|
Sunday, January 29, 2006 [continued from previous entry] Friday morning at 7 a.m.: -8°. Chilly. I know because I was out in it, bright and far too early. At the gym during the afternoon, the condensation that collects on the inside sill of certain double-paned windows lay frozen solid. Yesterday around the same time: 10°. By early afternoon, the temperature had floated up into the low 50s, sunshine pouring down, the air feeling positively springlike. Warm enough to compact the snow to the point that I could walk just about anywhere my little heart desired without sinking in, making deep boots or snowshoes temporarily obsolete. I sat out on the kitchen stoop for a while, soaking up sunlight and freakishly unseasonable warmth, so much snowmelt pouring through the downspout at the near end of the house that it sounded like the hill had sprouted a brook or stream, swollen with post-rainfall water. A kind of sound I've never heard here before. Seven days earlier, I'd been in Montreal, watching the day grow slowly light, sparse Saturday morning traffic moving slowly amid windblown snow, headlights shining through the gray. ![]() I watched from my tenth floor room, enjoying the show, wading out into it late morning for what turned out to be a huge, excellent breakfast at a busy local joint (Eggspectations) where I hoovered down the best cup of espresso I've tasted since returning from Madrid. I also witnessed my first bona fide vat of freshly squeezed orange juice, one counterperson filling several pitchers from it, an indication of the volume of food/drink the place cranks out. By the time I found myself standing out on the avenue in front of the hotel waiting for a bus, midafternoon had arrived, the snowfall had begun to ease up. A bus appeared in the distance, moving steadily, smoothly in my direction, through traffic and snow, riding the city street with the serene air of a sizeable ocean-going vessel, unconcerned with the smaller craft moving around it. (All right, I'm stopping with the marine metaphor.) ![]() I rode it to the end of the line, immediately transferred to a second, far more crowded bus, the passengers as multinational a group as I've seen anywhere on the planet, three or four languages being spoken around me, including English with an impressive array of accents. I exited at a stop five minutes along, made the one-block hike from there to my friend Tom's place, the local world white with new snow, fat, light flakes floating in the air like lazy, nearly incandescent confetti. Tom and his dog, Jack, met me at the door, Jack appearing at least as happy to see me as Tom, nose sniffing at my reachable body parts, doing the euphoric, body-wriggling oh-boy-another-friendly-human thing. Tom extended a more restrained welcome. I removed winter-weather gear, we drifted toward the kitchen. Tom flushed out his kid, Max, from his bedroom hideyhole, then briefly disappeared. Max interrogated me about having seen Brian Blessed in a fairly wild show in London, Mr. B. apparently a household idol due to his work in Black Adder. A field trip for film and dinner had been the evening's original plan. With the change in weather (and the absence of one of Tom's progeny, off doing a horror film festival with friends), the film and dinner remained on deck, but transferred to the basement instead of somewhere out in Montreal's 'burbs. Max drifted off to devote some time to the online gaming world, cheerfully slaughtering friends and enemies, leaving Tom and I without teenage supervision for a while. ![]() At some point, during one of far too many discussions about movies, Max and Tom decided they had to show me the highlights of a Jackie Chan film, a totally disposable movie as it turned out, except for the final 20 or so minutes, which feature a long, elaborately spectacular fight scene, as excellent as any fight scene I've seen anywhere. So good I'd consider buying the DVD just for that. [continued in next entry] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Yesterday, afternoon giving way to evening: ![]() España, te echo de menos. rws 6:13 PM [+] |
|
Wednesday, January 18, 2006 Yesterday afternoon: me in the gym lockerroom, post-sweatyness, pulling on clothes. No one else around, the place quiet. I'm buttoning, I'm zipping, lost in thought. I sit down, begin to pull on boots. From the line of winter coats hanging a few feet away, a cheery song starts quietly up. It play for a while -- faint, well-mannered -- then stops. A few seconds later, from a different coat, another song begins, plays quietly for five or ten seconds, stops. As I'm leaving, yet another starts up. Cellphones, left in coat pockets. And this is one of the nice aspects of a small town. People can leave cellphones like that, in a coat pocket, knowing the phone will still be there when the coat gets pulled on post-workout, its human heading back out to the day. Same way lots of folks here return a smile on the street, return a hello. This morning: me, in bed, drifting and out of sleep. The house lay still, absolutely quiet, the world outside quiet as well. And at some point, I became aware of the sound of footsteps off in another part of the building. Quiet, but clear. My eyes opened, I listened, knowing that all outside doors were locked, that I was the only person on premises. The steps ceased, I heard silence, nothing more. The household ghost, first time I've heard it in well over a year. Rain fell all morning, the temperature hovered around the freezing mark, slowly edging upward as the hours passed, the air feeling soft, almost balmy. Serious, intense rainfall, generating plentiful snowmelt that combined with the rising temperature to produce fog (snow ghosts, I've heard this kind of fog called), drifting in spectral fashion across the fields and hills. A week ago, we had a two or three day long thaw, followed immediately by days of intense, bitter cold. Snowmelt from the thaw gathered in large pools, the ground too hard to absorb it, refreezing when the mercury plunged. A week ago I had a driveway. Now I have a skating rink. A big one. If this keeps up, I may be forced to round up skates, see if my inner Brian Boitano wants to come out and play. Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 6:07 PM [+] |
