stalker

I think I’m a kind of stalker now, obsessed not with a person, but with an inanimate thing. A building, actually. Four walls, a roof, and a floor that housed my life for five years. It’s true. For almost two months now, I’ve stalked our old place like an ex-boyfriend who broke my heart. I find myself wondering if I could have done things differently. I worry I didn’t try hard enough, didn’t fight for our relationship. It bothers me to know that I think about it when it doesn’t think about me. So I drive by there to see it and check up on it and prove that it was once a part of me. I wonder when the “for sale” sign will go up and I wonder how much less it will sell for than what we paid and I wonder if anyone will see the note I penned inside an upstairs closet. I am bothered, truly, that our loss will be someone else’s gain. No, seriously, it really chaps my hide. I don’t wish the new owners well. I’m horrible. I want the floor to explode on them, too. I want the neighbors to make them crazy, too. They could be a couple of darling old gammies and I will resent them with my entire shriveled heart because they will have what I still think should be mine. You hate the next girl your ex-boyfriend starts dating; you hate the new owners of the house you lost. It’s weird to be writing about this because, in all honesty, I have compartmentalized my thinking about it. I seem to obsess about it, pine for it, only on my drive-bys. But when I pull up in front of our new place, that old screen clicks off and the reality of the new screen is right in front of me, undeniable. It’s not even a conscious decision I’ve made, this thinking; it’s just happened. Even thinking about it right now is breaking my own unconscious rule and takes effort, actual effort — forcing these thoughts into my head that flow so easily at the designated time. There’s an internal on/off switch that seems very persnickety about the rules of use and it feels as if I don’t even control it. Maybe I don’t. Maybe it’s a guardian angel. Some kind of divine authority figure allowing me to wallow only so much. It all seems vaguely illogical to me. Rationally, I understand certain things. Emotionally, well, I think I understand almost nothing in this life.

We drove by early this morning and my heart sank, the tears came, as we pulled past the tree overhanging the sidewalk and I could suddenly see the new “for sale” sign. The “for sale” sign that blares “foreclosure” on the top in bold red letters. The sting of that. The sting of that! You know, I can tell myself all these truths: we did all we could, we didn’t lie or cheat to get a loan, we were legit, we found ourselves in the perfect financial storm, it’s happening to lots of people, but the sting of that lingers like a low-hanging cloud and I don’t know when or if it will ever burn away.

Turns out, Jersey Boy is the selling agent, that ass. Pimping my house out for cheap. Asking $125K less than what we paid. I feel bad for my old place. Like, in my heart it’s worth more, despite the warped floorboards and the peachy-pink paint stain on the bedroom carpet and the insane squabbling neighbors. It was my home because I made a life there and for as long as I remember that, it will always stay my home. Other people will move in, have plumbing leaks, stain the carpet, struggle with neighbors, but I will always feel it’s mine. I can’t say if it’s right or wrong or even healthy — it’s mine because it’s in my heart and because I need to believe that once upon a time it was all real.

the end of things with the people at the door

(Here is part one.)

Slutty Boots spoke, a burst of words.

“Oh, no, hon! We’re not here to take the house right now. Oh, noo.”

I squinted at her in the blazing sunlight, surprised to hear her voice, while relief surged through me, wobbling me, and making me clutch anew at that hard knob in my hand. But once those words poured out of her, Slutty Boot’s forehead puckered and she clamped her mouth shut into a tight line. I watched as she quickly resumed scuffing her toe back and forth along the ground like an embarrassed little kid. She wouldn’t meet my gaze. Maybe she wasn’t supposed to talk. Maybe she had overstepped her authority, but she couldn’t help herself. Maybe she was one of those strippers with a heart of gold like Pretty Woman. I suddenly felt bad for her. Who knows why.

Perhaps sensing the crack Slutty Boots had created, Jersey Boy pressed his case.

“So is it all right if we come in, then? We want to talk to you about moving out.”

“Uhmm …..”

Slutty Boots looked at me then, her eyes almost pleading.

“Uhmm ….” I glanced over my shoulder once again, cringing into the darkness of my debris field.

Is it too late to pretend I’m not home? Is it too late to slam the door in their faces? Is it too late to pretend I’m the maid?

My doorway was a force field, surrounding me and protecting me. If they penetrated the force field, I was doomed for sure. For a split second, I waited, focusing all my energy on one last crazy hope, but the unobliging ground refused to open up and swallow me whole.

Slutty Boots continued to scuff her toe and beg me with her eyes.

” ….. okaaay ….” I sighed, opening the door just wide enough for my doom to slip through.

