10:32am Writing Practice 56° Boise
Yesterday I did writing practice on the Rocky Pestorini story and it was fun. I would do that again today except I have to write my bio for the reunion booklet. Yesterday was 3 months until reunion and I really wish I could get into it. This is a volatile election year with strong opinions on both sides of a clearly drawn line --- part of me wishes we had considered the election year when we set the date. For me, it will be good practice in rising above and I'll encourage everyone else to do the same. There are so many wonderful things to talk about besides politics, after all. For most everyone, that is.
Yesterday I got on Craig's List and checked out Carson City as a possible option for a move. It's a terrific location, high desert, near mountains. Population of under 60,000, pretty good weather most of the year and plenty of affordable housing. I found several mobile homes for sale that I could buy outright and pay just the space rent. I also found a share rental in the country on a half acre where I could have a horse if I wanted. Or a goat! I read it over twice and sent an e-mail to the owner, an older dad, he described himself. I assume he's around mid-40s. He has a teen daughter who stays a few times a week. Now I ask, does this sound ideal or what?! I could have a semblance of family without having to sleep with anyone. I'm waiting to hear back before I start planning my trip over to check it out.
I also found out what to do about getting rid of my PMI insurance. Then I could put $112 a mo toward my mortgage instead of down the drain. Or I could save it to buy a new car in the fall. Actually, I could lease a car, a Chevy, for about $125 mo. I'll check that out on Monday. A 27 month lease. That would take care of any vehicle issues I'm having right now, I'll bet. And I'd get a brand new car.
And one last update --- the same guy who advised me about the PMI business also told me that when the equity in my house is at 50%, he can do a reverse mortgage and I won't have to make a house payment ever again, only taxes and insurance at under $200 a month. So if I stay put and keep working on it, my home situation will be secure into my old age even after John dies. I don't have to pay off my house to get the benefit of no mortgage payment. That could be as close as ten years from now! Or maybe even less. When John dies, my income will go down considerably, probably to around $2000 a month or less. (And that's if the Social Security system is still in place. If it's not, there will be a whole lot of old people sitting on the streets. Many millions of us. It would be ugly, so I'll not project that out into the future.) When it's time for assisted living, I'll have someone move in here and assist me. This could truly be my last address. I could actually live here for the rest of my life. How weird is that idea?! I could watch Stephen's tree grow big and tall and I wouldn't mind that a bit.
But what about my idea to buy an RV and travel after the cats are gone? I have to be able to get up and go when I want, I really hate sitting here day in and day out with no trips planned. It's like I'm sitting here waiting to die. And in a way, I am. But I may as well do something while I wait.
So anyway --- my bio.
It's only been 5 years since the last reunion and yet things have changed so much for me. I wonder if it's our ages, if now is the time of life when so many of our loved ones depart the scene for whatever reason. Both of my parents are now gone, along with all the other relatives who went before them. One of my brothers died of cancer last year and the other brother is still fighting his cancer. While sad, certainly, these losses can be rationalized as a part of life. But I lost one of my children in 2013 to suicide. That loss still haunts me and probably always will.
On a lighter note, my health is terrific and it looks like I'll be around for another 30 years. I've lived in the same house for over 8 years; that's a record by far and there's no packing boxes in sight. My other son, Nathan, is preparing to retire from the Air Force next year and will go back to school for a master's degree in art to fulfill his lifelong dream. I have no grandchildren and there will be none if the current plan doesn't change.
Just before the last reunion, I bought my first digital camera and have since upgraded and taken my photography seriously. I retired from working for others last year and have been enjoying my freedom. I write daily and have outlined at least 8 books, non-fiction and memoir, enough to keep me busy for the rest of my life. All in all, I'm all set for the golden phase. My hair is white and thinning but I'm strong and active, go to the gym, ride my bike, hike, travel and have no complaints. I've got good eyesight, great hearing and I still have my own teeth. I really do feel blessed and grateful and I hope the same for you.
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Car Options
10:05am Writing Practice 59° Boise
Wow, this month buzzed by at the speed of light! I spent several weeks in the pits, weeping and napping and not leaving my house. I haven't been to my studio except a few times all month. When I do go out, it's to run errands and car shop. I've tried to tell myself to stop looking for a new car but so far, I haven't been able to mind me. And so today I'll hash it out again and see if I can make sense of the options.
Option One: Don't buy a new car at all right now. Get Sybil's horn fixed, get her detailed, have Robert give it a look-see about any leaks or radiator issues, and drive her for another six months to a few more years. She strong and healthy, no reason she won't last another 20,000 to 50,000 miles. That's another three to eight years the way I drive!
Option Two: Try to buy the 2011 Subaru Forester that I drove and fell in love with yesterday. It's above my budget by several thousand dollars and I'd have to put all my cash down to make it happen and then still have a $250 car payment for six years. Yikes! I could call USAA and find out what the insurance would be for that vehicle, that might help with this decision. It's such a nice ride, AWD, great condition, I could go to the mountains again, go camping and still take trips to Portland or California. Down side is, it's used and five years old, the potential for repairs is real and it has huge tires that will cost a fortune to replace when the time comes.
Option Three: Lease a new Chevy Cruze for $119 mo for 27 months. I was surprised by how much I liked it when I saw it yesterday, it's really a beauty that I would appreciate for trips and such. Plus it gets great gas mileage. But it's not a mountain car, it's a actual car, not an SUV. It's just like the car I have, the back seat lays down. My car has served me well for 22 yrs and I really don't need an SUV type vehicle. The kind of camping I want to do can be done with a car. Plus it's got a total warranty bumper to bumper for the life of the lease and that includes oil changes and maintenance, so no out-of-pocket expenses except gas and car washes. I could save money while enjoying a brand new car again. Then when the lease is over I could keep it or get another one with the money I've saved.
