I haven’t made a lot of noise about my mother’s death in January, and I don’t intend that to change. Everyone has their own method of dealing with loss, and I feel that making a big emotional scene is about the least respectful thing I could do in most cases.

I’m also not going to devote any more space in my blog to the hardships of five months away from home, enduring a very much unwanted Maine winter. There’s no need to discuss my role as caregiver during the ups and downs of her hospitalization, my tasks arranging the funeral, dealing with probate, selling her car and furniture, closing her apartment, and wrapping up her finances. I’ll even skip over seeing members of my family and a few long-lost high school friends I caught up with.

Happy family at camp
Forceps
I can't believe it's... butter

I’ll only briefly mention the powerful sense of relief once I had all those things behind me, and how very, very, very good it has been to finally be back home.

It sounds like I’ve ruled out just about everything I could possibly write, thus obviating any need for this post. But no, there is one thing I do want to share, and that’s a handful of laughs. One of that trip’s bigger realizations was how deeply important humor is to me, and its usefulness as a way to cope with even the most stressful times.

Amidst all the difficulties of the past four months, there were a handful of precious smiles worth remembering. Here’s a few.

One morning my brother and I were at her nursing home with my mother when she required emergency transport to the hospital. When the EMTs showed up, I briefed them on her condition, what medication she was on and when she had last taken each, the measures the nursing home had taken in response to her situation, and so forth. I was apparently so organized and on top of the medical lingo that—as I later found out—they actually thought I was the resident doctor!

During her emergency room trips, my brother and I sometimes hung out in the ER’s little kitchen area. Being me, I snooped through their cupboards and was surprised to find a gallon jug of molasses. Wondering what the heck they’d need so much molasses for, I consulted Google and immediately regretted it. Whatever you do, *DO* *NOT* google “emergency room molasses”!

At one point she was in the cardiac unit and a nurse and I were helping her walk. She fainted in our arms, and since the nurse was unable to reach a call button, she slapped a button pinned on her uniform. “CODE YELLOW, CCU ROOM 1! CODE YELLOW, CCU ROOM 1!” blared over the intercom and more than a dozen doctors and nurses ran into the room. Apparently “code yellow” is their shorthand for “patient out of control”, normally used for unruly or violent situations; kind of silly for an unconscious 90 year-old!

She was in and out of the hospital several times, occupying a dozen different rooms. However, after a two week stay in Room 118, her next readmission was coincidentally right back in to the same familiar room.

At one point, a prisoner from some local jail was in for treatment, with a policeman posted outside his room. His family brought a cat in with them for a visit, which is pretty surprising to begin with, in a hospital. But apparently the cat got loose in the middle of the night, resulting in a penitentiary-style lockdown of the ward and all the patient rooms until they recaptured it!

Whenever a newborn was delivered in obstetrics, they played a lullaby tune over the intercom. My mother enjoyed hearing it, although it felt very odd to hear it playing during two of my mother’s worse sessions.

The hospital allows visiting family to raid the small kitchens in the ward, so my brother and I started enjoying free ice creams during our occasional opportunities to step out of her room. I joked that I was doing my part to increase US healthcare costs.

One of the few things my mother would reliably eat was milkshakes, made with two cups of ice cream. So when the floor ran out of ice cream, my brother and I blamed her (even if we’d eaten more than our fair share)!

The doctors also ordered that the staff keep tabs on my mother’s blood sugar levels. We joked that it was because so much of their ice cream had disappeared…

It confused the hell out of me that I couldn’t buy a sugared cola drink anywhere in the entire facility: not on the floors, not in the ER, not in the cafeteria or coffee shop, nor in any of their vending machines. Apparently sugar is strictly verboten! But I couldn’t square that with all the free ice cream stocked on the floors for patients and family!

Ordering lunch one day from “Room Service” (when I worked there as a high school student, it was called “Dietary”), my mother wanted tomato soup. Asked if she wanted a bowl or a cup of soup, mom asked for a bowlful of tomato soup, but in a cup…

Auto-on, motion-detecting faucets… Great for keeping one’s hands sanitary, but a complete disaster when they’re placed in the only open section of countertop in the room. On multiple times someone would move mom’s dinner tray to the counter next to the sink, only to have the faucet helpfully spray the tray, the person, and entire room with water.

