Tag Archives: moving

Tiny Reminders

MIsunriseMoving on is simple, it’s what you leave behind that makes it so difficult.
~Anonymous

Sunrise on the Mackinaw Bridge… one of the few things on the 19-hour road trip that I enjoy. Others include cherry coffee, 4am boat counts, and of course, the two dead hookers. But I digress.

The sunrise made me sad this time. I almost drove off the bridge staring at it. I nudged a snoring hippie, “Look, it’s beautiful!” watched his blank stare scan the horizon and then one half-open eye turned toward me and I smile-sighed, “Yes, you may go back to sleep now.” He wasn’t awake. But even if he had been, I’m not sure he would have understood completely. Not completely.

When my childhood sweetheart and I broke up, I lost a friend. When my ex and I divorced, I lost the big screen TV. When Wisconsin and I broke up, I lost the entire chain of Great Lakes. I lost my water.

Breaking up hurts. Even after the hurt is healed, the memory can sting. Seeing the water at sunrise, the reflections, the tiny white caps and the boats gliding across it, made me yearn to dip my feet. I wanted to pick rocks and find shells. I wanted to dig my toes in the sand at the edge of the surf and wait for them to be engulfed in a wet mire of tiny crystals. I get giddy when I see the water. I’ve stopped before and taken a twenty minute break from the drive-from-hell to run along her shores, kids and hippie in tow. But I couldn’t stop this time. There was a family wedding to get to and we were late. I swallowed back a tear and kept driving, window down so I could smell the water and relive a thousand memories.

Even though breaking up hurts, it’s those little things you hold on to that make the occasional twinge of pain easier to bear—the good memories you fall back on, the ones that drown out the bad. Yes I miss my water, but there’s water here. It’s just different water. And I have memories, lots and lots and lots of them—from childhood through teenage years and on into adulthood. Lots.

And I have physical reminders.

Because when you break up, you always take something with you. You hold onto some little physical reminder. When my childhood sweetheart and I broke up, I wrapped the love letters in ribbon and tucked them into my babybox. I still have them, and the half-heart necklace is in a jewelry box. When my ex and I broke up, I put away specific jewelry to be handed down someday. And when Wisconsin and I broke up, I took her rocks. I have stones around the house and several pebbles I keep in my purse. They’ve lost their smell (yes, rocks have a smell) but just the sight of them is enough to allow me to let go of the hurt of the break up. To remember the good times.

Tearing Down the Past

tearitdownSaturday-Sucked, part 2…

I moved a lot as a child. From Wisconsin to Texas and back, and quite a bit around Superior. By the time I got to high school, I had gone to five of the six elementary schools and knew 80% of the kids in our town of 36,000. As such, I didn’t really have any attachment to the places we lived. I don’t truly have a “childhood home”. Oh I have memories at this one and that one. But none of the memories are of the house itself.

Save one.

For the last half of fourth grade and the first half of fifth, I lived in a huge monster of a Victorian house. It was gorgeous. It had sliding glass doors, hand-carved cherry wood throughout, hidden passages, a dumbwaiter in my bedroom, strange rooms that no one liked, and an odd walkway through a section of the walls that may have been underground railroad. It was cool as hell.

And haunted.

My sister and mother and I all agree to this without any hesitation. We lived there with someone else. I’ve told friends about this house over the years and the woman that stood in the attic window. I’ve explained how one of us would stand on the street and watch, and the other would go to the attic room and stand in the window, waving their arms to the horror and dismay of the one on the street. She was there. You were standing right next to her! There were footsteps heard going up and down those stairs all night long. There was a basement room that none of us could stand in without wanting to run. Things happened that could not be explained. It was haunted. We know this. We don’t question it one bit… and the following residents must have agreed, because they boarded up that attic window in no time flat.

I’ve actually written quite a bit about the year I spent in this house. This was where we lived when I nailed my sister in the forehead from across the room with my hairbrush, because she was touching my books. This was the house I started writing short stories instead of just poetry. This was where we experienced the tent worm attack that has since turned into a novella (due out next year, announcement coming, and referenced in my short story “The Man Who Slept Through Tomorrow” in Shroud #6). This was the house of the moose skull that’s in my upcoming novel “In the Shadow of Darkness” (announcements on that also coming). The nearby graveyard we explored is in a novel I’ll be working on next year. The ghost in the attic has a whole novel dedicated to her. Unfortunately, this is also a house filled with horrible memories, some of which have also been muse fodder—but I don’t dwell on those, and no, I won’t tell you which stories. Whenever I’m standing at the edge of a major decision, I have a reoccurring dream which includes the trap door in the attic of this old mansion. This house came with memories for the muse and cemented lifelong beliefs in the afterlife and paranormal experiences. This house, overall, was a major turning point in my childhood. In my life.

