QuArterly MAgAzine of StorieS, PoeMS, And PerSonAl nArrAtiveS
Transcription
QuArterly MAgAzine of StorieS, PoeMS, And PerSonAl nArrAtiveS
A quarterly publication of, by and for the Redwood Coast Senior Center community RC SC EDWOOD OAST E N I O R ENTER July/September 2015 GAZETTE A Q u A r t e r ly M AgA z i n e of S t o r i e S, P o e M S, And PerSonAl n A r r At i v e S Redwood Coast Senior Center • 490 N. Harold Street, Fort Bragg, CA 95437 • (707) 964-0443 • rcscenter.org July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette Table of Contents 2 Smells, Community and Freedom — Charles Bush 3 Working the Visitor Center on Saturday Afternoon — Henri Bensussen 3 Indebted to the dog haiku — Mickey Chalfin 4 Kitchen Garden Footprint 5 Muffins and Maps — Barbara Lee 6 To Chi Or Not To Chi — Nona Smith 8 If I Forget Your Birthday — Geraldine Pember 9 Watching — Mickey Chalfin 10 More Marilyn, Less Judy — Nona Smith 12 Looking for Winkler — Adrienne Ross 15 Three Poems — ruth weiss 16 Sydney’s Best Day — Gene Lock 17 And Dream — Rick Banker 18 Two Poems by Jay Frankston Where Are The Hippies Of Yesterday? Like an Eagle Cover Photo by Nancy Banker 1 Be a Part of the Future ! Get The GAZETTE on your computer, tablet or smartphone! Save paper! See all the cool photos and art in col or! Go to rcscenter.org and click on the Ga ze tte button on the home page Questions? Rick Banke r 937-3872 rick@ wreckle ssmedia.com BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2015 Syd Balows, President Bob Bushansky, Vice President Claudia Boudreau, Treasurer Rick Banker, Secretary Annie Liner Zo Abell Mark Slafkes John Wilson Charles Bush, Executive Director 2 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 Smells, Community and Freedom — Charles Bush I have managed a dozen communities of all sizes and types over the past 50 years. The question of what to do about the way some folks smell, that other folks don’t like, is always a sensitive and thorny issue. I always think that the things we don’t like to talk about have a lot to teach us, and smells are high on that list. What is it that’s so special about smells compared to our other senses, and what can smells teach us about managing interpersonal boundaries in a community? In order to “sense” something, we have to “let it in” somehow. For example, to see, we have to let light in our eyes. Light rays aren’t so scary, and we can just look away or close our eyes if things don't look pretty to us. To feel a touch, we have to make physical contact on the body's surface. We mostly stay in control because we can usually avoid undesired contact. Hearing is a little more complicated because sound can travel a long way and is harder to avoid. Nevertheless, at least it is just air waves getting into us – may be unpleasant, but at least not physically intrusive. Tastes are intrusive, but we can avoid them by simply keeping our mouths shut. Then there is smell. Little particles get right in our nose, and we know there’s something real that got inside us. Nevertheless it can come from a distance, and since we have to breathe, we just can’t keep smells out. They really intrude in a very intimate way. Smells are also connected strongly to emotion, and to attraction and repulsion. As a result we react strongly to how someone else smells, and all around the world, in different cultures we have different smell preferences. All of this makes it very hard for us to talk about smells, and hard to listen when someone tells us we don’t smell good to them. When someone doesn’t match our smell preferences, we generally want the “community manager” to fix it, whether that is our parent, the coach, the teacher, the theatre manager, the restaurant server, or the senior center director. Whenever folks in the community have different preferences, styles, or “smell sensibilities” it is worth trying to make an adjustment with a simple unemotional chat. If we turn to the “boss” to decide which sensibility wins, or decide to make rules about it, we always end up giving up some of our freedom. Learning how to work things out – person-to-person – can be hard, a little scary, but in the end very rewarding. How we smell to one another is really action-packed and intimate. If we can learn to tackle a hard one like that in a personal way, we will be on our way toward a beautiful self-governing community. So take a good whiff, and if something doesn’t tickle your fancy have a friendly visit about it. It’s hard to know how we smell to others, because were so used to ourselves. Having someone mention it is great – like when someone tells you your zipper is unzipped or your shirt button undone, or there is something caught on your teeth or coming out your nose. Those are the times when sharing information builds community by allowing us to accommodate one another in a kind way by negotiating our preferences. July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette Working the Visitor Center on Saturday Afternoon This is a day the clock measures slow sunshine at 7, clouds back by 9, rain beginning at noon tick-tick tick-tick shivering tourists blow in the door pat down their hair motorcyclists roar past on a run to Redwood Highway 101 putt-putt putt-putt What do you