Monday, May 30, 2016

Memorial Day


I am the daughter of a Veteran.

That's a short, simple statement.  A straightforward, declarative sentence most would consider patriotic.  Which would be an erroneous assumption by those who do not understand the meaning of that word from a military point of view.  Because in it hides a chaotic blend of experiences and sentiments.  For me, it is a wild clash of opposing emotions, beliefs and realities; all born from having lived with an active-duty solider.  The patriotism I understand is not the packaged, bastardized insult used to sell toilet-paper, tacky, $.99 'Made in China' flags and shiny, new cars.  Nor is it the lawn-chair riding, rock-and-roll blaring, "Let's-do-this-for-a-weekend" drunken party.

As you can see my take is vastly different from the televised version.  Because in our home, the cost of patriotism was bloody, heavy and it hurt; emotionally, psychologically and, sometimes, physically.  More about the truth of what my father sacrificed, it had nothing to do with pride, parties and parades.  It was about a flesh and blood man who answered the call to leave behind everything he knew and understood of the world and do things, endure things, and witness things which changed him forever.

In 1971 I was nearly six years old when my father shipped out.  Gone for two tours of duty, learning to be without him in the house was hard.  The head of the table was empty.  The TV remote was up for grabs and there were no more Saturday morning cartoon and pj camp-outs or nacho chip and Long-Horn cheese lunches.  Mom's Sunday loaves of home-baked bread were safe from his sneaky marauding and the aroma of engine oil and oil paints slowly faded away.  For three years my mother became the single parent of two small girls and all this while living under the constant threat of an 'official' knock on the door.

Indoctrinated to the neat, shiny package of what we were told patriotism was, we were in no way prepared for what our lives would become when he returned.   Because the man we picked up at the airport was not the man who had left us.  Within the first few hours we became aware of the stranger sitting in our living room.  At six months we began to worry he was there to stay.  By the end of the first year, we were praying.  For him.  And for us.

Yet, we did not lose sight of the fact we were luckier than some families.  Memorial Day was not for our solider, because he came home.  Damaged, invisibly wounded and different, but he had come home.  For other families, the cost of patriotism was long, black cars, dark, uniformed chaplains and a practiced speech. It was a triangularly-folded flag and a 21 gun salute.  It smelled like grave dirt, wreaths and sounded like "Taps".

For us it became about survival.  Struggling to map the nuances of this visitor who now lived with us, the cost of patriotism transformed our world into a mine-field, peppered with uncertainty, anxiety and a precarious sort of jagged orbiting of who my father had turned into.  It was the sudden shock of being woken by his screams when he slept.  It was the vast distance of the thousand-yard stare which would take root in his eyes as he was carried off -mid-conversation- somewhere we couldn't comprehend but could see he didn't want to be.  It was explosive bursts of stress and anger which would erupt at the slightest provocation and end with one of us sobbing.  It was the agony he suffered as he was forced to accept who he had been was gone forever.  It was his fear this new man would wind up hurting his family in a fit of rage and the open wound created by the constant, cold rejection of his pleas for help from the Government he had served.

Despite what you might think given my experiences, I am proud of my father.  I suppose most would gauge that statement as more recognizable to how we collectively define patriotism, but it isn't.  I am proud, but not for the reasons mainstream America has been taught to be proud of her men and women in uniform.  I appreciate being the daughter of a man who remained true to his ideals of responsibility, commitment and loyalty, even when forced to face the unimaginable.  I feel honored to belong to the bloodline of someone with the courage and fortitude to take that first step onto a plane which would take him to a foreign land where he might die because he thought what he was doing was right.  I even see the value of being witness to his struggle to live some semblance of a life after his return because it made the cost of hollow patriotism and war more poignant and starkly genuine for me than any movie, book or television commercial could have.

Despite that - or maybe because of it, I also share the balance I feel we each owe the men and women of his ilk.  But it doesn't arise for the idea that they are fighting for me, my way of life, or God, mother and country as I have been instructed by the classical definition of patriotism.  The debt I carry comes from what I owe another human being who has been hurt, who has been battered and scared, who has watched hope, optimism and faith die in front of them.  It is the debt created by being a member of the human tribe and I know it isn't paid by roasting weenies and waving flags or buying red, white and blue paper plates.

