Thursday, September 19, 2013

*WARNING* There is NO music in this post whatsoever. This is not a funny post. It is not a snarky post. In fact, it is somewhat warm and fuzzy and navel-gazy and bittersweet, so if you're not in the mood, I will understand if you were to skip right over this posting. Thank you for understanding. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- My ex-husband called this afternoon to check in with me about some plans we had made to get together this weekend. We had some sad business to attend to: the three of us--Ken, his wife Jennifer, and I--plan to drive out to Fort Funston to scatter the ashes of our beloved dog, who died Christmas morning of last year. Her death had devastated us all, and we weren't in any hurry to let go of this last real piece of her physical being, which is why we had waited. In fact, we've got an understanding; if any of us, at any time, suddenly feels they can't go through with it, then we stop and do it when we're all ready. After all, this isn't like flushing a goldfish down the toilet: we had gotten this dog as a puppy and had shared her, as our fur child, for nearly fifteen years. (Anyone who has ever loved a pet knows.) When we separated ten years ago, knowing him and his history as well as I did, I figured that, once the dog was gone, he'd disappear from my life, and that would be that: two people who had once loved and pledged ourselves to each other, breaking the tie and walking away in different directions forever. He was not the type to maintain ties with people who were not in his direct line of vision: almost none of his old college friends or band mates were contacted more than once or twice a year, Christmas and birthdays, and none of his exes. When he closed a chapter of his life, there was a very clear line of demarcation; nothing, or very little, spilled over into the next chapters. So, when he said, as we hugged goodbye after walking out of the vet's office, "I want to keep in touch--I don't want this to be the end," I was encouraged. He'd never said anything like this before, in my recollection. And, even better, he was as good as his word, popping in every now and again with a text, an email, a cell phone call. We had gotten together for dinner two or three times for dinner this year already--this Saturday would be number four. We chatted for a good forty-five minutes about this and that, catching up on each others' lives, as we hadn't spoken since before the summer. It was easy, comfortable, two friends catching up, no awkwardness or bad energy between us. Suddenly, about ten minutes before the end of the call, I suddenly thought: "Oh my gosh, I really love this guy." Not in any romantic way--don't get me wrong; I don't want him back as a partner, I adore his new wife, and I especially love how happy and absolutely right they are together--but realizing, for the first time, that we had come full circle as friends...that this was someone I truly cared about, enjoyed talking to, and that I was happy to have he and Jennifer in my life. I am feeling incredibly humble. And grateful. That's all. RM

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Schadenfreude: it's what's for dinner

Fabulous dress: $13 at a thrift store. Fabulous shoes: $120. Ho-yo-to-ho va-va-va-voom bra and undies: $45. Nylons: $4. Finding out you look, dress, AND dance better than the ex-boyfriend's new girlfriend at a wedding reception: priceless.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Prayer Of A Woman About To Go To A Wedding Also Attended By Her Ex-Boyfriend (And His New Girlfriend)

While I am not one given to prayer (what with not being religious and all), I think that, in extreme situations, a little help never hurts. Considering I work in a Catholic church and have been awfully nice and respectful during services for lo, these many years, I think I've earned one free chance at Divine Intervention.
And so, here goes nothing *kneels, clasps hands in prayer*....


Dear Lord....

1. Let me look absolutely fabulous; nay, not a frizz in the hair, not a clump in the mascara, not a hint of lipstick in the creases around the mouth, neither a suspicious stain or nary a wrinkle in the dress, let mar my perfect appearance.

(Also, may the girlfriend have spinach in her teeth. All night.)

2. Let not my usual friendly relationship with alcohol (AKA "truth serum") escalate into an unholy alliance that unleashes the lethal power of my venomous tongue, to share with all and sundry all the gory details of our disastrous relationship. Let not the truth serum cause me to show the full range of my immaturity and do things I may regret later, like dance like a squirrel in a blender (especially during a slow dance. ESPECIALLY during the first dance.)

3. Let not the Law of Murphy dictate that I should be seated at the same table as they, nor put in me any closer proximity than, say, two continents and a long bus ride, for the duration of the wedding and reception.

4. Let me not screw myself up; let not circumstances rattle my composure; let me not make any mistakes singing the hymns, trip over my shoes, or make any embarrassing noises during the ceremony or reception, so that my confidence should be shattered, and I should not end up in a quivering sobbing heap on one of the bridesmaids' shoulders.

