Saturday, October 10, 2009

Don't judge me...

I hate it when a stranger looks at you, and you know that right now they're judging you in some way.

I bring this up because mom is out here visiting right now, and the thing is, she fell in the grocery store last week. One of those big metal wheeled ladders that they use to stock the upper shelves was blocking the shelf that she wanted something from, so she tried to climb through it, tripped on the metal ankle-level bar, and smashed the side of her face in against one of the vertical supports. Gushed blood everywhere, had to get 4 stitches in the side of her face, and now is sporting a HUGE shiner.

Which means a number of things. First, it meant that our first activity together upon her arrival was for me to take her down to the Palo Alto Medical Foundation's urgent care facility to get the stitches taken out, since her doctor told her they should come out on what turned out to be her first day here. It had been almost 3 whole weeks since the last time I had to deal with a medical issue, so I'd been feeling a void in my life anyhow.

But it also means that whenever we walk up to a counter together, for lunch or something, people look at her, see her enormous black eye, and then look at me. And I can see them thinking. It's painfully obvious what they're thinking- "Oh my god, is he BEATING this poor old woman? Does he HIT her??"

After the first few times, I got so annoyed, I almost wanted to pre-emptively shout "SHE FELL IN THE STORE, GODDAMMIT!!", but let's face it- that isn't going to help. In fact, it's just going to make it worse. "Riiiiiiight," they'll think, "She fell in the store. Uh huh. Didn't Suzanne Vega write a song about that?"

Yes, she did. You probably remember it:

"My name is Mary
I fell in the grocery store
I live in Saint Loo-ee
You've probably never been there before.

If you see me
With a black eye
And I'm there with a
Shifty looking kinda guy

Just don't ask me what it is
Just don't ask me what it is
Just don't ask me, what it is."

And of course, it doesn't help that I look nothing like her, so it's not like people can assume I'm her son or something. People probably just think I'm some thug that's beating up an old woman for her social security checks.

The irony of that, especially with the grocery store connection, is that when I was about 3, my mom would often take me grocery shopping. My grandma always used to sing an old song called "Let Me Call You Sweetheart" to me to make me go to sleep, and I really liked it, so while I was sitting there in the grocery cart I would amuse myself by singing that song at the top of my lungs. Despite how obviously adorable that is, my mom was a little embarrassed by the spectacle I made of myself, bellowing that song continuously, barely even stopping to breathe, so she would park the cart at one end of the aisle, and then walk up that aisle and down the next, grabbing everything she needed in her hands, all the while pretending like I wasn't her kid- like she really had no idea whose little brown kid that was belting out old showtunes. And it probably worked, since I look nothing like her.

But in the great cycle of life, we often switch roles with our parents, and now I find myself shaking my head embarrassedly at my mother's grocery store antics:

Mom: "So, I think this next year I'm going to focus on my health. I need to keep exercising and stuff. Then I'll figure out what I'm going to do next."

Me: "That sounds like a great plan, mom. A couple of steps toward that goal, that you might want to seriously consider, are: (1) not forgetting to take your damn medicine all the time, and (2) not doing stupid shit like climbing around a metal ladder like you're a frickin' chimpanzee, rather than ask the 23-year-old stock boy to move it for you. I think you should make those things part of your health strategy."

So for all you dear readers who have read the stories in this blog and wondered to yourselves: "Why the hell does he do such stupid shit all the time?", I have a simple, one-word answer for you:

Genetics.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Stirring the Pot: Chapter 5: Gay Marriage

I saw today that DC is about to pass an ordinance making gay marriage legal in the District. The usual suspects in Congress will kick and fuss and try to block it, and will likely fail. Which is fine with me.

But on the larger issue of gay marriage, here's where I stand:

Governments should not be in the business of recognizing marriages. Hetero, gay, whatever, the government shouldn't have anything to do with that. The government should only recognize civil unions between any two consenting adults. Civil unions have all the legal benefits of marriage (or should anyway- I'd fix that too if it were not so), for instance, joint property, health and retirement benefits, etc, but avoid all the religious overtones that the word "marriage" carries with it. I'd have all governments stop issuing "marriage licenses" immediately.

This way, any 2 adults who want to make a commitment to each other can, and they can get all the benefits associated with that. And, people who want to include or exclude other people from a religious concept like marriage can be free to do so. In this way, society can be supportive of equal rights, and people who want to discriminate due to whatever their religious beliefs are can do so. Everyone gets to live the way they want.

But I doubt this is going to happen anytime soon.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

I lost on Jeopardy, ba-by...

I got back from a quick trip to LA this week...

Ed called me the other day to tell me he was going to be on Jeopardy, and that none of his other friends would be able to come. So, taking a quick look at the schedule, I decided to skip out of town for 2 days and see him on the show.

Southwest is magical: on 24 hours notice, I got a round-trip ticket to LA for $29 each way. That is a thing of beauty. Ed and I agreed to share a hotel room, and I got a rental car from Advantage for $14/day.

All these arrangements went down Sunday night, which means all day Monday I was slammed, seeing people back-to-back-to-back until it was time to race out of the office in a desperate attempt to get to the airport on time. As veterans of this blog know, desperate attempts by me to get to the airport on time pretty much always end well; it's the times where I try to be responsible that inevitably lead to disaster. And sure enough, with some hyper-aggressive driving on the 101, a little bit of shuttle karma, and a short line at security, I managed to make the flight a full 20 minutes before takeoff. Another job well done.

I spent the 55 minute flight to LA trying to solve a Rubik's Cube. Earlier that day I gave an interview to a prospective tutor named Leyan Lo, who until 2006 was the world record holder in Rubik's Cube solving, at 11.13 seconds. He had me mix up a cube for him, and then had me time him. It took him just over 16 seconds, and I have to tell you, it was amazing to watch. He then proceeded to teach me how to solve it, and presented me at the end of the interview with some instructions for how to do it. It was huge fun to solve it there with him, but I wanted to see if I could retain the knowledge long enough to do it again on my own later.

The verdict: nope.

My dance teacher (perhaps somewhat ironically named Gaye) always used to say that you had to learn something 5 times before you really learned it. How to solve a Rubik's Cube appears to follow that rule. Even with the written instructions I got bogged down.

That said, he gave a great math and physics interview, so he's almost certainly coming on board.

Anyway, in short order we landed in LA, and the girl next to me, who had been with some amusement watching me flail even with step-by-step instructions in front of my face, wished me luck. I headed out to find the shuttle to Advantage.

Now, Advantage rent-a-car is like the opposite of Advantage Testing; Advantage rent-a-car appears to be the cheapest option out there, with a service level to match. I realized after waiting a while that because it's a very small operation, the shuttle might only come when they were actually expecting someone, which meant waiting another 20 minutes, and I hadn't remembered to write down the number of the place, only the reservation number. So I hit upon a Brilliant Idea.

My Brilliant Idea was this: rental car places are all located in pretty much the same area, so why bother waiting for the Advantage shuttle? I could just jump the next major car rental shuttle, and then just spot for the Advantage lot.

So, 10 seconds later I jumped the Hertz shuttle, and off we went. As we passed through a light, I saw a sign that indicated that Alamo and Advantage were up the road. So, when we pulled into Hertz, I got out and started walking.

And walking.

And walking.

And walking.

It turns out that LAX is bordered by a pretty large, slowly decaying, totally-deserted-at-night industrial area, which is sprinkled here and there with car rental companies. Not, it turns out, especially adjacent to each other.

Ed called me on the phone as I was walking through a little urban meadow of broken concrete and shattered crack vials, and asked what the hell was taking so long, because he was starving. I informed him that (a) I was starving too because I hadn't actually had time to eat that day, and in fact had last had a meal over 24 hours previously, and (b) was trying to focus on finding the goddamned car rental place.

At that point, I was saved by... wait for it... the Advantage shuttle. Not that it picked me up or anything, but I saw it go whizzing by, probably on its way back from the airport, where it failed to find me in this universe but presumably *did* find me in some of the other multitudes of universes in which I did smart, normal-people things like sit down and fucking wait 20 minutes, or, you know, write down the car rental phone number or something. I saw the shuttle disappear down a little side street.

I ran after it, and got to the corner just in time to see it distantly turning right. So I headed down that street for quite some time, and then eventually stumbled upon Advantage car rental.

Like I said, it's a small rental company, and probably doesn't get a lot of business at 9pm on a Monday night, so there were only 2 people working, and each one was helping someone. I was excited since there was no one ahead of me in line, figuring that that would imply a very short time until I was once again on the road in LA.

But, I guess when you're stuck at work on a Monday night, and there aren't many customers, your incentive is to go ve-e-e-e-e-e-ry slowly, as a means of alleviating the boredom. It took a solid 15 minutes before one of the 2 guys finished, and who knows how long they'd been helping these people before I showed up.

But I did finally get my little Hyundai Elantra, which made me nostalgic for Julio, my Hyundai Elantra with the stupid little spoiler that I had from 1995-2003, before trading it to Plaid for a pile of used science fiction books so his kid would have a car to drive. After all, I had just moved to NYC, and knew I wouldn't be needing a car for the foreseeable. I got in this newer, less charactered Elantra and headed for the Radisson in Culver City.

Once there, Ed and I greeted each as we are wont to do:

Me: "Yo dude, good to see you!"

Ed: "Yo dawg, what's up?"

Me: "Dude, I'm really fucking hungry. Let's get out of here and get some food."

