that a restaurant chain – Quiznos – actually made the conscious decision to use these vastly unappetizing critters to advertise their fast food. Now, I love Quiznos (they make a yummy tuna salad sandwich), but I would like to know just how much blond Lebanese hash had to be consumed by their marketing team before they all said, “Hell, yeah! The mutant furry baked potato animals with human mouths! Yes! They just say ‘mmmmm, tasty!’ America will LOVE them! LET’S DO IT!”

Judge for yourself. Here’s the ad:

Now, most of America fell into two camps: the people who were totally creeped out by the Quiznos spongmonkey ad and people without TVs.

Then, there was me and my brother Ed. We thought this ad was freaking hilarious. In fact, in finding that clip on YouTube, I managed to laugh myself into a coughing fit. It’s the words “THEY GOT A PEPPER BAR!” that makes me laugh like a moron. And it had the same effect on my brother. In fact, he used to call me and leave messages on my answering machine simply saying, “THEY GOT A PEPPER BAR!” That was it. Just that. Click. I would double over laughing. It was so ridiculous, and yet so damn funny.

After a week of these calls, I phoned my brother back and did my best spongmonkey impression for him. Now, the thing is, my brother was very ill already at this point, so he was almost always at home when I called. No answering machine, just my brother, struggling to breathe on the other end of the line. And this time was no exception. God help me, I could not resist it, even though I could hear he was struggling with his weak lungs and failing heart. I just went for it. I didn’t even say “Hello” – I just started singing in this hideous high rasp. And, omigod, did my brother ever laugh his ass off. That’s right – I tortured a dying man with laughter and a commercial jingle, screaming, “WE LOVE THE SUBS CUZ THEY ARE GOOD TO US!” until I could only hear him wheezing and gasping through giggles. By the time I got to “THEY GOT A PEPPER BAR!” he was begging me to stop, but laughing all the time.

“Oh my god, I can’t breathe!” Ed wheezed and coughed. “Oh jesus, stop, please!” But through it all he was laughing so hard he was in tears. I stopped, thinking, “Holy shit, I think he’s dying. Now, this is going to be hard to explain to the family…” But then he said, gulping in precious air, “Do it again!”

“THEY GOT A PEPPER BAR!!”

Ed struggled for air and gurgled and howled and said, “Oh shit, that’s funny.”

I hadn’t heard him laugh like that in years. After that, I periodically called him and just yelled about that damn pepper bar and he would laugh and laugh. In time, his laughter became more faint, as he couldn’t even find the energy to respond. Once he told me that, indeed, I had almost killed him with my manic spongmonkey call. You know, the truth is, I think Ed would have loved going out that way, giggling like a fool over a really messed up TV commercial. Hell, we should all go out laughing.

Silly though it may be, I think of Ed every time I go into a Quiznos. I see the pepper bar and have to smile.

Thank you, wee spongmonkeys, you twisted little bastards. You were a damn demented way to advertise a sandwich, but, bless you – you made my brother happy.

Happy birthday, Ed.

Thanksgiving in a Box November 11, 2007

Posted by Merujo in family, feasting, friends, holidays, obnoxious neighbors, solitude, Thanksgiving, traditions.
2 comments

For the record, I’m not lazy. No sir, not one bit. But I don’t see a need to go through a massive amount of solo drudgery to produce a Turkey Day meal for one person. Just like virtually every meat-eating, red-blooded American, I love the smell of turkey cooking – oh hell, yes! But I just don’t see the point in messing up the whole kitchen for just me. Also, since my back is still pretty painful, standing in the kitchen all day is not particularly attractive (especially since I no longer have Percocet.) Plus, if you add up the costs of putting together a traditional meal… well, jeez, louise, it’s damn expensive.

If fuel wasn’t now as expensive as a gallon of milk, I would drive up to New Jersey and harass members of my family. Or I could join very kind friends in Virginia. Sure, I love the camaraderie of sharing the holiday with others, but this year, I actually want some splendid isolation. I am taking the week of Thanksgiving off (it’s use or lose vacation time, and I have no $$ to travel anywhere) to write. I want solo time. I need solo time. And since a trip to the Arctic (with access to Marlon Brando and superpowered glass shards) isn’t in the cards, my overcrowded living room shall be my Fortress of Solitude. This will be another Just Merujo holiday. And that’s very, very cool this year. I can stay in jammies all day, slap rice-filled heat packs on my back, and write to my heart’s content.

Even more cool? I’m getting Thanksgiving in a Box from the local Shopper’s Food Warehouse. A little lazy? Eh, maybe. But let me tell you — the lovely 12-pound Butterball bird they gave me two years back was fan-freaking-tastic, and it both fed me leftovers for ages and made a great base for homemade turkey stock. (Reminder: must get cheap freezer containers at the dollar store.)

