Light Fuse — Get Away

Lordy, I love the 4th of July! What’s not to love? Fireworks — picnics — homemade ice cream — kids allowed to play with matches AND explosives at the same time! Groups of people getting together to witness to their oneness as a family, a neighborhood, and a nation. And you don’t have to dress up or buy anyone a present! YOUR being present is the gift.

And you can count on this summer holiday. It’s a fixed point. I get a big kick out of a locker room story my husband told me years ago. At the end of a patrol shift change meeting, one of the younger deputies asked, “Hey, guys — when is Cinco de Mayo this year?” (I’m hoping he was the only one wondering about that!) No such worries about the 4th of July. It is serenely independent. I doesn’t give a damn about following a weekend or making itself convenient for you, me, or the Teamsters Union. It’s THE FOURTH OF JULY, for Pete’s sake — plain and simple. It’s in YOUR face as much as it was in King George’s — although to a lesser degree. You’re just gonna have to work around it.

My earliest 4th of July memory comes from the early 1950’s. Our family was invited to a nearby country club for dinner and a fireworks show. I recall none of the specifics — only the feelings — that this was a very big deal, or honor, or both. Dad and the other men played golf all day and at supper time their families were invited to join them to “dine” at the club. I recall a lot of thought and fuss about what we’d wear. It was important that we look good. Mom had to get my older sister and brother ready to go, as well as me! I felt special. I was only 4 years old and this was my first “event.” I was bathed and dressed in a crisply ironed cotton dress, with a matching hair ribbon, and wore freshly polished white shoes. Mom looked beautiful in her spaghetti strap summer cocktail dress, cinched in at the waist, the full skirt poofed out with a can-can petticoat. She wore sparkly chunky clip-on earrings and a matching bracelet. Right before she loaded us in the Chrysler Imperial, she gave her platinum blonde coif a huge blast of Aqua Net hairspray, hoping to keep herself as fresh and perfect as possible in the humid summer air. She tucked her red Revlon lipstick into her purse, tucked us into the family car, and we were on our way. It was so exciting!

It was a classic buffet lawn supper — a chef or two in tall white hats, the kind of hat that Chef Boyardee wore in his picture on the cans of ravioli that Mom bought at the IGA each week. There were twinkling lights and tinkling ice cubes –chatting and polite laughter. The men looked so dapper in their summer sport coats and ties. My favorite buffet item was the dessert: dixie cups of Sealtest ice cream, complete with a small wooden spoon wrapped in paper. The best part was the lid. When you pulled it off the cup, on the back as a picture of a movie star! Gee whiz — kind of like baseball cards, but cooler! Once you licked off the ice cream you might see Gary Cooper or Dick Powell, or a beautiful lady like Elizabeth Taylor or Doris Day smiling back at you. These famous faces added real class to the event for a 4-year-old. I was dazzled.

When supper was over we took our seats on the fairway for the fireworks show. And what magic! There was a “chunk” sound below, then a sparkling trail going up, up, up — and suddenly a glorious spray of color and light in the night sky. So pretty! I had never seen anything like it. And these miracles kept coming! I was delighted in every way. Everyone was. The crowed murmured “ooh” and “aah” in unison like a thrilled greek chorus. It was beautiful. It was heaven.

Then suddenly — horror! Another sparkling trail went up but at the top there was a terrible explosion and a big round flash of harsh white light. It terrified me. Had something gone wrong? No one screamed — a few people laughed. I was confused. More shells went up and they were pretty, but then another glittering trail tricked me with a dreadful white explosion. I began to feel afraid. What would happen next? I started to cry and put my face in my mother’s lap. I wanted to look so badly — but what if there was another explosion? Mom told me to look up — it was so pretty — it would be all right. But I couldn’t. And when I felt brave enough to peek, sometimes another bomb would explode. There was no sense to it — there was no warning. Why would someone do something so mean? Why wasn’t it always pretty? It seemed cruel to me. I kept wanting to look, trying to look, hoping for that glorious light — but the bombs were too much for me. Then show was over and it was time to go home.

I felt so ashamed. My mother told me to look and that it was all right, but I couldn’t. I didn’t understand the terrible bombs. I couldn’t look. And it would be a whole year until I could see those beautiful lights again! I was angry and sad. I loved and hated that show. What a loss, I thought — what a loss– all because I was afraid of what might happen next.

