New Year's Eve. What a day for a birthday.With or without champagne, I feel most of my birthdays have been memorable. It's not much of a feat to pull off since there always seems to be so much going on out there in the world on the 31st of December. I talk with folks and come to find out that for a lot of people the night is quiet. They'll rent movies or get "the ball in New York" on tv or whatever. I suppose that when the kids were small and here I wasn't doing things too much differently, either. We would don pajamas and party hats and would get out sparkling cider and bubbly and make a ton of mess with confetti and exploding streamers, all that. Those days were fun and pretty contained in their wildness. You might say blessed but that might be pushing it a bit.
But quiet? No, they've never really been quiet. I've lit off fireworks where and when I could get away with it, stood outside my door and banged pots and pans together, rung bells, whatever, and shouted out to the world "Happy New Year!". I've been to small gatherings out in the Mojave desert where we'd hang around campfires after a day of hiking and eating and drinking and then, at midnight, light off rockets or shoot off guns, whatever. Ever year it's been something different. I've thrown parties,big and small, have stood watch onboard ship, and once, after a hard fifteen hundred mile ride up from Cali, almost slept through the sacred hour. Would have, too, if it wasn't for my children dancing on my chest. I have been up in the mountains with friends in rented cabins, have hung out with lovers and wives in little apartments and not much bigger homes, have stood in the rain waiting for fireworks in the midst of big crowds and once even crashed someone else's party just to piss them off. One way or another it's been notable.
This last year, for the first time since I was seventeen, I came into the new year sober. It was strange and wonderful to be with The Boy and Mi Novia over in Seattle, walking the crowds, grabbing burgers at Dick's, taking a small piece of the world and making it ours in midst of the throng and watching the world go wild when the fireworks went off at midnight. It felt great to come back home and know that this year was going to be different. I had no idea how different. Maybe in some ways that wish was a kind of a curse, maybe better, it was some sort of blessing.
Face it, I was lost for many years in the wilderness that was you and me. I was caught up in the headiness of our relationship, a relationship that was thin as rice paper and about as fragile. I let that love guide me, and then, when I could no longer see that it was gone, I let it destroy me and the hearts of others who chose to love me. I let that love we shared be the loose cannon of my life, let it crash back and forth down below in the hold while the stormy waters that our friendship caused raised hell with every other aspect of my life. What life is all about now, my dear, long after you've been gone and made your life elsewhere, is a somewhat strange and beautiful story. I don't mind it at all, even while I'm looking at financial ruin and other uncertainties straight in the face.
You came into my life for a reason, M. Sure, I cook with recipes now, have a burgeoning cookbook collection, purchased a ton of great used cookgear and have a renewed sense of confidence in the kitchen again. And hey, I know what a kingfisher and a pileated wood pecker is when I see them now. I have a different appreciation for a clean house, for mundane chores, for books shared with intimate others. I think of you whenever I think of this house, this city, this region, the whole western side of the United States. The part of my life that you've impacted is huge and remarkable and seemingly endless, but maybe, if that New Year's blessing or curse has it's way, I can wrap up that old life and toss it in the fireplace tomorrow.
When The Boy and Mi Novia and I were coming home on the ferry last year we said that this year would be different. It has been, in spades. I now have a cat and no relationships to bind or steer me. I no longer work for the system we met in. I carry on with my writing, work as a volunteer at a foodbank, drive a thousand miles a pop to be with my children, goof with this house, buy all too many movies and, while I'm waiting for work to appear, send off even more applications weekly.
I think of Mi Novia and how she set me free. I think of her and realize that she was an even bigger shape shifter than you. Sure, my long ongoing grief and fantasy about you has kept me spinning in place, but she was the one who changed my relationship with The Estranged One for the better, she was the one, by leaving, who got me writing to you again. In that leaving she also left open the door for infatuation and that smittenness and this writing place helped blaze the way for me to leave that toxic work enviroment I was in. Mi Novia, in small and big ways, changed my life just as much if not more than you ever did. Sure, my words to you drove away my Estranged One and helped burn me down at work, but they would have never surfaced if not for Mi Novia.
