Hand to Hand

My nephew and I are on the carpet in his room. His olive-green plastic toy soldiers are lined up against mine. He has nine with their long guns at ready.

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“Maybe this war is over,” he says, “but want to play again tomorrow?”

Well not exactly ready. The guns are pointed up towards the wall. I have fourteen soldiers, all in the same stance, their guns at the same angle. In between our two armies is a jumble of small toy cars of all makes and colors, piled up high. If one of our troops shot his rifle, he would hit the cars but not the opposing army.

“What’s going on?” I ask Adam.  “Is this war? My army is sure to win this battle because I have fourteen soldiers and you only have nine.”

While Adam and I talk, my soldiers are waiting for the go-ahead from their sergeant. In the meantime, Adam is reaching into the box that contains more plastic soldiers. He grabs four that are crouching and sets them in front of his line of troops. Then he grabs seven running soldiers and places them on either side of his battle line. After his grab, he has twenty soldiers and there are none left in the box to join either army in this war.

Adam says, “Who will win this war now?  My army is much bigger than yours.”

I say, “I’ve got strategy on my side.”

Adam and I talked about strategy before we started this game. I told him that strategy is a plan for how to win a war and requires thinking before taking action. I said that sometimes a smaller army can win over a larger army by using strategy. I said, “Each soldier might not start moving or shooting or running until he knows where his army-buddies are going and whether their actions will make them win the war.”

Three of his soldiers with their long guns are now climbing on the cars and my soldiers’ guns are angled upward, aiming right at his men.

“Bang, bang, bang,” I say as I knock them down. Two more soldiers climb the barricade and get shot.  I push them down along with some of the cars.

“Five are dead,” I say.  “Now what?” I challenge him.  A few more cars topple over and the car-barricade is not as high.

His running soldiers move around to the side of the barricade.

“Bang, bang, bang, bang” he says and topples over four of my soldiers. I straighten out the guns held by some of my soldiers so they are level with his running soldiers and just like that, four of his running soldiers are down. Adam backs up the ones that are left and they join his army behind the few remaining cars.

All is quiet for a moment.  I say, “Let’s count our troops.” He has eleven. I have ten.

The barricade is now about even with the crouching soldiers.  Our armies face each other straight on. Adam pushes his army towards mine. I push my army towards his and moveable guns fall out of the soldiers’ stiff arms.

All that is left is a pile of soldiers, scattered guns and a few cars. “Now for the hand-to-hand combat,” I say.  Except we can’t tell which soldier belongs to whose army.

“What’s the strategy now?” Adam asks.

“I’m hungry.” I say. “Let’s see what’s in the kitchen for lunch.”

Just like that we leave the war front. Later, after lunch, we line up the cars by color and size. We return the soldiers to their box and the war is over.

“Is it peace?” I ask Adam.

“Maybe this war is over,” he says, “but want to play again tomorrow?”

“Sure.” I say.

Years later, Adam goes to college and takes two classes on war.

Now in his thirties, he is a researcher at an organization whose mission is to protect refugees, advocate for victims of torture, and defend persecuted minorities. Military generals are on the organization’s board.

When I visit my sister, I sleep in Adam’s childhood bedroom. I always check out the books from the college classes he took on war. And I think, if only the books described war as ancient history. If only war could be a game, played on the carpet in a child’s bedroom and could be resolved before lunch.

Betsy Fuchs is the author of the prayer memoir Pulling the Pieces into Prayer: And Bringing Their Blessings into a Jewish Life (or Any Life) and features prose poetry, photography and other writing experiments at her blog, http://betsywblog.blogspot.com/.

Seaside Bohemia

When the news broke in September 1984 that Richard Brautigan had killed himself, few people took note of the town where it happened. Many didn’t even hear of his death, an item relegated to the back pages. History already had painted over him.

Fifteen years later, as I sipped wine while reading in a coastal town just north of San Francisco, an alarming fact leaped off the page at me from the memoir by Brautigan’s daughter, Ianthe. Her father, she wrote, had put the gun to his head in a house less than a mile up the hill from the place where I’d lived for about a month. In Bolinas.

