Cousins, California, and Christmas itself…

Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Hello. In case you were wondering, exams went well, except for one. Then after many hugs, and fending off the last wisps of stress, I boarded a plane to Iowa. Of course, I do not live in Iowa, but my family was there already with my Mom’s side at the Wasserbahn Water Park. (What a place!) Thus began my vacation of lots-of-people-for-not-long-enough. I did see my cousins, of course, and it was a good time. Since United didn’t get my bag to me on time, we had an adventure to some nearby outlets to buy me $70 worth of clothes for which I will be reimbursed. There was also an extremely satisfactory Secret Santa, a rendition of “The Twelve Days of Christmas” which we found so entertaining that it is posted on Facebook, lots of Uno and Telephone Pictionary, and much cousin bonding on the couch in the hospitality room which was also Uncle Jon’s room. Poor UJ. We spent a quiet Christmas day at my grandparents in Brookfield, MO, and were up very, very early to get on a plane to San Francisco.

My dad’s entire family is in California, but except for him, the rest of us hadn’t been out for six and a half years. There has been some pretty awful drama which you may know about, and the details of which I’m not going to go into right now. Suffice to say, I’m so thankful we went, and that such a thing was even possible, but it was a surreal experience. We met my Granddad’s new wife, Shirley, and saw lots of cousins, whom I knew I had met before, but whose faces were unfamiliar. Last time I saw my cousin Lorenzo, we were kids and we visited the Jelly Belly factory together, this time he got more cheerful with each of four beers. It has been a very long time. We visited St. Mary’s Cemetery where my Grammy’s memorial is. We all stood around in the grocery store beforehand and said “I have never bought flowers for a grave before. How does one do this thing?” We got yellow because that was her favorite color. We visited my Aunt Sharon in the little house in Sacramento where Grammy and all of her siblings grew up. We drove down to Orange County to see my uncle and aunt and cousins. We went to a beach (a beach!) on New Year’s Eve. There was Bananagrams and a deeply competitive game of Silver Screen Trivial Pursuit.

I’m still sort of in awe that all of this could happen. That we could get on a plane in ten degree weather, and get off to see trees heavy with oranges down every other block. That Mary and I could sit there and watch as Grammy’s sister, my Aunt Marge, and Granddad’s new wife next to each other on my cousin Nancy’s couch making friends. That my family could step out of the car on Partrick Road in Napa, where my dad grew up, and smell the eucalyptus, and chew on stalks of anise. I had not remembered that California was so beautiful. Wherever we went I always felt like we were in a valley, surrounded by mountains that looked like cozy giants sleeping in extravagant positions. I could pick out a rumpled shirt-tail here, the crook of an elbow there. The palm trees that were not pruned looked quite silly—as if they were wearing shaggy fur coats beneath a bad hairdo. I looked out the window a lot.

Yet the trip was not idyllic. I suppose I am too old for that to be possible, but it was more than that. We never saw anybody long enough to get properly comfortable with them, and even then my aunt and her lies seemed to lurk a little triumphantly in the corner of every conversation. And there’s another thing. I think I missed Christmas. I mean, really, where was it? There was that one quiet day at Grandma’s, but I was busy packing. It is a silly thought, but I feel as though Christmas and I planned to meet, but missed each other by a few minutes. That doesn’t mean, though, that it didn’t happen. When I got off the plane from Pittsburgh and walked toward the baggage claim, there was a large group with American flags and signs, waiting for their soldier. I was a little shamed to walk past them in my dress and leggings. I was so obviously not the hero they had come to meet. Then my sister jumped suddenly out from behind them trying to scare me and hug me all at once, and I could feel their smiles at our little reunion, and I didn’t feel embarrassed anymore. That was Christmas. In Iowa, we took a cousin picture wearing light-up necklaces. That was Christmas. In California, we drove down the road in our cramped rental car listening to Simon and Garfunkel, and George snored on my shoulder. That was Christmas. Last night driving back from the Kansas City airport the stars above me refused to come into focus. They stayed icy and soft no matter how I squinted, so I closed my eyes and went to sleep. That was Christmas.

Christmas is no less than a promise fulfilled, an expectation realized. We are told every year that Christmas will come again. It does. “When we are faithless, he remains faithful.” He does. “For there is born to you this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”  And He is.

A Haphazard Winter Tears Christmas Entry

This morning I woke up to go to my eight-o-clock and looked outside to find that it was snowing heavy and windy. Tramping through dry, slippery winter without a hat sounded unappealing, as did Civilization class, so I stayed in bed. Already you and my day have been properly introduced. Isn’t she lovely? At nine I went to Brit Lit where I blinked my way through “Gray’s Elegy” and Christopher Smart’s cat. As I was walking out, Dr. Brown stopped me, and said that I’d seemed so tired lately, was taking fewer notes, and did not seem to be concentrating very well. Was I getting enough sleep? I said I was just ready for the semester to be over. Then I hurried away and tears sprung from some hitherto unknown reservoir of weariness.

