October 31

The Truth Behind the Tale, part 1.

 

 

A couple of things involving the interpretation of actual historical events have rattled my cage these last few weeks.

Listen, I know I’m a pain about this bugaboo of mine- it’s been remarked that I should just shut up and “enjoy the story,” whatever it may be, but I can’t: my researcher’s heart revolts- don’t claim it’s true if it’s not, dammit.

Starting with New Orleans- there are tons of ghost tours, many of which are based on actual historical events. Granted, these events have in many cases been so ramped up that they bear little resemblance to the facts, but there’s a generally nugget of truth under there. I did a whole series (and intend to keep going) of Hubpages on truth vs. reality on a couple of them, complete with an intro that says, “hey, I get why they get embellished, and I love a good ghost story too, but…spoilers ahead- didn’t happen. At least not like that.”

These stories took time to research. They took effort and diligence. I have a library of books, plus paid subscriptions to newspaper archives and classes attended.

In short, I take my shit seriously.

So when this email arrived, about this article, I was…uh…miffed:

From where was this history derived? We conduct tours of this cemetery and we repeated this info as historically correct and have had actual local historians tell us it is not true. Please respond. Thank you.

Wait. Waitwaitwait. I’m sorry? Perhaps I misunderstood. You’re making money off my work, and when questioned, chose to insult me and demand I do MORE work on YOUR behalf because you had no actual research of your own to fall back upon?

My return email was a detailed c.v. (“actual” historians, harumph!) and took up waaaaay too much time and emotional energy. Attempting to keep the tone formal and detached, it said that although I wasn’t going to dig up my actual info for her, she could start to do her own work using the following resources, blah blah blah. I said that given what I’ve made off that article I was positive that just one of her tour groups had made far more money off my research than I had, so feel free to go forth and do likewise.

Ultimately, my return email was stupid. Did I really think she would say, “Oh, jeez, you’re right! I have seen the error of my ways in that I focus on dressing up like Stevie Nicks and creating a vibe and instead should focus on the actual information I perform for credulous tourists!” No. Of course not. That’s not what she does. She provides entertainment, and as long as she’s not actually harming anything, I have nothing to say about it, other than that I’d prefer fact to fiction, but whatever.

Her return email focused on the money, of course, stating I was bitter because she was making more off research than I did. It quite deliberately misses the point, but then I guess we both did that, eh?

It also said she went to the library and did some research of her own, tyvm, so perhaps that’s a victory of a sort? My ego compels me to add that she did not also say she found anything contradicting my work. Ah hem. Plus, she’s providing info that most don’t have, so that’s a net gain for the world, too.

Ultimately, this has been a positive event. It’s reminded me how much I do love digging and finding and researching. It’s reminded me that the truth is often more interesting than the tale that gets spun around it. I need to get out my magnifying glass and archives and get back to work. Maybe they’ll ultimately get compiled someplace, or maybe they won’t, but the joy is in the hunt. As a side note, it also made me realize that Hubpages changed its formatting rules and I need to edit this and other pages, after having left them abandoned to fend for themselves for a few years.

And, in the end, there’s always the lesson the dead leave us with:
StLouis 3- Dupaquieri 2
Tempis Fugit, baby. Time, it does fly, get back to what matters, because you have less time than you think to accomplish it in.

This symbol, found on the Dupaquir tomb in St. Louis No. 3 is one of my favorites- a winged hourglass with a wreath of poppies (symbolizing the sleep of death) and morning glories (the hope of reawakening) over a laurel wreath (the heroic struggle), darkened to show the detail as time wears away the stone.

 

April 14

The Accidental Gathering of a Tribe

Yet another massive Nor’easter had shut things down and I was so VERY over it. I hated they gray. Hated the snow and never-ending winter. Hated my neighbors and their parking spot hogging, Tejano music blaring, garbage spilling genially oblivious ways. I hated this stupid city running around ticketing and towing everyone they could.

And I’ll confess, the thing I hated most was my own poor planning – no coffee or chocolate in the house during a storm while PMSing? I know better than that.

Tired and stressed out, I gave in and had a cranky pity party, ranting to a friend that I thought maybe this was it- I couldn’t take this place any more and I was seriously considering how to pull off a move because, what the hell! It’s not like I have any ties here anyway!

Cue the Wayne’s World transition sequence…

Say such things and the universe takes note, deciding to show me what a rough week really looked like. The next 24 hours brought news of one death, one recurrence of cancer and one unbelievable tragedy to a beloved granddaughter.

