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Making my daughter’s bed

I just finished making my daughter’s bed. In the normal course of a day’s events, this would not be anything worthy of note, it’s something mothers do, a way of tidying up. What makes it something to write about is the mere fact that she was here for a visit, ten days’ worth. Now she’s gone, back to that place I find myself referring to  as ‘home’.  It just rolls off my tongue. That place she’s lived for three years now, the other coast. Sunny L.A.

This is home, too, always will be in that memory bank of hers, an odd image as I write but one so suitable to what we think of in terms of savoring and squandering. When she first left for college,  back when the notion of her coming and going had a predictable rhythm, people would ask: how does it feel to have an empty nest? To which I quip, ‘My nest isn’t empty, it’s just a little quieter.’ Of course, the dog was very much alive and barking and keeping me busy and entertained in the way dogs do. And the dog’s presence – what she added to that place we call home – was something my daughter counted on more than anything else during holiday or summer breaks.

The dog is gone, a year now, though not my daughter’s relentlessness about my (a.k.a.) her need for a replacement. There is no replacing a dog that lived with you for thirteen years. A dog with her very own personality that any other dog would forever be measured against. There is, though, some sense in some people’s minds that home, by definition and/or suggestion, needs a dog.

My home does not need a dog as much as it needs a daughter. Her cosmetics bag and toothbrush on the vanity in the bathroom. Her clothes sprawled on the floor of her bedroom.  Her complaints about the thermostat being too low.  Her nestling under a fleece blanket to watch TV, flanked by that duo  she used to call ‘’rents.’ Her need for me as she falls asleep, not feeling so great.

Her unmade bed.

* * *

A writer puts down words, intent on expressing some urgent thought, some deep reflection. A week has passed since my daughter went back to that other home of hers. A week during which I read Joan Didion’s exquisitely poignant Blue Nights.  Why I would even choose to read a book ostensibly about a favorite writer’s recalling moments surrounding the life of her daughter, now gone, seems perverse. And yet it makes all the sense in the world.  When we talk about mortality, she writes, we are talking about our children.

Now comes the wrap-up, the thought left unfinished.

I head into my kitchen, daylight nearing its end, the sky a twilight blue artists dream of. The moon, pearly yellow, a lone pendant on a chandelier of tree branches.  I stand in front of the window, completely riveted by its commanding presence.  Everything about this moon on this night, January 8, 2012 (a week since my daughter has gone back to that place I’ve come to think of as her other home), calls to mind a picture book I read to her when she was young, Happy Birthday, Moon. There is a bear, in this delightful story by Frank Asch, so entranced by the moon, he wants to give it a birthday present. Only problem is that he doesn’t know when the moon’s birthday is, or what to get him. He climbs a tall tree, to have a chat with the moon. No response.

Maybe I am too far away, thought Bear, and the moon cannot hear me.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

I’ll be home for Christmas…after all

I had a lot of dread for holidays as we headed into Thanksgiving.  This is the year that my entire extended family gets together for the holiday.  In total, that makes for about 54 people or so.  In my mind, that is about 48 people who don’t really “get me” (minus the six in my own immediate family).

Whenever we get together with my extended family, even though I am “old,” married and the mother of four kids, I feel like I am still the gangly teenager who chose to handle social situations behind a good book, rather than try to navigate the troubled waters of family politics and small talk.

Away from my family, I feel like I have turned into a fairly confident, competent adult who successfully manages a household of six, who has a variety of outside interests including but extending beyond reading good books. I feel capable of stimulating and engaging conversation.  I have some rousing opinions on a wide variety of topics, which makes me a great conversationalist, at least according to my husband!

After a great deal of fretting, Thanksgiving arrived.  I showed up with the food I hoped would impress everyone.  I started making conversation with long lost cousins and uncles and aunts.  Before long, I discovered that all of us new(ish) mommies deal with insecurity when it comes to parenting.  Others of us who have inherited what you might call “interesting” noses talked about our insecurities physically.  By the time the day was done, I found I had connected on a variety of levels with many more people than I expected.

Since we were all just together for Thanksgiving, my (extended) family will be going their separate ways this Christmas.  But, this Christmas, I’ll be sending good wishes and greetings to the people who have loved me through thick and thin and who still find ways to help me feel loved.

If I can’t be home physically, I’ll definitely be there in spirit.  Because…”there’s no place like home for the holidays.”

photo by quacktaculous

Will you marry me, Jennifer?

Grand Central Station, the height of the holiday season, you can’t miss it – a banner draped across the majestic staircase – if you happen to be passing through the main lobby at 3:40 p.m. (give or take a few minutes), Friday, December 16th .: Will you marry me, Jennifer?

A tad distracted by my own agenda, not to mention Mrs. Vandebilt running through my head –

What’s the use of worrying/What’s the use of hurrying/What’s the use of anything –

I may be seconds too late to capture the banner but not the blurry spirit of it all.  A young man is proposing to a young woman. He has friends colluding with him. The joy is infectious. What could matter more than stopping to take it all in? A young man has decided to make a display of his love. He has chosen a time and place where hustle and bustle are at its height. Stop the clock. Romance is in the air.

It’s too easy – and there’s every reason – to be cynical these days. The holidays are a reminder of consumerism at its worst;  even the notion of giving seems less about the heart than the pocketbook, much as we try to make it a mix of both.  Those of us with limited resources – and even those with unlimited – reserve those special gifts for special occasions.

Asking a woman you love to be your wife in Grand Central Station would be a kick any time of the year. For all I know, maybe it’s her birthday, and I’m making too much of the timing. What I’m not making too much of is the time of year.  Growing up in Brooklyn, the city was always a magnet for me, more so during the holidays.  By the time I was old enough to take the subway by myself, I was off – with my best friends – to Radio City, the spectacle of the Rockettes. If memory serves me well, we’d  line up to get in before noon, when the tickets were 99 cents. I can verify this, if I choose, but why would I want to? Imagination has its hold. And sometimes it’s better than real life. We lined up in the cold, wearing stockings and skirts or dresses (no pants back then).  The shop windows – B. Altman, Lord & Taylor, Saks Fifth Avenue – were the big allure for me. And Rockefeller Center (duh).  Just being in the thick of it was all that mattered.

Years later I would make the city my home, always managing to walk down to Fifth Avenue, at night, during the holiday season to see the tree, and those people strutting their stuff in the rink below. Old habits – or maybe simple pleasures – die hard.  When you choose to live in the city, you get the right to complain about the tourists who come in droves the minute Thanksgiving weekend arrives and keep coming through the New Year. But it doesn’t stop you from being part of the crush.

