Saturday, October 11, 2014

I miss my sister

The morning started out cold, grey and foggy. By the time I arrived at my older son's house at 11 A.M., the sun had begun to burn away the fog. An hour and a half later, the sky was that deep blue of autumn, the sunlight golden, the breeze cool. As I drove home, I wondered what I could make for dinner that didn't involve going to the store. I wanted something warm and comforting, yet easy. Tuna casserole popped into my mind. I knew I had all the ingredients, so tuna noodle casserole it was going to be. I drove along, singing "tuna and noodles, tuna and noodles" under my breath.

And then I started to cry. Tuna and noodle casserole was one of those dishes that my sister and I had eaten often as children, and one of those dishes that brought back memories and drew us together.

I miss my sister. I know it's crazy, but I do. I miss my sister. As much as I love and appreciate my children and grandchildren, they don't share all my history. They don't have the same data bank of memories. They don't know when the meat pie mixture is perfectly seasoned, just by the smell. They didn't request New England boiled dinner as their first meal when they came home to visit. They don't share my twisted sense of humor.

I know it's not healthy. My sister has proven time and time again that she wants nothing to do with me. I don't understand it. She's said hurtful things, she's gone silent for years, she's blocked me from knowing anything about her life. And yet, in spite of all that, I miss her. It's pathetic, I know, but last April, even as i was walking up the sidewalk to my daughter's house for my 65th birthday dinner, I hoped against hope that Susan would be there, wanting to forgive and be forgiven.

I miss my sister. I want to write and tell her how much, and ask for forgiveness. But I'm afraid. She can be snarky and cruel, I know all too well. When my will power is waning, I pull out the letters she's sent in the past, and read her harsh words, and remind myself that the sister I thought I had was all a lie, a figment of my imagination.

But still, I miss my sister.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