The surprising part wasn’t how hard it all hit me, or the support given and received. It wasn’t even the unexpected fits of bawling that crept up on me.

No, the surprising part was that these things were happening to coworkers, not family.

This place that had become impossible to work full time had morphed into a pleasure to work at part time, and despite having not had a real day off in weeks, it had proven hard to give up. The comparatively few hours I was able to work made me something of a novelty and my arrival was greeted with cheers and all the latest gossip, not to mention bear hugs. And we could all use more bear hugs in our lives.

Hearing all of this terrible news in our little group took some processing. The hugs were a little fiercer, the admonitions of “you’d better take care of yourself, dammit,” a bit more pointed. With a funeral the next day and emotional exhaustion knocking me off my feet, there was no way I was cooking dinner, so when I clocked out, I headed to our odd little Italian joint for some takeout.

This place, well, let’s be honest: I’ve made fun of it quite a lot. They have a killer weekday take out pizza for $9.99 and pour a mean drink. But the patrons tend to be a little…colorful. Imagine Cheers set not in a big city but in a town struggling to get by in the shadow of a big city. Even the name- “Youngest Brother” – seems like it has a little bit of a chip on its shoulder.

I never order ahead of time, instead saddling up to the bar with my phone or other distraction in hand so I can just eavesdrop, and I’ve never left without some nugget of “wisdom” to share when I get home.* I don’t really interact with anyone, preferring the fly-on-the-wall approach because I genuinely don’t know what would come out of my mouth if they asked me what I thought about our current government or why everyone ought to be allowed to walk around with bazookas if they want to.**

So imagine my surprise when I walk in and get a big sort of…cheer? From behind the bar? And I’m kind of looking around to see who they’re excited about? And a little confused because I’m the only one around? And before I get to a barstool, a very large, very strong Jack and Coke is waiting for me with Mary the barmaid announcing to all and sundry how THRILLED she is that I’m there, because they’re “all fucking nuts” and she needed to talk to somebody “smart” and “regular” (quotes, all) for once.

None of which made a whole lot of sense to me, because I really couldn’t tell you about a single conversation I’ve had there, other than once being told that I was weird for not liking cannoli, but that I was probably still a “keeper” because I still brought them home for Mr. Pixel.

And then I actually allowed myself to get drawn into the fringes of the argument currently going on- whether getting bagels hot out of the oven were worth driving an hour away at 6am.  For what it’s worth, I was firmly on the “no” side, but then again there’s very little I’d be willing to schlep to do at that hour.

But while the debate raged around me, I marveled at this thing that had happened without my realizing it. Somehow, despite my feeling isolated, alone, and adrift, I’d made some connections after all. It wasn’t exactly what or how I’d pictured things, but it turns out that it’s still pretty nice to show up where, as the song says, “everybody knows your name.”

Even if you’re not quite sure how they learned it.

 


*My possible favorite was the night Charlie Brown’s Great Pumpkin was on, and a very lively conversation ensued about how, these days, adults would just screw everything up, not like back then (?) when kids could be kids… and Lucy would be considered a bully!

I mean…isn’t the Lucy thing kind of a central point of the story you’re supposed to take away? And adults could give kids rocks for treats, I guess that’s a good, character building sort of thing from this point of view? And small kids could stay out all night lost in the pumpkin patch? I don’t know, but it certainly always gives me something to chew over and consider because, frankly, these aren’t the sorts of people I’ve normally had in my life.

**actual discussion one night

April 1

Burning the Candle at Every End

Yesterday was…bad. Bad at home, bad at work*, bad internally. Maybe the full moon, maybe Mercury retrograde, maybe just “one of those days,” but I’ve been thinking I’ve been doing okay, holding it together, until being given unsolicited advice I probably needed to hear, and I realizing the only one I’ve been fooling is myself.

It was: “Don’t take this the wrong way, because it’s given in the spirit of ‘it takes one to know one,” and as someone who’s been there: you’re going to kill yourself if you keep going like this. You need to find a happy space, start taking care of yourself, and probably get medicated. Soon.”

And It was hard to hear, but as I considered how I’ve been dealing with the exhaustion, the stress, the disease, the job(s)…He’s not wrong. I’ve driven myself nearly manic.

I think a lot of us do- everyone in general, but caretakers in particular.

We’re often so isolated that there’s no one there to point out the obvious to us, even though we’ve heard it all- “You can’t pour from an empty cup,”. “Put your own airmask on before attempting to help others,” etc etc. Maybe we’re so busy just coping that we don’t let anyone in enough to see the truth of what’s going on. Or maybe, most painfully, that the people around us just find it easier to remain willfully oblivious. Or that those people around us are so busy dealing with their own pain that they can’t see ours.