Which brings  me to a prior visit, November 30th.  which made it ever so clear that living outside the city, some twenty years now, may have diminished some of my savvy if not my need for its pulse. Police barricades kept me from getting anywhere near the tree and the only way to get across town was to go underground, into the subway.  That’s how thick the crowds were on, yes, the night of the ceremonial lighting. That’s how tight security was. I could berate (or laugh at) myself for not knowing. Or I could simply remind myself: people do this every year.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

Breaking up is hard to do

“If you don’t do this for me, I’ll never forgive you”. That was the first message I read in a series of texts from an estranged friend. Pretty heavy for 8am if you ask me, and since I hadn’t seen the previous 8 messages I had no idea what she was talking about that could be so drastic, so damaging that it could warrant un-forgiveness. FOREVER. Turns out she had asked me a favor the day before but being pregnant and scattered I did not commit to said favor. Apparently this was not cool.

Over the next several hours I received a range of texts alternating from begging for my assistance to out and out irritation that I would deign to not commit to her. This friend I have. My childhood best friend at that. When we  hooked up in the first grade we were as thick as thieves until junior high when suddenly I was no longer in her circle of favorites. That stung a bit, but it was okay as I had other friends as well. Moving on to high school she went to a completely different school and then there was the “incident” after which we were banned from hanging out together. Over the years we remained in touch, in and out of each others lives, but still friends in the loosest sense of the word. But still I kept in her my life. Not necessarily because she was ‘such a good friend to me’ but because it’s what I knew.

At some point in my adult life, I began to shed old friendships as a snake does its skin. Simply because I needed to be surrounded by people who understood me, wanted to be friends with me, and wouldn’t hold a grudge over a slight that happened years before. Call it growing up, if you will, but it needed to happen. Somehow though she slipped through the cracks since we really didn’t talk that much and there were never any hard feelings, and that ‘friendship’ remained. Then I got married, while planning the wedding there was annother ‘incident’ and she became livid when I didn’t react to her quickly enough. A full year before it was supposed to even take place. So we I cut her out of my life. Slowly she wedged back in and ended up getting an invite to the wedding (my husband just shook his head). She showed up, after the ceremony, stayed for cocktail hour and then left stating she had to get back to her kids. I was PISSED and continued to keep her at arms length but did what any “good friend” would do- I called her on it. She acted surprised that I even cared. We eventually reconciled and I would still invite her to family functions and sometimes she would come, sometimes not.

I was okay with that. I’ve learned that friendships are like a marriage, they have both good and bad moments. They go through ups and downs and require lots of love, forgiveness and time to get things to work properly. But it’s a process. I get that. I’m not sure however, that she does. I’m also not entirely sure she really knows how to be a friend. A real and true friend. Not just when it’s convenient. And that’s okay too.

Back to the texts – I chose my fate of being unforgiven as what she wanted was in direct conflict with my own schedule. And at this stage in my life I can’t spend it pleasing others because of my fear of their reactions. Needless to say I haven’t  heard from her since. I’m not particularly losing sleep over it  as she’s not the first friend breakup I’ve had to deal with in recent years. It’s not fun but I understand the necessity to purge from time to time. I hope she does as well.  I’m not sure that the ‘friendship’ we’ve had is healthy. We’ve been hanging on to a relationship that was unhealthy and had run its course, for longer than necessary. Simply because it was easier to stay than it was to face the truth: we’ve out grown each other.

I still love her dearly but realize that at this point in my life and hers, we were just not meant to be. Breaking/growing up is sometimes hard to do…….

You can find more of Amber’s musings on life here

Fashion Plate

As a kid I used to be obsessed with those Fashion Plate toys. You remember the ones that allowed you to sketch an outfit by mixing and matching the different plates on a piece of paper and then you colored them in to your hearts content?

No one ever bought me one (that I can recall) but I do remember playing with them whole heartedly at friends houses. It may have begun my love affair with all things fashion related. Not too mention my desire to ‘mix it up’ when it came to my wardrobe. I was never a fan of wearing one print head to toe or being matchy-matchy. It was the 80′s after all and multi-colored socks and Madonna were all the rage, so I ran with it. Luckily for me, my mother was okay with this form of self expression, to an extent.

Fast forward a few years and I fell into a fashion rut. I became a slave to trends and began to wear things that were not really flattering on me but they looked good together. Or so I thought. I remember one of my favorite outfits circa 1995 was distressed looking overalls, a plaid body suit and Timberland-esque style boots. I was fresh to death and no one could tell me different. Oh how I cringe when I look at pictures from back then. Even well into college my sartiorial tastes were somewhat questionable as I tended to go with what the masses were wearing and less with my heart. The fact that in Atlanta in 1997-98 there was really only Express to shop in made it even worse. You could pretty much guarantee you would be wearing the same black bootcut pants as the girl next to you in class. Thus began my love affair with  makeup and accessories. Oh what a difference a fun eye-shadow, a necklace or some earrings made to even the simplest of outfits!

Somewhere along the way, after having my daughter and not wanting to fall into the ‘mommy rut’, my style began to evolve into something much more eclectic. I really took notice of my friends styles and what worked for them versus what worked for me. Instead of trying to adapt, I modified. And a fashionista was born. Sort of. I’m not ‘hipster’ or ‘trendy’ with my style of dress but I do pride myself on trying new looks and getting inspiration from all that I see. Working in fashion for the last few years has been a huge boon to my closet, not so much to my bank account.

Now I’m currently in the last stages of pregnancy and struggling with the idea of being fashionable while pregnant or just going straight for comfort on a daily basis. I do my best to give it a go when I have to be out and about. I put on makeup, do my hair and try to look as ‘hot mama’ as possible. However, the poked out belly button is somewhat taking away from the coolness factor. But I want to look good even when I feel like I just want to lay on the couch all day.

Now would be a great time to have those fashion plates make a comeback and I could just sketch my outfits daily and tape them to me saying “this is what I FEEL like wearing” while I really wear sweat pants and flipflops. Wouldn’t that be special?

You can find more of Amber’s musings here

Dear Diary

Tucked away on the very top shelf of my closet are two lidded boxes, gray cardboard trimmed with metal.  Inside the boxes are documents and trinkets I need to know still exist even if I hardly ever look at them,  journals I peek at occasionally, for their reminder of something no longer at my fingertips. There’s the leather and hand-made paper one (Il Papiro, Firenze),  the cloth-covered one with a musical staff on the cover, the abstract black-and-white vinyl one, echoes of Keith Haring.