Jersey Boy marched on into the rubble; Slutty Boots tiptoed in behind. I stumbled to the one empty corner of the room — the end of the sofa — and stared hard at the floor.

“You had to know this day was coming, right?” Jersey Boy said after a few seconds.

“Yes. Of course.” I looked straight at him now. I’m not an idiot, dude. “I just didn’t think it would come the day before Christmas. And I didn’t think people would show up at my door. We were supposed to get a notice first.”

Jerk.

“Well, sorry about that.”

“Uh-huh.”

He glanced around the room. I knew what he wanted and I was secretly happy I couldn’t give it to him.

“Can we sit down?”

Good luck, Peaches.

Never more mental bravado than when facing imminent doom.

As he took in the flotsam and jetsam of our lives, his eyes widened and flitted here and there, trying to locate some secure outcropping amidst this haphazard sea. The sofa? Loaded with bags I was packing for our trip up north. The chaise? Piled with books. This arm chair? Our coffee house cash register. That arm chair? A huge dusty fan. I could feel my face burning. I was mortified.

But I wasn’t all that sorry.

“Uhm, sorry,” I heard myself saying from the only seat in the room, “the place is a mess …. we’ve been packing and …. well … I’m sorry, I don’t really have anywhere for you to sit.”

A small scowl crossed his face as he was forced to find solid footing between the plops of trash bag and the poofs of warped floorboard. Slutty Boots hovered near the doorway, squashed between an arm chair and the jutting legs of my trampoline. I flashed a slight apologetic smile; she flashed one back.

I could have moved some things, I guess, but what was I supposed to do? Welcome my doom with open arms? Offer it some iced tea? Make it some chocolate chip cookies? I didn’t feel the need to make them too comfortable.

“Okay. Well, that’s fine,” he said.

Then he paused and looked right at me.

“So. We need to talk about you moving out.”

And that was it. Something in that clipped tone, something in that pause like a floodlight on the words, something about the sudden glare of it all and the corner where I cowered alone, something about it all just ripped right through me. Force field cracked. Bravado shattered. My face collapsed onto my hands and I was sobbing. Sobbing like an orphaned child. For eons, it seemed. I could not stop sobbing and I could not bring myself to come out from behind my hands. They were stuck to my face, tears leaking between my fingers. I was aware that Jersey Boy and Slutty Boots stood there. I was aware that they watched me instead of killing me which I would have much preferred. Despair is a messy business best disguised by the pillows of the bedroom or the whoosh of the shower — or so I was raised by the German half of my parents. You don’t cry. At least, not in front of others and definitely never ever ever in front of total strangers like Jersey Boy and Slutty Boots. It is verboten.

But I could not stop and I wanted to die because I could not stop.

Between heaves, I heard Slutty Boots murmur, “Ohhh, hon ….” and Jersey Boy clear his throat and say, “Um, take as long as you need.”

As long as I need? Are you sure? Because it would appear that I have completely cracked apart right here in front of you on the only empty space in the sad rubble of my lost home and I do not know when I will ever stop. “As long as I need”? Okay …

And for some time, there was only the lurch of my sobs, the damp of my hands, and the gloom of shame hanging heavy like incense in the air. Everything else was frozen, it seemed.

After a while, who knows how long, Jersey Boy thawed from his position, striding toward the other end of the sofa where all our travel bags were piled. “Can I sit here?” he said, as he dumped some bags on the floor and sat.

“Uhhh …. ” I couldn’t speak; there was no way. Yet somewhere in my brain I could hear real Tracey, regular Tracey urging me from very far away, from high on a mountain to me low in this valley, “Tracey! C’mon, hon! Rudeness! Say something! Why aren’t you saying something? ….”

But I couldn’t. I simply could not. I had become mute. Pre-verbal. I was a Cro-Magnon woman in yoga pants moaning into her hands. From his newly created perch near my side, and without waiting to see if I could utter any kind of permission at all, ex post facto, Jersey Boy now just started talking … and talking …. and talking.

I raised my head, swiping at my running eyes, nose, cheeks, and stared at the warped floorboard at my feet. The entire time Jersey Boy spoke, I stared at that floorboard. Peripherally, I was aware that poor Slutty Boots had become a slutty statue, frozen in one uneasy position, and that Jersey Boy was now fingering some papers and talking, talking, talking. What is he saying? Is he speaking English? His words were rough stones grinding through the rock tumbler of my brain. They made no sense, only noise. Through the heavy rumble in my mind, I heard myself clear my throat and finally speak — a strange high hummingbird voice, like a child’s.

“Uhmm …. can I call my husband? I want him to be here. Can I call him?” I was desperate for MB to hold my hand, to do all the talking, to loom big and tall and masculine, to even the playing field.