I read online you don’t see those bombs at fireworks shows anymore. I learned those shells were called “dago bombs” — yep, there’s a story there — and now they’re illegal. Back in the day, perhaps they added to the excitement of the show. Maybe they were a nod to the Revolutionary War, to the “bombs bursting in air.” And this was the fifties! No one worried one bit about damaging children’s hearing, or triggering PTSD in all those World War II vets, or even offending Italians! Fireworks shows — and sensibilities — are kinder and gentler these days. Dago bombs are against the law. A thing of the past. You just don’t see them anymore.

Or do you?

Now that I’m an old lady it occurs to me that life itself is very much like that 1950’s fireworks show. Lovely things happen — “Will you marry me?” “It’s a girl!” “I got the tickets!” “I love you.” “We’d like to offer you the position.” “I cannot EVER thank you enough.” But sad to say, there’s just no law against dago bombs. Into every one of our sweet little lives a few dago bombs will fall. “It’s cancer.” “I just can’t live with you anymore.” “There’s been an accident.” “There’s a problem with your account.” “We believe it was suicide.” Any day that starts out with a burst of hope and gratitude could end in an explosion of joy — or dread. And we really just never know, do we? We might begin to worry. We might begin to fear what might happen next.

Gather ’round children — here’s my take away this 4th of July.

When beauty comes to you, enjoy it. Reach out and take in as much delight as you possibly can. Celebrate with tears of joy. Revel with gusto. It’s perfectly okay to ooh and aah in appreciation and gratitude, and it’s much more fun to do this with a group! Let others celebrate with you. Let others love you. Savor every moment. Wonder with delight what the next beautiful thing might be. Look forward to finding out! Above all, take a moment to be grateful you are here to see it.

And when the bomb comes, the blast will shock you. It will be hard to speak for a moment or two — or days — or weeks. You won’t understand. You will cry. Other people will not notice your fear or grief and you won’t understand that either. Sometimes you may even hear them laughing, and it will make no sense. You will feel very alone. Then dear one, look around for a comforting lap. Someone to listen. Lean in and rest. Cry even more, and try to look up — when you begin to feel a little brave. And then, perhaps you will remember something that was beautiful. You were so lucky to see it. And eventually you might realize this: it’s just a show. Most of it has been quite pretty. It’s been beautiful. A group or friend can help you here, too.

My husband tells me he plans to put “Light Fuse — Get Away” on my tombstone. I like that. Yes, I am a serial enthusiast. But I hope I have learned something in this mayfly-long, fever-dream life I have been given. It comes down to this: Life here has something to do with light, love, and beauty. This is what is real, though at times it’s difficult to see. You will be afraid sometimes. You might even start to fear what’s next. Ask for help when needed. Nap when you can. And one thing more: keep looking up.

A Dialogue with God

A dialogue can be a conversation, a writer’s device, an exchange of ideas, or a teaching tool.  Experience has shown me a dialogue with God is all 4, possibly at the same time, and definitely not for the faint of heart.  Over the past 40 years I’ve had many dialogues with God — some mundane (as in “please don’t let it rain on the picnic”), some ecstatic with joy (these usually feature tears), some beyond desperate (more tears — but the hopeless kind), and some just listening (as in, what am I learning here?). 

O’Connell Youth Ranch

The following recollected dialogues concern a little boy I met 35 years ago at O’Connell Youth Ranch.  OYR is a level 3 lock up facility just east of Lawrence.  It’s a home of sorts for troubled boys — troubled by family situations, circumstances, the children’s welfare system, and sometimes trouble with the law itself.  I worked there evenings as a tutor. By day I was adding elementary certification to my teaching degree, a slog of 45 credit hours at KU.  Back in those days, the only thing “on line” was the laundry — one had to physically attend classes on the hill.  The principal at my children’s elementary school suggested I apply for the job at OYR and I jumped at the chance.  He was on the OYR board and had created the position there, using “homebound education” funds.  We needed the cash and I wanted the experience.  My husband worked days and he could mind our kids until bedtime.  I was lucky. It was a good fit.

