Friday, May 27, 2011

Better with Age

Another writing sample from my class last weekend...

As a young child, perhaps four or five, I remember someone asking me how old my parents were. I of course had no real idea, why would a child know such a thing? But I assumed I knew. My mother was in her twenties and my father was in his fifties. In reality, they were 32 and 36, respectively, but I had logic backing up my guesstimation. My mother had a beautifully smooth face and raven hair that I likened to one of her favorite singers, Cher, who in my mind was also in her twenties. My father on the other had had light hair and a farmer’s tan like my grandpa. Moreover, he had a mustache. Obviously only men in their fifties had mustaches.

As I got older it became apparent to me that my parents were slightly older than those of my classmates and friends. Being from the Midwest it was natural to have your first child before your twentieth birthday and apparently most of my friend’s parents had. My mother recalls my embarrassment at the fact that they were ever so slightly older than the parents of my peers. I suppose I attributed their old age to them being less fun. My mom especially, she was always less fun. She was the rule maker, and while she denies it, the wearer of the pants. Her mandates were overbearing and absolute: only sugar free products were to be consumed; this included but was not limited to Jell-o, Kool-Aid and gum, no MTV, no Simpsons and no highly processed foods. We had to go to church every Sunday. Compared to my friends, with their young, hip parents, I lived in a prison camp.

As I moved into high school I realized that shockingly, there were people with parents older than mine. Several of classmates had parents in there sixties! I was delighted to discover that now my parents were somewhere in the middle of the pack instead of the old dogs, waiting to be retired. Upon closer inspection, it appeared that my parents weren’t even that oppressive or uncool. They refused to join my high school’s Parent Network, an organization designed for parents to police their teenagers so that punishments could be doled out promptly and accordingly. While I did have a curfew, it was later than many of my friends and I rarely had to ask for permission to attend social events. I was even allowed to go to concerts with boys, on school nights. My mom worked and traveled all over the world and would fly my friends and I to stay with her in various locations. My dad was a marathon runner and helped coach cross-country. He may have been wearing spandex, but he was the only coach to actually work out with his athletes. They both encouraged me to be my own person and think independently. Ultimately, they allowed me to move to London on my own at 19.

Now that I am a grown-up and inching closer to 30 everyday, I believe that I have won the parent lottery. Perhaps the genetic lottery as well. My parents both continue to not only age gracefully but also to encourage me to pursue my ever-changing dreams, wherever they take me. While other parents are hounding their children about marriage and grandchildren, mine have embraced my decision to put that option on the backburner. Even if my mom does it somewhat begrudgingly, she accepts that the only grandchild she’s getting out of me, at least for the time being, has four legs and a tail. My dad, at 60, runs marathons with me and humors me by wearing the goofy shirt I handmade to match mine in order to designate us as a father-daughter duo. They may not always get my sense of humor, but they laugh at my jokes. They continually ask how I turned into such a free-spirited, open-minded, liberal thinking hippy, and all I can tell them is that it’s because of them.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Postcard from the Edge of Inspiration


As my academic career winds down, I have little left other than what I like to refer to as "super electives". These are classes that will have little to do with my professional work, but we are for some reason still required to take. I had intentionally put these classes off and quite frankly missed out on a few that sounded interesting in order to charge through my program. With no time left I made my decision based primarily on time, with some consideration for the level of interest.

This weekend I have "Audio Postcards". I won't bore you with the specifics of the course, but I will tell you that it has renewed my love of putting words on paper (or in this case, computer screen). I spent most of the day yesterday writing and feeling inspired. What follows is a small piece of what was produced.

I know only one story of my grandpa’s time in Europe. It involves him sitting down on a rock to eat his dinner only to find out the rock was a decapitated head. I found this story titillating as a child, I relished in each retelling of it, but in reality I am not even certain it was Grandpa who told it to me. Gram was always the storyteller and Grandpa the keeper of secrets.

Since he passed away six years ago I have devoted a great deal of time thinking about how many stories he never told. How closely he held his cards to his chest. I have longed for one more day, if only to hear one story, be filled with one tiny morsel of a secret. The story I have hungered for more than any other is the one behind the photo album.

Grandpa had this photo album that fascinated me as a child. It was covered in what appeared to be burlap and was small, the perfect size to fit into the pocket of a military uniform. On the cover were two polka dancers, decked out in their leiterhosen, holding hands as they joyfully danced. Inside were tiny pictures of a 20 year old version of my grandpa and my great aunts, my grandpa and ladies that were not my gram, my grandpa standing proudly outside the farmhouse in his uniform. I looked at this album countless times, mesmerized by my grandpa’s handsome features and majestic stature. Intrigued by the scandal of him showing affection towards any woman that was not my gram. But most especially I studied the captions under the pictures, all in German, all words I didn’t understand. Nor did my grandpa, for he had, according to family legend, taken the album off a Nazi solider and made it his own. If I had just one question it would simply be, “Grandpa, who was that man and what happened to his pictures?”