Friday, November 17, 2023

When It All Changed


November 19th, 2023, the 45th anniversary of the day that the world changed for 10 year old me.  It was 5:45 am and I was delivering the St. Paul Pioneer Press morning edition for the paper route my sisters and I cooperatively worked.  The papers were delivered at the corner of Grand and Cretin Avenues and we would spend ten or so minutes rolling the papers just so, into a tight package that would survive a toss from the sidewalk onto a front step.  I drew the short straw that morning so I didn't get to do the apartment buildings on Grand Avenue.  I trudged off into the pale light of a chilly dawn to go house to house, hoping to get my part of the route done in time to get home and catch Saturday morning cartoons.  I remember there being snow on the ground and being pretty bundled up against the cold, the canvas bag full of papers stiff against my shoulder and my nose starting to run.  I hated doing the paper route on cold days, this day was no different until it was.  Being ten, my worldview was pretty narrow, focused as it was on the denizens of Goodrich Avenue and the surrounding neighborhood or the daily grind of trying to navigate Catholic school as a kid with a lot of questions that weren't always welcome (I'll tell you about that one of these days).  I knew there was a great big world out there and was probably better informed than most kids my age, simply through absorbing information from my parents' conversations and their political involvement throughout my entire childhood.  I wasn't completely clueless about the world, but as a kid, you're pretty insulated from the bad stuff just by being a kid with your mind always being somewhere much closer to home than events across the world.

That cold November morning, as I grumped and muttered my way through my paper route, was the first time I felt horror.  It was the first time I cried for people I'd never met.  It was the last time I looked at the world with the idea that bad things didn't happen.  It was the first time I came face to face with the horribleness of violent death.  As I tossed a paper onto Shapiro's front step, the damn thing unrolled as it hit the door.  Cursing in the way only a kid can, I stomped up the steps to re-roll the paper so it wouldn't blow away.  Looking down at the front page, I saw the worst image I'd ever seen, one that haunts me to this day and a story that would shock the world for years to come.  MASSACRE IN THE JUNGLE - 800 Feared Dead in Mass Suicide.  The photo, taken from the air, showed a primitive looking village of sorts and rows upon rows of bodies.  So many people laying side by side by side, everywhere the camera could capture, there were bodies.  Men and women, young and old, kids and babies and dogs, all laying together like discarded playthings.  I stood, frozen by the image that, nearly fifty years later, still chills me to my core.  I remember sitting down on the top step and reading about the people who followed a man into the jungle. They followed him from their homes, away from their country and into a strange world they thought was going to be paradise to find nothing but squalor, back breaking labor, terror and ultimately, a horrifying night of death.  

I read the article and kept revisiting that front page photo, my brain almost refusing to comprehend what it was taking in, rejecting the words and images on the page.  I burst into noisy tears, sobbing in the cold, dim, early morning light and did not know, at that moment, everything changed.  Mrs. Shapiro never imagined when she woke up that Saturday morning, that she would soon be presented with a weeping ten year old on her front step before she'd had her morning coffee. Alarmed, as one would be, Mrs. Shapiro immediately went into mom mode, asking if I was hurt or if someone had scared me.  It was several long moments before I even realized she was standing there, wrapped in a fluffy robe and slippers, an empty cup in her hand and a look of concern on her face.  It took forever for me to articulate what caused my hysterical meltdown on her front step and I'm not sure that I did much more than continue to sob and point to the newspaper.  She ushered me into her kitchen and removed my hat and mittens, the heavy canvas bag lay abandoned in the front entry as she told me to sit at the table.  I put my head down on her table and continued to sob as though my heart was breaking, because it well and truly was.  I had heard that word, "heartbroken", before but until that moment, I didn't know what it meant to be heartbroken.  Poor Mrs. Shapiro bustled around her kitchen, doing the only thing some of us can think to do in times of distress, feeding the distressed person.  As I sat in the warm kitchen, trying to process the words, images and feelings that had crashed into my world so suddenly and unpleasantly, I watched Mrs. Shapiro cooking bacon and eggs and placing a cup of cocoa in front of me.  The tears finally gave way to that weird, disconnected numbness that comes after a storm of emotions and exhaustion set in.  I only knew Mrs. Shapiro from the paper route, trick or treating and occasional stops by as we raised money for the yearly school marathon, but here I sat at her kitchen table while she made breakfast and tried to make sense of the strange turn her weekend had taken.

After I had eaten a bit of the breakfast she so hastily cooked and drank some cocoa, Mrs. Shapiro asked if I was okay and I honestly couldn't answer.  I had so many questions swirling around and they began to pour out in a torrent of words that I'm not even sure made sense.  She tried so hard to console me but had no answers, she still didn't even know the details that I did, as her newspaper was still lying on the floor in her front entry.  She called my mother to let her know that her third daughter was currently weeping in the Shapiro kitchen and that someone should probably come.  After being assured I wasn't injured or in physical danger, my mother pulled a coat over her own robe and slippers and headed the five or six blocks to the Shapiro house.  By the time my mom got there, Mrs. Shapiro had read the article that had set this emotional storm in motion and appeared on the verge of tears herself, I think she was relieved when mom got there so she could process her own thoughts and feelings without a ten year old witness.

