Thought for the summer:


"I think you thought there was no such place for you, and perhaps there was none then, and perhaps there is none now; but we will have to make it, we who want an end to suffering, who want to change the laws of history, if we are not to give ourselves away."

-- Adrienne Rich

Friday, December 27, 2013

All I Want for Christmas. . .Is YOU. . .


Last night, my mom and I sat on opposite ends of the couch in her comfy basement, a bowl of caramel popcorn between us, to start the film "Love Actually."  The film's fantastic:  a cast of famous characters ranging from Hugh Grant to Emma Thompson to Keira Knightley, and intersecting plot lines that are heartwarming for various reasons that are not all cliche.  Although I've seen the film several times, I never tire of it. . .and I always cry.

I cry, and I think, damn Christmas movies, because even "White Christmas" makes me cry.  I cry when the judge in "Miracle on 34th Street" declares that Kris Kringle is, indeed, Santa; and I cry when George Bailey realizes his life is precious and important in "It's a Wonderful Life."  Again and again, the Christmas movies insist on the magic of the season, on the particular recipe of white lights and cold air and the possible jingle of sleigh bells.  The recipe that allows unlikely people to fall in love with each other, or unhappy people to become transformed.

The last time I watched "Love Actually," in Christmas 2011, I sat with my arms crossed the entire movie, bitter while my mom laughed in delight.  It had only been two months since A___ died, and I didn't want to be in the world anymore either.  Guilt and sorrow and love weighted my bones, made it difficult to move.  No happy story in "Love Actually" would end happily, I thought cynically, newly wise.  Our story was supposed to be one of those where all has been an enormous misunderstanding, where a few months have elapsed but then I turn around in the sunshine and she is standing there, looking at me the way she always did.  And we are on the coast of Spain, or in a villa in Italy.

But no, instead, she was dead, and there's actually no way love can continue forward from that point.

That was two years ago.  Two years.  I dreamed the other night that she did walk toward me across green grass, and that I stood in a red barn organizing, and my heart filled with such gladness to see her, to know we were going to get our second chance after all.  Always, she's real to me, just around the corner, waiting.

None of that explains why, after "Love Actually" ended and my mom took the empty popcorn bowl and kissed me on the forehead before she headed upstairs to bed, I took out my laptop and created a profile on match.com.  Ugh.  I feel nauseous just writing it.  The entire hour it took me to answer all the questions, my body numbed as if I was committing some horrible crime.  This morning, when I sat at the breakfast table with my daughter and my mom and step-dad, the mere thought of my smiling face and "36-year-old woman" on a profile page on match.com turned my stomach.  What a mistake.  I'm not ready and never will be.  I found my "love actually" in A___ and one or both of us read the script wrong, and now it's ended.  No more takes.

But now I've just checked the site, 24 hours later.  I'm not the only lonely lesbian in this area looking for at least like-minded companionship, a hiking partner, someone to share a coffee.  If I'm brave, I could respond to some of these notes I'm getting already.  Or I could delete my profile now.

Part of me wants to wear black and stay celibate in mourning forever.  Part of me wants to live.  I could depend on the chance encounter sometime in the next decade, or I could advertise, which is what sites like match.com do.  Here I am.  Waiting.  I marked the categories for "widow" and "one child at home". . . I'm not a simple match.  But I never have been.

If I don't do this in the window of this season, with all the magic in the air, etc., etc., I won't do it at all.  So. . .I'll leave the profile up for a week, just to see.  After all, a cup of coffee with a woman would be nice. . .

Monday, December 16, 2013

Thinking about 1st grade crushes. . .




My sweet little girl TK had a playdate today with a new friend.  Mostly, they built gingerbread houses and giggled, ate dinner together and giggled, and danced across the living room -- and giggled.  They're six --innocent, wide-eyed, amazed by the world.  The two of them are quite a contrast:  TK's coffee-brown  and K__'s creamy white, TK's got tight black curls and K___'s got white-blonde locks.  But their age makes them more similar than different.  At dinner, they both wanted to talk about crushes.

Crushes?  At six, shouldn't they still be friends with everyone, chasing everyone around the playground, regardless of gender?  Evidently not.

"Who do you like?" asks my daughter conspiratorially.

"I like Alex.  Who do you like?" K___ giggles.

I attempt to offer the adult voice of reason.  "Do you think first grade's the right age for crushes?" I wonder aloud.  Both girls shake their heads.  Definitely not.  "Not 'til you're in 8th grade," K____ declares, using her older sister as a gauge.  But then she and TK return to their discussion of all the cute boys in 1st grade, matching them up with their friends, wondering aloud if they'll get to sit next to Alex or Hunter tomorrow.

Do we shape this culture, or does it shape us?  As a lesbian mother, I should casually ask, "Don't you think any of the girls are cute?" but I stay silent and eat my chili, thinking about a world that still insists princesses end up with princes, that most people get married, that girls who finish their chili should spin and twirl as ballerinas until it's time to eat candy canes.

It makes me think of a phone call I had with a friend yesterday.  She and her husband are struggling because their 3-year-old son wants to play with "girl" toys.  While I can blithely tell her to let him be himself, to support what draws him, I understand her concern.  This isn't an easy world -- not for boys who want to wear dresses, not for girls who think the girls in class are cute, not for anyone outside the Disney version.

What can we do?  I changed the topic at dinner tonight, and TK and K____ were just as happy to talk about what it would be like to live in gingerbread houses as they were to talk about crushes on boys.  Another day, I'll push them to think more openly about relationship and gender.  For today, I'll hand them candy canes and play hide-and-seek, a game with clear rules, a game that includes everyone.

Friday, December 13, 2013

The Beginning of Us

Riptide Publishing has just released my novella for pre-sale!  



Written with a college-age audience in mind, The Beginning of Us is a romance, a social commentary, and an exploration of the human heart.  

Blurb:

Eliza, 
Where are you? I'm listening, watching, waiting for you. I need you. How dare you run away? Where’s the courage, the fearlessness I fell in love with?
I don’t know what else to do but write. It’s dark in my dorm room, and the wind rattles the panes of my window, and I’m supposed to be driving to my parents’ right now for winter break, but I can’t feel my arms or my legs, and my chest aches because I don’t know where you’ve gone. Or why.
I know I shouldn't have fallen in love with my professor. But you inspired me when you stood in front of the class, telling us to find our authentic selves. And I did—with you. How could I know that you would be so afraid of this, of us? That you'd be so terrified of . . . yourself? Wherever you are, Eliza, hear me—and come back to me.
Love (yes, I'll write that word, Professor), 
 Tara