You have to live for the future ‘cause the past will eat you alive. That's something my grandfather used to say, sitting on the porch swing he'd installed himself on the day he retired from the postoffice. He usually had his plain blue trucker had pulled down over his eyes as he leaned back on the swing, gently rocking back and forth, the lulling creaks and groans of the wooden porch in agreement with him. I'd sit there with him, sometimes right next to him but usually on the stool he'd made years ago in his wood shop and set proudly by the front door. Never underestimate the power of what your two hands can build, he'd tell me, teaching me how to use the tools as soon as he deemed me old enough.
"This too is true -- stories can save us." Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried
Tuesday, February 21, 2023
Something My Grandfather Used to Say
Sunday, February 19, 2023
There Were Only Two Seasons
Belted, deep to left field, awayyy back and gone!
She sat alone in her otherwise quiet apartment, watching yet another clip from last year's baseball season. Her team had done well -- they'd played far into October, even though they didn't make it all the way to the World Series. Spring Training had just begun but Opening Day was still forty-something days away.
Not that she was counting.
(She was definitely counting.)
She was the kind of fan that wore sweatshirts emblazoned with sayings like There are only two season: winter and baseball or You're killing me, Smalls. Her favorite movies were Major League and A League of Their Own and Moneyball. She was equally as happy being at the ballpark or listening to the game on the radio. She was a purist in this way -- the TV broadcasters were lazy, in her opinion. The radio team had to be able to bring the game to life in a way that only being there in person could duplicate. She'd sometimes go for long walks with the radio broadcast streaming through an app on her phone and even if she was miles away from where the action was taking place, she always felt like she was right there.
Nothing fueled her like being a baseball fan. Nothing had better connected her to her community, her network of I truly see you people than baseball. From the start of Spring Training every February through sometimes early November when a World Series victor emerged, she felt balanced and centered and focused. Baseball anchored her in her world and infused her with an energy that really faltered from post-World Series November through the middle of February when her ability to hook back into her baseball network re-emerged.
She loved this sport with a passion that felt nearly inexplicable. She'd never been very good at playing baseball or softball, though she'd clumsily made her way through a few games here and there. It wasn't that she had that tactile connection to what it felt like to be there on the field, the adrenaline of hitting the game-winner or the sense of responsibility that goes along with a missed catch, but even so, baseball filled her entire being with a joy that she didn't experience in her everyday life.
The bleakness of winter only compounded her sense of dread that flitted in and out of her awareness during the offseason.
That's not to say that when baseball season started back up that she was flipping a switch from black and white grimness to vibrant, unstoppable 24/7 joy -- but baseball helped recalibrate her more than therapy or yoga or any other mindfulness trick she'd tried.
Baseball was her lifeline out to the world.
When the season went dark, she simply felt more alone.
That's not to say she was totally alone -- she was just more alone. She had amassed a wide circle of baseball pals who were zealots like she was -- and while they sometimes checked in on each other during the offseason, it just wasn't as frequently or as connecting as it was once baseball rolled back around.
So she soothed herself by watching highlight clips from the most recent season or past seasons, historic moments and the like. It amazed her how some of these game-winning moments still made her cry, even after seeing them a hundred times, knowing exactly how it all turned out. Her emotional reactiveness only deepened her connection to herself -- she'd watch a clip of a game-winning moment and it would transport her back to where she was when that scene had played out in real time. She'd close her eyes and remember how elated she was, how energized, how happy she was. She'd remember the hugs or the high fives from when those moments happened in the company of others and she'd remember her phone pinging with excited text messages.
She'd really bask in the re-living of those moments. They, in so many ways, filled up her hope-center, her joy-center, her energetic-center.
Yet, it was also true that many people in her everyday life had no idea she even liked baseball, let alone loved it.
In her everyday life, she worked in advocacy and policy and education. She held space for people dealing with a crisis that they wanted to resolve through systemic change. She was an activist and a writer and a champion for the communities she worked with and the advocacy she did on their behalf. Some of the people she worked with had known her for years and had no idea how important baseball was to her.
