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Conference quark::human_relations-v1

Title:What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'?
Notice:Archived V1 - Current conference is QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS
Moderator:ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI
Created:Fri May 09 1986
Last Modified:Wed Jun 26 1996
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1327
Total number of notes:28298

988.0. "Pain" by SUPER::REGNELL (Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER!) Mon Apr 16 1990 18:07

         Parable

         (Open Letter To A Friend)

         ---

         Recently I received a letter from a friend. He was
         mourning for my lack of a warm and loving family
         life when I was growing up. This is truth...I did not
         have one. (Although that fact would be much to the
         astonishment of my Mother who thinks she provided just
         that...it is a question of form versus function, but
         I am wandering.)

         I was searching about for a way to reassure this friend
         while at the same time thanking him for his love. I am
         fairly certain that I have accomplished the
         former. As to the latter, well I hope the fact that I
         wrote this because of him will be seen as "Thank you."

         		**************

	 When I was 20, Bobby Adams wrote a song for me to sing
         at a protest rally. It was called "Alice" and it told
         the story of a prostitute in Manchester who died at
         the age of 28 from cervical cancer. A major factor in
         her death was the unavailability of any sort of health
         care for the destitute in our lovely State.

         Un-noted and untreated, she died on the corner of Elm
         and Hanover; bleeding silently to death while her
         "sisters" hawked their bodies all around her. The police
         carried her to the morgue and after the briefest of
         autopsies her unclaimed and unmourned body was cremated 
         in a $10 coffin.

         Like some latter-day phoenix, a battle cry rose out
         of the ashes of her body and we marched. Rallying around
         her memory and fighting for reform, we demanded change.

         I sang that song in anger and defiance. And I sang it
         well. The crowds roared and chanted. And they felt my
         anger and added their own. Together we flung our protest
         against the walls of the "establishment" and carrying the 
	 echo with us of thousands like us, we pushed the walls back.

         And after many such gatherings and many other songs 
         by other contemporaries...a fear bagan to grow on the part of 
         elected officials. Slowly, they realized that a number of us
         were approaching the age of our majority...indeed...things
         began to change for Alice's sisters. 

         There was pride in this...and a first taste of power.
         And we plotted how we would use this new thing called clout 
	 to change our world.

         ...

         Not very long ago...some twenty years later. Bobby and I
         sat in the parlor of my old Victorian farm house and we
         sang the old songs. And when we came to Alice, I sang it well. 
         And yes, there was still some anger there, but mostly
         there was regret; and there was that about it that
         spoke to unmet responsibilities and unfulfilled
         promises. 

         It was a child who sang the song 20 years ago and a 
         woman who sang it 20 years later. The child sang of injustice...
         the woman grieved; the child sang for herself first and
         Alice in afterthought...the woman sang for Alice first and
         in afterthought for herself.

	 And there was very little pride left in these things.
	 We left our afternoon of remembrance with the rancid taste
	 of promises unkept and dreams undreamed. And though we knew
	 the change from caterpillar to moth is and was inevitable,	
	 the passing to and from was none-the-less bittersweet.

         Do not begrudge me my pain. Without it, I would be like
         that younger version of myself...shouting anger into the
         darkness without seeing the light. I would be form
         without function and guilty of what my words accuse my family
         of being. I would be an embodiment of that which made me...
         and God help me...I hope to be something quite different.

	 I know that, like all those protestors, I will achieve only a 
	 fraction of what I try; but do not seek to spare me my failures.
	 If I ride the bike the first time I try, I will never appreciate
	 what a miracle riding a bike is. If I can teach my son only
	 one thing, I would hope to teach him to embrace his failures 
	 jealously. From them alone can he learn anything.

         Besides, I am not without joy. I look around me and I ask who
         else do I know that has so many friends...friends in the
         true sense...as in people who love me. My friends are
         not the casual type...they are people who passionately 
         care about me. And are vocal about it. I have long
         passed the point in my life when I would question their
         intentions or their sincerity. I accept their love and
         try to return it.

         And I have had the love of two men for most of my adult 
         years....how many people have not even the love of one? 
         Surely a person whose cup is overflowing should not 
         complain about the vintage of the wine?

         And I have the love of my son...and I am eternally at a 
         loss for words to begin to express what that means;
         to look into a child's eyes and see trust without
         question...love without denial...hope without
         fear...all credited (with no regard for veracity) to me.
         To see something that I am incapable of offering,
         offered to me without hesitation.

         Dear friend, (for I do count you among them, and what
         greater miracle is there than friendship born without
         even acquaintance?), I am grateful for this pain 
         that makes such joy.