After typing all of this out, it appears to make sense to try to lease that Cruze. It's white and very classy and comfy. It's a much nicer car than I thought it would be. Again, I need to ask about the cost of insurance before I finally decide. So I'll do that next. As much as I want the Forester, I don't need it and it's too much money and uses too much gas. It may turn into a money-pit vehicle and then I would hate it. The best deal for the buck is the Chevy. And if not that, I'll keep my car and wait for fall. Sybil doesn't like the heat of summers but she's still good on the freeway, loves a nice drive where she can stretch out and go fast. I just won't get into much camping but then I probably wouldn't go anyway, not alone. But trips alone are certainly doable, I enjoy those a lot.
Now, there is the possibility that I'm using this car business to distract me from my primary goal of writing books. Distracting myself is my best thing, I'm very good at it. However, my car is 22 years old this year and it quite possibly might be time to make a change in that regard. Or maybe I just want a change in something and because I can't move house, I'm focusing on a car to provide the change. And yet I don't want to get rid of my car, all my memories of Stephen are tied up in that car and this house ... so many memories.
My birthday is this coming Sunday and that may be causing all this confusion about wanting change. I'll be 63 yrs old, not bad and I'm very healthy and strong. I have a lot of miles left on me and a lot of things I want to do.
But for right this minute, I think I'll go fix my breakfast and call it a morning. No writing is being done lately, I'm certainly not productive at all. But I do need to go to the studio and print some things for Stephanie and a photo for Jodie. I'll be going to Baker next week and I'll pay the vet bill I owe for Sue's dog and I'll meet with my reunion committee at noon. That will be nice!
Wow, this month buzzed by at the speed of light! I spent several weeks in the pits, weeping and napping and not leaving my house. I haven't been to my studio except a few times all month. When I do go out, it's to run errands and car shop. I've tried to tell myself to stop looking for a new car but so far, I haven't been able to mind me. And so today I'll hash it out again and see if I can make sense of the options.
Option One: Don't buy a new car at all right now. Get Sybil's horn fixed, get her detailed, have Robert give it a look-see about any leaks or radiator issues, and drive her for another six months to a few more years. She strong and healthy, no reason she won't last another 20,000 to 50,000 miles. That's another three to eight years the way I drive!
Option Two: Try to buy the 2011 Subaru Forester that I drove and fell in love with yesterday. It's above my budget by several thousand dollars and I'd have to put all my cash down to make it happen and then still have a $250 car payment for six years. Yikes! I could call USAA and find out what the insurance would be for that vehicle, that might help with this decision. It's such a nice ride, AWD, great condition, I could go to the mountains again, go camping and still take trips to Portland or California. Down side is, it's used and five years old, the potential for repairs is real and it has huge tires that will cost a fortune to replace when the time comes.
Option Three: Lease a new Chevy Cruze for $119 mo for 27 months. I was surprised by how much I liked it when I saw it yesterday, it's really a beauty that I would appreciate for trips and such. Plus it gets great gas mileage. But it's not a mountain car, it's a actual car, not an SUV. It's just like the car I have, the back seat lays down. My car has served me well for 22 yrs and I really don't need an SUV type vehicle. The kind of camping I want to do can be done with a car. Plus it's got a total warranty bumper to bumper for the life of the lease and that includes oil changes and maintenance, so no out-of-pocket expenses except gas and car washes. I could save money while enjoying a brand new car again. Then when the lease is over I could keep it or get another one with the money I've saved.
After typing all of this out, it appears to make sense to try to lease that Cruze. It's white and very classy and comfy. It's a much nicer car than I thought it would be. Again, I need to ask about the cost of insurance before I finally decide. So I'll do that next. As much as I want the Forester, I don't need it and it's too much money and uses too much gas. It may turn into a money-pit vehicle and then I would hate it. The best deal for the buck is the Chevy. And if not that, I'll keep my car and wait for fall. Sybil doesn't like the heat of summers but she's still good on the freeway, loves a nice drive where she can stretch out and go fast. I just won't get into much camping but then I probably wouldn't go anyway, not alone. But trips alone are certainly doable, I enjoy those a lot.
Now, there is the possibility that I'm using this car business to distract me from my primary goal of writing books. Distracting myself is my best thing, I'm very good at it. However, my car is 22 years old this year and it quite possibly might be time to make a change in that regard. Or maybe I just want a change in something and because I can't move house, I'm focusing on a car to provide the change. And yet I don't want to get rid of my car, all my memories of Stephen are tied up in that car and this house ... so many memories.
My birthday is this coming Sunday and that may be causing all this confusion about wanting change. I'll be 63 yrs old, not bad and I'm very healthy and strong. I have a lot of miles left on me and a lot of things I want to do.
But for right this minute, I think I'll go fix my breakfast and call it a morning. No writing is being done lately, I'm certainly not productive at all. But I do need to go to the studio and print some things for Stephanie and a photo for Jodie. I'll be going to Baker next week and I'll pay the vet bill I owe for Sue's dog and I'll meet with my reunion committee at noon. That will be nice!
Friday, April 15, 2016
Hiding Out
11am Writing Practice 48° Boise
Sunny, windy and chilly out there today. The cats are out in it, I think they found a sunny spot to sit and pretend that everything is OK. I got up late for no good reason except I had to take a little extra bit of sleep aid in order to get to sleep after the brownies I ate at the meeting of the Compassionate Friends last night. I made a plate of cookies and brownies, all from scratch, and they were well received. Those meetings are only once a month, I should go every month, it would probably be good for me.
I realize that I'm hiding out the past few weeks, not making any efforts at all to have a life or be in this world. I'm very bored with it all. I don't want to buy a new car yet, it's too cold for yard work, I don't feel like bothering with it yet, and I don't feel inspired to write any of the projects I've got lined up. I've been reading in the back bedroom. That's my hide out. It's like a little cave back there, warm and snug, perfect for escaping from anyone and everyone. I've been turning the ringer off on the phone and I spend very little time on FB. Turns out I simply don't care about anyone, nothing interests me, I'm tired of it all and there's simply no reason to put forth any effort on anything. I've decided to go with this for a bit. All my life I've had to get out, go to school, go to work, make the dinner, run the errands, keep life organized for people. There are no people now. It's only me. Just me. I have stepped outside the river of the world and have let it rush by without me and I'm OK with that for now. I've never really done this before, never had the opportunity before. Now I do and so I shall avail myself.
