October 5, 2024

The Red Hearts

Los Angeles, California

Our friends are far-flung. I am increasingly grateful for the ones who live nearby. They can come over and hang out on the sofa, help me organize the rooms in my guesthouse (you know who you are, Dr. C!), and play Ticket to Ride into the wee hours (see last parenthetical). But not everyone lives here. In March of 2020, I shared an experience on an airplane, and subsequent journey, with three women (see posts entitled That Was he Year That Was, Parts One and Two). Two of us live in California, with one in the southwest and another on the east coast. Thankfully, we have stayed in touch.

My close friend, Karen, lives in Arizona. Why anyone lives full-time in Arizona is a mystery to me, but it’s a nice place to visit in Spring when the Dodgers participate in Cactus League spring training. Shortly afterwards the weather becomes hell and remains so for a good six or seven months. I would not go anywhere near the state during that time. But, this year Joel and I went to Phoenix in April to see the Dodgers play (and beat) the Arizona Diamondbacks. We are just starting to visit National League stadiums. I’m already up on him by two, but have no problem revisiting San Francisco. San Diego, not so much…

Last October, Karen sent me a birthday card and a bracelet. The bracelet was an intention bracelet, and the instructions indicated that one should set an intention to be reminded of while wearing it. My intention was procrastination. Not to intend to procrastinate. I need no reminder to do that daily. But rather to not procrastinate. I have now been wearing the bracelet, every day, for over eleven months, and it has actually worked. When I walk past some item in my home that needs to be put away, I will now back up, pick it up, and put it where it belongs. At least about 98% of the time (if it is after ten o’clock at night, my intention, understandably, can falter).

For Karen’s most recent birthday, I sent her a necklace with a red crystal heart. For the past fifteen years, I have worn a necklace with a small, ruby heart. I receive more compliments on this piece of jewelry than on any other that I own. It is a heart I wear near to my own heart and is very meaningful to me. When in one calendar year I suffered the deaths of three people who were pivotal in my life, and some significant strife followed; seeing that heart in the mirror each day, helped me. Like the bracelet it provided a grounding message for me, that in spite of what I was going through, there was still a reason to love, a reason to trust, and a reason to give back.

And so, I started giving red, crystal heart necklaces to the girlfriends, the fristers who had stood by me. I gave the first one to Carole, who stayed with me at a time when I couldn’t be alone. And the following year, when I traveled to Phoenix to celebrate Cactus League with Lynnette and Connie, I gave them each one.

While Carole was staying with me, back almost ten years ago, Karen was texting, calling, and sending me information to help me deal with the last death. How is it that I never gave a heart to her? It somehow slipped through the cracks. But that was remedied last month when I sent her a Kate Spade red heart necklace for her birthday.

I probably should have bought these necklaces by the dozen. I think of these women as belonging to a red heart club which fills a space in my heart. I was exceedingly fortunate to have them in my life at a time when I really needed them. And to have them in my life now, for the time that we share in both good times and challenging ones.

I will see Karen in Manhattan later this year when we cheer for her brother, Russell, who is traveling from his home in London to run the New York Marathon. There will be stories about this to tell in upcoming posts. I won’t wait till the last minute to pack. That would be procrastinating. My bracelet wil help on that front. And of course my heart will travel with me.


September 30, 2024

Spot Check

September 30, 2024

Do you ever get these reminders that people see you or think of you differently than you see/think of yourself? My salsa amiga, Joy, came for dinner a few nights ago. We ordered in, and as we were waiting for the delivery, I offered her a choice of white or rosé wine. It's September, so I am in the mood for using up the rosés. I could have gone either way, but she chose the rosé. We settled onto the den sofa with our glasses and tucked our feet up under us. It's what we do when we spend time together at my house. And then we dish. Mostly about the men, our salsero novios. It's a festival. But, as we began, she suddenly complimented me on my face! It is an aging face, and that is what I see when I look in the mirror. I do my best with it, but let's face it, aging is a bitch and it shows on our faces. But, Joy seemed to see my cheekbones and my eyes in a better light.

I am with a man who doesn't compliment me on things like this, so it is nice to hear it from a girlfriend. Don't get me wrong. As a boyfriend/partner Joel is exemplary in most areas of our relationship. But he just isn't very complimentary. At first it bothered me. If he didn't comment on a dress I was wearing, I stopped wearing it. Ditto perfume. But now I know it's his quirk, and I remind myself that you can't always get what you want, but it you try sometimes you just might find, you get what you need. I just made that up.

My dear friend, Connie, recently commented that I am so organized. Clearly, she has never seen my office. I used to see myself as organized, but I hit that tipping point where once you lose control of something, you start losing control of everything. This generally starts with people's garages. With me it started when I needed to bring all of my mother's files and stuff into my home. And then, when I sold my business, more files. So my tipping point occurred in my office. Easily remedied. I now work at the kitchen table. The office desk is a goner.

While I no longer see myself as organized, I do see myself as regimen-oriented. I fall off of my regimens often, but like in meditation, the object of the exercise is in getting back on. I try to meet my mornings with tea, meditation, and journaling. I try to work out on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays with a different cardio-with-weights workout on Saturdays. I don't eat meat on Fridays. I only have an alcoholic drink on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and the weekend (I don't drink a lot. I just drink often). But all of this is subject to change or to just throwing it all into a jar, shaking it up and seeing what spills out. Again, regimen-oriented, definitely not regimen-bound.

But, back to the sofa. It has become one of my favorite things, to hang out with my friends in my house. Am I getting lazy? I do think since the pandemic some of us would rather stay home. I get a lot of social time outside my house when we are dancing at clubs. And I leave the house almost every day for errands. But being at home, hanging out with a friend, brings the satisfaction of not running around, dealing with traffic and parking, and the often loud volume of gen Zs and electronic music in a restaurant.

Still, we left home last Saturday to meet our friends, Todd and Christopher, at a local Italian restaurant. Joel and I hadn't been to this restaurant, so I was overjoyed that we really liked it. We have needed to add an Italian to our restaurant rotation. And it was a lovely night with these friends-as-family whom I have known for many decades. I came home with the leftover brussels sprouts which were insanely tasty. And then, because it was Saturday night and only on Saturday night, I pulled the container of spumoni ice cream from my freezer and grabbed the box of Keebler Sugar Cones from my cupboard. Ten minutes of softening time and I scooped and packed a mound of ice cream on top of the cone and settled down on that same sofa to enjoy my weekly Saturday night treat.

Much later, while watching an episode of Divorce I felt something itching on my chest. It is mosquito season and much as we try to keep them out of the house, mosquitos happen. But I was alarmed to find a crusty, scaly growth on my upper chest. What the hell? I ran to the bathroom where I saw a reddish-greenish-brownish spot. OMG, what is that? Of course it was the weekend, so there was no getting to my dermatologist, Dr. Os, and frankly, I'm not that person who runs off to the doctor for every little thing. But maybe this wasn't a little thing. I rubbed at it tentatively. And... it rubbed off. It. Rubbed. Off. And then it dawned on me. I can construct an ice cream cone that could stand up against any Baskin-Robbins' employee. But. I don't have the paper cones that keep the ice cream from dripping from the bottom of the cone. And, let's be honest, I was kinda reclining when I slurped up that cone. The reddish-greenish-brownish spot was a jot of cherry/pistachio/chocolate that got away from the bottom of the cone ('cuz I like to mash it down in there as I'm eating it). Great cheekbones? Organized? Let's face it. I am more accurately described as messy, especially when it comes to my Saturday night treat. Luckily, a body scan was not required.  