Ed: "Me too. But first I have to finish dealing with my clothes here."

Me: "WHAT? You couldn't have fucking done that during the SIX HOURS you've already been here? Can't this wait?"

Ed: "Fuck you. Listen, I don't iron. What I do is hang my clothes in the bathroom and turn on the shower, and let the steam take care of most of the wrinkles. So I did that tonight. But then my brother called and I was on the phone with him for an hour and forgot that my clothes were in the bathroom getting steamed. I just got off the phone with him 2 minutes before you got here. Here, feel this shirt."

I feel the shirt. It is very, very, VERY damp.

Me: "Dude, you are fucking retarded."

Ed: "Hey- why don't you shut the fuck up and let me finish dealing with this, huh? How 'bout that?"

There are some days where I feel that, if Ed and I hadn't each become high-end tutors, we'd instead have become Vincent and Jules (John Travolta and Samuel Jackson) from Pulp Fiction.

So I waited for Ed, and then we headed off to Tito's Tacos. Mmmmmmm, Tito's. I don't know what Tito is doing there, but he makes the best damned taco-stand tacos on earth, bar none. We had a long leisurely dinner and played catch up, and then headed back to the hotel.

The next morning, Ed had to be on a 730am shuttle, so he had his wake-up call set for 530am. Now, for me there is no significant difference between the time it takes for me to get ready for a special event, and the time it takes for me to get ready normally. Basically the entire difference can be attributed to (1) putting on shoes that actually have laces and therefore need to be tied, and (2) tying a tie. So all that tying of stuff adds up to about 2 extra minutes tops.

For Ed, there is no significant difference between the time it takes him to get ready for a special event, and the time it would take a really really neurotic woman to get ready for the same event. I'm not sure why that is- I mean, he's not putting on makeup or anything. At least, I don't think he is; if he is, it isn't making him any prettier. The 2 hours of time he allotted was supposed to allow for him to have a leisurely breakfast, but he ended up only having time to grab coffee to go. Again, I'm not sure why that is- I had my head under my pillow, trying vainly to sleep through all his pimping and preening.

As a contestant guest, I was supposed to be at the studio at 1030am. So, I got out of bed around 1010, was out the door at 1020, and arrived at the Sony lot at 1030. Fortunately, the intake process for all the guests and just random people who wanted to be in the studio audience took long enough for me to park the car and join in. They made us buddy up with someone for the long walk through the forest of sound stages, and I wound up talking to the new husband of one of the contestants. They were also from NYC, and he was a biochemistry Ph.D., so I spent the walk trying to recruit him into Advantage.

Once in the studio, the guy who announces for Jeopardy explained how the day would go for us. They film 3 shows in the morning, take a mandatory 1-hr lunch break, and then film 2 more shows. So, an entire week of Jeopardy happens in 1 day. Alex Trabek simply goes backstage and changes suits in the break between shows, and then also comes out and takes questions from the audience. That's the stuff I remember being told. Now, Ed swears that he was told by the Jeopardy folks that we, the contestant guests, were ALSO told not to look at, try to communicate with, or otherwise acknowledge the future contestants, who sit in the section next to us while they await their turn up on the stage, on the grounds that the Jeopardy folks need to ensure that there's not even a snowball's chance of any cheating occurring.

I guess, in retrospect, that would explain why, when the contestants filed in and starting sitting down in the section next to us, and I started waving, flashing 2 thumbs up, and smiling encouragingly at Ed, all the other contestant guests seemed oddly restrained, and Ed seemed, well, sheepish.

Ah well. I, uh, may have drifted in and out a little bit during that spiel at the beginning. And following directions has never been one of my core competencies anyway.

I brought some ACTs with me to work on, anticipating that there would be a lot of down time. But actually, there surprisingly wasn't. But I also used the paper I brought with me to keep score of how many answers I knew all throughout the day, just to see if I had any chance as a contestant myself. Basically, it broke down like this:

science/geography/vocabulary: 5/5
history/literature/current events: 2/5 - 4/5
fine art/music/sports: 1/5 - 2/5
anything with movies, TV, or celebrities: 0/5

And with that last one, that's 0/5 *every* *time*. And it's not like I was guessing wrong, and then saying "oh right, I should have known that!" I mean, the questions get read, and I have blank, Homer Simpson stare. Then the answer is announced, and I *still* have blank, Homer Simpson stare. The answers didn't mean anything more to me than the questions.

Game 1 started with a male returning champion, and a woman originally from upstate NY who now lived in LA and was a patent attorney, and someone else challenging. LA woman managed to knock off the champion in a relatively well-contested match.

Then, 2 members from the contestant pool were chosen at random to come up and take the stage to challenge LA woman in Game 2. No Ed though, and no Roopa, who was the wife of biochem dude. Interestingly, as I had bonded with her husband, I could see that Roopa and Ed were sitting next to each other and had apparently bonded as well.

LA woman, whose house had burned down a couple months before in one of the SoCal fires, dispatched both those challengers pretty handily. 2 more contestants were chosen at random for Game 3. Still no Ed and no Roopa.

Game 3 was marginally better contested, but still ended in a pretty convincing victory for LA woman. Now it was time for lunch. Contestants were kept sequestered in the dining area for Jeopardy staff, while we were told to walk off the lot and forage. So I found some Japanese food in a minimall across the street, and came back to discover that I was apparently late (they made me leave my cell ph in the car so I had no way of keeping time, but was *sure* I hadn't been gone that long), and so I had to run across the Sony lot by myself. Fortunately, I remembered the way back and got to the studio just as they were closing the doors.

Which was good, because Ed was up for Game 4, along with a woman from South Dakota somewhere. Ed and LA woman went at each other like heavyweight fighters, leaving Dakota girl in the dust. They went into Final Jeopardy tied at $9600 apiece, with Dakota girl in a distant 3rd at $2400. The category was "Pulitzer Prize for Drama".

Uh oh.

Right away, I knew this was going to be trouble. Ed's not a big drama buff, and had it been me up there, I would have bet $0 and hoped that LA woman got it wrong, simply because I would estimate my probability of getting a Final Jeopardy question in a category like that correct to be less than 1%.

Ed, however, true to his nature, went balls-out and bet it all. And... got it wrong. Meanwhile, both the women got it right, and so he finished 3rd. LA woman won again. It was an exciting game though, and it will air on 10/29. Ed was the most entertaining contestant that day by far though, so I recommend watching it even though you know the final outcome overall.

After the game, Ed came back out to sit next to me. Roopa was one of the 2 called up to battle with LA woman next in Game 5. We watched her finish 3rd also, while a dude from New Bedford knocked off LA woman. Then the day was done, so we headed out, back to the hotel...

Ed: "I need to be drinking. Now. Make it happen."

Me: "OK, I'm on it."

So we dropped off stuff at the hotel and headed down to Santa Monica. I took us to Yankee Doodles on the promenade, because I always enjoyed drinking there back in the days when I was in advertising and was expected to go to events in bars to schmooze with buyers.

So we drank and played pool for a couple hours before going to dinner at Father's Office on Montana with our friends Scholzeey and Allegra, who work in the LA Advantage office, and whom we have known since they joined the NYC Advantage office in 2004. They are a lot of fun, and we talked well into the night. It was good that they were there, because the entire night up until that point had been Ed lamenting the fact that knowing just one more question was the difference between having $1000, and having $19,200 and the pride of being a Jeopardy champion. He can be a little obsessive, and so I was glad we were able to at least mostly get his mind off of it.

I woke up the next morning with a headache that I recognized as being the thing I always end up with after a night of drinking with Ed. He and I had booked our flights out that evening, in case he had won a few games in a row, so we had a whole day in LA to kill. We didn't end up getting out of the hotel until noon, and so after a hearty anti-hangover breakfast, we went down to State beach and spent a couple hours laying out. It was so nice to just lay out on the sand. Then we hit the Beverly Center, and then Versailles for some Cuban food.

Of course, this story can't end without my noting that true to form, we spent too long at dinner, and wound up having to race through west LA to drop off the rental and get to LAX in time for our flights. But, with some aggressive driving and a short line at security, we both made it. So I wished Ed goodbye, and thanked him for a most entertaining couple days...

Me: "Dude, it was great seeing you! And thanks for another interesting story..."

Ed: "You know what would have made it an even more interesting story? Winning 19 thousand dollars. FUCK! fuckfuckfuck."

Me: "Dude, seriously, you've got to stop that."

Ed: "Dude, I'm over it. I'm fucking over it. Don't worry about it."

Riiiiiight.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

You know you're retarded when...

...you cut your nose shaving. Your nose.

At this point in my life, the entire surface area of my body divides into:

1) Places that should have hair, but don't,
2) Places that shouldn't have hair, but do, and
3) my nose

But I was in a hurry, and downstroked and nicked the side of my nose, right on the cartilage, which means it bled slowly and forever. I mean, _forever_. Half an hour later, it showed no signs of stopping, and I was beginning to wonder if I'd become a hemophiliac. I drove all the way to work pressing a wet rag to the side of my nose. Fortunately, it did manage to stop bleeding before I died of exsanguination.

Dammit.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Goodbye, cruel summer

Equinox in 2.5 hours. At that point, the summer of 2009 is over. I will not be missing it.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

The Princess Diaries, Chapter 4

I babysat the other day for Kate and Max, while LAJ attended a meeting at their co-op school. Dima was on a business trip to Moscow, so I, the cavalry, arrived around bedtime to see if I could mind the kids for an hour and a half.