have to offer? the tourists ask. How far, where is what can we do/see/eat/shop for in twenty minutes before we leave again? Is it always this cold? tick-tick putt-putt putt-putt tick-tick I hand out maps, point out beaches, the museum, and the best and only place open for lunch at 3 PM. No malls, no Wal-Mart. (What do you need? Our homey hardware store’s just down the block.) Hard to comprehend a town that lacks a super emporium. tick-tick tick-tick putt-putt putt-putt Henri Bensussen indebted to the dog haiku dull moments, no way my legs never find the couch while the pooch is near bed sandwich each morn dog paradise strait-jacket nobody can move like a downhill bike all activities are geared seeking most pleasures state police on trail hide out behind redwood tree leash way back in car always so moving dog nose ready for springtime chasing rabbit scent Mickey Chalfin Thank You Harvest Market makes weekly vegetable, fruit, and bread donations and supplies much of the fresh produce for the 800 lunches we serve to elders every week, in the dining room or delivered by Meals On Wheels to shut-in seniors at home. Harvest Market also collects close to $900 a month for the senior Center through their bag purchase program. Without this generosity we literally could not operate the lunch-for-seniors service, because our federal subsidy does not cover the cost of the program. Harvest Market is truly an anchor for redwood Coast seniors food services. Many, Many thanks. 3 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette 4 July/September 2015 Kitchen Garden Footprint The Redwood Coast Seniors’ Kitchen Garden is now in summer mode. We are harvesting 50 pounds of food every Monday workday. Garden lettuce and red cabbage are going to diners and Meals-OnWheels folk. Purple peas and beets are appearing in the salad bar and Alice is making rhubarb crisp again. By next month we should have the first garden zucchini and other summer squash. Carol Ann Walton Realtor ® [ Gale Beauchamp Realty Office 707 964-5532 Mobile 707 291-2258 dRe #00483386 [ gbrealty.com cwalton@mcn.org 345 Cypress Street Fort Bragg, California 95437 Thanks to the 4, 5, 6 or even 7 gardeners who come each Monday and help grow our food! Have you noticed the big lettuce disappearing from the barrels out front? That is because we have been eating them! I planted more, tiny lettuce plants yesterday. In 4 to 6 weeks they will be in our salad bar. Cabbage, tomatoes, and giant red mustard are also growing amongst the flowers. You are welcome to take a walk through the garden. Look for squash and pumpkins overflowing their containers, the red blossoms of southwest pole beans, and a very healthy row of celery. There are 2 partly shaded picnic tables (a great place to have an informal meeting) and a cafe table with 2 chairs (just right for tea and a chat). See you in the garden, Linda CANCLINI TELEVISION & APPLIANCES MATTRESSES Marilyn (Pixie) Canclini 636 S. Franklin, Fort Bragg, Ca 95437 707 • 964-5611 • FAX 707 • 964-8227 cancliniappliance@comcast.net Stop in and say hello to Pixie, Lynn, James, Miles July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette 5 MUFFINS AND MAPS — Barbara Lee M ake muffins and check maps: the last on the “things to do” list. The muffins were for her favorite aunt’s birthday. The maps would guarantee they got to Alder Springs, where the oldest and oddest of her mother’s nine sisters lived. Aunt Zelda never married or had kids and she lived in a place so out-of-the-way that none in the family had ever been there. That was all right with her. Every year on her birthday, she would descend from her mountain for an overnight visit to a relative of her choosing. The entire family came together from the Bay Area for one sumptuous night of family and food. While there she told stories about growing up in the Great Depression and the effects of World War II. She told of hand-me-down shoes and handeddown boyfriends, but the matriarch’s days of independence on the road were over. The muffin maker went into the kitchen, located the recipe that would transform raw materials into mouth-watering joy. She lined up the bowls, the measures, the utensils. She placed the ingredients next to each in order of their use. She preheated, she gently folded, she tarried to beat the batter into fluffy nuggets she dropped into the greased and floured cavities of the muffin pan she placed squarely in the middle of the oven. At the right time, she extracted her creation and studied the results of her meticulous efforts. Golden brown domes, zeniths of cracked open crust, crooked fissures cascaded down the sides like lava to the edge of the sea. The spice-laden aroma filled her nostrils. Her job was done. They were perfect. She cleaned the kitchen, but before she loaded the car, she looked over the California map. Take 20 to Willits, 101 to Calpella, 20 again until just before Williams, swing a left to Leesville, Lodoga, Stonyford and Elk Creek. First right after Elk Creek, start climbing the Coast Range to Alder Springs. The ride was long and arduous. Storms had dumped rain and snow through northern California. Roads unexposed to sun were slick and slow. Four hours and fifty miles after the turn toward Leesville, she