My mother had seen the news but was unprepared to try and explain it all to me at 6:30 in the morning so we drove home quietly, her arm around my shoulders as I had scootched over to her side as soon as she got in the car.  The rest of the newspapers were delivered later that morning by my dad, no one seemed too upset as the news just kept coming.  I remember my parents trying to steer me away from the news coverage and to distract me from dwelling on thoughts of death.  

I sometimes wonder if that story, those images and words I read that morning, changed who I became.  Would I be different now if I hadn't seen that newspaper headline?  I didn't become obsessed with death, I didn't spiral downward, I didn't withdraw from the world, but something did change.  Ten year old me now knew that sometimes people did terrible things to each other, to themselves and to their kids.  As the details of what happened in Guyana emerged, the murder of Congressman Leo Ryan and four others on an isolated airstrip in the middle of the jungle, the insanity of Jim Jones and the incomprehensible actions of all those people, the world recoiled and wondered why.  After that day, and the weeks that followed, I no longer worried about monsters under the bed or boogeymen in the dark because they no longer scared me, I had bigger worries now.  

I suppose this is why I am a news junkie, I need to know what happened, why it happened and what happens next.  Maybe this is why my first career was in radio, when things happened, I was the one with the information, I was the one with the facts and I would be the one to tell people what was going on.

We had the paper route for a couple more years after that fateful day, I made sure to never read the front page until I got home.  To this day, I HATE letting anyone see me cry and I rarely cry in front of people.  Mrs. Shapiro recovered from the shock of finding a neighborhood child huddled on her front steps in the throes of emotional devastation and was very sweet to me every time our paths crossed.  My memories of that day are as vivid as if they happened yesterday, I remain a little morbidly fascinated by the events in Jonestown and still watch the occasional documentary about it.  

I mourn the child who left the house to deliver papers that morning, ugliness and horror crashed down on her in one giant blow and she was never the same after that.  I think she lost her wide eyed innocence, her belief that parents would never hurt their kids, her idea that religion was meant to save people.  She became a little jaded, a little cynical and determined to protect people after that, even though she was ten and had no idea what would come next.  

I carry her with me and protect her as best I can, I feed her joy on a regular basis.  I give her silliness and dumb jokes and the ability to see and celebrate the absurd.  I give her reassurance that the world isn't as horrible as that day and that there is so much good to be found.  I give her simple pleasures like books and big ridiculous dogs, trips to the state fair and hugs from her grown up kids.  She changed, her world changed but she did not drown in the horror of that day.  She found meaning and an appreciation of the life she had and the life she has today.  


Friday, September 22, 2023

Stuff and Things

 I read an article recently that started with the line: "Your kids don't want your shit." and it got me thinking about stuff and things.  It's been eight years since we did the clean out of my childhood home and that experience was at times heartbreaking, hilarious and bittersweet.  We picked through 43 years of memories there and while our hearts were breaking, it is a memory I cherish as it brought back so many things, people and events I had forgotten.  We found mementoes, keepsakes, oddities and treasures; we discovered long forgotten items and some things we had never seen and would never know how they came to be in my parents' possession.

My father's top dresser drawer was a spot we never rummaged through, even as nosy kids. That clean out felt like a violation of his privacy, even after his death.  Aside from the expected items like socks and hankies, was a small wooden box that none of us had ever seen.  Inside this rather unremarkable box was a small treasure trove of his life, and ours.  Some of the items included:

  • A Flash Gordon pin from a gumball machine (my dad's childhood bedroom closet was painted to look like Flash's ship).
  • A button from a St Thomas Academy uniform (his high school).
  • A dance card from a winter formal (my mother's card with dad's name filled in for every dance) represented the youthful beginning of their lifelong romance.  
  • The tiny hospital bracelet from April of 1964 that said Girl-Summers signaled their transition from couple to family with the birth of my eldest sister Jenny.  
  • A folded third grade report card from Nativity School showed how proud he was of Melissa's scholastic achievements.  
  • An embroidered oval patch with the name Henry on it from the stuffed dog I was given when I had my tonsils removed that I had thought lost forever when it fell off.
  • A small red shoe that I recognized as coming from Emily's Strawberry Shortcake doll.
  • A heavy metal dog made from assorted computer components from the 1970s represented his work life in the early days of computer programming.
  • A large caliber bullet from his father's days as a crime reporter for the newspaper.
  • A matchbook from the Lexington, my parents' favorite fancy restaurant, representing the many celebrations, birthdays and gatherings that called for a fancy meal.
  • A card signed by him that proved his unrivaled prowess at family games of Trivial Pursuit.
  • The remembrance cards from the funerals of his father, brother and mother represented his grief at the loss of his original family.
  • A photo of him holding Fiona, his first grandchild, showed how much he loved the legacy of grandchildren and the family that surrounded him.
This small box showed us what my father kept close to his heart throughout his life. The fact that it was not dusty and forgotten, but in a drawer he opened every day meant that this box, filled with small and seemingly inconsequential items remained important and relevant to him until the day he died.  That box had left the family home with him and moved to the small, assisted living apartment that he only spent a few nights in before entering the hospital for the final time. 
While the rest of the clean out involved furniture and collectibles, the good china and the liquor cabinet, these were the items that were the most important.  The tiny and insignificant were elevated to high importance and relevance simply because he saw them that way. 