T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
988.1First it was RAGE, then PAIN, a thin blue line ?BTOVT::BOATENG_Kand Who has a Monopoly of IT?Tue Apr 17 1990 01:261
       You mean...Before or After... ?
988.2Guess I goofedSUPER::REGNELLSmile!--Payback is a MOTHER!Tue Apr 17 1990 02:0114
    
    
    Neither.
    
    As a necessary means to an end...perhaps?
    
    I will enter the piece that came first as the next entry. [Yes, I know
    it should have been posted before PARABLE but I am backwards a good
    deal of them time...sorry]
    
    ANyway...
    
    INSTANt REPLAY was the first piece...then PARABLE...perhaps ne needs to
    see them together.
988.3Instant ReplaySUPER::REGNELLSmile!--Payback is a MOTHER!Tue Apr 17 1990 02:01276
         Instant Replay 

         ---

         Do you suppose there are really families out there where
         they gather round roaring fireplaces or linger over
         remains of hearty meals at much-used dining room
         tables and smile tenderly at each other? Are there
         siblings that stroll down autumn-leave-strewn country
         roads, arm in arm, reminicsing about how great growing
         up together was? Are there Mothers and Daughters that
         sit quietly over coffee and share a good laugh or a good
         cry over the awkward moments of growing up and leaving
         home?

         I wonder that sometimes. 

         What's left of my immediate family gathered over the
         rinds of a Pizza-Hut special round an old 
         second-hand dining room table in a mobile (ah...excuse
         me, modular) home in Florida just a few weeks ago. My
         sister and I and Mother. I was reminded that my family
         does not meet any of the preconceptions about close-knit
         families. I am not sure whether I am
         jotting this down in lament for or justification of
         that fact. But, there it is.

         ...

         For one thing, the only time we seem to gather is when
         we are circling the wagons after some family tragedy,
         or marshaling ourselves for inter-nicene battle. 
         Otherwise, we may co-habit, but steer clear of contact. 

         Actually, we prefer to "habit" separately and as far
         away as possible.  But, circumstances being what they are, 
         we spent the better part of five days together and the 
         only time that we really settled down together was the 
         night we had the "big rowe".

         There we were, Penny and I, toe to toe...face to face,
         literally screaming at each other. My God, how
         embarrassing. I am 40 and she is 45...and we are
         screaming like three year-olds. With about as much
         intelligent content. She about my spoiled nine year old
         and I about her obnoxious 4 year old. Both points true
         and untrue and totally irrelevant. Nine year-olds "will"
         be spoiled upon occasion and four year-olds are by
         definition "obnoxious". We could just as well have been
         arguing that it was unfair for the sun to rise in the
         east and set in the west.

         The minute the airlines clerk told Nils that our plane never
         took off from Newark I should have seen disaster coming.
         Rather than spend the night in La Guardia
         waiting the 12 hours for the next flight, we opted to
         spend an extra night with Mother in Florida.

         Bad choice. Much as I hate airline terminals, we should
         have flown to-Atlanta-to-Newark-to-New-York...et al.
         Everybody's "lets-hold-it-together" quotient
         was set for our leaving on that day. There was no room
         for error and no patience left on anyones' part when we
         returned, baggage in hand.

         The vagaries of travel and staying with relatives while 
         on vacation aside; the real horror of this little
         [relatively speaking] tirade was that I have had it a
         hundred times before. Regardless of that fact, I had it
         again...with as little control as I ever had. 

         I had it when I was 5 and she was 10. That time she
         dropped the old iron-ringed bedspring on top of me 
         and I screamed myself blue in the face until Daddy 
         finally heard me and came to lift the metal contraption off me.

         I had it when I was 10 and she was 15 and I made a
         wisecrack about her date for the movies. That time she
         threw a hand mirror at me which I didn't duck fast
         enough which resulted in several stitches and no movie
         date.

         And I had it three weeks ago in Florida. The old "same
         time, same channel" routine hurts too much for words. I
         watched the hateful verbiage hurtling out of me with as little control
         at keeping them back as someone vomiting a badly passe'
         noon meal. The output had about the same reek to it;
         and left me with the same shakes.

         ...

         As for walking down quaint pathways with my sister
         we did take a walk around the "adults only park".

         (Funny how a phrase like that at one point in ones' life seems
         to indicate an initiation into the hidden mysteries of
         sex and how at a later point indicates the absence of
         [at least] the result of such activity...children)

         It was anything but quaint. I am reminded of a lost piece
         of lyric from somewhere when I was about ten that went:

         	...little boxes on the the hillside
         	little boxes made of ticky-tacky...
         	...and we all get put in boxes
         	and we all come out the same...

         It was a place that small children could have spent
         their entire childhoods being lost in. (As good a reason
         as any I guess to exclude them on a regular basis) The
         neatly trimmed roads wound with no reason this way and
         that between seven versions of the same modular home in
         a variety of five colors. I was there for five
         days and drove everyday; and missed Mother's driveway
         each of those days because it looked like all the other
         driveways until you were by it far enough to see her
         Maine license plate.