I called my mother just to ask about a novel and she heard my panic. I did my French homework, and began to calm down. I walked over to the SAC to pick up a package from home. On the outside was written in sharpie “Dear Alice, Don’t cry in the mailroom. Mom.” I was startled. How had she known? It wasn’t as if she’d sent the package in the last twenty minutes, and all of this fatigue had only hit me today. As I walked back to MEP I wondered, was there something inside so touching, so personal…? That wasn’t like my mommy. Then I remembered something she’d mentioned several days before. She was only joking, saying that now I wouldn’t feel left out while all my friends were opening their big fat care package ordered by their parents for a campus fundraiser. Of course. She did not expect tears and melodrama, she expected laughter and good sense. That was the mother I knew and loved.

This afternoon I sat in the lobby with friends, and just happened to look up my house on google maps. Then I looked up my grandparents’ house,  then Karen’s, then Caldwell… I gave myself a virtual tour of home. In fact, I even tried to drive home from school using street view, but the going was a little slow. So I just switched back to my house and stood in the middle of Scott Avenue, spinning in circles, watching the summer leaves shading my front porch race by again and again. It was almost as good as the real thing. Well, not almost. Just sort of.

As everyone else is beginning their Christmas season, we here at Grove City are entering our stress season. I already have friends studying behind locked doors, and I myself am contemplating who exactly would be a good jailer for my computer. Maybe Katie? Anyhow, true to form, I’m not worried about exams, but I hate them just as much as everyone else. They haven’t begun yet, though… On Saturday night I went to a lovely Christmas party with lots of families. There were about seven different kinds of soup for supper. Then we went caroling and had a gingerbread house competition. I wished I was nine years old again, sliding around in sock feet with a sparkly Christmas sweater and my hair falling into excited, sweaty wisps about my face.

Then last night were the candlelight services at the chapel which are famous, and rightly so. Lots of people from the community come, touring choir sings, the Christmas story is recited, and then everyone lights their candle and Harbison Chapel’s sanctity seems to be consummated yet again as the organ swells and we all sing Silent Night. At “Christ, the Saviour is born; Christ, the Saviour is born” as everyone lifted their candles in solemn unison, and Liesel and I snorted back laughter, I forgot my constant wish that Christmas would arrive faster. Why wish for something you already have?

So to summarize this jumbled entry: Don’t cry in the mailroom, Alice, because in eight days you will be on a plane zooming toward the dear sister you haven’t seen since August, your tall baby brother, your parents, and assorted cousins, aunts, uncles and grandparents. Also, go ahead, be nine years old with pink cheeks and a sugar high, for “Christ, the Saviour is born!” Happy Christmas, goober. Study hard.

Ridiculous

Today, I am very happy. My dad will be here at three, and tomorrow I go home for Thanksgiving, which I have never been so thankful for. Also, the English Department has a teacup collection. And I’m taking good classes next semester. THEREFORE, what follows is a deeply frivolous entry which you may not want to read. Seriously. You might just want to skip it.

WHAT WAS YOUR:

1. last beverage: Milk

2. last phone call: Karen…well, not quite. See, Karen and I don’t call. We voicemail.

3. last text message: never…

4. last song you listened to: Hay un amigo en mi…

5. last time you cried:…I honestly don’t remember, and I watched two tear-worthy movies yesterday.

HAVE YOU EVER:

6. dated someone twice: No.

7. been cheated on: I prefer the word betrayed…

8. kissed someone & regretted it: No.

9. lost someone special: Yes.

10. been depressed: Not seriously.

11. been drunk and threw up: No. Wouldn’t be a very attractive look on me.

LIST THREE FAVORITE COLORS:

12. Yellow

13. Purple

14.Red

THIS YEAR HAVE YOU: (2010)

15. Made a new friend?: Yes. Many of them.

16. Fallen out of love?:  Probably.

17. Laughed until you cried?:Almost…those handshakes

18. Met someone who changed you?: I think so

19. Found out who your true friends were?: Yes. Or more like..decided.

20. Found out someone was talking about you?: Not that I remember…

21. Kissed anyone on your fb friend’s list ?: No.

GENERAL

22. How many people on your fb friends list do you know in real life: Everybody. I’m really relatively picky about it.

24. Do you have any pets: Well, there’s Tigg the cat, but we’re rarely on speaking terms. Does George count? He’s cute.

26. What did you do for your last birthday: Teased my hair,waved a knife around,and screamed about blood. Then I hugged lots of people.

