"The first family of Minnesota Blogging" - Mitch Berg, Shot in the Dark

Illuminating fun, faith,
family and foolishness.

“It is the duty of every citizen according to his
best capacities to give validity to his
convictions in political affairs.”

- Albert Einstein

Saturday, December 29, 2007

A balm in Gilead, part 2: wife
The second in a series, part writing exercise and part year-end reflection,
about the "balms" in my life, inspired by the book,
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson.


"We should talk more," she said, her bare foot lightly brushing mine. She's logical and practical in a way that some men say they wish women could be more like. There's wisdom and concern in her words, a concern that perhaps we're becoming too autonomous, rising and setting like the sun and the moon covering the same familiar ground but at different times, our orbits barely overlapping. Nevertheless, sometimes during the day, you can see the moon.

Earlier in the evening we had talked, sitting in big, comfy chairs in front of a too-hot fireplace at a local coffee shop. Then her motions had been gamine-quick, almost coltish as she reached across the small space between our chairs and stroked the arm of mine, or raised up to draw her legs underneath her, or raised her arms to take off her sweater when the fire became too uncomfortable even for her, the one who shivers almost non-stop from Labor Day to Memorial Day. She was telling me about her dreams, literally. Those fast-asleep dreams she had had recently, round and portentous, dripping with symbolism and still crystal-clear upon waking. To some extent they were also Dreams, having to do with what she wanted for the future, to pursue.

As for myself, the one who used to never be able to shut up, I had leaned back in my chair meditatively, parsing the symbols and conjuring context. Leaning back is something I've found myself doing more often the last few years; I'm not as concerned about letting silence into the conversation anymore, whereas before I often couldn't wait to careen in and even high-jack it, not daring to leave a space where someone else could take it away.

Now, later in the evening, when she says "We should talk more," it's not so much to say that the talking earlier was fun, but that we don't have as much fun as we used to have, or could have, and she sees the need to stay in practice. She looks ahead, imagines the inevitable empty nest. I imagine her considering the old buzzard sitting on the other side of that nest. What do the sun and the moon do once what has been your world goes away? "Ummm..." I say.

When we had first gone out I was nervous and had babbled, which I tend to do if I'm nervous. Fortunately, few things make me nervous anymore. Then, however, I had nearly blown it with my chatter, trying one conversational gambit after another looking for a favorable response, some traction. My best stories and jokes, my wittiest observations, littered the top of the table at the restaurant like dirty dishes. So I shut up, and things got better, because she had some things to say, too.

One of the things she said, some time a bit later, was, "Look, I don't want to lead you on. You're nice, but I believe God is preparing Mr. Right for me, and when he comes along, you're out of here."

Okay, so I have been nervous.

In Gilead the Reverend Ames reflects, with some wonder, over the circumstances that brought his young wife — and ultimately the son to whom he is writing — into his life. A widower who lost his first wife in childbirth and his infant daughter shortly thereafter, he had lived most of his adult life as an outside observer and counselor of the family dynamics taking place around him, covetously (he admits) watching the relationships that appeared to be denied to him, until these, too, overtook him.

I have only half-jokingly said that I was smart and got my trophy wife first. I didn't have to wait until old age, like Rev. Ames, to know the comfort of a wife and family. And it is a tangible balm.

My wife and I first met in April, 1986. We went on our first date in June. By late September we were engaged (though we didn't marry for another year). Once, as my she and I were clearly getting serious in our relationship, a concerned friend of mine (who had known me for years) drew her aside to urge caution, warning her of the dark moods that were known to come over me from time to time. These moods were not imagined, and during those times, I confess, I was not a good friend. I remember these moods well. Strange, I don't remember having one since I married.