As a nation we have turned 'patriotic' into garish comedies of consumerism, lip-service, empty gestures and work-free revelries.  We use it as a synthetic excuse for copious amounts of posturing and braggadocio, tri-colored, party favors and self-centered, over-indulgence.  But patriotism is not a time to cut loose and get stupid.  It's a heavy burden, a responsibility taken on by citizens which carries a profoundly steep price. Being the daughter of a career solider taught me this.  War leaves a bloody streak on every soul it touches and no one marches out of it unchanged.  Active-duty service always ends in a dying of one sort or another and if we could grasp the reality of that as individuals, as a nation, then perhaps we wouldn't be so ridiculously thoughtless of the sacrifice of others. 

In my mind, patriotism should have a vastly different flavor than the one we have fashioned for it.  First off, if we are so determined to make war, both overtly and covertly, the reality of it should be a part of our daily lives. It should be about tending neglected, forgotten graves and burying the flag-draped coffins we're not supposed to think about on any day but the last Monday in May.  It should be about helping the service-men and women who move through our culture struggling to rejoin society and healing the soldiers who return suffering wounds, amputations and life-altering traumas.  Instead of barbecue, beer and brats, it should taste more like compassion, humility, accountability and respect for the fragility of human life.  

For me, patriotism came at a very steep cost; shouldering pain born from sacrifice.  Meeting that debt can only be found in aiding those who come home wounded: emotionally, physically, and psychologically.  In giving up the funds, housing our disenfranchised, homeless veterans and fighting for legislation to care for those our politicians have so impersonally used and neglected.  It's paid by showing compassion for the families and loved ones left behind with whatever help you can give.  It is holding our politicians responsible for approaching foreign affairs like an endless game of Risk®, demanding transparency from our Government, and agreeing to making sacrifice in the name of conflict ONLY when we agree there is no other way to protect our homes, our families and our lives.


Thursday, May 26, 2016

Decay of an Angel




On a quilted blanket under the sun
She lies beneath the living sky
And wings - meant to make her soar,
Fueled to lift her into tomorrow
Well above the world around her,
Carrying her up toward all that she could be -
Tremble at the softness in his eyes,
Shudder at the taste of his hunger,
Quake at the flavor of his lies,
And begin the ground-ward journey
     Sliding down her back,
          Slipping along her spine
              Until they find their new home
                    In her hips and along her thighs
                        Where they can no longer open to fly,
Where they can only wrap around him
                                    Giving him a fleeting, pale taste of the heaven
                                           Her soul had been born to achieve.

© H. Newberry, 2014

Friday, May 20, 2016

Desperately Seeking Damage



Graphic credit:  H. Newberry
This is a "How The Hell Did I Not See That!?" moment.  You know the kind; the brain rupture when something catches you in a whole new way.  Lightening strikes and hits all the way to the back of a mental closet in  which you've shoved tons of crap you pretend you don't own. (Yeah, one of those.)

Have some of you noticed the same kind of negative people keep coming into your life?  They look different (different names, different faces) but they're basically the same miserable, nasty people?  Snarky ones who pretend all the put-downs are just friendly teasing.  (HAHAHA!! Not.)  Or the one who nit-picks you to death over the right way to -be, dress, think, act (disguised as advice, of course)?  How about the 'here-and-gone' one who's about as dependable as cheap tissue-paper?  Or the tragic one who can turn any occasion into a pity party.  And of course, don't forget the one smiling at you while fantasizing the best way to get your significant other alone and naked.
We all know this lady

You no sooner get rid of one and -BAM - here they come again, popping up like some demonic version of a "Wackamole" game.  Narcissists, drama-junkies, and backstabbers.  In and out  faster than we can hit the locks.  Critics, traitors, fair-weathers and leeches.  (As if some malicious bastard has carved your home address on hell's revolving door.)  Different skins, different names, but at heart - the same kind of people.

Well, guess what?  Want to know why they keep showing up?  Because some of us need them.  And they're not finding us.  We're searching for them.  We're looking for them so desperately we've all but taken out an ad in the classifieds.  Because in some sinkhole of our subconscious we think we need personalities like theirs to make our world feel 'normal'.
There is a whole world of sh*t going on back there
Though it's snarled up in unconscious perspective, it makes sense if you think about it.  During our formative years (say 0-8) our definition of the world is created by what's in place around us.  The personalities, sounds, smells, feelings and experiences we encounter build a sort of blueprint.  Dogmatic in the extreme, (for most of us) the subconscious uses this early design as the measure of what a normal environment should feel like (keep in mind I said normal, not good.). We reach adulthood unaware of all this, but we act on it, subconsciously seeking replicas of those early personalities and situations in an effort to sense all is 'normal' in our world.