Although we came to know most of the hospital staff by name, one day a new nurse came in. Seeing two guests, she asked, “Husband and son, I presume?” Yeah, no. My brother might be aging, but he was still 22 years younger than my mother. I might better understand “Son and grandson”, since there’s nearly a full generation between he and I…

Her treatment included regular doses of morphine, which naturally zonked her out. Even at her worst, just before a new dose she would relate a list of things like medications that the nurse should know about and take care of before she “lost time” due to the effects of the morphine. My mother was always both very organized and very much a take-charge person.

She had been a lifelong nurse, so there were some things in life that were normal for us but which seem strange in retrospect. For example, most kitchens have a pair of tongs for grabbing hot items like baked potato or corn on the cob. We didn’t have that… Mom had several old pairs of stainless steel surgical forceps that she used for cooking!

And finally, the thing I think is ludicrous but which no one else seems to appreciate. Mom would naturally use empty cans or plastic containers to store stuff in. In cleaning out her freezer, I came across a couple plastic tubs that originally held a spread product called “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter!”, which my mother used for storing… (wait for it…) butter! Doh!

These were the kinds of things that kept us on our toes and provided brief moments of much-needed levity during an incredibly stressful time. Looking back, some of them remind me that my mother was a normal person. Normal people have all kinds of quirks and idiosyncrasies, which you discover during the rare times when you have to pore over their belongings in detail.

I’ve already told you about Corrugated Fun, so now it’s time to honor the B-Bar.

High school in the Eighties wasn’t like nowadays. Mom gave you five bucks for your school lunch and you bought whatever you wanted. And your options weren’t exactly crudites and chia seeds.

Me, I’m a self-made man; every day, I’d spend all my lunch money on two or three big chocolate chip cookies and three or four B-Bars. Or as we Mainers say, “Bee-Baaahs”.

What’s a B-Bar? It’s a perfect food: a healthy blend of carbohydrates, protein, and maybe a little bit of fat. It’s your basic vanilla ice cream on a stick, surrounded by a hard chocolate shell. Nothing fancy, but four of those made the perfect school lunch for a happy, growing boy!

Good thing I spent a lot of my spare time running around on the soccer pitch!

Sadly, this staple of my childhood is long gone. The ’B’ in ’B-Bar’ stood for Barnes, the small local dairy that produced it, along with the blue-raspberry popsicles I fondly remember from YMCA camp. Barnes was acquired by Oakhurst or Hood or someone, and the B-Bar went the way of the dodo.

Speaking of which, if anyone happens to know which way that dodo went, I would be curious to know. She seems to have taken a lot of my favorite things with her. Including the B-Bar: gone but never forgotten!

I’ve been talking about this project for maybe a year, and I finally got to it. I made a batch of ice cream where I replaced the normal amount of sugar with an equal amount of Pixy Stix candy.

Just think about the genius of that: Pixy Stix are pretty much just pure flavored sugar to begin with, so swapping it one-to-one for the sugar in an ice cream recipe ought to be pretty much a no-op. While at the same time, it makes something absolutely magical: Pixy Stix ice cream!

I actually upped the ante even more by adding crushed bits of SweeTart candies. Again, this is a bit more sleight-of-hand, because SweeTarts and Pixy Stix are exactly the same formula; the latter were created when parents wanted to give kids the same candy, but in a less messy form. So it was like Pixy Stix ice cream with Pixy Bitz! Did I say “genius” already?

So was the result just as magical as I’d envisioned?

Well, not really. See, the dextrose in Pixy Stix isn’t quite as sweet as normal sucrose, so the ice cream was actually a little bit bland. Not bad, mind you, but in no way sufficient to induce a diabetic seizure. Though the flavor did tend to come around as the ice cream hardened and “matured”.

And the SweeTart bits, of course, absorbed some of the moisture from the cream base and partially dissolved, which rendered them more chewy than crunchy. But they did leave a wonderfully colorful pattern in the base medium, looking for all the world like any confetti cake you’d make. They were actually a nice, festive addition to a surprisingly unmemorable base recipe.