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Some people are different without trying to be, as Brautigan seemed to understand across the centuries in both directions from his too-brief, storm-tossed life. His mortal valves wide open, he knew the way in which, as Creeley said, things move.”

It was the first in a handful of coincidences that tied together me, Bolinas, and Brautigan, whose work consoled numberless misfits and dreamers in our youth, my people, like nobody else’s could have done or has done since.

High school in the Midwest was hell. My mother had remarried, and her new husband moved us from Rockford – then Illinois’ second-largest metropolitan area – into the cornfields, 15 miles away. Farm boys whiffed the city on me. They picked fights, while the sadistic adults in charge stood by, idly watching.

When I appeared at gym-class lineup with the wrong-colored shirt (white that should have been gray), my teacher sneered. “What about you, Awsbern? Tryna be differnt?” My mother had misread the list of required gear while shopping and had made a mistake.

I was the mistake. Tryna be differnt was the worst thing you could do at Byron Community Unit School District 226 where, in the early 1970s, authority struggled mightily to hold its ground. The wave that had crested in California, led by Brautigan and others, finally washed over the heartland. Girls wore peasant dresses and smelled of patchouli. Tie-dye was in evidence, though not for gym class. The braver boys, just a few, took elective cooking classes – “home economics” – meant for girls.

Brautigan bought the Bolinas house during this era, my lonely age. Where was Dad? Demoralized, alcoholic, he had gone wandering, I didn’t know where. Strewn around my bedroom were Brautigan softcovers, always one in my back pocket.

Bolinas, then as now, was an outpost of aged hippies, beach sleepers and high-spirited misfits, with rich people living on the hill and as many dogs as humans. “Bolinas dogs are so funny,” wrote poet Joe Brainard in his 1971 Bolinas Journal. “Running all over town. In and out of stores. Alone or in packs. Plain dogs most of them. Mutts. They seem to have a little Bolinas all their own.”

With a tribe of bohemians from New York, Brainard lived for a while in Bolinas, uneasily I would imagine, the natives historically preferring their dogs to outsiders. When state workers mount signs on Highway 1 to mark the Bolinas turnoff, townsfolk take them down under cover of night. The signs become coffee tables in the salons of chainsaw outlaws.

As if by an invisible pull, Bolinas is where I ended up after my divorce, having rambled to the far edge of the west in a traumatized vagrancy similar, or so I liked to imagine, to my father’s. With a woman I’d met in Colorado around the turn of the millennium, we occupied a rental on Wharf Road near the cafe where I sat with my wine and Ianthe Brautigan’s memoir of her doomed father that day. The grizzled waiter delivered another glass. “I used to see him around,” he said. “Real quiet guy. Sad.” The moment hung between us.

Early mornings I scouted the Bolinas beach for whatever the tide had left: shells, jellyfish, broken crabs. Once, I found an eel-like creature, about the thickness of my wrist, its body lined on the edges with tiny, quivering legs such as you see on millipedes. Half had been separated from the other, maybe a consequence of the roaring storm that had whipped the ocean overnight.

“Everyone looks at what I am looking at, but no one sees what I see,” wrote Sertillanges, the French Catholic spiritual leader. I had randomly picked up his book, The Intellectual Life: Its Spirit, Conditions, and Methods, in a San Francisco used bookstore. Sertillanges quotes Lamennais, an earlier philosopher who is said to have spoken the line while standing on the seashore at St. Malo in a storm. “No one sees what I see.” I felt the same way.

Now I saw that each segment of this eel-like thing was about a foot long, the pair of them maybe the same length apart. With a stick of driftwood I poked the glistening piece nearer to me and, in apparent response, the other piece twitched! I did it again with the same result. How could this be? Again. And again.

From Bolinas, my Colorado mate and I traveled to France for a few weeks. In a crowded Paris train station we became even more lost than usual. A thick-bodied man trudging ahead of me suddenly stopped, spun around and yelled, “Gerry!” I jumped back. “Gerry!” The man swiveled his head on his powerful neck, displaying a hawk-like nose in profile.

He faced me, unseeing. Dual-beam contact with him was impossible since one eye didn’t track with the other. “Gerry!” he shouted once more, then fixed me with the steady orb, sighed, and turned away. Not until he drifted into the crowd did the name that had been forming in my mind became clear. Jim Harrison.

