insane things I do

August 14, 2007

Mudhead

A kachina, a challenge, an interview with author Amy Cohen...

Mudheadd A Hopi kachina watches my computer screen from over my right shoulder. He wears a sanded leather loincloth over ochre skin, collar and cuffs of soft maple rabbit. He stands two-feet high, but he feels as tall as a man. His protruding eyes burn my back, transmit an ancient message of sure-footed joy.

You will dance and you will like it, he mutters. You will run and you will jump.

I try to pay him no mind.

"Hey, we're the same age, man. You can't tell me what to do."

Mudhead knows I'm right, knows we're both children of the sixties, his back rigid with curved cottonwood, my mind stiff with routine.

A rancher's wife handed him to me, made me take him in lieu of payment when I handed her a bag of frosted cosmetics and an invoice for eighteen bucks, thirty-one cents. I wanted to sell him on eBay, collect my fee by proxy, but Mudhead wouldn't have it. 

You will keep me and you will like it.

He's a difficult Spirit.

The feathers in Mudhead's hands shook as I rustled the pages of my local paper in search of the County Fair schedule. 

"Hey, boys! Who wants to help me bake a cake for the fair? I'm thinking I'll do a triple layer lemon supreme, whattaya say?"

My two sons barely removed nose from book. Louis, 12, raised one eyebrow.

"C'mon mom, you always win. Why not let someone else have a chance this year?"

Martin, 10, chimed in.

"Yeah. Besides, we don't get to eat the cake. Those judges are greedy."

I glanced at the two blue ribbons stuck to my wall with thumbtacks. San Miguel County Fair, First Place, Cake Competition, 2006. San Miguel County, First Place, Cake Competition, 2005. Maybe I have gotten complacent, I thought. I handed the paper to Louis.

"Okay, you guys think you're so smart. Find another category for me to enter."

I swear Mudhead giggled. The boys smooshed close on the couch, legs extended against my Spanish pine coffee table.

"Uh, mom? Will you actually enter the contest we choose?"

I shrugged my shoulders. Sure. Sewing, painting, pies, cookies, tortillas, I remembered the list, the old-fashioned pitting of gargantuan zucchini against watermelon, remembered last year's bevy of upstanding ranch women carrying tater-tot casseroles laced with green chile, carrying small town tradition in the crook of their arms.

"Sure. As long as it's something I can actually enter. We don't have a monster melon in the garden."

The boys whispered, laughed. They sounded gently sinister, the laugh of children giddy on newsprint power. Martin stood and handed me the paper, his index finger indicating my fate.

Mud Volleyball. Noon - 1 p.m. Open teams. Coed.

Damn that kachina.

The morning of the competition my boys brushed their rabbits. Martin checked Snowball's toenails, her tail, and packed her and Midnight into a cat carrier. The bunnies didn't care, didn't know they would be judged for size, weight, in the "Meat Pen" division.

"It's okay," Martin whispered. "The rest of those bunnies might get eaten, but you won't. We just have to tell the judge you're for dinner."

Midnight leaned one shoulder against the tight wire bars of the cage and rubbed.

My stomach flip-flopped as the car skidded into the dirt lot framing the fair. I wore shorts and a tank top, Walgreens sunglasses, my hair pulled back in a long ponytail. I never played volleyball of any type in the past, never cared much for organized sports, for the concept of a team, a group that must move as one. I stepped into the sun, into the tiny midway comprised of a few barns and several mobile units. I made the sign of the cross.

I like to do things by myself. I like to run, to move, to dance. I'm not that crazy about flying balls and muddy people. Hell, I'm forty-one years old. I'm not in the best of shape, either, not since the car accident last summer.

I tried to stop my mantra of pain, of worry, of Girl Who Can't Play Ball. My boys hustled their bunnies to the exhibition barn. I walked past the trailer serving up plates of greasy funnel cakes coated in icing sugar, walked to the wide ditch over which hung a drooping net like a useless apron. Several people stood beneath the net, waiting for any other takers, deliberately covered in mud like Dairy Queen chocolate dipped cones.

I chose a side, kicked off my sandals, and stepped into the mud. It oozed through my toes with a satisfying squish. It smelled bad, dead algae mixed with lord knows what kind of field run-off, with the stale warm water from a rancher's steer-slobbered watering hole. A referee blew a whistle. He held a trophy, a statue as big, as bold as Mudhead, and I held my breath, dropped beneath the surface, let it coat my hair, my face, my arms-who-knew-no-volleyball. Rats. Forgot to take off my sunglasses first!