Life as I knew it changed on the first of the year. I woke up sober and was clear eyed for the first time since I was a youth. I shared a bed with a woman who loved me, went back to work thinking that I finally was going somewhere with my job. That feeling was right on...I was going somewhere...I just didn't know where that place was at the time. Hell, I still don't. But, in the end, it's going to be someplace grand, I can feel it. And M, when I get there, you, my dear, will be but a stone effigy on my mantle. You, my old love, will occupy that grand spot in my life as the reason why I am there, but M, your little blue rock will pale in comparison from here on out to the painting on the wall above my computer, a painting done by the woman who really made things happen. A woman who once loved me, too.
It's been a very good year. You're gone, I'm happy, life is a mystery. Let's see what the new year brings.
Your WHMB
This last year, for the first time since I was seventeen, I came into the new year sober. It was strange and wonderful to be with The Boy and Mi Novia over in Seattle, walking the crowds, grabbing burgers at Dick's, taking a small piece of the world and making it ours in midst of the throng and watching the world go wild when the fireworks went off at midnight. It felt great to come back home and know that this year was going to be different. I had no idea how different. Maybe in some ways that wish was a kind of a curse, maybe better, it was some sort of blessing.
Face it, I was lost for many years in the wilderness that was you and me. I was caught up in the headiness of our relationship, a relationship that was thin as rice paper and about as fragile. I let that love guide me, and then, when I could no longer see that it was gone, I let it destroy me and the hearts of others who chose to love me. I let that love we shared be the loose cannon of my life, let it crash back and forth down below in the hold while the stormy waters that our friendship caused raised hell with every other aspect of my life. What life is all about now, my dear, long after you've been gone and made your life elsewhere, is a somewhat strange and beautiful story. I don't mind it at all, even while I'm looking at financial ruin and other uncertainties straight in the face.
You came into my life for a reason, M. Sure, I cook with recipes now, have a burgeoning cookbook collection, purchased a ton of great used cookgear and have a renewed sense of confidence in the kitchen again. And hey, I know what a kingfisher and a pileated wood pecker is when I see them now. I have a different appreciation for a clean house, for mundane chores, for books shared with intimate others. I think of you whenever I think of this house, this city, this region, the whole western side of the United States. The part of my life that you've impacted is huge and remarkable and seemingly endless, but maybe, if that New Year's blessing or curse has it's way, I can wrap up that old life and toss it in the fireplace tomorrow.
When The Boy and Mi Novia and I were coming home on the ferry last year we said that this year would be different. It has been, in spades. I now have a cat and no relationships to bind or steer me. I no longer work for the system we met in. I carry on with my writing, work as a volunteer at a foodbank, drive a thousand miles a pop to be with my children, goof with this house, buy all too many movies and, while I'm waiting for work to appear, send off even more applications weekly.
I think of Mi Novia and how she set me free. I think of her and realize that she was an even bigger shape shifter than you. Sure, my long ongoing grief and fantasy about you has kept me spinning in place, but she was the one who changed my relationship with The Estranged One for the better, she was the one, by leaving, who got me writing to you again. In that leaving she also left open the door for infatuation and that smittenness and this writing place helped blaze the way for me to leave that toxic work enviroment I was in. Mi Novia, in small and big ways, changed my life just as much if not more than you ever did. Sure, my words to you drove away my Estranged One and helped burn me down at work, but they would have never surfaced if not for Mi Novia.
Life as I knew it changed on the first of the year. I woke up sober and was clear eyed for the first time since I was a youth. I shared a bed with a woman who loved me, went back to work thinking that I finally was going somewhere with my job. That feeling was right on...I was going somewhere...I just didn't know where that place was at the time. Hell, I still don't. But, in the end, it's going to be someplace grand, I can feel it. And M, when I get there, you, my dear, will be but a stone effigy on my mantle. You, my old love, will occupy that grand spot in my life as the reason why I am there, but M, your little blue rock will pale in comparison from here on out to the painting on the wall above my computer, a painting done by the woman who really made things happen. A woman who once loved me, too.
It's been a very good year. You're gone, I'm happy, life is a mystery. Let's see what the new year brings.
Your WHMB