5. Let me remember at all times that I am attractive, intelligent, sexy, capable, and above all, worthy of love, despite the evidence to the contrary all around me. If nothing else, let the immortal words of William Shakespeare be my mantra: "I WILL SURVIVE."

6. Let not my usual sunny disposition shew any crack in its veneer; nay, let no misery, pain, or rage show during this happy occasion, at least until I am safely home in bed with a box of chocolates, a bottle of wine, a shitload of xanax in me--and my therapist on speed dial.

I beseech Thee to aid me in my distress, and I promise that I shall return the favor to Thee, shouldst Thou ever end up at a wedding with your ex-girlfriend and HER new boyfriend.

Amen.

RM

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Had my first lesson in nine weeks yesterday. It was rather odd. I had better breath control than before (which surprised the hell out of me--I hadn't expected that!) but my voice seemed reedy, thick, inflexible. It was interesting, from a purely scientific position, to observe how nine weeks had affected me. I was able to remember quite a bit but it will be a while before my voice is where it was before the break. Still, I was relieved that I remembered as much as I did. (I swear, I figured I'd have to reinvent the wheel. That can happen if one gets off track vocally.)
I should qualify--it has nothing to do with my teacher: I've been quite lazy; I've only sung at church, so haven't stretched my cords out the whole time. Still, it was gratifying to know the technique my teacher had given me held up through the lean time.
It was odd because my teacher had had a health scare during the break and so we were both kind of feeling our way tentatively through the lesson. Still, mainly thanks to him, it went well, I think. 
It will be interesting to see what happens the next couple of months--stay tuned...

Drogging

I can't believe nobody has come up with the term "Drogging" before (OK, forgive the naivete...haven't actually checked, cos, hi, I'm DROGGING, dammit!).
Drogging=drunk blogging.
You'd think this would be all over the internet considering 85-90% of blogs likely are drogged....just sayin'...or is it just me? Gawd knows most posts read like...OK, I'll shut up now...
RM

Thursday, April 11, 2013

If you want to make an apple pie from scratch....

....you must first invent the universe.
--Dr. Carl Sagan

Hoo, doggies, am I ever finding that to be true this week.

I'm writing...but in the process, I'm also having to re-teach myself all the skills I thought I had learned in school, but, it turns out, I somehow managed to either forget--or forgot that I never really learned, and simply skated by with as little actual work as possible...which pretty much describes my college years perfectly ("Oh, that I had applied myself to homework for my other classes with the zeal I spent on my musical training!" she wailed, hand dramatically draped across forehead). So, in addition to writing, I'm learning how to do research online, format my writing so that an editor won't snicker at me (OK, not as much), syntax, rhythm, grammar--all of it. The Elements of Style and The Chicago Manual of Style, my computer, and Wikipedia are constant companions.

Considering how good I was at weaseling OUT of homework all my educational life, I suspect my teachers are laughing their collective arses off somewhere at my toil, sweat, and confusion.

(Kids, here's my unsolicited advice for the week, re: grammar, syntax, sentence structure, etc.: DO THE WORK NOW, while you're still young and in school--it's a hell of a lot harder to make this information stick when one is over forty and having to come up to speed from long-time inertia. Trust me on this.)

So, in short: in order to be able to take myself seriously as a writer, I'm having to invent the universe before I can bake my apple pie.

Oddly, I am OK with this.

RM


Friday, April 5, 2013

Ch-Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes

Hello, all.
As usual, it's been an aeon or two since last I posted. My personal journal and the little tidbits of wit that get shat upon my Facebook page (AKA the ADD child's Happy Place) have gotten the majority of my writing time for much of the past few years.

But.

Things, O my Droogies, have changed a bit 'round here, and I figured I'd best fill you in.

I'll try and sum up the last two years in as much of a Readers' Digest way as I can. I haven't given you NEARLY as much information as I could have ('cause, hey, it's personal, OK?), so it may take a bit. Here goes:

Mid--2011: Lost one of the dogs. In the same week, wound up getting BACK together with ex-bf from previous posts, that I was still in love with. Would like to say something about lightning striking twice, but it pretty much went exactly the way our first go-around did.  Zap-fizzle. 'Nuff said about THAT.