Each one has its own beginning and end; one begins Sat., July 6, 1991, “three weeks in our new home,” and ends Fri., May 14, 1993, the day my daughter loses a front tooth.  Days earlier we celebrated Mother’s Day, the first without my mother, who had died a month earlier. “Here is the sum total,” I write. “I am my mother’s daughter . . . and my daughter’s mother.”  Unlike other diaries I abandoned, empty pages left blank, for the sake of a fresh beginning, this one is its own slice of time, filled up cover to cover.

Ones that predate these are lost to me, tossed away for some of the very same reasons Dominique Browning spells out in a New York Times essay that cuts to the heart of her decision to burn 40 years’ worth of diaries.

I didn’t want anyone else reading my diaries, ever, she writes.

My very first was powder blue vinyl, a girl’s figure embossed on the cover. In my memory, she has a touch of Veronica (the dark-haired love of comic-book character Archie) or possibly Betty Boop. There is a lock and key enclosure on the diary, as there would be on the next one I would get, the teenage years, a honey brown leather.  I took them from apartment to apartment, house to house, their secrets known only to me. I always knew where the keys were.  What struck me most when I last opened them was not the dearth of meaningful entries (no Anne Frank exposing my heart and soul to that silent listener; just a maudlin preteen/teen mostly careful about what I put down). Yes, there were one or two that touched me – a great aunt died and I thought I would never be the same;  a boy who had a crush on me could not understand why I had a crush on someone else.  But what struck me most was the handwriting that never changed.  A lefty’s awkward script, always trying for a slant it would never have.  Scribbling in a rush to get it all down as quickly as I could, or maybe scribbling just for the sake of itself. The deeper I went into myself, the less decipherable my handwriting would become.

It was the same with each new diary, the clean fresh pages begging to be filled.  I would start out with a neat, slow hand. Invariably the scribbling took hold, a coded reminder, in a way, that there are things intended for my eyes only. Forever.  Reference points, in my own hand, that can instantly place me at some moment in time worthy of reflection. Cards and notes and newspaper clippings tucked between the pages. And who else would really care? A few weeks ago, Britton Minor wrote a very moving piece about intimacy and solitude.  Doesn’t get much more intimate than writing to yourself.

Dear Diary:  Something has changed. God knows I love being alone with my thoughts. Walking keeps them spinning. Meditating slows them down. My iPod drowns them out.  But more often these days it’s a place deeper than words that draws me when I’m not hard at work on the stories and essays spawned and nourished, no doubt, by years of opening myself up to you.  Suffice it to say this – it’s me, not you.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

Always a reason

My neighbor has a bird, a five-year-old, and a death-sentence. She may not be locked up, scorned by society, or subjected to unwanted sexual attention, yet she sits on Death Row. Unbelievably, she smiles–her beautiful blonde tresses and youthful skin belying not only her age, but also her recent 12-week round of Chemo.

I met “Janey” a handful of months ago, when I pulled over to tell her how much I enjoy her bird’s squawking (yes, seriously), and “oh by the way, what kind of bird is he?” He turned out to be a she…a beautiful yellow and blue Macaw who only has eyes for “Janey” and will happily and literally bite the finger off anyone who doesn’t understand such fierce loyalty. Yesterday, I walked over to her house to finally get a close-up of the beautiful Lola, since I could hear her soulful “Awwwwwkkkkk!” and knew she would be on display in the garage. This is when I heard a gentle woman’s story.

Some months ago, after a handful of other months, one after another, in which doctors attempted to correctly diagnose the severe sternum pain “Janey” was experiencing, she discovered the baseball-sized mound that would, without a doubt, number her days. “People with stage four cancer can live quite a number of years.” she says to me. Then she smiles with the radiance of someone who knows what is important in life–someone who realizes that there is, literally, no time for sadness.

As she apologizes for the fact that the bird cage (huge) is not as clean as usual due to her recent surgery (a double-mastectomy), I think of my sister, and know that I will never share her with “Janey.” I want to. I want to tell her how much my sister meant to me, and how hard she fought. I want to tell her that my sister kept smiling too, taking every opportunity she had to make someone else’s life better, despite her debilitating pain and impending demise. I want to hug her and tell her that she will beat the odds…that a cure for every monstrous cancer in our midst is going to be discovered in time to save her. But I don’t. It’s all inappropriate–all self-serving, conversational even.

The best I can do is get over there and clean her bird cage, offer to have her son over for a play date, and remember to cherish this balmy day, this day in which I do not have a baseball in my chest. I may have a lump in my throat, but I’ll get over it, as I choose action over sadness. It’s what my sister would have wanted, and it is, next to a cure, what every “Janey” out there needs: for each and every healthy person to realize that there’s always a reason to rise up, celebrate, and be grateful for life.

The True Spirit of Meaningful Work

Dad loved the work he did. He called it simple work. But he simply loved it and people loved him. Whether he was working as a father, a career volunteer, in the church or at the office, he loved his work. And his attitude was infectious.

Mother wore her work like a badge of honor. Every story she told ended with a sigh and… “I did this work for my family.”

Conflicted by my parents’ messages, my dad’s attitude toward work resonated with me. The stronger, more positive spirit won out, and as I recall during my imaginary playtime, I announced happily, “I am off to work now!”

Thinking back on the many gifts I received from my parents on the business of work, what burns brightest is the light that illuminated their lives, expressing their greatest values. The legacy of doing versus just being was a strong lesson. “At work, do your work joyfully,” dad would say adding, ” when it’s family time be present!”

Early on, little ones pretend to be mommies and daddies. As their world grows larger, the young child imitates the role of doctor or police officer. Subliminally they want to serve and make things better! Why does that change?
All too soon the self-absorbed teen searches for ways to chase a paycheck. The shift in values begins. Young adults see their lives fragmented; you get a job, earn a salary and the rest of your time is spent on doing things that bring some happiness.
But I would argue that work and life are connected. Both are driven by the Spirit. What spirit of work do you impart in your home? How are your experiences with work shaping your son or daughter’s attitude and perspective?

The Last Summer

This summer, the family and I visited Wild Rivers, Irvine’s water park, on its last weekend. There had been a few years of false alarms and last-minute lease extensions, but this time we were sure it was the end; when we climbed the highest slides we could see the bulldozers off in the distance. It was a strange and somewhat melancholy time – I once attended a camp next door to Wild Rivers and spent the larger part of a summer going there daily, so it brought back a lot of memories.

The old park was showing its age, a bit – I distinctly remember the two slides I preferred back in the 80s, and they were still there, with only a handful of newer ones. The facilities looked a bit run down, the decor was questionable, and the Jacuzzis were barely warm. But, it was still a great time – the slides were pretty close to as fun now as they were back then, and the location is beautiful, a hidden enclave of rolling hills with nothing but an old water park and an amphitheater.