Kate is 4 and Max is 2, and a year ago if Laura left even so much as the room, Max would cry and cry, while Kate would be pretty nonplussed. Somehow, in the last year, the roles have started to reverse a little.

I set up in the kids' bedroom, ready to read stories, but poor LAJ had to basically peel Kate off of her leg in order to leave. And so, Kate commenced an operatic demonstration of the immense agony of separation. It was really something to behold. For a few minutes I waited to see if she would calm down, but she had some real stamina. So I began reading Max a story in Russian.

Now, my Russian is extremely rusty, and even in a book for a 2-year-old there will be a lot of words I don't know. So, I kept having to slow down to sound out words. It turns out that it's even *more* boring to be a 2-year-old listening to an adult sound out words than it is to be an adult listening to a 4 or 5 year old sound out words. Max all but said, "Dude, you're the adult here- why can't you read?"

So, I could see him starting to lose focus, and watch the show Late was putting on, which, to be fair, was a pretty impressive show. Finally Max turned to me and said, "Can you help my big sister?" I looked at him and said, "Well, I think she still needs to be sad for a while. But she'll be ok."

Hearing this, Kate calmed down for a moment, the better to overhear what was being said about her. But once she realized I was done, she let out the longest, highest-pitched wail I have ever heard. I actually laughed. I said, "Kate, you sure are working awfully hard over there. Doesn't that take a lot of energy?"

At this, she started to crack a smile mid-wail, before then realizing that she was breaking character, and resuming a full-throated wail. At this, Max turned to me and said, "Can you help my big sister, PLEASE?"

After a couple vain attempts to persuade Kate to abandon the histrionics, Max looked at me and said, "Maybe we can wait for Mommy in the TV room." I thought that was a perfectly good solution, so we invited Kate to join us, and then headed into the TV room. The wailing stopped as soon as we were down the hall.

But she never did join us. After 10 minutes in the TV room, we went back to the bedroom to discover that Kate had climbed up into her bed and fallen asleep. I guess it really did take a lot of work to be sad.

Max, however, had not burned up any energy on theatrics, and he proceeded to motor around the TV room for an hour. At the end of that, he suggested we wait in the living room, on the sofa. So I joined him there, and immediately felt exhausted. He was wide awake and alert though, and verified that each passing car was not mom's car.

After a while, I turned to him and said, "Aren't you just a little bit tired? It's getting late." Max's response: "No."

And so we waited.

And waited.

And waited.

Verifying cars the entire time. Finally I asked again (because I was starting to fall asleep), "Are you SURE you're not the least bit tired? You could lay in your bed and wait for mommy there." Max's response: "No."

He did, however, suggest we move to the kitchen, where he proceeded to demolish all the ham and cheese left over from dinner. And that's where LAJ finally found us- sitting at the kitchen table eating ham and pondering life, as men are wont to do. He was very excited to see her.

Honestly, I have no idea how parents manage...

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Why I Love Half Moon Bay, Pt 7

1) Because of the sunsets:



9/11/09













Here's the movie from that day:




2) The little surprises you occasionally come across while biking

Yesterday morning I came across the Google maps guys, biking along the cliff trail with a cart in tow that had cameras mounted all around it. They're getting video footage of all the bike trails. So, I biked up right behind it and mugged for the cameras for a few seconds. So, hopefully whenever anyone clicks the ground-level view of the HMB beach bike trail, there my ugly mug will be.

On a different day a few weeks ago, I came around the bend at one of my favorite trees to discover a modeling shoot. Models in tiny black bikinis and sky-high heels being made to hang around the trees like a band of superhot simians. It was wonderful. It's so awesome to be male; the simplest things can make a whole day seem better: unexpectedly stumbling upon a troop of bikini models, having a particularly satisfying bowel movement, scratching yourself.

I love living here.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Aftermath

It's been 3.5 weeks since Joel moved away and Keiko and I broke up.

Both these things have caused significant changes to day-to-day life. In the last few weeks I've been trying to make the adjustments.

On the Joel front:

- I have come to realize that fully 90% of the edible things in this house got here through Joel. After throwing out all the things in the fridge that were in various states of decomposition, which took quite some time, and then throwing out all the things I would never in a million years eat myself (e.g., fake chicken nuggets- Joel is a vegetarian that hates fruit, while I am a carnivore that hates vegetables and loves fruit. Between the 2 of us, as Joel once observed, there is no food that one of us won't refuse to eat), the entire contents of the refrigerator, not including condiments, were:

a few eggs
a small chunk of cheddar cheese
some prosciutto
2 apples
some fresh oregano (teetering on the edge of decomposition, but I rounded up. Probably more accurate to label it "some not-particularly-fresh oregano")

- on a related note, Joel and I were roughly comparable in terms of our willingness to allow things to slowly decompose in the fridge.

- the house is less lively without Kona bolting around it. She and I liked each other, although we were not madly in love the way she and Joel are. Through patient tutoring, we learned such commands as:

"Move it!"

"Do NOT go out that door!"

and

"PLEASE hurry up and poop already!"

We also worked hard at, but experienced much more limited success with:

"OK, look, you are NOT going to stop and sniff EVERY goddamned planter in the city of Palo Alto."

- On the plus side, I've slowly begun to turn back the tide of Kona hair that threatened at times to engulf the house. Kona is nature's perfect machine for converting air into hair. "But wait," you say, "isn't it *food* that she turns into hair?" No, no, Kona tuns food into a super-sticky substance that enables her hair to resist the washer, the dryer, and the vacuum cleaner (which she always had a particular hatred for).

So far, the way I'm winning the war is with the one thing stronger than Kona-hair: tape. I take pieces of tape and stick them to the chairs/sofa/etc. and then remove them. Basically, I'm giving my entire house a full Brazilian.

- I've always preferred having a roommate to living alone. It's more interesting, and keeps you in the habit of making little compromises. When you live alone, you never compromise on anything, which is not good practice for eventually being with someone.

I have had a lot of roommates over the years, ranging from the unmitigated disaster (Alana), to the eventual-best-friend-for-life (Laszlo), and everything in between. I got the beach house assuming I would never have a roommate, only because at this age I think I've passed the point where I can mentally tolerate the idea of posting an ad on Craigslist and having some random person move in. So it was a surprise to end up with Joel as a roommate, and he was a very good one. Considerate, and always good company, even in those moments when he was grumpy. And given that Joel is a 90-year-old man trapped in a 35-year-old body, that was a non-trivial number of moments.


On the Keiko front:

It's weird when you suddenly go from having someone you can tell anything to, no matter how mundane, to not having that person. And then longer that person is around before they aren't anymore, the harder is the adjustment. It gives a tiny, tiny glimpse into why when one half of an elderly couple dies, the other so often follows soon after. There's something incredibly powerful about having a constant companion.

Technology only amplifies the effect, it seems to me. Keiko and I had a gchat window open basically all day every day, and so any time something jumped into either's head, we would tell the other. Again, the sudden shift to not having that is incredibly dislocating.

For the most part, I've just buried myself in work. My GMAT student flew in from TX, and we had a week of hardcore all-day prep. I was wiped out at the end of every day. And last week Kiddo was here for a week of hardcore all-day math camp. More on that shortly. Being so busy has helped keep the amount of day-to-day sadness manageable.

Odds and ends:

Kiddo was my original student. We are entering our 7th consecutive year of tutoring together. I started with her when she was in 8th grade, and now she's starting her sophomore year at Stanford.

Over the years, she's become like my little sister. Keiko and I attended her graduation, and I stopped charging her family years ago. I help her because she's Kiddo, and I want to see her do well.

So, this year Kiddo is going to be taking multivariate calculus, and econometrics, which is a stats-intensive class. After last year's challenges finding a regular time that she would show up for lessons, I suggested that she come out a week early and do hardcore math camp all day. I'd backfill some of the stuff she only barely got in single variable calculus, plus teach her the stats stuff ahead of the class. She always has done better when she learned something first from me.

But it turns out Stanford doesn't let you move into the dorms early unless you want to pay a million dollars a day, and when she said she wanted to do the math camp but had no place to stay, I said that PROVIDED she got 150% approval from her parents, she could stay at the house. After all, there are empty bedrooms, and she's my other little sister.

Her parents approved, and so, for a little over a week, I suddenly had a teenage daughter. And let me tell you, having a teenager is a pain in the ass. You have to get them out of bed in the morning, because they sure as hell will not do it on their own, possibly making you late to work, and you would think that by the age of 19 they will have acquired minimal skills like ensuring that they've eaten something. But that turns out to be a naive hope.

Last Sunday, Kiddo had a particularly hard time getting out of bed, and I wound up late to the SF office for my first lesson. I was bailed out by the fact that that student is also chronically late, but I was annoyed. I put Kiddo out in the kitchen with some precalculus problems to work on while I did the lesson, and then gave an interview to a prospective tutor. When I came out of the interview, I looked around. No Kiddo.

I checked my phone, and there were several missed calls from her. So I called back, and she picked up and said the following:

"GusI'msosorrythepainwassobadtheparamedicsarehereI'matthe
conveniencestorearoundthecornerIneedyoutoPLEASEcome!"

(click)

oh god.

So I ran downstairs and around the corner, and sure enough, the paramedics were loading her into an ambulance. So I ran up and explained who I was, and they told me to get in. And off we went to St. Francis hospital. On the way, I had to text my student and tell him not to come down to take his last practice test before the real exam. Very, very professional. Sigh.