My birthday is a week from Sunday. I may drive over the Sumpter and spend the night at the motel there. I'd love a cabin but they have gotten too stinking expensive. If I leave here at around noon, I would arrive by 3pm ready to check in somewhere. There are trails for walking all around up there. I could take some ashes to scatter out by the cemetery if I wanted to. I could invite someone to go with me but I don't want anyone to go with me. I want to be alone. I don't want to go to dinner with people, I don't want to be out in public. Sumpter seems like a great place for how I'm feeling. If I still feel like this, then.
Emotions come and go like the waves of the ocean and can be just as infinite and just as deep. I'm down in that silent world under that water, holding my breath, barely moving my limbs to conserve oxygen .... sunlight is slanting through the water from way above and below is utter darkness, a blue so deep that it's almost but not quite black. The immensity of this space is frightening and I sometimes feel my heart flutter in a flash of fear but then I remember that I'm here of my own free will. I want to feel this, all of this, all of life in all it's aspects. I've been afraid of these depths all my life and now here I am, hungering for it, ready to be engulfed by it all. For this is where Stephen is, where the best part of him remains and I yearn to connect with him in this place of emotion so deep that there is no air to breath and no sound to hear expect the beating of my own heart. I can stay in this space as long as I want, for it's only a flicker of time and yet it feels like eternity. I won't be harmed here, this is the place, the source of all life --- I'm safe and relaxed now, just waiting for Stephen to arrive and take my hand and show me where he is now, let me feel what he's feeling and get a peek at life from his new perspective.
I'll stay here for as long as it takes, Stephen. Mama is waiting for you, honey.
Sunny, windy and chilly out there today. The cats are out in it, I think they found a sunny spot to sit and pretend that everything is OK. I got up late for no good reason except I had to take a little extra bit of sleep aid in order to get to sleep after the brownies I ate at the meeting of the Compassionate Friends last night. I made a plate of cookies and brownies, all from scratch, and they were well received. Those meetings are only once a month, I should go every month, it would probably be good for me.
I realize that I'm hiding out the past few weeks, not making any efforts at all to have a life or be in this world. I'm very bored with it all. I don't want to buy a new car yet, it's too cold for yard work, I don't feel like bothering with it yet, and I don't feel inspired to write any of the projects I've got lined up. I've been reading in the back bedroom. That's my hide out. It's like a little cave back there, warm and snug, perfect for escaping from anyone and everyone. I've been turning the ringer off on the phone and I spend very little time on FB. Turns out I simply don't care about anyone, nothing interests me, I'm tired of it all and there's simply no reason to put forth any effort on anything. I've decided to go with this for a bit. All my life I've had to get out, go to school, go to work, make the dinner, run the errands, keep life organized for people. There are no people now. It's only me. Just me. I have stepped outside the river of the world and have let it rush by without me and I'm OK with that for now. I've never really done this before, never had the opportunity before. Now I do and so I shall avail myself.
My birthday is a week from Sunday. I may drive over the Sumpter and spend the night at the motel there. I'd love a cabin but they have gotten too stinking expensive. If I leave here at around noon, I would arrive by 3pm ready to check in somewhere. There are trails for walking all around up there. I could take some ashes to scatter out by the cemetery if I wanted to. I could invite someone to go with me but I don't want anyone to go with me. I want to be alone. I don't want to go to dinner with people, I don't want to be out in public. Sumpter seems like a great place for how I'm feeling. If I still feel like this, then.
Emotions come and go like the waves of the ocean and can be just as infinite and just as deep. I'm down in that silent world under that water, holding my breath, barely moving my limbs to conserve oxygen .... sunlight is slanting through the water from way above and below is utter darkness, a blue so deep that it's almost but not quite black. The immensity of this space is frightening and I sometimes feel my heart flutter in a flash of fear but then I remember that I'm here of my own free will. I want to feel this, all of this, all of life in all it's aspects. I've been afraid of these depths all my life and now here I am, hungering for it, ready to be engulfed by it all. For this is where Stephen is, where the best part of him remains and I yearn to connect with him in this place of emotion so deep that there is no air to breath and no sound to hear expect the beating of my own heart. I can stay in this space as long as I want, for it's only a flicker of time and yet it feels like eternity. I won't be harmed here, this is the place, the source of all life --- I'm safe and relaxed now, just waiting for Stephen to arrive and take my hand and show me where he is now, let me feel what he's feeling and get a peek at life from his new perspective.
I'll stay here for as long as it takes, Stephen. Mama is waiting for you, honey.
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Rocky Pestorini
9:04am Writing Practice 45° Boise
Two days in a row, up and at 'em early after weeks of late nights and late mornings and nothing productive happening in my writing life. I just read over some of my last blog posts and I can sure see how moody I've been and how likely I am to stay that way if I don't find a way to stop thinking about Stephen. And yet I don't want to stop thinking about Stephen.
A few days ago on Sunday I spent the entire day weeping. When I wasn't actually crying and sobbing, my eyes were wet. All day long! I stayed home and spent the day in the back bedroom, his old room, reading the first of a five book series from the creators of The Dragonriders of Pern. When the going gets tough, the tough hop a dragon and fly to Pern until the trouble blows over. I'm also watching the TV series, Downton Abbey, from the beginning. Another great place to escape to.
Then Sue Stubbe's puppy got sick on Monday and she kept me up all night with her worries. I asked Keith to take her to the vet and he did, bless his heart. That bill is $174 and I'll have to pay it. Sue may or may not ever pay me back, but I assume she'll at least make payments. I would feel bad for her but I happen to know that she's an impulse spender, buying clothes that cost too much and then she can't wear them. So after keeping me up all night and texting me constant updates early Tuesday morning, I spent another whole day in the back bedroom reading and napping.