The thing that bothers me, though – the park and the amphitheater are both being razed to build more houses. I don’t understand the logic here – why destroy the amenities, which are the things that make someplace good to live, in order to just make more room for people to live there? Is there anything in the vision of Irvine except places to shop?

I suppose that Irvine has a great school district, the Spectrum and whatnot and probably has no fear of running out of new residents. Still, I do feel like Orange County, and Irvine in particular, have an overpowering desire to root out all things strange and eccentric, intending to replace things that are more acceptable and, well, safe.

I may be hypocritical in this – I, too, want Orange County to be safe… I have a little one of my own now, and the desire for her to grow up safe and with a good education keeps me here. But, still, I have to wonder – will I recognize this place in ten years? I have already seen suburbia crowd out Huntington Beach and start to encroach on Tustin… Does it stop somewhere?

David N. Scott also reviews awesome things that are not closed over on Our Kind of Stuff.

For Richer or Pourer

An end of the summer event; who doesn’t like a night outdoors?  It’s the last Saturday in August. The big dipper’s appearance overhead is an added treat to the beautiful Hollywood Bowl back drop.  The impressive bandshell shines like the bright sun before she sets in the west. Eighteen thousand concert-goers begin to find a place to nest and dine.

In this fish bowl, the class distinctions mirror life.

You can find the top one per cent comfortably seated in the pool circle. The inhabitants are sport-coated and strapless. Amidst the crisp linens, silverware and crystal, catered meals and fine champagne generously flow. The fragrance of sophistication fades before it reaches the higher elevations.

Terrace boxes comprise the next nine percent of the population. Neatly packaged dinners, plasticware and moderately wines with bold labels are prominently positioned for the discerning eyes to see. Casual elegance and polite conversations buffer the exuberance from above.

And then there is the rest of the world. Tupperware to two buck chuck, food and wine are stored underneath the seats and there is no pretense here. No comparing but lots of sharing. While there is a definite distinction of class and color; the evening’s participants of the ”rest of show”  display decorum and genuine pleasure in open-air experience. Saturday date-night itty bitty black dresses loose fitting collared shirts dot the crowd adding a festive feel to what awaits 36,000 longing ears.

The balmy night air is filled with magic and music and the two and one half hour  stunning performance does not disappoint. Three encores speak volumes. All have been sated. People have come to catch a glimpse of a legendary conductor. God smiles and realizes that lives may not be permanently changed by a philharmonic experience but civility reigns as the masses pour into the streets of a Saturday Night feverish Hollywood lifestyle.

Pandora (yes), Pete Fornatale (way better)

I love music, I like cooking, I hate ironing, no secret there.  Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, Lady Gaga, Springsteen, Dylan, Leonard Cohen, the Stones, the Dead, Sinatra, Fred Hersch playing Jobim, Chopin (yes, I’m a woman of eclectic tastes)  — they add spice to cooking, take the monotony out of ironing. Don’t need a rocket scientist to tell me why or how.

When I got my first iPod, I considered sending a letter to Apple, offering myself for a commercial. Wouldn’t it be cool – someone well over the age of twenty-something dancing around with her iPod? Making playlists is something I love to do.  Doesn’t take a genius. All it takes is a certain patience and passion and appreciation for the art of the segue.

A few Saturdays ago I turn on the radio, one of my favorite stations, WFUV (live from Fordham University). It’s around 6 p.m. I’m in the kitchen, revving up for dinner, on comes a tune that, in an instant, transports me back to my teenage years, Diana Ross and the Supremes, “Stop in the Name of Love.” Soon another song, “Bus Stop,” the Hollies, and my curiosity about the theme of the set list is piqued.  As D.J.’s go, it doesn’t get much better than Pete Fornatale, with his ‘Mixed Bag’ of a program. His voice, recognizable in an instant, is a welcome reminder of the early days of FM radio, the freshness of it all, the boldness to play music without commercial interruption. There are several D.J.’s I like on WFUV, but Pete Fornatale makes a bridge of music, past and present a seamless ride.

So happens that this particular Saturday, September 3rd, is the birthday of Lester Farnsworth Wire, who happens to be the man credited with inventing the traffic light.  What better way to celebrate Wire and his invention than a set list of songs around the theme: Stop. Look. Listen? Or, in my case, listen while I chop.  The “Look” segment has me smiling all the way through, singing along:  “Misty” (yes, Mathis himself), “The Look of Love,” “Turn Around/Look at Me,” “The Way You Look Tonight” (Sinatra-style), “Wonderful Tonight” (duh), “Look in My Eyes,” and a touch of J. Geils (“Looking for a Love”).

This is no simple longing for things the way they used be, the voice of nostalgia yearning to turn the clock back, hitch a ride with Michael J. Fox, do that one thing differently in the past that might alter the course of events. This is all about the reminder that, yes, Pandora gives me what just I ask for – blues guitar legends, jazz essentials, solo piano – but it takes the human touch to give me that much  more.   Someone thought about something unusual on this day, a song popped into his head, maybe a theme that he could have some fun with.  With all the music at his fingertips, and beyond (and maybe with the help of some equally passionate interns or assistants), he gave thought to a string a songs that would be linked in ways far beyond facile categorization.  I imagine, too, he thought about those listeners who’d never heard of Lester Farnsworth Wire and the few who might relish this bit of trivia passed along on radio waves. Maybe one would happen to be married to a man with a head full of bits of information she marvels at. Lester Farnsworth Wire  — ever hear of him? she asks the husband. He takes all of a minute to answer:  Isn’t that the guy who invented the traffic light?

Photo courtesy of Sara Dolin.

Visit Deborah’s website here . . .

The Hole

In a back field of my elementary school, there was a hole. I’m sure I remember this hole larger than it actually was–I was smaller then, after all–but nonetheless, it was legendary. The shallow space was large enough to sit in, which gave it infinite possibilities in our childhood imaginations: a nest for hungry baby birds (or heck–unicorns), a cockpit for aspiring astronauts, a hideout for runaway agents, or anything else we could dream.

It is somewhere near this multi-purpose indent that I met my best friend–or so she has told me. I don’t remember the interaction specifically; we were in first grade. But the day stands out in her mind because it was that day that she worked up the courage to approach me–she described me as “big and scary”–and say “Hi. Can I play with you?”

As everyone knows, the anatomy of the first-grade friendship is pretty simple: if two kids find a toy or activity they both like, there is instant potential for a lifelong bond. Our story started something like that.