Good Ol' Uncle Charlie
For example, let's say you had a drunken Uncle Charlie who breezed in and out of your bleak childhood like sporadic splashes of glittering rainbow paint.  Each time he staggered in you were hugged, petted and given gifts.  His beer-scented presence was an oasis of love and acceptance in your dismal world.  Now, thirty years into your quest for happiness, you wake up married to an alcoholic who can barely function.  Behind you is a series of failed relationships with unstable people who were charming but couldn't be consistent to save their lives.  Now you're laying there wondering, 'why, oh, why are you attracted to people like this?'.

Or, let's say you're born to a shallow mom.  You are not so much her child as an extension of her self-image.  She's disapproving, critical and all about how you fail to make her look good.  Twenty years later, (a string of hurtful, shallow friendships behind you) your staring across the table at the 'best friend' who is matter-of-factly swinging between one-upping you and slaughtering everything from your hair to your make-up to your handbag (God, don't get her started on the way dress).  Why, oh, why, do these cold, critical women fool you into befriending them time after time?

And we've all met this one
Or (last one, I promise), you grew up with a mentally-ill family member, someone who's erratic behavior kept everyone in a tailspin of drama, anxiety and emotional instability.  Fretting, nervousness and tip-toeing on eggshells was your whole world.  You longed for peace and quiet.  And you now have it.  Because, after wading through the horror of nearly EVERYONE you tried to get close to being addicted to drama and chaos, you are alone.   (Except for the cat.  You do have the cat.)  So, you got what you wanted; life is neat, calm and tidy.  But it isn't right, is it?  You're irritable, pessimistic and pretty much miserable. About everything.  Life is too big and too empty.  There's nothing (except depression and bitterness) as you wander from room to room feeling the lack.  But what choice do you have?   Whenever you try to make friends you can't find a happy medium.  People either bore you to tears or drive you nuts.  Why, oh, why can't you just find someone to share your life with?

This one too
Well, I can tell you 'why, oh, why'.  Because these people - those who mirror in one way or another (to some degree) the negative personalities from our early years - are the ones we are looking for.  Given the surplus of miserable, entitled, selfish, nasty, mean people in the world, they are going to continue answering the ads as long as we're putting them out there.  And, if we don't invest in some self-examination, we'll keep looking for them because (according to our subconscious) our world is not 'normal' without them.

Now, I'm sure some folks out there had amazing childhoods.  No pain, no trauma.  Nothing but blue skies and unicorns.  You're happy and well adjusted.  Everyone in your life is the spitting image of Mother Teresa and Abraham Lincoln.  Or maybe you're one of those who, despite a nightmare, Daliesque landscape peopled with caricatures from a Law and Order episode, have overcome it. Go you!  More power to you.  (Please wait in the corner while the rest of us fix ourselves.)
The Oogie Closet

The question is how do we stop?  How do we get our address off the spinning door and nail the damn thing shut?  Ending our quest for 're-runs' means sitting down and staring deep into the back of that oogie closet.  Dragging out our formative relationships and recognizing those personalities outside the context of ourselves.  Identifying them for who they really were goes a long way towards helping you spot them when they show up and apply for the job.  Someone in your childhood was hyper-critical?  That could mean you're drawn to disapproving people, even when they seem really nice to you in the beginning.  (How do they treat the waiter?)  Maybe one parent was distant?  Could be the reason you're attracted to those who won't make you a priority. (Wow, you're canceling on me for the fifth time?)  Another person was consistently abusive and cruel?  That's probably why you're find yourself around selfish jerks who constantly hurt you.  Even fun, ol' Uncle Charlie left his mark by showing you love in sporadic, alcohol-perfumed flashes.

If you're sick to death of being stunned, hurt and confused by the people you constantly find in your life, then you have to learn to recognize the old personality behind the new face.  And one of the best ways to do that is to step back and watch how they treat/judge/view other people.  'Cause if she's a snarky, hateful, imperious bitch to the waitress - dun-dun-da!  (Well, hello, grandma Bessie! When did you get here?!)  Or if he eye-f*cks everything walking by (Wow, big brother! The way you treat women certainly left a mark!) or measures you against others all the freaking time - sigh (I'll never be good enough, mom).  Another sure-fire way to identify them is to keep track of how many times you have to make concessions/excuses for their behavior.  If your constantly having to forgive them or over-look the things they do (or don't) and say, then it's a good bet your subconscious wants them around more than you do.