It was like spotting a grizzly bear at O’Hare.

Of his dead friend Brautigan, Harrison would write in his memoir, Off to the Side, a few years later, “There is the Rilkean quandary of the exposed heart being richest in feeling and the point at which the exposed heart cannot recover. We actually discussed the matter while trout fishing in Montana and he said he would never commit suicide as long as he could still write and his lovely daughter Ianthe depended on him. The news [of his death] was terrifying but somewhat expected.”

Harrison mentions in the same book another friend, Gerard Oberle (“Gerry!”), with whom he attended a literary festival in St. Malo. “All my mortal valves open up fully when I walk the long beach at St. Malo,” he wrote.

Naturally I had to find Brautigan’s house in Bolinas. And I did, at 6 Terrace Avenue, about halfway up the hill to “the mesa,” Bolinas’ level mountaintop, wide with tall yellow grass that sways in the ocean wind. On the Mesa: An Anthology of Bolinas Writing, was published, like Brainard’s book, in 1971. “Things move,” minimalist poet Robert Creeley wrote in “Bolinas and Me,” his contribution. “You’ve come to here / by one thing after another, and are here.”

The Brautigan house is a three-story structure, with overlapping wood shingles like scales and a big deck on the second floor.

I learned of Brainard’s Bolinas period long after my own, in a roundabout way. During the summer of 2006, I undertook a project with an Italian mail artist name Gianni Simone, living in Japan. Having liked the chapbook of essays that I self-published, Simone sent an email that gamely suggested that he would send me a few lines that begin, “I remember …” and include a memory. I would reply with a memory sparked by his, opening with the same words, “I remember …” We would repeat the process, and keep going until one or both of us grew tired of it.

A year passed. Our exchanges gradually became darker, more intimate. Two years. The friendship — is this the right term for it? — deepened. After two and a half years, we quit at 999 memories.

Eventually I had an idea to put them out as a book. Researching whether anything similar had been done before, I discovered Brainard and his book I Remember. Published in 1975, it’s a non-chronological string of memories set down as they came to him, each starting with the same refrain that Simone and I had used, but limited to what Brainard could recall of his life to that point. In 2010, Simone and I published our back-and-forth memory book under the title Made of This, with a nod to Brainard in the introduction.

I still have not met Simone in person, nor do I feel the need. But I’d give a lot to meet Richard Brautigan. Unlike with Harrison, I never came close.

On an impulse, I sent Harrison my essay chapbook, a collection that includes an overly sentimental piece about childhood and my missing father. In a note I mentioned that episode in Paris when our paths crossed, or almost. Harrison wrote back. “Of course you should have said ‘hello’ in the railroad station, as when abroad I get terribly fatigued when speaking pidgin French.” He added that he was “mostly answering because I liked that piece you wrote about your dear old Dad.”

Dear old Dad. I started this essay you are reading on a gray, rainy Saturday exactly ten years after scattering his ashes into the ocean at Bolinas, which took place on another gray, rainy afternoon: my 50th birthday. Gusts of wind made the job harder, and lent a lugubrious tone that Brautigan would have appreciated.

A paraplegic in his final years, my father said he never wanted to live past 50, but he did. Unlike Brautigan, who exited just a few months short of the mark. In the years after his death, tributes kept showing up. They still do. There was even a literary magazine in the early 1990s (I didn’t find out until after it was defunct) called Kumquat Meringue, dedicated to Brautigan’s memory. It originated, of all places, in my hometown: Rockford, Illinois.

Some people are different without trying to be, as Brautigan seemed to understand across the centuries in both directions from his too-brief, storm-tossed life. His mortal valves wide open, he knew the way in which, as Creeley said, things move. How a corresponding thing touched here in time and space moves elsewhere – a twitch or pang – as if severed yet somehow together. Others looked where he looked, not seeing what he saw. I remember.

Randy Osborne’s personal essays have appeared in various online literary journals, print anthologies and several have been nominated  for the Pushcart Prize. He lives in Atlanta.

