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December 2007

December 27, 2007

In Waiting

With the season upon us in which we tend to receive those folksy yearly recap letters from far-flung friends, I thought it might be an appropriate time to post this piece — which could very well have stood as a sobering, non-traditional holiday letter for AKL and me exactly three years ago. You need to know up front that ultimately, things turned out quite well for us, and we couldn't be happier (or more tired). But life reveals itself slowly, and as a time capsule, this seems no less worth putting out there. --BK


My wife AKL and I have been trying unsuccessfully to have children for the past two and a half years. Recently, we had our third miscarriage.

Three times we have been through the unbelievable loss and hurt — I never again want to hear a sound as sad as AKL’s open sobbing through the bathroom door when we lost the first — and then the shift into medical crisis mode, and then the aftermath: weeks or months of emotional fragility.

All the while, we lived in social awkwardness. As our pregnancies were not yet public knowledge, there was no public acknowledgment of our losses. So we kept going to the office, feeling distracted from the same work we hoped would distract us from our far more complex troubles. We wore no armbands, nor dressed in black — nothing outside the norm, but for a handful of hushed, coded conversations and emails. Coworkers and friends may have wondered, but they didn’t pry, and we didn’t offer, assuming most would not have been prepared for our honest answer when they asked us perfunctorily, “How’s it going?”

Obama2004 Our second loss was in July 2004, and we spent a horribly uncomfortable week cringing at every mention of the “DNC” (Democratic National Convention) — in our hometown of Boston, no less — while dealing with our impending “D&C.”

Full disclosure: we’re card-carrying pro-choice Democrats. But when you have a miscarriage, even early in the first trimester, rhetorical, clinical terms like embryo or fetus or viable go out the window, because in your gut what has just happened is that, quite simply, your baby has died.

Throughout, friends and family have tried to be helpful. Though it feels nice to be loved, their attempts at help are generally centered around stories of their friends or acquaintances who went through similar travails to eventually succeed. People who have three boys now and are happy, or some such. While I understand the hopeful message of these tales, because they’re about success, they don’t have much to do with our present situation. And with each loss, we pay a higher emotional price for our hope. Yes, we might wind up being those folks. But we might not. We might be the friends who tried and tried and then, because the trying was killing them, stopped trying on their own and either tried to adopt, or didn’t. We don’t know.

Sometimes I convince myself that one’s ability to have kids must be inversely proportional to one’s desire to have kids. Surely, if we were a couple of 15-year meth addicts, we’d have our own basketball team by now — but we’re not. AKL and I are 33 and 37, respectively (“you still have so much time,” you say); we have a home, steady jobs, a healthy relationship, love to give, and we have wanted children since we got engaged nearly five years ago. We waited two years: until we had gotten married, until we moved out of our little condo, until AKL finished grad school, and then we were ready. But nature doesn’t work according to human timetables. This difficult fact that none of us gets to decide when we might have a baby underscores our biggest struggle: the powerlessness of our situation. There are certain things we can do to help our prospects, but there is far more over which we have absolutely no control.

I thought about waiting to tell our story, to see how it all turns out. Maybe — hopefully — it will have a happy ending (yes, we understand, full of new challenges). But to wait would be to miss the real story, which is about our trying to cope with the agonizing uncertainty of right now.

Sono_2Because the truth is, we’re having a really difficult time with it. The week or two after each miscarriage was emotionally — and in AKL’s case, physically as well — grueling, but together we muddled through, in crisis mode, on adrenaline, love, bad movies, and comfort food. The lingering psychological aftermath is tougher, as post-trauma, we find ourselves struggling to regain our bearings. And each time, we are forced to re-address the question of why we want children to begin with, and how we feel about ourselves without them.

AKL and I communicate well, but when we do nag or argue, miscarriage is the elephant in the room. When we talk about our cats, we’re really talking about our children. When we talk about our friends or our family or a possible vacation, we’re really talking about children.

