Friday, November 23, 2012

Chapter 1: Lemonade Stand



Chapter 1: Lemonade Stand
“Sugar: Check. Water: Check. Lemons: Check.” Holding her hand held notepad, Lilly crosses off the tiny square box next to each crayoned word.
“The recipe is on the counter, hun,” Grandma calls from the living room. Lilly stands on the whicker chair, hugging close enough to the counter to let her lean over. Humming one of her favorite non-tunes, the kind that springs up as naturally as dandelions in spring, she begins scooping sugar in to the orb-like glass pitcher. Grandma told her last month that during her next visit, she could have a lemonade stand. She always wanted to have a lemonade stand. For the whole month, Lilly kept adding tasks to her list to prepare for her next visit: buy cups, make sure Grandma has a pitcher, lemons, sugar, water, make sign, table, chair, bring piggy bank. After stirring in the sugar, she holds the pre-sliced lemon over the gaping mouth of the pitcher. Her hum comes to a sudden halt and is replaced by a tight mouthed grimace. Squeezing harder than she holds Mr. Teddy when she’s scared, Lilly’s tiny hands only juice three measly drops into the sugar filled pool below. She asks Grandma to help her squeeze the lemons.
“One dollar for lemonade?” Grandma asks, looking at the carefully printed sign. She helps Lilly carry the items to the corner where her table sits waiting like a throne for her noble arrival.
“It’s the best lemonade,” Lilly replies, in her matter-of-fact way, causing Grandma to laugh under her breath, “It said so on the box.”
In the humid July sun, Lilly’s blond pig tails shine like the reflection of a flashlight in a mirror. She hums the fifth movement of her invented concerto and waves to each car that drives by. Lilly picked out her favorite candy last week with mom at Mr. Benson’s store downtown. Bubble gum, Swedish Fish and the little dots that you can pick off the paper. Mom said that she could buy five whole dollars worth of candy after she had her lemonade stand. Patting her piggy bank in the middle of his pointy ceramic ears,
“We will be rich!” She exclaims.
The glimmer of pink ceramic shows a moving reflection, causing Lilly to look up. Expecting a car, her soft little hand rises automatically to greet the prospective passerby. A whiz of bike spokes threads by, so close to her table the flimsy legs shake. Nailed to her seat in fear, Lilly tries to take in the quick mischief, unsuccessfully. The short haired illusion kicks his sandaled foot straight in to the fragile glass pitcher, sending it straight in to the lap of the defenseless vendor. Standing up suddenly Lilly fumbles to save the golden liquid, but in her hast knocks over her pale pig friend. His silver and gold insides roll embarrassingly in to the middle of the road. Wet and sticky with sugar, Lilly’s drenched skirt clings to her skinny legs and her tears hug her reddened cheeks. Running inside, Lilly leaves her ruined throne and seeks the comfort of her Grandma’s embrace.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Leila