Once, not too long ago, I was teasing her. "Oh, you're definitely high-maintenance," I said, citing how particular she is about the ingredients in the food we bring into the house, her taste in clothes, the way she likes things that concern her to be "just so." She was not amused, which suggests that there are still times when it is better for me to keep my mouth shut, especially if it gives me time to think. And as I thought about it I quickly realized that almost all the maintenance she requires is handled by her. She rises early for her physical and spiritual exercise, the burdens of selecting and preparing the foods we eat fall upon her, her fastidiousness in her appearance reflects well on both of us with little involvement from me. About all I have to do is avoid shrinking her jeans in the wash (difficult, because I like tight jeans on her) and bring her favorite towel up from the laundry on Saturday night and hang it on the rack above the bathroom radiator (I've also ceded this premium towel position to her). Further, since I am almost pathologically detail-averse, she manages the details that keep our household running smoothly, from balancing the checkbook, paying the bills and (usually) putting the things I need out where I can find them or won't forget them.

She does all of that, and somehow still desires my attention and conversation.

We should talk more.


Related Posts:
A Balm in Gilead, Part 1: Life and Death
A Balm in Gilead, Part 3: Children

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Santa drives a tow-truck for Triple-A
The Mall Diva went out of town overnight with some friends last Sunday, leaving her car parked on a St. Paul street outside the house they all had left from. Sunday evening St. Paul declared a snow emergency, and the owner of the home notified the Diva that her car could get towed if it wasn't moved.

No problem. She called home and asked if someone could get her second key and drive over to her car and move it. Well, one problem: neither she or anyone here knew where that second key was. A messy search of all likely and unlikely places was fruitless (and keyless). Hmmm, what to do?

Just leave it and let the city tow it? No, the towing fee and the ensuing impound fees (since she wouldn't be back until Tuesday morning) made the expense prohibitive (not to mention incredibly inconvenient).

The car has a keypad door lock; perhaps I could get a couple of people, we could go to the car, open the door, put it in neutral and push it into the driveway? No, the car couldn't be shifted without a key in the ignition.

Wait a minute, we have family coverage from Triple-A for our cars! I called the company and inquired about getting a tow on a snowy night when there had to be lots of cars in ditches. Sure, they said, they could get a truck over there in three, maybe five, hours but they'd either have to tow the car to a garage or back to our house; they couldn't tow it 25 feet into a private driveway.

So be it. Now we just had to hope that the AAA driver got to the car before the city driver did. As it was already about 10 p.m. we'd have to go to bed and wait until morning to see who won.

Waking up Monday morning, it was with Christmas-like anticipation that I went downstairs to see if there was something in the driveway. Hallelujah! Peace on Earth! Good will toward men! The Diva's car was nestled in the driveway, in front of the garage door, leaving just enough room for me to back my car out and get around hers! Better yet, not even a parking ticket! Best of all, the towing was free under our AAA plan!

Others weren't as fortunate.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

A ghost of Christmas programs past
The Mall Diva's Christmas program, Eclectica, went off as scheduled last Sunday before a packed house that included my mother who flew in from Missouri. The show was great with the only flubs being the charming ones that somehow make a show a more personal experience for everyone. Oh, and a couple of young angels from the manger scene got stage fright and refused to go on, but I'm sure it was noticeable only to their parents and the cast.

Of course, it all reminded me of the many Christmas programs I had participated in as a child, especially since I had my mom sitting next to me. The first one I can remember (barely) was when I was three or four and it must have been at an Air Base where my father was stationed. As I recall there wasn't a stage as such, just something like a gymnasium floor with rows of seats in front of the performance area. I can remember sitting in a chair at the back of the "stage" while other acts performed before my group got to do our thing. I have no idea what our act was, but my parents caught my solo performance as I waited...casually picking my nose. Hearing about it often afterwards helped keep that in my memory banks.

My next solo was in kindergarten when our class of 12 performed "The Twelve Days of Christmas". I was "Five golden rings!" I also couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, which makes me think that perhaps my kindergarten teacher had some kind of twisted sense of humor. After all, she also assigned the kid with the lisp the part of "Seven swans a'swimming." It's safe to say we brought down the house.