To make them go away.

“Well, we’re on a tight schedule. We have several of these to do today so we can’t really wait,” he said.

“Uhmmm ….. okaay.” I slumped in my seat, no fight in me. None. My sometime inner Shaniqua had been trapped, drowned, in the deluge between my face and hands.

For the next fifteen minutes, while my gaze did not leave the floor, Jersey Boy walked me through every corner of our coming doom, pointing out this feature and that feature, a thorough tour guide of our personal hell. And when he was done, he started the tour all over again, until the tumbling in my brain finally slowed and the words were somewhat more refined, a little better understood.

Next, came a barrage of questions. I whispered thin responses while Jersey Boy patted his pockets.

“Do you have a pen? I need to write your answers down.”

I reached a still-damp hand toward my art pens on the coffee table and handed him one. As he wrote, he said, “You know, I lost a home, too. So did Slutty Boots.” He nodded in her direction; she nodded agreement.

Yeah, sure you did.

Enough with the false camaraderie. I didn’t buy it and didn’t comment.

“You’re being very nice about this,” he continued. “We get threatened a lot, you know. Or people say they’ve been threatened by us. That’s why Slutty Boots is here — as a witness.”

Slutty Boots smiled her apologetic smile again.

Whatever.

Jersey Boy stood up. “So now we need to take some pictures — for the bank.”

I panicked at this, could feel the sudden burn of my face.

Oh, no. No.

My entire underwear drawer was dumped atop my unmade bed.

Oh, no.

“Uhmmm …. w-w-w-why?”

I stuttered with post-sob convulsions.

“To prove the place hasn’t been trashed.”

“Well, you can s-s-see the f-floor.”

“Yeah. What’s that?”

“Under floor l-l-leak.”

“Okay. Well, can we take the pictures?”

“I’d rather you d-didn’t.”

“We’ll just have to come back,” he warned.

It worked.

“Oka-aay.”

I collapsed against the arm of the sofa, head in hand, as he trounced through the ground zero of our home, snapping mementos of despair and disarray.

“Okay. We’re all done.” Well, his voice didn’t hint at any sight of underwear. I sat up a little straighter, allowed myself that small kernel of relief. He stood near Slutty Boots now, near the door. They both seemed to be waiting for me to do something.

Oh. They’re done done. They’re leaving.

I stood, lopsided, and moved to coil my arms around myself, to still my trembling core. That old stubborn instinct for self-protection. Flimsy arms were no barrier against our coming doom, of course, but I needed to believe they were. As I snaked my arms around me, my hand brushed up against something on the opposite elbow. That’s weird. What is that? I reached for it, tugged at it and ….oh, Lord. I’d gone to Old Navy to Christmas shop earlier that day. I’d found this hoodie on sale for ten bucks, had come home and tried it on. Was still wearing it, I realized, with its price tag poking out from the elbow. Are you kidding me? I flashed back to when Jersey Boy and Slutty Boots had first arrived. How I’d stood in the doorway, all hemming and hawing and lost, but, oh! with a very indignant hand on my hip and, I realized now, a Minnie Pearl price tag at my elbow.

Lord.

I was crumpling again, overwhelmed now with the searing pain of my own ridiculousness. Oh, I could feel it coming: the telltale shudder in my stomach; the acid sting at the corner of my eyes; the childish quiver of my chin. Furtively, I cupped my elbow to hide the offending tag, breathing heavy to quell any encore of tears.

It was official. I was a loser in every possible way. I could be the Olympic gold medal winner in losing. I couldn’t be the dignified woman holding her head high as the enemy swarms her homestead and claims it for their headquarters. No. I had to be the chick blubbing endlessly amidst the rubble of her home while strangers watched and cleared their throats and wondered why she had a price tag jutting from the sleeve of her hoodie.

I stole a resentful glance at Slutty Boots. Why did she get to be a silent slut while I had to be a sobbing Minnie Pearl? Why, God? Why?

Tottering from this surge of self-pity, I lurched towards the doorway where they now waited, price tag duly smushed and hidden under my hand.

“Well, thank you for being so nice,” said Jersey Boy.

“Uhm, okay.”

“Good luck, hon,” said Slutty Boots.

“Uhm, thanks.”

“I’ll be in touch. Remember, end of January,” said Jersey Boy, as they turned to go.

I nodded and closed the door. No longer my force field, it was now just a door. I stumbled across the room, threw my shaking body on the sofa, and clamped the nearest pillow to my face. I knew what was coming and I just let it come. Let it all come.