It has been a long time since life felt normal. Before monthly planning and hormone spikes took over our sex life. Before the losses and the hospitals and the specialists. Before a nurse handed me a sterile cup and asked me to produce that certain sample (healthcare-subsidized porn at the ready). We’ll never regain the absolute joy of finding out we’re pregnant: the big ultrasound, talking excitedly about names, hearing a heartbeat….

That unfettered innocence is gone, and our story is rooted in the present. The ending is uncertain. We do what we can, but the rest is beyond us. So we sit and fidget with the not knowing. Today first, and then tomorrow, and then the next. Waiting to see where, eventually, it all leads.

December 20, 2007

Ear Words

One summer during college, I DJ'd a weekly (early) AM radio show. My roommate, Brett, had a job that summer that required him to get up each morning at 6:50. The night before each radio show, I'd sneak into Brett's room, set his clock radio to my station, and turn up the volume. The next morning, at 6:50 on the nose, I'd be playing the poppiest, most insipid, incessant song I could find. The Ramones, They Might Be Giants, maybe the Hemingway 7" by an odd little band called Blue Clocks Green — which may still be the catchiest thing I've ever heard (and through the magic of "the internets" you can hear it too). In any case, I considered the day's show a success if my earworm song was indeed embedded in Brett's head that night.

I imagine the phenomenon of a song that is stuck in one's head has been around as long as songs themselves. Now, thanks to the Germans, who also gave us obscure international hockey player Petr Draisaitl, we call this an "earworm" — from their word ohrwurm — which, translated literally, means "lyrics to Rappers Delight."

My wife, AKL, is an easy mark for earworms. She will freely admit that her internal life soundtrack is one of the most stunted one could ever hear. It sounds like a compilation K-Tel and John Hughes might have released in the mid-'80s. I'm not quite so troubled by these traditional earworms, but they roll around my brain enough that when AKL says, "Guess what song I have in my head," I generally cover my ears, jabber loudly, and run to the bathroom.

Reijo_2 No, my true sleep-killer is not the classic earworm song per se, but rather earworm language. I get words and phrases in my head, phonetic constructions, odd syntax, and, worse still, names of obscure and long-forgotten hockey players. My sleep has been disturbed many a night by the odd sound or syllabic stress of bygone hockey names like Steve Konowalchuk, Jim Peplinski, Simon Nolet, Wilf Paiement, and Reijo Ruotsalainen.

Foreign spellings and pronunciations linger in my craw like stubborn phlegm, with their seemingly misplaced or extra letters. Former Soviet and Russian players: Kharlamov, Zelepukin, Mogilny, Afinogenov, Afanasenkov. And then there is the daddy of them all: German national team member Petr Draisaitl. I have no recollection whatsoever of any details about this guy other than his name. He was nothing near an outstanding player. But his name haunts me still, those bevel-edged consonants occasionally clanging together in my otherwise empty head at 3 a.m. like some complex math problem.

Some of my earworms are much simpler. Friends and I noted a few years back that Brits often pronounce "tuna" as "chuna." That one kept me awake a while, just repeating the sound of it in my mind. Place names, too, can be problematic: Monongahela, Nesowadnehunk, Coxsackie. Fuggedaboutit.

And it's not just language. I can get caught up on conceptual earworms too — the latest being the seemingly crucial thought that somehow the entire universe hinges on a simple combination of Murphy's Law and Occam's Razor. That is to say something along the lines of "the thing most likely to go wrong will go wrong."

Sometimes large chunks of text get stuck in my brain: the middle section of the Jewish mourner's Kaddish; a Henry V monologue I learned once for acting; much of the repetition in Tim O'Brien's great The Things They Carried. Sometimes, I can read something only once or twice and bits will stay with me forever. (Admittedly, the bits that don't much matter, but still.)

The construction and language of poet Michael S. Harper's For Bud (Powell) is that way:

For Bud

Could it be, Bud
that in slow galvanized
fingers beauty seeped
into bop like Bird
weed and Diz clowned—
Sugar waltzing
back into dynamite,
sweetest left hook you
ever dug, baby;
could it violate violence
Bud, like Leadbelly's
chaingang chuckle,
the candied yam
twelve string clutch
of all blues:
there's no rain
anywhere, soft
enough for you.


