Night of the Living Living

My friend D has ovarian cancer.  She has for a while, and she will until we can band together and figure out how to rid society of the Big C scourge once and for all.  D is, as she and everybody who knows her will tell you, a warrior, and though there are a few uninvited and most unwelcome cancerous specks lurking within her, they don’t govern her, so they are just along for the ride.

On Saturday night she hosted, with her family and with the help of many of her dear friends, the 3rd FU Cancer MusicFest, a night to raise money and celebrate what matters, friendships and love.*

I could describe Saturday night to you, but that’s sort of like trying to describe a dream to a passerby.  I might be able to capture shards of sound and snapshots of the spectacle of the night, but the meaning of it all is lost in the telling.  I’ve been trying to assemble and arrange my collection of shards and snapshots into a facsimile of what it felt like to be there, surrounded by people I have known since I was six and people I had met just four minutes earlier, listening to music in the rain, eating great food in a welcoming and even elegant setting.

But how can I convey to you just how much fun it was to sit with Jamie, my “boyfriend” from 5th grade, and relive the Van Morrison concert we went to together in 1992 at the Greek Theater in Berkeley.  I am still talking about this days later due in no small part to the fact that my 5th grade boyfriend feels a little bit like he could be my cousin, if my cousin were also my next door neighbor if my next door neighbor was freaking hilarious and had as few filters as I do, and with whom I resumed conversation maybe even mid-sentence even though I haven’t seen him since about a month after the Van Morrison concert at the Greek (about which I remember little except that I laughed through the entire thing).

I don’t think I could do justice to how great it is to know that Johnny C., whose little brother happens to be really good friends with my little brother since before time began, lives in Hawaii and is the captain of a dive boat and spends his days taking people out into the ocean to see the wonders of the deep.  On his days off, he goes diving.  On vacations, he goes diving.  The other day he swam with a whale shark.  He loves night dives and feeding Manta Rays.  My husband was so happy for him he looked as though he’d quit his own job and was spending his days swimming in the sea in paradise himself.

Another childhood friend’s husband, bartender for the night with the aforementioned husband, walked away from his lucrative and respectable career earlier this year, walked into a brewery and asked if he could volunteer in exchange for learning about making beer.  “Why volunteer?” they asked, “when you could work here instead?”  And so he does.

Late in the night, as D’s three sons and her husband prepared to play and sing for her on the stage they and their friends had built, she took the mike and thanked everybody for coming and sharing in the celebration with her.  They played and they sang and we danced and we cheered.

And it was beautiful and good.  And even though my friend, the warrior, says thank you in ways that you didn’t even know thank you could be said, does she know?  When she stands on that stage built by the hands of the beloved** and looks out at us, does she see?  Does she see that she’s brought us all together to do something so important?

It’s not raising money.  It’s not telling her we love her.  It’s not showing her that she is stronger than cancer.  It’s not making sure her boys know that they are forever surrounded and lifted up and held tight.   It’s just this: we were actually living the lives we were meant to live.  Who we are, who we are meant to be.

*bonus, raised thousands of dollars for the Sandy Rollman Foundation and For Pete’s Sake, formerly known as Crossing the Finishing Line, which I’ve written about before, even though Aunt Becky didn’t reward me for it.

**extra points if you can spot TWGH.

Swim Club, Mid-July, Same as It Ever Was

You could slap a pair of headphones on me at any time in the future and in any place and I could identify the sound you played for me without a moment’s hesitation.

“It’s the pool,” I’d say, “Mid July.”

The same pool I’ve been going to since I was five.  Where I raced against much taller girls in swim meets. Where I played in the deep end until the skin on my fingertips puckered and peeled.  Where I practiced flips off the diving board.  Where I learned to do headstands.  Where I became a master of Marco Polo.  Where I worked for five summers.  Where, on the steps in front of the locker rooms at the ripe old age of 13, my now husband and then object of affection first asked me to marry him.

I’m listening to the same sounds now.  Truth be told, they are the same sounds but one town over.  I took a circuitous route around the country to get here, but I ended up only about three miles from where I started.  Maybe fewer.  I haven’t actually measured.   That geographical detail is immaterial, though.  I could still identify the sound.

What’s harder is splitting the one sound into its component parts.

Happy shrieks.

Babies slapping their chubby hands on the surface of the water.

Lifeguard whistles punctuating the day, followed by the low and almost reluctant admonition, “Walk.”

The background thrum, but louder louder then softer softer in ceaseless waves, of cicadas.

Swoosh, scream, sploosh of the slide.

The clang and reverb and hanging silence before the splash of the diving board.

In the distance, a rhythmic thwap and return of tennis balls.

The cadence of the lap swimmers as they carve through the water in tidy back and forth rows.

Teenage girls’ voices amplified to ensure that the boys hear their calculated phrasing.

Magazine pages turning.

Mom/babysitter and kid call and response “Come see!”  “In a second!”

Negotiations over complicated rules of made up games of pool tag.

Laughing laughing laughing.

Home is Where the Job Is

The WRH dreams of Sunday mornings of sleeping in and coffee and newspapers and calm.  Perhaps some neighbors stop by, perhaps the family rallies for a late morning tramp through nearby woods and meadows.  In fact, the WRH is forced into the Great Sleeping Fake-Off to see who will get up first with the kids.  Who is more asleep?  Who got up earlier yesterday?  Who is more tired?    Who is more deserving.  Ooohhhh…that’s an ugly question and no good can come from answering it.  TWGH and I are not known for our slavish adherence to routine.  Controlled chaos is more our thing.  And we would sell our souls to sleep in.  We are known for our love of sleep.

We are trying, despite our very natures, to institute a Sunday morning routine that works.  And by “works,” I mean ”works for us and doesn’t represent the kind of child neglect that could get us into any trouble with the neighbors, the grannies, or the law.”  So we try to get the kids to entertain themselves and each other while we watch CBS Sunday Morning.  Great show, learn lots, entertaining too, yada yada.

One of the segments this week was an interview with the mysterious, handsome, talented, and totally weird Daniel Day Lewis.  Describing the choices he makes about how often to work and not work, he said, “I live in a landscape, which every single day of my life is enriching.”  TWGH and I looked at each other, and then sighed.  Big, long, sad, sighs.

We live in a terrific place.  Hey, Money Magazine ranked our town as the ninth best place to live in America (just ask anyone around here, they’ll tell you).  We grew up in the next town over – yes, both of us, nauseating, but true.  Our families are close by, mostly.  And we work here.  But in the years between high school and college, we both lived in different places on the map.  I lived in California and Montana, and he lived in Colorado, Louisiana, and Rhode Island.  And we’ve been around.  We’ve traveled enough, together and apart, to have caught the gist of what it might be like to live somewhere else.    We’re not moving.  Our roots go deep here and they seem to be grabbing hold more tightly every day.   Our life is enriched by all the people, places, and events that those roots are curling around, but not by the landscape we live in.  My feelings about Missoula, Montana, and his feelings about Providence and about the Colorado Rockies and how we each felt about ourselves in those places cannot be recreated where we are.  This is not a deal-breaker;   neither of us, I think, feels that we have made a geographical sacrifice.  But we will, I’ll bet, continue to work this bruise, though to what end I do not know.