I cried because I was absurd. Because I’d cried in front of strangers. Because of the stupid price tag. I cried because of the warped floorboards. Because of the pile of underwear. Because of the unmade bed. I cried because of the dream gone bad. Because of the flotsam and jetsam. Because Jersey Boy had taken my pen. I cried for my lost friend, lost job, lost business, lost family. For what had passed. For what was to come.

I cried because my nose stuffed so badly within ten minutes of crying that I could no longer cry and felt gypped.

I ripped that price tag from my sleeve, waited for my nose to clear, and just cried.

delayed responses

I spent the whole of 2008 trying to figure out how to tell my family about our situation. I’m not kidding — the entire year. Well, except for my sister. I told her early on. But the people who read this blog knew what was going on before most of my family did.

So I have trust issues. Whatever. I think I come by them honestly.

I delayed so long because I wasn’t sure what response I’d get. I could get a lecture about right and wrong, about what’s moral and what’s not; that would not be without precedent. I could get judgment about what a bad person I am. Also not without precedent. I could hear what a disappointment I am, how ashamed they are. Again, the precedent thing. To say it as kindly as possible, my family and I do not agree on who I really am or what kind of person I am.

I also delayed because of my mom and her ongoing undiagnosed illness. Earlier this year, the doctor had told my dad to take her home and let the inevitable happen. She was going to die. She was suffering from “a failure to thrive.” She’s been going to die for 25 years, but this time, according to the doctor, she was really going to die. She did not. So I didn’t want to say anything when she was going to die that might speed up the process and I didn’t want to say anything once she wasn’t going to die that might upset her and make her die all over again. Does that make sense?

Finally, I delayed so long because — well, it worked best for me, for us, and I was feeling protective of me and us. The longer I kept them in the dark, the more freedom we had to walk through this particular hell without the burden of their responses. I was assuming, anticipating, unhelpful — let’s just use that word — responses. As it turns out, I was right.

So throughout the year, at various family gatherings, I stuffed it down. Deflected conversation about me, about us. Focused on being “extra funny.” Oh, I’m so good at that. It’s sick. When the economy took its nosedive a couple of months ago and everyone in the family was affected in one way or another, still, I gave non-committal, generic answers to questions about how we were doing. I wasn’t ready to say and, besides, the holidays were upon us with the ho-ho-ho and baby Jesus and all. What was I going to say? “Merry Christmas! We’re losing our home! God bless us every one!”?

No. Really not the right time. Although, in retrospect, that might have been more fun than the method I ultimately chose.

But on the first Sunday of the new year, with the holidays finally over, I sent out a very brief email to the rest of my family — four people in all. A “just-the-facts-ma’am” kind of email. Nouns and and verbs, basically. All year long, I’d agonized in my head over this email, lost sleep over this email, felt sick, literally, sick to my stomach about having to send this email but it couldn’t be put off any longer. I fought hard against pouring my heart out and saying too much. Once I pushed “send,” I began to freak out with anxiety.

Hours later, one family member wrote back. Again, they knew nothing about our situation. Nothing at all. This is the entire text of the email:

Tracey,

Thanks for the update. We’ll be praying for you. Let us know if we can help.

Love you too!

Loved One

You know what, pippa? I really think I’m going insane. I do. I really really do. Because when I tell someone that, um, “we’re losing our home,” I don’t think the normal, human response is “thanks for the update.” Especially when we’ve said nothing at all along the way. It’s not the weather report, for God’s sake. And it’s not an “update.” That would imply I’ve given them information before this, which, again, I HAVE NOT. But, clearly, a family member of mine thought this was an appropriate response. Maybe other people would think that as well. If that’s the case, then I’m kind of in the minority as the crazy one who thinks it’s inappropriate, right? That would make me the one who lives in a completely different reality from other people, including those in my family and, well, that’s kind of scary to me. But it’s been 10 days now, and I am still not done flipping out over this email, so maybe I really am insane. It feels like I’m out in the ocean, drowning just offshore, and I’m waving frantically to my loved one, screaming, “I’m drowning! I’m drowning!” and my loved one just waves back and calls, “Thanks for the update!”

My kind of brain finds this unfathomable. This rambling post is my attempt to fathom it but I’m really not sure if I can. And I’m not sure if that means I should be afraid of my kind of brain.

Anyway, moving on.

So that’s the first response I got.

A few hours later, the same person sent a follow-up. Oh, okay, I thought, here’s where Loved One clarifies or expounds or realizes it was lame or something redemptive like that, please God.

There was no “subject.”

It was a chain email for a recipe exchange.

~ Hey! Hullo! I’m drowning!

~ Thanks for the update! Wanna recipe for stroganoff?

