Friday, January 29, 2021

Finally, something to write about!

 I sat down the other day and started a blog about my dad, and deer and my dead mom and then got BORED with even my own thoughts!  Thank goodness I'm now in LA, and sitting in my mostly empty apartment, doing and doing and doing things.

(Though to tell the truth, the thing I most want to be doing is sipping coffee and watching videos of Queen Elizabeth, I know I really need to get up, and take out the garbage, take out the recycling, etc).

My mission here in LA:  fit as much as I can into a storage cube, purge anything I don't love and sell some shit for much-needed cash, because my ass is broke.

I needed to do this on the cheap, so I recruited two beefy nephews to fly out with me.  It was their first flight, and though they like to play it cool, they really enjoyed the novelty of the plane taking them off "Like the dragster"), landing in LA ("Bro, I can see myself living here" and we were only in the airport), and were very patient in helping me.

They got a kick out of the pool and hot tub, and were amazing little helpers.  We drove past two of their favorite YouTubers ("You wouldn't know them Aunt Becky, they do pranks and are gamers and stuff"), and they saw one of the cast members ("It's Pat, he's the dad.  PAT PAT PAT!  What's up? You busy?").

They told me about their favorite foods, drinks and some fun dishing of their brothers.  They sometimes were a bit intimidated, like when we went to Grand Central Market, and they didn't know what to order from the various stands of different cuisine ("Bro, you're supposed to try something new in a place like this").  So, I went up to my favorite mexican spot and ordered quesadilla, and one ordered the exact thing and then the other got brave and ordered a burrito ("It's really good.  And huge").

I meant to cook for them, but the packing and moving was exhausting, so we did a Burger Tour for fun.

FatBurger, Carl's Junior, In n Out ("I just called it Inside Out burger, I don't know why I did that"), maybe Jack in the Box?  And then, they'd still be hungry, so they'd order pizza at night, after working out and after moving a bunch of crap for me.

We went to Santa Monica and even though it was windy as fuck, they got some good pictures. I wanted to go on scooters, but one of them said "That's not my thing" and the other said "Don't be a baby".

We also went to UCLA ("Those fraternity houses are like mansions") and the Rose Bowl ("It's ok, kind of old"), Universal City Walk and walked by Bubba Gump ("I really like shrimp") and went into the Harry Potter store where I forced them to buy their mom an early birthday gift ("I guess she'd like that") and also Rodeo Drive ("Look, Channel"..."It's Sha-nel bro").  Both of them had a hard time saying Boulevard ("Listen to how he says it!"  "Shut up, you can't say it either") of which there were many to go see the Fresh Prince's House in Bel Air ("I think that's it?  Hard to know").  We went to Griffith Observatory (Me: "Do you know what an observatory does?"...Nephew "Observes"?  Smart ass) and I said with quite a bit of confidence "You have probably seen this in Rebel without a Cause, or LA LA Land or the Paula Abdul video...them:  "Um, no Aunt Becky.  Can we go buy Compton?").

And so we did!  And Hollywood Boulevard ("Let's go to Marshall's...I like Marshall's) and then down to the SoFi stadium and drove past the old Forum.

And finally, some shopping at DTLA ("What's a bodega?") as we stepped into a hidden shoe store designed to look like a bodega entrance and then The Citadel outlets that the fashionable nephew really wanted to go to ("It's all my favorite brands") and they didn't find much ("Nothing really to my taste").

Oh! We also went to Long Beach and saw the Queen Mary ("That shit is HUGE...I like Long Beach") and tried to find the house from their family tv show, Animal Kingdom ("That is not Smurf's house, that's a hipster bar").

And then I dropped them off on Thursday morning at LAX, and was super sad and super exhausted to see them go.

I know I bitch about my dead mom, but I realize how lucky I am that they had 5 kids, and 4 of those 5 kids had 16 kids so it's pretty much free child labor for me.  (Don't get me wrong, I paid them and paid for all their food).  But, thank god for family that I love and a free house to stay at so I can give up my super-expensive place for a bit and try to catch up financially.


Saturday, January 23, 2021

Pulling the Rip Cord

I head to LA tomorrow for the next adventure.  Packing up my place and putting it into storage.  I'm mostly ready---but am wondering what it'll be like to walk in and see the Pickle items (For new readers-Pickle was my now-dead Beagle that I killed on a road trip from LA to Cleveland).