January 2012: Was not offered a full-time slot at the opera. Decided I'd had enough of being jerked around and, for the first time ever, turned down the extra chorus offer. Went through major depressive episode at the thought of not having enough gainful employment to survive. Pulled self up by bootstraps emotionally and began to tentatively explore possibility of finally putting my money (or the lack thereof) where my mouth was, moving away from singing as a career, and doing something else with my life.

March 2012: Proving yet again that "If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans," a full-time contract (filling in for a colleague who had to take a last-minute leave to care for an ailing relative) got dropped into my lap....TWO WEEKS before start of rehearsals. I had to drop all my nascent plans and completely rearrange my life to accommodate this change, but it was worth it for one reason: I got to sock away money like a crack-addicted squirrel in anticipation of the next jerking-around that surely was headed my way. (I'd lived on poverty rations for so many years that having a regular paycheck, and saving a chunk of it each week, was painless.)

May 2012: Had a reckoning with the ex-bf, who had been lingering in my life despite my repeated attempts to move on, where we finally made peace with each other. In what has to be one of the biggest ironic moments in recorded history, at the end of a gut-wrenching five-hour no-holds-barred bare-knuckles soul-baring, he told me, for the first time,

                                                    "I love you."

Eight months after he'd dumped me.

(???)

He then said, "I'll always have your back."

After which he promptly disappeared from my life again. In the past six months, we've seen each other....once.

C'est la vie, c'est la guerre....

December 2012: Lost the other dog--the one my ex-husband and I had gotten as a puppy and had had for fourteen years, a once-in-a-lifetime dog whose loss will forever leave a hole in my heart.
Oh, did I mention that this happened on Christmas morning?

January 2013: Sure enough, got jerked around yet again, and was not offered a full-time job. Initial offer: one concert. Not even an opera...a concert. From a sixty thousand dollar contract last year to a six-HUNDRED-dollar offer this year. (I should like to point out here that there has been no appreciable change in my vocal production in this time.) Needless to say, in the most professional way I was capable of, I told them to go pound sand.

February 2013: They came back with another offer...the concert...plus ONE opera. (Apparently someone else had turned down the initial offer--I was not the only one sending out sand-pounding orders.) Yet again, I reminded them where a good quantity of sand could be found, and what they could do with same, forthwith.
I hadn't been holding my breath for the same situation as last year--the chances of another mezzo colleague's needing to take a last-minute leave, and THEN of that contract being offered to me, were laughable to nonexistent.

So.
Lost my partner.
Lost my dog.
Lost my job.

Now what?

Here's where it gets interesting. (Well, OK, at least to me.)

Back in January 2012, when I'd first refused my offer at the opera, I began to kick around the idea of writing again. I've mentioned in the past that one of my dreams was to be a writer, but I'd taken a 25-year detour in pursuing a music career instead. Well, OK, I had the time....and didn't want to sing anymore...and I had a couple of ideas to play with...so I did. I figured, "Well, if I'm gonna be broke, I might as well be broke and happy....right?" *shrugs*
One of the ideas started mutating (really, there's no other way to describe it) into something interesting, so I just kept jotting related ideas down until one day (about a week before the full-time offer, mais oui) I realized that I might...just might...have enough for a full-length book. A real book. Maybe even more than one book.  I had a storyline--a very rough one, but still a storyline--I liked. I had smaller ideas, little bits of dialogue or set design or exposition or character development, attaching themselves to my storyline like fleas on a barnyard cat--they were hopping around so fast I almost couldn't keep track of them all.  Even better, the little bits all fit together neatly and plausibly. I started feeling like Gene Wilder in 'Young Frankenstein'--wild-eyed, screaming "IT....COULD....WORK!!!!"

And then, the offer came in, and I had to put all that aside.

So. In January 2013....when my life went into free-fall....things were, on the surface, worse than they had been the year before. But, oddly, I felt free. There was nothing, no one, holding me back anymore...I could go anywhere, do anything, I wanted. I had my little savings socked away to keep me from panicking about money--it wasn't a huge amount, but enough to last me a few months while I sat with the question of what I wanted to do with my one wild and precious life. And, again and again, when I did sit with that question, the answer came back that, at least in the short term, I wanted to write.

And so I am.
I don't know if this is what I will end up doing with my life.
I don't know whether my writing is any good.
I don't know whether I'll ever get published.
I don't know if I'll ever make a dime from it.
It.
Doesn't.
Matter.

I'm free.

RM