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"HIM..."

5/30/2011

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Sometimes I just need reminding that I never really know anything.

Years ago, my sister had been even more unwell than usual; she’d been following a nightmarish, doctor-recommended diet that left her frail and thin. To remedy this, we were learning macrobiotic cooking, and in those circles I’d learned of the upcoming “grand opening” of a new-agey bakery, basically a party. I thought it would be a good way to get my sister out of her apartment for a night, though it was soon clear it hadn’t been my idea at all. 

Neither of us really knew anyone at this event. Now that I’d gotten her out of one door and past another -- a rare and somewhat frustrating feat -- I had no plan other than to basically lay low and observe. But seconds inside, I turned to see my sister standing there with her mouth agape. “Oh my God,” I said, with my usual level of sisterly tolerance, “what’s the matter now?” She was staring far into the back of the long room, where wildly dressed people danced wildly.

Without a trace of embarrassment, she stretched out her arm and pointed directly at the most wildly dressed, most wildly leaping, long-haired man, far off in the center of the action. 

“HIM,” she intoned, stock-still and zombielike. “I want HIM.”

What?

Still pointing, she repeated her words in a trance: “I want HIM.”

I won’t sugarcoat my reaction here, much as I’d like to. I looked from the leaping hippie, clearly young and strong and in peak health, to my frail, plainly attired sister, whose true powers I hadn’t nearly begun to suspect. “OH MY GOD,” I said, “I can’t take you anywhere.” In true big-sister-know-it-all fashion, I stood glaring, taking on the embarrassment I felt should have been hers.

Only minutes later, I had to swallow it all. 

My sister having dutifully put her attention elsewhere, I continued my watch-and-observe tactic and after awhile glanced back to see a shocking sight: the hippie had stopped leaping. In the very center of the wild dancers, he was staring, stock-still and zombielike, at my sister.

It was a moment to witness, I tell you. And obviously a much-needed lesson for a sour bit player like me. 

I apologized to my sister immediately and pointed out that the object of her desire was now looking at her. And I got out of the way. 

They met that night and, after some weeks needed for him to shed various wild-dressing women, went out for the first time. I think it was ten days later that they were married (tofu wedding cake), and they were together for the rest of her life.

So much for big sister know-it-alls. 

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Take a Rocket Ride

5/30/2011

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I used to take the city bus to my college classes. For some people, the bus is an intimate setting -- which can make it a challenge for those who spend the ride pretending they’re somewhere else. Thus, despite the inherent routine, some days on the bus are just different. 

There was the day I sat facing the aisle, watching a gaggle of girls of an age I used to be. And you had to watch them -- they made sure of it, the way that young girls can. Sprawled across the long back seat, they chatted loudly in unsubtle codes and giggled over apparently hilarious secrets. They waved their newly purchased lingerie high enough for even the driver to see. They never stopped moving. Or talking. 

Now I was probably twenty at most, but these girls made me feel old, and burdened by life. Had I ever been that giddy and carefree? If so I couldn’t remember. 

But seconds after the gaggle got off, I noticed an older woman. She was staring at me.  

“Those girls are pretty,” she said finally, “but you -- you could be a STAR. . . .” She intoned that last word with a hint of rushing air, a la
Sunset Boulevard. The other passengers regarded me dubiously. 

I thanked her, to be polite, with a little shrug-eye roll combination acknowledging to everybody else that, yes, clearly, the woman wasn’t quite all there. You gotta love the crazy people, I attempted telepathically. 

The irony stayed with me that as I’d watched the young girls, someone had been watching me, probably with that same wistfulness. Walking from the bus stop, I thought then about how, before long, I would be the age of that woman, that I’d remember her. 

And here I am.

But when it comes to intimate bus rides, for me, this next one is it.

I don’t even know how to write about this person, I love her so much. I haven’t seen her in more than 30 years. I actually never met her, and I don’t remember what she looked like, except that she wore a long, light-colored overcoat and had brown hair. Yet even today her memory could make me cry.

I was on a crowded downtown bus, planning on spending the ride pretending I was somewhere else. When I first saw her, she was making her way down the aisle, her arms loaded with worn-looking bags of all kinds. I noticed she was stopping at certain rows, leaning in and reaching over the seated passengers, encumbered as she was with all her bags. Polite and purposeful, she was tucking something behind each of the window handles. The other passengers seemed undisturbed; no one even touched whatever it was she was leaving behind.