So, wake up and  pay attention.  The guy your texting from the bar - Who is he?  Really?  The woman across the coffee table with the high-tilted nose?  Could it possibly be Aunt Mable who always treated you like the bastard child at the family picnic?  Whoever it is, figure it out.  LOOK for them in the people you come across and feel drawn to.  Because if you've got an consistent history with negative people, it's a good bet the person catching your eye is a blast from the past.
Once you realize you've got a negative personality at the door, run.  Get up, get out and go.  Because - GUESS WHAT!? - You actually don't need them.  The only reason they keep showing up is because you aren't paying attention!  Take control of your life away from your subconscious and actively choose the people you invest in.  Inventory those who populated your early world and consciously choose something different, something better.  Build up, not back.  You've paid your dues and you've got the scars to prove it.  Close out the position, cancel the interview and pull the ad.  

Run.  Just run as fast as you can.

Friday, May 13, 2016

If Peter Pan Taps on Your Window, Shoot Him

May 13, 2016

No.  Just say "No".

I have always been the odd one in the crowd.  Anytime I hear a collective stampede towards some new, amazing fandangle I run the other way.  (And after people watching for almost 50 years , I'm really okay with that.)  My clothes rarely reflect current trends, (I dress for comfort, not style) my favorite activities are almost never on anyone's "Ooh, Let's Do This!" list (this does not include exploring abandoned buildings and any time spent in water balloon fights) and I see what I buy as things rather than extensions of myself.

Being born into a culture which worships perpetual youth has really underscored this difference.  Don't get me wrong, being young was fun (at times) but being self-absorbed, ignorant, tormented by the opinions of others and led around by the nose was not.  And while those around me were oblivious to, baffled or horrified by the idea of getting older, I was excited about it.  Even at sixteen.  (That's not to say I was a frumpy, fussy old lady in my youth.  I wasn't and unfortunately they had Polaroid cameras back then.)

To me, aging was something to be anticipated.  It meant arrival.  Gray hairs were beautiful, glittering prize-ribbons for wisdom.  Wrinkles were "laugh lines" displaying character.  It would be the age of understanding things.  Of being in on the secrets and getting all the jokes.  Looking towards long-stretched years through those eyes I believed by the time I'd spent half a century in my skin I would be exactly who I was with no more worries about the perceptions of others and the business of living would be a roller-coaster adventure that would somehow make sense.

Life making sense...

Granted, certain nuances of the reality have been different from the ideal (waking up and getting out of bed, for instance.  Or trying to find clothes I would want to wear at this age). But on the whole, I was pretty close to right, and while I could name several reasons to validate a less than eager approach to aging, please allow me to pop a few bubbles:

First: You can be 19 forever if you just think happy thoughts.  (Uhm, no.)  I've watched humanity (kinda like driving past a really long train wreck), so I get the desperate need to deny aging.  (Sort of.)  For most, growing older only means dying and mated to the fact we're not given a comforting way in which to regard our mortality, that's terrifying.  In our culture, death isn't a natural transition with positive overtones.  It's a horrific, grief-filled trauma over which we, the victim, have no control.  And as if this mindset isn't enough to make us cling in screaming desperation to youth, religion has terrorized us with what might happen to us after death.  (That alone is enough to turn some towards atheism.)  So, I get it.  Mortality is scary stuff.  But then, so is driving to the store (have you been on the road lately!?), or walking down the street (there's a whole broken-down circus of crazy out there, people!).
copyright, unknown

But the fact is mortality is going to catch up with us eventually.  (Not if, people, when.)  We may not know how, but it's a given.  And racing around frantically pretending it won't is the adult equivalent of putting your fingers in your ears, screwing your eyes shut and shrieking "Old McDonald had a farm" at the top of your lungs.  (Which, by the way, has not been proven to be a sufficient antidote against it.)

For those who are interested, the alternative to mortality denial is acceptance.  Accept that one day you are going to die.  (Not obsess.  Just accept.)  Things will get put into perspective really fast.  Because death is the Great Leveler.  Think about it.  If there's a really awesome sale at your favorite store but it's only for a week, you'd make special efforts to get there.  Deadlines, people.  We live for them.  When we're forced to make choices with a deadline on the horizon, we get stuff done.  Well, dying is the ultimate deadline.  Knowing we only have so many years can give us permission to be braver and happier.  After all, trying new things and letting go of the stupid, petty stuff that sucks all the joy out of being here are hugely beneficial to the quality of life.

Next bubble: Only in youth are we able to enjoy life to the nth degree.  (Really?  Really?)  Were your early years truly the most exciting, stimulating, be all and end all of what you've experienced?  Because mine sure as hell weren't.  No confidence.  No courage.  No, self-awareness.  No wisdom.  Stripped of the current illusion, most will remember the reality of youth; stress-filled, awkward, groping, agonized, stumbling in the dark, trying to fit in, and figure ourselves out while at the same time attempting to understand how the hell we wound up in the messes we got into.
 