This near stranger saw me for a minute, likely more clearly than I’ve been seeing myself.

———————————————————————————–
*in retrospect, the work part is kinda funny, now that I’m not in the middle of it. Rough night all around on the phones, everybody’s mad, everybody’s in a hurry, I get it. But the last call is someone who is bellowing, losing his mind for a good half hour, calling me all kinds of names…because his internet went down for 5 minutes. It’s back up now, but I have RUINED HIS WEEKEND and he is “HIGH AND DRY NOW- WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT THAT, HUH??!”

Turns out dude had some “Netflix and chill” action going on, and when the internet went off for those few minutes, she left. Sweetheart, if she was out the door that fast, she was looking to get out anyway.

Funny now…when I was being screamed at and accused of all kinds of things, not so much, especially exhausted, burnt out, and allowing his profane name-calling to get to me. Perspective and balance: I will find them again.

January 7

The Dangerous Allure of a Rose Colored Rear-View Mirror.

I’ve found myself in one of those cycles where everything seems to be going wrong- and in expensive ways, which just ratchets up the stress levels: the dog got hurt and was touch and go for awhile. The heat/hot water were out for days. Car problems. Sickness. Rough holidays. The hurricane-force blizzard that was Grayson.

But in the middle of all of this, my beloved New Orleans Saints kept marching along toward the playoffs. Perversely I was getting more miserable the closer they came. As soon as I allowed myself to acknowledge this contradiction it became perfectly clear that I’ve been not just homesick but timesick.

This is the time of year when things really kick into high gear back at home. Twelfth Night was yesterday and kicks off Carnival season- with a few parades, of course. King Cakes everywhere! Parties, friends, food, things warming back up…and I am missing it.

But it was nine years ago that Superbowl fever really took over the city.

Looking through that rearview mirror those were among the best, most fun months of my life- I have the pictures to prove it!

[foogallery id=”2170″]

It’s these days that I find the hardest- the ones where you can pinpoint where you were and what amazing thing you were doing at a precise moment- in contrast to today, where you, say, had to get the car jumped three times (really) standing in sub-zero temps. And photographic evidence of how wonderful it was can drive that knife home when everything seems bleak.

And yet…

2009 was also only a year after the stock market/housing collapse. Things were in free fall and we’d lost just about everything, although Mr. Pixel tried to shield me from the worst of it. He’d fallen into a deep, deep depression. He did come out to see the games and got out of himself for those few hours, but refused to attend a single parade or party. We fought. A lot. It was also the year I closed my business, which was a difficult decision and process. I’d started a “regular” job where I’d meet some of my best friends, but also worked for a boss who had a whole subscription’s worth of issues. And hell, Superbowl Sunday both my daughter and good friend ended up in urgent care- daughter, away at college, taken by her roommate, friend by me. Both missed the big day, both were very worrying…and yet, in my memory, the clearest part of that was the “fun” of having to dodge through the parades to get to the doctor with my shivering, feverish, very sick patient.

Looking at the past through that rose-colored rear view mirror is dangerous, because its focus is so narrow. It cuts off everything on the periphery until the memory so occluded it has little relationship to reality.

Yes, it was a good time, but possibly it seems like such a bright, shining star because there was also quite a bit of darkness around, too.

Just as, dark as these few weeks have been, if I breathe and let myself see it, there was a lot of light, too. A coworker did an mindbogglingly kind deed, sending her plumber out in the middle of the night to deal with my furnace/water heater, despite knowing I could not pay because of the emergency vet bills. He refused to even give me a bill. Words cannot describe my gratitude, and even astonishment that she would do that for someone she doesn’t even know very well. The dog is improving, and getting back to his feisty self. Hubby holds steady, and is getting ready for a second knee surgery that should restore much of his mobility. I might’ve found (or rather, been found by) a potential new friend who’s going to show me why this “is the most gorgeous part of the world” come this spring.

Last but not least, I start a new job in two weeks- one with much less physical labor and much better pay that should take some of the pressure off. For the first time in several years, I feel that this New Year has potential.

And, hey, so do the Saints! There’s a pot of roast beef on the stove for po boys/disco fries and cold beer in the fridge. So maybe we won’t be watching the game in a theater with a couple hundred fans, or heading to the French Quarter afterward. It’s enough- more than enough- if I remember to keep facing forward, through a windshield that’s maybe a little dirty and dim, but has that potential we all need to keep putting one foot in front of the other.