The Driving Lesson

My uncle was energetic, intense, self-confident, and passionate about golf. In western New York, lake-effect snows might blanket local courses anytime between November and May, but my uncle believed that the golf season should start when spring did. Each year he declared he would be golfing again come April first, ignored comments from family and friends that area courses would still be snow-covered, and pretended—or behaved as if he believed—that winter would move out of the way when it was time for golfing to resume.

 

RootLesson

My uncle chuckled, said those boys needed a driving lesson, and pushed his foot on the accelerator.”

By the end of March he’d start checking out the county golf courses. Hoping to recruit his teenaged nephew to the game, one day he took me with him to look over conditions at a course on the east side of the county. The back road we traveled was narrow, bumpy, with no shoulder to speak of, and passed through barely inhabited farmland and fallow fields. It hadn’t snowed recently, but the course was still mostly covered with dingy crystalline snow; open patches of fairway were few and scattered. We walked around some, my uncle estimating how soon the course would be snow-free and the groundskeepers could get it ready for play. He was cheered by his prospects. Then we began to retrace our way home, taking that back road again.

We were in my uncle’s Mercury, the one with the winged messenger god on the hood. As my uncle joked and fantasized about getting on that golf course soon, I noticed him paying particular attention to the rear view mirror. I could hear a car coming up behind us. Suddenly it roared past, two boys my age or older in the front seat. Once beyond us, the boy driving cut back into our lane too quickly. It was a thoughtless, careless maneuver, an immature driver misjudging distance and ignoring safety checks in his mirrors. Had his judgment been worse, his rear end would have clipped the front of our car. In a few seconds, his greater speed put more distance between us and I couldn’t tell if he’d realized how close we’d been.

My uncle chuckled, said those boys needed a driving lesson, and pushed his foot down on the accelerator. I felt myself thrust against my seatback, my feet instinctively braced against the floor. We gained on them rapidly. The teenager started to speed up but we closed in on their car until our front bumper was barely a foot or two away from their rear bumper. The boy stepped harder on the gas pedal and so did my uncle. We hurtled down the narrow two-lane, inches apart, at 60, 70, 80 miles an hour. The fields along the road were a blur, the boys in the car ahead glancing frantically around and behind them, my uncle smiling ferociously, my gaze alternately on him and on the car close ahead. I was terrified, speechless, certain that the four of us would crash.

Suddenly my uncle slowed slightly, whipped the Merc’ into the passing lane, shot past the other car at nearly 90, then swerved close in front of them, and rapidly decelerated. He laughed as they braked and fell behind us, saying how uncomfortable it must be to drive with your pants full, and guessing the boys would pass other cars more politely from now on. He was happy. He’d done a kind of civic service, he thought, taught them a valuable lesson.

My pants were not full but I’d had a lesson too. We’d never met another vehicle on that road but I didn’t believe we should have counted on that. Had someone been ahead of the boys or if the boy driving had panicked and swerved, there would have been deaths, perhaps the boys’, perhaps a third party’s, perhaps our own. I remembered the smile on my uncle’s face, the terror on the boys’ faces. Our lives had been at risk and I had none of my uncle’s confidence that the risk was always in his control.

My uncle, on the other hand, was in good spirits all the way home. He was certain that in a week or so he’d be on this road again and he’d be playing golf again by the first of April. For him, it had been a very good day.

Robert Root is the author of the essay collections Postscripts: Retrospections on Time and Place and Limited Sight Distance: Essays for Airwaves, the memoir Happenstance, and other books. He teaches creative nonfiction in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Ashland University. His website can be reached here.
Photo courtesy of Robert Root.

The Stirring

I would be home from school pretending to be doing my homework when I would hear the garage door open and the sound of my father’s car crawling into the space beside my mother’s. The hinges on the back door would creak like all the others in our 1950’s split-level, and my father would tap his way down the stairs to our kitchen-dining room. After planting a hello peck on my cheek, he would plop the mail on the kitchen counter, loosen his tie and swing the suit jacket he’d worn all day at the office over the back of a chair. I always knew what was coming next; his trek to the utility room.

 

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… but my father’s reason for opening the door was to visit the nook of tall metal shelving that displayed his army of liquor bottles standing at attention, each one a different shape and color.”