27. What time did you wake up today: 7:40- my 8am class was cancelled

28. What were you doing at midnight last night: Watching Toy Story 3. The end of it..the heart warming part.

29. Name something you CANNOT wait for: Three-o-clock

30. Last time you saw your Mother: October 24

31. What is one thing you wish you could change about your life: Nothing,really

32. What are you listening to right now: the fridge humming, and dear hallmates getting ready to leave

33. Have you ever talked to a person named Tom: Pretty sure I have

34. What’s getting on your nerves right now: Nothing. I’m in a beautiful state of mind.

35. Most visited webpage: Facebook. This computer is terrible for my health.

37. Nicknames: Not many. A-girl. Aliche.

38. Relationship Status: None.

39. Zodiac Sign: Taurus. I think. Somebody who cares want to check that for me?

40.He or She?: She.

41. Elementary: Caldwell

42. Middle School?: Caldwell and that one infamous year at Penn-Griffin

43. High School?: Guess. This is a hard one.

44. Hair Color?: brown with peroxide

45. Long or short?: A little longer than I would prefer right now.

46. Height: 5′ 9″. Average height for a man. And I am not a man.

47. Do you have a crush on someone?: Probably not. It’s debatable, but I choose not to debate it.

48: What do you like about yourself?: My waist. Don’t touch it.

49. Piercings?:ears

50. Tattoos?:  No. But someday I want to get henna all over my body.

51. Righty or lefty?: Right handed.

52. First surgery?: Never

53. First piercing?: My ears.

54. First best friend?:Mary

55. First sport you joined?: Haha. Silly.

58. First pair of trainers?: That’s a weird question. My mother wouldn’t even remember.

RIGHT NOW:

59. Eating: Maddie’s gingerbread cookie!

60. Drinking:  nothing

61. I’m about to: Clean my room. It’s gonna be so great.

62. Listening to: Didn’t you already ask this question? Or did I dream it?

63. Waiting for:Three o’clock.

64. Want kids?:  Many

65. Get Married?: mmmmmm yes.

66. Career?: Mr. Powell’s replacement.

WHICH IS BETTER ?

67. Lips or eyes?: Eyes.

68. Hugs or kisses: I’m such a hug kid.

69. Shorter or taller: Taller. This is a very important issue in my life.

70. Older or Younger: Probably older.

71. Romantic or spontaneous: Um, can he just be himself?

72. Nice stomach or nice arms: How about both?

73. Sensitive or loud: This is dumb. I’ll choose after I’m married.

74. Hook-up or relationship: Neither?

75. Trouble maker or hesitant: Neither. At all.

HAVE YOU EVER :

76. Kissed a stranger: No…

77. Drank hard liquor: I’ve…eaten it!

78. Lost glasses/contacts: No. Just my keys.

79. Sex on first date: No.

80. Broken someone’s heart: I seriously doubt it.

81. Had your own heart broken: No. It’s pretty tough stuff.

83. Turned someone down: Not directly…

84. Cried when someone died: Yes.

85. Fallen for a friend: Hahahahaha. No. I’m more the enemy type.

DO YOU BELIEVE IN:

86. Yourself: More often than is wise

87. Miracles: Yes, usually

88. Love at first sight: Such a belief would wreak havoc on my life. So, no.

89. Heaven: Very much

90. Santa Claus: I believe in my mother…

91. Kiss on the first date: First date?

92. Angels: Yes.

ANSWER TRUTHFULLY:

93. Had more than one bf/gf?: No.

94. Is there one person you want to be with right now?: No. For the first time in a long time.

95. Did you sing today?: Not yet…

96. Ever cheated on somebody?: Only in Mafia

97. If you could go back in time, how far would you go, and why?: I wouldn’t.

98. If you could pick a day from last year and relive it, what would it be?: Tomorrow. Of this year.

99. Are you afraid of falling in love?: No. I like it a little too much, actually.

DID YOU READ THAT? I like you. I promise a grave, weighty entry next time around.

Changing my Mind

Within the next month I have two term papers due. For Brit Lit, I was going to write about George Herbert for my daddy, because I like him, and for Civilization I was going to write about characterization in the medieval mystery plays. It was all decided, then I put away the ideas and forgot about them. But now warm, compact things have been happening which are forcing me to learn one of those wuthering life lessons college so eagerly shares. I am learning how to change my mind.