Here’s the deal, fellow DC-area solo travelers (and those bereft of cooking skills): you get a full family meal for $39.99 (you can get a “deluxe” version for $5 more that nabs you classier taters, green bean casserole and an extra pie), and all you have to do is pick it up at the store (you name the pick-up date/time) and reheat stuff at your leisure. You get the following:

10-12 lb. Butterball® Turkey
1 lb. Turkey Giblet Gravy
2 lb. Seasoned Mashed Potatoes
2 lb. Cornbread Dressing
12 oz. Cranberry Relish
12 pk. Butter & Egg Dinner Rolls
8” Pie (Apple or Pumpkin)

The bird (totally tender if my last order is a good example) takes two hours to reheat, filling your home with the super smell of crisping tryptophan without the need to check/recheck/baste/recheck… You get the drill.

I’ll have Thanksgiving for days and days and days. It’s really quite the bargain (says Sofa Penny Diving Girl.) And no sink full of dishes.

You can order online, arrange your pick-up time, and, voila, you’re set.

I’m just hoping the morons upstairs won’t be offering me any, uh, “soundtrack” to dine by this year.

If they do, I guess it’ll give me an excellent excuse for opening a cheap bottle of Australian red and putting my headphones on…

Gobble, gobble!

Termite September 1, 2007

Posted by Merujo in death, family, friends, memories, pets.
5 comments

I don’t think I’ve ever mentioned Termite out here. She was our dog when I was growing up. A mutt, plain and simple, Termite was some terrier mix, just a tiny black thing when she came into our family. I can’t even remember exactly how she came to us — probably through a friend of my sister, Nurse Rachet, who was also responsible for our adoption of Tuptim, the Siamese kitten she saw get thrashed in a hit and run. (One broken leg and $200 later, we had a cat that ran the roost for nearly 22 years before her time came.)

Termite was the runt of her litter, abandoned by her mother, and raised, at least for a few weeks, by a somewhat tame raccoon kept by our puppy’s original owner. The raccoon impressed its behaviors on wee Termite, who, all her life, would dip her paws in her water bowl, mimicking raccoon eating behavior. Her tail was broken when she came to our care — a result of raccoon discipline, we’d been told. A trip to the vet ended with a bobbed tail rather than the curvy one her siblings had.

Man, I miss that dog.

She liked to gnaw on wood, including the legs of my mother’s old upright piano, hence her moniker “Termite.” That habit faded as she grew out of her puppy days, but the name stuck. (For the record, the chewing in general remained as a bad lifelong habit — I’ll never forget that dog taking my sister’s retainer from the edge of the bathtub one night and gnawing it into a lump of plastic and wire. She managed to get it stuck in her own small mouth, wire wrapped around her teeth. Once Mom got over being furious with my sister for leaving the pricey thing in reach of the dog, she had to laugh at how well it fit in Termite’s mouth. “Your mouth is the same size as the dog’s, dear.” I can hear Mom chuckling at my sister. Somewhere, there is a great photo of the dog wearing my sister’s retainer before we managed to extract it.)

Termite had one white paw, and, I’m sorry to say, I was responsible for that. As a little kid, I put her in the basket on the front of my bike and took her for rides around the neighborhood. (She was a sucker for a bike ride — when my mom was older and had one of those 3-wheeled bikes with the big basket, Termite was always in the back, nose up in the breeze.) But on one of our rides, I hit a huge bump, tossing Termite from the basket and, in a moment forever frozen in my memory, I ran over her tiny paw, full force.

Oh, how that poor dog cried. I remember not being able to breathe, for having caused so much pain.

It brought back the one of the earliest, darkest memory of my life — another moment I can see with absolute clarity despite having been no more than 4 years of age when it happened. That was back in New Jersey. I remember standing at the edge of my yard, by the street with my mother, as the neighbor across the road showed us her new beagle puppy, all floppy legs and oversized ears. It hopped all over the yard and yipped with excitement. I remember the neighbor laughing as the beagle continued to gambol in the grass. And then, suddenly, the puppy wasn’t in the grass.

The car is a blur in my mind. It came down the street so fast, and that puppy had just barely put paws in the street.

Bounding, bounding, full of energy and raw joy…

And, just like that, it was gone.

The car never stopped.

All that was left was a streak of red. And a horrified owner, her hands up over her mouth, standing, unmoving. And a strange mix of fear and shock and embarrassment and shame — I figured the puppy was trying to cross the street to see me. In truth, I have no idea.

