Category Archives: memory

Rock Pools

Nothing can get the heart pounding and the blood racing through one’s veins like a sudden submersion into a pool of melted mountain runoff.  It is also, incidentally, the best known hangover cure for those with stout hearts.  There are reasons societies like the Polar Bear Club exist.

Every year they had a strict tradition of piling into the car and heading out west at the end of September to celebrate Gary’s birthday.  This tradition also included a dramatic over imbibing of Guinness and Jameson the night before.  Needless to say, the much less desired, but also traditional, headache and hangover were part of the package deal. The morning after the night before would begin in the mid to late afternoon, as soon as the first one of the crew had reemerged from their alcohol induced comas and started the rabble rousing. 

Foggy movements commenced sluggishly after the first set of sleep crusted eyes had cracked open, cursed the light, and promptly slammed shut again. A deliberate attempt to block the passage of time and deny the existence of morning lacking a successful conclusion prompted the eyes’ possessor to sigh in resignation and  assess the self inflicted damage while rolling herself over onto her side in preparation for the big move – sitting up. The initiation of such a move must be undertaken with severe caution as the incorrect pacing and progression could inevitably set her head crashing with an intensity to rival an industrial construction site. Once having achieved a lateral prone position it was possible to determine if verticality would be on the present menu. 

Wary of the repercussions, she sat up cautiously and looked around the dark living room, taking a moment to gather her thoughts are recollect exactly why the surroundings were so completely unfamiliar. Memory slowly emerged, as a picture tuning in on an unstable channel and she swallowed twice to determine just how dehydrated she was.  Owen’s house, out west. It was the September holiday and all six of them had traveled out to the small town in which Owen’s family had a cottage in order to celebrate. The paucity of beds had led to a heated World Series of rock-paper-scissors to determine who slept in comfort and who kipped on the floor. Rock-paper-scissors had never been her sport. 

Feeling the approach of a cough, Evelyn tensed with trepidation. No, no, no. Please no. *COUGH* A paroxysm of pain shot through her shattered skull like bolts of lightening radiating from the center in every direction. “Fuck,” she quietly cursed, squeezing her eyes shut and fighting the urge to lie back down and surrender to the eruption; a greasy breakfast and a cup, or ten, of tea she knew were the only solution to her present predicament.

Evelyn stood slowly, first making her way to her knees, then to the back of the couch to find support on her way to a fully upright position. Pausing briefly before moving on, she made her way into the cottage’s tiny kitchen and stood in the doorway inspecting the battleground and formulating a strategy. Tea was her priority but a mug would have to be washed before that would be a possibility. There were pans, she assumed, but where was another dilemma entirely and the thought of rummaging through the cabinets and providing a metallic clanging to accompany the persistent throb in her head was not an appealing option. Her eyes landed on the kettle sitting atop the counter and she made her way there.  Baby steps.

Kettle filled and switched on, Evelyn carefully washed the mug she found sitting in the sink and located both a box of Barry’s and the fresh carton of milk she had purchased the day before. Sitting on the fridge shelf next to the milk was the also newly acquired carton of eggs and packet of sausage. Predictably, the fry pan was under the cabinet. Unpredictably it was easily accessible and required no grand adventure to locate and set on the range. “Phase two complete.” 

Within minutes the smell of frying sausage and rashers permeated the small kitchen creating a sense of comfort deep within Evelyn, as did the warm milky tea sliding down her throat. Fortification

The sounds and smells emanating from the kitchen drew the attention and groggy praise of the other inhabitants of the cottage as they stumbled about moving through their own painful morning-after rituals. At first only grunts were exchanged, but by the time breakfast was half consumed conversation had begun to flow and the plans for the afternoon were being deliberated in broad brushstrokes. The washing up would be left until they had returned. “Priorities, people.”

“The real question is, how many cars do we take.” Jane got directly to the point, probably because one of the cars in question was hers. 