So we get to the emergency room, and they take her in. Eventually I join her in the room and along with the ER physician, finally hear the story:

Apparently, her period started about an hour before. She started experiencing cramps, so she went down to the convenience store to get some advil. While there, the cramps suddenly became the worst she's ever experienced in her life, and she basically passed out in the store, causing the convenience store dude to freak out and call 9-1-1.

What follows is a litany of questions from the ER physician, which went something like this:

Are you pregnant? Where is the pain located? Are you pregnant? What is the pain on a scale of 1-10? Are you sexually active? No? Well, do you think you might be pregnant? Are you on any kind of medication? Should we do a pregnancy test?

And after that was an extended discussion of teenage girl menstruation, which I am of course not going to reproduce here, principally because this is my written memory and I'd like to forget everything I had to hear about what teenage girls go through biologically. I mean, Jesus H. Christ, women are complicated.

After the doctor left, Kiddo looked at me and said: "I'm sorry you had to hear all that. But thank you for being here. I just don't understand why he was so obsessed with whether I'm pregnant. How much clearer could I be that there is _no_ _possible_ _way_ I am pregnant??"

To which I said:

"Uh, look, Kiddo, think about where we are, and what these people must see all the time. Here you are, rushed in here with symptoms very much consistent with recently becoming pregnant. And you're rushed in here, 19 years old, accompanied by a 37-year-old "family friend" who can't tell them your social security number or your address, other than "it's that building at 14th and Avenue A." 9 times out of 10, this situation is EXACTLY what they think it is. This just happens to be the one time where the situation is exactly what WE say it is. But they don't believe that, and they're probably right not to."

Kiddo: "O-o-o-o-o-o-o-h."

So, after an IV, oxygen, and some pain medication, Kiddo was discharged, and we went to get some food (I hadn't eaten since the day before, and she hadn't eaten since the drive into the office). By the time we got back to the office, she was feeling a little better, so she did more math while I got the rest of what I needed done. My student couldn't come down to the office anymore, so we eventually went home.

Her mom thanked me for being there at the hospital with her. I told her I was just glad she was OK. I've never actually killed a student, though I've been tempted on occasion, and I certainly didn't want her to be the first.

A couple days later, Stanford re-opened for the year, and I drove her down to school, along with her giant suitcases full of "books" and "shoes". I had no idea that lead shoes were in this year, but I can infer that based on the total weight of her suitcases.

And with that, my brief time as the guardian of a teenage girl ended. It was actually nice to be busy, and to have the company at the house, but it really underscored how woefully ill-prepared I am to be taking care of anybody. But I'm hopeful Kiddo got a little more self-sufficient from her time staying at the beach house, if for no other reason than she would have starved to death otherwise...

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Einmal ist keinmal

Do you ever get the feeling that life is a series of endlessly repeating cycles?

I do.

It has been a summer of loss. In May I almost lost my roommate to an idiot driving a Zipcar. In June I almost lost my mother to heart issues. In July I did lose my father. Two nights ago I lost my girlfriend Keiko. And today I lost my roommate to a new life in DC, working for the OPM.

It's too soon for me to really write about what happened with Keiko. There was no proximate cause for our breakup. Nothing dramatic happened. But we were over 2 years into our relationship, and had just kind of reached That Point. And we failed to make it past That Point. Entirely due to me. I mean, 100% due to me. She was supportive, sweet, and loyal for over 2 years, and still I ended up hurting her terribly.

Basically, if you are a close friend of mine (and let's face it- if you're actually reading this blog, you probably are), then I have done 1 or more of the following things to you:

1) deeply hurt you
2) significantly disappointed you
3) completely failed you
4) nearly killed you

This is one of those days where I realize anew that it is a blessed miracle that I still have any friends at all.

Shara found this picture, and I feel like I should have it near me at all times:








Danger!









Tonight, after coming home early and crashing for a long while, I got up, put on my swim trunks, and walked down to the sea. I'm not especially religious in any kind of particular way, and praying's not really my thing, but I walked a little ways into the water and knelt in the surf, and prayed. I prayed for 3 things:

1) for Keiko, that she be granted healing, peace, happiness, and a man who will be as supportive, sweet, and loyal as she is, and sooner rather than later,

2) for healing between the two of us, that we may remain meaningfully part of each other's lives even though we're not dating anymore, and

3) forgiveness: for once again failing so spectacularly in my most basic life goal of having a net positive impact on the world, and on the people around me; for being so deeply, tragically flawed; and for being so pathetically unable to rise above those flaws.

At that point, I had to cut it short. It had taken several minutes to articulate those points, and you might not realize this, but Pacific Ocean water in the SF bay area at 11pm is, in a word, frigid. Another couple of minutes, and my testicles would have ascended straight into heaven. The other things I would have asked for will have to wait for another night.

Tomorrow morning I will wake up more alone in this beach house than I ever have been, in the 2 years that I have lived here. But I chose this path, and I will just have to hope that I have the strength to follow where it leads. I guess we'll see.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Dreams from my father (my version)

Today would have been my dad's 74th birthday.

My strategy for getting through the process of laying him to rest was largely to not deal with the matter on an emotional level, but rather to avoid dealing with it as much as possible, and just get through the process. I process things primarily over time, in story form, and so this post will be my way of processing through the experience.

Consequently, I issue the following warning: this post may well be unreadable.

Now, I *never* guarantee readability in my posts; this blog serves as my written memory, and hence is really organized only for me. LJ mocked me a few days ago, saying she could quote precisely how long I napped for on the Cabo trip. OK, fair point, I may have gone a little overboard on the petty details in those posts, and probably do in my posts in general, but again- this is my memory, and you plumb it at your own peril.

Still, I feel compelled in this case to warn you that this post in particular may be unreadable, even in comparison to whatever its baseline level of unreadability is. So, you really should stop reading. Now. Seriously, stop. Quit reading. This instant.

Okay, fine.

Have it your way.

You were warned.

You brought this on yourself.

Don't blame me.

It is odd to think that, at age 37, I will shortly be the age that my father was at the point of my earliest memory of him. Parents always seem godlike when you're a little kid, and it weird to try and reconcile that image of godlike power with how totally clueless about life I feel right now.

Because my father was raised in India, he carried with him a certain set of expectations for how his oldest son would behave. My mom noted in her eulogy that my dad tried to live out his failed dreams through his children. I think I can credibly claim that this burden fell most heavily on me, due to an Indian cultural expectation of filial piety, especially from the oldest son.

Consequently, since his dream had always been to be a doctor, my childhood was sprinkled with things like Fisher Price doctor sets, with toy stethoscopes, etc., and trips to the hospital where he worked. He was never a chatty guy, but he did drop hints about medical school. Bear in mind that these memories are occurring when I was in the 4-8 year old range.

When I was approximately 7, my dad decided to give me a leg up on medical school by teaching me chemistry. He had an office in the house, and I would study the periodic table while he worked there, and he would quiz me on it. By the end of 2nd grade, I had memorized most of the table, including names, symbols, and atomic numbers. Later, I discovered that all the other boys had spent time with their dads doing things like learning to throw a ball, but at the time I assumed that everyone was learning the periodic table.

It was also during this time, hanging out in my dad's home office, listening to Haydn all day, that I began one of my most ambitious projects: writing down all the numbers. In order. In neat little columns, page after page.

If I had to boil my entire life down to one observation, it's that I was somewhere in the 12 thousands before I concluded that it might be time to abandon this project.

When I got a little older, it was time for science fairs. Since my parents were both in medical roles, they had lots of ideas for projects. One year I did a project that had something to do with growing bacteria in cultures, although I've long since forgotten what that one was specifically. Another year, I did one called "Salivary Amylase and Aging." That one probably came from my dad, who did geriatric biochemistry research.

That project featured my wandering around asking people to spit into test tubes, recording their ages, and then taking the samples back and running them through a spectrophotometer to analyze the amount of amylase present. Less amylase makes it harder to digest food, and then hypothesis was that older people produced less amylase, making it harder for them to properly break down food, adversely impacting digestion.

Note that while all we had in the house was one 3000 year old TV that was the size of a refrigerator and was crammed with about a billion vacuum tubes, one or another of which was blowing out approximately every 90 seconds, forcing weekly trips to the Radio Shack to replace them, we had things like functioning spectrophotometers just lying around the house.

All this, of course- the chemistry lessons, the medical research science projects, the doctor sets, the trips to the hospital, was designed to produce a son committed to medicine as a profession. So the most fundamental way in which I disappointed my father was that I never got excited about medicine. I learned the chemistry, but never particularly enjoyed the subject. I played with the doctor sets, but much preferred playing with cars, trucks, and blocks. I did the science projects, but never got particularly excited about them. And I hated being in hospitals. I still do. I hate the look of them, I hate the smell of them, and I especially hate the feel of them. I knew medicine was off the table by the time I was ten, and that really disappointed him.

My dad also had a very specific idea about his role in the family. He seemed to see his role as twofold: being the provider, and being the discipliner. Everything else he left to my mom. Included, therefore, in "everything else" was pretty much all of the housework, and pretty much all of the child-raising. Given that there were 4 of us, that was a fair amount of housework and a fair amount of child-raising. Both I and my sister did a lot of babysitting and childcare while still children ourselves as a result.