Then she came to my seat. She was young, possibly still a teen, with a soft delight in her eyes. She reached across me, and finally I saw what she’d been distributing: small, folded bits of torn notebook paper. She pushed one behind the window handle without a word. 

She took a seat facing the aisle, settling her bags on her lap. I was across the aisle in the seat just behind, facing forward -- I had a perfect view of her. 

In the seat in front of her, a young mother held her fussing baby over her shoulder. The baby’s face was inches from the mysterious paper girl.

The baby started crying, clearly working up to a wail. The mother bounced the baby lightly, making distracted shushing sounds. 

Behind the mother’s back, the girl sprang into action, searching among her bags. Within seconds, she pulled out a doll. She held it up and -- without a sound, with no hint of embarrassment -- danced it around. The baby gaped in surprise and went quiet, watching the little show. The mother never turned, never knew that her shushing hadn’t worked. 

I was -- who wouldn’t have been? -- instantly smitten.

It was only after she left that I took out her bit of paper. In a childish hand, it read: 

                                                              TAKE A ROCKET RIDE

Whoa.

Clearly this little wandering spirit was pure Light for Sale. A Master in our midst.

I snagged the other bits of paper that I could. They varied, each some little message. But from them you could tell that she actually called herself Rocket Ride.

Swoonworthy.

I know I found Rocket Ride’s messages around the city three times in all, though sadly for me I can’t remember the second. But when I spotted her one winter outside a supermarket, tucking her paper bits (“Merry Christmas from ROCKET RIDE”) into the change slots of a row of phone booths, I ran up to her, babbling excitedly that I was her Number One Fan.

When I saw my first hummingbird, I shouted, “It’s a HUMMINGBIRD!” The result was exactly the same: Rocket Ride fled me, with fear in her eyes.

I saw then that, while Rocket Ride loved everyone, she couldn’t talk to anyone.

I think a part of Rocket Ride lives in me, and in all of us. The part that, if we knew how much we really loved each other, might well implode from the knowing. 

Angels, please bless Rocket Ride. 


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A box in a bag, a bag in a box, and a bag in a box, with rocks

5/30/2011

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I once did some hard time living with my eventual ex and his parents. One day I noticed a few simple items collected behind my ex’s bedroom door, and somehow those items kept calling for my attention. I’d ask the ex why he had those things, what they were for, but he’d only shrug. Apparently they’d just been there forever. I’d look at them from time to time and wonder.

One day it occurred to me to invoke and apply the
names of these items.

A box in a bag, a bag in a box, and a bag in a box, with rocks.

An object poem, hiding in plain sight! The whole impulse toward -- and inevitability of -- language itself revealed! I went racing to the eventual ex, who proved once more why he’d become an ex by remaining utterly unimpressed. 

A box in a bag, a bag in a box, and a bag in a box, with rocks. 

Those words and that discovery uplift me to this day. (And yes, somehow I’m still single.)


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Dandelion Bouquet

5/30/2011

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With screens big, small and everywhere to stare at these days, people seem to be losing their capacity for immediate physical observation, to be forgetting how to be present. And not just those zombified people who run off the road or walk into poles texting.

I hope I’m never one of them -- and not merely for the improved survival odds. 

Even if you haven’t managed a penthouse view, there are rewards in being aware of your surroundings. Those rewards can be lasting, though they may be simple, even small.  

For example, I was once in the right place at the right time to see a bounding grasshopper boing itself accidentally onto a resting bumblebee -- and what a surprise for them both. As they grappled to free themselves I knew I had to stay out of it, and we know who likely won that one. But I’d have missed it had I been tweeting or something out in the field that day.

Then there was the unforgettable moment, two summers ago now, as I was parked with my dogs at the Drift-In ice cream stand in DeRuyter, New York. A little girl of no more than three had been picking dandelions next to the building when her mother called her over and handed her a tiny ice cream cone. She toddled in my direction, ice cream in one hand and dandelion bouquet in the other. Closing her eyes against the stream of sunlight, she raised her hand to her open mouth. Her eyes popped open again as she startled to find herself with a mouthful of yellow fluff. Seeing her mistake, she lightly shook her head, laughing at herself. 

I can’t think of anything worth trading for having seen it.


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    Kathy Hill currently lives a semi-rural life and spends entirely too much on birdseed.

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