All I know is, one moment the puppy was there, and then, it was gone. For years, I had flashbacks to that sudden, senseless death.

And then, they faded.

But, in that second when I crushed my dog’s paw beneath my bike – so fast – first the front tire, then the back, dear god, it all came back. I shook like a leaf as I fell off my bike, my legs wobbling under me. I swept Termite up into my arms and cradled her shrieking form, running all the way home. I’m not sure how my bike got back to the house. Probably a neighbor walked it home for me.

Her paw was swollen, tiny bones broken and flesh so bruised, but there was little a vet could do. She limped and yipped in pain for days, and, as her fur grew, her paw turned to snow white, a permanent reminder of what I had accidentally done to her. For her part, bless her small but loyal brain, Termite seemed to not remember how it had happened and that I was the culprit. Either that, or she simply did not blame me for her injury. Even as she limped those first weeks, she still followed me to the garage and wagged her little stub, waiting for me to put her in the basket for another go. But I just couldn’t do it. We took long walks and she ran next to my bike, but I never took her for another ride. Mom’s big “trike” would fulfill all her bike-riding needs.

She was a good dog. If you howled, you could get her to sing. It drove my mom nuts, but it was hilarious to watch her tilt her head to the sky and answer some call deep in her canine DNA. She put up with kids dressing her up and me trying to teach her tricks. She slept at the foot of my bed and would wake me up with prods, pokes, loud panting, and the occasional polite yip of reminder that she really, really needed to go outside now, thank you.

She was a faithful companion for many years, patient and affectionate, and very mellow, except when the phrase “wanna go out?!?” was tossed her way. Then she became a bouncing, barking spring on furry feet. I would miss her so when I left for Mac in 1984.

I remember each time I came home from college. I could hear her cry as I approached the front door, and through the screen, I would always see that frantically wiggling tail stump before anything else. She was always so happy to see her family come home. Sometimes so happy she’d pee on your feet on the front steps as she talked out out her warbling welcome.

By the time I was a sophomore in college, Termite was an old dog. Grey and white had crept over her form, she was slow and clearly in arthritic pain. Her eyes had grown cloudy, and her personality altered. She was tired. The year my father died, she had started to become incontinent and snappy. Hers was a rapid decline. The week after my father died, Mom had colon cancer surgery. When she came home, weak and sick, Termite was snapping at her, blindly getting under Mom’s uncertain feet, and leaving messes that Mom slipped in. The happy dog with the wiggly tail had been replaced by this one, angry, confused, and ill.

It was time.

I remember the day we put her down so clearly. My mother was having post-surgery problems and she was restless, sleeping in her freshly empty bed only for minutes at a time and then waking in distress. Mom wanted to sit in her recliner in the living room, and, en route, she slipped and fell in another mess poor Termite had left behind in our dark hallway. When I went to find Termite and take her outside, she snapped at me and bit my hand, her face curled into a snarl that had become more common in those late days.

My brother was called up from his basement room to take our dog away. Mom sobbed — it was the first time I’d really seen her break. She was always so strong, but between my father’s death, the cancer, and now, the failing of a faithful friend, she was weak. “I can’t do it anymore!” She cried, her whole body shaking. “She can’t do it anymore!” When I heard Mom say this, gasping through her tears, I wept like a baby, losing all composure.

My brother was furious that he was being dispatched as the executioner. He was an angry man in general back then, and his emotions had a hair trigger. He yelled that it should be my job to do, as I had grown up with Termite. Maybe he was right. And, had Mom not needed my help with her surgical wounds, I probably would have gone in his place. But Ed did not have any aptitude to attend to a fresh colostomy on an traumatized older woman.

Ed was still swearing at me and Mom as he left the house. Termite did not snap at my brother when he picked her up to take her to the car. Her stump of a tail wiggled in anticipation of the ride — it was as if, for one final moment, our happy dog had returned.

Ed was back in an hour. Termite was gone. My brother didn’t speak to us for days, and I was left with such guilt and anger for so long. Had we done the right thing? Should we have kept struggling with her declining health? Our cat, Tuptim, ruler of the roost, looked for her dog day after day after day. She would sit at the top of the stairs to our basement, calling in this wailing yowl for hours at a time, coming as close to weeping as I think a cat can, waiting for Termite to answer.

She missed her dog.

We all did.

It took me a long time to set aside my feelings of guilt. In the end, our little friends depend upon us to make the right decisions for them. And for us. And, in the cold equations of life, an infirm, angry, elderly dog around a infirm, aging, blind woman with poor balance presents little choice.

Awww, crap. Made myself cry. Dang it!

Poor dog. Little friend. You with your tiny stump frantically wagging at the door whenever I came home. So loyal and so true. You were robbed by age and infirmity, and someone else had to choose for you.