One day when I was about ten, while I was watching Saturday morning cartoons and quietly minding my own business, my mom came thundering into the room. Now, mom is usually pretty mellow, so I was caught off guard by her intensity. She reached down, grabbed me by the collar, dragged me to my feet, wagged her finger in my face, and said:

"YOU... are NOT going to be a helpless male like your father!!"

And with that, she dragged me down to the basement and taught me to do laundry. I also learned cooking and cleaning. And, I'm proud to say, I'm not a helpless male like my father apparently was. Although, to this day laundry is by far my least favorite house chore.

In his role as disciplinarian, my father saw justice as something swift, corporal, and not subject to any negotiation or explanation. Once, when I was nine or ten, I was sitting on the front porch as two dudes walked by. Our neighborhood was not particularly good, but we had a fire station on our block and that mitigated some of the effects of the broader area. Still, drugs were fairly rampant, and it turns out that these two dudes were smoking a joint, passing it back and forth between them.

Now, I was still too young to know that's what was going on; it's just obvious in retrospect that that's what was happening. What I observed that day was one of the dudes dropping the joint, and then the other calling him a "bitch" as he stooped to get it, and then both of them guffawing and heading on their way.

What my nine-or-ten year old brain took away from that scene was that "bitch" was a funny thing to call someone. So the next day, at dinner, when my sister was annoying me, I called her a bitch, expecting this to be quite funny. So I was very surprised when an instant later I was decked across the face. My dad played a lot of tennis in his life, and he had a pretty good forehand. Or so I infer, based on how incidents like this one felt.

This is the kind of thing that has, I think, forever saddled me with a certain antipathy toward authority. A simple request not to use the word "bitch", coupled with a short explanation, would have sufficed, but instead I got decked without warning. Authority in our family was heavily concentrated in my dad, and this was how justice was typically meted out. Consequently, I have a very strong reaction to people who exercise authority in ways that seem unjust or arbitrary.

Dinner in our house tended to be relatively early; 6 or 630 typically. I was allowed to play on the block relatively unsupervised, with the expectation that when my mom called out the window that dinner was ready, I'd be close enough to here and come in. And once we finished dinner, I was not allowed to go back outside.

In the summertime, because we ate dinner so early, there was often substantial daylight left after dinner. And JD and Dustin, the two boys on the block that I played with, were both allowed to be out basically until dark. So one day, in the summer before 7th grade, I hit upon the idea of slinking out the back door after dinner was over, thinking I would just play with JD for an hour or so and then come back in. It would still be well before dark, and who would notice?

So, an hour later, when I tried to get back in the back door, I discovered it was locked. We never actually locked the interior door, so I was totally surprised. I tried coming around the front, and that was locked too (which was not surprising). I started to panic a little. I went around back, and was forced to start knocking and yelling. No one came. I stood there pounding on the door and yelling for a while. Our house was not that big, so I knew they could hear me.

Finally, the door opened, and my father stood there, holding a piece of molding that you use when two pieces of paneling meet in the corner. It was fairly thick, yet fairly flexible. I knew I was in big trouble.

Prior to that point, I'd never gotten punished with anything more serious than a belt, but I have to tell you: molding is extremely effective, if causing pain is your goal. It hurt like hell. All the while as he took it to my backside, he yelled at me for violating his rule about not going back outside. Again, no discussion, no opportunity to explain that I had stayed very close to the house, that I was aware they were concerned about my safety and had therefore taken pains to make sure I was back well in advance of dark, etc.

When it was over, he sent me to my room. Not long after that, mom came up to the room. I was quite upset, and she held me and said she wanted me to know that no matter what happened, I could always come home.

I didn't say much at the time, but I often thought about that over the ensuing years, and I remember thinking even that day that I was being given something of a mixed message. I mean, I'd been deliberately locked out, preventing me from coming home even if I wanted to, and then I'd been pretty thoroughly switched, which didn't exactly make coming home seem like the most attractive option in the world.

In his role as a provider, my father was much more successful. He came to this country essentially with nothing, and managed to eventually earn a comfortably middle-class living for his family. But it was a long climb up, and my parents often stressed out a lot about money. But my father was pretty careful to make sure that we kids never saw any of that; they had most of their money talks in the kitchen with the door closed after we had gone to bed. But there was only one bathroom in the house, and it was right next to the kitchen, so over time I learned that if I came downstairs at night and saw the kitchen door closed and the light on, mom and dad were having a Money Talk.

From 6th through 8th grade, I participated in an after-school math program run by an independent group called MEGSSS (Math Enrichment for Gifted Secondary School Students), which was math for super, super geeky kids. It was a 6 year program, and by the time I was in the 3rd year, I was easily the dumbest kid in the class. It was hard, but I loved it, and a lot of the math we did in that class I didn't see again until I was an junior/senior yr math major.

Unfortunately, the program cost money, and it was way the hell out in the county. We only had one car, which my dad let my mom use while he took buses to work every day, and with my sister also getting involved in after school activities, plus my two little brothers, the logistics of keeping me in the program started to look grim.

Plus, year 4 coincided with my beginning high school at SLUH. I had spent the last 2 years at a public magnet school, which obviously helped on the economic front, but the St. Louis public high school system is among the worst in the country, and so I was headed to a private school, which meant significant tuition costs.

One day, as I came down to use the bathroom, I heard my mom and dad having a Money Talk. The subject concerned my continued participation in MEGSSS, how we could possibly afford to keep me in it and high school at the same time, and how, even if we did somehow find the money, we could possibly get me to and from it. I sat outside the door listening for quite some time, and finally heard my dad say, “Well, if he wants to do it, education is important and we’ll just have to find a way.”

A few days after that, my mom approached me to ask me what I thought about MEGSSS, and whether I wanted to sign up again for the 4th year. I loved the program, and knew it was special, but I also knew, from my father’s (as always, totally unspoken) example, that a man provides for his family. Period. To the best of my knowledge, he never once hesitated to make any sacrifice he felt was necessary to provide for us. And so I knew what I had to say:

Me: “Enh, I don’t really care one way or the other. It’s kinda a lot of work, and I don’t know if I’ll have time this year since I’m going to be in high school, and SLUH is supposed to be good.”

Mom: “WHAT? I thought you *liked* MEGSSS!”

Me: “Sure, it’s OK. I mean, I’ve enjoyed it OK. But it’s kinda boring and a lot of work, so it’s OK with me if I don’t attend it.”

With a little more reassurance, my mom was convinced. I still remember how visibly relieved she was at my words. And so I knew I’d done the right thing. It’s the first time I can remember thinking in my head that I needed to be a man.

The second time occurred a little more than a year later.

In my neighborhood, which was relatively poor, I was part of a small group of street urchins that roamed around on our bikes, mostly bored and doing nothing in particular. None of us came from families of any meaningful economic wealth, and so none of us ever carried money around. Nevertheless, we often got hungry during the day, and one thing I learned from the gang was that you could walk into any small convenience store, plunk down 5 cents to buy a piece of gum or something, and walk out with a couple other small items tucked away in your pocket for consumption later. It was something we all did, and none of us referred to it as “stealing.” It was simply “taking.” And it was The Way Things Are.

At the time, if you had asked me if I thought stealing was wrong, I would have looked at you as though you were crazy and said “duh.” But in my 11, 12, 13, 14 year old brain, “taking” was something different. It was The Way Things Are. Our lives went on, the convenience stores’ lives went on, and no one seemed harmed. So I just picked up along the way a bit of a minor shoplifting habit.

When I got to high school, where there weren’t going to be any more subsidized school lunches, I was given an allowance of $10 a week to fund buying any food not originating in the house. Even in 1987, $10 a week was tricky to get 5 lunches a week out of, and I was often hungry by the time I left school. There was a National supermarket just a block away from home, and so I would stop there on the way and often nick something to tide me over until dinner.

Again, if you had asked me if what I was doing was right, I would have shifted around uncomfortably and eventually said “no.” I mean, I knew I would get in trouble if I got caught. But no one ever got caught, and the National was so giant that it would never miss a pack of Starburst, or a Hostess Cinnamon Roll. No one got hurt. Life seemed to just keep on keeping on. It was The Way Things Are.

Plus, by employing this strategy, I got access to much yummier stuff than I could possibly have ever found around the house, where we weren’t even allowed sugared cereal, and even better, this way I never had to ask for any more money. I felt very deeply that asking for any more money represented failure on my part, an unforgivable weakness and inability to sacrifice. So I found a way to replicate the results of sacrifice, without actually doing the sacrificing. Remember, I was using 14-year-old logic: don’t have to ask for more money, get free candy, this is The Way Things Are. That was about the extent of my reflection on the issue. (There’s a good reason 14-year-olds should not be tried as adults.) Anyway, it seemed like a win-win at the time.

Until the day I finally got caught.

I still remember standing there in the baking aisle of the National, surreptitiously sticking a pack of starburst AND a cinnamon roll down my pants while pretending to examine bags of sugar (oh, the irony). As I turned to go, I saw a woman’s head peering around the end of the aisle suddenly vanish. If I had been a smart criminal, I would have immediately divested myself of the stash. But it never occurred to me that there might be plainclothes detectives guarding the store against urchins like me, and I chose to just try hightailing it out of there. I made it halfway out the door before feeling two hands grab me by the collar and yank me back in.