Honestly, I was beginning to wish I’d never said anything.

The next day, another family member weighed in with this:

I am sorry. Hang in there, this is another bump on the road of life, but you will get through it. As a very wise man once said, “Keep knees down and chin up.”

It ended with “love” and an inquiry into our new address.

After that, MB and I debated at length what “knees down and chin up” meant. He thought maybe it was a Kama Sutra thing and I thought — if the directions were reversed — it would sound distressingly like a Pap smear. I’m pretty sure it was meant as a reference to prayer, but darned if I’ve ever prayed that way. Whatever it was, it didn’t help. It basically meant nothing to me — hearing those kinds of platitudes. It pains me to say that because I love these people, but they are very hard to love. And the more family members responded in this way, the more isolated I felt. The first response felt like an outright denial of the situation; the second, like a complete trivialization. I felt chilled by the utter detachment of it all.

So that was two of the four family members I’d emailed. As of today, I haven’t heard anything from the other two. Not one word. This all sounds SO boo hoo hoo, please forgive me. I sound like such an ass. But I guess if it were me, if it were my daughter, sister, loved one, I’d try to put myself in her shoes. I’d try to imagine what it would feel like to go through this. I’d pick up the phone as a way to connect in the most immediate, firsthand way. I would try — as much as humanly possible — to be there for her, to show some compassion.

So that’s what I expect from them, I guess.

But again, I find myself wondering if I’m being unreasonable in my expectations. I find myself not sure anymore, not sure if my responses are …. normal as compared to the people whose DNA I share. To me, the situation is traumatic; it’s horrible, basically; our world is upside down. I don’t want my family’s pity or “oh poor baby” kinds of emails from them. No, I don’t want that. (I’m sorry — I’m writing this on the fly, something I shouldn’t do because I’m never sure if I’m making any sense.) What I want from them, I guess, is some sort of acknowledgment that the situation is actually as significant as it feels to me walking through it. The consistency of their responses makes my blood run cold because I perceive the situation so differently, but it also makes me question the way I perceive it. Their collective silent shrug makes me wonder if that is indeed the proper response. Maybe it is just a bump on the road of life. Maybe I should just keep my knees up and chin down or knees down and chin up or arms akimbo and legs flailing and I will feel much better about losing my home. Maybe I need to just embrace utter silence on the issue, like some. Maybe I should just have a Pap smear and 12 hours of Tantric sex and I’ll have a fresh new outlook on every single little thing.

Maybe I just need to lighten up. You know, no big whup.

Okay. This is unseemly of me, I know. I’m cringeing even writing this. I feel like I shouldn’t be writing this. But …. I’m just gobsmacked by the whole thing. I actually feel worse since sharing this news with my family. It feels so much heavier — because I told my family, for God’s sake. Denial. Platitudes. Silence. Where am I supposed to put all of that? What I am supposed to do with all of that? I keep checking my inbox to see if one of them has written anything else; I keep checking my cellphone to see if one of them has called. It’s pathetic.

They haven’t.

And I have a feeling they won’t. That’s the response. Situation over.

Ack. Enough of this. It is what it is.

the start of things with the people at the door

Through the gaps in my blinds, I could see them, the man and woman who came knocking on my door on Christmas Eve eve. He looked mid-fifties, white hair, wore jeans and a Chargers’ jersey. No. 17, to be exact, quarterback Philip Rivers. I rolled my eyes. I hate that look — grown-up men in football jerseys. You are not Philip Rivers. You are not LaDainian Tomlinson. You are not any NFL player or coach or even water boy. Please try to dress yourself in the morning with that fact in mind. I took a reasonable and instant dislike to him based solely on his attire.

The woman stood behind the football jersey, all in black, the late afternoon sun bouncing off her bright blonde hair. She looked like some kind of stripper, frankly. Belted black leather jacket with faux fur trim, black leather lace-up boots, stiletto heels. Faux face. Faux hair. The works. I had no idea what was under that jacket but I was kind of afraid I was going to find out. They knocked and waited while I secretly narrowed my eyes at both of them. Who were they? What did they want? A woman in slutty boots and a man in a football jersey on my doorstep on Christmas Eve eve. Was this a joke? Had someone sent me some horrifying NFL strippergram? I hovered near the door where I could see them but they couldn’t see me. I don’t know why I was hesitating because unless it’s someone I know or UPS at the door bringing me goodies, I never answer it. Really. Never. If I’m home alone, I just want to be left to shuffle around in my Kleenex box shoes and paint my curly fry fingernails. Is that so much to ask? But now I debated. I considered it, I guess, because the curiosity was killing me. I figured this: If it’s a strippergram, I’ll slam the door before anything happens and my face gets too red. If it’s Greenpeace or something, I’ll slam the door before they get too long-winded and I have to tell them no. Whatever awaited me on the other side of the door, I predicted a door-slamming in my imminent future.