Anyway, this Covid pandemic was keeping me home, I was working from home and seeing no one so I decided to come to Ohio for a bit.  That soon became a bit longer.  And then, a while.  And then, may as well stay for the holidays to OH SHIT my ass got laid off and I have no CASH so into a period of austerity.

Thankfully, I have a huge and supportive family and friends here in Elyria, and feel I can still have a life here, for now.

It's where I want to be at the end of the world (I DON'T think the world is ending, but it does express my sentiments) and so this layoff, while out of the blue and surprising, is forcing my hand.

I couldn't actually afford rent on my income, so now, I'm not going to be paying rent!  That's a huge relief.

Anyway, please don't rob me, send some love and with any luck, I'll be back in LA in the fall.

Stay safe peeps this little bird has flown!

Thursday, January 14, 2021

PANIC

I had a little panicky moment and feeling yesterday.  My sisters Beth and Kitty and I try to walk as much as we can (or bike when the weather is good).  And, Kitty comes over every night, and we catch up on the day, and really know the details of each other's lives. 

Last night was the first night without my dad...and we kept saying it'll feel so freeing to not have him constantly interrupting and demanding his Bruce attention.

In truth, I felt mostly really sleepy, and not very fun.  Without work, and my dad to bitch about, my life is pretty empty.  Kitty got up to leave and I said "Now what am I going to do?" and she said..."I wondered the same thing."

So, while my dad cheerfully drove off to Florida, happily imagining golf courses and his newly burned cds and NPR to entertain him on the way, I am here, in an empty house, glad for the peace and quiet but secretly despairing on the purpose of my life.

Thankfully, I've been to therapy so I kicked in and reflected and exercised, picked up healthy items from the grocery store, turned on some good tunes, put my phone down and out of my reach, cleaned my living space, read through my mom's recipe box, knitted and did some self-care.  I shored up my financials, made a list, made plans to move out of my LA apartment, got in to see the doctor, dentist, pap smear, mammogram, etc.

But man, those moments, and missing my dad and mom (and dog)--I've got to lean into them.  Because I know that's the way through for me.  But they SUCK!

Grateful to be here, grateful for my family and friends and colleagues and the great state of California for unemployment and looking forward to this reset.


Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Our Abbey is not be used as an escape

Is today Wednesday?  I set my alarm super early to get up and say goodbye to my dad as he heads to Florida.

He was so excited last night--- checking items off his packing list, bustling around, showing off his neatly folded new shirts for his skinny frame.

My sisters Beth, Kitty and I would yell out--where's the blue sweater and he'd dig down and lift the shirts to show us his new sweater.  He loves this new sweater---he got it to mimic the sweater he's wearing in a picture with my mom.  I think it was the day they got engaged but my dad doesn't remember the specifics.  It's certainly Christmas, and at my grandmother Mimi's house.  My mom "frosted" her hair, and was worried my dad wouldn't like it.  One of my uncles told her "If Bruce doesn't like it, he can go right back to Vermilion".  My dad grew up in Vermilion, a cute little lake side town and my mom (and all of us) grew up here in Elyria.

Anyway, I woke up to say goodbye to my dad at 6a and he was yapping away.  I went back to sleep and then he woke me at 730 when he was really going to leave.  He told me "Remember what Mother Superior says in The Sound of Music?  You can't use this house as a place to hide away from the world."*  I was thinking, it's a pretty soft place to land and since dumbass work laid me off, what other choice do I have?  Continue to throw good money after bad in LA?

Anyway, he's right though.  I need to figure out what this is all about here.  Writing?  Dating?  Collecting unemployment?

For now, I tried really hard to be super lazy today and not do anything but I was compelled to write this blog, makes some calls and now I'm off to the doc to get my parts squeezed and poked and prodded and a flu shot.

*The actual quote is the title of the blog.  (My dad thinks he's uber catholic now because he wrote a check and was confirmed.  He didn't even have to go through PSR!)


Tuesday, January 12, 2021

FREE FREE LIVING ON THE DOLE!

 My ass was laid off on Friday!  I wish I could have recorded my face because I was completely and utterly surprised.  My boss pulled a good one: he knew for a while and overshared that there would be layoffs, but went ahead and gave me a bonus and a positive performance review.  And then, he set up a fake meeting with the head of our LA office and told me.  The head of our LA office didn't bother to turn on his video (weird? was it pre-planned?) and I literally had my to-do list, and was ready to take notes when I heard something about someone being laid off.  And then, it was ME!  

