Monday, June 29, 2015

Midlife and Other Crises: "Flight to Athens by Way of Brussels, June 2015"...

Midlife and Other Crises: "Flight to Athens by Way of Brussels, June 2015" ...: "Flight to Athens by Way of Brussels, June 2015" Noise is the constant. Hum Hum Hum Crinkle of food wrappers Snaps of convers...
"Flight to Athens by Way of Brussels, June 2015"

Noise is the constant.
Hum Hum Hum
Crinkle of food wrappers
Snaps of conversations
The modern Tower of Babel
What the ear senses,
the nose feels.
Sniffs microwave
Bad cologne
First
class
farts.
Headlines spied over the top of seats
read "Greece is Failing".
Tom & Jerry cartoons play on screens.
Hum Hum Hum

Midlife and Other Crises: So This is How to Lose 'Weight'

Midlife and Other Crises: So This is How to Lose 'Weight': I

Friday, June 19, 2015

So This is How to Take a Train in Boston...


Poem:
"North Station 2:00 PM Friday"

Pigeons as thick as pet cats straining greenblue necks
purposefully scouting Dunkin Donut crumbs on the concrete floor.
(Long ago they learned how to open the automatic doors by
crossing the electronic eye...a feat that amazes no one.)

World-wise children in proper strollers avoiding the birds,
scanning steadily ahead
following their intrepid parents’ stone gaze.

The view from the bench is rumps
shifting
under thin short cotton shorts,
under silky stretch jersey skirts,
under breathable fabric dress pants.

Shifting,
each cheek rising and falling
straining
for the call of the loud speaker.

Shifting the weight,
waiting the shift.

Amazing.

Monday, January 19, 2015

So This is How To Keep Young?...

One of the perks of moving to a "young" city like Boston is the optimistic hope that its youth will somehow rub off. Well, not so much youth, but at least its energy.
Last night Boston's own mighty New England Patriots, led by their Gaelic warrior prince Tom Brady, trounced the otherwise svelte Colts in the AFC championship football game. I mention this because my Boston apartment faces Tom Brady's.
I am, at best, an erstwhile football viewer -- captivated only by the fans' hoopla -- so living across from Mr. and his-even-more-famous Mrs. Brady was not a great thrill...that is, until someone who was thrilled that I lived across the street from the famous couple's city apartment told me that Brady is considered 'old' in football years.
That same someone told me that Brady and his model wife are on a mission to "preserve" their youth with diet and exercise. Not surprising considering their bodies are literally their fortune.
Just in case you wondered, Brady is 37. His-even-more-famous Mrs. Brady is 34...or at least that's what Google says, and who am I to argue?
In comparison, the opposing Colt quarterback, Andrew Luck, is a whole 25-years-old -- my middle daughter's age.  Just think, this kid has only had a drivers license for 7 whole years, and there he is leading men into 'war'.
For the record, 25 is indeed 'young', and 37 is in no way 'old'.
But in sports and model-world anything over the second decade of life is freaking ancient!
So I watched the game, intent on witnessing an epic battle of age versus, well, youth.
I confess I also watched hoping to catch a glimpse of human frailty -- perhaps a limping Brady, arthritis knee acting up...nothing too serious, just a little something that betrayed his aging bones.
The hoped-for limp would provide me with proof that Mr. and Mrs. Brady are wrong and one cannot stop time. I would then be perfectly justified to be my 50-something-self, sitting quietly on a couch watching football with my husband, washing down pizza with Cabernet.
But I don't know whether I really wanted to see Brady fail or not.
Had his 37-year-old body crumpled and limped off the field while I refilled my wine glass, I think I would have felt hopelessness. Not 'hopeless', but 'hopelessness' - the knowledge that nothing I could ever do would help stave off the ravages of time.
But, hallelujah, Brady didn't limp but rather pranced, gallivanted, and galloped his way to a resounding win.
I feel sorry for the young man Andrew Luck, but not too sorry -- he's got at least 12 years to catch up with Brady and his 6 Superbowls.
And as for Brady, he's going to have to muster whatever strength his exercise and diet plan can manage when he faces the Seattle Seahawks on February 1st.  That day he will be facing a slightly older opponent, the 26-year-old Russell Wilson.
And me?
Well, Brady's win made me hopeful for all us 'oldsters.
So on February 1st you can find me once again sitting on my couch, watching football with my husband, washing down that pizza with some good Cabernet - ever hopeful.


Tuesday, January 6, 2015

So This is How To Be Bored...