September 20, 2024

Chicken Fingers

Los Angeles, California

There is a restaurant space near by home which has housed a lot of different restaurants. Back in the '80s it was what we used to call a coffee shop, which was named Pages. It shared a parking lot with Jane Fonda's Workout, and became a popular place to go after morning workouts. Once, after eating breakfast with two friends from class, a group of teachers walked by our table and we started throwing our buttered toast and bacon onto each other's plates so we wouldn't get caught eating fat after a workout. Ah, youth...

I don't remember what the restaurant housed before Pages, but afterwards it was another coffee shop. And then a popular barbecue chain, Tony Roma's, which it remained for a long time. During the pandemic and after a long construction, the building was painted orange and opened as another coffee shop/diner, Norm's. Norm's is famous in Los Angeles but couldn't cut it at that time in this neighborhood. Recently, rehabbing began again and a sign went up: Raising Cane's Chicken Fingers.

Now, I'm not taking that 'fingers' thing literally. I've seen this restaurant before in a neighboring community, and the chicken thing is going strong: Popeyes, Chick fil-A. Dave's Hot Chicken (that one is pretty good). So the appearance of a chicken finger joint shouldn't raise any cain (get it? Hah!). However, it has.

I do not indulge in any social media. If I made a list of the ten things I am most  proud of in my life, that would come in, let's see, probably around five. No Facebook. No Twitter, no X (yeah, I know, that's the same thing). But a neighbor suggested I get onto Next Door. Hated it. But recently, when there was a lot of helicopter commotion in the neighborhood, I decided to log on. And there was a string of indignant uproar about the chicken finger restaurant opening in the neighborhood. The most virulent complainer was a man. Named Karen. And I am kidding. I have a good friend named Karen who is the least Karen-like of anyone I know.

The complaint was against fast food. It's chicken, for God's sake. Not even the other white meat but the actual white meat we compare the other one to! Where does all this righteous virtue-signaling come from? It makes me tired.

And the new kid on the block is alcohol. Whether this is tied to a recent study which proffered that no amount of alcohol is good for you or just the newest of influencer trends, I don't know. Nor care. This reminds me a bit of Butch and Sundance poised on a cliffside with the posse closing in. Sundance is afraid to take the long jump into the river because he doesn't know how to swim. Butch laughs and admonishes: The fall'll probably kill you! We live in Los Angeles. I don't know the odds, but I'm thinking that our chances of dying on the road or freeway is probably greater than having a glass of wine each night. Or eating chicken fingers. What a world; what a world.

September 10, 2024

Maybe Not

Los Angeles, California

The debate will be on shortly, and I will definitely be watching it. In fact, I am praying before this debate. So much is riding on the coming election. However, but, instead... I've decided to take a break from politics, religion and sex (alphabetical, not preference order) and explore other themes, if you will.

In the afternoon hours leading up to the debate (last mention, almost), I needed something light to watch. It is the last day of a weeklong triple-digit heatwave. This morning, I had to undergo a nerve-racking test related to the health of my eyes, and Joel kindly went along with me. Afterwards, we went out to lunch, to Walmart to buy a new ironing board cover (see how mundane things here get when I stop writing about politics, religion and sex?), and to the market. We came home exhausted and HOT (heatwave. one week. over one-hundred degrees). Joel left for his home, and I unloaded groceries and finished up a few more chores before taking a break and turning on the TV. CNN? No, not yet. MSNBC? No. FOXNEWS? Never. Surfing around, I landed into the middle of When Harry Met Sally.

Strangely, Joel is of the opinion that all women love "chick flicks" and all men love action movies. Really. I am not a flick chick. I find most romantic comedies to be insipid and stupid. The men of my previous relationships were not action movie (dick flicks) guys. One loved crime dramas. They all enjoyed classic films like Casablanca and the Marx Brothers. My high school boyfriend was also a western film lover. Kinda blows the guys & action films (which are even more insipid and more stupid) theory.

But there are chick flicks and there are chick flicks. If it was written or directed by Nora Ephron, I am in. Her writing and directing was clever, witty and polished. I am a greater fan of When Harry Met Sally than Sleepless in Seattle, and I hadn't seen WHMS recently, so I gratefully dropped into it. It was a perfect pre-debate distraction. On this watching, I was particularly taken with Carrie Fisher playing the Meg Ryan character's best friend. She had a unique voice, and I was reminded of listening to an interview she did with Terry Gross on NPR's Fresh Air. In it, she reminisced about her marriage and relationship with Paul Simon. As I remember her telling of it, at a particularly tumultuous time in that relationship they had been arguing all night. In the morning, Paul Simon took her to the airport where she was flying from NYC to LA. Before boarding the plane, she turned to him and said:You're going to be sorry if the plane crashes. And Paul Simon replied: Maybe not. This probably doesn't read very funny, but as she told it to Terry Gross it was hilarious. Maybe because we relate to those times when the coin has landed on the other side of love and we are feeling maddeningly hateful. But then later, we realize the aspect of absurdity that exists in many of our battles.

Writing of celebrity marriages, I am reminded that Julie Andrews once noted that her marriage to Blake Edwards survived because of a great deal of therapy. I could be wrong, but what I recall reading was that she attributed it to both their individual therapies as well as couples therapy. Blake Edwards was a genius of comedy. Someone who worked with him once told the story that when he was in production on a film, and sitting in his director's chair, he could sometimes be observed shaking with quiet laughter. And those were the times when the crew knew he had come up with an inspired gag. Do you know the farce scene in Victor, Victoria when James Garner and Alex Karras are, on a snowy night, sneaking in and out of the hotel room shared by Julie Andrews and Robert Preston? When Alex Karras, coming out of the room into the hotel hallway with his coat and hair clearly covered in snow, is surprised by another guest coming out of an adjacent room, he covers his skulking by asking the guest: Do you have heat in your room? Purely Blake Edwards.

Victor, Victoria isn't really a rom-com. With it's music, and wry wit, it is much more than that. And that is what I have always loved about Blake Edwards' comedies. It provides more than whatever. And (because I cannot stay away), it is what I wish for tonight's debate. More than whatever. Will we get that? Maybe not.

August 25, 2024

Steve Martin's Birthday

Los Angeles, California 

I am a complicated woman. I have set the bar high for my own and others' behavior. I am easily annoyed and could use a 12-step program to kick my habit of complaining. But, I also spend a lot of time trying to be nice. I really like people, at least when they're not pissing me off. So I am friendly and I think, for the most part, considerate. And I am always gratefully blown away when someone shows me an unexpected kindness. Because since the pandemic, or maybe even before, people got kinda not nice. Maybe it started with the workforce who couldn't work from home during the pandemic. The cashiers and tellers who worked through it all and fought the Karens with the mask tantrums. About halfway through lockdown those employees got that look, like dead behind the eyes. And then a younger generation entered the workforce and that's a whole other zombie breed. Haven't quite figured it out, but I kindasorta think that after being the darling of the parents who fought with their teachers, coaches, and probation officers (because their kids could never, ever be in the wrong), these young adults have absolutely no idea how to be of service to anyone outside of their own little golden duck puddle. If you ask them how their day is going (and why aren't they asking me, I'm the customer?), they give you a blank 'huh' look. I know that look. It's the look of smartphone deprivation. So the one without that look, who is bright and makes eye contact with you, can really make your day. And give you some hope for civilization.