The furnace and the ironing board were enclosed in that room, out of the sight of guests, but my father’s reason for opening the door was to visit the nook of tall metal shelving that displayed his army of liquor bottles standing at attention, each one a different shape and color. I imagined him contemplating his soldiers: Would this be a day for a martini, or a scotch and soda? Or maybe a Rob Roy, or a gimlet? My father was sadly bereft of all knowledge related to ingredients that might go into a casserole. He wouldn’t even know where to find a cookbook. But when it came to bartending skills and crafting his evening potion, he was a master mixologist.

Having made his choice of spirits, he’d return to the kitchen, his muscular fingers wrapped firmly around the necks of the bottles, and place them on the kitchen table with barely audible taps. He’d unscrew each cap, with metal scraping against glass, and stand it next to its corresponding bottle. Soon, spicy aromas would waft across the room and find their way to my nose; I might wrinkle up to the sharp smell of Jack Daniel’s or open my nostrils to the light scent of a lime segment getting ready to land in a gin and tonic.

Placing a highball glass on the table, my father was ready to mix his brew. I could see him bent over sideways to get a snail’s eye view of the glass and its contents, pouring the liquids with such great care that he might have been preparing a life-saving nutriment, where one extra drop would spoil it. Then, the ice cubes lifted from our dispenser would sink heavily to the bottom of the glass, ready for several trips back and forth on the tip of his index finger. The final check came when he held his glass up to the ebbing light at our kitchen window to examine the results. Yes, it was ready for consumption. Carefully watching my father mix his daily beverage with such loving attention gave new meaning to the expression, nursing a drink.

Ruth Sterlin is a psychotherapist specializing in early attachment and family relationships. She is also a published author of several articles in her field, but for the past several years she has changed her writing focus to personal essay and memoir.
Photo by Ellen Blum Barish. Copyright 2015.

I’m Not From Here

I arrive in Seattle to visit my mother, who has moved many times, so there are no warm fuzzy childhood memories upon entering her house. But I’m relieved to see she’s built a cozy fortress for herself with bric-a-brac, books, and benzodiazepines.

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During my travels across America, I’m always looking at other cities and asking, “Could we grow old together?”

She resides in a suburban hamlet where those who can still drive go 18 miles per hour in the 25 miles per hour zone, and those who can still walk cheerfully shepherd their carefully groomed dogs around, dropping off casseroles for those who can no longer drive or walk. It’s not far from where I grew up, but nothing about Seattle feels like home to me any more. The Emerald City informs me that I now only qualify for a visitors pass.

I never thought I’d be away from Seattle this long. Growing up with a stepfather who changed jobs on a whim, there was always a new school, a new house or a new city to navigate. But we always moved back to Seattle when we needed to regroup.  It was a safe place to build up our strength to take on the world again. When I became old enough to make my own impulsive and illogical decisions, I stuck to this pattern. New houses, new jobs, new cities, mostly determined by friends and boyfriends, always ended with me returning to Seattle when my enthusiasm ran aground.  I became a flight attendant, perhaps because escaping was built into the job description; a perfect career for a girl who was raised by middle-class vagabonds. Five years ago, I found myself at the end of the line with a boyfriend in Nashville. This time I was unwilling to admit defeat and so I headed west in a hurry. I needed a diversion.  I wasn’t ready to have Seattle shrug its shoulders and say, “We knew you’d be back.”

Moving to Chicago was all my glorious decision, a place to win or lose on my own terms. But it was still my rebound town. Like when you break up with someone and you call up that party girl you thought you’d never seriously consider, because, why not? You desperately need a distraction; you deserve to have a good time. But you know she’s not going to be a long-term thing. I mean, sure, she’s super fun and she makes you feel alive for a while, but most days she’s just overwhelming; she lives too large and she’s just so damn loud. Chicago told me I could come and live large and get loud for awhile, reminding me that I leave all the time anyway, so it’s not like we could really get that serious about one another.