She dragged me into the back office of the National, where there was a uniformed security guard, a giant black man, waiting. They proceeded to do a whole good cop-bad cop routine on me. The woman said she wanted to call the cops and have me sent down to the station, charged with theft, and sent to jail. The security guard said, “You want to send him to jail for trying to steal a piece of candy and a doughnut?” Meanwhile, I was shaking, and so terrified I couldn’t even cry. Jail actually didn’t sound half bad, I remember actually thinking that, because I couldn’t bear to think what would happen when he found out. And very, very deep down, I was ashamed, and couldn’t bear to think what my parents would think of me.

In the end, they just called my house and made my mom come up to the store and get me. She was mortified. As we walked home, she said “I can’t not tell your father about this.” I couldn’t say anything. I was still too ashamed and terrified to say much of anything.

When we got home, she sent me to my room. I waited in there for what seemed like a week, but was probably only an hour or so. I eventually heard my dad come home, walk up the front steps like he always did, hang his coat on the coat rack downstairs, and then open the door to the hallway and head toward the kitchen.

Silence followed.

I started sweating.

Suddenly, I heard the hallway door explode open, slamming into the wall, and I heard my dad hit the steps at a dead run. His feet were hitting the steps hard, and in the couple seconds it took for him to make it up the flight, I thought to myself, “Stand up and take it like a man.” So I stood up from my bed (I had been sitting on the edge), and turned to face the door as it blew open and my dad came running in.

“Dad, I…” I started to say.

And then he gave me a full forehand right across the face. With full forward momentum. It knocked me over onto the bed. Then he set upon me, and for the first few blows I tried to parry a little, but then I just went fetal and absorbed the blows. While he was hitting me, he was yelling at me about how I’d disgraced the family name, and showed no appreciation for the sacrifices he had made.

It’s true what they say, that when something like that is happening, your mind just disengages and goes somewhere else. It’s like it was happening to someone else, and meanwhile I wondered in my mind why he wasn’t asking me *why* I’d done it. It didn’t seem to occur to him at all to inquire as to what I had been thinking. I mean, I knew I’d done something stupid. I was totally ashamed of myself. But even as I’d done something retarded, part of my thought process had actually been to try and be less of a burden on the family. And I wanted to tell him that. But I never got the chance that day.

Eventually, he just tired himself out, I guess. He got up and stalked out, saying only that I’d better not come downstairs, because he didn’t want to see my face. For a long time, I just lay there on the bed, still in the fetal position. I don’t remember anymore how long it was until I started crying.

When that part was over, what remained was anger. I was really pissed off. I was especially pissed that he seemed most concerned about the family name, and not at all about what I might have been thinking. I remember as I lay there vowing never again to do something so foolish- not because he’d told me not to, but rather because I knew that I might have gone to jail, and going to jail would mean jeopardizing my ability to get out of that neighborhood. The other kids in our little group of street urchins, none of them ever graduated high school, and I don’t know if any of them ever made it out of the neighborhood. But my dad had also instilled deep within me the idea that education was the way you bettered yourself, and made a better life for yourself and for your family. And I was determined to get out of that crazy house, out of that crazy neighborhood, and on to some place where no one knew I’d once been a common petty thief. And so I never shoplifted again.

During my junior year, I dated for a while a girl named Dawn. The drama that was my story with Dawn will have to wait for another day, but one Friday night her parents were not coming home, and she invited me to spend the night at her place, presumably as a major tactical move in what was ultimately her failed quest to take my virginity. I did enjoy her attempts, though, and so I agreed. I figured it would be easy; I often spent weekend nights at Plaid’s, and I knew he would cover for me.

Thing is, this was the age before cell phones, and when I got the invitation early that evening, I tried calling over to Plaid’s house. He wasn’t home, so I talked to him mother. I told her to tell Plaid NOT to call my house that night. I even made her repeat exactly the message to give to him, so that I could verify that she had it right.

You can probably see where this is headed.

The next day, when I got home, my dad asked me where I’d been the night before. Which was odd, since I’d told him I was spending the night at Plaid’s, and he’d never asked a follow-up question before. So I repeated my cover story. That’s when he said:

“Well, then why did Plaid call here last night, and then say you weren’t with him? Where the hell were you?”

(pause)

“Uh, I was at Dawn’s.”

I expected at that point that I would have the shit kicked out of me. I braced myself for it. So I was totally caught off guard when all he did was sadly put his face in his hand and mutter:

”I can’t believe you would just lie to me, right to my face. Get out of here- I can’t even look at you.”

I’ll never forget how… disappointed… he looked. He didn’t seem angry at all- just sad. And that made me feel worse than I ever did any of the other times I was ever in trouble. If I had to define a moment in time as the lowest my relationship with him ever was, it would be that moment.

Of course, little more than a year later I graduated from SLUH, and headed off to Pomona College. In part because of the academic performance expectations he and my mom had always set, I did well enough to go to a very good school. I went to Pomona intending to double major in physics and psychology. I enjoyed physics, and my father, grudgingly accepting that I wasn’t going to do pre-med, was willing to compromise and accept the only real second-place career option: a Ph.D. in a hard science. Psychology seemed fairly useless to him, but as long as it didn’t distract from physics he could ignore it.

At Pomona, I was happy in school for the first time since maybe 4th grade. I loved it there. I got involved in a million different things, and slept on average maybe 4 hours a night most of the time, with the occasional crash that caused me to sleep through a morning of classes. There were so many different things I got involved in that I was pretty overextended, and as a result my grades were not especially great- I graduated with a 3.06. So for four years, my dad and I had the same discussion of my college career: he argued that I should stop doing “all that other stuff” and just focus on physics and my grades in that. That conversation was pretty much the only one we had.

As college drew to a close, I applied half-heartedly to physics Ph.D. programs Univ of Washington, UC Davis, Univ of Illinois, and… … one other place that I can’t even remember anymore. Illinois rejected me, then UW rejected me, then UW rejected me a 2nd time a week later with a different letter, as if I hadn’t gotten the message the first time. JOC and I threw a party at our room every time I got rejected, so the upside was that we got 2 parties out of it. Whatever the other place was also rejected me. But then UC Davis accepted me, and even gave me a fellowship. But I decided to defer for a year because I wasn’t actually sure I wanted to do it. Once I actually had an acceptance, I realized that I’d really only applied for a Ph.D. because it was my dad’s expectation.

I wound up selling TV advertising time at Katz in Los Angeles, where I managed to put together a successful sales career, despite having been that kid who was supposed to go out selling candy bars to raise money for my school, and after knocking on 100 doors in the neighborhood, ended up selling exactly 1 candy bar, to my mom, because she felt sorry for me. Integrity and honesty in negotiations turned out to be a primary competitive advantage of mine, and I learned those things from both my parents.

Although he didn’t especially approve of my decision not to go to graduate school, my dad never stopped providing for me. I graduated from college with nothing- no money, no particularly marketable skills, no car, etc. As a graduation present, he gave me the 2nd car, which he had gotten while I was in school. And though I tried hard not to ask for money, and mostly succeeded, I knew he would have given me money without hesitation if I needed it.

It was while I was working at Katz, selling TV advertising time, that my dad had his stroke. It was the week before my birthday, and I had a pretty somber birthday party. I made dinner, and people hung out with me until it was time for me to go to the airport and head to St. Louis.

Everything about my relationship with my dad changed with the stroke. Like many people, I knew intellectually that everyone dies, and consequently, eventually my parents would die, but I was not prepared for this reminder of his mortality. I felt particularly ashamed that our relationship at that point had been virtually nonexistent; I saw him when I came home, and we had the usual conversation that implied that I was wasting my time on the path I was on, but other than that there wasn’t much. And that was really more my fault than his.

In reflecting on the 37-year-long relationship that I had with my father, I don’t know if I will ever stop being disappointed in myself that it took his nearly dying to make me start to truly appreciate him, and to tell him that I loved him. For all his limitations, he loved me honestly, and within the scope of parenting as he understood it, did a good job raising us. Many of my most fundamental qualities, both good (a deep desire to provide for the people I love, virtually irrespective of sacrifice), and bad (a deep-seated inability to articulate the feelings that cause me to want to provide for the people I love), I get from him.

So thank you, dad, for helping make me the person I am today. I will miss you in the years ahead.

I love you.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

HMB Videos

Guest post from Joel:

The last weekend in July produced very nice cloud movement over Half Moon Bay. The beachcam dubs randomly selected tunes over each day's video; sometimes this works well, and sometimes it doesn't. For these three days, it worked very well indeed.

Friday:



Saturday:



Sunday:

Monday, August 3, 2009

Saying goodbye...

The rest of the story of my father's funeral:

Thursday Mikie arrived in the morning, and Laszlo arrived in the evening. Aside from picking them up, it was a quiet day. A couple family meals together.

Friday morning Keiko arrived, and after checking in at the hotel (because I couldn't ask her to stay with me in the cat-shit-smelling basement, or on the air mattress in Anne's study), we headed to the wake.

I've been to a few wakes, including my grandma's, but I've never had to attend one from start to finish before. 2-3pm was family only, and although it was just an hour, it felt like approximately 3 weeks. At precisely 2:04pm, I turned to Laszlo and said:

"You're in charge of this assuming, God willing, that I go before you. I want cremation. No wake. I will not have anyone going through this on my account. Just put up a picture of me. People get half an hour to be sad, and then start up the dance music, bring out some good food, and then everyone should laugh and tell jokes, and maybe share their favorite story about how I almost got them killed. I'm trusting you on this."