It all began several weeks ago when Dr. Brown was teaching the mystery plays. She was talking about the role of guilds in the plays’ production and performance and that was when this sort of hazy glow began. At first, I couldn’t really tell where it was coming from. It certainly wasn’t the powerpoint, and I didn’t think it was Dr. Brown herself. Maybe it was her words. Yes, that was it, they were  shimmering visibly in the blank semi-circle at the front of the room, busily building a medieval village out of their own translucent gold letters. I watched the mussed organization of the little whoville take shape. Clattering bright wagons, laborious heirloom costumes, then the strange timbre of one voice projected loud over a silent, crowded street. “…the piece was then judged by the guild, and if they approved it, he became a master, a member of the guild. Therefore we have master…piece…” And that was when the singing started. I knew exactly where it was coming from this time. A soft, angelic cooing, right from the center of my chest. The village in front of me picked up the pace. The master masons (masters of pieces!) ran round behind their wagon half in and out of costume, clutching treasured bits of script and calling to their overwrought apprentices to “Make haste!” There was a smell in the air as if everything had just been dragged out of the attic, and every villager was taking short, arid breaths, and thinking colorful, interested thoughts. I felt a whelming sense of scarlet and brown belonging. It was magic. I wanted in.

So, I basically had to change that particular thesis. I had already had my original, boring topic approved, but how could I write about characterization, for goodness sakes, when there was a bustling village inside my head? So I came up with a very correct, and secretly exhilarating thesis, spent quite a while emailing back and forth with Dr. Dupree. And…then it was approved. And I rejoiced.

The paper for Dr. Brown is tremendous. It is not long in reality, but it casts a huge shadow. I’m not frightened. I love all papers without exception, but everything about it must be beyond my highest standards, and that includes the topic. As for Herbert, who I had planned to write on, well, he is dear, but there is someone else. He is a comfortable cousin, whose company and wisdom I appreciate,  but John Donne is my lover. If you have ever read any Donne, you will consider that a highly appropriate image. “We can die by it, if not live by love,/And if unfit for tombs and hearse/Our legend be, it will be fit for verse;” I realize he is quite dead, and wrote every poem for a woman other than I, but such separations mean nothing. “Love, all alike, no season knows, nor clime, / No hours, days, months, which are the rags of time.” You laugh, but “For God’s sake hold your tongue, and let me love,”  “For love all love of other sight controls,/And makes one little room an everywhere.” Humph. So there. And I haven’t even mentioned “To His Mistress Going To Bed”. In comparison, George Herbert is “Most poor:” and “Most thin.”  “He is a crazy brittle glass,” “A broken altar,” who merely “did sit and eat.” I cannot “love both fair and brown.”

Of course, I am being quite silly, and it has been fun, but be assured, I am really not throwing Herbert out with the bathwater. I promise. It’s just that Donne has found his way into my eternal soul and made himself comfortable there, or at least his words have. “Wilt thou forgive that sin which I did shun/A year or two, but wallowed in a score?/When thou hast done, thou hast not done,/For I have more.” I am not a poet, and these are words I could never write, but, at the same time, they seem to have been born of the most secret, quiet part of my being. “Batter my heart, three-personed God…/Except you enthrall me, never shall be free,/ Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.” That is almost worthy of ink and needle and permanence on my skin.

Herbert is home and dinner and small, palmable books. He is “a ragged noise and mirth,” and “a box where sweets compacted lie.” But…I got a ninety-five on the Donne quiz today. He and I are meant to be. The two are brothers, though, in a sense. My two metaphysical darlings…I will write about them both, mayhaps. I do know I have changed my mind, (or rather Donne has, or God,) but I’m not sure what to. We’ll see. Dr. Brown will tell me what’s best. I’m flexible.

Home

This weekend I did everything I had planned except my homework. I did laundry for free, ruffled my baby brother’s hair, ate sushi, ate chikfila, ate my mother’s cooking, drove all around Greensboro on my lonesome singing as loud as I could, had a sleepover with my best friend, and went to see the kids with whom I used to act  beast their Shakespeare. That was all great, but my primary activity was hugging people. I am always hugging people wherever I go, but this was different. One-armed hugs, spinning hugs, hugs where you scream into each other’s ears, and collapse into each other’s arms, and hugs where it’s just cozy. So many endorphins. Walking into school and hugging one person after another after another until you forget who you’ve hugged and who you haven’t. That is coming home, my friend. Where you hug, and eat, and still have time to think.

But now…I’m back. I’m back at school. It is not home but it is partly so. It’s a halfway house for kids like me. Kids who are neither here nor there, who can vote but not drink, get married but not rent a car, whose paper soul is beginning to rip down the perforated line as huge invisible hands tug it gently in the simultaneous directions of Greensboro and Grove City.  Because now everybody I have to love is no longer in one place. I have to drive hours and hours to complete my rounds. Ah, well, thank God for long, cramped car rides, because now there are hallmates to be hugging.