And I wanted to show Bob the famous haunted house of my childhood.

I had planned to do better than a drive-by—I was going to knock on the door and explain I lived there as a child and ask if I could walk through. I was going to see if I could stand in that basement room now. I planned to find out if I was even able to climb those attic steps. I was going to say good-bye to old ghosts—both the house’s and my own. I was going to get an adult visual of the rooms and passageways for the novel. And I was going to rescue the journal I forgot, above the 3rd tile from the left of the drop-ceiling in my old bedroom.

But the house is gone.

My sister told me they tore it down and I couldn’t believe it. I think I was actually in denial. They couldn’t have. It was one of the oldest houses in town. Of course, it was in a town that loves to tear down its history and replace it with concrete and glass. So after we went treasure hunting on Saturday, I had mom drive by. I had to see this for myself. And I found that it was true.

It was gone.

The massive porch, gone. The weird twisting back entry, gone. The massive windows and cool little gables, gone. Hell, even the sidewalk to the front street was gone. There’s nothing there but a dirt patch to hold my ghosts. I was shocked. I was saddened. About a decade ago, when they sold the lot across the way and my favorite reading tree was trashed to put up a garage, I was stung with loss. This went deeper. I had a hard time comprehending what was right in front of me—nothing.

The ride home included mom and I rehashing for Bob several of the ghostie’s tricks. She reminded me of the storm that scared the crap out of us. I recalled the shadows that seemed darker than they should have and the sounds we could not explain. And I repeatedly droned, “I cannot believe they tore it down.”

And as we neared my parents’ house a thought dawned on me, “Where will the ghost go?”

My ghosts are buried in the soil. If you believe that events can haunt a location, I may actually be one of the ghosts in that ground. But I was referring to our mystery maid (the attic window was the servant quarters, so we had all agreed years ago that it was a servant’s ghost). Where will she go? How will she walk the stairs that are no longer there? How will she slam the door that has been dragged away to some salvage yard? What will she do? Where will she go?

And the more we thought about it, the more we questioned it. Where do ghosts go when you tear down their haunting grounds?

I got home and hopped on Google hoping to find pictures to use as reference for the novel. There was nothing. Mom laughed, “Well, no one can fact check. You can just make shit up now.” Yeah, I love turrets, but that house didn’t have any…and it won’t in the novel either. Realizing her snark was met with sadness, she told me that the woman that lived there before us probably had pictures and that she ran into her all the time at garage sales and such. I told her to ask next time and she agreed. Case closed.

I thought.

The universe is goofy. Just when you need something the most, it delivers. I had taken a one-two punch Saturday—between the teacher’s estate sale and my house being gone—and was feeling beaten. I was deep in thought, dredging through memories of both school and that house. And still in that funk when we returned to the estate sale Sunday.

And the universe provided.

There was Mrs. Farmer, chatting up my mom as I came around a corner. And yes, she has pictures. She also has my address now and will be sending me what she’s got. I have to wonder if the ghostie will show up in them or not.

They say “you can never go home again.” This time, they weren’t joking, but I’ve got pictures coming in the mail. And as mom says, I’m writing it all down and making my ghost immortal, even if the walls that held her are gone…

There is no spoon

The kids are happy and healthy, I love my job, I’m enjoying PA even more than I thought I would, and I’m not fighting with my significant other. Matter of fact, we’ve haven’t fought about anything yet, not even a disagreement… Hell, not even the pre-planned “Corn Battle.”

Wait… did you catch that? Significant other? Yep, there’s a boy. And after getting scolded at HFW for not telling a friend ["I had to figure it out on my own, damn you!" followed by "Oh, I'm so happy about this!!"], I need to come clean before I go any further. And if you think we should have told you in person, I apologize for both of us—we have a large network of friends and without a checklist we were going to fail on that front.

Previously referred to as “what do I call the boyfriend if I’m too old to use the term boyfriend?” or simply “the boy,” you may have heard of him. He goes by a few names. In my posts, it’s usually The Hippie. *gasp* Yes, Bob and I are dating [living together even]. Because sometimes the thing you need most is right in front of you—and if you fail to see it, the universe will slap you upside the head. [And just to prevent the planet from asking: it happened after my divorce was final and his separation was underway. It had nothing to do with either divorce, in fact, we both tried to stop the other from having to go through that and were then there for them as a friend when it became inevitable. Irony. I know.] We stumbled upon the idea—or rather, got slapped by the universe—looked at the logic, studied the possibilities, and talked for hours about something that had never occurred to either of us [though we've since learned that many of our friends saw what we didn't, go figure!]. Why not give it a shot, right? We’re best friends. We know each other very well, we’ve heard the other complain enough to know what not to do, we think alike, have similar interests, etc. Okay. After all, “we aren’t seventeen anymore”, as Bob said, “we’re adults with scar tissue, and if it doesn’t work we’ll still be best friends.” And for the first time in my life, I look forward to my day on a whole. I wake up to a smile that’s just for me, I go to a job that I adore, I come home to a house full of joy, and I fall asleep to the most comforting sound in the world—the heartbeat of my best friend.