This in no way resembles anything from my youth...
The image of the suave, sexy, smart, self-confident, world-conquering man/woman-child with the sultry eyes, bottomless bank account and plump pout is a posed, photo-shopped package.  It's an anesthetizing marketing tool created on the back of our mortality panic and low self-esteem to get us to buy crap we don't need.  (And it's a fairly recent one given that less than 70 years ago the majority of commercial ad images were targeted at people over 30.)  With our thinking intentionally skewed by people trying to sell stuff, we now live as if only the young are equipped to fully realize the human experience.  (Provided they continually bankrupt themselves to get the newest yeehaw, of course.)  But think about it for a moment.  Could it be possible this ideal is based on the fact young people are way more impulsive and much more inclined to spend money without thinking about the repercussions?  I mean, how many older folks (outside frantic Peter Pans and compulsive, cougar-moms trying to screw their way back to high school) do you see taking out a mortgage to buy the latest geegaws, fads and gadgets?

Last One:  We are at our most valuable when we're young.  16 - 29 is the only age range society grants any real merit to.  Outside observation makes this one easy to understand.  Our culture, under siege by a vacuous (fancy word for empty-headed), shallow adolescent fantasy, considers this the ripest time of sexual attractiveness.  In other words, (crass and profane though they are) this is when you will peak on the F*ck Meter.  Broken down in even simpler terms- it's the optimum time for you to be judged by shallow people in the hopes they will give heavy props to how you look (never mind who you are) and use that to decide whether or not they would 'do' you.  (Which in our sad, twisted collective somehow grants people status.)



Looked at it from this angle it's pretty sickening.  When a society collectively buys into the standard that the way an individual will be treated, whether or not they will achieve their goals and how happy they will be is dictated by whether or not ethically-depraved, emotionally-stunted narcissists would fall down on top of them for a few minutes there is something drastically putrid infecting it.

So, to break this whole thing down for you - the Fountain of Youth we are so obsessed with is, in actuality, the Bog of Eternal Stench.  It's a rancid, life-numbing, soul-stealing, slogging state of sleep-walking consumerism and non-existence.  You see proof of it almost every time you go anywhere people collect.  A sixty-five year old approaching the world as if they were perpetually celebrating their twenty-first birthday by looking to get rated high on the collective F*ck Meter is a heart-breaking and disturbing thing to see.  Just as unsettling is a nine year old leaving the house looking like a twenty-five year old adult film star trying to make rent.

But when people are unable to find value in a society which denies any significance to age outside the established, marketable parameters, what choice is there?  Humans want to belong.  They need to belong.  It's hard-wired into our DNA, our lizard-brains, our Ego, and our ID.  We need to be a part of the tribe and find reassurance that our existence has meaning, that we are in fact 'real' and have value to the whole.  Meeting this need is one of those vital components which completes us.  It's what motivates us to keep on living, keep on giving and brings us joy.


Sadder still, immersed in a constant bombardment of "you must be forever young", we have all but lost our understanding of the point of living.  We no longer value life in the reality of the act but instead fight to build an illusionary self.  Adapting this proxy existence, we waste the vast majority of our time between working to buy things to accentuate our 'pretend' lives and monitoring the world around us for our approval ratings.  And in all this buying and pretending and monitoring we've stepped away from the rewarding process of living; entering a world in which everything is amazing and new, exploring and experiencing all the aspects of that world first-hand and finally, the ultimate beauty of cultivating and understanding it.

Age, people.  Experience life, both the good and the bad.  Get messy.  Get dirty.  Grow some scars and a few bruises.  Cry.  Love.  Laugh out loud.  Get older, wiser, bolder!  Take the face-lift money and travel!  Forego the boob-job or tummy tuck and rent a van and drive 17 hours to the beach just to feel the freaking sand on your toes! Or stay home and watch movies and eat something besides salad without counting the calories.  Wave at people without sucking in your stomach.  Cultivate wrinkles and character.  Let that grey hair shine!  Grin wide enough to show all those teeth.  (God knows, we paid enough for them.)  Buy stock in muscle rub and thumb your nose at society.  Screw Neverland.  Stay right here and help build a place where we give value to living.  Make it to the top of that hill and throw a party!  Strap on the harness and ride the zip-line or meander your way down!  Because we're all going to get to the bottom one day.  And I'd rather see you celebrated for you laughter and your life than "duck-lips", flat-screens and where you landed on the F*ck Meter.
copyright, unknown