arrived. Aunt Zelda greeted her from the porch in a purple sweat suit, her bright yellow socks rolled down over the tops of pink sneakers. Too-red lipstick outlined her welcome words. “I can’t believe you’re here.” She hugged so tight and went inside to make them hot tea. While auntie was inside, she unloaded the car. Where were the muffins? She looked front and back, under the seat, and then remembered that she had placed them on the trunk before she packed the car. She saw herself slam the rear door shut. She got into the car, started the ignition, took one look back at the house and drove off without securing the muffins. Aunt Zelda was flittering about the kitchen like a big cheery grape. “You’re the only one who could make it for my birthday. The weather and all, you know.” She could tell from the empty hands and sad look on her niece’s face that there would not be muffins to put in the bowl purposed to accompany the tea setting in the center of the chrome and Formica kitchen table. Before the frustrated muffin maker could wring her own neck, the ancient oddity reached into the empty bowl, took out an imaginary muffin, took an imaginary bite, closed her eyes and savored the imaginary flavor and texture. “Um, um, um.” She looked into her favorite family member’s eyes and smiled. “Barbara June, you’ve done it again. These muffins are as good as gold.” Aunt Zelda said that every time. 6 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 To Chi Or Not to Chi — Nona Smith I first met Allyson in a walking group when our short legs fell into a comfortable side-by-side stride. She was an attractive, petite woman whose wispy hair framed her face and accentuated her green, feline-shaped eyes. She spoke with a slight southern drawl and seemed to feel comfortable sharing the intimate details of her life with a complete stranger. “For many years,” she confided as we puffed along at a good clip, “I was involved with a church group. But just recently, one of the elders told me I wasn’t deacon material.” She made air quotes around deacon material and rolled her eyes heavenward. “He said I talk too much, listen too little, and lack empathy. Imagine that!” She looked angry. Devastated actually. “I’m leaving that church.” She sounded determined. Several weeks later Allyson came to walking group again. She fitted her stride to mine and began telling me about her new friends, some women who study goddess worship. They travel together to places like Delphi and Machu Pichu to be near The Goddess Source. (Again, the air quotes.) She’d already made two trips with them to small villages in Mexico and had collected trinkets and charms along the way. “I find these spiritually energizing,” she told me, her cat eyes narrowing. Months later, Allyson caught up with me again. She was no longer affiliated with those women, but she told me about the intricately woven necklaces she’d created using the amulets and milagros she’d collected in her Goddess Source travels. “They are spiritually empowering talismans,” she said touching her chest where an imaginary necklace might have lain. “But what do you know about feng shui?” she asked. I was confused by the rapid change of subject. “Uh … not much.” She smiled, like I’d said The Perfect Thing, and I felt like a fly who’d stumbled into a spider’s web. “It’s my new spiritual path,” she said. Her face conveyed rapture. “Let me tell you about it.” I sensed this walk would be a long one and picked up the pace, hoping to wind her. “It’s the ancient Chinese practice of placing things” – and here her stubby fingers made those air quotes again – “in order to produce the maximum harmonic balance in one’s life.” I tried to hide my skepticism. “What kinds of ‘things’ are you placing?” I asked. “Good question!” she said, beaming. “I can show you. I’m enrolled in a feng shui training course now and I’m required to do several consultations before I can get my certificate of completion. May I do one for you? Then you’ll understand about placing things.” She looked ecstatic. The look got me. With lots of trepidation and a caveat, I agreed. “Okay, but here’s the thing: I don’t want to spend a lot of money remodeling any fatal flaws you find, so you’ll have to tell me what to do to improve things – if you find improvement is needed – without it costing a lot.” She readily agreed and I awaited her visit with … curiosity. At the appointed time, I saw Allyson’s car from my kitchen window. When, after several minutes, she failed to appear at my door, I went outside to look for her. I found her pacing back and forth on the sidewalk in front of my house. She was swinging a small crystal by a red thread. “This is bad,” she announced without a hello. She was frowning. “Your house is on a down slope, a very poor sign.” I could tell she’d forgotten all about our agreement. I invited her in anyway and hoped for the best. July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette Standing over the threshold in the foyer, Allyson peered up the stairs to the garage level and down the stairs to the main part of the house. Crystal swinging, her brow still furrowed, she announced, “This isn’t good. The life energy force, the chi, is confused. It’s not good for the chi to be confused. You’ll