Frankly, it's because they never asked.
While she listened to them and worked on their behalf and generated programs and projects and events based on their feedback, so few of them had ever asked her what kind of music she liked or did she have a dog or did she enjoy cooking or what's her ideal vacation. They didn't know how many siblings she had or if her parents were still together or if she was married or if she had children.
They knew what they seemed to need to know about her: where she went to school and what skills she had that could suit their purposes and drive their agendas forward.
Even after years of being very successful in this industry, working with both colleagues and volunteers on regular basis, there was a failure to connect beyond the surface of what brought them into each other's lives in the first place.
And in the very infrequent moment when someone did learn something personal about her, like the fact that she was a massive baseball fan, at least half the time, that person would wrinkle their nose and say, "Baseball is so boring, no thanks."
It was always just that much harder after a remark like that for her respect someone who'd express such an unkindness.
She couldn't tell you why she'd fallen so in love baseball, but she could tell you that the sting of unnecessary commentary about something she'd just confessed was incredibly important to her damaged relationships.
Now in the quiet space, just forty-something odd days away from Opening Day, she scrolled through Twitter, turning the sound way up on the video highlights from season's past as texts from her baseball-season friends started gradually to populate her inbox.
So close, she murmured to herself as she watched another mobbing at home plate.
So close. So close. So close.
Just forty-something odd days until she could return to being fully alive.
First line by Landon Wolf
2023
Virtual Tip Jar: Venmo @sarahwolfstar
Saturday, February 18, 2023
The Apartment
The dog sprang off of the bed with a growl rumbling in her throat. I sat up in bed and watched her move slowly and intentionally towards the room's open door. The hallway was dark. My roommate either wasn't home or was already asleep. Everything felt still and quiet, except for the dog, who continued her guttural noise. The air around me suddenly felt cold, like the air conditioner had just kicked on. It was the dead of winter, though, so I knew it wasn't that.
She must be here.
I pulled my covers up to my chin and watched the dog. He was a boxer/doberman mix who belonged to my roommate's boyfriend and so whenever they came over, my roommate tucked herself in with her man and I tucked myself in with his dog. Only seems fair. He was a sweet dog, even though he shed like a beast.
And also, ever since this new snuggled-in routine of ours began, she started showing up.
My roommate and I had moved into this apartment at the start of the semester. We'd lived in a different unit in the same building last year and had liked how conveniently close it was to campus and liked the layout and liked how chill the building manager was and liked how so many of our friends lived nearby. It was just like being in the dorms, except without any supervision.
While last year, it had just been parties and shenanigans, this year had a completely different vibe.
Because of her.
The dog's growling remained at a steady hum.
I gently called his name but it only made him growl a little louder, every hair on his body standing at aggressive attention. I knew that all he was doing was protecting me. But it honestly scared me more than she ever could.
Have you ever lived in a haunted house?
When I was a kid, I swore my house was haunted -- but living in this place now? I know that was just my imagination -- a real haunting is like this. Objects would move from one room to another, distinct footsteps would be heard in the hall, lights would flicker even when the power was off.
She had a bit of magic to her, if you ask me.
We first noticed her on the third night we were living here. My roommate, her boyfriend, his dog, and I were watching a movie when a picture we'd hung earlier that evening suddenly crashed to the ground. We heard glass shatter and everything -- but when we went to pick it up, it was perfectly intact. All we had to do was hang it back up on the nail, which was exactly as we'd hammered it in a few hours before.
"That's weird," my roommate said before we all shrugged ourselves back to the couch to finish the movie.
Later that night when we'd all gone to bed, the dog had done exactly as he was doing tonight: he started to growl. But that time when I woke up, he was standing over me in a protective stance, as if I were about to be brutally attacked.
That's when I saw her, a shadow lingering in the hallway. I could see the outline of long hair and a flowing dress. She had no legs, at least not that I could see.
I blinked and when I went to focus in on where I'd seen her, she was gone.
Even so, it took the dog another few minutes to lay back down and stop seeming to need to protect me.