We did everything together: traded stickers, built forts, hiked toward ice cream on summer nights, repeatedly campaigned for a clubhouse (then a horse) from our parents, survived ill-fated years in Scouting, and ruined our chances for impressive ACTs by seeing *NSYNC the night before our test. We practically lived at each others’ houses and knew each others’ deepest secrets. Our friendship continued to grow throughout elementary school and stretched out as the safety net through the awkward circus that is junior high. By the time we made it to high school, my friend was often boasting the virtues of our decade-long friendship.

Then, around junior year, we started drifting apart. Nothing happened, really; there was never a big fallout or even a family move. But something imperceptible shifted. For the first time in our lives, we started pursuing different interests, meeting new friends (in our large high school, this was easy to do), and having gradually shorter conversations.

We stayed connected, though. We reassured each other through senior year of high school and dried the tears that preceded the transition to college. We visited each other’s respective colleges and sampled our vastly different lifestyles.

But then… It was as though I looked up, and she was gone. My fiancee asked me one day what she had been up to, and I realized I had no idea. Our rare Facebook chats went something like this:

Her: Hey. What’s up?
Me. Not much. Doing <insert current activity here>
Her: That’s cool. How are your parents?
Me: Fine. Parent-like.
Her: That’s good.
Me: What are you up to?
Her: Not much <working on homework, finishing class, etc.>
Me <textually sarcastic>: Sounds like fun.

And then the blinking cursor would sit unattended until one of us forgot about the conversation entirely and logged off. I wondered how it had happened that we, two girls who grew up knowing we’d be in each others’ weddings, now somehow had nothing to say to each other.

I haven’t been back to my elementary school in years, but I’d be willing to bet that they have filled in that hole in the back field. Maybe it was filled for safety reasons, or because however it got there had since gone away. Maybe whatever purpose it once served was no longer. It’s hard to know.

But what does it mean that our friendship started near that space? What was that hole, really? As kids, all my best friend and I needed was that physical space in our lives to represent endless possibilities. As we grew older, the possibilities of our futures stretched out before us, and our friendship and imaginations filled in the gaps.

Over time, it was our experiences that started to fill in that space; experiences shaped who we were and who we would become. I don’t know what set us on different paths, but time transforms possibilities into choices; to steps; to new lives. Like seedlings in the wind, we took root in different places. We grew in different directions. The me of today wouldn’t recognize my 12th-grade self. That me, the girl scared to leave her high school, would be a stranger.

Perhaps it’s that stranger who was her friend; maybe that scared senior couldn’t transform while remaining in the cocoon of our friendship. Maybe I grew my wings precisely because I let go of my friend and, with her, the person I’d always been.

Looking back, I love how far I’ve flown. I relish my post-secondary experiences because they’re the first stories I’ve written for myself. I’m proud that I’ve scripted a life penned by my own heart. But sometimes I remember that, in the history books of our lives, friends can bring us the chapters we’ve forgotten. When we’re too tired to write another word, lasting friendships can tuck us in and re-read us those parts that never got published. And it is those times when I wonder what chapters are missing from my story. What have I forgotten about my childhood self? What tales won’t ever be told to my grandchildren? If that first-grade friend could help me revisit our playground field, what would our imaginations discover there? I may never know–or maybe the chapter of our reuniting just hasn’t yet been penned.

And so, to the friend who had the courage to say hello that day in first grade, thank you. Some of our specifics may have slipped away, but I’m glad to know our books start with the same chapters. That limitless place we used to play may have long since been filled and forgotten, but it hardly matters.

Because I know what all architects remember: that building even the tallest skyscrapers starts one way–with a hole in the ground.

Dashing Gray is a 20-something lifelong learner who works in higher education and embraces her semi-yuppie, child-free life. Recently engaged to a wonderful black man, she spends way too much time in coffee shops drinking high-calorie espresso drinks and blogging out the many questions of life and weddings. Because life is never just black and white, learn about her adventures navigating — and embracing — The Beauty of Gray.

A determined life

Grandpa left us last week. Finally, after 94 years, he left us. It’s strange. There was a time (was it only last month?) when I couldn’t imagine a world without him. He was always a part of my life. I wake up to the sun, and sleep under the stars, and just like those celestial constants, Grandpa was always here. No matter where I was in the world, he was always with me, somewhere beneath the same sun and stars.

Every couple of weeks, I would call Grandpa to see how he was doing. He always answered like he was expecting your call, and greeted you cheerfully with the time of day, dragging it out— “Gooood morning!” or afternoon, or whatever—and no matter how your day had been going to that point, it was suddenly better. The phone call would usually lead to a shopping trip, and lunch at his favorite restaurant. I would walk beside him and his walker as we trundled slowly up and down grocery store aisles picking up vitamins and mouthwash and his favorite peanut butter cheese crackers. Then it was off to the Cozy Diner for a sandwich and a cup of coffee.

We would end the afternoon chatting quietly in his apartment. Grandpa would speak wistfully of days and people gone by. I would listen with eyes closed, comforted as always by the sound of his voice. As I walked out the door, he would send me off with a hearty “God bless you!” and an admonition to be careful.

Grandpa was in the twilight of his life. He had outlived two wives and his beloved son, yet he chose to remain cheerful and as full of life as his old body would allow. He had the uncanny ability to slough off pain like a worn overcoat and leave it where it fell, having no time for acrimony or regret. His life remained full because he willed it so.

The time came when Grandpa could no longer do simple things like shower, or even walk. He went to the hospital for the last time in early August. At first, he endured breathing treatments and exercise regimens. He realized early on, though, that things were not going to get better. Grandpa had always been the physical and emotional caretaker of our family, a true patriarch in every sense of the word. This new reality simply would not do. Grandpa refused to be a burden on anybody.

“I’m ready to go when the lord is ready to take me,” Grandpa said one day. With that, he refused breathing treatments and exercise of any kind. He wanted comfort care only—morphine and water and a pillow fluff every now and then.

The vigil began.  On the wall in front of his bed hung a picture of him and his first wife, my Grandmother, who passed in 1986. On another wall, there was a picture of him and his second wife, Miriam, who passed in 2005. When he wasn’t surrounded by family, I imagined him nodding off to sleep with thoughts of seeing them again.

Toward the middle of the second week, Grandpa fell asleep one day and never woke up. In the end, he died as he had lived, on his own terms and with minimal fuss. He lived as he wanted, as long as he wanted.

We should all be so lucky.

Noise

I’ve been acutely aware recently how I always feel that I must be quiet. Don’t make noise. Don’t let anyone know I am here or exist. Hearing a lot of noise bothers me. Loud music, screaming, motorcycles, crowds … all of these and more.