have to wind a silk garland around the banister so the chi will know which way to proceed.” Without actually agreeing to do this, I led her downstairs. At the bottom of the steps, Allyson stood in shocked dismay, staring out the window in front of her. The window framed lush greenery and a graceful but sickly Monterey Pine. The crystal on the thread swung enthusiastically. “Oh dear. Look at this.” She gestured dramatically to the glass. “Your money is disappearing,” she announced. “Coming in the front door and running right through this window. The only thing saving it is that pine tree.” She hadn’t fully entered the house and already things were going badly. I didn’t have the heart to tell her the tree had been diagnosed with beetle blight and was scheduled to be cut down at week’s end. Instead, I steered her toward the living room where she discovered yet another problem. Light streamed into this high ceilinged room from many directions. Allyson clucked her tongue. “Bad for the chi,” she said. “We need crystals in this room to ‘ground’ (another set of air quotes) the chi and keep it from charging around and causing an energy overload. Nine crystals should remedy this situation, hanging from red threads, dangling in front of the windows.” She made a note of this. I could see my home was hopelessly inhospitable to the chi, but not knowing how to get rid of Allyson, I showed her the bedrooms. Her crystal swung energetically as she walked around, offering suggestions for additional gem placement here, wind chimes 7 there. Standing in my son’s walk-in closet, I saw Allyson smile for the first time. “This is the best energy in the house,” she enthused. Well, of course it is. This is where my son used to hide his weed stash. We walked down the final flight of stairs to my office, a low-ceilinged room with panoramic views of stately oaks. It had the feeling of a cozy tree house. Through a large window, I delighted in watching squirrels cavort among the branches. “To keep the chi energized here you’ll need to paint the ceiling black,” Allyson proclaimed. I bit my tongue and balled my hands into fists. Then realizing I had no more rooms to show her, I was flooded with relief and ventured a question. “Chi-wise, am I doing anything right?” She thought about it for a nano-second before answering, “Not much.” And then, as an after-thought added, “But if you want to attract a ‘serious relationship’ (air quotes again) into your life, you might try placing pairs of things in the north/east corners of rooms. A pair of salt shakers, gloves, anything in twos.” Consultation over, crystal swinging, Allyson left. But not before mentioning it was customary to tip the practitioner. She handed me three small red envelopes with gold leaf designs on them and waited while I grudgingly stuffed a few bills into them. The experience stayed with me for several days. In the end, I decided I was going to increase my pace so I don’t have walk with Allyson anymore. I also concluded I’m probably a feng shui skeptic. I never considered painting my ceiling black and I wound no garlands around my banister. There are no chrysalis dangling from my living room windows, but I did place a pair of earrings on a table in the north/east corner of my bedroom. A few weeks ago, a guy with promise came into my life. The chi seems pleased. 8 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 If I Forget Your Birthday — Geraldine Pember When you were born only the ones around you wished you a happy birthday. When you were one year old you were not aware of that special day At two and three and four I’m sure you started to be aware you were experiencing a special time of joy. The lights that flickered on the cake in front of you — it was such a treat to blow them out. At five, six and seven it became more exciting opening the gifts you received. At eight, nine and ten the celebration was more delightful, and so you counted the time when your birthday came — and now you have added many more. In the years to come and go, if I forget and fail to get in touch to wish you a happy birthday, I want you to know it will never be because I didn’t care. It will only be because I did not look at the calendar in my busy world. A feeling of annoyance will come over me, being cross with myself. Thoughts of you will bring back all the times of life’s pleasures we’ve shared, and how I treasure the memories in all we have done together. I will carry you I my heart Forever, and hope in all the Future years you live, life will Be gentle, kind and loving to you. And whenever you feel spring has come, a summer breeze touches you, you see a rainbow in the sky, hear a bird sing a song, see a butterfly pass by, hear the sound of a breeze in the trees — please think of me, who will always think of you, every day wishing you for all eternity — — a Happy Birthday. P hoebe G raubard a t t o r n e y at L aw 7 07 • 9 64 • 3 5 25 [\ wiLLs • trust Probate • eLder Law 594 S outh F ranklin S treet F ort B ragg, C aliFornia 95437 July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette 9 watching with seconds remaining with friends food eaten clock winding down edge of couch we suffer the agony of not knowing until that last gasp shot falls not within the