         I still haven't figured out how Mother managed to get
         the correct drive every time. Some homing instinct
         perhaps? The answer is probably something I don't want to know.

         What we did on our "stroll" was discuss how much longer 
         we thought Mother would be able to take care of herself and how 
         we were going to handle the situation if the inevitable 
         did not out-run the irretrievable. Death being so much
         cleaner than incapacity.

         Even this conversation was riddled with family
         cliches. We could hear Daddy saying...

         "If she gets bad enough I will put her away...and that
         will be that."

         This about his Mother. She chose to will herself to
         death rather than face that epithet, but Mother...for
         all that she is more independent than Margaret has not
         a fraction of Margaret's determination.

         We heard ourselves saying...

         "If she gets to that point we will just have to put her
         in a home. At least she has the financial resources to
         handle that...for awhile anyway."

         When did *she* become *it*? Since when do I do something
         *to* someone and not in conjunction *with* except under
         extreme duress? Why didn't we sit and talk to
         her about her wishes if such a thing should happen? Was
         it because (as we, no doubt, told ourselves) we didn't
         want to threaten her already seemingly tenuous hold on
         reality? Or, was it because (more likely) we didn't have
         the strength of purpose to face her as a person with
         this changing-of-the-guard subject?

         Or was it (terrifying but a real possibility) because we
         do not see her as a person? Indeed she is Mother; but I
         have never seen her as Faith. Have we spent so many
         years being held in comparison to what-a-good-daughter-should-be 
         that we are returning the favor by seeing her only as
         what-we-have-to-do-about-Mother?

         And as for discussing the "wonder years of growing up"
         the less said the better. We stood in mutual distrust
         and dislike of each other until the day when I was 13
         and she was 18 and she left for college. We stood in
         guarded neutrality when I was 14 and she 19; when she
         left for California to marry Jack. I did not see her
         again for ten years and (I feel terribly callus saying
         this) did not miss her or having a "sister" until I met
         her again as an adult. I harbored not even the slightest
         empathy for her until she forged her way though a messy
         divorce. 

         Even today, she is a person that I love but not one that
         I like. We are vastly different people; our values are
         different, our lives are different, our dreams are
         different. The things that make me smile bring no
         answering grin from her; the things that make her cry 
         are unfathomable to me. We are strangers who happen to 
         have the same parents. We understand and respect the 
         biological link that binds us and we attempt to give it
         its due. But we lack any other attracting force. We
         admit without guilt that if we met as strangers the best
         possible reaction we would draw from each other would
         be dismissal. More than likely, we would experience
         immediate distaste.

         ...

         The thought of sitting down with Mother for a cup of
         coffee...for the fun of it seems a bit masochistic
         to me. Like an infinite loop, Mother still spends her 
         time annotating the bits and pieces of her daughters that
         need work. She spent our days together complaining that Penny's 
         bottoms were too short and my tops were too low.  There was a brief
         whimsical moment when we two suggested melding the
         non-offending parts to produce the "suitable_daughter".  
         It ceased being whimsical when we realized that Mother might have
         actually wanted that. It wandered over into hysteria
         when we decided we could go the other way....the totally
         "unsuitable_daughter".

         And I truly do not understand the pain of leaving home. It was
         freedom to me...long sought after and much cherished. 
         Until I made my own, home was where my parents fought;
         my Father drank; my mother ineffectually "martyred". It was
         never a place of refuge, only a place of residence.

         ...

         The single unrehearsed event of the entire week took
         place in the wee hours of Thursday. After Penny and I
         had slept fitfully over the last heard epithets of our
         Wednesday night brawl, we emerged from bedrooms to be
         cornered by Mother.

         "We have to talk." She says.

         "About?" Penny is lighting a cigarette.

         "My God! About what! You two said some awful things last
         night. I can't have you leaving like that."

         "Mel, are you still angry with me? Do you think I meant
         any of what I said?"

         "Nope."

         I "was" angry about the fact the fight happened at all,
         but I knew what she meant. I fully understood that the
         content of the fight was irrelevant and devoid of
         meaning.

         "You are just like your Father! How can you do that?"

         "Mother," We gave up and sat down. I tried for
         understanding. "We were raised to do what we did last
         night. We have been having the same fight for 40 years.
         The content doesn't matter and never did."

         "What...?"

         Well, we spent two hours trying to make her see how we
         "see" our world. We tried make her see that Daddy was an
         addict even when he wasn't drinking; that his
         personality was an addict's; that we had that
         personality; that we warn our kids to watch out because
         they carry the same genes; that start me on anything and
         I may be hooked. Sure, it may not be alcohol or drugs
         but it could be work or chocolate or science fiction
         books. There is some major ingredient that directly
         relates to "moderation in all things" that we obviously
         lack. At least hope that the things we succumb to are
         not overtly dangerous.