By 2:08, I wanted to run out of the room at full speed. I mean, it's weird to just be there nearly alone in the room with your father's dead body.

Not long after 3, people started to show up. That at least provided distraction. Although I had told few of my StL friends about the wake, because I wasn't thrilled about folks seeing me the way I expected to be at the wake, many people ended up coming, and in retrospect, I'm very glad they did. Talking to people kept me from dwelling on the situation, and I needed that.

The wake lasted until 9, and then we had to help pack things up, so we didn't leave until 930. That's 7.5 hours in the creepy funeral home. Again, NO FUCKING WAY do I want anyone to ever endure that on my account.

From there, we had dinner out at the Drunken Fish in the Central West End. It was pretty good. Mostly sushi, but they had teriyaki chicken for me. Teriyaki chicken is how I survive sushi places.

Saturday morning was the service. We had to be at the church early to help set up for the luncheon afterward, and from there we went across the street to the funeral home (at least it's convenient, even if it is creepy) for the funeral home prayer service. The deacon corralled me into doing one of the readings, which I didn't mind per se, but he asked me right before, which means I didn't have time to read it beforehand. As a result, I didn't feel my cadence properly captured the significance of the passage (the Love is Patient, Love is Kind passage), but people seemed to think it was OK, and between no prep and being something of a wreck, I'm giving myself a pass on that one. But I would have liked to have done a better job of it.

From there, Mikie, Willie, Laszlo, Mikie's best friend Nanna, and I carried the casket out to the car, and drove with it for the 30 seconds it took to get it in front of the church. We carried it into the church, and the service began.

It was a nice service. My mom is extremely active in the church, and so the entire priestly brass turned out, as well as many members of the parish. At the end, my mom stood up to give the eulogy. On some level, I think you had to be there to really feel how amazing the eulogy was, but I will transcribe here her copy of it:

"Mike was born in southern India in 1935 into what would be analogous to a middle class family in the United States. They were neither very rich nor extremely poor. Mike's father worked very hard on plantations to provide a comfortable life for his family.

One of nine children, Mike came from a very devout family rooted in our Catholic tradition. Walking to Mass was part of their daily routine. I don't know much about Mike's childhood except that he was a typical kid: he used to cut classes to go play soccer, and he and his brothers used to sneak out to see movies that their father didn't want them to see.

Although not highly educated himself, Mike's father believed in educating his children, including his daughters. Mike's parents were especially proud of him, since he was the first one from his village to graduate from college. Mike was especially close to his mother, who used to give him privileges that she didn't give to the others.

After receiving his BS in Chemistry, Mike worked in a chemical factory for a couple of years while he tried to figure out a way to come to the United States to go to medical school. In 1963, upon obtaining a student visa and a two-year scholarship from St. Benedict's College in Kansas, Mike came to the United States to take pre-med courses. His dream was to become a physician, return to India, and start a free clinic for the very poor.

After two years at St. Benedict's, his scholarship expired, and no one counseled him on how he could possibly fund medical school. At that point he had two choices: go back to India, or go into a different field of study that would offer him a scholarship. He didn't want to go back to India without a degree; his fear was that everyone would think of him as a failure. Consequently, he got into the master's degree program in organic chemistry at Creighton University with the arrangement that he would teach a lab in exchange for free tuition plus a stipend.

In 1968 he graduated with his master's, and again was faced with going back to India or continuing to go to school. He applied, and was accepted into St. Louis University's Ph.D. program in organic chemistry with financial arrangement similar to Creighton's. In 1970, in order to supplement his stipend, he got a part-time job at St. Louis University Hospital in the chemistry lab where I was working. His job was to set up new procedures. I taught him how to use some of the equipment, and hung around a lot. I wasn't interested in him; I was interested in what he was doing.

Occsionally throughout our marriage, Mike recalled the first time he really noticed me: we were in the elevator together at the hospital and I was wearing black jeans, a red shirt, no make-up, and my hair was in pigtails. Mike didn't like make-up because he thought it was phony. One day, he invited me to shoot a game of pool in the student center. He was rather stunned when I beat him badly, and since Mike didn't like failure, he had to ask me out again to try to beat me. And so our relationship started out as a competitive one.

In 1971, when we decided to get married, Mike wrote to his father informing him that he was marrying an American girl. His father wrote back and said, "You realize that you are breaking 500 years of family tradition." Mike didn't care, but it put the fear of God into me, especially since we were gonig to be married in India. However, I was very grateful and relieved when his parents and siblings accepted me with their characteristically warm Indian hospitality. The thing that really saved me was that I was Catholic.

Mike wanted to show me the beauty of his country, and so we traveled around, starting with Kashmir, where there were gardens and lakes at the base of the Himalayan mountains, then to Agra to see the Taj Mahal, and to Bombay where his sister, who is a Carmelite nun, lived. On the way home, we spend a few wonderful days in Rome. When we got back to the United States, Mike initiated the process of becoming a US citizen. I told him that I was willing to go back to India with him if he wanted to try and start a clinic, but Mike, in his wisdom, said that I wouldn't survive.

Soon after finishing his Ph.D. in 1975, Mike obtained a postdoctoral position at SLU. Subsequently, in 1977, after receiving his citizenship, Mike began working at the VA Medical Center in geriatric research, where he stayed for almost twenty years.

We have been blessed with five loving, beautiful, intelligent children. The reason I say five is that our goddaughter, Anne, has become an integral part of our family, and she has never failed to be tehre when I needed her. Mike tried to live out his broken dream of becoming a physician through our children; however, much to his frustration, none of them wanted to become a doctor.

At some point, I began to go through some personally difficult times that Mike didn't understand, and we began to drift apart, increasingly straining our marriage to the point where we were on the edge of divorce. I wanted with all my heart to be able to role model for our children what it means to be faithful, and I wanted the opportunity to prove to Mike that I would take care of him when he got old because he doubted that I would. I think we both knew that something disabling would happen to him. I remember feeling so disappointed with I thought we would split up and my desires could never be fulfilled. But we both believed very strongly in commitment, and one day, I could feel the power of the Holy Spirit orchestrate a series of events that would begin the process of healing our relationship. Never underestimate the power of God.

Even through the most difficult times, Mike never failed to show his love for me. He would do things like warm up the car in the winter before I drove to work, or stop on his way home from work to pick up a banana split for me. I have often said that no one else on the planet would have put up with me. God has a way of fulfilling our deepest desires that is often beyond our imagining. I always thought that something would happen to Mike, but not when he was so young, and not before the kids were grown.

As most of you know, on May 31st 1996, Mike had a severe stroke leaving him with right side paralysis as well as unable to read, write, or talk. Willie was thirteen, Mikie was fifteen, and Maria had one more year of college to finish. Gus had already graduated from college. I learned in an instant that control is an illusion; we don't have control over our lives.

It has been my privilege to have taken care of Mike during these last 13 years. It is what has given me an underlying peace and joy even during the bumps in the road, and perhaps it has been the most formative time in my spiritual life.

And so Gus, Maria, Dan, Mikie, Nini, Willie, Anne, Laszlo, and Keiko... especially all you young people who have yet to go throught the twists and turns of married life, know that marriage may at times be difficult, but marriage is for keeps, and nothing will give you more peace and joy than being faithful to your commitment: for better or for worse, in sickness and in health, until death do us part.

And Mike, I know that you are here with the angels celebrating life with us. Save me a spot next to you. I love you."

Again, I'm not sure that reading it conveys how powerful it was when my mom delivered it. And I also want to point out that she never once wavered or faltered in any way in delivering it. I always knew my mom was tough; she had to have been to have gotten through the last 13 years, or for that matter, through many of the other things she's experienced in life. And there have been many times when I was impressed by her, or proud of her, etc. But at the end of the eulogy, for the first time ever, I think I was actually in awe of her.

At the conclusion of the service, we again carried the casket, this time down the church steps and into the hearse. Then we went to the graveyard, where there was another short service at the grave. At this one, we were caught off guard by the deacon inviting any of the kids to say anything. Willie got up and gave a nice contrasting eulogy, entirely extemporaneous, which we all wish had somehow been recorded. My brother is, well, a unique character, and whatever else you may think of him, he always lets you know *exactly* what he thinks.

He spoke about not knowing my dad real well, and how he'd learned things about him listening to the eulogy (as had I). He mentioned that my dad kind of kept to himself, hanging out upstairs in his study a lot watching kung fu movies. But he also was always willing to help with homework, and then my brother said we kids were all thankful, and that my mom and dad had done a good job raising us. Then he said -and this is the part I remember well- "My brother Mike is the bravest person I know, my brother Gus is the smartest person I know, my sister Sweetpea is the wisest person I know... and I like to think that I'm the funniest person I know." That got a good laugh, and was really just what was needed at the time.

After that, we all headed back to the church for the luncheon. We were all emotionally exhausted, and hungry, so it was a somewhat subdued lunch, but it was nice to be done with the process. Here are a few pics from the luncheon:


Anne, Willie, mom, me, Mikie. And my sister, in pregnant absentia.













With Laszlo and Nanna...














Me and Keiko




















Laszlo, introducing some levity into the mood. And reprising one of our iconic college-era photos.

















With grandpa (center) and cousin Joe. We are simple folk, plain and true. And are clearly all exhausted and sick of picture-taking.