orange rim not through the limp white hanging net the ball bounces away where nobody can change what just happened and then, with the final score at the buzzer we are limp we try to breathe and wonder about those bounces which did not go our way we have another game in two days to willfully guide that damn bouncing ball this time through the hoop mickey chalfin Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many. - Anonymous Michael E. Brown, M.D. Psychiatry & Psychotherapy 347 Cypress Street, Suite B Fort Bragg, CA 95437 (707) 964-1820 Free and Low Cost Classes & Therapies Everyone is Welcome! Donation Only Yoga, Tues 4³5 pm 7·DL&KL7KXU-6:30 pm Meditation, Sat 8:30-9:30 am 10 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 More Marilyn, Less Judy — Nona Smith spotted them as soon as we entered the store. There, on an upholstered chaise lounge, they glittered in all their glory. I was drawn to them like a magnet. My friend Kay saw them too. She giggled as she took my arm and led me in their direction. “Go on. Try them,” she coaxed. The others had dispersed around the barnlike consignment store, each pursuing their own interests. Cindy went in search of used books, Peggy headed for the fancy dinnerware. Kay and I made straight for the shoes. This pair was the stuff legends were made of, reminiscent of Dorothy’s ruby slippers… on steroids. But glitzier. Sexier. Less Judy Garland, more Marilyn Monroe. I hefted one of them and turned it over. The soles were virginal. No surprise there. Who could really wear them? The heels were five inches of shimmery gold. The shoe itself narrowed into what I could feel would be a toe-cramping point. I peeked inside, searching for the size. The shoe glinted and sparkled in my hand as if speaking to me, encouraging me: Try me on. You know you want to. “Oh, go for it,” Kay encouraged. To humor her, okay, to humor me, I sat on the chaise, removed my clunky black leather clog, and slipped on one ridiculously shimmery silver spiky heel. Wouldn’t you know? It fit. I put the other one on. “Can you stand up?” Kay asked. “I can try,” I said. With effort, teetering, I did. Cindy and Peggy, finished with their explorations, wandered back to us. I stood unsteadily, hands at my waist, right hip thrust forward, one foot tipped sideways I and waited for comments. “So, what do you think?” “Huh,” Cindy said. Her tone was flat. She studied the shoes in earnest. “And where exactly would you wear them?” She had a point. I live in a place of crooked streets, wooden sidewalks, dusty roads and uneven pavement. “But Art will love them,” Kay said, referring to my husband. Her eyes twinkled. Peggy kept still, her lips pursed, looking skeptical. I took a few tentative, wobbly steps to see if I could actually walk. I hadn’t worn high heels in a long time. Heels this high...never. “You have to get them,” Kay said. “Think of the possibilities.” I thought of the possibilities: Halloween. A sexy evening at home. Bed. Those were the only three I could come up with. The angle of the heels made my knees lock and I had to concentrate hard to keep from tipping forward. I could hardly stand in these shoes, but being five inches taller, I could see more. Still, I had a hard time imagining walking in them. “They make your legs look sexy,” Kay said. She raised an encouraging eyebrow. Cindy raised her shoulders in a you-gottabe-kidding-me shrug. Peggy raised the issue of finances. “How much do they cost?” Good question. How much indeed? I reached for Cindy’s shoulder to balance myself, lifted one leg and wobbled on the other, toes painfully pinched. Tipping my raised foot upward to scan for a price tag I felt I’d invented a new yoga position: Downward Twisted Stork. Not a relaxing pose, but one that certainly fostered mindfulness. July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette The price tag said $30. I read it aloud. The hand that cradled the shoe was now covered with glitter. A forty-something guy, with slicked-back hair, not unattractive, strolled by. The store manager. “Nice shoes,” he said. “Expensive, originally. They come from Red Carpet Shoes in Hollywood. The woman who put them on consignment is a designer and sometimes gets paid in fancy shoes.” So. The shoes had a history. A mystique. Glamour. “I’ll give you $25 for them,” I heard myself saying. Kay smiled with satisfaction. Peggy shrugged. Cindy shook her head. “Deal,” he said. When I arrived home, Art was busy in the kitchen. “Have a good time?” he asked. I began pulling purchases out of bags to show him what a good time I’d had: a blouse, some humorous birthday cards, a rain jacket for him. “And wait,” I said, holding up an index finger. I rushed upstairs, wanting to slip the shoes on and make a grand re-entrance. But once up the stairs, sparkly heels on my feet, I realized I couldn’t possibly walk down a whole flight without breaking something. I removed the shoes, sauntered down all but two steps, put the shoes back on and extended my arms. “Ta da!” Art stared at me. He rolled his eyes from the glitzy shoes to my face. I could see from his expression he didn’t get them. The shoes held no sparkle for him. He stood in silence, waiting for an explanation. “So?” I asked. “So?” he asked back. “Do you