So I opened the door.

Sunlight slammed into my face, blinding me for a moment.

Jersey Boy spoke.

“Are you Tracey So-and-So?”

“Uhm, yes.”

There was a weird pause. Yup. Here we go. Strippergram.

“Okay. Well, my name is Joe. This is Slutty Boots. We’re here to take back the house.”

And my entire world froze over.

“What?”

“We represent the bank. We’re here to take back the house.”

“What??”

It didn’t make sense. Their words. The sun shoved heat down on my head but I began to shiver. They looked past me into my home.

“Can we come in?”

What??

I glanced over my shoulder into the living room. Or, more accurately, the rubble of our leftover lives. We’d been sifting through our belongings for weeks, packing and tossing, packing and tossing. Stacks of boxes leaned lopsided here and there. Half-filled trash bags dotted the floor like some deflated obstacle course. Some of them actually contained trash. Others contained our stuff because I’m a lazy packer. Every chair in the room had something on it. Books, more books, even more books, the cash register from Boheme, a Sundance Film Festival poster, old VHS tapes, a fan. I noticed, as if for the first time, the two square splotches of test paint on the far wall — one russet, one butter-colored — and remembered smiling while I smoothed them out, buzzing with pride and possibilities, a long time ago it seemed now. Looking at them through the glaze of this moment, they seemed like odd spots of flush on a wall sick and ashamed. A few feet away, my trampoline loomed like a torture device, propped up against a chair, its legs menacing outward. Large irregular chunks of Pergo floor were missing, ruined from the water leak a couple of weeks ago, giving a sense that we owned a pack of very large and very bad and very hungry dogs. Warped floor panels poofed up randomly waiting to trip people because I was too lazy to pull them up. In the breeze of the open door, I saw the dust bunnies I’d ignored skitter around the edges of the room because, these days, a numb apathy had closed my eyes. I closed them again and held my breath …. held my breath …. held my breath ….

Jersey Boy interrupted. His voice was more forceful now.

“Can we come in?”

Can you come in? …. what? … why? … uhmm …..

And suddenly, something long-forgotten flooded through me and my eyes flashed open. I cared. I cared more than ever. My entire body was shaking with how much I cared. I wanted to run upstairs and grab my husband’s rifle and make a last feeble stand, like some geezer cowpoke yelling, “Get offa my land!” I cared. I cared about nothing else but my home, my lost home, and keeping these strangers out of it forever. Protecting my debris field. My private debris field. All those stacks of shame.

No. No. You can’t come in. You can’t ever come in. Go away. Please go away. You need to go away.

Silence for a moment. They were just waiting, I guess. Waiting for me to cooperate. I shielded my eyes to look at them, saw the blank expression on his face, saw Slutty Boots scuff her toe along the ground.

Then I tried to answer the man, say something other than “what?” I could only manage a quaver, it seems.

“You’re here to take the house back right now?”

I imagined Slutty Boots staggering around in her heels, schlepping boxes, moving our entire life out onto the sidewalk for the neighbors to paw over, like I’d seen sheriffs in Florida doing on 20/20 several nights before. I hadn’t slept well at all since then and demanded MB call our lawyer for reassurance that wouldn’t happen to us. He’d soothed my fears and yet, it was a lie, I guess, because … here they were. Those people. The house takers. The stuff dumpers. Sure, they didn’t look like those guys on 20/20, but this was Southern California after all. Maybe Slutty Boots and Jersey Boy were more official than they seemed. Well, I hope she breaks a heel. I hope she twists an ankle. I hope he throws his stupid jersey back out. I couldn’t think anything but petty grade school thoughts. Really, I couldn’t think much at all. I stood in the doorway, freezing in the heavy sunlight, shaking from knowing that the year-long theme of my night terrors was now really here.

I clung to the doorknob in my palm as if it would somehow save me.

(more to follow)

thanksgiving snippets, part 1

~ First, everything stopped in our house during the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade when Miss Kerry O’Malley appeared on screen in a medley from Broadway’s White Christmas, twirling in an impossibly swirly red gown with these wide white equatorial stripes on a vast spinning globe of skirt. Gorgeous and just so much fun, too. For me, it was the best of the Broadway show numbers. Truly lovely and nostalgic and joyful, taking me back to a time I’ve never even been yet still long for. At the end, the camera came in for a beautiful close-up of Kerry’s face and I got the distinct impression that she was in that moment and that time, too. So thank you, Kerry O’Malley and the cast of White Christmas, for those glowing heartfelt moments. They made me feel like I was completely melting into the larger spirit of the season and it was just the start I needed for my Thanksgiving day.