The Red Queen's Gambit



In the winter of my tenth year, my grandmother took me to San Francisco to a wonderful old theater in the heart of the city to see a production of the avant-garde ballet ‘Red Queen, White Queen’.
‘Red Queen, White Queen’ had first premiered in the late Sixties, a Cold War retelling of the classic Brothers Grimm story of Snow White and Rose Red. The political overtones had been over my young head, of course, but I’d been entranced by the ballerinas in their sparkling tutus and satin toe shoes. I’d been on the edge of my seat, scarcely breathing as they twirled and pirouetted; dancing around the enormous red and white chess pieces decorating the stage.
For the next six months, I took ballet lessons once a week at the community center, and every afternoon, clad in a black leotard and pink tights, I ceaselessly practiced plies and forced my growing feet into fifth position.
It was those long-ago memories of music and black ballet shoes that came to mind when the woman walked into the motel office that November afternoon. There was nothing remarkable about her: she was tall, but so are hundreds of others. She was slender: again, not remarkable. Her simple scoop-neck top and tapered black pants could have come from any store here in Cactus Springs, as could the simple canvas slip-on shoes she wore. But there was something about her posture, the carriage of her head and shoulders, the graceful way she moved across the tile floor of the office toward the counter, that whispered to me: ‘that’s a dancer’.
“Good afternoon!” I said cheerfully, smiling at the woman with the gamine haircut. She smiled back, a tentative smile as if she weren’t quite sure how to smile.
“Are you looking for a room?” I asked, already typing commands into the computer to find an available single.
“I think so, yes.” she spoke softly, with a slight accent I couldn’t immediately place. Not from California, I thought.
“Just you?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Is it just you? Do you just need a single room?”
She looked around the office as if to check for others.
“Yes. Just me.” A faint smile flitted across her face, and was quickly gone.
“All right. If you have a driver’s license or other form of ID, I’ll fill out the registration form and get you all set up.”
Now, a cloud crossed her face, as quickly gone as the smile.
“No, I don’t have a driver’s license. Is that going to be a problem?”
Something about the tone of her voice made me take a closer look at her; noticing for the first time the strain around the wide mouth, the bruised look to her dark eyes.
“Well, normally I do require some form of identification; do you have anything I can use? A credit card, anything?
Her shoulders slumped, but only for a moment, before she resolutely squared them again She looked at me with a combination of defiance and despair.
“No, I don’t. But I do have cash; I can pay for the room. Please, if you can’t help me, I’ll need for you to call me a cab so that I can find another place.”
There was something about the way she faced me; masking her fear, refusing to be denied, that impressed me. I made an on-the-spot executive decision.
“Well, since I happen to be the owner, I’m going to bend the rules a little for you,” I said with a friendly smile. “May I have your name?”
“Benedetti. Charmaine Benedetti.”
Hands on the keyboard, I looked up at her.
“Can you spell that?”
She patiently spelled both her first and last name and I typed as quickly as I could.
“Okay. Address?”
A hesitation. I looked up to see confusion in her eyes.
“No. I’m so sorry…” she said softly, distress in her voice. “Does it matter?”
My immediate thought was that she was homeless. Even a town as small as Cactus Springs has its share of homeless, but most of them have found shelter in battered motor homes or campers out in the desert. I hurried to reassure her.
“Well, since you’re paying cash, no. We only really need an address to confirm the credit card. I will require a security deposit, though. Will that be a problem?”
“No,” she said with a shake of her head. “No problem. I quite understand.”
 “All right, Miss Benedetti…”
“Mrs. Mrs. Benedetti.”
“Oh! I’m sorry! So, Mrs. Benedetti, how long are you planning on staying?”
“I’m not sure. Can we start with two nights, and go from there?”
With a few clicks of the computer’s mouse, I finished filling out her meager information and selected a room. We were almost full, so there were only a couple from which to chose, but I thought she’d be happy.
“I have a nice little room, right on the end. Double bed, tub with shower, small kitchenette. Fifty-nine dollars a night, plus tax.  And one night’s fee as a deposit. Will that work for you?”
“That will be fine.” She lifted a handbag onto the counter and rummaged in its depths. When she withdrew her hand, she was holding two one hundred dollar bills.
I accepted the money, rang up the sale, and printed a receipt and a registration form. After she signed the form, I separated the pages and handed her a copy along with the key to her room and her change.
“I’ve put you in number one. It’s just outside the office to your left. Do you need help with your bags?”
Again, the quick glance around the office, as if looking for someone or something.
“I only have the one bag. I believe the taxi driver left it outside the door. It rolls. I should be able to handle it.”
I had already walked around the counter, planning to hold the door open for her. I pulled the door open and stood back to let her exit.
“All right, then. If you need anything else, please just call from your room, or come and see me.”
“Thank you so much, Miss…?” Mrs. Benedetti held out an elegant hand to me. I grasped it and shook it gently.
“Spencer, Sage Spencer. Owner and manager, at your service.”
Mrs. Benedetti smiled, a genuine smile that crinkled the corners of her eyes.
“Thank you again, Miss Spencer. You have saved my life.”
With that, she collected her suitcase, pulled up the handle, and began walking across the circular gravel drive that swings around past the twelve rooms of the motel and encases the swimming pool and lawn area. I knew from experience that pulling a suitcase like that across gravel isn’t easy, but she didn’t hesitate, didn’t even slow down. I watched until she had unlocked the door and disappeared inside her room. Only then did I hurry back inside to call the sheriff.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Gone too soon....

No, it can't be.It can't be true! That was the first thought that crossed my mind when I saw the news. Not him, not Robin Williams. But it was true, it is true. A man so many admired and appreciated, dead, apparently at his own hand. How can this be? Why did this happen?
     I think suicide is an incredibly selfish act. It provides relief to the person killing himself, but delivers so much pain to the loved ones left behind.  And yet..... 
     One of the quotes I've been seeing attributed to Mr. Williams comes from a movie he was in, and it reads like this:  "I used to think that the worst thing in life was to end up all alone. It’s not. The worst thing in life is ending up with people who make you feel all alone."
     I don't know if that's how Mr. Williams felt, if that's part of what caused him to take that final act, but I know how hard it is to rise above depression, how it takes hold of you and makes you think no one loves you, no one cares, there's really nothing left to keep you on the earth. 
     I'll admit to having thought about suicide occasionally in the past. I know people say it's a permanent solution to a temporary situation, but sometimes, just ending the pain is all you can think about. There's no room for considering that maybe tomorrow will be better. Depression convinces you that not only will tomorrow not be better, it will probably be a whole lot worse. Get out while the getting is good.
     I don't know how Mr. Williams died, only that it seems to be suicide. But I know that I'm only still here because I couldn't find a convenient way to do it. Pills, car accident, plastic bag over my head. All too unreliable. What if I didn't die? What if I just wound up being incapacitated, a vegetable left at the mercy of hospitals, a drain on my family? And there was always a worry about who would find me, and how long it would take. I didn't want my children being the ones to discover what I'd done. 
     Although I no longer actively think about suicide, I don't shy from the idea of dying. I sometimes wish I could go to sleep and never wake up. If I found out I had a potentially fatal illness, I might refuse treatment. The truth is, I'm not afraid to die. I guess Mr. Williams and I had that in common.