“Two would be far more comfortable than one,” Gary opined.

“Truth,” Evelyn and Owen chimed.

“Yeah, but there’s no way my car will make it. Paved roads only. That’s all it can candle.”

“I hear ya, but do you really want to be smashed in the back of mine with three other people? I mean, I don’t care. I’ll be in the driver seat. Plenty of space for me.” 

Always the conciliator,  Owen proposed, “What about two in the front seat?” When his suggestion was greeted with audible silence, undeterred, he persevered. “Sarah and Jane are small, no? Why don’t you lot sit up front and Evelyn, Danny, and me can fit in back.” Crickets. “It makes the most sense…” Owen trailed off and concentrated on using the last bit of his sausage to mop up the egg yolk that remained on his plate.  

Piled into the back of the car, windows wide open for the curative fresh air, they left the village and headed out onto dirt track country roads. Stone walls zipped past the car – only one – windows on both sides, unbroken as far as the eye could see but rimmed on the top by a seemingly endless expanse of green rolling hills. The road, barely wide enough for one car, let alone two, was actually a two lane local “highway” and as a result Gary would have to pull to the side, nearly scraping the left flank of the car on the low wall to make room for the passing vehicle coming from the opposite direction, Sarah and Jane, tucked snugly into the shotgun seat,  visibly shying away from the approaching impenetrable barrier. Owen gazed thoughtfully out the window as Evelyn dozed, her head resting on his shoulder, and Danny and Gary sang full throatedly along to the Stone Roses blaring on the car stereo. 

As the hour wore on the landscape rose and the road became bumpier eliciting profanity from the six sufferers in packed into the small car. Making one last turn off the road, the car slowed to a stop in front of a gated path. Danny jumped out of the car to investigate the status of the lock. After fiddling with the latch for a moment or two, he shrugged and returned to the open rear window and the expectant face of Evelyn. 

“No go. We’ll have to hop it.”

“Excellent.  Then let’s go!” Evelyn cracked in a brave, if slightly fabricated, tone as she crawled clumsily out of the back of the car and made her way to the rear, thumping her fist on the trunk hood which obligingly popped open. Sarah, Jane, and Owen came around the back of the car to help her drag out the supplies. Owen, overseeing the cooler “… for safe keeping”, snapped back the lid and extricated six cans from the reserve, taking one for himself and passing out the other five to the group. In unison the six friends popped the tops of their hair-of-the-dog and lifted the cans into the air, “Slanté!” A cacophony of gulps, sighs, buuuurps, and aaaahhhhhhs! followed.

Squinting into the dull light of the grey Irish afternoon, Evelyn surveyed the landscape, the craggy hills and damp grasses dotted with slate colored slabs and boulders. She felt a chill run down her spine and a thrill pass up it. While Owen grabbed six more cans from the seemingly bottomless stash in the car’s trunk, everyone else climbed the low stone wall and started the hike up to the ultimate destination, carrying the necessities of the afternoon: bags of crisps, towels, and a blanket for the ground should they find a spot dry enough to deploy it. Upward they hiked, the cool air making Evelyn’s ears tingle and sting before settling into a dull numbness. The wind stung her eyes and she squinted against the assault wondering, not for the first time, what degree of insanity was required for this venture. Hugging her towel close to her chest, Evelyn bent forward into the wind and looked down at her boots as they made their way up to the destination – the rock pool.

Destination acquired, even Gary and Danny, the most stout hearted of the crew, hesitated, looking down into the black depths of the water. The pool was unfathomably deep, the water black in a whole no more than ten feet across and fed by the mountain runoff. Over one side of the rock pool stood a large, flat rock protrusion which could, would, and had, function as a diving board into the abyss. Busying themselves with a variety of tasks, not strictly necessary but solid delaying tactics, each member of the crew turned inward to prepare him or herself for the moments to come – testing the wind; setting the towels away from the possible splash radius and debating the accuracy of the estimated measurements; warily eyeing the rock structure from which they would jump; assessing and commenting on whether the sun, “that smarmy bastard”, would make an appearance; rigging a rope line from which to suspend the beers that still wanted cooling into the water.