After helping break down the luncheon, we headed back to the hotel to change, and while Keiko and Anne did girl errands (beauty store, baby registry shopping for my brother), Laszlo and I got ready to tear down The Dwarf House.

The Dwarf House was a project that Willie had done in carpentry class in high school. It was a one room house just big enough for a small family of dwarves. It had at one point had a functioning electrical system, windows, etc., but over the years had had its windows broken, and was no longer plugged into the main house so lacked any actual electricity. Effectively, it was like a little dwarf meth house, a blight on the property and an eyesore for all the neighbors.

I had been plotting its destruction for a very long time. It took up half the parking pad in the back. And it had been there TEN YEARS. Willie showed no signs of ever doing anything with it, and I was in need of venting some pent-up energy, so I recuited Laszlo, Mikie, and Nanna to systemically destroy The Dwarf House. It took several hours, because it turns out that Willie was very good at carpentry and built the house very, very sturdily. But we did succeed in destroying it completely.

In the evening, we went to dinner at Cunetto's, which is awesome family-style Italian served in ginormous portions. Then we headed back to the hotel, because we were all wiped out. Poor Laszlo had an early morning flight. Keiko left Sunday afternoon. I left Monday morning, emotionally exhausted, but glad to be on the other side of the whole experience.

In the end, it was the support of friends that made the whole experience bearable. Losing a parent is tough, but it was a powerful reminder of how blessed I am to have so many people in my life that care. For that I will always be grateful.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

StL Day 2

Death, it turns out, is surprisingly complicated.

Yesterday we were at the funeral home by 830am to make the arrangements for my dad's funeral. The funeral home is, well, creepy. The people who work there are nice enough, but the affected tone of sympathetic seriousness was annoying me by 10 minutes into the process. I understand why this tone is employed, and I'm sure it's the right one for the vast majority of people, but I personally would have preferred a pragmatic, businesslike approach. But I'm sure most people would perceive that as callous.

Anyway, it turns out that there are a million decisions that have to be made in this process. My mom, who is still somewhat numb/in shock, was not in a place to want to be making lots of decisions about things. So, my cousin and I helped with that as much as we could. A partial list of decisions you have to make is:

- what services do you need the funeral home to provide?
- is there going to be a wake (now apparently referred to as a "visitation")?
- If so, for how long?
- In which room in the funeral home?
- What will the deceased be wearing?
- what flowers (if any) will you have?
- what will happen at the visitation? Do you need any ancillary equipment?
- Is there going to be a church service?
- When will that service be?
- Will there be an obituary?
- If so, what will it say?
- When will it run?
- Who will be pallbearers?
- Should we be picked up at the house or at the church?
- What should the prayer cards look like?
- What should they say?

And then, when you've gotten through a bunch of stuff like that, you get taken down into the basement. For the casket tour.

Ew.

So there you are, in a room full of caskets. In fairness, the guy was good about not pressuring us in any perceptible way, at least not until it came time to decide about a vault. But first, we wandered around the room looking at all these different caskets, and by the end of the tour I was convinced I wanted cremation. Because you wander around the room going "OK, dad isn't going to give a shit which box he's in. But he's my dad. We can't dump him in the ground in any old thing." It can drive you crazy, and I don't want anyone doing a casket tour for me.

In the end, we went with a metal casket, toward the lower end of the price range, but not at the bottom.

Then, The Undertaker starts asking us which kind of vault we want. Not that we have to buy one, of course, but here are all the different types, and why you might want to choose this particular one, or that particular one, or maybe this othe-

"Wait," I said, "Why exactly do we need a vault?"

"Well," says The Undertaker, "technically you don't need one since Michael is going to be buried in a Catholic cemetary, and the Catholics don't require one. But there are a lot of reasons to consider it."

And so he begins with Line of Reasoning #1: the casket will be under 6-8 feet of earth, which is going to put pressure on it. Also, water will slowly eat away at it, until 50 years from now it may be more or less gone completely. I mean, if you think about a car, if you left it outside for 50 years, it'd be pretty much rusted away. A vault will protect the casket from that kind of pressure and slow degradation.

Well, I thought, that's a pretty compelling argument- if my intention is to dig my dad up 50 years from now to say hi, and maybe play a round or two of pinochle. Otherwise, I don't get it. Clearly, the skepticism shows on my face.

So, he goes into Line of Reasoning #2: the dirt that the casket is in will have a tendency to shift over time, especially once it's been dug up and put back in, and the casket may drift. Sealing the casket in a vault will help provide weight and stability that will ensure Michael doesn't end up running into the next grave over.

Hmm. My problems with this line of reasoning include the following: (1) IT'S THE FUCKING GROUND! It's not like the coffins are sloshing around down there like rubber fucking ducks in a bathtub. (2) Even if dad does end up sidling up to Jane Doe in the next grave over, seriously, what the hell else does he have to do down there other than make friends with the neighbors? (3), let's say he does shift 2 feet to the left over the next 50 years. Going back to Line of Reasoning #1, unless we plan to dig him up 50 years from now, WHO THE FUCK IS GOING TO KNOW THAT???

"I'm sorry," I say to The Undertaker, "I'm just having a lot of difficulty understanding what the value is."

So The Undertaker, in a last desperate gambit, reaches for Line of Reasoning #3: well, the movement of the casket over time will disturb the earth at the surface, which will make it harder for the cemetary staff to maintain the grounds. The vault helps the cemetary keep maintenance costs down.

Ah, well gee, that's really persuasive. Why don't we spend a couple thousand dollar's of my mom's fixed income in order to lower the cemetary's cost of operations by $1 a year. At a 10% discount rate, assuming my dad is in the ground from now to infinity, that means the net present value of the additional costs the cemetary will incur because I'm a stubborn, cheap bastard is $10. So I apologize on behalf of my family to all the hundreds of other future people who will someday be buying plots in Resurrection cemetary, since they will be bearing their individual fraction of the $10 in the cost of their plots.

"I don't think we'll be needing a vault, thank you," I say to The Undetaker, "but thanks for explaining the issue."

Trying hard not to show disappointment, he leads us back upstairs, to where it now seems less creepy, thanks to the Casket Room. We finish making all our decisions, and then The Undertaker draws up our invoice. Fortunately, they will take a life insurance policy as collateral, and they file all the necessary paperwork with the life insurance company, which will then pay the funeral home's invoice and send the balance of the policy to my mom.

From there, we picked up my brother Willie and went to Uncle Bill's for some greasy spoon breakfast with mom. That was a nice respite, because from there we had to go to the cemetary.

At the cemetary, you also sit down with someone, in this case an Irish Catholic identical twin with a slightly off-color sense of humor, and he walks you through the million decisions you have to make at the cemetary, which include the following:

- one plot, which coffins eventually stacked, or two plots side-by-side? Or more, if others want to be buried nearby?

- lawn-level stone, or upright monument?

- graveside service, or in a chapel?

- if graveside, tent/chairs or no tent/chairs?

- where in the cemetary? Buying a plot, Mike Finnegan informs us, is like buying a house. Location matters, and significantly impacts pricing.

"Can we buy some plots and flip them? Or has the market for that tanked too?" Fortunately, I say this only inside my own head. By the way, is how I survive situations like this.

So we pile into "the company van" and get a tour of the cemetary, to see where single plots are available (we decided a single plot with my mom eventually going in on top). The first place looks decent enough, though it's the cheapest area since the road and the railroad tracks are right there. We keep moving.

The second place is also close to the railroad tracks. It's slightly more expensive since the road isn't right there. Mike tells us not to worry about the wooden temporary road thingy just to our left; the railroad accident that dumped toxic chemicals was right over there a couple weeks ago, and that wooden road is for the workers to get in and out of the area as they continue their cleanup.

A lot of this whole dying process seems silly, but I do draw the line at agreeing to bury my father (and eventually mother) in a Superfund site. Suddenly, being anywhere near the tracks is not attractive. We keep moving.

Eventually, we've made a circuit of the whole grounds, and we decide to go for a plot in the interior near a bunch of cops, former military, and local small businesspeople. A very middle-class neighborhood, not obviously near the site of any future hazardous chemical spills. We go back to the office, draw up all the paperwork, and pay. We leave the cemetary, and realize that we forgot to deal with the flowers at the funeral home, and head back there.

I am not thrilled to be back at the creepy funeral home, and am not looking forward to spending 7 hours there on Friday (family visitation 2-3, public visitation 3-9). The Undertaker brings us a book of flower arrangements to have at the visitation, and that's kind of where I shut down.

"OK," I say to Mom and Anne, "I just want to set expectations here by saying that I do not expect to have anything useful to add in the way of choosing flowers, and I'm looking to you guys to take the lead on this one."

In retrospect, I suppose I should have manned up a little more there, but I was tired of making decisions, and so were they, and so we ended up pretty much going with what was on the first page, which was a bunch of white roses and stuff. I know dad wouldn't care less, and I think all of us were headed that way quickly.

Flowers chosen, we headed out of there. All of us were in need of a nap. I hoped to take one, but ended up answering work emails and stuff online until it was time to take mom to dinner. We had great Vietnamese back in the neighborhood I grew up in, and then dropped mom off at home. Plaid came by and picked me up, and we went to Ted Drewes for the best frozen custard on earth. Our friend Janet met us, and we ended up trading stories in the parking lot of Ted Drewes until 2am. A long day, but a good way to finish it.

Now, we're off to go pick up my brother Mikie from the airport. Always an adventure with him, so the family fun will begin in earnest soon...