Wednesday, July 16, 2014

No, but thanks for asking

got a message from someone I know today. It was one of those chain letter types that told me that God was testing me, and that if I forwarded it to 14 people, God would fix two big things tonight in my favor.

Most of the time, I just delete crap like that and move on. But today, for some reason, it struck a nerve. For just a heartbeat, I considered it. I can think of at least one big thing I'd like fixed. I'd like my relationship with my siblings to be healed. But even "God" can't fix that. So, after a minute, I just closed the message and walked away to fix dinner.

The people who know me really well know that I don't believe in a "God" with a capital G. I do sort of believe in a force greater than man, a superior intelligence but not a single omnipotent Being. And if I DID believe in such a Being, I certainly would not believe in one that "tests" people.

What really bothers me is that there are still people out there like that. People who are like sheep who believe whatever they're told, who don't think for themselves, who don't test and question and challenge. How can anyone believe that "God" will reward me for spamming my friends?

When I DID believe in a god, I prayed often and hard. I begged for help with sick parents and sick pets,  I prayed for my family's anger and hurt to be healed, I prayed for help with my own life.  I prayed over and over for the lives of children I didn't even know. And how many of those prayers were answered? Well, it all depends on how you look at it. I'm sure there are those who would say God answered my prayers, but the answer was no. Ha.

I have seen so much pain inflicted on the world in the name of one "God" or another. I have seen the most sanctimonious people in the world say the cruelest things, and I've got to tell you, if I could be God for a day, there'd be a whole lot of reckoning going on.

Is there a point to this? No, not really. Just venting. Thanks for listening.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Deep Thoughts

I belong to several on-line forums. Most of these forums are populated by what I refer to as Deep Thinkers. You know what I mean: the type who constantly question, challenge, ask and wonder about life's mysteries. I aspire to be like them, I really do. I imagine that they spend their days with a dialogue of Deep Thoughts running through their heads, flowing out their fingertips and into the ethers.

I also have a dialogue running through my head, but it sounds more like this: "Man, it's hot out here. Can't wait for winter  so I don't have to wear a bra when I walk the dogs. I'll be able to hide under a coat, instead. Ginger, seriously, how many times can one small dog pee? When I get home, I need to make a shopping list. I know there was something I needed, what was it? If I didn't have to hold this leash, I could get my phone out and make a list on it. Annie! What are you eating? Geez, I hate people who use the street as a garbage can. There's that truck with the expired tags again. I'd report it, but I don't want the bad karma. I hope that load of laundry is dry, I need to fold it, then sweep the floor, and wash the breakfast dishes. Wonder if I have enough brown sugar to bake a batch of oatmeal cookies?"

Well, you get my drift. I used to think that when my kids were grown, I'd have all this free time to "Discover Myself". The only thing I've discovered is that I'm a great time waster and ditherer. I'll be standing at the sink, washing out the coffee pot, and I'll realize the hummingbird feeder needs refilling. I'll get out a pan, the sugar, and a measuring cup, and make nectar. While it's cooling, I'll go outside to get the feeder, notice that the roses need deadheading, or that the cobwebs are overtaking the garage window again.

I suppose if I were a child growing up today, I might be diagnosed with ADD. I like to think that I'm just so creative I can't settle down. I have a half-dozen different projects going on at once, from finishing a quilt I started five years ago, to working on my next novel.In fact, that's what I should be doing right now. But as usual, I couldn't resist checking email, reading the latest on Facebook, and pricing new sheets on three different webpages.