Man, I still miss you.

I’ll leave you, dear reader, with this song — a tribute to another four-legged friend. And if I’ve made you sad, the last couple of seconds of this video will make you smile.

21 Years Gone June 15, 2007

Posted by Merujo in change, death, family, lost opportunities.
6 comments

It was raining on the last day my father saw the open sky. I remember only pieces of that day, and the short days that followed. It was late May 1986. I had just gotten home from my sophomore year of college, and I knew my father was very ill. Just how ill, maybe I really didn’t fathom at the time. Or didn’t want to.

As spring break approached that year, I got a call from my sister in Milwaukee. She’d taken a trip down to Illinois to visit Dad while Mom visited our brother in Germany. “There’s something really wrong with Dad. I think you need to come home.” I was packing for my college choir’s annual tour when she’d called. I was scheduled to spend spring break singing in a handful of Midwestern churches and small concert halls with the rest of the group. I went to see the testy and high strung assistant director of the choir – a woman who would, eventually, embarrass me into quitting the choir because I could not read music. (But I could sing, man. I could sing.) She had been tasked with leading us on tour, so I explained the situation as best I could. My sister didn’t know what was wrong with our father, but she was panicked. Mom was coming home from Germany, and the choir bus would run us through my hometown. Could I leave the choir in Moline to see my family?

The answer was no. (So cold.) Either I went on the whole tour or nothing at all. I didn’t have cash to get home on my own, and Mom was still overseas. I had a terrible relationship with my father, and I didn’t want to get on the phone and say, “Hey, I hear you may be dying. Can you send me money so I can home and see you?” It was just a mess. A bloody big mess.

I packed my bag for tour and headed out with the choir. Mom returned home while I was on the road. I called her from a phone in the back of a church hall somewhere in Wisconsin. She didn’t sound good. She told me I had to come home. What I didn’t know – and she was keeping to herself – is that she had been diagnosed with colon cancer. But she kept silent. She knew, I think, before any of the rest of us, that Dad was going to die. She put her own health on hold. She’d had cancer before and survived. She was goddamn tough.

I told the assistant director that I absolutely needed to leave the tour. The bus driver told me we would hit my home town around noon the next day. I called Mom and asked her to meet me in the parking lot by the mall near our house at noon. No cell phones then. I was at the mercy of pay phones when I could find one.

Again, the cranky woman told me I couldn’t leave. To this day, I don’t know if she was more concerned about dumping a kid in the middle of a college-sponsored tour (and her liability) or the lack of one of her first sopranos. I tend to think it was the latter, honestly. The other members of the choir could see that I was quietly freaking out, and they sympathized. I made a deal with the bus driver. I sat up front and quietly gave him directions to the mall when we hit the outskirts of Moline. I saw my mother in her little Escort wagon, waiting in the empty lot by Von Maur – one of those big, high end stores with a pianist playing standards on a baby grand next to a small fountain.

The driver stopped in the lot. I grabbed my bag, turned to the appalled woman charged with managing us and just said, “Sorry, I’m leaving.” And I was gone.

Mom took me to the hospital, where my father was already on a downward spiral. He had lost a tremendous amount of weight, and with his dentures out, he looked even more hollow. I don’t remember much about that time. Even in good times, my father and I rarely communicated. He didn’t enjoy my company, and I was surly around him in return. There was simply a great deal of silence. No one really talked to me about what was eating him alive. In truth, I think the doctors were having a hard time pinning it on one thing. Systematically, he was shutting down. But briefly, he rallied.

He came home from the hospital, and I returned to Minnesota to complete the academic year, mostly in a daze. Plans were in place for me to leave for a year in England in the autumn. I was pretty shell shocked finishing that semester. I was parting ways with my friends for a year (which became a critical year and a half, in fact) and I had no idea what waited at home, where my mother tended to “her Eddie” – a man she loved, but I listened to treating her with something less than love so many times.

I came home again in late May. By then, my father lay in bed almost all the time. Only once or twice did he shuffle down the hall in one of his nightshirts, looking lost, looking vacant. There was no conversation. I tried a couple of times, but there was no response. He was vanishing, and he retreated into the bedroom – just him and CNN and the shelves of Louis L’Amour books he loved, but could no longer read.

I stayed quiet. I stayed out of the way. I watched. I waited. I let my mother spend time with him. If we had been close, it would have been different, I think. If he hadn’t been so damn mean and unpleasant so much of the time, it would have been different. I think. But I just stayed out of the way.

And then, one morning, things declined to the point where my mother couldn’t handle it. “We have to take him back to the hospital,” she said, her voice quavering. I called my brother Ed up from his basement room and we walked Dad out to the car.