So, at first I was shocked but then I realized how boring and slow my job had become...there just wasn't enough work.  Plain and simple.  And now, day 2 of official unemployment, I woke up much earlier then normal and am dancing a literal jig (once I get my bra on) and have a new to-do list (food stamps!  FSA!  Debt Relief!).  

I'm happy happy happy in a way I haven't felt in a long time.

This kick in the butt will force me to get out of my LA apartment and settle into Ohio for a while.

PLUS, my dad leaves tomorrow for Florida so I can have the whole house to myself for a bit.

(I mean, he's good company but he's a definite personality, and girlfriend likes her quiet sometimes.)

I'm trying to think of it like a writing retreat--and the setting is certainly perfect for that.  A cabin in the woods with great views, a fireplace, affordable (free) and time to save some much-needed cash.

It'll be a self-imposed period of austerity.

Anyway, have to sort out taxxes, unemployment, job hunting, etc but for now I"M FREE!!!!

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Escape Hatched

 Is the name of my new sitcom, I think.  I'll probably never finish it.  That's one of the things my dad said to me a few weeks ago "You're like me, you start things but never finish them."  He's constantly making things about him.  It's how he relates to the world.  I guess that's how many people relate?

Anyway, in that way, he's the opposite of my mother who was mostly empathetic, or pissy.  When she got really mad she'd turn the wheel of the car, hit the gas and squeal around a corner.  And then, if you apologize, she'd say the worst thing ever "You're just being yourself."  A punishment for being an asshole.

It's January 7, 2021 and I'm currently sitting in a waiting room in Avon, Ohio, a permanent sub for my dead mom.  My 78 year-old father is getting a patch of melanoma taking out of his right arm.  Only on the drive here did I come to understand it was his right arm, and not his left.  (So who's self-involved)?  

He just went in to the outpatient surgical office, after chatting it up with everyone in our path.

Sitting in the waiting room, he was reading the New Yorker and I was trying to worm out of him his favorite restaurant (his birthday is Saturday).  I looked up Macaroni on my laptop and slyly said "Is that your favorite restaurant?" and he replied "One of them" and I didn't get a chance to ask him more because and a fellow next to me said "Please don't talk about food, I'm waiting for my colonoscopy and I'm starving."  My dad jumped on it saying "Oh, the worst part is over.  Now's the good part--it'll be the best drug you've ever had".  The fellow looked at me and I hopped into the ha ha parade saying "I guess we need to get him better drugs for home."  Then he was called into the room, handed me his spare New Yorker, flip phone and wallet and went off.

So, sitting here, I'm forcing myself to look over at the hospital part of this facility.  The site where my mom died.  I can't see her room but I know it's there.  My mom died on June 19, 2018.  Even on the drive here I said "We can go visit mom in ICU" and our eyes filled with tears and Dad said "The most traumatic event our family ever went through".  My eyes are filled with tears.  Worry about my Dad's procedure, wondering why the hell I'm living in Elyria instead of LA, missing my mom and wanting her here right now as I'm a poor long-term sub.  As my dad deals with his 5th round of cancer, we're all thinking:  it was supposed to be him first, not Mom.

He was talking last night about a patient he met in a long-term nursing facility.  He was having lunch with two patients, in his volunteer role as Ombudsman.  One of the patients coughed and the other patient said "Don't let them hear you".  Dad laughed at his own joke and then explained to me "They're stuck in there, it's like school.  Eat at this time, sleep at this time.  They know if they get a little bit sick, it's the kiss of death. That's when I want the 45."  I said "Dad, you're going to die here, at home, with us taking care of you."  He laughed and then got a bit teary-eyed.

The door to the procedure area opens again "Donald?" We all look up, trying to guess who Donald is.  He's older, tall, thin and sprightly and as the nurse says "Hi, I'm Mara" he replies with a buoyant "HOWDY" and disappears to the same door my dad went through.

A lady to my right says "I like your purse, where did you get it?"  I reply and worry that I sound really bougie "A little shop in Chicago, where you make custom purses.  I think this was upholstery fabric."  "I really like it".  We are all a shared community:  my Dad, hungry colonoscopy guy and my purse admirer.   