Earlier this month, on Steve Martin's birthday (I heard that mentioned on NPR that morning), I hit a trifecta of wonderfulness. And it couldn't happen on a better day. I love Steve Martin. For anyone who thinks he only makes comic films, they missed his stand-up genius, and are missing his writing: witty screenplays; insightful novels; his memoir, and the plays he has written. And then there is his banjo virtuosity, and his knowledge and love of fine art. And, by the way, he seems like a really nice guy. Plus, he dated Linda Ronstadt!!

One of my favorite things about Steve Martin is that he made balloon animals for us at Disneyland. My parents were kinda nuts about Disneyland. When I was growing up in Burbank, California, and freeway traffic was manageable, my family was known to spontaneously jump into the car and make our way to Disneyland. Often this would be on summer nights when my mom would say to my sister and me Grab a sweater. We're going to Disneyland. This would be after dinner but in time to drive there to watch the fireworks. We also went to Disneyland for whole days, especially when my cousins were in town. As kids, we knew how to navigate Disneyland. How to bob and weave through a slower-moving crowd on Main Street. How to get through a relatively-unknown passage to get from Fantasyland to Frontierland. We knew which rides to hit first before lines got long. And we knew that before we left, we would find the guy who made the balloon animals for us, while entertaining us with his funny patter. He was the same guy who worked at Merlin's Magic Shop in Sleeping Beauty's Castle. When he was behind the counter entertaining shoppers, you couldn't even get into the small shop which was located on the right side of the Main Street side of the castle (also located adjacent and nearby was the grotto and wishing well which was, frankly, the best place in the park to make out on a date). That creator of balloon-animals, the Merlin's Magic Shop comedian, was Steve Martin.

So, on Steve Martin's 79th birthday, I was running errands, hitting the bank, Sprouts and Trader Joe's. Everyone was cheerful and engaging. When I got to Sprouts, a multi-tattooed young guy who was shopping with his girlfriend/wife and small baby, gestured that I should go ahead of them with my handbasket filled with only two or three items. Are you sure? I queried. He nodded. And my question resonated after I checked out, thanked them again, and made my way out of the store. Has it come to this, that when someone offers kindness, we question and even give them an out? You know you just offered me kindness, right? I'm offering you an opportunity to reconsider. Maybe you've just had a stroke?

I really despair of getting back to a kinder and gentler world. I honestly think that the genie is out of the bottle and we will continue to live this way -- like rats crowded in a cage. We see it in the way people are driving. It's a dog-eat-dog world out there with everyone gunning for anyone who gets in their way. As I left Sprouts I reflected on what it feels like when someone offers what was once considered to be a common courtesy but is no longer common. Sadly, it is rare.

As I walked up to Trader Joe's, which shares a parking lot with Sprouts, I saw a severely disabled older woman walking, assisted by a cane, up to the store. I entered the alley where the carts are stored, and backed one out. Would you like this cart? Her face lit up. Thank you, she said as she took it. I think she was grateful. I was ecstatic. Here I was, exemplifying what I think is important: Paying it forward. It was the least I could do on a day like this. It was, after all, Steve Martin's birthday!

August 15, 2024

Cognitive Dissonance

Los Angeles, California

I'm frightened and amused. I'm framused. Have you, by any chance, read the manifesto named Project 2025? I kinda want to call it Project 225, because it harkens back to that year, AD. It's not a new concept and it dovetails well with MAGA. Or at least with the founders' ability to harness MAGA's moronic base. I'm just a little surprised that they have the balls to actually publish it after, I suppose, two decades or more (when was Obama elected?) of whispering about it in men's clubs and corporate retreats.

I should preface my comments on this by writing that I think the fringes on both sides of the political spectrum are pretty crazy. The woke stuff is from another planet. A lot of the progressive ideas seem unsound. While Trump was promising to build the wall and to make Mexico pay for it, Bernie was promising free college education for all. I pondered aloud, How would we pay for that? Joel's reply was Make Mexico pay for it. Joel, having been raised in Mexico, knew Trump was pissing in the wind about Mexico paying for the wall. But they, in their red caps, all seemed to buy it.

Meanwhile, women were going after men with a vengeance and a lot of men unfairly took the fall for it. Risqué jokes could be a reason for canceling men as well as their careers. And all the while, necklines kept getting lower and skirts kept getting higher. We can broadcast whatever we like, was the message. But you better not look at it, or we will lower the boom. Women had a lot of justified anger. We had been objectified for eons. But now with the power endowed they were, by God, going to use it, rightly or not. It was retribution time.

In addition, progressives were busy attempting to put the dairy industry out of business, wanting to outlaw everything they deemed unhealthy, and letting five-year olds or their parents, decide what, if any, gender would be applied to these little people. What kind of insanity is that? Down the rabbit hole we had gone.

But shifting a wee bit to the right, there goes our civil rights. Let's make everyone practice one or one and-a-half (we're thinking Judaism might pass, or maybe we'll pick them up later) faiths. And, for the love of heaven, let's keep women at home and not allow them to terminate unwanted pregnancies because in our new/old world, all pregnancies are wanted. And sex should solely within the confines of traditional, heterosexual marriage and initiated by the husbands in that union. Women have children because without it, they will become "crazy cat ladies" according to the MAGA VP candidate. But that's just the tip of the iceberg that is getting some press. How about we change the government so that all civil servants report under the president, and let's give him wider-reaching authority. Enough of this balance of power bullshit. What's good enough for Hungary should work pretty well here. Libertarianism was an experiment which failed in the everybody-do-your-own-thing '60s. Americans are stupid. They shouldn't be left to their own devices. They need to be made to understand that this country will be better if the government is left to white men who will eject Muslims and Hindus and the rest of those people outta here. And, by the way, the democrats have been inattentive to the tech industry needs and that's why some of these tech execs have come up with this cool plan.

Frightening. But still just a teensy bit amusing, as archaic ideas brought up in modern times can be. J.D. Vance is the poster child. Forget about Trump. He's old. He's only useful to them at this time in order to get this ball rolling. But what is not in any way amusing is that while this is going on, a generation of younger men are reacting to the world as a place they would like to get out of, and take a bunch of people with them while they are at it. It used to be that the cultists who wanted to drink Kool-Aid or jump on the Hale-Bopp Comet were rare. Now they're mainstream. And you don't even need to drink the Kool-Aid, just wear the red cap and Project 225 will gather you up.

I stopped attending Mass when I became increasingly aware of an American Apostolic Movement which professes a desire to make the United States into a Christian nation, despite it being founded on religious freedom for all. The more I read about this, the more I felt that I couldn't be a part of any Christian community. I experienced a personal shake-up in my faith in Christianity. Recently I attended Mass for the first time this year. It was a funeral Mass, but the ritual of Mass which I have now loved for decades was before me. I uttered the responses and repeated the Lord's Prayer. In my silent prayer, I felt my connection to God. But that occurred in spite of my knowledge of what is happening in the hearts and minds of many "Christians" who want to take their belief and dogmatism, politicize it and make it law. That is wrong.

