May 292012
 

I’m looking for relevance; nothing new there, lately. My pulse, the whoosh of the blood, tells me I’m here, physically. It’s the “Now what?” question that’s gotten hard to answer.

Existence sans purpose is like a train ride to nowhere—taking an interminable journey for no reason and with no destination.

The fickle winds of youth provide fits of relevance—carry us on the eddies and whirls of life toward the next undisclosed moment—toward at least something—often with great expectations.

No pulse-checking when hours are full, absent of despair, when we’re needed and have important things to do, even tomorrow. But Empty Hours and Desperate Hours build gaudy neon signs to advertise and incite my discontent—plunder my stash of purposes.

Empty Hours and Desperate Hours are twins with different aspects. One vacates our allotted time—simply removes us from the hunt. The other feigns nothing, skips all guile, tells us who we’re not, asks us why we’re here, and yawns at its sedition.

I hear the drumbeat from my neighbor’s party and wonder why I’m not there. Would I be relevant if I were?

Purpose in youth is built in, privileged—a rudimentary function of organic nature—if left undiminished by diminished others. But youth is self indulgent by design; cannot anticipate what it cannot imagine; cannot prepare us for the consequences of unheeded self neglect—for the Twins’ neon sign.

The Twins don’t cut deals; just remind us that nothing’s a given. A call from my children to see if I am still alive is a game changer, an unplanned visit a bewitching relevancy enhancer! To talk about anything with them turns off the cheeky sign for awhile. Ah, is that the author of these words!

I felt relevant then, when they needed me—when I needed them for a purpose greater than the next breath of air. 32 years until the second one hit 18—countless more, as it were, if and whenever they needed me. It’s a habit of core relevancy that hooks us; undisputed, a commitment to nurture, protect, teach, prepare—a natural addiction. It’s about them.

And then … as in a dream unfolding …

Our roster of siblings and friends gets short. In unguarded moments we reach for the phone to call someone who will not, cannot answer—who hasn’t had a phone number for … how long now?

In line at the super market I realize I don’t know a single celebrity on the magazine covers. I never read them anyway but I once knew their names, knew they lived in my time, which meant I lived in theirs.

Temporary! That’s the word I neglected—should have embraced so the Twins couldn’t ambush me … challenge me with what, of course, must be.

 May 29, 2012
Oct 172006
 
Child: Mommy?
Mother: Yes?
Child: Why did you just tell someone they can’t sit with us?
Mother: She is a black woman and black people are not allowed to sit with white people.
Child: She’s black?
Mother: Yes.
Child: It’s the color thing again?
Mother: Yes.
Child: Is color important?
Mother: Sometimes.
Child: The color of people is important?
Mother: Yes.
Child: Do black people talk differently?
Mother: Sometimes.
Child: Uncle Alfred talks differently. Is he black?
Mother: Good heavens no!
Child: Are black people bad?
Mother: No more questions please.
Child: Johnny Russell is bad but he’s not black, right? I mean because he sits with us.
Mother: That’s enough.
Child: What are colors?
Mother: You wouldn't understand, honey.
Child: Mommy?
Mother: Yes.
Child: It’s really hard being blind.
Mother: I know dear.
Child: So how will I know when someone is black?
Mother: Don’t worry dear, I’ll tell you.
 October 17, 2006
Dec 202005
 

John Offenbacher
played soccer
everyday he could
in his childhood.
Didn’t do much else at all
but kick a ball
until he met a girl
named Shirl.
That changed everything,
even made him sing.
He didn’t do it well
but he couldn’t tell
and Shirl didn’t care.
She liked his hair.
They got hitched
and now they’re rich
with a little boy Offenbacher
who plays soccer.

That’s all …

 December 20, 2005
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