The little boy was Billy. He was 10 years old when he came to OYR.  His trouble wasn’t the law.  He was a “failed adoption.”  Billy had fetal alcohol syndrome.  This impairment creates a disability currently called  ID — intellectually disabled.  At the time it was EMH — educable mentally handicapped.  Billy also had anger issues.  Billy and his younger brother had been adopted together but a few months later the family decided they didn’t want Billy after all.  He arrived at OYR the day before Thanksgiving.  The very next day, Thanksgiving, he arrived at our house.  As I welcomed him, I pulled off his stocking cap and he looked up at me and gave me a delighted grin. He was adorable. I can still see that happy smile. It was along the lines of love — or shift — at first sight.

We often hosted OYR kids on the holidays.  Some boys, the ones with families, got to go home for a few days; but the boys without homes, and the young, idealistic house parents (whose own homes were often in Texas or New York) had no family nearby.  It seemed simple to us to just invite these folks out for Christmas dinner, Easter dinner, Thanksgiving dinner,  or our 4th of July Picnic.  We had a pretty big dining room table, and our own extended families were back in Chicago.  We were familiar with lonely holidays. After a year or so it seemed right that we should be Billy’s support family, the place where he would spend his school holidays — it would give him some continuity and the house parents fewer kids to watch over the school breaks.  Finally, it made sense that he just come live with us as a foster son.  He was 12 and our daughters were game.  But it was just such a huge step.  I didn’t want to mess it up, quit halfway, or ever “send him back.”  How could I commit?  I knew I wasn’t up to it.

“It makes sense, God,” I said one day, “But I know I can’t do it.”

“Aha! You are absolutely correct. That’s what grace is all about,” came his quick and clear reply.

Billy moved in with us a few months later.

Billy and a kitten — note glasses!

He took well to country life.  We got him a bike and he loved to fish.  He loved the animals we had (chickens, a horse and pony, a dog and some cats) and he adored being outside.  He tenderly bottle fed and raised a litter of abandoned kittens, spending his own allowance money on the formula.  He did well in school.  He was active in Special Olympics.  In high school he got a job sacking groceries at Dillon’s and banked his paycheck every week.  Steve suggested he try Wrestling, telling me Billy only had to know 2 or 3 good holds to do well.  He made the team.  His junior year we helped Billy find and buy a car. Billy arranged to drive a neighbor boy to school to help pay for the gas.  He even got and wore glasses — something he said he would never do.

“I’m grateful,” I said to God one fine summer day.

God didn’t answer. But I am pretty sure she was smiling.

On his 18th birthday, Billy drove to school, on time as usual,  but he didn’t come home.  Some worried calls and connections on the police force told us he was seen driving around town with a carload of pals.  We found out he didn’t show up for school or work that day and that he had emptied his bank account. He called us two days later.  He was in the Mass Street Dairy Queen parking lot, out of gas and out of money.  The friends were gone too.  I went to pick him up.  Steve took the car to gas it up and Billy drove home with me.

He was silent for a few miles. Suddenly he piped up from the back seat, “People can be pretty bad.” We rode on in silence for a while, he reliving his adventure and me hoping to find the right words.

“They sure can,” I agreed, cracking my window a bit.  He smelled as bad as he was feeling! “Tell you what, when we get home, just take a shower and get some sleep.  We’ll talk later,” I said. I was glad he was safe. I hoped he’d learned something helpful. “That worked out okay,” I muttered to God and myself. But again, God just listened. He was being supportive. He knew what was coming.

Billy went back to work and school but things were different after that.  He wanted to see his mom.  God hinted (no dialogue needed) that Billy had been told since he was 5 years old he could “do what you like when you’re 18.”  So we arranged for him to meet up with his mom.  She worked at the Denny’s on Metcalf as a waitress.  She was open to seeing him.  They visited more on the phone and suddenly he wanted to go live with her. She was open to that too.   It was 3 weeks until high school graduation.

“Can he finish high school here in KC?”  I asked her. It was Billy’s senior year.

“We’ll look into it,” she said. 

Billy moved away the next week.  I was happy for him — sort of. It was a quiet summer. But then in October he called out of the blue.

“My mom’s crazy!” he said.  “I’m gonna go live in Milwaukee with my sister.”

“Did you get to school?”  I asked.

“No,” he replied.  “We couldn’t find it, or something.”

I asked God to keep him safe.

I think I got call waiting.