I love my life. I live closer to all my friends, I have the greatest boss a girl could ask for, my house is full of insanity and laughter, and I’m treasured for no good reason. But, where was I? Because we all know my blogs traditionally go a little deeper than happy happy joy joy. Oh yeah…

Off and on throughout the summer, as I pondered this bliss that took me 40 years to find, I often caught myself holding my breath. I was waiting for the fights that interrupt happiness, because that’s what I’ve come to expect. I was waiting for the stress of life to come home and kick the dog, because that’s what I’d come to believe was normal. I incorrectly warped deep-thought expressions into “oh crap, what did I do?” And I held back, a lot, unsure if the unleashed, full-version of every day me, as opposed to 3 days at a time for weekend/con visit, would be too much. Afraid to scare or push away or in some unnamed way ruin what seemed effortlessly perfect.

I was waiting for the other shoe to drop. And I was wrong. There is no shoe.

The world isn’t always full of what you expect, what you warp, or what you think is normal. And the pain of failing at marriage isn’t the end of the world… hell, it’s the beginning of a new one, with or without a new heartbeat. “I’m done with men. I’m not dating, I’m not interested, I don’t want them in my life, my wallet, my mind, my decisions… period,” was spoken through tears, based in pain, and simply the mortar for a wall that wasn’t necessary [Speaking of irony, I half-sobbed half-screamed that statement to Bob of all people]. If death isn’t the end, divorce isn’t even close to it [or a breakup of any kind or even just a bad relationship in the past]. So for anyone out there that thinks they’re too old to start over, or hurt too much to try again, or just feel empty and unsure and are mixing mortar to protect themselves—yes, I’m looking at two of you in particular—stop.

Stop now.

POP lists aren’t necessarily ridiculous. Fairy tales aren’t always make-believe. And life doesn’t begin at 30 or 40 or 50 or whenever the new buzz campaign has declared. It begins when you want it to, or when the universe slaps you into realizing it’s started without you. There is no shoe, and no reason to live your life afraid or nervous or mixing mortar. There is laughter and happiness and possibilities that have no bounds… and if you think for one moment that you can’t have it, you’d better have good health insurance, because the universe has a brutal left hook!

When the Cat’s away…

Because yes, I’m running away. Off to Necon this afternoon with Bob, Alethea & Tomo. We shall play with the magical talking box and hope it doesn’t get us lost, see friends & colleagues for several days, road trip back… and you know what? There’s no flipping airplane involved for me!! Wooooooh… and reason #9,782 why I moved = no more airfare =)

Oh wait, I got sidetracked there… sorry. I’ll be gone, but I figured I’d leave you with a chewy coffee talk to ponder in my absence… Thus, the mouse will play!

What is something you do when no one is around? Not something wrong or dirty, although if you feel like answering with those, who am I to stop you?! I mean something silly, or stupid, or that you could easily do when others are around but you don’t. Stupid human tricks if you will… that for whatever reason, you keep private when it doesn’t need to be. Are you a closet singer? Dancer? Talk to yourself? Or is there something even better, darker, funnier that you do? Bring it on… amuse me, damn you!

Change is good

Because I’m still formulating, editing and generally unfucking the thoughts that were to be posted today, let’s do something quick and dirty instead. Due to a twitter I wanted to respond to this weekend, I revisited the HorrorWench, because there was a pertinent post there once upon a time. And as I was looking for it, I saw that the persona was looser, a touch more insane, and sadly, funnier. I lost my funny?!! Or so I question…

A lot has happened in the last few years, more so in the last six months, and my voice is changing because of it. I feared it for a while, now I’m getting comfortable with the idea of it [although this YA Fantasy building steam in my brain kinda worries me!]. But my blog voice doesn’t have to leave the silly behind, does it?

So here’s a question for my 7-1/2 loyal readers… should I include the silly? The short snark and quick quips? Should I let that slightly insane part of me back out in public or keep this serious? Do I stick to thought out posts of turtles and roadtrips and metaphor laden apples, or do I splash in the everyday stupid? Do you really care if that commercial irritated me, or do you just want to hear what I’m working on [1 novella, 2 novels, 3 shorts, contracts for 2 new things, and edits for 2 other people]?

I’ve changed. My life has changed. My blog has changed. They say change is good… but does change necessarily mean stopping one thing completely and going a different direction, or can it be a strange melding of personalities?

Speak up! I can’t hear you…