Making noise myself sometimes scares me. Will I get in trouble? Suddenly I hear my mother’s voice, “Now be quiet or you’ll wake your dad. He was drunk and if I woke him he would punish me. Anytime he was drunk, which was often, I had to walk on tip-toes. I couldn’t laugh and play. That’s when I learned that it was dangerous to make noise.

I’ve never learned to scream like I hear children do today. Part of me hates the screaming and another part wishes I could scream with them.

I am hoping that as I allow my own wild woman to emerge that she will teach me how to be loud, noisy and perhaps even scream!

The Everyday Hero

He said he wasn’t out to be the most famous pilot – just the oldest.

My uncle didn’t say that, however, until a bit later in his career.  In 1911, when there were no instructors, he taught himself to fly in a wrecked aircraft he had purchased and rebuilt after it had crashed and killed its previous pilot.  He spent several years barnstorming and air-racing throughout the Midwest with Charles Lindbergh and other early aviators.

Then a funny thing happened: in 1919 a prominent Kansas City physician hired him as a contract pilot for emergency surgery missions around the region, and John Kerr “Tex” LaGrone settled down to become an institution.

He had served as a civilian flight instructor for the Army at Love Field in Dallas during World War I, and in Kansas City he continued training new pilots, including quite a few women.  He was the first pilot to transport a high-level political candidate when Franklin Roosevelt hired him while running for Vice President in 1920.  Tex rushed reporters and photographers to important events; he saved a sick child by flying medicine to her at a distant hospital; he even saved a baseball game when the visiting team’s only pitcher was injured and Tex was enlisted to zip over to a nearby town and bring back a substitute.  The former daredevil became known for safety and caution in the new world of commercial aviation.

His new life wasn’t without hazards, of course: early aircrafts were fragile things with fabric skins and wooden propellers.  When engines malfunctioned or storms threatened, pilots had to put down wherever open space could be found.  Tex once landed on the front nine of a golf course.  Even their planned landing fields in those early days were often just that – fields – and they had their own hazards.  When landing with Roosevelt aboard, Tex’s plane hit a rock hidden in a clump of grass and nosed over, breaking its propeller.  Even more hazardous were hungry livestock:  “You know in those days stock caused us a lot of trouble,” Tex explained to a reporter.  “There was a salty taste to the fabric and I lost several planes left in pastures because hogs, cattle, mules and horses discovered airplanes were a tasty delicacy.”

Renting some hangar space at the local airfield in 1922, he established the Tex LaGrone Flying Service and also became the nation’s first dealer of Waco airplanes.  Lindbergh dropped in often and always wanted to fly whatever spiffy new Waco his friend had there.

Tex started the tradition of delivering a planeload of Kansas City Star newspapers to the college football crowd at the annual Thanksgiving Day game between Kansas and Missouri.  The deliveries were stopped during World War II when Tex sold his private airplanes to the Army and served as a test pilot of B-25 bombers for the North American Aircraft company.  He resumed the popular tradition in 1948, but soon thereafter his health began failing.  The Dean of Kansas City Aviation died of cancer at his home in April 1953, at age 61.

If you walk through the Frontiers of Flight museum at Love Field in Dallas, you’ll see, in between the Charles Lindbergh exhibit and the display devoted to World War II heroes such as Jimmy Doolittle, a small exhibit with some photos of Tex, and a particular walnut propeller with one blade broken off.  Most of his stories, however, are contained in a thick folder of newspaper clippings, letters, and photos handed down to me by his widow.

Lindbergh became an aviation legend by braving the vast Atlantic alone; Doolittle did so by leading a daring, desperate raid on Tokyo in a flight of B-25’s.  My uncle, by contrast, was known for his many small everyday exploits.  Lindbergh summed up the man’s career best:  “Tex LaGrone has been flying since 1911 and has got a kick out of every minute of it.”  And in Kansas City, Tex lived to be the oldest pilot.

Author’s note:  more photos of Tex LaGrone are at http://www.earlyaviators.com/elagrone.htm

To Catch a Thief

"Will Work for Outback Red Sweater"

As a high school junior, I realized my three-bucks-an-hour babysitting gigs were no longer cutting it to procure the things that really mattered, like sweaters from the Limited, Wet-n-Wild lipstick, and used cassette tapes from Repeat the Beat.

I was tired of sitting around on my neighbors’ couches eating ice cream from their freezers and flipping through their cable channels for R-rated movies while their children bounced off the walls upstairs. It was time to get a job – a real job! where I could stand behind a counter reading Tiger Beat magazine and filing my nails.

Landing a gig was almost effortless, thanks to my strong Eastern European work ethic and dress code which dictated nothing less than a suit and briefcase for my interview at Baskin Robbins Express. But that wasn’t where I ended up getting my first part-time job – it was at a classy discount department store, where I was assigned to back cash register duty three nights a week.

As with most things in my life, I was petrified. There were just too many ways people could pay for their purchases and it was nearly impossible to keep the various procedures straight.  The constant stream of sales and promotions further confused me, and I lived in perpetual fear of returns and people who required that I count back their change.

But I was cute and friendly, so they kept me around.

Every evening around six-thirty, the undercover security guard would stop by my register for a chat. Rob was a burly man who always wore suspenders with a black T-shirt and fedora, and he pursued shoplifters with the zeal of a convert. Everyone was a potential thief, no one could be trusted – not even old lady Byer in the ladies’ fitting room.

“See that broad over there, red purse, bad perm? I’m keeping an eye on her,” Rob would say, leaning into my counter and nodding conspiratorially toward the unsuspecting shopper. “Ten bucks says she’s wearing five bathing suits underneath that dress.”

Rob took it upon himself during these chats to school me in the ways of criminal detection. He warned me never to trust a person who was walking too fast and taught me how to recognize bands of marauding gypsies. Sometimes he would give me pop quizzes about potential thieves.

“Okay, quick! Who’s the crook, the lady in the sundress or the dude with the bandanna wrapped around his head?”

“Uh . . . bandanna dude? I guess?”

“Wrong, grasshopper!” Rob would say, smiling with glee. “It’s sundress lady, and I’ll tell you why…”

Even as he ran down shoplifting facts and figures, Rob’s eyes would be darting around in his head, always on the lookout for someone making off with a pair of leg warmers or a pretty scarf. I even witnessed a few momentous occasions when he stopped mid-sentence to chase down a criminal in plain sight. On those nights when he hit the jackpot, he’d always come by later to give me a recap, play-by-play. I imagined he had a wall in his basement with names of petty thieves engraved in blood.

