Monday, December 16, 2013

The No-Sided Conversation

Things had gotten weird between them.  That wasn't really it. They'd gotten "uncomfortable."  He thought. But that was the bitch of it.

He wasn't sure.  Maybe it was all in his head.  But it didn't feel that way.

They were friends. "Glorified acquaintances," if he were honest about it.  Their circles overlapped from time to time.  Still, he liked her and that was the also the bitch of it.

Had he made her uncomfortable by being too flirty with her and crossed a line?  Had he simply been uncomfortable because he didn't know the right place to be with her flirty/friendly-wise and she picked up on his discomfort and became uncomfortable simply because he seemed to freeze up around her, as if she were doing something wrong?

It felt like they were on a feedback loop of emotional negativity and defensiveness, but without a real reason.  Perhaps.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Relyea Avenue

"Excuse me, sir. I'm a local attorney, and this is the house I was born in and I haven't been here in twenty years, at least. We moved away when I was six.

"May I look around? Walk out on the dock?

"My father built it, around when I was born."

"What's your name?

"Yeah, that's etched in concrete in the garage. 

"Go ahead.

"I know how memories go."

The house is different. Better. Renovated. When I was a child it was dark; trees bound it
and kept it in near perpetual shade. Now they're cleared away and it's lighter and not some '70s nightmare.

That's the spot on the driveway where I dropped the glass bottles, when I was three, and they exploded and I jumped up and down, barefooted, in the shards, and screamed, "Shit! Shit! Shit!" and was forgiven for cussing because I was bleeding and crying.

Between those two trees, there used to be a platform my pop built for me for a zip line he set up across the yard.  He dug a pit beneath it and filled it with leaves, in case I slipped and fell.
And I protested and railed against the pit, as a four year old, because I'd never fall, and promptly was saved by those leaves on my very first attempt to get on.

The grass on that spot on the lawn is grown back, but, literally, for years, it was bare, scorched dead, from where my cousin Mari set down a sparkler on top of a bag of fireworks on some 4th of July. And I remember being tossed over someone's shoulder as everyone sprinted away in all directions from the blast and I watched it erupt into an explosion of a million white hot sparks, like the Death Star met its end on our lawn.

There's the tree next to the dock I used to climb, and there's the pluff mud where, when it was low tide, because I was so small, I could carefully walk out onto it for a ways without sinking in too much, but, if I did, I got the hose before I was allowed back in the house. I didn't know anything could be that cold.

The dock! The dock! The dock! There's where I stood and Pop helped me fire a gun for the first time. He helped me hold and aim and squeeze and I shot the pluff mud and the M1 Garand nearly broke my shoulder and I cried and "I'm going to count to three and then I'll give you something to cry about! One, Two, Three!"

And look at that! Raccoon droppings on the dock. Pop hated raccoons scat on his dock.
He even rigged a trip wire to a car battery to fry the little bastards, until my mom found out and made him take it down because she envisioned a pile of dead neighborhood kids, who'd attempt to sneak onto the dock at night. So Pop left triscuit crackers coated in tabasco out there, thinking aversion therapy would keep them off the dock, but all that really happened was we couldn't sleep because raccoons screamed in the trees all night as they shat fire.

The boards are spongy, as though they can't handle an adult me. I fell off the dock plenty of times. 

There was that one time at a party, when I was a baby, seated on the edge, next to the creek. "James, don't let him sit so close, he'll fall in."
"He's fine."
I wasn't. They turned their heads for an instant and in I went. Pop ripped off his watch and tore out his wallet and launched in and brought me up. And when I learned to swim years later, the family friend who taught me,  who held me as I worked on my form,  would always tell folks how I trembled and trembled in her hands.

And I walk back to get in my car and leave and that was then and this is now and I have  marsh and pluff mud and saltwater and lowcountry in my veins and bones and I'll find my home again.

I will.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Thanksgiving 2013

I run to clear some space
or justify gluttony later.

I bathe. I iron. I dress.
I heap the plate with yellow:
potatoes, macaroni, yellow rice casserole; 
then brown: turkey and stuffing.
Oh, fine, I'll get some salad.
3. 2. 1. Go!
Inhale food, not air.
Ow. Ow. Ow.

Up from the table,
down to the couch.
Along comes beer.
and now for intermittent wakefulness,
as gladiators smash into each other
interspersed with exhortations to:
shop, shop, shop!
and
spend, spend, spend!
and get out the house ASAP!
to join the maddening crowd
to buy unnecessary stuff
that people we love don't really need
for the next time we have time off to see them
instead of staying home and 
spending time with them
instead of staying home and 
spending time with them now.

NO!