         I doubt she really heard. In out past, when not documenting 
         faults that needed fixing, she spent time protecting her
         privacy by re-writing current events. Daddy was not home
         laying on the couch dead drunk; her was suffering from
         the flu...and so on. I am not sure if she wants or
         (honestly) even needs to admit any of this to herself or
         to us. But we needed it. And at least we have once done
         it in front of her if not "with" her. A start or sorts.

         ...

         By Thursday night, going home was well past due. Home to where
         instant replay means we get to see Bobby Allison crash
         yet another time into the wall at Daytona in s-l-o-w  
         m-o-t-i-o-n this time, and tapes refer the closely guarded 
         copies of "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" and "Batman"...



988.4GEMVAX::CICCOLINITue Apr 17 1990 20:162
    You make this into a book and I'll buy it!  You are a beautiful and
    absorbing writer.  Please, go on!
988.5Yes, it's rivetingMCIS5::WOOLNERPhotographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and denseTue Apr 24 1990 03:335
    I'm not often moved (in Notes) to read, really _read_, an entry that
    goes into the hundreds of lines.  I'm spellbound and, well, speechless. 
    Please go on (if you can, and if it helps you)...
    
    Leslie
988.6Thanks...Just wool gathering out loudSCDGAT::REGNELLSmile!--Payback is a MOTHER!Tue Apr 24 1990 22:0018
    
    Hmmm...
    
    Well, I was sort of thinking out  loud. That is how I do it,
    you see, I write essays.
    
    I think I have said about all I have to say at this point.
    
    I have come to admire some of you; love some of you; trust the most of
    you...even those I disagree with...and value your thoughts. I have been
    thinking lately about this and just was throwing it out there to see
    what you all thought.
    
    Thank you Leslie...I am a writer by trade...it is somehow reasurring to
    know that I have a talent for my craft.
    
    
    
988.7CADSE::MACKINJim, CAD/CAM Integration FrameworkTue Apr 24 1990 22:142
    ...and craft is such a perfect term.  I could almost see you molding
    the words.  Sheer magic!
988.8Oh what a wonderful compliment! Thank you!HARDY::REGNELLSmile!--Payback is a MOTHER!Wed Apr 25 1990 20:5735
    
    At the risk of wandering from the topic...[but then it was MY topic so
    perhaps Steve will forgive me...]
    
    I just had to reply to the last reply...[talk about recursive..]
    
    Anyway...
    
    I once upon a time, many years ago, learned to write from one of the
    greatest journalists of my era. A Pulitzer winner, no less.
    
    I am not made of the stuff that he was; nor am I sure that I would wish
    to be.
    
    However, one thing he taught me that serves me well in all things I
    do...not just writing...is that *magic* only happens when the
    practitioner has done something enough times to make it *seem* to be
    done without thought.
    
    The observer then perceives *magic*. The practitioner then perceives a
    job well done.
    
    Too many who write [and even those of us who know better when we are in
    a rush or just lazy] do not take the time to *build* what we write.
    
    That is why I used the term "craft"...because building a good piece of
    writing is much like building a piece of furniture. If you build it
    with care and attention to detail and *love*...it will last a long time
    and provide comfort; if you build it hastily and without thought and
    little emotion...it will soon fall into dis-repair and may even give
    splinters. [grin]
    
    Anyway...I am preaching, forgive me. But I love to write.
    
    Melinda
988.9Sore Foot ... What NEXT?WR1FOR::HOGGE_SKDragon Slaying...No Waiting!Sun May 20 1990 01:1722
    It's okay Melinda... seems I'm learning something new everyday...
    But then I already suspected this part of it.  That's why I keep
    trying to get feedback on my writing... to learn HOW to build it.
    I can see some of the shoddy materials in it but sometimes... it
    seems you get lost in the writing and can't find the right parts.
    Guess that is what was meant by one of my mentors when he said 
    "How do yo become a good writer?... simple... rewrite, rewrite,
    rewrite, edit, store away, pull out and start all over again...
    somewhere around the 2nd or 3rd time through if it's still shoddy
    file it away for a longer period of time or through it away and
    start from scratch."
    
    I degress from the topic... "PAIN"
    
    Standing by a roll up steel door and having the guy who now has
    your job pull the chain while you are busy tying your shoe... having
    said door slam down and bounce off the top of the same foot... I
    now have a minor bruise on the top of my left foot... thank goodness
    I was wearing steel toed boots... I'd hate to think about what would
    have happened if I hadn't.... yuck!
    
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