I think those of us who are centrists with origins in either party have been asleep at the wheel. There are some really peculiar and dangerous movements brewing in this country and the manifesto of Project 2025 is a pinnacle of these. We live in a land of diverse cultures and faiths. We are a melting pot of these. And the concept of Making America Male, of Making America White, or Making America Christian is abhorrent. We all came from somewhere. My man is a Latino; my closest friend is Asian. I have friends in all colors, some whom are LGBQ and many who are Jewish. And that is, in my world, in my country, in my state, city, home, and heart, the way things should be. And I will do everything in my power to keep it that way.

July 30, 2024

It's Chinatown, Jake

Los Angeles, California

My head keeps getting whipped around. What is happening in American politics reminds me of Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass where the Red Queen says: It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place.

On June 15th, Joel and I attended the fundraiser for Biden hosted by George Clooney and Julia Roberts. The big draw was Obama. It was held at the Peacock Theater in downtown Los Angeles (or as the cool kids say: DTLA). I grew up in Los Angeles and am a 3rd generation Californian and 2nd generation Angeleno and I'd never heard of the Peacock Theater! Turns out that Peacock is its newest name, having been named Microsoft and something else at another time. I wish they wouldn't do this. I still call the Giants' stadium in San Francisco, the AT&T. It's no longer that. But I digress.

The fundraiser was an interesting event with intense street security, but not so much getting into the event. Yes, they looked in our purses, but fairly perfunctory. You get a better screening at Dodgers' Stadium, but perhaps that is because of the Naked Gun comedy where there is an attempted assassination of Queen Elizabeth in the stadium foiled by Detective Frank Drebin (Leslie Nielsen). Funny movie, by the way. And I kinda adored Leslie Nielsen. But again, I digress.

At the event, Biden walked haltingly and started speaking slowly. But once he got onto a topic, he was knowledgeable and articulate. He can do this, we thought. But then came the debate two weeks later, hosted on CNN by Dana Bash and Jake Tapper. I watched it alone, but was texting with Nikki, a politico college student who is the daughter of my friend, Cathy. Not to put too fine a point on it, Biden's performance at the debate was profoundly abysmal. As was Trump's, but in a completely different, albeit Trumpian, way. Biden seemed tired, ill, overwrought and unable to rise to the occasion on so many different levels. Trump was Trump. All the adjectives would take up too much space here, so reprehensible should suffice. He represents this new normal of dishonesty. Outright, unconscionable, boldfaced lying. And because Americans are too stupid to do any research on their own, fact-checking is pretty much nonexistent to the right. Duh, well he said it. It must be true. It's on Fox.

Nikki has a crush on Jake Tapper. After we commented on how nice he looked (he looked ok), we both got absorbed by his expressions of incredulity. But really, why would he be surprised at anything Trump would do at this point in time? The envelope to be pushed has ceased to exist. Still, Jake often looked surprised. I texted Nikki, It's Chinatown, Jake. She didn't text back. A few days later I asked Cathy if Nikki would know that reference. She rolled her eyes and said no. Still, I'm sticking to it. It's Chinatown, Jake. If you don't know the people and the territory, or in this case the cult, you just won't get it. On the other hand, a better reference might be Faust. Look it up.

Joel and I were disagreeing on whether Biden should leave the race. After the fundraiser, we started off on the same page. But he didn't watch the debate. Something was clearly not right. Bill Maher had been saying all along that Biden can do the job, but he just can't run for the job. Campaigning has never been his strong suit. But after the debate created the furor that it did, I questioned whether he could do the job of beating Trump.

We had celebrated (as much as we could during the pandemic) when Biden beat Trump. Yes, kids, Biden beat Trump. It was a different celebration than when Obama had won his first election, because Obama represented hope and change. Biden represented sanity. But now something was brewing and as time went on, it made sense to me. When Biden wrote his statement that he was not seeking reelection, I texted the news to Joel. He was not happy. The fear that I have is that we Democrats won't have learned the lesson from the experience with Bernie. To be angry about this, and to withhold your vote makes no sense at all. It made no sense in 2016. Didn't we learn the lesson?

Kamala has not yet chosen her VP. I was hoping for Mark Kelly. We saw him at the Giffords event we attended earlier this year and I was heartily impressed by him. But yesterday I read that Pete Buttigieg is topping the oddsmakers' lists. What a splendid choice that would be on so many levels. The world could move on from the insanity of Trump and the radical right and left! Trump can go to prison or fulfill the bargain he has made with the devil (again, Faust), and Biden can retire knowing that he will be remembered as an effective president and selfless statesman. By Christmas, all could seem right with the world, maybe even in Chinatown.


July 15, 2024

A Moonbeam in your Hand

Los Angeles, California

I have been so fortunately blessed in my life to have known women who enhanced my life. I named my blog after Sandra, and every time I sit down to write a post, I see her name and I think of her. And, not so sadly. Of course I still miss her beyond words, and my life has changed so dramatically since she was a part of it, so the history we shared is a bit compartmentalized in my memory. But when I think of her, I think of how truly good she was and reflect on how infrequently we run across people like that in our lives. Don't get me wrong. Most of the people in my life are basically good people. But I look on humans as flawed beings, and part of my sometimes-challenging emotional makeup is in accepting that. I believe most of us do the best we can. We make mistakes; we correct mistakes; we learn from mistakes. Hopefully, we take responsibility for whatever damage we might cause to others. But, somehow, Sandra seemed less flawed. I think her faith provided a foundation for how she lived her life. And yet, she was completely unpious and was never judgmental. Life seemed to sit on her lightly. She was a devout Roman Catholic and a traditionally-conservative Republican. But to be her friend you didn't have to be either; she welcomed all into her life.

I loved her. I loved spending time with her. She was always so much fun; so game for anything. With Tom and John, we traveled to Tahiti and Panama; stayed a week each year at the Kona Village, and spent time in Tahoe, Carmel, and Rancho Santa Fe. If I told a story about her everytime I wrote a post, it would take me years to write them all. And, truthfully, I'm not sure I could write them well. You kinda had to be there. But here's one. Once when Sandra got exasperated with John's uncharitable behavior we witnessed her uncharacteristic sharpness with him. John, she said, What would Jesus do? We were hanging out at the Bora Bora Bar at the Kona Village at that moment. John shrugged (he'd heard this one before). But later, Tom said to me: It's a better concept to consider what would Sandra do. And a few years later, when I started my blog, thusly naming it seemed right.

Sandra has been gone for ten years. This past weekend, I attended the funeral for another friend, Maria. Maria was not a close friend, but I knew her for many years. She worked in the office of my accountant and was the friendly voice heard when I phoned and the bright smile when I walked into the office every month to drop off my business books. For even more years, I had known Joyce, who was my bookkeeper. One of the best parts of retiring was transitioning these relationships to friends. Joyce kindly included me in a group attending musicals at an LA theater. And the three of us would have lunch on occasion. After one of these lunches, I showed off my new Tesla. The next time I phoned the office, Maria brightly said: Guess what I got?  She had purchased a hot red Tesla after seeing mine.