But the one performance I've especially been thinking about the last few days came when I was in fourth, or perhaps fifth, grade, when my dad was out of the service and we were living in Indianapolis. It was at Harrison Hill Elementary, either in Mrs. Boaz's class in 1968 or Mrs. Zinn's in '69. The Viet Nam war was going on and I remember our teacher, whichever one it was, telling us that a local soldier had written a poem (he may have even been a former student of hers), and that it had been set to music and that a group of us boys were going to sing the new song in the program. Pretty cool beans for a bunch of boys at that time, especially for my best friend Trey and I, because it meant we could wear our toy army helmets and bring our guns (I was especially proud of my Thompson submachine gun replica). We practiced that song for several weeks, and I remember it was a pretty grim one. It didn't seem much like a Christmas song at all, but the teacher said that it was going to fit into the program.

This show was just going to be a passing reference as I recounted some other programs, but I remembered the opening lines of that song and started wondering who the author was and what ever had happened to him. With the power of Google I searched the opening line:

"Take a man and put him alone, put him 12,000 miles from home."


To my amazement, I found the poem on several websites, including that of a sometime commenter here, joatmoaf's I Love Jet Noise. None of them had an author name, but several included the citation that it was found in the pocket of a dead Marine in the Quang Tri Province, June of '69. Joatmoaf listed the whole poem, although updated for Iraq. The first verse was pretty much how I remembered it, though:

Take a man and put him alone,
Put him twelve thousand miles from home.

Empty his heart of all but blood,
Make him live in sweat and mud.

The rest of the poem doesn't register with me, though it does seem even grimmer than what I remembered. Definitely not Christmas program material. While I don't remember all the words of the song we sung, I know they weren't happy ones. I do remember what happened next. The emcee of the program was a sixth-grader, dressed as Santa Claus. He'd been a great and jolly Santa all evening, but this time he came out, as planned, and spoke to us "soldiers" kneeling on the stage. He said that once upon a time there had been a young family with a new baby that hadn't even been able to find a room in an inn and had had to give birth to their son in a stable. He said that even though things looked bad for them, they had had hope. When he finished his speech we exited backstage while an adult came up. As I led our small group down some steps I heard the adult say that the author of the poem was in the audience that night, and I heard a loud round of applause. I never did see or meet him. The show continued with Christmas carols about the newborn king.

Viewed through the fog of nearly 40 years, it almost seems like another world. Indeed, a world where kids could wear army gear and bring toy guns into the building, and where a Christmas program could mention the Savior and sing songs about His birth. It is also almost surreal that I could have been that close to the origins of what some might consider almost an urban legend in our internet age. The dead marine in Quang Tri might be apocryphal, but I remember what our teacher told us and I remember singing that song, and I remember the soldier being introduced, even if I never saw him.

I wish I had been able to shake his hand.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

On with the show!

The Mall Diva posted about Eclectica a couple of weeks ago and, being both a proud father and a marketing guru, I just had to get the word out again about this coming Sunday's show.

Eclectica is the name of a Christmas program that the Diva and her good friend, Princess FlickerFeather, conceived of several months ago. They found some scripts for skits, selected music, actors and other performers and worked up their own choreography for the program. They then broke the cast into three groups, with each group rehearsing one night a week for the past two months. As the producers, however, the Diva and Princess have had to be at all three rehearsals each week. There are certain compensations, however: I wonder if it's coincidence that the Mall Diva's sister, Tiger Lilly, has the most uncomfortable costume?

It is a Christmas program about the true meaning of Christmas, which you know is an important topic around this blog, and I've heard reports of some very talented performances at the rehearsals; including, I'm told, an impressive turn as a camel by a certain MOBster not related to me. The show is this Sunday night, December 16, at 6 p.m., with cookies and refreshments to follow.

Where: The Miracle Centre Church
125 21st Ave. S., S. St. Paul, MN 55075
Admission is free!