That’s my single most clear memory of the week when my father died.

The walk to the car.

Mom went ahead to open the car doors and start the engine. I could feel the urgency in her movements. A light rain had started to fall as we walked out. My father was a shuffling ghost in his nightshirt and loafers. His eyes were sunken and his jaw hung open. I held one arm and my brother held the other as we led him out. It was as if he had no weight at all. No strength, no power. So light it was as if the spirit had already left him.

And then, in the middle of our small yard, the rain increased. Big drops hit my father’s face, and something happened. He stopped stock still. Rigid. And he gripped my arm so hard, it hurt. He was an immovable object. I heard my mother calling, “Ed, Ed, come on, you have to get into the car!” But my father just stood there, the rain running down his face. And he slowly turned his face up to sky. His jaw dropped lower and his eyes seemed to seek something there. I wonder if he knew right then that would be the last time he would see the sky, to know the enormity of the world. I wonder if in his silent sickness, he was pleading to leave right there and then.

It’s a path I would have chosen for him. Instead, he lingered in the hospital for days. My siblings gathered, goodbyes were said. My mother sat at his bedside, taking notes in shorthand when he actually did speak. I think I’ve mentioned, one of the last things he said was my name. But I have no idea if it was to wish better for me or tell me he loved me or just to condemn me. I will never know.

There is a Polaroid of me and my father, probably taken the day before he died. In it, he is jaundiced from his failing liver, his eyes so deep in their sockets, they are mere pinpoints in his face. I was trying to cheer him, I think. 21 years later, I can’t remember the exact circumstances, really. Strangely, I am smiling. It’s a big, forced smile, disturbing in its context. The picture popped up in a packet of documents after my mom died in 2001. It really rattled me to see it again. I gave the photo to the Sasquatch to hold for me. I still can’t look at it without a mix of really rough feelings.

My father died on the Sasquatch’s birthday, you know. We had just become friends at the beginning of that college year. He phoned me from his parent’s home in Nebraska a few days after Dad had died and said, “You didn’t call me for my birthday.” I told him where I’d been on his birthday. I think he felt terrible. I did, too. Isn’t it strange? I can clearly remember taking that call from him in my parents’ bedroom, sitting on my father’s side of the bed. Feeling strange. Feeling wrong.

I still feel strange and wrong about how my relationship with my father ended. Or didn’t end.

I just see him in my mind standing in the yard, whatever strength he had left to call up radiating through his limbs. Do not take me from this place! Do not take me from this sky! Do not take me to the room where I will be ended! I will make my stand here!

But then, he faltered, and we moved him on.

I’m not sure how to end this post. I’m just not sure.

I am my father’s daughter. I have his gift with words. I can tell stories and speak convincingly in front of groups. I also unfortunately have his prematurely grey hair, hand tremors, and broad nose and even broader calves. I have his ability to sing, his ego and his sometimes incendiary temper. There are times when I do not appreciate seeing him in myself. And there are others when I depend on it.

I still don’t know how to end this. So I will simply say this: father friends, be good to your children. Trust me – a time comes when you cannot mend fences anymore.

Be well.


Damn my overactive imagination! June 14, 2007

Posted by Merujo in family, ghosts, television, terror, travel.
2 comments

I’m wide awake – freaky wide awake – at 12:35 at night, and it’s my own damn fault.

Last night I watched the first episode of a goofy cable show called Destination Truth. I didn’t know until tonight that it was an original series for the SciFi Channel, as I saw the premiere episode on USA (I think.)

In each episode, the host – a dude named Josh Gates – goes to funky places around the planet, looking into local myths and mysteries, like living dinosaurs, ghosts, sea serpents, and mermaids. Part of the show is travelogue (some of which I found absolutely hilarious) and part is hokey-scary stuff with night vision cameras, rustling trees and strange sounds. Last night, Josh and his “crack team” went to Papua New Guinea in search of a live iguanodon that villagers swear they’ve seen and mermaids rumored to be swimmin’ around off the coast. (One guy said he found a dead mermaid washed up on the beach, whacked its head off and then buried the carcass in the sand. An attempt to unbury said remains was fruitless.) Like I said, it’s goofy, but entertaining.

So, I find out there’s a new episode on tonight. What the hell, I’ll watch!

Big mistake.

Big, biiiiig mistake.

Have I ever mentioned that I get really creeped out by weird recordings? You know – like the ones where people claim to have the voices of the dead on Memorex? Don’t like that stuff. No sir, not one bit.