The next morning, I told my roommate and her boyfriend about what happened. Her boyfriend got a strange look on his face and said, "I wonder if this is where she lived."
"Who?" my roommate and I asked in unison.
A shiver seemed to travel through his body. "Haven't you ever heard the story of Shadow Woman?" he asked, his voice dropping low, as if he didn't want to be overheard.
We each shook our heads.
He went on. "I'd heard that one of the apartments in this building was haunted," he said.
"From who?" my roommate asked. "We lived here last year and never heard about that."
"You lived on the third floor, though, right? Not this apartment," her boyfriend asked.
"Well, yeah," my roommate said. "But even so, we never heard the building was haunted."
"It sure seems like it might be," I chimed in, goosebumps popping up on my arms.
Her boyfriend nodded while he pointed at me. "Right, whatever happened last night wasn't exactly normal. Like, if just the picture had fallen or just the dog acted a little strange or you just thought you saw someone with no legs hovering in the hallway, that could be a coincidence. But all three?"
My roommate and I looked at each other.
"Pretty creepy," my roommate confirmed a moment later.
Nothing else strange happened over the next few weeks, though, so much so that I nearly forgot anything had happened at all. Then came a night when it happened again -- the dog woke me up with a growl, ready to protect me. Maybe I saw the Shadow Woman in the hallway again, but I couldn't say for sure.
What I can say for sure is that the next day, my roommate and I made a point of going by the building manager's office to ask if he'd ever heard any of the units was haunted. We fully expected him to laugh, but instead, he got very serious and lowered his voice, just like my roommate's boyfriend had done.
"She's harmless, probably," he said. "But she's around."
"You rented us a haunted apartment?" I squeaked.
He paled for a moment before clearing his throat. "Well, you two took a long time to make up your mind about signing the lease. There wasn't another unit available."
"And you didn't tell us?' I squeaked again.
He shrugged apologetically. "Not everyone who lives there, ya know, sees her," he said.
My roommate and I looked at each other, our jaws gaped. Maybe this explained why we'd never heard this rumor before.
"Who is she?" my roommate asked.
The building manager leaned back in his chair. "She was a student, too, like you two. No one's really sure who she is exactly but sometimes people who see her see her hunched over a table, like she's writing a paper."
"Are you serious?" I asked.
The building manager nodded gravely. "The rumor I always heard was that she killed herself."
"In our apartment?" my roommate asked as she instinctively grabbed my arm.
The building manager held up his hands defensively. "Nobody said that. Can't even confirm she was a real human -- like I said, I've just heard the stories. She seems to be a friendly ghost, if not a bit studious," he added with a chuckle.
We were not amused.
The smile dropped from the building manager's face. "Look," he said. "If you want to break your lease and move out, I won't penalize you."
My roommate and I looked at each other for a long thirty seconds.
"We'll stay," she said, representing the results of our silent meeting.
"For now," I added.
And now? It's a few months later and she has become semi-regular fixture in our home. The dog still growls at her. But the rest of us have learned to offer her a sleepy hello and return our heads to the pillow.
I called the dog's name again as a chill runs through me. I'd gotten so used to this that it barely even bothered me anymore. The dog's spell finally seemed to have broken so he scampered back up and curled himself at the end of my bed. If I squint, I can see a figure fading slowly down the hallway.
Her.
I laid my head back down and pulled the covers up to my chin. As I drifted back to sleep, I wondered if we'd ever learn her name.
First line by Meredith Brown
2023
Virtual Tip Jar: Venmo @sarahwolfstar
Friday, February 17, 2023
With Love
“With Love”
for Liam
You almost died
during RuPaul’s Drag Race
on a frigid Friday
night in Boston.
The same cancer
that killed my father
threatens your, life, too
and all I could picture
was my childhood body
rushing, love-fueled,
straight towards
a hospital bed,
stark-white 1980's health
care that left him wired
and tubed in a way
that paralyzed my brothers
lingering in the doorway.
But I wasn't scared.