~ Arriving at my parents’ house, I managed to finagle a welcoming hug from The Banshee, even though she has a strict hug regimen, as previously discussed. And when I say “finagle,” I ain’t kidding. She was on the floor, playing with her aunts’ old dollhouse, so I perched on the sofa near her and said something like, “Hey! Help! I need one of those yummy Banshee hugs!” Then I had to wait for, oh, five seconds while she deliberated, Solomon-like, about the wisdom of hugging Tee Tee. Those were some long vulnerable seconds, I gotta tell you, and it occurred to me that I might not survive emotionally. Suddenly, decision made, she jumped up and crushed me in a huge hug. So hooray for yummy random hugs. And being a sycophant. To a four year old.

~ Moments later, Piper and family were arriving and The Banshee raced to the front door and stood there, chanting, all OCD, “Piper … Piper … Piper ….” She could barely contain herself, waiting in the entryway while my sister’s family rolled out of the car and unloaded Thanksgiving goodies. While she waited, she got quizzed on who else was arriving besides her idol Piper. “So Banshee, it’s Aunt ……” “Tee Tee!” she said. Oops. We corrected her. “And it’s Uncle …..” “Beloved!” she answered. Oops. Another correction. Really not fair to quiz her when she’s basically in a trance of anticipation about Piper. And when Piper entered the door, The Banshee flung herself head- first at her cousin. She’s the only person who doesn’t have to ask for a hug from The Banshee. She gets one whether she wants it or not.

~ MB had to show Elder Nephew how to use a bottle opener. Uhm, wha??? How do you not know this, dear boy?? You are 17. I guess that’s what aunts and uncles are for, though. Filling any odd educational gaps for their nephews and nieces. So, phhhew, that one’s covered.

~ I sat next to Piper at dinner and she regaled me with endless high-speed tales of I know not what. Something like, “Tee Tee! There’s this boy at my school and his name is Ben and (something insane and hilarious and incomprehensible happened to him) and he was really ASLEEP THE ENTIRE TIME!!!! HAHAHAHAHAHA!!!” Really, she was SO ramped up to share these things with me and I felt bad that I couldn’t follow the thread — or threads — tumbling wildly out of her mouth, but it was cracking me up to see her in such hysterics, so I was laughing. Just not for the reasons she might have thought. But bless her for always wanting to connect with people.

~ After dinner, my sister and Sparky the puppy and I went outside for some fresh, actually chilly air. We sat on my parents’ lawn, near the waterfall. I love that waterfall. Dad only “turns it on” now for special occasions, and even though it’s man-made, it looks so natural — huge rocks jutting out from the pine trees, water rushing towards an ending pond, the sound a backing track to so many years of memories. I can’t imagine my parents’ yard without it. After all the rain we’ve had the last few days, even on Thanksgiving Eve, the grass, so greedy-thirsty from drought, was still dry and cushy, and while we talked, we took turns tossing a fallen pine cone across the lawn for Sparky to retrieve. Between pieces of more meaningful conversation, we’d stop intermittently to laugh at his flying black hair, his teensiness, his willingness to fetch a pine cone, for Pete’s sake. A while later, we were joined by Banshee’s mom, with Baby Banshee in tow in her green plaid dress. She plopped near me, a little bottom-heavy dumpling, as the wind blew my too-long Sasquatch hair into her face, tickling her, making her laugh. Dark clouds dotted the sky, a timid sun peeking behind them, slanting her light like a sideways glance. The perfect clean after-rainy-day sky. The occasional stray raindrop did smatter us here and there, but we didn’t care. It felt so good. Later, as the three of us sisters chatted and watched Baby Banshee trying not to roll down the slight slope, Banshee’s dad (brother) and Younger Nephew started a game of Bocce ball on the lawn in front of us. At one point, a stray ball rolled towards Baby Banshee. She squealed bah bah bah!! and grabbed the ball, clutching it to her bosom with a thrill, drooling over it with love. She hugged that ball tight like a baby for a long time. Chatting continued, lazy and comfortable. We watched brother and nephew’s game, I randomly refereed, and Baby Banshee waved and giggled at her daddy across the lawn, squealing again whenever a ball came near her. I just wanted to drink it all in, slow everything down, make every second last. Sometimes you just have to tear up at how beautiful things can be, you know? I want to take those moments on the grass and sear them into my brain for later, maybe soon, maybe years from now, when I know I will surely need them.

a golden opportunity

For all you savvy business people. This, from the Sunday edition of the LA Times under Business Opportunities:

“Brothel. World Famous Chicken Ranch. Real $ Maker. Includes 40 ac.”