Hell, I was so freaked out by the “weird recording” sequence of the John Carpenter movie “Prince of Darkness” that I can still be sent into a panic if a friend jokes around by repeating the dialogue from that scene. Notice I’m not mentioning what the dialogue is. I’m not going to get myself more wired than I already am at this point.

So, what happened in this goofball show tonight? Josh and his minions go to Thailand to visit a town with a ghost problem. The haunting is centered around a Buddhist cemetery with it’s own wee crematorium. Josh & the crew set up camp in the cemetery for the night, and they even put a microphone inside the tiny crematorium chamber and seal the door.

You know where this is going, right?

Yep, they get some creepy-ass sounds recorded from inside the locked space. And when it’s cleaned up by audio experts, it’s a voice saying “GET OUT!” in Thai. (Nice to know that ghosts the world ’round go for the traditional angry spirit “screw you” phrase that pays.) But you see, they played the damn recording over and over again in the show, getting me more and more weirded out. Add to that all the night vision footage of the crematorium, and, voila – I’m gonna be up all damn night.

It’s my own fault. As soon I saw what they were doing, I should have turned the channel. Watched “Top Chef.” Turned the boob tube off. Read a book.

But, nooooo. Little Miss Love-a-Scare stayed put.

I’m an idiot. Now, I keep hearing noises everywhere. I need to go out on the balcony and rescue my poor plants that are soaking in pots filled by tonight’s heavy rain. But I don’t want to know what’s out in the dark on the balcony along with the plants. I had to stop listening to iTunes on my headphones as I sit here now because my back is to my bedroom and the overhead light just blew. One must be able to clearly hear what’s lurking in the dark – so thinks my paranoid mind. And right now, my bedroom is a dark room giving off all sorts of creaks and groans. When I took my headphones off just now, I realized the weird noise was just the upstairs neighbors having sex. {{shudder}} To keep my sanity, I’ve compromised and put the headphones back on -without music playing – so I muffle the neighbors, but still hear whatever’s gonna creep up on me.

Silly, huh?

If I do sleep at all tonight, I will have to tuck in the sheets entirely around me, so nothing can grab me from beneath the bed. Go ahead, roll your eyes. But, you see, this is an improvement from my childhood, when I would sometimes get so scared of creatures in my closet, I would pull the sheets over my head, too. This frequent loss of oxygen might explain a great deal about me.

That strange habit started after my paternal grandmother’s death when I was in third grade. At the funeral in Minneapolis, there was a tiny pillow in her coffin with a small scripted banner that read “From the grandchildren.” Before they closed the lid, the undertaker handed the pillow to me, as a keepsake. WTF? Yeah, in retrospect, WTF? Let’s give the little kid a casket pillow! Lemme tell you, I got home, put that freaky death pillow in the back of my closet and proceeded to have years of believing that both the bogeyman and my dead grandmother were in there, waiting for me. I had to make certain the closet doors were completely closed before hitting the sack every night because I was certain the monsters in the closet could slip through any small crack.

I actually blame my late brother Ed for a lot of that (thanks, Ed!) because he liked to terrify me for shits and grins. Everyone has to have a hobby, right?

I had a deep fear of our basement – which was your typical slightly dank, Midwestern flood plain ranch house crap – because of the times Ed would hide by the staircase, turn off the lights and grab my ankles as I ran screaming up to the light. He would laugh this loud, basso-profundo “BWAH HAH HAH HAH!” as I ran. It wasn’t until college that I could handle that basement trek without doing things like walk backwards up the stairs, ever vigilant for the things that might lurk there.

Part of that fear, too, I think came from my sister Barb’s stories of staying in her friend’s theoretically haunted house in New Jersey. It was one of those pre-revolutionary structures that has a lot of history and death attached to it. As I recall it, people had been buried in the dirt floor of the basement during the Revolutionary War (later exhumed), a fire had taken the life of a child in an upstairs bedroom, and, when the house was used as a funeral parlor during the 1920s, the caretaker was killed there. (Lots of bad juju with the house.) Many people had seen and felt strange things there over the years. The beloved mother of Barb’s friend – a homeowner with a wicked sense of humor – knew that my sister was scared of the house basement. She used to send Barb down to get a can of peas or some other mundane item and then turn out the lights and lock the door and giggle while Barb hyperventilated and waited for the ghosts to come.

We should both be in therapy, honest to god.

So, here I am. It’s now past one in the morning. I really need some sleep, and I will try.

But I’m leaving a couple of lights on. And I may sleep on the sofa, as the neighbors are still going at it. Have I mentioned recently how much I loathe them? Last thing I need tonight is to picture them as the happy humpers. Ye gods, no!

Sweet dreams to you all, when you have them. Just make sure your sheets are all nicely tucked in. You never know what might be under your bed, waiting to nibble your toes and breath heavily in your ear.