How did we get to this point? Where my guinea pig bats his fragile arms, propelling against the quick rising waters, condemned to his cage? Where my father, a cancer survivor, sits on the roof of our house waiting to be rescued? Where my mother and I hold the phone close to our ears with my father on the other end, stirring with paranoid fear for his life?
They told us to evacuate, but there is no telling my father what to do. Fifty one year’s hugging Sam Adams, an adolescence of nightly beer pong and a backfired intervention have my father’s stubborn Irish blood consistently above legal BAC.  After his liver transplant five years ago we moved here to Staten Island. With the idea of being closer to his doctor, comfortable financially and a drive away from the shore, my parents settled in comfortably. After finishing my degree at Colombia, I packed up my baby blue Honda and transplanted myself and my belongings to their quaint one-story chalet. Mom enjoys my company and needs help tending to dad’s basic needs. I come and go due to my graduate research at Colombia, staying weeknights on a makeshift mattress in a one room Manhattan apartment. The escape becomes necessary when dad’s weeks turn sour. His permanent residence in front of the television, relieved only to play with his therapy animal or step across the hall to alleviate his weak bladder, shortens his temper and my tolerance. I can’t stand seeing my father in this condition.
Now the vision of my father begging for help on top of our graying scaled roof in the blunt of this hurricane haunts me. I look over at my mother, on her third consecutive cigarette, rubbing her forehead.
“We couldn’t convince him, mom,” I attempt to console her grieved, hunched over body with a touch on her shoulder; “He refused to leave.”
My mother just hung up from a phone call to 911, imploring immediate assistance for my obstinate father. On Sunday the island was strongly encouraged to evacuate with Hurricane Sandy looming over distant waters. Memories of Irene flooded into my mind as sure as the warnings on each news channel. We didn’t evacuate that humid August morning despite urges from FOX, CNN and my overly cautious Aunt. The shrill gusts rocked the pale siding on our house as my mother and I huddled on the floor next to my father’s recliner.
“They said it may take days,” mom’s forehead sinks lower, hitting the fake cedar laminate of Aunt Shirley’s kitchen table.
“The National Guard is working with the FDNY and the NYPD on search and rescue efforts on Staten Island, Regan said, but many low-lying coastal areas remain inaccessible because of flood water. This has led to some dramatic rescues, as well as heart-wrenching tragedies.” Mom’s sobs increase, her shoulders heaving with each stifled inhale. My Aunt shuffles hastily over to the den and changes the channel.
The shrill ring of Aunt Shirley’s wireless acts as my alarm clock. “Yes…Yes…” My Aunt nods her head hastily and quickly gathers her car keys and jacket. “We will be there as soon as possible.” Slipping on her shoes she hangs up the phone.
“Your father is at Susan E. Wagner high school. They have a shelter set up there.” Mom and I quickly rise and head out towards the front door. Mom walks hurriedly down the steps ahead of us, leaning on her cane and holding the railing for support. My aunt leans in and whispers to me,
“Don’t tell your mother, he didn’t arrive at the shelter until this morning.” My heart sinks. Dad, out there in the wind and rain all night? Mom would have a heart attack if she found out.
It’s been three weeks. Three miserable, dehumanizing weeks in a make-shift shelter holding two hundred victims, with a water heater designed for a two story house. Where the sight of peanut butter and jelly causes immediate nausea and wool blankets have lost their secure warmth. Where the custodians lock the extra bathrooms to save themselves the extra work; this is the third time my dad wet his pants today. Last week we were moved from the high school to a homeless shelter,
“Everybody out the back doors and down the steps” directed the suited officer. Her weary-eyed expression contrasting her pressed uniform, “Officer Brown at the curb will direct you where to go next,” she habitually guided the human traffic jam with her stout arms, pointing towards the exit.
“My mother and father are both physically handicapped” I nodded in the direction of my parents while asking the emotionless guard if I could take them out the front doors.
In her monotone, unfeeling voice she repeated “The ramp is reserved for faculty and staff” and went back to funneling the unkempt shivering mass out the door. For a week we have suffered the bias of homeless shelter workers, who judge our stay as capable disaster victims who “have a place to go”. 
Mom and I decide today we will go home for the first time since the storm hit.  I help her out of the car; she leans on me as we walk up the front steps. My eyes avoid the roof and the haunting image that I have tried so hard to repress for three weeks. The nonexistent screen door is easily forgotten after stepping through the threshold. Furniture strewn, upturned tables, shattered mirrors, and Mom’s shriek stifled by the muffle of shock covering my ears. Sinking to the floor, her cane drops like a soldier’s weapon upon being wounded. Someone has already been here.
Prying mom’s head from her hands, I see the flood and tear stained wedding picture she cradles. Her sparks of passion fan my memory to flame; I dart past the kitchen to my bedroom at the back of the house. Devastation has been waiting here to meet me: I see his name written in the brown water line that cuts across the room, at shoulder’s height. I smell him in the dank emptiness filled with soggy insulation and yellow stained drywall. I hear him in the silence that will never be broken by my stolen viola. My songbooks, keyboard, lesson plans; taken from me by a coy Sandy mistress who left my soul shattered like the cracked kitchen tile.
I stand in the doorway to my backyard and hear a melody of hammers, chainsaws and car horns polluting the cold November air. My persistent contribution to this tragic symphony is the harmony of hopelessness.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Famine



Famine, Abundance.
Famine Abundance.

Isn’t that the way life works?

We are given, blessed, lavished, provided for, bestowed upon, loaded with, covered over,
A heaping mass of plenty, extravagant generous bounty,
And we forget.

We forget the spectacular plush, heaving net of fish, regardless of the soreness in our back in consequence of hauling it over the hull. 

We choose to dwell on the dull ache in the pit of our stomach and the pile of fish carcasses to our left. That wreaking stench-filled mound appears more ghastly and real than any hypothetical bounty of blessings that once was, or is, promised to come. And this pang in my stomach is enough to send me to the grave. 

