Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Better Living but not Through Chemistry


In a conversation with an old friend, I questioned why she didn't read fiction anymore. Her reply surprised me, implying that there was nothing to be gained from reading fiction because it couldn't change her own tragic circumstances. Her fiancee would still be dead and she would continue to wake up every morning without him. I wanted to argue with her, but closed my lips and continued to listen. I didn't have sufficient evidence to counter her grief based choices. My life has been untouched by grief. All I can do is listen.

But this conversation had me pondering what place fiction has had in my life. Many of my most profound insights come from reading and reflecting. They come from absorbing other's life experiences. I'm a voracious reader, from the newspaper every morning to blogs, from library books to grocery store novels, from magazines in doctor's waiting rooms to textbooks. Reading is how I come to understand the world I live in.

I can be very impatient with the spoken word. My husband and I are in the process of purchasing a business and it involves very lengthy sales presentations via the telephone. After 20 minutes I am up and prowling the room looking for something to read. Once the same fact or point has been repeated for the third time, I am ready to pull my hair out. If the information could be condensed into a typed format, I would be a much happier business owner. I can read much faster than you can talk, so let's get on with it.
_______

I draw inspiration from good fiction. The characters may not be real, but their circumstances often are.

In cleaning out my son's bedroom, I found a school copy of “To Kill a Mockingbird”. Somehow, he ended up with two copies, but only returned one. I decided to read it before returning it to his old school, not having read it before.

I have not seen the movie, and was unsure what the book was going to be about. I knew it involved the south, and prejudice, and some sort of gripping court room scene, but that was about it. The book is full of many colorful characters and lessons, but I was most struck by Mrs. Dubose, the frightening, ancient neighbor that Jem Finch is required to read to, while she, as it turns out, is withdrawing from a morphine addiction.

This happened to be the week that I decided to beat an addiction of my own. I've been taking Trazodone for the last ten years, presumably to prevent migraines. Except, I continued to have migraines, so it wasn't working for that. I continued to take it to help me sleep better, so I would be less likely to have migraines. Yes, it would help me fall asleep, presuming that I was in bed and ready to relax into the blissful mindlessness it afforded me exactly twenty minutes after consumption. On the rare occasions when my prescription ran out, or I left home without it, I would be in for a night of insomnia. One night was hardly bearable, two nights was unthinkable.

My most recent prescription ran out the same day I read of Mrs. Dubose and her determination not to die an addict. I finally have my migraines under control with the addition of magnesium to my diet and my continued use of Trazodone was superfluous. It was time to stop. 
________
Sunday night was as expected. I was drowsy and crawled in bed hoping a busy day full of activity was going to be enough to carry me to slumberland. It was too much to hope for. I tossed. I turned. I went to the bathroom and got back in bed. I turned over my pillow to the cool side. I went to the kitchen and had some toast and cold milk. I went back to bed. I may have slept a bit, but it was so shallow and restless, that it wasn't worth much.

Quitting is important. The last ten years have been a haze of equanimity. While that may be what many may strive for,  I've been thinking that, for me, doing it through chemistry is cheating. It's a fiction and while I've been missing out on moments of true despair, I've also been lacking transcendent joy. The last decade which has seen the death of my beloved grandmother, aunt, and both my parents, failed to plunge me into depression. My daughter's wedding, our twenty-fifth anniversary, other family triumphs have given me a warm happy glow, but there's no exhilaration. It's time to find out how I feel without the cloak of chemistry. Am I truly a zen-master or am I as crazy emotional as the rest of y'all?

The real side effects of withdrawal started the next day. My skin itched and felt tight all over. I began to sweat with only light exertion and then was chilled and achy. I was tired and listless, though maybe it was just from lack of sleep. Trazodone is sometimes prescribed as a mild anti-depressant and in those cases withdrawal side effects can include anxiety and suicidal thoughts. While I am very fortunate not to be prone to these feelings, I did wonder if I could be overtaken and questioned my wisdom of quitting cold-turkey.
____________

It was only when Mrs. Dubose had died in pain but free of the grip of morphine, did Atticus Finch explain to his children her true situation:

"I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand. It's when you know you're licked before you begin but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what. You rarely win, but sometimes you do. Mrs. Dubose won, all ninety-eight pounds of her. According to her views, she died beholden to nothing and nobody. She was the bravest person I ever knew."

It's only been three nights, and my side-effects are already waning. I still itch but the sweats and chills are gone. I'm still worrying about getting a decent night's sleep but I can't pretend that this is anything like morphine. I've hung onto my empty pill bottle just in case I “need” to get a refill, but I won't. I won't get a refill because I read a piece of fiction that spoke to me. Mrs. Dubose taught me a what it is to be strong in the face of my weakness. 

Sunday, September 22, 2013

The Shifting Seasons

"Sun in an Empty Room"  by Edward HopperHeading

Autumn

It's a melancholy day. The fall solstice is upon us and there is finally a freshness to the air. I rake leaves that have dropped due to the heat of the summer rather than the chill of fall, but the effect is the same. Things are changing.

I sit on my son's floor and sort through the detritus of his middle school years. Pages and pages of what we used to call “dittos” and notebooks full of illegible chicken scratch. Very little of it has long term value and is relegated to the recycling bin. He is now in high school and these things are not needed. His room no longer suits him and I'm clearing it out.

While my nest is not yet empty, it is shrinking. Our daughters have moved on. The oldest married a year ago and has a home and husband of her own. The younger moved with the spring into the blistering desert seeking her own season of change. Her room stands empty waiting a fresh coat of paint but I haven't yet been able to bring myself to cover over her own shade of sunny yellow optimism.