|
Thursday, January 12, 2006 Yesterday evening, for some inexplicable reason, someone intent on driving me into a state of nervous collapse dropped a quarter into the jukebox that's tucked deeply away in the recesses of my teeny little brain. The song that began playing (over and over and over): the theme song from The Jeffersons. (Oh, I'm movin' on up, MOO-VIN' ON UP!....) Why that particular tune at that particular time? I have no clue. Many long, joyful years have passed since I saw my last episode of The Jeffersons. Not that I have anything against George, Louise, Lionel, their goofy English neighbor or the hilarity that followed the opening song every single week. It's just that my life is full and happy without them. And the ongoing repetition of that spirited ditty gets me wanting to rip and claw at my head until I can reach inside and find the off switch. I can't remember the last time I heard that theme song, much less sat through an episode of the show. Way the hell back, many lifetimes ago, predating even the eleven or so months spent working at the program's production company. A gig I stumbled into during 16 strange months spent in L.A., where I ended up after dropping out of my one and only marriage and fleeing cross-country. The marriage, by the way, was not the problem. For the most part, I was the problem. Too young, too unhappy. Desperately insecure, flailing about beneath the weight of a miserable self-image. Doing my best, god knows, but that, in some ways, is not saying much. And though I married a lovely, intelligent, affectionate, talented woman, an excellent person all around, and with the finest intentions in the world loved her as best I could, I got hitched out of loneliness, not love. Not a foundation that would sustain the union, at least not in this particular case. And when I finally precipitated out and bolted cross-country, I found myself in North Hollywood, ensconced in an apartment over a three-bay garage, making substantial money doing temporary word processing, a gig that landed me in a sprawling suite of offices in a high-rise building in Century City. Tandem Productions, home to Norman Lear, creator of All In The Family and The Jeffersons, and his two partners, producers of Blade Runner. Where I spent eleven months amid a strange, extravagant mix of personalities, a blend of IT geeks, show-biz types and a rainbow assortment of support staff, dramas and melodramas unfolding all around (some of which, with time, included me). Some great people, some truly weird folks, and some great, truly weird individuals, all of whom had their moments of shining, some in enjoyable, benevolent ways, others in darker, messier ways, their flaws and vulnerabilities on sad display. (Blah blah blah.) I had no direct contact with Norman Lear and his partners, apart from him passing silently through my workroom on a couple of occasions to use its access door to the floor's elevators. But I found myself at one point charged with inputting his rolodex into the computer, a collection of big-name phone numbers/addresses that gave me the illusion of rubbing elbows with the higher strata of L.A.'s entertainment industry. (Providing me with that year's perfect Christmas gift for two or three women I knew: Harrison Ford's details -- me printing them up, cutting them out to fit into tiny gift boxes that I wrapped with tiny red ribbons, presenting them to the women and savoring their wide-eyed, open-mouthed expressions on seeing the contents. None attempted to contact him, for which I gave silent thanks, though one claimed to have driven by his house at a moment when he stood at a front window, looking out at the street.) Which describes part of my L.A. experience in a nutshell -- finding myself in situations or knowing people that provided encounters with famous faces. Vicarious encounters, generally -- once removed -- though every once in a while firsthand. For instance: Century City, lunch hour, me at a local bank, cashing my weekly paycheck. Standing on line, minding my own business, looking at the check, looking out the bank's floor-to-ceiling windows at the lunch hour world outside, lost in thought. Glancing absently about, noticed at some point that someone I knew had queued up behind me. Or thought I knew. Someone who'd been in my home numerous times via the T&V, frequently enough that the experience of running into her in 3-D felt like encountering a personal acquaintance. Louise Jefferson (Isabel Sanford), looking far more human than she did on the tube: bags under the eyes, sagging skin below the chin. The real world version of Louise Jefferson. She didn't look at me, didn't speak to anyone. I let her alone, cashed my check, went on with the day. And here, years later, my teeny brain is flogging her theme music. Go figure. The temperature yesterday and today has lifted itself above the freezing mark, the air softening, the snow softening, the expressions on people's faces softening into hopeful smiles. I've heard a couple of folks refer to it as the January thaw, which gets me looking around, puzzled. I associate thaws as occasions of sunshine, warm temperatures, abundant patches of green ground poking through, happy birds flitting about, singing with joy -- not gray, chilly, quiet in typical Vermont January fashion. I mentioned that to a guy in the gym lockerroom this afternoon after he used the 'thaw' word. His response: a laughing shake of the head at my foolishness, saying, "Hey, let's not get crazy now." Heh. The sadists in the local weather biz are promising things will get far crazier tomorrow, with temperatures rising giddily into the mid-40s. We'll see. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Today, light streaming over northern Vermont: ![]() Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 7:51 PM [+] |
|
Sunday, January 08, 2006 This morning, northern Vermont -- sunrise through lightly falling snow: ![]() Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 1:23 PM [+] |
|
Thursday, January 05, 2006 Yesterday: January sky, pre-snow: ![]() Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 10:58 AM [+] |