I get up and wipe my tears:  waiting rooms and hospitals make me very anxious.  I take a quiz on facebook for a study with Carnegie Mellon predicting my likelihood of catching Covid. "Have you experienced any anxiety, depression in the last day?"  I'm not sure what to say--last night the congress was counting votes after a bunch of idiots stormed the capital, I am trying to find a tenant for my apartment that's sitting empty in LA, I'm currently reading Obama's new book and I just cried when I looked over at the building where my mother died.  I check "Not at all" because this is just baseline anxiety.  "Have you been anxious if someone in your family will catch Covid" Um, yes.  My dad has Melanoma and we are in a surgical outpatient clinic surely breathing in nothing but Covid air.  Yes, I'm anxious. I'm a human and his technical ICE.

My eyes fill again as I think "Who's my ICE?"  The emergency contact question always makes me cry.  Everyone else puts down a husband or wife and I put down my best friend, or my father or my sister.

"Karen?"

My purse admirer pops up and I say "Good luck Karen" and she says "Thank you!" and my tears dry up.

I'm hungry.  My dad barely eats and has lost some 60 pounds (on purpose).  He's also like a little mouse:  I'll open up a box of granola bars I bought and find only one in there.  He's a late night binger and will eat any sweets in sight.  My mom use to hide the cookies from him and this year I hid them in the oven and the next morning he said to me "Amateur hour.  Your mother was much better than you." And so, the cookies were gone.

I don't like seeing my mom's stocking hanging empty, so I stuffed it with his favorite candies:  Malt Balls from the local Chocolate shop run by a high school friend and AllSorts Licorice.  He balked when he pulled them out "Who got me these?" and then two days later I went to eat a maltball and they were completely gone. "I had a real binge last night" he confessed.

I wore my one Christmas present from my dad to cheer him up: A mask from our church, St Mary's.

This purse is here in Elyria, because I gave it to mom and she used it as her chemo bag, filled with magazines and snacks as the poison poured into her veins.  I went to one treatment--it's pretty boring, Dad read Hamilton and mom chatted with the nurses and patients around her.  We were assured she'd survive.  She did survive the cancer but not the chemo.  

I'm wiping my eyes, embarassed and not sure what to do with my runny nose.  Take the mask off?

I decide on action and get up to grab a tissue and check my dad's privacy identifier number on the board "Pre proced" in a yellow highlighted.  My dad wasn't sure what the exact time of the procedure was, and I can't go back there with him because of Covid.  

The door pops open and another doc comes through, on his phone, ppe on.

I need to distract myself so I get up and go to the board again.  "In room"--now highlighted green.

My sister texts: "How's Dad?" I reply "Still waiting" and think, I've got to get it together, for when the doc comes out.  

One time, my sisters and I were with my mom, while dad had another surgery at the downtown Cleveland Clinic.  They teased my about my $200 dollar jeans (i got them through work, I'd never pay that for jeans" and how they don't fit because I keep tugging at them and none of us have an ass to hold them up.) We giggle about how we have my dad's ass and mom says "I always liked a good ass on a man."  

I cry again and then a nurse comes out and says "Favio" and Favio gets up and the nurse says "My name is Carol, what's your birthdate?" and I go to check the board again for 4752525 and it's still "In Room" but not "In Procedure".

It's been 40 minutes since he went in, he's probably anxious and I send good thoughts his way. I wish my mom was here and we were talking about asses or reading our books or watching the home improvement show. 

So, who's making it about themselves now?

I walk out to the atrium and find the art soothing.  I walk back and look at the patient update board: still "In Room".  The art here is Robert Mangold, silk screen prints.  I plop down within view of the update board and decide I better read instead of thinking about my dead mom's room.  She liked the view of trees.

Another man next to me wears an Ohio State jacket and his head dips and sways as the doc comes out and updates him.  "She's in recovery, she may need to stay overnight."  The man reaches up with his hand, fingers twisted, head swaying on it's stem "So, two weeks?"  The doc replies "A few weeks". They are the star--we all watch and track their movements.  Where is this man's daughter?  How will he care for his wife? Am I being judgey?  When Mom was in the hospital, one of us was there all the time except at night.  In ICU, the nurses said "A lot of these patients don't have any visitors".  We had to make a list of who was allowed in, because too many would keep mom from resting.

 I glance at the board:  "In room".  A notice pops up on my laptop:  "Kim Kardashian waiting...".  This is part of the current news cycle: Kim is going to divorce Kanye.  I love Kanye--his honesty, brashness and how much he loved his mom and Kim.  I hope they can figure it out.  I'm cheering for them.