Lemme know if any of you want the phone number.

Hey, you know, 40 acres is nothing to sneeze at.

speaking of ….

Yeah. Speaking of timeout, have I ever told you about the time I worked at a preschool in Seattle and all the kids called me Miss Tracey and one day I put a rotten little punk named Rennnn in timeout in the dollhouse and dress-up area then promptly forgot he was there until 45 minutes later?

Yep. Good times. Good times.

i dreamed a dream

As I think I’ve said before, I don’t very often remember my dreams when I awake. My Beloved, however, remembers all of his in minute detail and they all seem to be soaring epic tales of only-God-knows-what. I say this because I’m a bad wife and because, *sometimes, when he starts to tell me a dream he had — *sometimes — I cover my ears and say, “OH LORD!! IT BURRRNS!!” and other such supportive stuff to encourage him to please continue which he always does. He just talks louder; doesn’t seem to get the hint. He’s a very vexing person, you know.

But back to me. So, yeah, I don’t remember my dreams often. When I do, it’s usually because it’s one of my recurring theme dreams. And, frankly, there is only one recurring theme — which I will tell you but not before I warn you that this is likely to be the most embarrassing admission in the history of this blog. Beet-red embarrassing for me and, very possibly, the same for you. You may be irreparably embarrassed for me. You may think less of me forever. (How is that possible, Trace, you say? Oh, it be possible. It be. Brace yourselves.)

So … I will tell you the recurring theme by sharing how my dream discussions with MB always go down:

ME: So I had a dream last night.
HE (sighing): Okay. Who wanted you?
ME: (Uhm, insert name of famous person here.)

Yep. That’s my recurring theme dream. Sally from When Harry Met Sally varied her outfits in her recurring dream; I vary the celebrity who breathlessly declares he wants me. And that is the entire dream. That is the entire discussion of the dream. Nothing really happens in the dream except this: a random celebrity ardently declares his love and desire for me.

For instance, here’s a recent one:

ME: So I had a dream last night.
HE: (sighing): Okay. Who wanted you?
ME: Simon Cowell.

Simon Cowell? Simon Cowell?? He of the freakishly small hands?? Lord. I have issues. Deep, unfathomable issues. I am in a full-body cringe right now. You may feel similarly. And I do apologize.

Oh, and the randomness of it all cannot be overstated. These are not men I spend time mooning over, no matter how attractive they may be. They are not men I just saw in a movie or TV show that day who might be hovering in my subconscious. They just ….. appear. Out of nowhere. It’s like there’s some cosmic celebrity lineup for Tracey’s Recurring Theme Dream and every male celebrity is eventually gonna have to make an appearance, like it or not. They have to show up and hit their marks and make me believe it, dammit!

And MB always takes it in stride. He only berates me when he thinks the celebrity is sub-par. THAT will be his issue. Usually, he just sighs and laughs because he’s good-natured and secure and, amazingly, still loves me in spite of all of this. Bless you, man!

But this morning — this morning — was slightly different. I remembered two dreams. The discussion went like this:

ME: I had two dreams.
HE: Really?
ME: Uh-huh. In the first dream, I killed someone.
HE: Really? How?
ME: I stabbed him. I feel bad.
HE: Hm.
ME: And then the second dream …
HE: Yeah — who wanted you?
ME: Sawyer from Lost.
HE: Good one.
ME: Yeah. (pause) But I don’t deserve to have Sawyer want me — I killed someone!

I just …. don’t know what to say.

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* all the time

what to do when you’re awake at 3:28 a.m.

— do crunches on your exercise ball

— quietly try on clothes, seeing if those just-now crunches have changed everything

— stop trying on clothes

— sit on bed wondering why you tried on clothes

— decide you hate all your clothes

— crawl back in bed, wondering how much you could make if you sold your cache of Halloween anti-depressants — the, oh, 6-month supply given to you by a concerned loved one — on the street

— no, seriously, actually do this

— handwash some dainties in the bathroom sink, turning on the water just barely so as not to wake the other person in the house, the one lying there quietly, flaunting his sleep prowess

— contemplate waking him up for no other reason but to share your pain

— decide this has too many far-reaching consequences

— calculate again the untold riches that await you if you just, you know, become a drug dealer

— mentally work on your emo version of “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” from “My Fair Lady”

— wonder what emo is

— finally fall asleep wondering about emo, have a dream about Elmo

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