Maria was one of those rare people who have a glow. She was beautiful, and had an especially lovely smile. And she smiled a lot. Her face would light up with that smile. She was so kind, and as was told and retold at her funeral service, she was infinitely generous and loving to everyone she encountered in her life. Her life's mantra was Living is giving. And story after story reflected that. I wish I had known her much better.

In the course of her funeral Mass, the old, Irish priest (gee whiz, they import a ton of these) reflected that Maria was still with us, as well as having rejoined her late husband, as we are not humans on earth who experience spirituality, but rather spiritual beings who are experiencing a brief human existence. The simile that comes up when I hear a nugget like that, mostly imparted while reading or listening to a homily at Mass, is that it is like a cookbook. Like my mother before me, I collect cookbooks. And I rationalize the continuing purchase of new books like this: If you get one recipe out of a cookbook which becomes part of your repertoire, it was worth the price of the cookbook. I am still thinking about the Irish Father's reference to spirituality, and how it relates to my own life.

Maria was only sixty-seven years old and was felled by ALS. As I remarked to a friend, the only thing worse than dying of ALS is living with ALS. I'm not sure that's true, but for those of us left behind, Maria's disease and death seemed heartily unfair. But then, I always feel that when I lose someone I care about. I take it personally. And that is maybe what we all do. Loss is personal, as well as universal.

And, in case you wondered, the title of this post is from The Sound of Music, specifically from the song How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? It seemed fitting to me, this moonbeam reference resonating with Maria's bright glow. If fortune is with you, you know people like Sandra. And Maria. I knew them both. In that, I was infinitely, extraordinarily lucky.

July 10, 2024

Viva Colombia!

Los Angeles, California

To Paraphrase Garrison Keillor, It has not been a quiet week in Lake Woebegon. Or, at least not here in La LA Land. It has been Joel's birthday week, and... I write that without irony. Back in the day, I celebrated a birthday month, so he is indeed, at least, entitled to a week. And, he has been on vacation. A nine-dayer starting on a Thursday when we went to our favorite Mexican restaurant to drink beer (Joel) and tequila (me) at the bar and watch the Dodgers play. The next night we were out at a local club on their Colombian night. Dancing normally starts at ten, but they had opened early so they could watch Colombia v. Costa Rica in the Copa America soccer championship. Colombia won, so the Colombian clientele were joyful (and drunk). The club was crowded, but one of the things we like about sharing the dance floor with Colombians is that their style of dancing is very close and their movement compact. You don't get trod on. So we danced and drank a little (beer/tequila).

After hanging around and in the pool over the weekend, we went out for Chinese food on Sunday night and then to a different local club to dance. We had been there once before but it had since been remodeled with a very nice and clean (especially after the last club and all their drinking and spilling) dance floor. We stayed until midnight (late for us but this was J's vacation after all).

And then Tuesday rolled around, which is J's actual birthday. We went to a local diner for an early lunch and back home to hang out more and watch an actual Copa America game, Colombia v. Brazil. Colombia didn't win. The score was 1-1. But, unlike in baseball, this can still advance you. Brazil was out; Colombia advanced. After the game, we went out for oysters which is half of what we do for each of our birthdays. The other half was waiting for us at the club with the Colombians. Were they joyful (and drunk) like last time? No. They were ecstatic and bombed. They weren't even collecting a cover charge at the door. It was Bienvenidos, come on in! The floor was so sticky, you could hardly pick up your feet to dance. But their palpable glee was infectious and, especially since it was Joel's birthday, we had a blast. When he refused the free drink the bartender offered him she asked me if I wanted a shot. Are you kidding? Later, after Joel did accept a beer from our friend, Iggy, we saw the bartender dancing alongside us. We danced until the non-Colombian DJ started playing too much regaeton (my spellcheck wants to change that word to rigatoni). We left around midnight. It was the third time we had danced that week. If only life were all birthday vacations!

We got in some pool R + R in before Joel returned to work three days later, and I turned back to the tediousness of some home remodeling. There are very few things I find more banal than house projects, but houses need repair and updating. And you just can't dance that stuff away. So life as we know it moved on. Birthdays come and go, you know. Meanwhile, Colombia played Uruguay and slammed them, 5-0. Hence advancing to the upcoming finals against Argentina. Argentina's good. See, I'm learning something here, even though the game we watched had commentary entirely in Spanish and all I got was an occasional híjole! But that final, Colombia v. Argentina, is still to come. And at least I do know enough Spanish to write: Viva Colombia! 

June 1, 2024

Adia

Los Angeles, California

I am a Sarah McLachlan fan. Though previously aware of her, I dug more deeply into her music about fifteen years ago. In a marriage increasingly lacking the emotional intimacy I craved, I found her music and lyrics provided a place to go where I could imagine having what was profoundly missing in my life. It was a time of searching. I had already found salsa dancing which brought much needed joy to me (I smiled after writing that sentence, because while learning salsa dance I also met my salsa amiga, who is named Joy!), and I created this blog so I had a place to write.

But this post isn't about flogging the failed marriage nor about the relationship I found afterwards which provides a great deal of what was missing, but rather about Sarah's song: Adia. Last night I attended Sarah McLachlan's concert at The Hollywood Bowl. It was a night reminiscent of attending Paul Simon's concert there during his farewell tour in late May 2018; an overcast night which can be perfect at The Bowl. What was different was that instead of having Joel by my side, we were a group of four women friends, a congregation that is perfect for a night of Sarah's music. We had dinner at The Backyard, sharing small plates and the requisite bread and wine. I am committed to the principle that, if you are going as a congregation, you've got to break bread together.

I could provide a review of the stellar concert here, including a lot of unexpected tears through the whole of I Will Remember You, as well as the joy of singing Ice Cream live instead of singing along with that cut on her live album, Mirrorball. Instead, I'm going to segue into the space I traveled after Sarah's explanation of the song, Adia. As she introduced it, she confessed that she had once done a terrible thing. She had fallen in love with her best friend's ex. And that act caused a fracture in the friendship they shared. As it would. As she was singing the song, I remembered that I had always wondered what that song was about. And, with her illumination, I got that song in a way I never had before.

Fractures in friendships can be devastating. Or not. I've experienced a few, including one recently. But none of them held the profundity of separating from my friend, Cin. We had met at the university where I had recently graduated and joined staff. Cin was a student assistant in the Student Union building where I worked. She held a morning shift on a few days of the week, coming in at 7:00 AM to work the information desk adjacent to my office. When I arrived at 8:00, she was the friendly face that greeted me and we quickly became friends. I married my husband shortly after, and Cin and her boyfriend became our closest couples friends. We even went camping together (don't ask).

So much followed in our shared lives: their marriage; home purchases for us both; Saturday morning classes at Jane Fonda's Workout followed by lunch and shopping at The Gap; health scares; marital problems, her divorce and remarriage; loss of her mother and my father. Throughout it all we marveled at the shorthand we shared. We seemed to mirror each other in tastes, opinions, and how we supported each other… and in those shopping experiences. As we later moved from The Gap to Banana Republic and Ann Taylor, one of us would hold up a piece of apparel and ask: Do we like this? We often bought the same items, though sometimes in different colors flagging a slight independence in our shared taste. At those times, as well as in deep conversations about personal issues, it could seem as though we were of one mind. The comfort that we both felt in this unity perhaps insulated us from the knowledge that this kind of merging is both complicated and hazardous. Danger, Will Robinson! Life is a moguled course, and as time went on we weren't always navigating life’s bumps together, nor always in a compatible fashion. While I was working in the small business my husband and I had started; she had gone on to get an advanced degree, meeting new friends in her profession. I was confused and hurt when she didn't attend my father's funeral. With her career and new marriage, she had much less available time and struggled to understand why I wasn’t getting that. As we weren't able to replicate the previous couples relationship when she remarried, we each increasingly socialized in separate circles. In a nutshell, there were, as my husband used to say: tissues.