Stripping down to one’s skivvies in the late fall mountain air is a test of will power, but nothing like the steel nerves it takes to fling oneself off of rocks, easily five meters in the air, into the icy cold and watery abyss waiting below.  

Clad only in her bra and panties, clothing stashed with her towel safely away to provide a modicum of warmth after the ritual was complete, Evelyn looked down into the pool where Owen still paddled and around the perimeter where Jane, Danny, and Gary, slightly blue in appearance to her eyes, laughed dripping with water. Sarah had opted out – she always did – and lay on the grass on the outstretched blanket dozing. “Come on, Evie,” Owen beckoned from the pool. He was laughing at her hesitation. She knew it. The degree to which she cared was, however, up for debate. “It isn’t going to get warmer if you wait longer, ya know,” Owen taunted. Evelyn stuck her tongue out at him.

It was impossible to back out now. There she stood, on the precipice of the moment and it had to be taken. Each year she wondered to herself why she opted to continue with this ritual, why she allowed her better judgement to be swept aside by the insanity of the moment. Was it just so that she could say she had done it? Was it a cult-like ritual guaranteeing her in her superstitious mind another year of solid friendships with some of the best people she had met in her short lifetime? She stood, looking down while knowing she should not, closed her eyes, and whispered a near silent “fuck it” before tossing caution to the wind and leaping off the slab into the frigid water.

As she plummeted below the surface she experienced – or perhaps only thought she experienced, she couldn’t be sure – the queer sensation of her heart stopping momentarily in her chest. Eyes open she looked up at the circle of dim light that illuminated the grey afternoon in the world above. Silence. Peaceful silence and beauty. This was why she did it. Under water for no more than the span of a few seconds, eternity extended outward from this moment in time. Endless. She no longer felt the chill of the water as it enveloped her entirely. She no longer felt the after effects of the night before. She no longer suffer doubts. Her thoughts were as clear as Waterford crystal and she floated back to the pool. 

Resurfacing, she was reborn.

Leave a comment

Filed under adventure, fiction, Ireland, memory, travel

Outward Bound

Rocky, Nancy & Dan

Much to my chagrin, I found myself deposited on my own isolated island in the middle of the Everglades, a muggy, mosquito infested little slice of nature. Resigned to spending a night alone in this dreamland – a nightmare of my school’s creation – I spread my mini-tarp half way between the the shore and the line of mangroves behind me, stuffed my sleeping bag inside the mosquito netting, and settled the bundle on the waterproof haven I hoped I had created – Oh, please, don’t let it rain! – before I brought myself down to the water’s edge, journal in hand, fighting the urge to make the worst of my predicament. Surly teen that I was, I rebelled against the very notion that I had be forced to spend a week in a swamp, learning “to use cooperation to solve group problems” and “sensitivity and respect for others.” I was freaking sensitive enough on my own without some idiotic organization telling me how to behave!

I perched on that shore prepared for my night of seclusion fielding mixed emotions: after three days trapped in canoes with classmates, I reveled in the silence as I watched the sun set over the marshy terrain, but as dusk encroached so did my desire to be indoors away from the vampiric insectoid-companions beleaguering my solitude. My skin had grown three inches thicker with layer upon layer of sunscreen, sand, sweat, and repellant, so under the netting I went, daily journal requirement fulfilled with a flourish as I scribbled, “gorgeous sunset, but this sucks” in the middle of the damp pages of my bedraggled composition book.

The sun sets early in the winter months. My night would be never-ending.