As tends to happen, January brings boredom to even the most enthusiastic.
Blame the holiday hype...  Blame the eggnog...  Blame the disappointment of bad gifts... 
Just don't blame yourself.
There is something sad about our self-imposed busy holiday season. It's as if we are trying to ward off the January doldrums by expending as much energy as possible before the year ends.
I think us middle aged people have earned our boredom. Wait until you've experienced (and can still remember) 50+ years of holidays come-and-go.  There's remarkably very little that can surprise us or keep our attention.
This December I walked Fifth Avenue and 60th Street three separate times, but not once did I bother to glance at the famous tree or even look at the expensive shop windows. 
I know: that IS sad! 
But in my defense, had those I was walking with even hinted at wanting to experience what many consider the quintessential American holiday display, I would have gone along.  But no one did, so neither did I.
Does getting older mean you no longer get excited?  Is boredom what I have to look forward to from now on?
Boredom is defined as "the state of being weary and restless through lack of interest" (I looked it up  in the Merriam-Webster dictionary just to make sure that was what I was feeling). 
I can relate to the "restless" part, but, gosh, I'm fighting off the "being weary" - it sounds so defeated.


Yawn. Pardon me, I'm boring even myself today...

Monday, December 15, 2014

So This is How to Look at the World...

Lately, there's been a lot of public outrage about perceptions.
We humans like to categorize ourselves into groups. Our shapes, colors, and apparel speak volumes to observers, who make assumptions about us based on preconceived perceptions we express in the current lingo as ‘prejudice’.
In my youth, these perceptions drove me crazy and made me as angry as those currently marching our streets. As a short, olive-skinned, curly dark haired, slightly plump female who prefers clogs to heels, I've always resented having to constantly prove my intellectual and social status both in business and in society. I know in view of what others suffer because of what they look like, my suffering was slight, but nevertheless, I suffered. 
Somehow, I thought once you reached midlife people stopped judging your outsides. That the wrinkles on ones’ skin overrode any preconceived perception of category based on looks. 
In any case, I had not felt that suffering in years, so, for lack of a better word, I thought in aging we acquired the wisdom to see beyond our skin. I thought midlife made people more careful about trusting their perceptions and more willing to have their assumptions shattered. 
I was wrong.
As a perk to being on the board of a public media company that will remain nameless, I was invited to a star-studded meet-and-greet last week. Arriving late, I took my glass of Merlot to an empty seat at a table with a middle-aged couple. After the stars' presentation, there was that quiet moment when strangers know they must either make acquaintance or awkwardness will ensue.
"Hello," I said.
"Hi," said the blue-eyed grey-haired suit-and-tie wearing male of the couple. "Are you with the restaurant they took us to for lunch?"
Stunned, I immediately scanned my outfit for any misguided signs that shouted "waitress":  wool slacks, velvet shell, textured office jacket, Chanel purse, demure gold necklace, big gold earrings, diamond wedding band – nothing that would have alluded to “service help”.
OK, I was wearing booties (it was snowing after all)... Maybe it was the booties? 
No, wait, I suddenly remembered my youth...
"Did they take you to an Italian restaurant?" I asked.
"Yes - great place - you know - so much food!"
That's when the angry young me had a small eruption:
"Oh. Well, I'm not with the restaurant, I'm a board member of (the organization) that took you to that lunch. But I am Italian -- We all look alike."
The blue-eyed man seemed visibly taken aback, unwilling to let go of his assumptions, but he knew how to do a social quickstep and immediately introduced his blue-eyed wife. 
We chatted aimlessly about northern versus southern Italian food (I'm the latter, which they claim to prefer). About the event, and how great public media is (because it's such an equalizer). About their retirement to a warm climate after his wife's back ailments led her to take pain killers (she hates how they make her feel, according to him). And, finally about his ridiculous post-retirement writing and consulting ventures (he handed me two cards, one for each venture - one is an inconsistent blog...).
In return, I purposefully told them nothing about me -- in my unthinking mind this was a way to punish their impudence. 
The truly sad thing about this small encounter was that they were innocuous people. They were not bad people, and, in sincere humbleness, far less superior to me. 
But that single comment betrayed their preconceived superiority based on what my body looked like.
And that made me angry.
That comment reminded me that we retain our presumptuous perceptions well into the "wisdom" of our later years, and that they continue to sting, even when we think we are finally immune. 
Even worse, I recognized in myself a sick willingness to categorize the blue-eyed-couple into something they perhaps are not -- merely because of my own preconceived perceptions of their shape, and color, and attire...
In an utterly benign way, this week I felt a gentile slap of prejudice, and my reaction was blinding, unjustified, hate.
At this point, I suppose I should say something uplifting, like therefore this proves that we should all abandon all our prejudices -- religious, race, gender, nationalism, you name it, just get rid of it all! But then we all know how insincere that sounded and how badly that went for poor Nick in "Gatsby".
What I am now willing to say is that I can no longer write off the anger on our streets, (as I did to my youngest daughter), as mere youthful outrage.
The current marches against the folly and tragedy of preconceived perceptions may just be misspent energy, (a desperate search for a simple answer to a complicated situation), but they sadly point to a visceral unalterable truth.