Chicago has done its best to accept me as an adopted child, even if I use rookie terms like “Macy’s” and “Willis Tower.” Chicago suggested I could reinvent myself in any shape that pleased me.  I listened when the ghosts of Studs Terkel, Carl Sandburg and Roger Ebert whispered to me to become a writer. But they didn’t tell me to write a book or a movie or a play or anything in particular. Writing gave me my first taste of proclaiming vehemently that I was more than seat backs and tray tables, that my identity wasn’t built of Cokes and peanuts. But it didn’t give me a clear path as to what I should do; no sweeping dream, no master plan. Discovering writing was like being given a medicine proven to save my soul, but I didn’t know whether I should smoke it, snort it, ingest it, or even where I could score it on a regular basis. I just know that I would be diseased and miserable without it.

Chicago yells, “Oh stop being so dramatic and get back to work, already!”  Chicago gets brusque with me sometimes. The city that works is also the city that stays up too late, drinks too much, and pushes too hard. I find myself on the “L” in the wee hours, night after night, wondering how long I can sustain this pace. Attempting to keep up with this town is exhausting even in sensible shoes. So many reasons for me to believe it would be a terrible place to grow old, slow and complacent. I fear I’ll end up like the elderly folks I see on the train, expending all their energy battling the landscape just to get their groceries home in a snowstorm. I wonder how long I have to find a more subdued slice of life, to be part of my own little casserole community.

During my travels across America, I’m always looking at other cities and asking, “Could we grow old together?” Denver tells me, “You don’t want to spend your golden years with us here in the land of thin air and stoner mountain hippies. Plus we get snow here in May here, like, for real.”  Los Angeles coos to me to in a smooth jazz radio voice, “Honey, you know these lithe sun-kissed super humans with their Gucci sunglasses will never make any sense to you. Plus you hate being in the car.”  Austin tells me I’m too much of a Yankee. Philly says I’m not tough enough. Every time I come home from a trip, Chicago throws a pint of Old Style in my face and tells me to snap out of it. It mocks me when it gets wind of my civic infidelity. “Quit being ridiculous,” Chicago implores me. “Have a hot dog with mustard. Take a walk through Millennium Park. Have a drink downtown and laugh at the tourists on Michigan Avenue, knowing these streets are all yours all of the time. You’ll feel better.”  You can always count on Chicago when you need some straight talk.

I hoped Chicago might cure my loneliness, but it follows me no matter where I go.  It’s the souvenir of the urban nomad. I find solace in random encounters with the people I come across in my travels. There is an unexpected joy when the girl half my age with a maternal smile in a diner in Wichita touches my hand as she sets down my coffee and says “enjoy this,” instead of “you look tired.” There is a piece of me in the grey-haired hotel security guard across the street from the hockey arena in Pittsburgh who tells me in great detail about the day they brought the Stanley Cup through the lobby and how beautiful it was when the sunlight hit it just so, his eyes picturing it, helping me to see. I find myself in the little girl who stops me at work and says, “I drew you a picture.” I take all these pieces and I try to build a nest, but often it feels like heavy lifting and my arms get so tired.

At the end of my Seattle visit, on the way to the airport, I make small talk with the cab driver. “I hear a little Midwest accent,” he tells me. “It’s hard to believe you were ever from here.” I smile. Seattle bids me a calm, crunchy granola farewell. “You’re welcome to come back here anytime,” Seattle tells me as I stare at Mt. Rainier beyond the highway traffic. “But you are made of so much more than this now.  There will always be a quiet, tree-hugging chunk of this place in you, but it’s time for you to go home. I mean, you’ve become accustomed to living pretty large and sometimes you’re just so loud.”

Chicago senses I could use a pep talk when my plane touches down at Midway. “You didn’t move here to make your life easier,” my town reminds me. “You moved here because you wanted to fly by your own lights, you wanted to make your own way. Such a conquest tends to be complicated, overwhelming and messy. But you can handle it. We showed you how to be determined, how to open yourself up to possibility. Welcome home, kid. Now get yourself over to Pulaski and grab yourself a bag of tacos al pastor. You’ll feel better.”’

Eileen Dougharty has shared her essays at numerous live lit shows in Chicago and has contributed to Chicago Public Radio’s “Pleasure Town” podcast. She has written for Nvate, Story Club Magazine, and Tattooed Heroine. She’s currently playing around with mixed media in hopes of creating stories for all of the senses.
Photo by Ellen Blum Barish