As I lay in my netted bower, fingertips raised above my head in the deepening darkness to prevent the aggregating antagonists from puncturing the barricade I had erected around my tender, if somewhat begrimed, skin I thought, yes, this is what hell feels like. I could see miniature mosquito morphology landing on the net, multitudes. Waiting. Waiting for me to sleep and relax my defensive front. Then they would strike. Piercing my protective layer, sucking my blood in spite of the net.

Contemplating this fresh hell, I turned my head aside to find I was not alone. A small, masked bandit of the rodent variety squatted not four feet from my face, rubbing his tiny hands together, observing me observe him. Cute, I thought. I had no food. I had nothing he could want. I knew it and he knew it, but I was an oddity yet undiscovered in his terrain.

“S’up?” Why not? There was no one else to hear me talking to him. Seemingly startled by my greeting, he scampered off into the bracken behind me as I returned to my meditation on the delights of swamp life.

A faint rustling sound emanated from the void and I craned my neck to witness the approach of my recent acquaintance accompanied by his (or, to be fair, possibly her) much larger companion. Both stood in the spot he alone had formerly occupied, rubbing their tiny hands together, observing me observe them.

“Brought a friend this time? I still have nothing for you.” They blinked. In unison. “I’m really not much of an exhibitionist, folks…” More blinking.

Fingertips still holding the ‘skeeter screen aloft, I closed my eyes and hoped for sleep. Day break. The break of day. If I didn’t break first.

Eyes open again and a third had joined the crew. It’s a freaking hoedown, I glumly thought to myself. “I’ll call you Nancy, and you Danny Boy, and you,” I said pointing at the largest one, “you’re Rocky.” Apparently offended by my spontaneous musical outburst following the naming ceremony, my three voyeurs turned tail and returned to the cover of the undergrowth obscured by the night’s blackness.

Exhaustion overtook me and sweet sleep swept me into a dreamless daze.

Time is difficult to measure in an unfamiliar environment. How long had I been sleeping? I wasn’t really sure, but I woke with a start to the startling sound of screeching. Blood curdling screams. Disoriented and suppressing a rising panic, I lay still, motionless, in the dark. Behind me. The noises came from the opaque murkiness behind me. As I listened to the night noises I realized they originated from where the raccoons had retired. Rocky and his gang were going at it. Frisky raccoon festivities in full swing, the shrieks, howls, yowls, and squeals perforated the peace of the place.

Hands over my ears to block the sounds for what felt like years, my frustration mounted. Stuck in the humid heat, the odor emanating from my unwashed body stinging my eyes, exhausted beyond memorable recognition, I wanted to shout. I wanted to scream. I wanted to sob.

Instead I laughed.

As the sun brightened the sky to a dim grey and the clouds became visible in the pale light, the noises dissipated. The raccoon party disbanded, presumably each to his own den and I emerged from my cocoon, wearied and worn but amused. I opened my grubby but mandated memoir of the disastrous affair, turned to the next open page and scribbled, “beautiful morning, but this sucks.”

Leave a comment

Filed under adventure, ancient history, memory, travel

Musically Transported

Broken_CDs_by_Mikkaa87

It was always music, and not the sense of smell, that brought her memories closest to the surface of her conscious mind. Her playlists acted as time machines as she felt herself transported back through her memories and experiences to those moments when her inner soundtrack played. One song could stir-up the past in an explosion of emotion and a visceral recollection of a singular event in her life, or it could bring back the thoughts, sensations and perceptions of a period of time, a string of individual events that were all intricately tied together through the temporal tapestry of music.

She sat in a quiet alcove, earbuds carelessly pushing into her sense of the present, and was suddenly slapped across the face with the past, whipping her attention from the here and now and dragging her back 5 years in fractions of seconds. The library before her faded from her mind and was replaced by an image of a crumpled heap of desperation practically prone on the polished pine-wood floor of an empty room—the largest of the house—no indication of the furniture that used to be present excepting the tumbleweeds of dust and cat hair that had long collected where the vacuum hose could never quite reach. Beside her lay a dustbin, caught mid-sweep and half full of the remains of the life that had once been lived in this room.