The game was on! I jumped! I ran! I danced, one foot stuck after another! I felt the spirit of Mudhead move my bones, move my bones, crack my back. I hit the ball once, just once during the whole damn game, and as I did, my boys screamed, "Mommmmmmmmmm!" The muddy man to my left high-fived me, and as we slapped hands together, we both fell backward into the slippery muck. Score one more for the other team! We lost. Big time.

I let my boys hose me down next to the pig barn. A cute rancher in scuffed boots and a goatee grinned, shook his head.

"God, you were horrible. But I have to say, I never saw anyone have so much friggin' fun."


Vball11


My shot of glory! I am the muddy chick who just slapped that ball over the net at the County Fair!

********
Acohencover I was asked to participate in Amy Cohen's Virtual Book Tour via Blogs. Amy Cohen wrote screenplays, wrote for television, wrote for shows like "Caroline in the City" and "Spin City."

Amy wrote a memoir, The Late Bloomer's Revolution, where she talks about finding herself later in life, in her late thirties, after her much-loved (and hilarious!) mom dies after a heart-wrenching bout with cancer. Amy and her dad both approach the single's world, both begin to date. Amy even learns a skill that most of us master in childhood - how to ride a bike!

As a single woman in her 40's, as a woman who has tried a million careers, who is still reaching to find herself, her audience, her sure path, I opened Amy's book with trepidation. There's nothin' like reading about someone else's perfect success to bring ya down, to accentuate your own flaws. But Amy's stories of searching for self in the midst of city life captured my heart, my laugh, and I realized she was different from me in nearly every way except the one way that mattered: she desperately wanted, needed, to live life as fully as possible.

I sent Amy a few questions, questions that I hoped would help you get to know her, to understand the warrior under the surface. Read her answers, then go buy her book! You won't regret it... 'cause if I can hit a muddy ball over a net and Amy can haul across town on a ten-speed, you, too, can do anything. Anything.

Birdie: Amy, I opened your memoir expecting to read yet another snarky, irreverent chick lit romp like so many other new books on the shelves, but instead I was surprised to find a deeper, more thoughtful, achingly real story of a woman in search of a way to unite her family roots with her growing sense of self. The book had some incredibly funny moments where I giggled out loud, but the parts that made me stop, made me gasp, were the intimate asides where you flipped a funny story to reveal the hidden darkness below the surface. How has your great sense of humor helped you face difficult moments in both your personal and writing lives?

Amy:  Birdie (love that name!), first I want to thank you for all the incredibly nice things you said about my book. You can't imagine how much it means to me to hear that.

I'm actually convinced I've gotten a lot funnier as bad things have happened to me.  In fact, there's no question. I mean I was no laugh riot when my mother was sick, but afterward when I got fired, my boyfriend broke up with me, and then the eight month rash?   I always thought if anyone had caller I.D. at that point, they were screening, thinking, "Oy. What's happened to her now? Let her leave it on the machine."

I think humor is a coping mechanism as much as anything else. I feel so lucky to have it, because, boy, has it gotten me through some rough times.

I'm not sure I even would have known that I could be funny or see humor in those situations until they happened to me.  But you make one joke about your face looking like you went through the windshield of a car or resembling a really bad diaper rash, and that makes you feel more like yourself. Plus, laughter is such a relief – sometimes the only relief in a situation like that.

I think people often think that because you can joke about something you're in denial, which couldn't be further from the truth. It's simply a different way of expressing pain and confusion.

Birdie: You and your dad share dating (horror!) stories and advice. Did you discover new things about your dad, about your relationship with your dad, through writing about him? Has writing about your family and friends changed the way you understand them, understand your relationship with them?

Amy:  I think in particular with my father, I had such a great desire to portray him as I saw him – funny and so sweet and good.

We'd had such a rough road for so long.   And so often he can come out with things that drove me nuts, like when he said that because I'd been "on the schnide" (chaste for a few months) that might make men think they could go to bed with me easily. That was his awkward way of saying, "but you can't let that happen because you're very special," (which he said.)

I wanted to show a side of him I knew so well, but few people saw.  That was so important to me.  Our new, incredibly close relationship, which I never could have predicted, has been one of the great surprises of my adult life.

I think it's been so wonderful for him to finally realize, in print, how I really saw him.  It reminds me of what people say when they see themselves on TV, that you see yourself in a whole new way from a distance.
But what really thrills me is he has all these new fans! People just cannot get enough of him – he got an ovation at my last reading in New York – how great is that?

Birdie: As you describe in your book, you suffered a humiliating fall - and some serious road rash - as a young girl since you were too embarrassed to tell your friends you didn't know how to ride a bike. You decided to face that deep fear and learned to ride a bike in your mid-thirties. Do you think that we, as women, are improved by facing our fears?

Amy:
  I think we're improving because we're talking about things more. I've gotten about a hundred emails from women saying, ‘I thought it was just me feeling scared and insecure and like a big loser!  Now I have a term for it. I'm just a Late Bloomer." 