find them…sexy?” He gazed at the shoes again then 11 shrugged. “Not really. They look…” I saw he was searching for the right word “…lethal.” Fear is not an emotion I want to promote in our bedroom. “Lethal wasn’t the look I was going for,” I explained. “What then?” he asked looking at me over the top of his glasses. I told him about Kay’s fantasy and how she’d encouraged me to buy them. “Sorry,” he said. He shook his head slowly. “They just…don’t do it for me.” Deflated, I placed the shoes on the top shelf of my closet, pushed to the back. Some days, if I’m standing in the closet and the sun hits the shelf just right, the shoes wink at me. Truthfully, I don’t see myself wearing them. I can’t imagine a practical use for them. But I also can’t quite bring myself to dispose of them. It’s like letting go of possibility and I’m not ready to do that yet. 12 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 LOOKING FOR WINKLER – Adrienne Ross W inkler has been in England for six months. Now he’s back, and Mimi can’t decide to call him. She’s been visiting in his town, Iowa City, sitting at the Great Midwestern every afternoon gazing out the window. Students walk up and down Washington Street, backpacks dangling from the sodden shoulders of their loden coats. She’s been in town the exact same period of time he’s been back from England: one week. She’d know Winkler anywhere, his pointed long chin, downturned mouth, angled beaky nose. Faculty members stride by, turning their scarfed necks to get a glimpse of their bespectacled reflections in the steamy window. Mimi searches out the passing cars, surely he will still drive a black car? Her coffee cools, its froth descends. They could have bumped into each other at the camera counter in the student union, she to buy film, he to pick up his developed pictures. Mimi slumps in her chair and reads another time the story on page one of the Iowa Daily. Read the letter, he said, his voice urgent and thin. Mimi remembers his dry voice very well. She didn’t understand his letter ten years ago, and she doesn’t understand the newspaper article today. Winkler a racist bigot? How could that be right? She reads it again and again. Of course it doesn’t say anything about his state of mind. Maybe he has forgotten by now how ten years ago he fled from her apartment. Ten years is a long time. Mimi remembers his voice on the phone. Just read the letter, he said. He spoke slowly. He said: read the letter, and hung up. The letter in her hand said he’d taken his things away and didn’t want to see her again. Of course she’d read it several times already. UNIVERSITY RESEARCHER SUED BY TENANT Professor Ernest Winkler, Director of Research Services at the U of I prestigious Institute for Data Acquisition and newly appointed Chairman of the Applied Statistics Center, was brought to court on a Discrimination in Housing charge by his tenant, Jillian Dixon. Dixon, who is black, claimed that Winkler evicted her from his duplex in the Campus Heights district because of her race. Dixon said today that she and her husband, from whom she is now separated, had first rented the lower flat from Winkler two years ago. Winkler served an eviction notice to Dixon claiming she was “making [his] life a living hell. Her loud music, constant stream of visitors, belligerence and hostility when asked to comply with garbage and parking ordinances, all caused [Winkler] to ask her to leave.” Winkler further alleged that Dixon has not paid rent for six months despite three requests, two of them in writing. Dixon contends that she played music neither late at night nor at any other time. She has no friends in Iowa City, does not own a car, takes out the trash every week, and has paid rent through the next year. Prof. Winkler has just returned from England where he directed the establishment of the American Data Center in Cumberland. Mimi thinks she should call him tonight, she’ll be gone tomorrow. What if she calls him and he says: Did you read about me in the paper? Yes I did. So you’re just looking to satisfy your prurient curiosity? July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette No, not at all — Well, I don’t need it. No, really, I live in Berkeley. I’m only here because of the conference — What if he says: Mimi. Of course I remember you. My god. I think of you every day of my life. You think of me — ? I wonder if you’re single. If you’d ever come to Iowa. If I could ever see you again. I’m lonely. I miss you. I behaved badly to you and I fear you’ll never forgive me — Oh, yes — You must be married, happy — No! No! Mimi sips her coffee, now cold. The café is nearly empty now, its steamy warmth dissipating. Of course she had read the letter several times already, her heart smashing against her chest and sounding in her ears with a thunderous rending noise like an earthquake. Just thinking about it now twists her stomach like an icy fist squeezing. He never wanted to see her again, prohibited any form of communication. Before she leaves town she wants to encounter him accidentally, in a way that will somehow be easy for him and not shocking or painful. His Institute is across the river, in the third and fourth floors of the Economics building; while the conference, attended