One Saturday I was scheduled for the busy afternoon shift and Rob was not around. There was a big sale going on, and even my usually quiet back register had a line of customers snaking down the aisle. I was pretty frazzled – what with all the coupons and promotional codes being bandied about -  and therefore not on top of my game when an attractive middle-aged man walked up wearing a camel hair coat.

“I’m just buying this coat, and I’d like to wear it out of the store,” he said, holding up the price tag, which I promptly scanned in. After he’d left (in a hurry), I realized with horror that I’d sold him the coat for $9.99.  He’d clearly switched the tag on purpose and left with a few hundred dollars worth of merchandise on his back.

I broke out in a cold, nervous sweat, prepared to be in the worst trouble of my life. I had been face-to-face with the enemy, and I had let him get away. Surely I would be fired from Stein Mart and could never work in town again. My permanent record would be irreparably tarnished and my hopes of attending college dashed. I’d end up a blogger housewife in Cleveland, sporadically posting Lithuanian recipes and cute things my kids have said.

But even worse than this, I had disappointed Rob. He would never forgive me for letting that shoplifter go, especially since the scenario was one he’d drilled me on many times before. It was probably the easiest case study in Rent-A-Cop school, and I had failed it royally. I could just picture my mentor, sadly shaking his fedora-clad head.

I was never found out, but lived with the shame of my mistake for years, beating in secret like the tell-tale heart. And I avoided Rob for the rest of my time at the store, though I did eventually confess my error to our parish priest.

Thanks to the experience, I now have a freakishly accurate theft detection radar when I’m out and about. Once I saw a dude try to leave Drug Mart with an unpaid bottle of Snapple and the strength of my judgmental gaze alone caused him to retreat. I’m always on the lookout for people walking too quickly through Nordstroms and am prepared to tackle them should the need arise.

If I find out that post-it pad on your kitchen counter is from the stock room at work, I will report you in two seconds flat.

I’m doing it for Rob.

Read more of Rima’s writing at RimaRama.com.

Glasses: how many are too many?

the glasses in question...

I can’t get anything done these days. I blame it on my glasses: all three pairs.
I am actively wearing three pair of prescription eyeglasses.

  • Outdated pair outfitted with every add-on Eyeglass World has to offer (this goes over big with folks such as myself who cannot see the Big E on the eye chart)
  • Prescription Sunglasses *New
  • Computer Glasses *New  These glasses ‘work’ only if the area of interest is ~16 inches from my nose. I now carry an expandable yardstick in my Vera Bradley bag to verify distances.
  • So, why am I having problems carrying projects to fruition? Certainly seeing clearly must help, right? Yes, no question about that. The problem surfaces with the ever-present question, “What pair of glasses should I be wearing?”

    Without consternation, I selected my prescription sunglasses for my sojourn to the grocery store; my quandary mode, however, hit full force when I walked into the store. The easiest plan was to leave on my sunglasses, run in, grab my multi-grain Saltines and zip back out the front door. But, ah, whoever said life was easy OR that I could run in Publix and grab only one item? Fifteen minutes later I find myself, arms laden with groceries, in the checkout line perusing life through Tommy Hilfiger’s shaded sunglasses. Suddenly I feel like a kid playing dress-up standing inside a grocery store with my sunglasses on. You say, “ Take the damn things off, ridgely.” Oh, if life were so simple. Remember, I can’t see the Big E and my arms are full of groceries. I can’t get to my other glasses. Besides which pair would I get? The debit card scanner is about 16” from my nose, I’d be tempted to grab those, but then I might try to walk out the front door and hit the Rug Doctor Display instead. So, Maybe it’s just as well I look like a snooty suburban housewife with my sunglasses on and my sunbonnet hanging demurely down my back. Dimly punching in my PIN# and the definitive NO to the never-ending cash back? question, I walk out the front door anxious to be a woman in the right place, at the right time, with the right glasses on.

    All this discussion about eyeglasses is nostalgic. As a little girl, I can remember my grandmother asking for her reading glasses. Wearing readers is a rite of passage for the boomers; sit next to a sharp looking couple and you may hear one say to the other, “Forget it, these aren’t going to work, I’m a 2.25 and these are only 1.75.” If you know what they are talking about, accept it. You are middle-aged. You need to wear your reading glasses. Period. Don’t fight it. And if you see a blonde lady struggling with obvious indecision, help her out. Go with the sunglasses- they are good for distance- and she usually needs to get moving somewhere. But, hey, I’m open to suggestions.

    read ridgely’s site here

    photo taken by author

    Lessons and Dreams

    I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did. But people will never forget how you made them feel.

    Maya Angelou

    Aging, death and dying. I seem to be preoccupied lately with these things. I’m not afraid of them; they happen. I know that I will die. Right now, it’s not the passing that frightens me. I’m way past that. It’s what I’ll leave behind. If I died right now, what would happen to my kids? They have so much learning to do. While sometimes I think that there’s not much I can give them, I know deep down that I would leave an incredible void in their young lives if I were suddenly gone. It’s not arrogance that tells me this. I am old enough to have lost, and there is much more yet to lose. I know the ache of an empty space: that endless yearning for what was and will never be again.   It is my life’s work to prepare my girls for that moment. The moment when I am not here.

    I have dreams, sometimes, of people who have left me. A few months ago, I remember lying in my bed in the black quiet of a predawn fall morning. I was in that magical state wherein reality and dreams juxtapose on a backdrop of warm blankets and fuzzy shadows: rabbits in topcoats glanced frantically at their pocket watches while the glowing green clock on my nightstand foretold a dire future of showers and coffee and bills to be paid. I sank deeper into my dreams, the clock be damned.

    There I was, sitting at my mother’s old yellow Formica table. We were silently having coffee. Her hair was still impossibly curly and dark black where it wasn’t graying. She was wearing a tattered blue housecoat. She smiled and sipped, and I did the same. Why must the dead always be quiet? I wanted to hear her voice. I wanted Mom to tell me I needed a shave. I wanted her to tell me that she had driven by my house the other day and noticed my lawn needed a trim, and what would people think? Yes, Mom, I would say. I’ll get to it. But we just looked at each other and drank. It was pretty uneventful, as dreams go.  I was frustrated.

    Then Mom looked at me over her coffee cup. Silently, and with more eloquence than mere words could achieve, her eyes told me that I was still her little boy and that I was loved, now and always. My frustration left me; peace settled over me like a warm quilt on a cold night.

    The alarm rattled and the dream was over. Mom was gone again, for now, but her lesson for me remained: while a part of her was gone, the best part of her was still with me—the love that she had for me, and I for her. It is what I will leave for my children.  They will walk in the knowledge that they were loved, unconditionally, and forever. That will always be with them.