Some_kind_of_wonderful_2 Man, I fall hard for that thing every time, like I do for Mary Stuart Masterson in that awful guilty-pleasure Some Kind of Wonderful, or for Juliette Binoche in, well, anything. Some things are just goddamn Shakespeare to my ears, or eyes, as it were.

I don't know if anyone else out there has my affliction, aside from maybe my brother, who shares some of the same obsessive-compulsive hockey knowledge. If you do, please send me the cure. Is there some form of substitution I could be doing, a la "Maim That Tune"?

I eagerly await your comments and answers. Until then, I'll remain thankful each day this haole doesn't live in Hawai'i (god love you for that apostrophe). I might not sleep again, with all those polysyllabic words in which every other letter is a vowel. Even looking at the following words as I type them, hits me like a brace of Blue Hawaiians: MELE KALIKIMAKA!

 

December 13, 2007

For Your Holiday Listening Pleasure

A holiday music sampler, in no particular order.

Father Christmas - The Kinks
Outside of the "Heat Miser" song, my first "favorite" Christmas song as a kid. "Father Christmas, give us some money — we got no time for your silly toys..." Still classic.
Fairytaleofnewyork
Backdoor Santa - Clarence Carter

"The call me backdoor Santa. I make my runs about the break of day. I make all the little girls happy, while the boys are out to play." Nuff said. His "ho ho ho" may make you blush. Additional reason to love it: Its horn line supplies the hook for Run DMC's inimitable "Christmas in Hollis."

Fairytale of New York - The Pogues
God love the Pogues. Shane McGowan and Kirsty MacColl go toe to toe in brilliant hungover reverie. "Happy Christmas, your arse, I pray God it's our last...."

Christmas Wrapping - The Waitresses
Memo to self: If you're gonna be a one-hit-wonder, try not to make it a holiday song. Classic '80s trash pop.

Bing_bowie_2 Little Drummer Boy/Peace on Earth - Bing Crosby & David Bowie
In his final TV special, Bing Crosby teamed up with the Thin White Duke for this unlikely duet. Until the advent of iTunes, this one could cause me to leave on VH1 on Christmas day in the hopes I'd catch the video.

Feliz Navidad - Jose Feliciano
Maybe the best of the bunch. Jose knows how to work it, taking things up a notch with the switch to English for the choruses.

Mamacita - Guster
A much newer Spanglish entry by local Boston boys. Very cool tune.

Santa Claus is Back in Town - Elvis
Great opening, great execution. No one could sing about nothing the way Elvis could.

Xmas_spectorSleigh Ride - The Ronnettes
Solid production from the Wall of Sound man off the excellent A Christmas Gift for You... album. My second favorite Ronnie Spector tune, after her cover of Johnny Thunders' You Can't Throw Your Arms around a Memory.

Run Run Rudolph - Chuck Berry

Worst lyrics of the bunch ("Run Run Rudolph... Randolph's not too far behind"???), and Chuck Berry may have played it while sleeping. Still, it manages to rock.

Adeste Fidelis (Oh Come, All Ye Faithful) - Choir of King's College
Almost any choir worth their pillar of salt can sing this one and it'll sound good. I worked for a small publisher many moons ago, and one year we put together some locally-produced Christmas songs for a Rudolph book. The recording of this song kicked ass. And half our staff was Jewish, I might add.

Which leads me to...

The Chanukah Song - Adam Sandler
Despite the fact that my Jewish brethren have written many of the quintessential Christmas songs (White Christmas, Rudolph..., O Holy Night, etc.), as yet, we have been able to come up with only one commercial Chanukah song, thanks to Adam Sandler's simple brilliance. "You don't need Deck the Halls or Jingle Bell Rock, 'cause you can spin a dreidel with Captain Kirk and Mister Spock (both Jewish)."


Lagniappe: Get your baker's dozen bonus track straight from the source. The Gurgling Cod has magnanimously posted Shonen Knife's excellent Space Christmas for you fans of Osaka bubblegum pop.