No matter the relationship, when there are sustained unmet expectations on either or both sides, and a subsequent perceived inequality of effort, it can and will falter. And that is what happened to us. We tried to navigate the conflict but ultimately agreed to take a break from our friendship. It was summertime, and one of us (guess who) poetically wrote that perhaps when the leaves start to turn we can revisit and work our way around what had become a roadblock. I recall writing at the time that I felt we had a friendship connection that was once-in-a-lifetime. In her response, agreeing to the time out, she had concurred. The leaves turned, but neither of us reached out.

Sarah said about the eighteen months when she was estranged from her best friend that it was the hardest break-up she has ever experienced. And I get that. I mourned the loss of this friendship like a death. In the course of that, I ruminated that I had been a true and generous friend to her. What had happened? But, as time passed, the hurt receded, and life went on. I reached out to old friends, and made new ones. I also learned through these friendships that there is a kind of 'gene' that women either have or don't have which allows us to form special bonds. Yes, it is ok and even fun to have friends who don't have it. We know them well. They are solely bonded with husbands, maybe their mothers,  and/or their kids, which is good and as it should be for them. But there is a difference in those of us who are each a women's woman, as my friend, Lisa, puts it. After Cin's divorce, I had given her a refrigerator magnet that read: Marriages may come and go, but best friends are forever. We both appreciated that sentiment. Clearly, as does Sarah McLachlan.

During the time of hiatus, I welcomed a friendship that developed and became primary in my life at a time when I was grieving the deaths of my best friend (and namesake of this blog), Sandra, my mother, and my husband. Those three deaths occurring like dominos in the same calendar year. That friendship is with Lynnette, who I had known in a professional capacity for twenty years (she was my dentist!). I will always believe that God sent her to me when my need for her was great. While there was no dearth of girlfriendships, Lynnette and I quickly developed a unique closeness which continues to this day. Before she and her husband moved to the next county, we saw each other often, and spoke almost every day. During a bathroom remodel, she would drop by with baked goods which I shared with my contractor and workers. Now, with her living an hour away, we have frequent l-o-n-g phone conversations and try to schedule her coming to stay at my home for a weekend each month. Pre-pandemic, we traveled to Arizona for MLB Spring Training each year. Something we hope to reinstate in 2025. My friendship with Lynnette taught me a lot about how important friends can be in our lives when we are in grief or trauma. And it has brought more laughter (see post entitled: The Two O'Clock Miracle) into my life than I could ever imagine after all that had happened to me. Not having her in my life, for the rest of my life, is inconceivable.

So, when Cin reached out to me ten years after our break, I was dealing with a full plate of challenges as a widow and sole business proprietor, and spending my free time with Joel, Lynnette, and other friends. While I responded to the note she had sent me, I felt that it was too little and too late. As I later told her, my first thought was: What, did it take you ten years to miss me? But that brief exchange opened up a long-closed door for me, and each year as her birthday in January approached, I considered reaching out. And finally, five years later, I did. Sarah lost eighteen months with her friend. Cin and I lost fifteen years. And that is, indeed, a loss. But, with the passing of time came some friendship wisdom. And this reconnection has underscored my belief in something profound. At its core, my world is about connection. And I will never again give up on the people who hold value in my life. I am grateful for and blessed by these relationships. And appreciative in a way that I probably wasn't back twenty years ago when this all went down. Cin and I are each in a different place now. Our friendship isn't of the daily variety that it once was, and reuniting has required some understanding, adjustment and negotiation. But, we now hold a strengthening cord between us with the knowledge that anything can be severed. And it is our responsibility in truly valued friendships to protect that cord, so that does not happen.

Spending the evening, hearing Sarah's story and the wonder of her music, I felt grateful to be with three other girlfriends, and rather proud to have organized and funded the evening. I vowed to continue to make that effort to be generous, while appreciating what these women-with-the-gene bring to my life. I love Joel with all my heart. He is the most important person in my life. But without the strength and understanding; without the connection with these women, I could not survive.Yes, Ice Cream is about the man in my life; the lovers in our lives. We celebrated that by singing along... Your love is better than chocolate; Better than anything else that I've tried. But going forward, Adia will provide the reminder that we need to take care of our friendships. As, in the end, it will be these fristers who make the effort to be there for us, and the risk of their loss is reflected in Sarah's heartfelt, cautionary ballad exploring the challenges of self-reflection, and the lasting impact of true friendship. 

May 15, 2024

Rushing to Simplify

Los Angeles, California 

We live in complicated times. There are a lot of emotions swirling around out there: Anger; impatience; irritability, to name a few. Emotions that have always been around but what is different is that there used to be a structure of social decorum that is now lacking, if not utterly missing in action. People say rude things. Politicians say rude things. It has been said that our ex-President (and convicted felon) modeled this behavior which gave agency for people to act in contemptible ways and to say outrageously inappropriate things to each other. Ok, I'll buy that.

I read a lot about the issues impacting us at this time in our history. And I try to come at these subjects via diverse conduits. There are both psychological and sociological explanations, as well as philosophical and faith-based. My brain tends to work in triads, so I try to read articles, and then process the information, from at least three of these viewpoints. Hopefully, most of us have learned that looking at the world through one lens only is dangerous and cult-like. The need for a variety of modalities is vital, especially in this volatile world in which we now reside.

By comparison, I have thought back to the world in which I came of age. I moved out of my parents' home when I was eighteen and two months old, sharing an apartment with my cousin, Caryn, and my best friend, Pam. It was a one-bedroom we furnished with two twin beds in the bedroom and what was known as a 'hollywood' divan, essentially a twin bed against the wall with bolsters. That twin would serve as the sofa in my next three apartments.

By the time I moved into my last apartment, I was in my junior year at university, and was finally able to live alone. I had help. My parents paid for half of my living expenses (rent, utilities) and also financed my auto expenses (gas, repairs and insurance). They funded my tuition and books, which didn't amount to that much at a state university, back in that day. I sometimes wonder why my friends' kids languish at the family home for so long; in some cases into their thirties! We could not wait to get out and be independent. We got our drivers' licenses on our sixteenth birthdays with the specific purpose of driving away from our parents every chance we got! I think part of the foundation of that independence was that we kinda wanted to do things that we could not do under our parents' roof. Our parents had the ability to say no and to hold firm boundaries on our behavior. If we wanted to smoke marajuana and/or sleep with our boy/girlfriends, we had to do it elsewhere. (Note: Drinking we could do with our parents, once we were of age.)