by over a thousand people, is held in the Union Building nearly a mile away. Mimi was in fact invited to a reception in Winkler’s department on the first night of the conference but didn’t go. She didn’t want to run into him at a party, her throat would close up, her creamy silk blouse would soak through with sweat. But it would be okay at the café, the camera store, the bookstore, best of all here at the café. She doesn’t know if this is his favorite café, she doesn’t even know if he goes out to cafés, she has chosen to maintain her vigil at this particular café because it is her own favorite, the coffee is 13 wonderful, she can look out the window at the passers-by. It is getting late, it is getting dark. Mimi is leaving early in the morning, this is her last night, the last night of the conference, she hasn’t packed yet, and she will soon meet some other conference participants for dinner. She leaves the newspaper on the table before her, and swathes herself in her down coat, her suede beret, her gloves. She pauses in the muffled temporal gap between the comfortable café and the freezing sleet which can stab your cheeks with a hundred knives of ice. She sees through the chilly early evening gloom the back of a man’s head as the man gets out of a car across the street. He locks his car, pulls his hat down, the hat is a fedora, how unusual. He walks gingerly to the icy sidewalk, the walk of someone who knows how to pay attention to icy streets, walks gingerly into the flower shop where a display of hothouse palms is illuminated in the window. He never used to like plants, what has happened? Does the Director of an Institute have to buy plants to decorate his big office? In her mind Mimi sees the office, it has bulging leather furniture and the carpet is definitely on the light side, maybe even pale blue. Could she buy a small bunch of flowers for the local friend whom she will shortly meet, a small potted plant? Yes, midwesterners definitely need a plant, need many plants, in the deep pale Iowa winter with its landscape of twigs and skeletal branches, the big sky all shining white and cold, crystals of ice implied in its gleaming clarity. She decides to leave the shelter of the café’s entrance and walk across the street, carefully on the icy road, carefully, and enter the flower shop. She will look around, she will see Winkler, she will speak, she will say, Oh! Is it you, Ernest? Winkler, hello. Hello, Ernest, she will say. He will turn, he will 14 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette stiffen, he will clear his throat. Hello, Mimi, long time no see. No. Winkler, my goodness. Shall we have some coffee and catch up all our years? No. Ernest Winkler, hello. As Mimi writes and discards each script she is immobilized within the shelter of the café’s entrance. In a way she is ready to walk across the street right now, but she can’t think of the right words to greet Winkler. So she turns her face away as Winkler exits the flower shop carrying what looks like a big bunch of white chrysantheumums. She sees him get into his car and drive away. The car is dark green. Mimi walks up Washington towards College Avenue and the Holiday Inn. Her boots make crunchy grating sounds on the ice. She keeps well away from the curb. Mimi sees it all now: Ms Dixon and Ms Dixon’s ex-husband, bright young graduate students, bright young black graduate students, arrive from the east coast. Winkler is assigned as their advisor, Winkler is asked where they can live, Winkler offers them the downstairs flat on a “temporary” basis. The Dixons split up, Winkler gets emotionally involved with Ms Dixon, who is maybe more attached than he, certainly more attached than he. Then Winkler goes to England for six months to set up the American Data Center. What a coup for the University, for Cumberland, for Winkler! “Be gone when I get back,” Winkler probably tells Jillian Dixon, “you have six months to find another place and another lover, pack all your things and just get out.” “I will, don’t worry!” she says. But she likes her lower flat, she likes the neighborhood, perhaps she has another love affair, and she simply doesn’t bother to move. Now Winkler is caught in exactly, precisely, the kind of situation he most detests, is most hostile to, has put the most energy July/September 2015 into avoiding. No walking out on Jillian Dixon leaving only a letter, Mimi thinks, Jillian Dixon has legal remedies. She remembers his voice dry as a bone, dusty dry, when he said: Read the letter, just read my letter. Of course she’d already read it several times, and was reading it again as he spoke. Lizzie was a busybody. She loved to spread gossip and to tell people when they were doing something which, according to the Gospel Of Lizzie, (as her late husband used to call it) was a sin. After service one Sunday Lizzie rushed after Joe who was just getting into his pick up truck to drive away. “Now, Joe,” she said. “You know very well, drinking is a sin. Your truck was parked out front of the Tip Top Saloon all night. I saw it there.” She shook her head, and pursed her lips. “The whole town saw it.” Joe looked at Lizzie. He put the key into the ignition. Turned on the engine. Shifted into first gear and drove