But even if the results were mixed (hah!), it was still a very worthwhile experiment. Not all dreams turn out the way you envision them, but I’d rather have that than to never know and always wonder…


Saturday I attended my second Wise Speech workshop at CIMC with Narayan Liebenson Grady. It was interesting because it was one of the few times when people are encouraged to talk to one another, and I found it refreshing, meeting new people or renewing existing friendships.

One nugget I’d like to share is the following quote, which comes from Maha Ghosananda. While his name might not be familiar to most, he’s earned the nickname “the Gandhi of Cambodia” for his work during the brutal Khmer Rouge years that eradicated Buddhism in Cambodia. Here’s the quote:

The thought manifests as the word.
The word manifests as the deed.
The deed develops into the habit.
The habit hardens into the character.
The character gives birth to the destiny.
So, watch your thoughts with care
And let them spring from love
Born out of respect for all beings.

Narayan shared this as a way to put Wise Speech into context as one of the bases upon which our actions depend. This makes clear the reasons behind the Buddhist emphasis on training oneself to engage in wise thought, speech, and action: they are are what drive our habits, our character, and our destiny.

This runs parallel to my main revelation during the workshop, which is to view speech as “instant karma”. Speech has instant, irrevocable results: speak in an unwise way, and you reap immediate repercussions.

Speech is an ideal part of one’s life to work with, because it is concrete, it’s easy to control, and you can see its results immediately. And, of course, it’s an area where most people act without any thought. There’s no other element of practice that yields such obvious results for such a small investment of effort.

After the workshop, a bunch of people from our ever-growing circle of dharma friends got together for a birthday dinner at the Elephant Walk. It’s a Cambodian restaurant, which was a bit ironic given the Ghosananda quote earlier in the day. After dinner we went for ice cream at Lizzie’s in Harvard Square, where I had my favorite: a frappe with chocolate chip ice cream and vanilla syrup, a personal creation I’ve always called “Corrugated Fun”.

This provided ample amusement, thanks to an event earlier in the day. Since lunch wasn’t provided for the workshop, a couple of us went over to the local Whole Foods to pick something up. I grabbed some fresh berries, but put those down when I discovered that they had Haagen-Dazs Cookies & Cream ice cream. Everyone was amused that I put away a pint of ice cream over lunch. Having more ice cream after supper (which I’d ordered “spicy”) only cemented my reputation as having an iron stomach.

I might have even scared them when I offered to recruit a few of them to come with me when the Jimmy Fund’s annual Scooper Bowl comes takes place in June!

Then I came home to some really surreal news, but that’s a story for another—friends-locked—post.

In episode two of “Don’t You Wish You Were Ornoth”:

I just realized that I have a job where ice cream can be expensed to the client.

Just got back from the Scooper Bowl, a seven dollar all-you-can-eat ice cream fundraiser for charity.

I was there approximately an hour and a quarter, and ingested no less than 20 cups of ice cream, an average of one cup every three minutes and forty-five seconds.

Those break down into four HP Hood Comeback Caramel, three each of Häagen-Dazs Cookies ’N Cream and Raspberry Sorbet, two Häagen-Dazs Light Dulce de Leche, and one each of Häagen-Dazs Mint Chip, Brighams/Élan Black Raspberry and Bordeux Cherry Chip, Edy’s Grand Orange Sherbet, HP Hood Green Monster Mint, Kemps Lovin’ Caramel Swirl, Garelick Farms Dinosaur Crunch and Vanilla…

…and one immense case of Bloaty-Ohs!

The charity which puts on the Scooper Bowl is the Jimmy Fund (the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), which incidentally is also the beneficiary of the Pan-Mass Challenge, my annual charity bicycle ride from Sturbridge to Provincetown. I am late in starting my fundraising, but a notice will be posted here shortly. However, if you want to get a jump on the competition, aim your browser at my PMC Profile page.