I think in some weird way, all my bad dates and failed relationships played a big part in my ability to confront things that scared me.  After my break up, when I thought I might never get up again, I had a series of painful little break ups. At first, after each one I'd cry and fall apart for a few days or weeks or months – the guy who wore a beret and sunglasses INSIDE (can you believe I cried over a guy who wore a beret and sunglasses inside?); George, the musician.  Even "John Lawrence," the newscaster, who I didn't even like that much. 

But after awhile when each new promising thing didn't work out, I started to realize I'd survive. I'd be fine. I'd done it before. I'd endured much worse. And that helped me face new scary things (like bike riding) and know, whatever happened, I'd be okay.

I'm hoping women are realizing slowly that age shouldn't be a barrier, even in ways as big as motherhood.  Which I think is a great thing because you can savor life in so many great new ways as you get older.

Birdie: Your life is about storytelling, about the art of storytelling through many mediums - fiction, television, memoir. Why are stories important? How do they help us?

Amy: Well, I think in addition to hopefully being entertaining, stories help us connect, which is a huge accomplishment in our increasingly disconnected world.   What I've loved so much about this whole experience is feeling like we're getting together a whole club of LATE BLOOMERS.  A sisterhood actually. I've gotten so many amazing letters from men and women who said, "I thought it was only me."

Birdie: Your book, at its base, is about evaluating fear, putting it to the side so that one can fully live. If you could leave your readers with one legacy, what would you want it to be?

Amy:
What a great question!  Encouraging others to confront their fears would be a terrific legacy. I would love to have people attempt to confront their fears, knowing if nothing else, they couldn't fare any worse than I did.  In some ways there's nothing more liberating than confronting something that scares you and knowing you won out.

That's why I wrote the book. So people would feel not only less alone but emboldened. Even something as small as a friend of mine who was afraid to drive in New York and after reading my book, took on the scary cab drivers of the city. I love hearing those stories. And the people who whisper that they didn't know how to ride a bike well into their thirties either and were afraid to tell anyone.  I would love so much if I could be the inspiration that says "honestly, just try it. I did it and it changed my life."

Thanks, Amy! And thanks, Mudhead, Louis, and Martin, for making me step into the mud, into an existence a little less clean and oh-so-much-more beautiful for it.

August 13, 2007

Do you need a piece of the Southwest? A Contest!

Ebay_items_05

Ebay_items_06

Click on the photos to view a larger version!

 The Navajo consider Canyon de Chelly one of the most sacred and important places on Earth.  They call it "Tsegi," which means Rock Canyon.

For more than 2000 years, humans have lived in the canyon depths, in pit houses, cliff dwellings, and Navajo hogans.  Numerous petroglyphs and pictographs exist throughout the canyon, most of them telling the story of a cherished life at one with the animal and plant life that call the canyon home.

Several Navajo who live in and near Canyon de Chelly create original Rock Art pieces, paying homage to the the ancient monument walls.

Eugene Clark, a native Navajo who lives on the Navajo Reservation, painted this gorgeous slice of Canyon de Chelly rock. He copied petroglyphs from the canyon wall, painted antelope and hunter, Kokopelli, the four cardinal directions, ancient symbols for life and mother nature.

This piece measures 8 inches long by 6 inches high at its highest point, and half-an-inch thick. The rock is that of Canyon de Chelly, a gorgeous rich red. The colors are natural, vibrant. Eugene Clark signed his name and the year of his work, 2001, on the back of the rock.

So here's the deal:

Ask me to write something, anything. It could be a short story about the underworld, about life in ancient India. It could be a poem, a song, a Gregorian chant. Be as creative, as thoughtful as you can. Whatever idea resonates the most with me, I'll write. And the Creator of the Idea gets this beautiful piece of Native art.

Post your ideas in comments below. I'll close the contest at one minute 'til midnight, New Mexico time, this Friday evening. One idea per reader, gracias! (But chit chat MORE than welcome!)

August 07, 2007

Upping the ante

An anonymous eBay bidder has informed me that if she wins the I'm-so-glad-I-quit-Avon Mrs. Albee eBay auction, I must smash the statue on YouTube! Of course I shall honor this request should she win. Do YOU have a YouTube request if you win the auction? Post it below! I'll pretty much do anything legal/PG-rated...

May 03, 2007

Been Busy... will return soon!

Sewingman

Hi everyone! I thought I should drop in for a moment and let everyone know I'm okay... just preoccupied at the moment. I will return soon with some great stories. It's been an adventure-filled week!

xo to all!