I ran right in.
I found out
it was time to say
goodbye to you
while I sat
at a brightly lit restaurant
in Cleveland Heights
where I was dipping
my kibbie into its sauce.
I didn't know
what to do with my hands
or my face or my voice,
after that brief phone call
where I'd had the fortune
to turn to my friend, someone
who'd met you
only once, and she let out
a gasp when I shared
this grave news.
Context, though,
is everything, and what
we'd been discussing
was pre-birth planning
and souls and the awesome
power of everlasting love,
the pillars and powers
of all that exists exponentially,
far beyond what our human
brains can begin
to comprehend.
You and I,
we had our moments,
our evens and odds,
our tough disputes.
Your partner is the one
who partnered us,
who brought us into
each other's lives
and left us there
to figure it out
while he mixed cocktails
and set out the snacks
on Drag Race nights
for so many years.
I'll always think of you
snugged on the couch
in my old office, piled
with yoginis guzzling
whiskey in cheap glass
carafes. A singalong
begins, you, our pied piper,
belting out of the classic
I will always love you
while your partner sulked
in a chair outside the door,
impatiently ready to leave
this party you and I
had only just begun.
I'll always think of you
with love.
Set free now
from the pain
of your human body,
attacked by the very same
malignancy that took my father's life,
I spontaneously wrap
my arms tight around my body,
invisible-you I sense in this
embrace as I say out loud,
Thank you, you are loved.
It's quiet here, six hundred
fifty-odd miles away
from where you will draw
your last breath.
I hear that, though,
that final sigh.
I see it pulse
through this
white light --
2/4/2023
Sunday, February 12, 2023
A Safe Space
The girl sucked in a breath and dried her tears, glancing over to her mother.
"It's OK, Shirley," her mother said with a slow, gentle tone. "You can tell us what happened."
Shirley nodded briefly at her mother and then looked over at the principal sitting behind his looming desk, stacked with folders and colored post-its and plastic bins full of pens and paperclips and rubber bands. She'd always been so afraid of this man and of this office, a person and a place you were only sent when you were bad.
"Yes, Shirley, this is a safe space," the principal said in a reassuring tone that more confused the young girl than set her at ease. Wasn't this the same man who had not so long ago yelled at her best friend Margot for running in the hallway or who suspended her friend Kevin for talking back to a teacher, even though the teacher was mean to him first? Was this the man who created the safe space in the school?
Shirley looked at the floor. "I don't want to get anyone in trouble," she murmured in a barely audible voice.
Her mother reached over and took her hand. "It's not about getting someone in trouble," she said. "It's about making you feel safe here at school."
There it was again -- safe. Here, at George P. Barnes Elementary School. The same place where they had to routinely participate in drills that taught students how to survive an active shooter or that forced the teachers to focus on standardized tests instead of simply focusing on learning what the students were interested in and making an average week in the classroom about that. Safe, ha, what a farce.
Shirley looked up and locked eyes with the principal. "Chloe Jackson put a note in my backpack that said, Your dad died probably because you smell bad," she reported, feeling more and more numb with every confessionary syllable.
The principal's eyes grew wider for a moment before he leaned forward and asked, "When did this happen?"
"Two days ago," Shirley said.
"How do you know it was Ms. Jackson?" the principal asked, his neatly folded hands starting to twitch.
"She signed her name," Shirley said. "And I also know what her handwriting looks like because we have been in the same class almost every year." She paused before adding, "She usually sits right behind me in class, because of alphabetical order."
"Right," the principal said, awkwardly clearing his throat. "You have the note?" he asked.
Shirley's mother pulled it out of her pocketbook and handed it across the desk. "I found it in her backpack when I was looking for her lunch bag," she offered as a preemptive means of explanation.
"Right," the principal repeated, this time the syllables dragging out as he examined the torn half-sheet of paper that did, indeed, contain the exact message described. He seemed to read it a few times before setting it on his desk. "You didn't tell your mother about the note when it happened?" he asked the girl.