Our son is moving, at my suggestion, into the oldest sister's room, taking the things he wants across the hall, and leaving rest behind. Lacking the sentimentality of old age, there's very little that he desires and it's up to me to sort and save his childhood.

I move on to the bookshelves. Familiar titles by Dr. Seuss mixed with Goodnight Moon, Where the Wild Things Are, and the entire Harry Potter series failed to make the move across the hall. These among many others will be packed in cardboard and moved to the basement to await grandchildren that may not be too far behind.

A short novel caught my eye and I sit in the recently vacated yellow bedroom, in the rocker that I nursed my children in and skim through the book before it gets donated. It's a beautifully written Caldecott winner about a young girl surviving the dustbowl with her widowed father. My crumpled leaves and powdery dirt are of insignificant concern compared to the strife caught in the pages of this book.

My son comes to find me and despite his advanced age, he's still slight enough to curl up awkwardly on my lap, all elbows and knees. I rock him, lost in reflection and melancholia, but he blocks the motion and we sit still. He initiates the rocking again but proceeds to remove my arm that is wrapped around his shoulder, still wanting contact – but only on his terms. Thus we perform the ritual, the push and pull of the seasons, the dance of parent and child.  


Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Home de Fence


I've been neglecting my blog – in part because I got outed. Not in the sexual sense, but two of my kids discovered I had a blog and read it. As expected, one shrugged it off and was “like whatever.” The other was reportedly rather upset, and concerned that I was “depressed.” For the record, I'm not. 
I've been waiting for something funny, or profound, to write about, that wouldn't upset anyone, but divine inspiration eludes me. My life drifts on, without literary inspiration or a vision of the future, so I fill it with activity.

I'm waging war on weeds because that's the only thing I can control right now. I pull them, whack them, and hoe them, but best of all, I BURN them. My latest weapon is a propane
powered weed torch. It's very frightening and highly dangerous, but immensely satisfying. It's hot and it's loud. It roars. I point it at the enemy and they shrivel into blackened ash with a hiss. Only today did I dare use it in the front yard, fearing the passersby would deem it dangerous and call the police or fire department. If I get it too close to fallen leaves, they burn, but a quick stamp of the foot puts it out. Best of all, it smells of camping. I enjoy the scent of campfires and this makes me really quite happy. Roaring hot destruction also pleases me.

The hubby is waging his own war on roaches. Those nasty big brown ones periodically infiltrate our house and he gets crazy about them. I figure it comes with the “old house” territory but my dearest insists on complete and total elimination. I managed to talk him out of spraying insecticide all over every surface in our kitchen and pantry, opting for me caulking every crack and crevice that could be discovered. Then we followed with roach bait stations, but they were still making themselves known. Next, hubby armed himself with


the boric acid powder that I had gently powdered in the appropriate places. The instructions call for “lightly dusting” areas where roaches travel – do not create “piles” as roaches will avoid those. Hubby (being a typical overachiever and non-label reader) finished off the first bottle and is now on his second as he creates Sierra Nevada sized snow drifts along every baseboard in our kitchen and has now moved on to the backyard where we are enjoying winter during the spring. (I am not allowed to water near any of his boric acid deposits, which is pretty much everywhere.) At least it gives him something to do.

Which is really what the problem is here. He has nothing to do. He has a job (or at least an employer) but he works from home - that is, he is . . . home, but . . . he has nothing to do. The new company, that took over his old company, doesn't know what to do with him. He's had several conversations with his “new boss”, but he has no projects to work on, no office to go to, no-one to meet with and nothing to plan for. It's very unsettling, knowing that at any minute, this mega company will figure out that they don't need him after all and terminate him. We'd like to hit the road next week, for our son's spring break, but he can hardly ask for vacation time under the circumstances. Staying home is more of the same. Killing weeds and roaches. We continue to search the internet for a “more substantial” job for him and wait. And wonder. And burn weeds. And kill roaches.

Idleness can breed anxiety. Hubby's been working from home for a number of years, is very aware of the pulse of the neighborhood and has become known as our local Gladys Kravitz (remember
Bewitched?). This is good and bad. Good, because he's keeping an eye on things, and bad because you can't see everything at once. We have an alley in the back of the property that is partially fenced by chain link. Our front yard is on a very busy street that sees a lot of transient foot traffic. Our neighbor to the west was foreclosed and the house has been empty for 3 months. Despite Gladys's vigilance, the copper plumbing next door has been stolen twice. It's all a lot of to keep track of, so now we are working on fences. Yesterday, we started covering over the chain link with recycled fence boards from a previous project. We bought solar lights for the top posts of the redwood fence that we started building FIVE YEARS ago. We are replacing posts of the gothic pickets along the sidewalk that are on the verge of breaking off the next time a drunk stops to steady himself.

Killing weeds, annihilating bugs, stronger fences, constant vigilance. It's starting to feel like we really are prepping for the zombie apocalypse. Zombie prepping has become quite trendy. Why do you think that is? Not having premium cable, I don't watch shows like the Walking Dead, so I'm a little out of the loop when it comes to this stuff, but I don't know anyone that really believes that zombies are actually coming to get us.

Zombies are a metaphor for things we have no control over. You can't kill something that is already dead. How do you prepare for that? Propane flame torches and toxic acid powders won't kill them. Stronger fences won't repel them. So we stand at the window, like Gladys Kravitz, ready to sound the alarm, fearing the worst but hoping for the best.