    In the end, that may not be as good as a hug. But it sure beats a void.

    image source:  http://www.mnartists.org/work.do?rid=61237

    Where Have All the Stewardesses Gone?

    come fly with me

    As I waited to be scanned in with my electronic boarding pass, I had a momentary flash back to days long ago. Some of the things I remember about flying in the 70′s

    • People dressed up to fly- they did not get their outfit out of the hamper
    • Flight attendants all looked like Barbie dolls, not greeters at WalMart
    • Flight attendants were called stewardesses
    • Kids were given a set of wings, and or coloring pages during flight
    • Food was free
    • Life Insurance was available for purchase at most airports
    • Smoking allowed on most flights

    What prompted my 1970 flying flashback was a tie-dyed personal bag on the shoulder of a teenager in front of me. You do remember tie-dye, right? Wearing tie-dyed clothes made a statement in my day. S and I were not allowed to wear tie-dyed clothes, or heaven help us the accompanying peace sign necklace (the communists were behind the peace sign).

    I am anxious to reach my seat as I have walked 36 gates with a lead filled laptop case. For $100 I would have sold it at the Food Court. I guess I needed a sign?

    My single positive thought as I collapsed in a seat at my gate was congratulating myself for not wearing my cute little pink sandals. For this travel day, I wore my Dansko clogs. OMG what will I be doing next- wearing Velcro hush puppies?

    I finally sit down in my seat, 13D. This is after I accuse another passenger of sitting in my seat- maybe counting is one of the skills you lose first? Knowing I just have a few minutes, I quickly call LT to let him know I am on the plane. The last thing he says to me “Make sure you are not going to Charleston, West Virginia.” I hang up, and casually ask my neighbor if we are going to South Carolina. After a somewhat odd look, he replies he hopes so. I tell him the destination is not important anymore I have gone through hell to get here. Where this flight is going, I am going. If it is going to Charleston, West Virginia instead of Charleston, South Carolina so be it. He is staring now. I flash him that million dollar smile.

    I wrench my diet coke & Kindle out of my Vera Bradley purse and settle in for the short flight. I triple dog dare any crew member to tell me to put it away. A crew member just announced I had a life vest under my seat- nada.* After stopping and questioning said crew member, he admits/concludes there are NOT any life vests on the air craft. My Kindle is the least of his problems.

    I quickly go over an escape plan with my neighbor- he just nods.

    None of this would have been necessary if the stewardesses were still on board.

    Where are you?

    My focus on my missing life preserver came as a  direct result of reading The Survivors Club by Ben Sherwood. As he aptly reports in this must-read book when it comes to survival, there are things you cannot control- like the plane crashing. Yet, there are things you can control, like verifying the location of your life vest and the nearest exit. So much for my survival.

    read ridgely’s personal site here

    photo courtesy of dreamstime

    Spellbound By The Stars

    Unique mother/daughter experiences are difficult to come by in today’s busy world.   My eldest is turning twenty-four this weekend, and recently I was fortunate to have spent five fun filled days with her in Hollywood, California.   Neither of us had been to Hollywood before, so attending the Turner Classic Movie Film Festival together was a dream come true.  We didn’t just visit Hollywood; we took it by storm.

    I had always enjoyed classic movies but had not introduced my daughter to them until several years ago.   Around that period, she was working through a very dark point in her life after having lost several close friends in a short amount of time.   Classic movies provided her with a temporary escape from reality.   As a result she became a TCM junkie and I soon followed in her footsteps.   I promised her that if she got accepted to nursing school, I would fulfill her dream and take her to Hollywood.  Darn if she didn’t take me up on it.

    Traveling together and maneuvering LAX for the first time, was a bit daunting.  However, Hubby had arranged for a car to pick us up since he knew there was no way in hell I was going to drive in LA traffic.  My guess is he was also being preemptive, knowing that I would have to share a hotel room and bath with my daughter for four nights.  After twenty-seven years of marriage, he has become the master of keeping the stress factor low.

    Our first day, we decided to tour Warner Brothers studio.  There weren’t any star sightings, but we saw some very cool movie artifacts.   We did get to see the back lot where they film “True Blood” the set for “Friends,” and the sound stage where “Harry’s Law” is taped.  I must say, it looks much more impressive on TV.

    We made it back to our hotel just in time to get ready for the TCM Red Carpet event.

    Cocktail attire was required and TCM held the event at Grauman’s Chinese Theater.   The red carpet was laid out and the barriers were up for crowd control, just like on Oscar night.   My daughter and I strolled down the carpet attempting to look glamorous, but paled in comparison to the stars that were attending.   For a few moments, we fanaticized that we were Hollywood stars and everyone was taking our picture.  The highlight of the evening was viewing “An American in Paris” with Gene Kelly, from the red velvet seats in Grumman’s.

    Seeing all of the foot and handprints of movies stars from various decades outside Grauman’s was iconic. Standing in Cary Grants footprints followed by George Clooney’s proved to be hot flash central for me, while my daughter took it to be a part of living history.

    The Hollywood Museum, which is in the original Max Factor Building, was equally impressive with its vast display of memorabilia.   My daughter fixated on the red ruby slippers from the Wizard of Oz, movie costumes and Hannibal Lecter’s jail cell from “Silence of the Lambs” I on the other hand was swooning over Cary Grant’s Rolls Royce and Jean Harlow’s 1932 Packard Phaeton.  We were both rather disturbed by the Caliber from 1923, used to determine a stars facial measurement in relation to the projected perfect facial measurements. It looked like a torture device out of a “Saw” movie.

    Our film festival was not complete without the wonderful panel discussions and autograph signings of various leading men and woman from the golden era.   Of course seeing stars like Alec Baldwin, Warren Beatty, Julie Andrews, Debbie Reynolds, Mickey Rooney and Leslie Caron, only added to the experience.   We also were in attendance for the viewing of Spartacus, which was introduced by Kirk Douglas and Breakfast at Tiffany’s, where Julie Andrews spoke during a tribute to the director, Blake Edwards.

    Our trip ended on a unique note, when our driver for our trip back to LAX was not only dressed in classic Hollywood movie garb, but he was also a classic movie fan.   He drove us through some beautiful Hollywood neighborhoods while he played tunes form the 20’s and 30’s.  It was the perfect way to leave the allure of Hollywood behind us.

    “Do you think Dad paid extra for this?” I whispered to my daughter.

    “No,“ she replied.  “Even Dad is not this creative.”

    Visit Laurie’s personal site “Chaos, Canines and Cabernet” here.

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