I've taken to turning the ringer off on my phone. Mostly when it rings, it's a marketing recording so I don't answer it anyway. My friends know to leave a message or I can see I missed them with the caller ID and call them back. I simply don't want to talk on the phone anymore these days. I'm spending less time on Facebook and I'm withdrawing more and more into my own little world. This is really a first for me --- always before, I've had a job to go to or family to take care of that has kept me engaged with life outside myself. The only thing that takes me out is the fact that my studio is a few miles away and since I pay for it, I feel like I should go over there sometimes. And it really is lovely over there, very comfortable. Not as comfortable as here at home but then I at least have a reason to get out of here sometimes. Or I invent reasons. If I want to.
I've been listening to a memoir by Billy Crystal, Still Foolin' 'Em, and it's organized by age. Which makes perfect sense in Billy's life, since he's talking about his career and how it developed. It's a nice memoir, funny and detailed, nothing horrible happens to him, his kids are happy and well adjusted, none of them take to drugs or jump off buildings. They go to college and get married. They have babies and he gets to be a Grandpa. He and his wife love each other and support each other and they stay married. How very nice for him. All of that, even without the great career, makes him a mensch in my eyes. He feels like a real person and I've always liked that about him.
As for me, I'm still browsing through time trying to find out what it all means. I write stuff down but still haven't found a thread to hang on to. I will though, I intend to keep at it for as long as it takes. there's no race here, only time and memories. Yesterday I started a little project that seems kind of fun --- the story of Rocky, my little cat. He's such a character and I have so many photos of him and his story is interesting, what with his rocky start in life and all those birth defects. Who knows, if I can get it written up and put on Amazon, he could inspire others to rise above their challenges. Maybe even me.
Two days in a row, up and at 'em early after weeks of late nights and late mornings and nothing productive happening in my writing life. I just read over some of my last blog posts and I can sure see how moody I've been and how likely I am to stay that way if I don't find a way to stop thinking about Stephen. And yet I don't want to stop thinking about Stephen.
A few days ago on Sunday I spent the entire day weeping. When I wasn't actually crying and sobbing, my eyes were wet. All day long! I stayed home and spent the day in the back bedroom, his old room, reading the first of a five book series from the creators of The Dragonriders of Pern. When the going gets tough, the tough hop a dragon and fly to Pern until the trouble blows over. I'm also watching the TV series, Downton Abbey, from the beginning. Another great place to escape to.
Then Sue Stubbe's puppy got sick on Monday and she kept me up all night with her worries. I asked Keith to take her to the vet and he did, bless his heart. That bill is $174 and I'll have to pay it. Sue may or may not ever pay me back, but I assume she'll at least make payments. I would feel bad for her but I happen to know that she's an impulse spender, buying clothes that cost too much and then she can't wear them. So after keeping me up all night and texting me constant updates early Tuesday morning, I spent another whole day in the back bedroom reading and napping.
I've taken to turning the ringer off on my phone. Mostly when it rings, it's a marketing recording so I don't answer it anyway. My friends know to leave a message or I can see I missed them with the caller ID and call them back. I simply don't want to talk on the phone anymore these days. I'm spending less time on Facebook and I'm withdrawing more and more into my own little world. This is really a first for me --- always before, I've had a job to go to or family to take care of that has kept me engaged with life outside myself. The only thing that takes me out is the fact that my studio is a few miles away and since I pay for it, I feel like I should go over there sometimes. And it really is lovely over there, very comfortable. Not as comfortable as here at home but then I at least have a reason to get out of here sometimes. Or I invent reasons. If I want to.
I've been listening to a memoir by Billy Crystal, Still Foolin' 'Em, and it's organized by age. Which makes perfect sense in Billy's life, since he's talking about his career and how it developed. It's a nice memoir, funny and detailed, nothing horrible happens to him, his kids are happy and well adjusted, none of them take to drugs or jump off buildings. They go to college and get married. They have babies and he gets to be a Grandpa. He and his wife love each other and support each other and they stay married. How very nice for him. All of that, even without the great career, makes him a mensch in my eyes. He feels like a real person and I've always liked that about him.
As for me, I'm still browsing through time trying to find out what it all means. I write stuff down but still haven't found a thread to hang on to. I will though, I intend to keep at it for as long as it takes. there's no race here, only time and memories. Yesterday I started a little project that seems kind of fun --- the story of Rocky, my little cat. He's such a character and I have so many photos of him and his story is interesting, what with his rocky start in life and all those birth defects. Who knows, if I can get it written up and put on Amazon, he could inspire others to rise above their challenges. Maybe even me.
The Lives and Loves of
Rocky Pestorini
The Miracle Cat from Idaho
I started calling him Mr Pestorini when he began trying to stop me from putting on my shoes. He also follows me around begging for attention sometimes and I can't figure out what in the world he really wants, so I pick him up and cradle him like a baby and sometimes he likes it, most times not. He's very involved with me and loves to be near. He was a great vocabulary. The other day I stuck my head out the back door and saw him curled up on one of the metal chairs by the fence and I told him I was going to take a nap and asked him if he wanted to take a nap with me. He looked at me for a few seconds, then got up, stretched and sauntered across the yard and into the house. I ring the tuna bell in the evenings and that never fails to bring him and my other cat, Milo, in for the night. I like to think I have the smartest, most well-trained cats on the block. They are certainly the funniest.
So my idea is to write Rocky's story to the best of my ability as a way to weasel into writing memoir before I have to write the really painful stuff. I can practice with his story and it will be fine, no crying or depression. He is, after all, still alive and pestering me daily. No heartbreak there yet.
OK, that's it for today for the blog journaling. I've been writing in the spirals the last few weeks instead of in here but only because the laptop was on the desk in my room and that spot is so not a comfortable place to write. As much as I want to write at the studio, it's not as comfortable as here in this chair at home with my vid-fire and my soft music on YouTube and my cats curled up nearby, content to have me here with them. I am their life and you know what? They are my life, too.
Sunday, March 27, 2016
Introduction
Next month will be my 63rd birthday. It's hard to believe I've lived this long, it sure doesn't feel like it. Older people always say things like that, I heard my own grandmother say it and yet failed to understand what she meant when she looked so ancient with her white skin and white hair, polyester pants and shaky, creaky voice. Now I know just what she meant.