Wait. That just made me think of the neighbors again. Ewww.

Shudderingly yours,

Merujo

Pride and Joy May 30, 2007

Posted by Merujo in equality, family, gay rights, weddings.
8 comments

My brother is getting hitched this weekend. Married. Civil unionized? I don’t know what the official term is for same-sex unions in Germany. Whatever it is, it’s a long time coming. My brother and his partner (whom I consider my adopted brother) have been together for more than 30 years now.

Thirty years.

I think they have the average straight American marriage beaten by a mile at this point. And I couldn’t be happier for them. These are two great guys. Two really wonderful men. If anyone in our family needs help – material, emotional, financial – they are the first people in line to offer assistance. They remember every birthday, every anniversary. They are forgiving and kind and utterly generous. The support and encouragement they have given me in the past couple of years is beyond measure.

I really regret that I won’t be there this weekend. I’d love to see them have this moment, long denied, pointlessly, unfairly, unjustly. What a triumph for them to be able to do something that so many others take for granted. What they have waited decades to do, average Janes and Joes do every day, without a second thought. And average Janes and Joes undo every day, too.

So many opponents of gay unions talk about the “sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman.” Sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman, my ass. If straight marriage really was such a holy estate these days, it wouldn’t be something that could be done drunk in Vegas and then be put asunder with fillable PDFs, a flick of a pen, and a modest filing fee. Just ask Britney Spears and her first husband.

Marriage is supposed to be a partnership. A commitment. An expression of love and deep friendship. (I’m starting to sound like an e-Harmony ad.) Why does it matter to some insecure strangers if it’s between a man and a woman or a man and a man or a woman and a woman? It should only matter to those two people, bonded by something powerful and beautiful and, may I add – speaking as a single person, something enviably wonderful.

I could use this space to ponder and growl about why there is so much hatred and bigotry and ignorance and stupidity in the world – much of it here in our “Christian” nation – but this isn’t the time for that. This is simply a time to say “congratulations” and offer wishes for 30 or 60 or 100 more years of happiness and contentment.

Friday will bring the matching grey suits and engraved rings. A Bentley to take them to the Rathaus in the center of Frankfurt. A sea of friends who are gathering already in anticipation of the celebration. A feast befitting such a joyous event. And, from this side of the Atlantic, every good thought, every fine wish, and all the love I can send to them.

May we all find such a lasting and true love. May each of us be blessed with a partner as fine as my brother has found. Lucky guys. Very, very lucky guys.

Cheers!

Why "Church of the Big Sky"? May 3, 2005

Posted by Merujo in family, mom, Montana, the blog, the past, travel.
8 comments

About seventeen years ago, I took my last really big trip with my mom. Growing up, our family traveled all over the United States. My father did some sort of semi-clandestine work with weapons and such for the U.S. Government (and hello to any shadowy people reading this!) He spent a great deal of time going to proving grounds for tests (when he wasn’t overseas using his handful of passports… hmm…) My mom, faced with solo summers riding herd on her pile o’ children, popped us all in the car, which, by the time I came on the scene, was a hideous, enormous army green Chrysler station wagon we called “The Tank”, and she took us all over the United States. We had a little blue trailer, covered in really old school peely decals from all the states and national parks we’d visited.

All the kids were Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts, and we were very adept at packing the car (unlike my father, who, if allowed to pack the roof would lose at least one suitcase on I-80) and experienced at wilderness camping. We’d travel West and South, usually chasing after my father, who would briefly join us in between missile tests at White Sands or burying aliens in Nevada (okay, I made that second one up, but who knows?!?) We had bears invade our campground, encountered food-stealing hippies, and once (before my time) even killed a Great Snowy Owl who unfortunately flew into our car. (My traumatized oldest brother was told that the owl was “napping.”)

All in all, it was an awesome way to spend summers as a kid. Mom was up for anything. That last trip, back in 1988, right after I graduated from college, was different from the rest. Mom was no longer keen on tent camping. She and my father had purchased a motorhome (a Mallard, god help us) the year I graduated from high school. In fact, they delivered me to college in Minnesota in that thing. It was fairly humiliating, especially when my father, who learned how to drive in a tank in WWII, drove over another parent’s car directly in front of my dorm. I wanted to die.

My parents, it turned out, just wanted to ditch me and get the hell out of Dodge. They’d been raising children since 1945, and they dumped me, high-fived each other, and took off. This is before cell phones, remember. I didn’t hear from my parents until the week before Thanksgiving, other than postcards from my mother. I still recall my favorite:

“Your father drove the Mallard into a row of gas pumps in Salt Lake City. I hope the owner doesn’t press charges.”