Shirley shifted uncomfortably. "I didn't see it until she found it," she confessed.
The principal nodded. "Well, I'll need to investigate this a little more before I can make decisions about what actions to take," he said. "I'm just so troubled that this happened, Ms. Jablonka." He paused and looked over at her mother. "And I'm so sorry for your loss as well. This isn't the sort of thing anyone should have to be dealing with during a grief period like you're experiencing. I will keep you informed as my investigation continues."
Shirley felt a bit stunned as she sensed this was the end of their meeting. "Don't you want to know why she wrote this note to me?" she asked, her tiny voice growing stronger with every word. "Don't you care?"
The principal looked at the girl with some confusion. "Of course I care," he said defensively.
Shirley turned to her mother. "Chloe's father is on the school board," she said. "He has a lot of money and so Chloe never gets in trouble, even though she bullies a lot of kids." She turned to the principal. "Did you know that Chloe was a terrible bully, not just to me but to a lot of kids?"
The principal seemed lost for words.
"She's mean. She writes mean notes to a lot of kids," Shirley went on. "She's written other mean notes to me, too, but I usually just throw them away. The only reason we're here today is because my mom found the note and she said we had to come have this meeting. But Chloe, she is mean a lot. And I don't think she's going to get in trouble for this, even though saying my dad is dead because of me and not because of cancer is pretty mean and terrible. She won't get in trouble because her dad will make sure she doesn't get in trouble."
Her mother turned to face the girl whose face was puckering once more as tears started falling again. "Shirley, I'm sure Principal Morris will take this seriously," she said, smoothing the girl's hair.
"I don't even smell bad," Shirley said, her tiny fists now resting in her lap. "I didn't make my father die because I smell bad."
"Of course not, sweetie," her mother said.
"I can assure you I will look into this," the principal said, his voice sounding more and more hollow.
"She's just a mean bully," Shirley said. "That's all you'll find out when you look into this. But what will be different? She'll still write mean notes. Even if you decide to punish her this time, she'll still keep doing it because she's not nice. She'll probably be smart enough not to write another note to me but she'll find other ways to be mean because she knows her dad can yell louder than a little girl like me. He has power and I don't."
"I will speak with Ms. Jackson and her father, if need be," the principal said, trying to regain control of the conversation.
"When you do, will you tell them both that this school is supposed to be a safe space where all the kids and the teachers and everyone actually is safe? Will you tell her and her father that the reason this school will never be safe has to do with people like them?" Shirley asked defiantly.
"Ms. Jablonka, I will investigate the matter," the principal repeated, his once calm face now looking tense.
Shirley stood up quickly, causing her chair to push back on the tile floor and make an awful screeching sound. "Thank you," she said, spinning on her heels and walking out of the office. "Thank you for your time," she heard her mother say as she heard the principal say, "I will be in touch as my investigation continues" as he closed the office door after her exit.
Shirley's cheeks were flushed and her entire body trembled as her mother reached down and held her fingers wide for her to grasp.
"Want to go get some ice cream?" her mother offered as their hands interlocked.
Shirley felt her mother's love course through her as their palms pressed together. "Yeah, OK," she said.
In the car, the girl looked out the window from her spot in the backseat as her mother drove. Everything about the view was predictable and it calmed her down. Later, when the girl and her mother would sit across from each other at Parish's Ice Cream, each with two large waffle cones full to the brim with multiple flavors of their choosing, she would find herself savoring this moment as one of the safest she'd ever feel, just a girl and her mother and a couple of ice cream cones existing in their own trust-bubble that could never be popped, no matter how mean the outside world could seem to be.
