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Rest in Peace, Anna Wolford

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anna.jpg

Memory is a capricious thing. We often regret the things we don't remember, wish we didn't remember the things we do.

My memories of my grandmother are, like most memories, mostly random snapshots and impressions that don't really add up to a person. Many of them revolve around breakfast, as my grandmother and grandfather were both notiorious early risers (much to my consternation when I was 12). I remember the smell of oranges, which they ate every morning, and the smell and sound of frying sausage in the kitchen.

I remember how she laughed -- loudly and often, like most everyone in our family. Her wit was sharp and quick and wouldn't let much slip past. She had about her an obvious sadness, too, from a dificult life that most of us couldn't even imagine. Her mother died when she was very young, from an "accident" when her alcoholic father was "cleaning his gun." Her first husband, a gentle man whom she apparently adored, died of a heart attack when my mom was only six or seven. Her second husband -- the grandfather I knew -- was an evangelical minister who ruled over his wife, his four children, and her two with an iron fist. He was a complex and often hypocritical person who certainly can't have been easy to live with.

I remember Grandma once telling me, "You have a lovely back" when I was trying on a dress for the high school senior formal. I was embarrassed; it seemed like such an intimate and old-fashioned thing to say to a teenager, but I was secretly pleased. I still think of it sometimes if I glance over my shoulder in the mirror at my rather ordinary thirty-something back.

Although my grandmother and I weren't close as I got older -- her religion and the loss of mine divided us more than I would have liked -- the memories I have of her are scattered but fond. She was a warm, vibrant woman who should have had an easier, better life even before Alzheimer's took her memory from her. I wish her funeral could have reflected more of her life and the person she was, and I wish I'd said something that day.

Happy Birthday, H.J.!

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Today is Harry Joseph's 30th birthday. Let's be frank, you and I.... He's not taking it well. (I and several friends woke up to this article in our inboxes from the birthday boy.)

OK, I will admit that, even beyond the 30 thing (which I took kinda hard, too), it's not the best day for a birthday. Both of us are sick and didn't leave the house all weekend, despite grand plans of sledding and other snow-related frolicing. We missed out on last night's planned dinner with Jen C. and John, as well as The Scene is Now's CD release party at Tonic*. Then today we decided to cancel our lunch reservations at Bouley since we're still too stuffed up to taste food. And it's cold and it's grey and OH MY GOD HE'S FUCKING TURNING 30.

On the other hand, I don't think he was wrong a few weeks ago when he said he has a feeling the early thirties just might be the best years of our lives.

That, and I made a cake.


*Buy Songbirds Lie (scroll down to the second CD), because it's really great.

Famous Blues Guys

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Happy Birthday, Emily!

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The other night I watched this surprisingly good show called "The Trail Mix" on MNN (for non-New Yorkers, that's public access TV). One of the guests of the week was a fashion designer, who started designing clothes after she lost her job and realized that most of her talents, while useful for "life on the prairie," aren't currently bankable skills.

This immediately reminded me of my friend Emily. If I had a time machine and could beam Emily back to, say, early homestead times, I'm fairly certain it would be a smooth transition for her. She's strong, practical, and extraordinarily resourceful, with a wry sense of humor that would equip her to withstand bear attacks, food shortages, or nosy, sanctimonious townsfolk. Plus, she can quilt like nobody's business -- here's a picture of beautiful Mr. Quilty, which she made me:

Have a great birthday, Em, and come visit us soon!

Miscellany

I'm coming out of a lengthy dry spell with reading. I was beginning to think that the web is destroying my attention span, because I would start one book only to get distracted and begin another. Now I'm reading two, but they're both so good that I have high hopes for finishing them.

One is A.L. Kennedy's Indelible Acts, a solid collection of short stories. I discovered Kennedy's Original Bliss completely by accident at the Jones Library in Amherst. It's about a bizarre but strangely moving love affair between a porn addict self-help guru and a woman in a loveless and abusive marriage. Since then, I read another of her books, Everything You Need, which was also good (and briefly made me want to live in a cabin in Wales).

The other is The Sun Also Rises, which I had never gotten around to reading before. Hemingway can knock me out with a simple sentence (Emily describes them as the "essential sentences of purity") like no one else can. "It was amazing champage."

A decent close for the weekend, perhaps. Watch or un-watch some porn. Read a self-help book to kick your self-help addiction. Drink amazing champagne.

About this Archive

This page is a archive of recent entries in the Friends & Fam category.

Dreamlife is the previous category.

Jen Miscellany is the next category.

Teapot Dynamo is Jennifer S-T, a soon-to-be Mom living in Queens, N.Y. Find recent entries on the main index or look in the archives.

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