The swaying man pulls out his paper and I think "Good idea, good distraction".  Why do I always cry in waiting rooms?

I look through his wallet...ids, list of phone numbers, list of surgeries, list of meds, his United credit card (he loves to fly to Cali, and get early and hang in the United Lounge, something my mother never would have done).  

OK, thank god the procedure started.  We've been here almost an hour and a half.  Good thing I took work off today, I'm a mess.

That's what my mom said to my dad when he lost it at the hospital room when she had her procedure to check for cancer in her chest. "You're a mess".  So he pulled it together.

I pull it together and pull out my book, "A promised Land".  I scan the room as a new patient comes in, looks kind of my age, cute, beard, nice manner with the receptionist.  440 area code--local boy.  I can't see a ring and he doesn't seem to have an ICE with him.  I type away and try to look charmingly engaged with my thoughts.

Swaying guy gets a phone call--so maybe he does have some kids who care.

Cute guy wipes hand sanitizer and I don't see a ring.  Why is he in his 40s, and not be married?  I'm not.  The receptionist says something about "If she sees that number calling" and I think ok there's a she.  He sits far away so no go there.

Good distraction.

Dad's number on the board is now "In Phase II", highlighted in blue.  I've been in this waiting room for two hours.  How long does it take to scrape off a patch of skin?  Is he bleeding from his blood thinners?

The door pops open "I'm looking for Kevin".  It's the cutey patootey, who has been laboring at the vending machine for the last 2 minutes, as I've been keeping an eye on his left hand.  "That's me, hey!" he exclaims as a frumpy lady meets him halfway across the room and he hands her the coke he just bought.  "Hey, what are you doing with that soda?" the nurse asks Kevin (I know his name now!).  He hands the soda to frumpy lady and says "It's for her" and they laugh and he goes back into the procedure aread.

The last waiting room I've waited in was for Andy's surgery.  Same thing---I was upset, alone and worried.  And with Andy, he had complications with his bladder and so what should have been a quicky recovery was all day and almost the night.  The main surgery was successful but man, he struggled when his bladder wouldn't "Wake up".  That was a long night, helping him with his cath, and checking on his color. It was two months after my mom had died.  I shouldn't have been there.  But, who else?  Andy's my ICE.

The next day, another friend came over to relieve me so I could do my grief group intake meeting.  Andy had never had surgery and didn't know about the brat diet, so was planning to order chicken curry something. I recommended he not do that "What you put in comes out the other end" I said and pointed to his catheter, right next to his surgery site.  I think that upset the friend--that person hasn't talked to me much since.  Later, I came back and had gotten the brat foods and he chowed on those.

I look at the board again, and dad's number isn't on there anymore.  The door opens and I look up--no doc.  My eyes are dry because I'm mad again about my mom. Not sad, MAD.

He's out!

"How you feel dad?"  "Great!  They were great back there.  Wonderful job.  It was FUN! There's my doctor, nice guy!"





Tuesday, January 5, 2021

More TV

Current state:  watching Peaky Blinders with Bruce.  We have to squeeze it in before Carson reruns at 10 pm.  He watches Carson every evening and comes into the sunroom where I'm having "Becky time" and tell me every joke.  I've already heard him laughing with his very loud laugh in the living room.  On my kindest days, I thank god holy moley, he's so enthusiastic and outgoing and chatty---I mean that's lucky.


BUT it really GRATES on my nerves.  So, instead, we're watching Peaky Blinders.

Except now.  It's 954 and Carson comes on at 10, and Dad wants to get ahead of Carson.  "Whup!  We gotta switch it".  He fumbles with the remote, switching it from streaming to live tv.

"A lot of work to do"

He gets up, and has his snack of fruit salad, whipped cream and is dying to tell me how much he weighs or doesn't weigh (I never bite).

I yell "You're missing it"

"No I'm not, timing is everything".  He talks the tv off of mute.

"Oh my fire is, well, it's almost time to go to bed anyway." He stokes the fire.  Earlier in the day he had been chopping wood while I was on a work call.

"Let's see what year it is.  Oh, 1982.  That's 40 years ago and hard to believe"

He settles in and tries to get me to laugh along and enjoy it.  I don't play along but am still here typing.

Poor Dad, he almost always wants to chat, have fun and it drives me into my little introvert shell.

Even now, as I type away, and look at the results, he laughs at Johnny's monologue and leans into bring me in on the joke.