Time passes so slowly at first, a heavy train with churning wheels inching along, heaving to and snapping each loaded car that it's attached to into action, taking years to climb up out of the canyon of youth and finally gather a little speed toward goals and dreams in an unknown future and then hitting a level straight stretch in the middle years, cruising smoothly if one is lucky, hitting rough track or running out of track all together if one isn't. And then the slight decline, the train picking up speed, lighter now because much of the cargo has been spent on the journey, cars have dropped off as family members have gone ahead. This new lightness, while potentially refreshing, is also filled with nostalgia for all that has been experienced on the trip, all of the people, once so alive and loved, now gone, and the once exciting adventure that was set upon with so much hope and joy is now rushing toward the end of the line and who knows what will happen then?
This morning, upon waking, I thought of Stephen and imagined living a lifetime without him. There are no guarantees, I could be dead by the end of the day or last another 30 years or anything in between. That's the trick about life: you don't know how much you're going to get or if any of it will be good or even worth it. I'm at that nostalgia point where all the people I grew up with and loved are gone. All of them and now, so is Stephen. He's been gone almost 29 months. Friday was his third birthday without him and tomorrow will be the third memorial birthday party. I have to clean house today and bake a cake somehow. I have all day today and all day tomorrow. Plenty of time but no time to waste.
Off and on since Stephen died, I've pondered ways to join him. I've imagined jumping from a high place like he did and I've spent plenty of time scoping out likely spots. But I'm not a jumper (but then neither was Stephen and he managed it). Then yesterday I thought of driving my car up into the mountains and finding a nice cliff to drive off, my old car Sybil and me could go together. A few times, I've spoken of acquiring an aneurysm and just dropping dead one day but there's no way to create one of those, you just have to hope. I've also mentioned being first, jumping up and waving my hands yelling, "Pick me! Oh please pick me!", if a gunman walked in to shoot up a place where I happened to be doing business or eating. That seems heroic, like maybe I could save the lives of others if I threw myself on him and maybe even freak him out a little. That would make the news and not seem like a suicide at all. No one would know. Then this morning I thought of tying a plastic bag over my head. I would only be uncomfortable for a few minutes but that's only if I could stand to go through with it and not rip the bag off before I passed out.
The urge to keep living is so strong! Even when there's really nothing going on and every reason to get going, the life inside has a will of its own and insists that it must continue no matter what. Even when you can't imagine going another day without your child alive in this world, you do. You just keep breathing in and out, you keep eating meals and going about life as if there was a point to it all. You keep waking up and upon waking think, shit.
Don't worry, I only have those fleeting thoughts, I'm not going anywhere, at least not on purpose. I have decided to give meaning to my life by writing it all down and I can't go until I'm finished. There is so much to write! It may take me years and although this is the first of it, the beginning of the process, I'm hoping that the act of writing will give twofold benefits: 1) I'll have something the get up for each day, a reason, an excuse, really, for wandering around in my past. 2) I'll get to live it all again, feel it all again, view it all from a distant perspective where the confusion can clear and hidden meanings can be revealed. Maybe I'll begin to understand where I came from, who my people really were, what their motives were, why they were they way they were, why I made the choices I made and why so many events just seemed to befall me.
I can't make the train stop at this point but I can run to the caboose and look back and back and back and try to make sense of it all before the stupid thing falls into a ravine, exploding in a ball of fire. I don't have to watch that part. I can focus on what has gone before and let the train run wild and free. And why not?
Time passes so slowly at first, a heavy train with churning wheels inching along, heaving to and snapping each loaded car that it's attached to into action, taking years to climb up out of the canyon of youth and finally gather a little speed toward goals and dreams in an unknown future and then hitting a level straight stretch in the middle years, cruising smoothly if one is lucky, hitting rough track or running out of track all together if one isn't. And then the slight decline, the train picking up speed, lighter now because much of the cargo has been spent on the journey, cars have dropped off as family members have gone ahead. This new lightness, while potentially refreshing, is also filled with nostalgia for all that has been experienced on the trip, all of the people, once so alive and loved, now gone, and the once exciting adventure that was set upon with so much hope and joy is now rushing toward the end of the line and who knows what will happen then?
This morning, upon waking, I thought of Stephen and imagined living a lifetime without him. There are no guarantees, I could be dead by the end of the day or last another 30 years or anything in between. That's the trick about life: you don't know how much you're going to get or if any of it will be good or even worth it. I'm at that nostalgia point where all the people I grew up with and loved are gone. All of them and now, so is Stephen. He's been gone almost 29 months. Friday was his third birthday without him and tomorrow will be the third memorial birthday party. I have to clean house today and bake a cake somehow. I have all day today and all day tomorrow. Plenty of time but no time to waste.
Off and on since Stephen died, I've pondered ways to join him. I've imagined jumping from a high place like he did and I've spent plenty of time scoping out likely spots. But I'm not a jumper (but then neither was Stephen and he managed it). Then yesterday I thought of driving my car up into the mountains and finding a nice cliff to drive off, my old car Sybil and me could go together. A few times, I've spoken of acquiring an aneurysm and just dropping dead one day but there's no way to create one of those, you just have to hope. I've also mentioned being first, jumping up and waving my hands yelling, "Pick me! Oh please pick me!", if a gunman walked in to shoot up a place where I happened to be doing business or eating. That seems heroic, like maybe I could save the lives of others if I threw myself on him and maybe even freak him out a little. That would make the news and not seem like a suicide at all. No one would know. Then this morning I thought of tying a plastic bag over my head. I would only be uncomfortable for a few minutes but that's only if I could stand to go through with it and not rip the bag off before I passed out.
The urge to keep living is so strong! Even when there's really nothing going on and every reason to get going, the life inside has a will of its own and insists that it must continue no matter what. Even when you can't imagine going another day without your child alive in this world, you do. You just keep breathing in and out, you keep eating meals and going about life as if there was a point to it all. You keep waking up and upon waking think, shit.