My friends tell me that it is too expensive for their kids to move out. And I understand that. My hourly wage at the first job I held, loading film cassettes in Hollywood, was two dollars an hour. My first rent was $150, split three ways. So I was making $344 gross, and needed to pay $50 for rent. Doable. But my other expenses were utilities and groceries (also split between roommates). No cable, no app subscriptions, no internet, no cell phones, though the cable/internet would also have been split. Can you live without those things? Maybe, but for most of us who are not Amish, probably not.

I have read articles about people who go offline and they generally report a slower and calmer existence. So many of us talk about wanting that slower and calmer life. However, when we are out in the world, we get caught up in all the rushing about. Why is everyone in this rush? Where I live, people cruise through stop signs, sometimes at full speed. Forget the speed limits on streets and the freeway. When Joel and I drive forty-five minutes to a favorite salsa club on early Sunday evenings, we have to get through two freeway interchanges. What we have noticed is that once we are out of the urban landscape and are driving through outlier suburban communities, the freeway madness subsides. For the most part, drivers observe the speed limit and don't swerve in and out of lanes. Do these areas of suburbia promote a slower and calmer existence?

I do believe that one way to have a slower and calmer existence is to simplify. Recently, a newly-retired friend asked me about how I had approached retirement, back about seven years ago. I shared what I thought was valuable information. Reduce appointments. I don't necessarily mean medical appointments, though I think we can do too many of those. But get rid of the people you pay for services that either you can do for yourself, or you don't really need. We all saw people going gray during the pandemic, and many of them decided to not go back to salon-coloring their hair afterwards. As I approached retirement, I decided to let go of a lot of the services I had previously utilized. I stopped getting manicures/pedicures, realizing that the time it took to get this done was better spent, and that doing this for myself, at home, took much less time. No more facials, for the same reason. I let both my insurance and travel agent go, realizing that all the info I needed was easily found online. I stopped using a property manager on my rental properties. And, after the pandemic, I continued cutting my own hair (if you have long hair, this is easy, and the technique for cutting is on you.tube). I still have beauty appointments: I get highlights in my hair. And I can't give myself the regular massages and acupuncture my body needs to support my dancing. But I have cut out a lot of professional services that were costing time and money. And that was a good thing.

I constantly look at my life to see where I can free up time for writing, for dancing. To spend time with Joel and my friends. When my friend, Beth1 (there are three Beths) and I went to see Gone With the Wind recently, I was reminded of the sign displayed on a sundial at the Wilkes' plantation, Twelve Oaks: Do not squander time. It is the stuff of which life is made (paraphrasing, but maybe I nailed it).

So, are all these people rushing around because they are overbooked? I know not; it is a mystery. But rushing they are. And, interestingly, when we dance here in LA, we notice that dancers on the floor are more aggressive than they are when we dance out in the boondocks area of suburbia. Maybe, as someone once pointed out to me, we are living with too many rats in our cage. Those guys start turning on each other when they are crowded together. So, in addition to simplifying, to sussing out more time in a slower and calmer world, we also need to appreciate our need for space. Space in our homes, on the roads, on the dance floors. If time is the stuff life is made of, maybe space is the stuff that affords us the ability to slow down, which in turn might offer us a calmer existence. You can't rush to that. But you can simplify. And that helps. You must trust me about this.



April 25, 2024

Giffords

Los Angeles, California

Last night we joined our friends, Connie and Curt, and attended the Giffords Second Annual Los Angeles Event in Beverly Hills. For us, it was the first annual. I received an invitation after supporting Giffords throughout the past few years. I feel gun control is right up there at the top of the issues that need support and I am happy to contribute to them. And... the event was very nice! It began with a cocktail reception and dinner on the patio of The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts located on at Canon Drive and what is known by Angelenos as 'little' Santa Monica Boulevard. 

It was a warm Spring evening in LA and being outside was pleasant. And the food was kinda really good. Not the drawing point of the event, but it added something special to the purpose of why we were there. Joel had a beer and I ended up having two glasses of Whispering Angel rosé before we entered the theater to hear the heartbreaking stories of people who have lost loved ones to the senseless tragedy of gun violence. Senseless and rampant. I have written before about how this has impacted me (see post entitled: Borderline), and could write more about why I think this is continuing, and increasingly happening in the United States. Why the shooters are predominantly young. And almost always male. There have been articles explaining this much better than I can here. And there are a lot of theories including the culture of social media creating a lack of social skills, a certain hierarchy in dating culture, anger, and isolation. And the opportunity to acquire assault weapons. It is for the sociologists to figure this out, law enforcement to work on prevention, and the courts to enact consequential justice.

What is left to us is the responsibility to do everything we can to at least curtail these incidents, even if we can't stop them. In addition to these heartrending stories were the stories from Giffords organizers telling us how much has been accomplished by the organization. Much more than I was actually aware. I did some research before I decided to support Giffords. I had also wanted to support Sandy Hook Promise. And of course there are the Marjorie Stoneman kids who are now adults, and the parents and siblings who recently lost those kids in Uvalde, Texas in an intensely horrific manner. All deserve our support, but I decided that Giffords, with the Congressional connections she and Mark Kelly have, had the most potential for real legislative movement on the issue. I don't know how much my support helps, but I fervently feel that somehow, some day, this all must stop.

April 24th is a day in the memory of both Connie and myself. She lost her mother on that date. And, it was my father's birthday. The last birthday I celebrated with my dad was his 83rd. Connie and I were lucky. We lost our parents in the course of medical care at fairly advanced ages. All four of our parents passed away non-violently. But I have had other violence in my life, and can attest to the longevity of the damage. You live with it. It simply does not go away. Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly are a testament to this. The thing I noticed about them is that he never took his hand off of her. Whether she was speaking, or he was speaking, his hand was on her shoulder, her knee, or holding her hand. It touched my heart. I don't think a photo exists of my parents where my father did not have his hand on my mother. So, for me, there was a connect-the-dots between this event and the date.

Giffords deserves the support we gave it last night. Even without the lovely dinner on the pretty patio, I would contribute to continue this fight. We are living in a time when our civil rights are being threatened and taken away. That is hard and horrible. But death from gun violence is hard, horrible, and reprehensible. We must do everything we can to eliminate this threat from our schools, churches, theaters, stores, and all of the other places it has occurred. When will enough truly be enough?

April 1, 2024

The Wedding

Los Angeles, California

A great big shout out to those of you who joined us yesterday for our surprise Easter celebration. Yes, there was salmon and a pork roast. Chocolate Easter eggs and an abundance of ceramic bunnies throughout the house, some wearing gold wired-ribbon bows decorating their necks. Guests were advised to attend in 'party' attire. Joel wore a white band-collar shirt with light tan slacks, and I wore an ivory, midi-length lace dress.

Our guests were greeted with Veuve Cliquot brut rosé in a variety of champagne flutes which I have collected throughout the years. There was a small team in the kitchen and hors d'hoeuvres were offered on trays throughout the living room and den of the house. I think there might have been a ripple of expectation, even though we kept our plans under wraps.

Once everyone was there and the appetizers had circled, we asked everyone to fill their glasses for an Easter toast. And it was then that Joel announced that the day also included... a wedding!

We had previously asked our friend, Carole, to officiate. She had done so for her brother, Todd, when he married Christopher. As soon as we decided on officializing our relationship, I knew I wanted Carole to provide this service. At Todd and Christopher's wedding, she was warm, light, and stellar.