If you could only choose 1 cd to ever listen to again, what would it be?
Well, I'm torn between two. First, there's the Toasters' 1998 "Live in London" disc. It really captures the essence of their incredible and energetic live shows at the height of their skill. And, of course, it's ska, which is practically a necessity of life! Songs like "2-Tone Army" and "Weekend in L.A." are pure happiness, built to order.
 
Then there's the industrial might of KMFDM's 1995 "Nihil". Their most polished effort, "Nihil" is an angry stomp through a world of angst and misery. Songs like "Ultra", "Juke Joint Jezebel", "Flesh", "Disobedience", and "Trust" all set the tone of submission and preversion that reaches a crushing crescendo in "Brute", the most compelling song of submission I've ever heard:
Touch me — hate me
Give yourself to me and break me
Cut these eyes and I will see
Kiss these lying lips for me
Stroke this skin and I will kneel
Brutalize me; I will heal
If you could only choose 2 movies to watch ever again, what would they be?
Although I generally dislike movies, perhaps that's why I find this one easy to answer. The first and obvious answer is Richard Linklater's 2002 "Waking Life", a rotoscoped nonlinear romp through pop philosophy. It's a saturation-bombing of introspection for a slacker population who haven't yet woken up to the real questions of life, and is thus an absolute treasure trove of questions for the enquiring mind. Don't leave home without it!
 
My other selection is a little more embarassing: "Star Trek: the Wrath of Khan". People really don't seem to realize what a literary masterpiece WoK really is. From a writers' standpoint, it does an expectional job of using all the literary elements: character development and change, dramatic tension and action scenes, a believable but larger than life villain, several archetypes, incredible imagery, unexpected plot twists, and above all it manipulates the viewers' emotions with a skill that most movies fail to accomplish. And on top of it all, virtually every line of dialogue is fantastically quotable! It's an amazing piece of writing, and no matter how stupid it might sound, it really does make my list of movies that are actually worth seeing.
 
If you could only choose 3 books to read ever again, what would they be?
I suppose, as a writer, I ought to have an opinion here, but I don't. To be honest, there aren't many books that I really find very compelling. For me, books are pretty interchangeable, at least those designed to entertain. But if I really had to make a list, here's what might get considered:
 
  • Tanith Lee's "Cyrion" (good atmosphere)
  • Something from Terry Pratchett (good humor, but they're all interchangeable)
  • Elizabeth Scarborough's "Song of Sorcery" (good "innocent" fantasy)
  • Michael Shea's "The Color Out of Time" (like Lovecraft, only well-written!)
  • Clark Ashton Smith's "Monster of the Prophesy" (one of the trailblazers of horror and fantasy)
  • Bram Stoker's "The Jewel of Seven Stars" (even better than his "Dracula")
 
If you could only choose 4 things to eat or drink ever again, what would they be?
  • Ice cream (one of the necessities of life; either chocolate chip, or Haagen-Dazs' Cookies & Cream)
  • Coca-Cola (an ancient addiction)
  • Some form of chicken curry (Indian food, and meat!)
  • Baby carrots (fresh garden veggies steeped in butter!)
 
If you could only choose 5 people to ever be/talk/associate/whatever with ever again, who would they be?
  • Inna — One of the most insightful and interesting people I know. She's helped me really come into my own as a person, and is quite the cutie!
  • Ailsa — Each time she's come into my life, she's heralded major change, and always for the better. She's been my role model for successfully incorporating emotion and impulsiveness into my otherwise very staid personality. And she's a cutie!
  • Rhonda — Another woman who helps me explore that part of life that I don't understand, Rhonda has an intuitive grasp of emotion. And as a fellow writer, I appreciate her intellect and skill. And she's a cutie, as well.
  • Pam — Unlike the others, Pam is me in a woman's body. She seems to understand me in a way other women can't: she empathizes with my social ineptitude as well as my passion for perfection and order. She knows what it's like to be happy being alone, and things like that connect us in a rare "kindred spirit" kind of way. And being a writer, she understands what I'm about. And she's a cutie!
  • Margot — Margot is also a writer, as well as an artist, and I really appreciate her intelligence and her supportiveness. And wouldn't you know it? She's a cutie, too!

Frequent topics