Within the year Billy called again.  The sister was crazy too.  He was going to come back to Lawrence and finish high school.  He could get SSI but would need a payee.  Steve agreed to be payee on one condition — Billy must be in school or have a job.  Billy returned and got a small rent controlled apartment in Lawrence.  He enrolled in school and had to repeat his senior year.  He was included in a KU special education graduate program called the “self determination project.”  They taught the kids how to make their own way and make their own decisions.  This included sex education, and they showed the guys how to put on a condom, using a banana for “practice.” 

 “Hmm,”  I told God.  “I’m sorry but I can picture that condom covered banana on the nightstand right next to the creaking bed!”   

“No comment,”  said God.  She was mostly just listening.

It didn’t matter anyway.  That spring Billy graduated high school at age 20 and a few weeks later a female self determination classmate named Tricia moved in with him. The following spring she had a baby girl.  They brought the baby out to meet us one night, but Billy complained the baby cried an awful lot, especially during their favorite TV shows..  That made him mad. With all the excitement of life Billy didn’t have time to find work and his school days were over.  He was on borrowed time with Steve.  He was still collecting SSI.  Steve had to follow through.

“I can’t be your payee anymore, Billy.  You’re not looking for work or training for a job. I can’t help you buddy.  Let me know when you get a job, ” Steve offered.

But Billy never got a job.

After that, Billy began to slip away.  We heard the baby was placed in foster care.  The state tried to reintegrate the baby with Billy and Tricia but eventually their rights were severed.  Then we heard Tricia’s Mom moved in with them and Billy couldn’t handle it. They broke up. Billy dropped out of sight.  Another year went by. One day I got a call from Topeka.  I could hear a baby crying in the background and a man’s voice hollering, “Shut up!”   It wasn’t Billy hollering — Billy was telling me he was heading to Arkansas. He’d heard there was work there.

All I could say was, “Okay Billy.  Keep in touch!”

But to God I said a lot more, sometimes with tears.  “All those years — all those people doing so much, working so hard to help him,”  I said.  What a waste, I thought.  So much for  GOOD WORKS.  I wasn’t mad or sad.  Just humbled.  I quietly gave it all to God.  Just let it be.  “I don’t know what to think,”  I said.

 God didn’t either, I guess.  He didn’t say anything.

We heard nothing for 7 years.  But one day the phone rang.  It was Billy!  He was living in Wisconsin.  He’d been bouncing around the country, finally finding work with a carnival traveling all over the south and Midwest.  All the heavy lifting and long hours had hurt his back, and when the carnival pulled out of Eau Claire, Billy watched it go.  He’d found work at a Burger King and was having trouble with his roommate. He wanted to ask his Dad a question.  I thought, Billy, your dad’s been dead for 20 years,” but then realized HE MEANS STEVE.  Steve took the phone.

Billly and the Old Man

Billy began calling more frequently then, and a few years later we got an invitation to his wedding.  He was marrying a girl he met at Burger King.  We went to the wedding and we were introduced to everyone as his parents.  I danced the Mother/Son dance with him.  He wore a baby blue tuxedo and a huge grin. Billy took well to married life. A few years later he brought his wife and (by then) 2 kids to visit us.  He wanted to visit the Youth Ranch and was full of questions.  “Do you still have those red dishes?”  “Do you still make homemade Macaroni and Cheese?”  “Do you still go to the little country church?”  He calls us regularly and always calls on Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and Christmas.  He loves to tease Steve and calls him “The Old Man.” Billy has 3 children now and he’s a night cook at Denny’s.  Tiffany, his wife, has extended family nearby and she works as a supervisor at a factory that makes medical equipment.  Billy’s working on getting disability (bad back) and proving his Cherokee bloodline to receive tribal benefits.  They live happily a small trailer and he has no teeth.  But he still has his sweet smile.

I  dialogue with God these days about many topics but when it comes to Billy we mostly just sit still and feel good . God kindly lets me know we didn’t do anything special and with a smile he reminds me we aren’t going to get any kind of upgrade over this.  It’s just all in a life’s work.   We just met a little kid at a tough moment and tried to help.  And it somehow worked out.

“Thanks for everything you’ve taught us. Thank you for all of it,”  I say softly.

“I know, kid,” God always says.  “You’re welcome.”

January 20, 1970

Just married….off to Kansas City to stay in a real hotel for one whole night!!