We had planned to hold our ceremony, so to speak, outside, but we were having one of the rare rainy days in Los Angeles. So, instead, we gathered in the den of my home where a fire was burning brightly in the fireplace, creating a cozy scene.

Joel and I have been together almost ten years and our knowledge of each other's past is deep. We had talked about what was most important in our relationship when we made this decision to wed. Trust, we agreed was the most important thing. Transparency had been lacking in both of our previous marriages and it was vital to us. Support, which means an ear and a shoulder for each other at all times. We pledged to honor the Maraña in our relationship, which is a made-up word we created to express what is at the center of our shared lives. It is the body and soul, passion and depth of us. And, lastly but supremely, we promised to Salsa Dance together for as long as we were capable of standing.

Carole stood by while we spoke the vows we had already long upheld together. There was no written script. We stumbled and mumbled a bit, which made it earnestly meaningful to us both. At our age and with our combined experience of life's epiphanies and downfalls, we both know that fumbling is not a bad way to go. To keep going. Life can knock you down, and sometimes muddling through it all is the best you can do, and that's ok. But that doesn't sound joyful, and despite our verbal stumbling, everything about this day was joyous to us. We had gathered our closest friends; the people who meant the most to us in our lives. We were both family-free, and that was also good for us at this juncture. Everything was esta bien.

The party continued with salmon and pernil. There was scalloped potatoes, roasted asparagus and baby carrots, tamales, and more brut rosé. The servers also poured provençal rosé, and Casamigos reposados tequila. From its hiding place in the service porch, came a beautiful, layered wedding cake which was chocolate with raspberry filling and white frosting. On the top of the smallest layer was the golden couple which had adorned both my grandparents' and my parents' 50th Wedding Anniversary cakes. Joel and I will not make it to a 50th anniversary. With luck and good health, we may make it to our 20th. But I wanted to use that topper, because it's not about the longevity of the marriage. It's about us being golden.

Thank you to all of you who attended and raised a glass for us. We love you all.

POSTSCRIPT: April Fools !!! Joel and I are still blissfully unmarried together. But that meal really sounded good, didn't it?!?


January 15, 2024

Wet January

 Los Angeles, California

The new year arrived. 2024. It doesn't seem possible that it has been four years since a leap year, a general election, and Covid lockdown. Time flies, as they say. Even if you're not having fun is sometimes added. I am grateful that I am having fun though fun is interspersed with responsibility, introspection, and grief for the loss of my friend last month.

I began the year without wi-fi and internet, which picked up and walked away on January 2nd. I was in the middle of doing some financial reports with CNN keeping me company when the television, which comes to me via wi-fi steaming, went off. Then, back on and off, on again, before landing on OFF with a vengeance. I went through the usual fixes of rebooting the modem, then resetting the modem, none of which worked. Dead. Doornail dead. I called AT+T. Long story short, after five days, waiting for a new modem (which, after installed, didn't fix the problem), a repairman and finally, a lineman, it got fixed. The first day without internet and television was weird. By the second day, I was doing more reading and convincing myself that all was ok. I had power, heat, water (and cellular service). Who needs the television and the internet? I told one of the repair people that I had planned to cut back on screen use in the new year, though not so dramatically. As the days passed, I took down my Christmas decorations, did both reading and writing, and a little meditation. I worked out. Life can go on, even if we can't google (though I actually could google until I ran through my data allotment, twice).

I had gone out to lunch with three girlfriends the week before Christmas. This was a 2nd annual holiday get-together. I enjoy the company of these women both in a group and individually. But this particular day the conversation quickly turned to what series they were watching on television. I watch a series here and there. And I sometimes repeat-watch a favorite series (looking at you, Durrell family). But with the sheer preponderance of available series, I'm much less in the swim of it. As the conversation went on, I, once again, found myself thinking about what it means that so many hours can be spent in front of screens! And how, when I lost the ability to utilize any screens besides my little iPhone 12 Mini and small iPad, it was an interesting experience being unplugged.

I read a lot of New York Times and The Atlantic articles. Frequently popping up were references to tempering alcohol intake by observing Dry January. And then on NPR, I heard someone refer to Damp January. Dry, damp -- it's all about temperance. And, temperance came to California to roost quite awhile ago. I can't remember the last time I had a conversation with anyone besides Joel which didn't include information about what they were giving up: Alcohol, carbs, meat, sugar, dairy -- all diet-related, and not in any way about what is happening with our minds and souls. But it's the mind and soul part that I think about as I happily enjoy scotch, pasta, filet mignon and ice cream (all in moderation. Ok, maybe not the scotch). During the luncheon with my friends I utilized a break in the television series discourse to ask if anyone was planning any resets for the new year. Beth asked if a reset was like a resolution. No, I explained. Resolutions are like, make or break, line in the sand. A reset is more like a mindful awareness. There was a long silence before one of them said: Well, that's heavy. No, heavy is what you get if you spend your life sitting on your posterior watching hours of television. And I don't mean that in the body-weight sense, but rather in the sense that you're going to spend a lot of time just sitting there. Like a rock.

My reset was in a word: Kindness. I am not always kind. But I do try to be. Tom often remarked to me: You are difficult. But you are worth it. I used to lament the difficult part. I knew my faults and my flaws. But I have come to an acceptance of myself. I expect a lot from people around me. But, I give a great deal in return. It is how life should be. There is nothing more dispiriting than a stinginess of spirit, or a lack of generosity. It stings to see that in those around me. So I do stay conscious of spreading generosity where I can. But this year I am focusing on kindness. I want to be more mindful of this going forward. There is so much anger in today's world that when one experiences another's kindness, it creates an opening like a flower. My Christmas cards this year referenced the Jackie DeShannon song: What the World Needs Now with the inside-the-card sentiment reading: It's the only thing that there's just too little of. The Beatles advised us that all we need is love. But today, in this election year, with so much anger on the road, in the marketplace, and on the airwaves, I think kindness is the missing quotient. Apparently, loving your neighbor is just too far a bridge these days.

So, dry or damp? Uh, no, neither. Joel presented me with a bottle of Johnny Walker Blue Label for Christmas. The last one lasted for about eight years. So, in the same way that I never dream of a white Christmas (way too cold), I will not be embracing a dry/damp January. I will reserve the JW Blue and my go-to will be The Macallan. Oh, and tequila. But, in keeping with the commitment to my new year's reset, my plan is to drink it... kindly.



About Me

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California, United States
Once, I came up with this brilliant idea (well, I thought so, anyway) that the key to happiness was to concentrate on three things -- to choose three interests, then focus and funnel your energy into that trio. I was an English major in college and have always written in some shape or form. So, my first choice was writing. I've always kept journals, and have also written plays, novels, poetry, and shopping lists. I do have a day job. It deals with numbers (assets and finances). Go figure. I went to college at a California University. I live in California, Los Angeles, but not downtown. No children, and sadly, between dogs at the moment (dog person, not a cat person). Enough info? I was going for just enough to not be a cypher, yet not enough to entice a stalker. And, I started my blog after being dragged, kicking and screaming, to do so. Blogs! Read about ME here, right? But I have been advised that this is a way to write regularly, and to put your writing OUT THERE. So, here goes. My name is Bronte Healy. Thanks for reading my blog.