Don't worry, I only have those fleeting thoughts, I'm not going anywhere, at least not on purpose. I have decided to give meaning to my life by writing it all down and I can't go until I'm finished. There is so much to write! It may take me years and although this is the first of it, the beginning of the process, I'm hoping that the act of writing will give twofold benefits: 1) I'll have something the get up for each day, a reason, an excuse, really, for wandering around in my past. 2) I'll get to live it all again, feel it all again, view it all from a distant perspective where the confusion can clear and hidden meanings can be revealed. Maybe I'll begin to understand where I came from, who my people really were, what their motives were, why they were they way they were, why I made the choices I made and why so many events just seemed to befall me.
I can't make the train stop at this point but I can run to the caboose and look back and back and back and try to make sense of it all before the stupid thing falls into a ravine, exploding in a ball of fire. I don't have to watch that part. I can focus on what has gone before and let the train run wild and free. And why not?
Saturday, March 26, 2016
2007 was a good year ....
9:40am Writing Practice 33° Boise
Frosty out this morning, I hope all the newly blooming things survived the cold night. February was so warm, we all got lulled into thinking winter was over. But the day is bright and beautiful, it may warm up again. March only has another week and then it's on to April, the month of my birth. I'll be 63 years old. My next and last big bonus birthday is 65 and then I'll qualify for Medicare and I won't owe hardly any state taxes. Two more years.
Yesterday I went and drove that 2007 Vibe I was talking about and it was fine, probably the best vehicle I could find in that price range. I applied for a loan through Key Bank but it was too late in the day and I won't find out until Monday. In theory, I could take $3000 out of my savings account and put $3000 on my Capital One card and buy it today, then get financing next week. I was offered $1000 for Sybil as she sits from Jeff at State Street Auto Body last Thursday. Then it would become a kid car and who knows how she would be treated.
Funny. When I bought my little red car back in 1994, I told people that I would be keeping her forever and that someday she would be Stephen's car. 22 years later, I still have the car but Stephen is a box of ashes in my closet. He did use her to learn to drive in 2007. He was a very good driver once he learned. He was such a late bloomer in so many ways.
2007 was a great year for us, Stephen and me. We started out the year in Hannibal, working on the CD. We went to a movie on New Year's Eve, The Holiday, a sweet romantic comedy that we loved. That was out last New Year's Eve together. He was 23. In fact, 2007 was our last full year together. He left for Portland in November 2008, came back here September 2009, then left again July 2010, never to return.
2007 saw us completing our CD project, selling our house in Hannibal, moving to Boise, Stephen meeting Tony (a real boyfriend), learning to drive and getting his license. Then I bought this cottage in October and moved in over Thanksgiving weekend while he was spending the holiday with John's family in Hanford. Stephen was involved with Tony through the holidays and New Year's, so we didn't do anything much together. Although I think I made Christmas meat loaf dinner for all of us, including Mark, a tradition we continued for five years. The last one of those Stephen attended was 2009. That was the one where RubyAnn showed up a few weeks before and inserted herself into Mark's life. It was only a matter of time before she cut me out of his life and I knew it would happen the minute I met her.
So I guess I'm saying, I'm cool with buying a 2007 Vibe. That year treated us really well from beginning to end. Also, I'm not ready to commit to a huge car payment for the next six years. I haven't had a car payment since 1999, I need to start slow. I've had the best car of my life the last 22 years, who knows what the next one will be but I just want to start slow and work up. Or maybe see what the future brings. Just this morning I had the idea to take Sybil up to the mountains and find a nice cliff to drive off. When I go, I'd like to go with her. But then there's Nathan and Stephanie and James to think of. I don't want to hurt any young people with my passing so that idea is for another day. Besides, suicide isn't something you just up and do one day. You have to work up to it, it takes a plan and a lot of nerve to end a life. Suicide is not for the undecided or faint of heart, that's for sure.
Now, how did I get off on that subject? I guess I want to acknowledge that I have those thoughts. Ideas of ways to exit come to me at random moments and I entertain them for a bit, usually briefly. It doesn't take long to remember that I can't leave that way. After my last attempt, I promised not to do that again but then I spent another 14 years in self-destructive behavior that could have lead to my demise ... but didn't. I'm still here and that was 38 years ago. If anyone ever read this or any of my pages, they would think I was whacked. And maybe I am in a way. Stephen's life and suicide has left me in a void that I just rattle around in.
"Music survives everything, and like God, it is always present." Eric Clapton
When I heard that sentence in Clapton, The Autobiography, I knew it had significance for what I'm trying to write. I must do something with Stephen's music, it's his legacy. So are his photographs. I can't go until I get that job done. And whatever I do with it will be my legacy. He and I will leave no biological trace on this world (and Nathan doesn't intend to either but he's got his own art and plans for a legacy and is still alive to hone it all) and so the best I can do is take what Stephen left and combine it with my talents and ideas and make something of it all. Not everything is a masterpiece but all efforts are worthy of history in some way. Someday, someone might benefit from what I'm trying to do and if not, I will never know.
OK, off to get a grip. Breakfast first and then, who knows?
Frosty out this morning, I hope all the newly blooming things survived the cold night. February was so warm, we all got lulled into thinking winter was over. But the day is bright and beautiful, it may warm up again. March only has another week and then it's on to April, the month of my birth. I'll be 63 years old. My next and last big bonus birthday is 65 and then I'll qualify for Medicare and I won't owe hardly any state taxes. Two more years.
Yesterday I went and drove that 2007 Vibe I was talking about and it was fine, probably the best vehicle I could find in that price range. I applied for a loan through Key Bank but it was too late in the day and I won't find out until Monday. In theory, I could take $3000 out of my savings account and put $3000 on my Capital One card and buy it today, then get financing next week. I was offered $1000 for Sybil as she sits from Jeff at State Street Auto Body last Thursday. Then it would become a kid car and who knows how she would be treated.
Funny. When I bought my little red car back in 1994, I told people that I would be keeping her forever and that someday she would be Stephen's car. 22 years later, I still have the car but Stephen is a box of ashes in my closet. He did use her to learn to drive in 2007. He was a very good driver once he learned. He was such a late bloomer in so many ways.