The present famine is sufficient. It is enough to fill the stomach of our minds with doubt, hatred, and reckless despair in spite of the prior abundance. It exists as ample reason for me to believe that provision will never grace these skinny hands again and these chapped lips will be doomed to lick the dust off the ground. This famine, my present despair, robs abundance of the grace she brings with her timely arrival and succinct visit.
“That selfish wretch,” famine screams, belly hollow and ribs protruding. “Look what she did to me!” The gaunt pale figure writhes on the floor, cradling its nonexistent middle. Cheekbones like bird beaks pecking at the stale apathetic air. As if abundance robbed the creature of hunger and thirst and replaced it with anguish, hatred and a ready finger to blame. 

Famine knows not that Abundance shares DNA identical: from the very womb of provision birthed give and take alike. Yet the suffering of one often obliterates the joy of the other, when joy has the ability to reign supernaturally over all strife.

We forget.
We forget the joy of abundance and are consequently robbed the abundant joy in our suffering.


 “It is just as I said to Pharaoh: God has shown Pharaoh what he is about to do. Seven years of great abundance are coming throughout the land of Egypt, but seven years of famine will follow them. Then all the abundance in Egypt will be forgotten, and the famine will ravage the land. The abundance in the land will not be remembered, because the famine that follows it will be so severe. The reason the dream was given to Pharaoh in two forms is that the matter has been firmly decided by God, and God will do it soon.” Genesis 41:28-32

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Americanism



What have I been doing with my mind, so as to idly sit by and not think for myself? I have been allowing others to make decisions for me and refusing to take the time to learn necessary information so as to knowledgably contribute to society. I refuse to let this happen anymore. After this 2012 election, the first election I was alive for where I could vote, I decided not. I decided to NOT take advantage of my rights. I decided to NOT thrive in the overarching pride of Americans freedom. I decided to swallow the excuse of ignorance; that I did not know enough about the candidates in order to feel comfortable claiming my opinion. I was, in fact, opinionless, and proudly flaunted that. What shallow short sighted girl am I to think that my contribution is worthless? Why would there be novels of history proving life giving sagas and brow beaten heroes, if my place is truly insignificant. I feel I have done a disservice to my country and myself.

I refuse to allow this ignorance, this idleness to poison my mind further. Last night, after the election was over and Obama took the win, I watched his victory speech. I will formulate my own opinion about our president. I will become informed about his policies. I will be faithful to the freedom my fellow countrymen have suffered, served and suffocated for. Freedom is dreamed of, sought after and fought for but its unbound ropes remain uninheritable. 
Americanism: a liberating, invigorating, intimidating choice. I choose to be an American.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Unnatural Disaster



A natural disaster results in unnatural living. 

Naturally, the “Jerseyan” thrives inside his spinning world, rotating from job to car to computer, never encountering the face of the spinning planet next door. But what is the need? The Jerseyan is sufficient without community. Neighborhoods are full of individuals who ignore the sight of Mr. Jones taking out his trash and Susie Smith’s hello kitty backpack walking home from school at 3:05. The Neighbor, in fact, does not exist until his needs pry his unfriendly rear end out of his three story house.

Neighborhood, therefore, contradicts the very lifestyle of the Jerseyan. We live in “Individualhood”: A self absorbed group of independently focused people. Jersey then is a compilation of self sufficient “individualhoods”. We don’t consider having the Lyttle family over for coffee and dessert, to babysit Mrs. Kormack’s 3 year old torment would require copious amounts of alcohol. But after I mix the dry ingredients for my chocolate chip cookies and find I’m short one egg, it takes about three quick seconds for me to ring Mrs. Lollie’s doorbell. In fact, the swift amount of time it takes to cross the street proves all I need to forget Lollie’s kindness and return to my bustling kitchen. With achieving my own goals at the center of my spinning world, I can only hope that the wave across the street is enough to lend me two cups of sugar when I run short next apple pie.

Community, the ingredient lost on Jersey citizens in the recipe for social prosperity becomes unanimously potent in the face of disaster. The Neighbor does not exist without need, and the oil of need surfaces to the top of disaster’s flood. 

Naturally, we bake, compute, drive, and work independently, with our own agendas and priorities governing every move we make. Naturally we dwell in tragedy of isolation. Our remote lifestyle is our self imposed natural disaster; the flood of narcissism that tears down the walls of friendship, ruins the possession of joy and robs the home of social treasures, leaving loneliness to weep beside his destructed dwelling. 

Be a part of unnatural reconstruction.