It's not that I don't have Deep Thoughts. I do. I wonder if my mother knows how sorry I am for being short tempered with her that last time we went to the grocery store. I wonder how it is that I can imagine so clearly the subliminal hum of a starship's engine as I walk the corridors late at night. I ask my spirit guide to help me overcome my frustration at the state of my life. And I stare at the computer screen and think, that tiny piece of slightly salty chocolate I just ate is probably already messin' with my mind. Oh yeah. Deep Thoughts.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

I'm going to be sixty-five on Tuesday. And the lilacs are blooming.

I always thought I was born in the perfect season for celebrating birthdays. The lilacs in the back yard would be blooming, the big forsythia bush on the corner would be all decked out in yellow blossoms, and the borders of our huge lawn would be full of tulips and daffodils, gladiola and iris.
 Often, my birthday dinner table would be graced with a bowl overflowing with their combined colors and scents
I was born in Monterey California, on Good Friday. My mother spent Easter in the hospital, and would tell me how my father brought my big brother Joe to visit me. Because children were not allowed in the maternity ward, Dad held Joe up to the window of my mother's room so that he could see his new baby sister; father and son both wearing the yellow sweaters my mother had purchased for them for Easter.
My mother was an amazing gardener. She turned our corner lot into a showstopper, with geraniums and roses and irises and tulips and lilacs and cosmos and dahlias. People would stop and take pictures of the glory. She gardened well into her 80's, and it wasn't until her last months that she reluctantly gave up  Her last summer, even when grass fires forced her to wear a mask when she was outside, she would be out as soon as it was light, watering and weeding. She would come in the house with muddy fingers, using her shirt as a bowl to hold tomatoes or zucchini from the garden.


Maybe it was because my mother grew up during the Depression, where money was scarce. Or maybe it was because she grew up in a large family where hand-me-downs were common and birthdays and holidays weren't a big deal. Whatever the reason, my mother went to great lengths to make every birthday, every Easter, every Christmas, special. She spent hours at her sewing machine, making dresses and shirts and pajamas and robes and doll clothes. She wore the same dresses for twenty years, but we always had new clothes. And it wasn't just a case of clothing a growing family. She could have done that at Sears. No, she sewed, I think, as a creative outlet, in much the same way she gardened.
 I was incredibly lucky to have the mother I had. I tried as best I could to emulate her when I became a mother. And it fills my heart with joy to seem that my daughter is following in her G'ma's footsteps, developing a love of gardening and crafting and caring for her family.









 

I had fifty-nine birthdays with my Mom. She might not have physically been with me for every birthday but her spirit was. Her spirit still is.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014


It was one of those days. You know, one of those days where you look at the bananas on the counter and the zucchini in the refrigerator and just know you have to bake. Waste not, want not, right? So, I made two loaves of chocolate zucchini bread and a dozen banana nut muffins.

"They", the elusive "they", say that you should write what you know. I may not write what I know, but I write who I am. If Sage likes to bake, well, it's probably because I like to bake. And I like to bake.

The recipe for the zucchini bread can be found at the end of the third book in the Blue Moon Mystery series, "Desert Gold",  but I'm including it here for those who haven't yet purchased the book. (and why haven't you?) The banana muffins were made from a recipe found here:http://www.bettycrocker.com/recipes/chocolate-chip-banana-muffins/0ce7024a-b13a-4b18-852c-22f2d89ffb1a. Enjoy!



Zucchini Bread
3 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil
2 cups sugar
2 cups freshly grated zucchini (use the freshest squash you can find. The fresher the zucchini, the moister your bread will be.)
2 tsp. vanilla
½ cup chopped walnuts (optional)
1 tsp. salt
¼ tsp baking powder-
1 tsp baking soda
1 Tbs. cinnamon
3 cups flour

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour two 8x4” loaf pans
In a large bowl of mixer, beat eggs until well blended. Slowly mix in oil and sugar. Add zucchini and vanilla and mix to combine. In a separate bowl, stir together dry ingredients. Add dry ingredients to zucchini mixture, mix well. Divide batter into prepared pans. Bake on middle rack of oven for 60-70 minutes, or until toothpick inserted close to center comes out clean. Cool on rack for 10 minutes, then remove from pans and continue to cool. Bread will firm as it cools. Best cut with a serrated (bread) knife.
*To make Chocolate Zucchini Bread (a great way to sneak vegetables into a kid’s diet):
Add ½ cup unsweetened cocoa (NOT Dutch processed) with the other dry ingredients.