2007 was a great year for us, Stephen and me. We started out the year in Hannibal, working on the CD. We went to a movie on New Year's Eve, The Holiday, a sweet romantic comedy that we loved. That was out last New Year's Eve together. He was 23. In fact, 2007 was our last full year together. He left for Portland in November 2008, came back here September 2009, then left again July 2010, never to return.
2007 saw us completing our CD project, selling our house in Hannibal, moving to Boise, Stephen meeting Tony (a real boyfriend), learning to drive and getting his license. Then I bought this cottage in October and moved in over Thanksgiving weekend while he was spending the holiday with John's family in Hanford. Stephen was involved with Tony through the holidays and New Year's, so we didn't do anything much together. Although I think I made Christmas meat loaf dinner for all of us, including Mark, a tradition we continued for five years. The last one of those Stephen attended was 2009. That was the one where RubyAnn showed up a few weeks before and inserted herself into Mark's life. It was only a matter of time before she cut me out of his life and I knew it would happen the minute I met her.
So I guess I'm saying, I'm cool with buying a 2007 Vibe. That year treated us really well from beginning to end. Also, I'm not ready to commit to a huge car payment for the next six years. I haven't had a car payment since 1999, I need to start slow. I've had the best car of my life the last 22 years, who knows what the next one will be but I just want to start slow and work up. Or maybe see what the future brings. Just this morning I had the idea to take Sybil up to the mountains and find a nice cliff to drive off. When I go, I'd like to go with her. But then there's Nathan and Stephanie and James to think of. I don't want to hurt any young people with my passing so that idea is for another day. Besides, suicide isn't something you just up and do one day. You have to work up to it, it takes a plan and a lot of nerve to end a life. Suicide is not for the undecided or faint of heart, that's for sure.
Now, how did I get off on that subject? I guess I want to acknowledge that I have those thoughts. Ideas of ways to exit come to me at random moments and I entertain them for a bit, usually briefly. It doesn't take long to remember that I can't leave that way. After my last attempt, I promised not to do that again but then I spent another 14 years in self-destructive behavior that could have lead to my demise ... but didn't. I'm still here and that was 38 years ago. If anyone ever read this or any of my pages, they would think I was whacked. And maybe I am in a way. Stephen's life and suicide has left me in a void that I just rattle around in.
"Music survives everything, and like God, it is always present." Eric Clapton
When I heard that sentence in Clapton, The Autobiography, I knew it had significance for what I'm trying to write. I must do something with Stephen's music, it's his legacy. So are his photographs. I can't go until I get that job done. And whatever I do with it will be my legacy. He and I will leave no biological trace on this world (and Nathan doesn't intend to either but he's got his own art and plans for a legacy and is still alive to hone it all) and so the best I can do is take what Stephen left and combine it with my talents and ideas and make something of it all. Not everything is a masterpiece but all efforts are worthy of history in some way. Someday, someone might benefit from what I'm trying to do and if not, I will never know.
OK, off to get a grip. Breakfast first and then, who knows?
Friday, March 25, 2016
Stephen's Birthday
10:14am Writing Practice 41° Boise
Today would have been Stephen's 33rd birthday. I welled up a little in bed this morning but didn't spill over and so far I'm fine. I got a sweet text from James DuTois and then I sent a text telling Nathan simply, I love you. He sent me one back, Yay! I love you too! That made me very happy, since I so seldom hear from him. He doesn't know how much I've thought about ending it all the last few years but it's the thought of him and how much it would hurt him if I did that that keeps me here. He's had enough trauma in his life when it comes to me, he doesn't deserve that final insult.
To catch up, I've been writing in my pages because I've left this laptop at the studio several nights this past week. I have my iPad mini to play around with here in the evenings but I've been trying to spend less time on Facebook at night and not having the laptop here makes it easier.
I went to Baker on Wednesday to support Yvonne and Ray and had a big talk with Ray's case worker. She doesn't think much of Yvonne so I tried to enlighten her. I hope I didn't say too much ... I had a cup of real coffee with Sue when I first got to town and that stuff tends to make me giddy and flip. But I asked for help before I went in and I think I did OK, by and large. The best point I tried to make with her was, yes, Ray is the focus but Yvonne needs support and encouragement, too. She's had precious little of it in her life and she could use some now. She's doing a marvelous job with Ray but she feels picked on and judged and so is not part of the "team". Lisa, the case worker, was complaining that she wished Yvonne would be more open, let them in her house, let more people be involved with Ray. She doesn't realize that her very attitude about Yvonne is what is blocking the progress. Sad. Lisa is holding views that are counter-productive to the process of transition for all of them. She didn't want Ray to move from his 18 year home in Haines, isolated out there far from town and opportunities to be more social. Yvonne is taking him to the library and he has started reading again. No one had worked with him out there in all those years! This change could be so good if people would set aside the judgement and embrace Yvonne as a team member for Ray. I hope the energy will move in that direction as time goes by.
On the way home from Baker, I stopped at Walmart in Ontario and bought a new desktop computer, an Acer Aspire Z all-in-one. The whole computer is in the screen and it's heavy! But it's a nice, big screen and it will be very fun to edit photos on it. It's got Windows 10 as an operating system and I can purchase a Waterlogue for PC and play with all my large photo files. I plan to buy a wireless keyboard and mouse and I'll be able to sit back in my beanbag chair to compose stories. Although I could do that with this laptop as well, if I took along this lap board. I sure have gotten great use of this old lapboard. It used to have a pillow attached but the elastic that kept it attached wore out long ago and the pillow was tossed. I'll keep my eyes open for a new one so that I can have one for the studio as well.
I really like it at my studio! I was thinking of leaving the laptop at home but I think I'll take it. The headset for the speech recognition program only works with this laptop. Plus it might take me a while to get everything moved over the the new desktop. I plan to go over after breakfast today and see if the wifi is fixed. It was out yesterday and so I didn't get too far in my set up. The new computer was only $349, no tax in Oregon which saved me over $20. I figure it's our birthday present to us, Stephen. I know it's not a Mac but that would be going too far. Now we have a desktop and a laptop and an iPad mini, we should be good to go for just about anything.