April 12, 2007

My tribute to Kurt Vonnegut

I have alluded to this particular chance meeting a few times during my three years blogging, told bits and pieces of the story. Here it is in its entirety. When I lived in So Cal I managed, like all other beach bums, to see Hollywood stars in their native habitat. I never found much inspiration in those encounters, a few laughs or moments of introspection, but nothing that gave me great pause. One day, thirteen years ago on the Indiana backroads, I met one of the great writers of this generation, in fact the only great writer I ever met, and it spurred years of wonder and dreams. I'm going to miss him.


Please enjoy my story, posted at Beauty Dish. Even though it contains no (what?!) Avon, I posted it there as I had mentioned parts of this story, and Vonnegut, in that blog during the past three years.

March 29, 2007

A story I never passed along because I was chicken

I wrote a story last month about grief, about a shamanic ritual I chose to deal with that grief. I posted it at TNB, and never posted the link here until today. Some of you found it, left me dear comments. I was worried about posting the link here, worried that I might be judged for the ceremony I chose, the danger of it, the illegality of it. I'm not so afraid now. I am human, a failure in many ways, someone who is always searching for meaning beyond the layer of skin that thinks it can hold my thoughts, my being.

I hope you enjoy it.

January 03, 2007

Out with the Old, in with the Cold

crossposted at blogher.org

Three weeks before the turn of the year I turned forty-one. Turning forty was easy, was just a number, a notch on the invisible calendar under my skin. But this birthday brought a few new gray hairs, the tiny crinkle of crow's feet around eyes that looked just a little bit... old. Old. I stood before the bathroom mirror, tried to remember my face at thirty, at twenty, but a tired woman of four-plus decades returned my gaze.

The first morning of 2007 I rolled out of bed determined to even the score. Exercise! Diet! I made a mental note to check out the latest facial creams in the Avon brochure - the ones that promised to fill my fine lines, to plump my lips. I pulled on my bathing suit and donned my embroidered Japanese robe, a pair of fuzzy pink boots.

I might be old, I thought. But I'm still young enough to do crazy things.

I barked at my two boys to hurry, jumped into the car, and turned the key. The engine grouched at the cold, at the frozen snow beneath our wheels. We slid from our street onto Seventh, the tail of our car imitating the glide of an aquarium fish. My youngest son, 9, held my bath towel on his lap.

"Mom, tell me again why you're going to jump in a frozen lake?"

I smiled as I drove. I didn't offer an explanation. Nature reveals herself through our mouths, minds, eyes, ears, fingers, tells us her deep secrets when we face her with open arms. The roads were slow. Cars sputtered over hunks of ice cemented to the road. A steady stream of vehicles pointed toward Wal-Mart, toward the after-holiday sales. We passed them by, let the shoppers face cold depths of their own.

Storrie Lake loomed before us. A yellow backhoe rested near the shore, its operator satisfied with the job he did hacking up ice three-inches thick. He joked with the ambulance man. They looked at me, at the crowd of a hundred Las Vegans giddy for a chance to welcome the New Year with a burst of hypothermic pain.

I stood with the others, the ones in swim suits, in shorts and t-shirts. We gathered near the dock as a man in a bright orange wetsuit guarded the sharp ridge of ice. My boys waited behind, with the audience in winter jackets and knit caps, most carrying cameras to document our strange journey.

Someone started a countdown - ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one - then a rise of happy screams filled the air as one by two by three we flailed from the dock to the depths. The water shocked me, knocked the air from my lungs. I wanted to yell Happy New Year, but my voice wouldn't cooperate. I dunked my head under the frigid water and realized how alive I felt, how simply alive. I didn't feel forty-one, didn't feel any age. The water whispered it didn't matter.

On the ride home I stopped at Sonic to treat my boys, treat myself for a job well done. We ordered burgers and fries and a selection of drinks. I ordered a cherry lime-ade, then paused. My bathing suit still held the memory of Storrie Lake under my robe.

"But please - hold the ice!"

January 02, 2007

Polar Bear Plunge Photos

Ah, I don't have time or energy to write the story yet, but here are the promised photos of my New Year jump into the abyss.

I coerce an innocent bystander into taking a Before shot of me. 11 is to my right (left in the photo), and 9 is at my side, my towel boy. I am wearing my Japanese robe, just like a prizefighter!



Storrie Lake was frozen over, so the Polar Bear Club had to ask a backhoe operator to smash up the ice along the water edge! Notice the waiting ambulance...



The crowd gathers! I am somewhere in the throng. 11 and 9 got so engrossed at the activity, and the crowd pushed them aside, so they weren't the best photographers from this point.



The Official Sign:



The swimmers line up to take the plunge:



I'm cold and wet, but happy to usher in a New Year! (That's my mug on the right...)



My Photo

Las Vegas, New Mexico Rocks!