Apparently, he didn’t. My father had an amazing gift for BS’ing people. He must have put his silver tongue into overdrive on that one.

After my father’s death in 1986, the Mallard was completely paid off through the wonders of the “credit life”. For two years, while I studied overseas and Mom adjusted to life as a widow – and got used to some major physical changes after cancer surgery the same month my father died – the Mallard just sat in storage at the RV sales lot, over in the less desirable part of the Quad Cities, by the harness racing track and the prison.

When I graduated from college, Mom wanted to travel again. In fact, she arrived in Minnesota for my graduation in that damn Mallard and whisked me away a mere hour after the ceremony was over. (That was a little traumatizing, actually, as I didn’t get to say goodbye or have any Hallmark moments with any of my friends.)

Within a week, we were on the road. I hadn’t done much driving during college, and I was rusty. But, with Mom suffering from arthritis and her vision less-than-perfect from diabetes, she wasn’t up for much time behind the wheel. With us, we had one of my sisters – freshly and bitterly divorced, her petulant teenage daughter, and her young ADD son.

This made for a jolly time.

Here are the highlights of that trip:

  • Visited world’s largest cement buffalo
  • Listened to niece bitch about separation from first serious boyfriend
  • Visited Wall Drug (we wanted to see the “bowling cat” but it had died shortly before we arrived)
  • Listened to niece bitch some more
  • Visited Devil’s Tower (made obligatory Roy Neary/mashed potatoes comment and did impression of Francois Truffaut)
  • Threatened to throw niece out the back window of the Mallard
  • Got really, really depressed by the tribal-run campground at Little Big Horn
  • Called ex-brother-in-law and begged him to take daughter for the summer
  • Camped at gorgeous Lolo Pass in Idaho
  • Finally snapped and smacked niece in parking lot of Lolo Pass campground

Well, you get the picture. My niece, who is now married, has two kids (and suffered a stroke at 30) and still talks about me walloping her on that trip. She likes to tell people she seriously needed someone to smack some sense into her, and, apparently, I was the one pushed to the edge far enough to actually do it. (She was awful. Really. Ask her.)

Eventually, we ended up in Montana. We’re not really sure how or why, but there we were. By then, my niece had settled down and we were just in awe of the absolute majesty of nature. I decided that I wanted to live there. Now, of course, Cher and Dennis Quaid and half of Hollywood have bought up most of Montana, so I think those dreams are dead, but a girl can dream, right?

Looking for a place to spend the night, we came across a KOA campground in Bozeman. Bozeman is a town bubbling with natural hot springs. You know the steamy Brad Pitt/Julia Ormond “doin’ it in nature’s hot tub” scene in Legends of the Fall? That’s Bozeman. The campground actually had a swimming pool filled with sizzling hot springs. It was fantastic. No matter what had ailed our traveling party, it all melted away (no, I did not drown my niece.) We didn’t want to leave, and ended up staying a few days.

During our stay, we took drives out to just soak up the views. We’d find ourselves to be the only humans for miles, with only the occasional moose or big horn as company. One day, in the middle of nowhere, in fields of emerald green and brilliant yellows, surrounded by mountaintops, we came across a tiny church. It seemed so out of place, yet was so striking against the stunning backdrop. I dubbed it “the Church of the Big Sky.”

For years now, I’ve talked about going back there. I used to joke with my mom all the time about moving there and taking her with me. Only half-joking, she’d reply, “I’m ready! Let’s go!” When she was miserable and blind and dying, I used to tell her to imagine that we were there, and still, she’d whisper, “Okay, let’s go.”

Not to be morbid, but I’ve long thought, when I go, I want someone to take my ashes up there and just let ’em fly.

Today, on a whim, I typed in “Church of the Big Sky” on Google. And you can only imagine my amazement when this popped up as the very first link. I’d put the picture right here in my blog, but I don’t want to disrespect this gentleman’s rights.

But that’s the place! That’s my “Church of the Big Sky” up in the middle of nowhere! I’m tickled pink, blue, and purple to be able to show it to people, so they know I’m not nuts. So, if you find yourself wandering through Montana and you come across this little church in the wilderness, stop and think some good thoughts. For yourself, for a friend, for the world. Take a look around and just revel in how beautiful nature is.

I swear, if I find that Cher or Dennis Quaid has built a coffeehouse next door, I will have an enormous bone to pick with them…

And, if I haven’t bored the crap out of the five people reading this, mabye I’ll tell you the story of the rest of that trip, driving down guardrail-less mountain passes in the rain and playing “Duel” with the psychotic trucker in New Mexico while all the scrub brush around us is on fire.

Good times. Good times…