I looked at a car I kinda like yesterday. It's a 2007 Pontiac Vibe, a little hatchback SUV sort of thing, dark blue-gray, Ray's favorite color. 105k miles, not too high., really about average miles. A one owner, local family. It's in great condition and the price is under $6000. I just checked Kelly Blue Book and this is a good price for that car. I may go drive it today. Why not? That car might just fit the bill for me perfectly. I could finance it for 3 years and have a payment of about $150 a month if I put $1000 down and offer them $5500 as a sale price. It's got good tires and I wonder if I should have it checked out by my auto guys at Gary's? I'll call and ask. I was looking at the Vibe back in 2006 when they first came out. Very interesting idea. My total debts right now are about $3000 (not including my mortgage) and that's after almost 4 years since my bankruptcy. Not bad. My credit score has been 694 for several years, also not bad. I could see about getting qualified for a car loan but I'll need another 4 years in order to fully recover my credit. I may have to just eat a high interest rate for a while and if the monthly payment is right, not worry about it.
OK, seems like I'm all set to have a good day on this important anniversary. It's chilly and cloudy today, a good day to stay in and work on things but let's go see about that car first. Then this weekend I have to clean house for the party on Monday. Don't know what kind of cake I'll make this time ... maybe something from scratch .... we'll see. I'll be ready for a party by Monday with a nice, clean house. And maybe a new (to me) car.
Happy Birthday, Stephen, my little love. I miss you so much.
Mama loves you, honey.
Today would have been Stephen's 33rd birthday. I welled up a little in bed this morning but didn't spill over and so far I'm fine. I got a sweet text from James DuTois and then I sent a text telling Nathan simply, I love you. He sent me one back, Yay! I love you too! That made me very happy, since I so seldom hear from him. He doesn't know how much I've thought about ending it all the last few years but it's the thought of him and how much it would hurt him if I did that that keeps me here. He's had enough trauma in his life when it comes to me, he doesn't deserve that final insult.
To catch up, I've been writing in my pages because I've left this laptop at the studio several nights this past week. I have my iPad mini to play around with here in the evenings but I've been trying to spend less time on Facebook at night and not having the laptop here makes it easier.
I went to Baker on Wednesday to support Yvonne and Ray and had a big talk with Ray's case worker. She doesn't think much of Yvonne so I tried to enlighten her. I hope I didn't say too much ... I had a cup of real coffee with Sue when I first got to town and that stuff tends to make me giddy and flip. But I asked for help before I went in and I think I did OK, by and large. The best point I tried to make with her was, yes, Ray is the focus but Yvonne needs support and encouragement, too. She's had precious little of it in her life and she could use some now. She's doing a marvelous job with Ray but she feels picked on and judged and so is not part of the "team". Lisa, the case worker, was complaining that she wished Yvonne would be more open, let them in her house, let more people be involved with Ray. She doesn't realize that her very attitude about Yvonne is what is blocking the progress. Sad. Lisa is holding views that are counter-productive to the process of transition for all of them. She didn't want Ray to move from his 18 year home in Haines, isolated out there far from town and opportunities to be more social. Yvonne is taking him to the library and he has started reading again. No one had worked with him out there in all those years! This change could be so good if people would set aside the judgement and embrace Yvonne as a team member for Ray. I hope the energy will move in that direction as time goes by.
On the way home from Baker, I stopped at Walmart in Ontario and bought a new desktop computer, an Acer Aspire Z all-in-one. The whole computer is in the screen and it's heavy! But it's a nice, big screen and it will be very fun to edit photos on it. It's got Windows 10 as an operating system and I can purchase a Waterlogue for PC and play with all my large photo files. I plan to buy a wireless keyboard and mouse and I'll be able to sit back in my beanbag chair to compose stories. Although I could do that with this laptop as well, if I took along this lap board. I sure have gotten great use of this old lapboard. It used to have a pillow attached but the elastic that kept it attached wore out long ago and the pillow was tossed. I'll keep my eyes open for a new one so that I can have one for the studio as well.
I really like it at my studio! I was thinking of leaving the laptop at home but I think I'll take it. The headset for the speech recognition program only works with this laptop. Plus it might take me a while to get everything moved over the the new desktop. I plan to go over after breakfast today and see if the wifi is fixed. It was out yesterday and so I didn't get too far in my set up. The new computer was only $349, no tax in Oregon which saved me over $20. I figure it's our birthday present to us, Stephen. I know it's not a Mac but that would be going too far. Now we have a desktop and a laptop and an iPad mini, we should be good to go for just about anything.
I looked at a car I kinda like yesterday. It's a 2007 Pontiac Vibe, a little hatchback SUV sort of thing, dark blue-gray, Ray's favorite color. 105k miles, not too high., really about average miles. A one owner, local family. It's in great condition and the price is under $6000. I just checked Kelly Blue Book and this is a good price for that car. I may go drive it today. Why not? That car might just fit the bill for me perfectly. I could finance it for 3 years and have a payment of about $150 a month if I put $1000 down and offer them $5500 as a sale price. It's got good tires and I wonder if I should have it checked out by my auto guys at Gary's? I'll call and ask. I was looking at the Vibe back in 2006 when they first came out. Very interesting idea. My total debts right now are about $3000 (not including my mortgage) and that's after almost 4 years since my bankruptcy. Not bad. My credit score has been 694 for several years, also not bad. I could see about getting qualified for a car loan but I'll need another 4 years in order to fully recover my credit. I may have to just eat a high interest rate for a while and if the monthly payment is right, not worry about it.
OK, seems like I'm all set to have a good day on this important anniversary. It's chilly and cloudy today, a good day to stay in and work on things but let's go see about that car first. Then this weekend I have to clean house for the party on Monday. Don't know what kind of cake I'll make this time ... maybe something from scratch .... we'll see. I'll be ready for a party by Monday with a nice, clean house. And maybe a new (to me) car.
Mama loves you, honey.
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