The cake mixes were 4 for a dollar and that was a good thing.  I wasn’t sure how many it would take to make our wedding cake.  I was new at this, starting to teach myself how to make food for people I loved.  Some folks have fond recollections of making meat loaf with Mom, or learning the secrets of perfect pastry in a farmhouse kitchen somewhere in the blissful past with a Grandma old and wrinkled and warm.  I’d had none of that – food was important in our family, but it was an afterthought, not an offering.

I was in college – a girl of the first generation in my family to have such a gift and privilege.  As far as food was concerned, I’d been trained to set and clear the table (my brother had no such duties – he was confined to the lawn mower) – but I was never invited into the steam, sputtering oil, and billowing clouds of flour that made up the mysterious world of cooking.  It must have been regarded as beneath me.  My job was to study, get good grades, practice the piano, and marry well.  “Make something better of yourself!” seemed to be the message.  Don’t make sandwiches!

But here I was – 20 years old, preparing to get married against my father’s wishes, living with a girlfriend in a firetrap apartment in a rickety old house – about to declare my independence and launch my life into a trajectory that would forever after be out of kilter with “what we expected.”  But I was elated.  I was going to be me.

Steve and I had been crazy in love since high school.  We were old enough now, nearly adults, and so eager to find our own way.  We had around $300 between us – money left over from summer jobs – so we bought Steve a new set of clothes, got a case of Andre’s pink champagne and a box of kitchen dixie cups, scored 5 dozen daisies from a confused florist, and with what was left over, an off-the-rack wedding dress for me from a fancy department store in Kansas City.  I didn’t know you had to order the dress ahead of time, but the lady took pity on me and sold me one of the ones you try on – a floor model, not too badly defiled with other girls’ makeup and BO.  We wrote some vows (mostly lifted from Gibran’s The Prophet) and found a campus minister willing to preside.  Danforth Chapel was free at 5pm on January 20th – Steve’s 21st birthday.  We were set.

JPEG of a DVD of a VHS tape of a Super 8 movie…from a galaxy far, far away.

The cake mix and a dozen eggs set me back about $3.  I didn’t have any cake pans but by asking around my apartment house I came up with 4 frying pans of different sizes.  It was deep January and so cold there wasn’t enough gas in the old house to bring my oven over 200 degrees, so progress was slow but steady.  When the four larger layers of something like white cake were done I baked a small top layer in a saucepan.  I remembered seeing my mother make frosting out of milk and butter and powdered sugar so I blended them as best as I could and slathered the cake together.  I had a small figurine of Winnie the Pooh so I put him on top.  Since it was Steve’s birthday 21 candles seemed appropriate – and we could sing!  And just for extra dazzle, I scattered a package of small paper American flags on toothpicks up and down the sides.   After all, we’d recently watched the Vietnam Draft Lottery on TV and it felt important to express our patriotism.  Our country was at war.  Steve got a high number – 275, I think – but friends who would attend our wedding were not so lucky.  One already had enlisted in the National Guard.  The other was talking about Canada.  But on this day, at that moment, the war, our lives, and all our “ever afters” were still ahead.  And we weren’t afraid of any of it.

I spent an awfully long time – too many years – being ashamed of that cake.  Not ashamed of its appearance, but sad that our wedding had made my father so unhappy he refused to attend.  I had defied him and was told I had broken his heart.  That beat went on.  Years later, when my mom lived with us, she’d sometimes speak wistfully of the fact that they’d just bought a lovely new home and she’d hoped to have our wedding reception there.  Too bad, she’d say, too bad you couldn’t wait.  It would have been a lovely party.

It took me 30 years to one day suddenly become giddily proud of that cake – I made it myself, I marveled to me. I MADE MY OWN WEDDING CAKE!  That cake was the first meal Steve and I shared as husband and wife.  It was the start of our 51-year banquet we called “our life together,” a jolly run at making something out of nothing.  We liked to do that.  And we were pretty good at it.

The cake must have tasted okay.  There wasn’t any left, and there was no wine left over either.  That January day, those who attended wished us well, and we returned the same good wishes to them.  Looking back, I can see it was our Last Supper as students, as children, as friends.  It was a communion of sorts.  The sacred elements were wonky white cake and cheap pink wine in dixie cups. Soon we would all “go forth” to new lives, personal challenges, and uncertain futures.  But just think: my cake fueled us all for the journey. I am so grateful.