Saturday, January 29, 2022

Everything Looks Worse in Black and White (2011)

Can so much recollection be tied up in so small a place in such pictures and imagery as I know to be inaccurate at best? It’s like the song So Long by Fischer-Z that I so wanted to re-obtain from decades before, and I remember riding with Dave in his Celica listening to its thrumming beat, its synthesized lull. Then when I finally got my ears around it for the first time in eons, I was disappointed to realize that it had disconnected from me long ago.

But even so, I still see the images, and I have to wonder what portions of them are real and what are fabricated from a mind trying to fill in the blanks. Snippets I recall from the field, standing on dirt roads in full combat gear with LBE, ammo packs and gas mask hanging limply at the side, steel pot tipped back on the head, boots dusty from the march, M16 dangling from nonchalant fingers. Probably smoking a cigarette because that’s what we did when we got the chance. That and beer. And these pictures fade in and out with some inconsistency of background.

Lush vegetation beside some ramshackle wooden structure. Many pathways through brush with something to do with weapons or grenade training. A hornets’ nest between trees in an opening in the woods. Different forts, different flora, but the same pose. Those are the faint times, somehow impactful enough to plant a picture, but not near enough to hold onto it like a life preserver. Who would want to?

Were there really armored vehicles in that one sand pit? Or was that a dream? The older, the harder it is to differentiate.

Riding down Hancock Street, heading south, already past that sporting goods place - can’t even remember the name. Then there was a tuxedo shop on the right beyond the intersection, and the ski shop up the hill where I bought $50 skis on sale and had to borrow the money for those because that was a lot back in 1982. Further down Hancock, there’s a package store, called a packy by the locals, where they sold Genessee Cream Ale which was really nothing but stanky pisswater in a can. What cream?

But I know that somewhere heading in to Weymouth, or some other place on the south shore, that the road came down into the city with a sort of panoramic sight, and I only went there once or twice, so it’s not even recognizable in street view any more. More’s the pity. What could be a useful tool for retracing steps has left me unsettled and a bit confused for the lack of ability to match the scene on the screen to the one in my head.

Hendrie’s Ice Cream plant. I’ve searched for it in Google. It was somewhere near Mattapan, but it’s elusive now, hiding way back in the nowhere land that exists in the small place with so much recollection.

I know I painted a house in Winthrop. I know I went snorkeling in Boston Harbor.

I know I walked through Braintree to someone’s house. That fellow is a friend on Facebook now, and no one should tell him that he is middle-aged.

Go figure. I’m still walking old streets while everyone else has gotten older.

A beach south of Boston, but still in the city. To me who is accustomed to broad sweeping beaches looking out over a wild Atlantic Ocean, this had the makings of being caught and canned in a lagoonish setting with a building on the left and every square inch of sand covered with supine bronzed bodies. I know it exists, for Pete and Pat and I went there one summer. But I don’t know where exactly and street view isn’t helping.

These images refuse definition, as if by doing so they will be rendered even more harmless than they already are. I know there’s a swimming pond out off 84 somewhere, and pretty Janine wore her pretty bikini there, but I could only look nonchalantly because Chad was there, too.

Perhaps the dirt road that led out to it is now paved and homes were built all around it so as to provide easy living for those with money. Change does that to a place and nothing can save it after all, except memories.

But what will save the memories? Like jigsaw puzzles, pieces go missing even as they sit unused in a box in the closet until one day they are pulled out and an attempt is made to reassemble them.

Unfortunately, not every memory is worth saving, even though they may be pleasant. So we find ourselves in something of a construction business as we try to remold them enough to be able to describe them in stories or poetry because we know... WE KNOW... they would absolutely add the necessary seasoning to make the written piece taste real and exotic. Or at least just real.

So, A Corner of Nowhere gets written. There’s no mention of Shevlin and his doings, but I can still decode it though others may frown and walk away none the wiser. And that all took place out.... out.... out there somewhere and the maps aren’t being specific enough.

Just do something with it and re-sculpt everything, though it may only be a fantasy.

No one will know

Not even me.

Note: The words “street view” in here refer to a feature in Google maps that allow you to virtually drive any streets that they have recorded with their street view car.

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Eulogy

 So my father died a little over three weeks ago on Christmas morning. When it was apparent he didn't have much time left, I prayed that God would extend him at least into January so my mother wouldn't have to associate Christmas with the loss of her husband of 66 years.

God ignored me.

I don't know what thoughts I have of all this. It seems like everything now is really geared towards getting his funeral arranged and taking care of death business. I suppose all the contemplation will come later when there is less organized chaos.

I do know that my father was never about taking care of himself physically. He didn't exercise or care that he ate way too many sweets. Those things just weren't important to him.

I could also make the point that his son wasn't that important to him either, though he did take me fishing when I was a kid. Other than that he really took little interest in the things I liked and wanted to do.

That last statement is probably unfair of me. There were other things he did for me, but I remember him showing up for one little league game I had and left because I wasn't in the game. He showed no real support for that or other things I did.

If I sound bitter, I'm not, really. He admitted that he wasn't a very good father to me and I can agree with him. Yet he provided a roof over our heads and food to eat. We never went without what we needed physically. For those things, I am thankful.

And I'm also thankful for the negative things as well, for it has instructed my own parenting with regards to my sons. I spent time with them doing things that he was unwilling to do with me. I can still see places where I could have done better. That's probably the curse of hindsight.

I can say that my father was an honest man and there are many examples. He held to fairly firm principles, though at times he was easily led astray by narratives that appealed to him. We are probably all guilty of that at one time or another.

But I can't really put together a glowing outline of his life to use as a eulogy if asked. Not if I'm being honest and frank. If asked to say something, I'll probably refuse, though I confess to a sense of obligation as I was his only son.

My dad was okay to me and not abusive and maybe that's enough.