I couch and beer and smile
and laugh and listen and tell
and nap and am covered in
nuclear fire-hot dogs
and this is how it's
supposed to be.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Forum Pt. 2

As The Forum was technically out of the purview of the school, I was free to publish whatever I wanted.  I was strongly encouraged to get a faculty advisor.  I selected the Wills professor who liked to make sex party and heroin jokes in class.  He said this edition was one of the funniest things he'd read, period, but he couldn't advise me to release it in this version.  I took his advice because, you know, I needed a job after school.  Five years later though, I present to you my unfettered vision:
 
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The Forum Pt. 1

 
The pinnacle of law school-dom is being an Editor in Chief.  There are only a handful of publications (USC has Law Review; ABA Real Property, Trusts, & Estate Law Journal; Journal of Law and Education; and the International Journal of Law and Business).  Editors in Chief are some of the brightest legal minds of their graduating class. 

My law school grades were not abysmal, but they were roundly mediocre.  And I had (have) no fervent desire to practice law.  However, my third year of law school, I was the editor-in-chief of the law school's satire newspaper (no, I didn't invent it).  The Forum had a history of existing but no one publishing anything.  I managed to get two issues out in the fall.  I joked that the other Editors in Chief could have their successful careers, trophy wives, and respect of their peers; I had more readers (non-parent division) than all of them combined. 

Without further ado...

(Scroll Down to See)
 
 


Thursday, November 14, 2013

Good Luck With That

I knew the day was coming, but I didn't know it would be today.

Pop: "You know I'm going to get you to do what I want you to do."
Me: "You know how good you've been at that over the years." (Editor's Note: He has not; at all)
Pop: "I'm going to bribe you."
Me (knowing where this is going): "Uh huh."
Pop:  "I'm gonna tie inheritance to you getting married and giving me grandchildren pretty soon."
Me: "Yeah...that'll do it." (Editor's Note: It won't)

That said, if any fun, adventurous, hilarious, wildly intelligent, beautiful single woman wants a piece of a retired teacher's nest egg and is willing to grow my spawn inside herself, by all means holler. 

Oh, and you'll need to have money of your own until the old man kicks the bucket because I'm flat-broke.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Coach Clark

Randy Clark was a giant to me as a boy. And I'm not being figurative. I mean he was huge.  I was maybe 5'5" and maybe 100lbs, at most, back then.

He was the varsity basketball coach and the middle school principal. And if he wanted to be, he could be scary (he was the principal after all...he gave me my first lecture on sexual harrassment in seventh grade), but for the most part he was gregarious. He was my classmate Eric's dad too.

I didn't know him as Randy, of course. I was a 12 and 13 year old when I was in middle school.  I didn't know him as Mr. Clark.  He was Coach Clark.  That was that.

I remember various things about Coach Clark. There was that lecture (and all that was my classmate Paul's fault. After I'd been in the vicinity after Paul had dropped his pen and told the girl whose desk it dropped under to "spread your legs so I can get that" which got us a finger wag, we were in the lunch line and a different girl cut us. Paul told her "get to the back of the line, hoe." She asked what he called her and I said "a garden tool."   wockawockawocka).  He taught me social studies in 7th or 8th grade and I remember when he took my text book from me at the end of the year to show the class that it needed to be clean with no markings and, out of the 500 page book, he happened to open it to the page where I'd scribbled cusswords earlier in the year.

Oof.

Then, at the end of the school year in 8th grade, my family life went to hell in a handbasket.  Lawyers were involved; custody was contested.  I literally didn't have a place to stay.

And Randy Clark (and his wife Ellen) stepped up and took me in.  Yes, I was his son's classmate and he was the principal, but Eric and I hadn't been super close and...just...and.  That was a big, damn deal.  The Clarks didn't have to bring me in and they did.

I stayed with the Clarks for the last three weeks of the school year.  The legal whathaveyou resulted in me moving away for high school. I happened to run into some of my former classmates and Coach Clark in Hilton Head a couple of years later at some academic something or other.  Other than that, life has gone on: high school, college, the army, law school, whatever this period is.  I ran into Eric five or six years ago in Columbia.  We both looked much different (7 inches and another hundred pounds will do that).  We made small talk. That was that.

I ran into Eric again last night. I asked him how he was doing. He told me Coach was in the ICU.   A group of faces I haven't seen in twenty years appeared to comfort and support Eric.  There were many faces I didn't recognize. But I had no doubt they were men and women that Coach Clark had an impact on.  It wasn't my place to insinuate myself into their congregation so I left them be. 

I let my mind wander to that time he and his wife showed me extraordinary kindness.  As a 13 year old going through a crappy time, I appreciated it. As a 34 year old, I am awed and indebted to them.

Today, I learned that he has passed.

I am being figurative: Randy Clark is a Giant.