I have a couple of dear friends on that same awful and wonderful journey with their own parents and I both sympathize and, in a weird way, envy them a little.  The ritual of sorting through a lifetime of things is a huge pain in the ass, time consuming and can feel like a burden, because it is.  At the same time, it is a last chance to wander through their life and your own.  Once you've weeded through the big stuff, the obvious and the heavy, you get to the small and random things that made the most memories. 

I have been slowly going through my own house and I'm getting rid of stuff I simply don't need anymore, mainly because I hate moving them around in an effort to find space for other stuff that I do use.  The kitchen is the main culprit here, the plethora of single use gadgets in a kitchen borders on the criminal or the insane. When you add in the stuff acquired in a burst of culinary optimism, you have a storage catastrophe on your hands.  In tackling my kitchen in recent weeks, I have unearthed a number of head-scratchers:
  • Baking pans (I don't bake that much, it's too precise and doesn't leave room for improvisation without involving math and math is terrible)
    • 4 - 9x13 (I don't have teenagers at home anymore and I need to accept it)
    • 3- 8x11 (am I baking multiple cakes at a time?)
    • 1 - of a size I don't understand
    • 2- 8x8 (again, one?)
    • at least 8 loaf pans (because sure, I bake that much bread)
    • 4 bundt cake pans (I love them and I'm keeping them)
    • 3 glass pie pans (these came from mom's kitchen, which is REALLY weird because that woman did not bake a single pie that I can remember)
  • A hot dog cooker and bun toaster (a gift from one Christmas, this is a seriously specific item with no workable alternative uses)
  • Three, yes THREE gadgets that promised to easily and quickly remove the kernels from a corn cob (because why use a knife, that's for peasants)
  • Four sets of those poke in the end corn cob holders
  • Five can openers (three the bottle opener/can punch and two of the other kind)
  • 2 elaborately complicated corkscrews (we are not wine drinkers and if we do, there's a good chance that it has a screw top...shut up)
  • A camping oven (bought in a moment of delusion that I was going to camp...I did not)
  • So. Many. Food. Containers. (to my credit, I had weeded out the bowls with no lids and lids with no bowls a while ago)
  • An alarming number of flashlights (I blame my beloved for this one, he's weird about them)
  • More bamboo cutting boards than a rational person needs.
  • Two sets of steak knives (because I'm serving steak to a football team on the reg?)
  • Meat shredder claws (they actually work, but so does throwing the cooked meat into your stand mixer for a bit)
  • Two egg poaching cup sets (neither one made a proper poached egg and I had to find other methods)
  • A chip bag heat sealer (trust me, buy of box of binder clips from the office supply store)
  • A truly baffling number of water bottles and travel mugs (STOP giving me drinkware, I'm not even kidding)
Having tackled the kitchen and freeing up an impressive amount of storage space, I tried to pass these culinary treasures to my children.  Both declined as they are not newly out of the nest and setting up their households, they are both well on the way to acquiring their own shit that will vex and annoy them in the coming years.  The next step was to make the offer of my kitchen finds to my friends and the rest of the family (a little tricky because most of my family lives well away from me) and got rid of a few, but not many, of the culinary treasures.  Lastly, the local Buy Nothing Facebook page (that I started for EXACTLY this mission), and within a day nearly everything was taken.  This is the secret, just offer up the stuff and the universe will take care of it.  I tried doing a garage sale once...never again.  I do not have the patience, the money is marginal and I just want stuff gone.

I don't collect anything, thank goodness.  We had to figure out what to do with my mother's collection of teacups with saucers, her Dickens Village Christmas decorations and dad's massive collection of historical newspapers (think every major headline from the 1930s to the 2000s).  These were all items we knew were important to them but none of us wanted.  What to do?  That's the really hard question because anything short of saving them as a kind of memorial seemed disrespectful.  Therin lies the rub, we didn't want it, didn't want to throw it away and we couldn't find a lot of takers within the family.  We invited friends and family to come and say goodbye to the parents' house, the site of so many gatherings for so many years and to take things with them.  It may seem macabre, but it ended up as a really beautiful way for the people who loved them to have a physical reminder of the people they loved.  Something they can walk into a room, look at or pick up and remember a specific moment in time, an event or just a slice of the past that makes them smile.

I will continue on my personal quest to thin out my belongings, fortunately I (think) I have time.  I don't want my kids to have a huge amount of stuff to go through, but I actually DO want them to sit together, turning odd items over in their hands and talking about a specific event, a funny story or just a random memory that the object brings to mind.  I plan to leave a box like my dad's for them to find, I have the beginnings of my own small treasure box and didn't even realize it until recently.  Clearing out a lifetime of physical items and all those memories is painful, wonderful, happy and sad. It's a fine line, I guess, but one we all will walk eventually.