Her stomach summersaulted within as she sat up, absorbing the scene before her eyes: an empty house occupied solely by ghosts of past conversations and the soft plaintive voice sounding through the stereo speakers. She wiped the tears—both shed and unshed—from her eyes with the back of one dirty hand and reminded herself that to live was to move on, to get past this moment in time, to never be conquered by the actions and attacks of others.

Unaware how much time had passed since the moving truck had pulled away, she knew only that time seemed to extend out interminably in the darkness before her causing waves of panic to ebb and flow through her mind. Swallowing back pride and nausea in equal measures, the woman got to her knees and then her feet, walking out of the room to locate the last remaining clock in the house, the electric blue light glowing from the kitchen stove.

One hour. She had one hour before she needed to collect the children from their grandparents’ house and bring them to a newly father-free dwelling. The baby would understand nothing but the raw emotion dripping from his mother’s heart; the child, however, she would know. She would realize and the mother needed to clean the room that had once held father’s computers, TVs and gaming equipment so she could encourage her daughter to create a new space designed just for the children, a playroom in which all of their joys could obscure the memories of past tension.

Walking back into the empty room, the woman picked up the broom and swept the remnants of the past into piles to be collected and thrown out.

Leave a comment

Filed under ancient history, memory, parenting, romance

The Choice

love belly

image by Adam Selwood

 

Fingers splayed wide and palm protectively pressed to her belly, she stood, shocked into silence, staring at the stranger before her, a stranger who, until moments before, had been her husband. Her eyes were wide and surely her jaw was dropped—that’s what people said happened in moments of utter disbelief—as the cyclone whirled inside her head, bouncing thoughts around haphazardly, collecting unrelated debris and shattering existing intellectual structures in its path of mental deconstruction.

Surely she must have felt this storm rising; nothing comes from nothing, there must have been warning signs that she ignored. But while the tempest swirled across her mental landscape, outwardly she made no movement, no sound, perhaps not even a blink of her eye as she stood riveted to the spot where she stood, looking at the man she thought she knew.

Regaining awareness of her physical body, she groped blindly behind her, right hand still protectively shielding her belly, and found a dining room chair with her outstretched left fingertips. She sank gratefully into its stability and closed her eyes momentarily, taking a few deep breaths. He too seemed compelled to sit, as if, perhaps, shocked and, to a certain extent, relieved by his own proclamation.

The argument between them had bounced back and forth over the course of multiple hours; it was approaching midnight and the first iron had been struck shortly before she had tucked her three year old daughter in bed. Neither party was innocent in this battle, both had grievances to air, complaints that had been festering for quite some time—years, she had just been informed.

Exhausted, she needed the battle to halt, not forever—she knew that was an impossibility—but long enough for her mind to readjust to the latest thrust.

She did not reopen her eyes until she could feel some of the color coming back into her cheeks, until she could again sense the steady heartbeat that thumped beneath her breast, until she felt that words—not screams—would come from her mouth. When she did finally peel back the curtain shielding her from the reality sitting before her, she took in the scene in an objective way.

The house was dim, only one reading lamp illuminated the family room behind her and countertop light shone from the kitchen to her left, the rest was engulfed in a quiet but now peaceful gloom. The yelling was over. There would be no need for more.

She looked down at her hands, resting one inside the other in her lap, curled under where soon her belly would expand to make room for the new life growing within. She imagined those hands holding her baby, caressing a cheek, running them through soft hair, holding a tiny hand in her own—and she bit back on her tears. She was done crying. She was done fighting. She was done trying to change his mind. The choice was now with her and she knew there was no real choice to be made.

She looked up at his face, weary, worn, exhausted—unhappy. How long had he looked this way and she had just not noticed? How long had he been silently telling her he needed to leave? How long had his resentment seethed beneath the surface before it bubbled forth and erupted on her consciousness as it had this night?