First line by Nicole Hatcher
Virtual Tip Jar: Venmo @sarahwolfstar
Monday, February 6, 2023
The Upgrade
One day, I showed up at the ballpark to watch my favorite team, and the staff at the gate said my seats were being upgraded to sit in the dugout with the players. At first, I thought they were kidding because I'm typically the opposite of the luckiest guy you'll ever meet, but, what the hell, if they were beckoning me to follow, who was I to turn it down? So I'm walking along with the guy -- he told me his name was Bruno, like Bruno Mars, the singer? You heard of him? Anyway, this guy Bruno is walking me down to this tunnel I never even noticed before, even though I come to maybe forty games a season and have ever since this ballpark opened back in '94. I'm just walking along with Bruno down in this tunnel and I'm trying to, ya know, make small talk and whatnot but he seemed kind of distracted, so I didn't want to pester him. That is, until we got right to the path that was gonna take me up to the dugout and then Bruno turns to me and, you'll never guess what he said. He said, "Mister, I picked you out of the line because you look almost exactly like my Uncle Donny. No one loved this team more than my uncle Donny and it was actually him who was supposed to get this opportunity, but he had a heart attack and died last night." Bruno, my new buddy Bruno, he got a tear in his eye while he's telling me about his poor Uncle Donny and I patted his arm to comfort him, ya know, but all I could think was goddamnit, I've never been so happy to be a bald-headed bearded-man before this very moment. Uncle Donny, god rest ya! So, Bruno, he tells me that he got permission to have his Uncle Donny watch this game from the dugout with the team to celebrate his retirement or some situation like that and as it so happened, I also just retired, so me and Uncle Donny have that in common, too. Luckily, my ticker's a-tickin', and I been vegan for the last twelve years to make my wife Sheila happy so I don't think I'll drop dead like Donny did anytime soon, but, well, now I feel like I should knock on wood or something... Like I said, I'm not typically the luckiest guy you'll ever meet, so I don't want to put it out there in the Universe that I couldn't possibly fall over dead from a heart attack like Bruno's uncle Donny, but, well, let's just say it's more likely my cat would push me out of a window than I'd have a heart attack. You should see my cholesterol! So anyway, Bruno's all teary-eyed about his Uncle Donny while he's escorting me into the dugout and, I gotta tell ya, I almost did have a heart attack, right then and there, because you ain't never seen a view as pretty as this one. The smell of the grass! The bats all lined up and the batting helmets all arranged and everyone just going about the business of getting ready for the game. Bruno took me over to meet one of the coaches and explains who I am and all the coach said was, "Sorry about Donny," while he kind of eyed me like I was going to rob the place or something. Anyway, Bruno shows me where I can sit and shows me the secret bathroom and I'm just watching the TV guys get set up and the players start to meander in. They didn't really pay any attention to Bruno or me but that was OK. One or two came over to say hi and offer us some gum and, I mean, I don't chew gum normally but I did when a pro ball player handed some to me. I guess if he'd said it was cool to jump off the Golden Gate Bridge, I'd've gladly done that, too, it was just that neat. Anyway, as the game started up, I pulled my radio out and turned on the broadcast -- with headphones because sometimes the radio guys rag on the players and I was just trying to be respectful -- and I gotta tell ya, it was just the most terrific time I ever did have at the ballpark. Bruno, he sat there with me all nine innings and when the game was over, he and I had become so buddy-buddy, I thought he was gonna start calling me Uncle Donny. Ha! Well, I'm kidding about that, but we did get to know each other and he accepted my friend request on Facebook so I guess you could say me and Bruno are pals now. It truly was just the best day I ever did have, and all because I kinda looked like a guy who dropped dead from a heart attack, poor bastard. I saw a photo of Uncle Donny sometime down the line and, truth be told, I don't think anyone would mistake us for the other but, hey, who am I to second guess Bruno's decision? After that day, grass never did quite smell the same to me, either. Just never did smell the same.
Saturday, February 4, 2023
I Know Differently
As the sun rises over the horizon, I pull my collar up to keep my neck warm from the chill. I'm not the sort who prefers the cold but I am the sort who prefers routine and ritual and this daily trek to see you is part of that. Sometimes, though, the rain does keep me away. Cold, though, cold I can confront, mind-over-matter, and even make a game of seeing the smoke of my breath cut through the air as I exhale. This morning's frost makes my breath crystalize but what brings hope into my soul is that cut of sunbeam, slicing through the frigid morning.