December 06, 2007

Addiction

With the holiday party season nearing full tilt, I think it's time I come to terms with some personal trouble I've been having lately. OK, for a long time.

One year, in my bachelor days — when life was both more exciting and more boring — my age-old friend Spider and I decided we'd each make our New Year's resolution to develop six-pack abs. We were both fairly active guys who had once been in shape. We each figured what the hell, the mutual competition would keep us honest and spur us on, and the rippled stomachs would surely, we thought, be a hit with the single ladies.

I can't remember how close Spider got to that six-pack, other than to say that he has only slightly less body hair than Robin Williams and Tom Selleck combined, and I believe he ultimately chose to simply comb the hair on his stomach in such a way as to give the impression of a six-pack. God knows what was actually under the hair.

My own quest was more enlightening than successful. No matter how many sit-ups, crunches, etc. I did, I was never really able to get past a solid four-pack. Those bottom two ab cuts just would not show themselves. It didn't take long for me to realize why. Beyond the fact that I simply did not have the mental discipline to work out every single day, I knew at a core level that those two muscles would be forever hidden under an unyielding layer of beer and cheese.

Dsc_01340130 So, a few months into the year, I gave up my resolution. The experiment had paid some dividends, but when push came to shove, I was not willing, at that stage of my life, to give up either beer or cheese.

Soul searching ensued. If I had to choose one, I wondered, which could I actually give up, beer or cheese? Ultimately, I decided, it would be far easier for me to give up beer. I would miss it, sure. But life without cheese? Get real.

I don't just like cheese, I dream of it, pine after it, live for it. Always have. I have my cheeses of choice, for those times I need something stronger than vacuum-packed cheddar, and I love nothing more than spending a good hour in a proper, local fromagerie. Going to Neal's Yard in London was like a personal cheese hajj.

Laughingcow_2 Mind you, my cheese eating has not all been quite so glamorous. I've had more than my share of cubed orange colby-jack at office parties. And I mean cubes that have been sitting for hours, sweating under the glow of holiday cheer and bad jazz. I've opened the tub of squeaky-fresh cheese curds before even exiting Wisconsin farm stands, eaten poutine for breakfast, and scraped the last bits of jarred Whiz onto my cheesesteak. I've reveled in individually-wrapped slices of pasteurized process cheese food product, creamy WisPride logs, and bacon-cheddar squirt cheese. I've had my brushes with hitting rock bottom; I know why the caged cow laughs.

But am I addicted?

To find out, I turned to the source. Alcoholics Anonymous has a list of 12 questions for self diagnosis. They tell us that "Yes" answers to four or more questions may indicate that you have a problem. Highlights are as follows. My honest answers are in line with the questions.

1 - Have you ever decided to stop [eating cheese] for a week or so, but only lasted for a couple of days?

Yes.

3 - Have you ever switched from one kind of [cheese] to another in the hope that this would keep you from getting cheese-drunk?

Yes.

4 - Have you had to have an eye-opener upon awakening during the past year?

One word: pizza.

7 - Has your [cheese eating] caused trouble at home?

No. But my wife might be what they call an "enabler"; or worse, an addict herself.

8 - Do you ever try to get "extra" [cheese] at a party because you do not get enough?

God, yes. I eat party cheese like a starving college student, uncertain as to when and where I might stumble onto my next free meal.

9 - Do you tell yourself you can stop [eating cheese] any time you want to, even though you keep getting cheese-drunk when you don't mean to?

Yes.

12 - Have you ever felt that your life would be better if you did not [eat cheese]?

Yes. Specifically, my cholesterol and might be lower, my weight slightly lower, I might be more in fighting trim, with a thinner waist — and six-pack abs.


The addiction question. According to my answers — as the Magic 8-Ball likes to say — "signs point to yes."

So what next? Am I ready to give it up? I don't honestly know. The program tells us that the first step is to admit we are powerless over cheese. Forget the other 11 steps for now; I'm living one day at a time, one holiday party at a time. If you see me on the street, wallowing in a self-pitying stink-breath cheese hangover of yet another aged gruyere, get me to a meeting. My name is BK, and I'm a cheese addict.