Saturday, December 22, 2007

Our Inheritance

Any of us who have lived long enough know, directly, about wills and inheritances and such things. Certainly, at a surface level, these things distribute wealth or, sometimes, debt. Usually this includes some furniture, a knick-knack, and -- in fairness -- birthday and Christmas presents gifted to the Loved One throughout the years. It is all very necessary because these knickknacks will far outlast us. Indeed, as I type this blog entry I wonder what future generation might be lit by the twice-inherited pineapple-esque lamp next to me.

There is no mistaking the need to guide the distribution of artifacts and past a certain age we all do it, whether in writing or not. For years I have known that the piano was "mine", a testament to the fact that I stuck with piano lessons a few years longer than my siblings or,p erhaps, it was because I have friends who know how to tickle those particular ivories. A favorite ring, a hope chest, clocks... all verbally willed in bits and pieces over the years. I was told once the story of an aunt, an elderly aunt because this desire does not seem to kick in until later in life, who would physically gift those things from her home that she wanted her visitors to inherit. I imagine when it is time for me to scratch that particular itch I will whip out my trusty label maker and sneak people's names onto my personal "big ticket" items. There is no right or wrong to it -- we must all find a way to distribute our artifacts.

And, of course, this is the surface of it -- our lives extend beyond a reversed garage sale. Since we accumulate more than artifacts, if we are particularly observant, we understand that these must also be distributed. A hostess and matriarch, my mother had much to pass on in this area.

One particular, ethereal inheritance for me was Thanksgiving. My family has two major holiday celebrations: Christmas and Thanksgiving. New Years Day, for a while, was a contender, but it peaked and faded years ago. The bestowal of Thanksgiving was in no document, no will, no "I bequeath to Ed and Linda the Thanksgiving Day" scribbled down anywhere. Instead it was one of those verbal bequests, when my mother -- too ill to cook the Thanksgiving meal and too saddened to see it made in her kitchen without her -- decided that we would, instead, have the meal at my house. Keeping our 2 month old baby out of the weather and having two kitchens in the house sweetened the deal considerably. During that sweet and sour meal a simple comment mentioning "a good transition" and "passing a torch" were made.

And so, this past Thanksgiving was overseen by a photo of that previous Thanksgiving meal, and a cardboard smiley face as old as I, whose black and yellow visage has smiled down upon many transitions and is, itself, an inheritance of sorts.



More than artifacts, these inheritances are the spirits and the lives we had so cherished and their gifting, as always, gives us meaning. I think, too often, people forget to bequeath these ethereals or others, perhaps, refuse to receive them. The fear stemming from such an omission being that individuals will drift apart and sacrifice group and familial identity in the name of day-to-day convenience.

So, we have for the time being happily inherited Thanksgiving and it has certainly staved off day-to-day convenience, but it has also kept us, for another year, together in familial community. There is nothing more satisfying, to me, than to sit at a table surrounded by as many family members as possible... making the feast a sign of abundance that goes well beyond the food.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Memory Is State Dependent

I was walking by our iMac in the living room the other day and I spied Linda surfing the web (a phraseology deceptive in its lack of strenuous activity). Curiously, I snuck up behind her to see what she was doing. Was she reading the news? Catching up on e-mails? Perhaps buying me that perfect Christmas present?

Nope.

She was reading "the red tar pit". This little old site that has been forcibly forgotten by me, buried in an avalanche of graduate studies, special work projects, fatherhood, entertaining, and hobbies.

"What are you doing reading that old thing?" I asked.
"Sometimes, it's just nice"

And so I decided to check out this old blog site again. It's amazing to me how someone who is so otherwise immersed in computers could be so afraid of a web site. But, you see, memory is state dependent and sitting in front of that great big "create post" text area would take me to emotional places I wasn't sure I was ready to go.

More than anything else, and despite protestations to the contrary, I wrote this blog as letters to my mother. I always enjoyed her dedication to memoir writing and while I never had her style I could make her smile in print. And often she would call or, more frequently, drop me an e-mail telling me how much she enjoyed some particular post or another, or how she had passed one on to some friend in her writing group.

Those posts were a way of saying "look at me, mom" without having to be quite so obvious about it, or without spending hours relating things on the phone -- I do my best retrospection around 2am anyway. The joy I got from sending her these missives wasn't so much about the need for approval -- I just got the biggest kick out of interacting with her. And I meant it when I said that her smile and her laughter gave me meaning.

And so, sitting in front of this great big "create post" text area, I have to confront the memory -- that state dependent memory -- of times when I could communicate with a loved one by simply picking up the phone or pushing a send button.

So.. what got me in front of that terrifying "create post" text area?

When I got on-line and looked at who has been hitting this blog for the past, say, 2 weeks.. I recognized several familiar spots... Rochester, Alexandria, Baltimore, Pikesville, BelAir. Other hits were from google searches specifically for my name. One particularly funny one was:

+ +the +red +tar +pit

It made me wonder if other people take a few moments and re-read some of what's been posted here. Truth be told, it made me wonder whether it was time to stop avoiding all of those things that brought me close to her.

My "year of firsts" is coming to an end. I've been through what would have been mom's 70th birthday. We've gone through our birthdays and all the major holidays except Christmas. I'm not quite sure if it's time to "get back to normal" because I don't really have a firm handle on normal.

Maybe it's time to get off my blogging ass. We'll see.

-Ed