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, certain of the truth behind her words, but not entirely sure what that sorrow actually expressed.

He looked at her through red-rimmed eyes—although no tears had fallen it was clear that the emotional turmoil of the night had taken its toll on him as well. “I can’t do this again. I just can’t.” His eyes pleaded with her to understand the feelings he could not find the words to express: exhaustion, desperation, imprisonment, resentment, animosity, indifference, detachment. Her anger of moments earlier dissipated looking into his eyes and was replaced with sorrow tinged with compassion.

He’d offered her a choice, but the choice he had voiced was not truly what he wanted; it was what he felt was the only option he could decently express.

It sounded simple enough, but when she looked in his eyes and saw no trace of love, when she thought back to the things he had said—yes, people say what they regret during the course of an argument, but the rarely say what they don’t mean—when they fought earlier that evening, the choice he voiced was not truly the one he was offering.

His mouth said, “It’s me or the baby. You choose.” But his eyes could not lie, “I don’t want either of you. Let me go,” they pleaded. She could not ignore the testimony of those eyes.

“You offer me no real choice here. It’s not the baby you don’t want. It’s this…” right hand sweeping across the landscape of the house, encompassing the life they had created over the past 10 years. “I understand that. I know you think I don’t, but I do. You offer me no real choice when you tell me that you haven’t loved me for years or that you resent me for being pregnant with our child.” She returned her palm possessively to the baby growing within her. “Even if I were willing to consider your choice, what guarantee do I have that you wouldn’t decide this life isn’t what you want anyway? Then I would have sacrificed this life I have wanted for so long on the alter of your confusion. You want your freedom? You can have it. I’m keeping my child.”

His voice cracked slightly as he spoke, “I never meant to hurt you.”

“I’m sure you didn’t—but you have. I’d like to say that I won’t harbor anger towards you for this, but I will. I’d like to say that I forgive you for this, but I can’t—not yet. Someday I will, but not for a long time.” She looked back down to her hands, wiping the moisture from her palms onto her skirt, engrossed in the action.

Silently he pushed back the chair from the table and stood. “I’m the world’s worst father. You don’t need me anyway.” With that her turned from the room, grabbed his jacket and walked out the front door, closing it gently behind him.

Leave a comment

Filed under ancient history, children, memory, parenting

One Punch

For months he had been harassing me at every opportunity. “It’s just because he likes you,” I was told by every adult to whom I bewailed my predicament. “Boys at that age are funny that way.”

Well, if that was affection it was a damned strange way of expressing it.

Eventually my limit was reached.

As I stood in the junior high school locker room preparing to head out onto the field for soccer practice, Louise approached me: “Josh is out there waiting for you.” It had been a rough day; everything that could go wrong had and I knew I couldn’t put up with the inane taunts of a mean-spirited boy. With a deep breath I nodded at Louise and she squeezed my arm in silent support before I turned towards the exit and prepared to face what was waiting outside.

I had hardly emerged from the dim fluorescents into the dazzling Miami sun when I heard his recitation of all the earlier jibes about my looks and boyishness. I turned to him and quietly said, “Not today, Josh.  Not today.” He barked a cruel laugh at me and turned to his friends mocking my warning. “What’s wrong? Did the girls realize you were in the wrong locker room?”

All the anger and frustration of my day—-no, of my whole week, month, year thus far—-came bursting to the surface and I felt my face flush with heat and rage.

I think I shouted; maybe I screamed; perhaps it was a cry. Whatever  the noise, I lunged at him, knocking him to the ground while his friends watched in stunned silence. I only remember hitting him once before someone pulled me off of him but that one hit had hurt my hand and as I stood, I looked at him lying there on the ground curled up, bleeding from his nose and mouth.

I shook head to toe with fear at my own capacity for rage.

1 Comment

Filed under memory