away. That very night Joe drove into town, pulled up into Lizzie’s driveway. He turned off the engine, got out of the truck, locked it and walked back to his home. July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette for PAUL BLAKE may 16, 1949 – october 2, 2014 OCTOBER 8 2014 15 ANTONIA LAMB 10/03/43 — 9/9/13 again & again she was seen after her sudden exit it is the dark of the moon you passed before it into the everlasting light OUR TIME AT PLAYLAND there’s a tug on my heart it hurts unshed tears i did what i could even to becoming objective to steel myself from feeling your pain not to enter your rollercoaster ride again & again on the the merry-go-round reaching for the brass-ring up & down went the horses i rode the white one with the angel on the back you on the black one with the grinning devil the fun house with the mirrors showed us elongated or fat the burlap bag slide had us screaming all the way down my fright in the spook-house was not faked but the tunnel of love was romantic the tunnel of love was romantic you’re gone i keep telling myself or are you? ruth weiss seems she wanted to let it be known that what seems far is near and what is near is dear ANTONIA spread your wings we hear you. ruth weiss t his really did not happen the young waitress didn’t touch my arm did not get my attention she wasn’t wearing a silky blue blouse i didn’t see her next to me i was unaware of her warm touch didn’t feel her soft pressure on my skin i never noticed how beautiful her face was her perfectly aligned white teeth never saw her red hair tied up in a bun my breath wasn’t taken away when she spoke i didn't hear a word i’ll have to pay more attention to these details when they might just happen again and she persists mickey chalfin 16 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette July/September 2015 Sydney’s Best Day — Gene Lock H er wide eyes scanned the canyon walls. Sydney, after all, is a Blue Merle Australian Shepherd, and this is Desert Mountain Sheep country. She is tall in the passenger seat as we crawl off Highway 395. This road runs north and south, on the eastern side of the mountains you see in Yosemite. We are headed into the Eastern Sierra’s Lundey Canyon. Lundey is north of Mono Lake, but shoved hard against the peaks. It is lots of places: Miners camp, once; a drop off spot for trailheads to lead the sorefooted up through Yosemite’s backdoor; salad bar for beaver and bear; and one building — the Lundey store. Rough pitchpine boards, charred by desert sun, rusty roof. The open porch floor is big handhewn planks, pulled from one of many landslides now covering gold rush mines up the canyon walls. Sydney takes cautious steps around floor cracks as we check out the leafy vines that shade the one rocking chair. It holds a woman in her late 40s maybe, hair a dusty tan-gray, eyes green. Birkenstocks, shirt and cargo shorts, normal high desert business attire. A lightly sun-seamed round face smiles. “They’re hops vines,” she says. “Miners here made homebrew from mule and horse feed, and grew hops to give their beer a bite. Miners probably froze, but the hops are still with us.” She and her husband, an LA cop, own the store, and she runs it summers, with his help when shift work allows. Beer, Slim Jim jerky, fly fishing stuff, maps, canteens. An old cooler groans in the corner. I take a beer out of it, pay the woman, as Sydney sniffs the one room store over. She and I spend summer days on this side of the Sierras, walking creeks, peering down cliffs, mostly just enjoying the silence that sticks to high desert gorges and meadows. But a store! Here are scents of old fish bait, dropped food, spilled beer, a feast of blooming flora. Sydney’s nose goes to Shop Vac mode. I chat more with the woman, and view browning photos of Lundey winters, of fish, of bearded, tired men with hopeful eyes. Sydney is gone only a minute or two. She comes back from another room, living quarters, maybe — some old tables and chairs, salt shakers, I think. She’s shifted into her sneak-up-on sheep gear, head and tail low, eyes on mine. Her gold-furred face clamps a cold pork chop. It is going with us, her eyes say to mine. The woman doesn’t notice, and I think it not a good time to tell the cop’s wife that shoplifting is in progress. Sydney goes off the porch first, waits at the getaway van’s passenger door, then vaults onto her seat, grinning around the pork chop. I drive away slowly, like it says in the thieves’ manual. About a mile down the rocky road, we park under creekside cottonwoods, and Sydney eats the best pork chop ever stolen. Even the next day, her pink tongue reaches far out onto her cheeks, to savor the moment. She catches my eyes and we laugh the way good friends do. I hope Aussies are still welcome back in Lundey Canyon. July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette And Dream — Rick Banker “You see” I said to myself when I woke up, “I was standing so cold on An iceberg and I wasn’t Really cold; (I wasn’t really Breathing either) and I said Boy I’ll bet that water is Cold” Head first! And the ice blue water welcomed me! And the far away shelves of ice so blue In the ice light said “You can come up this way if you want to” But I didn’t want to. I wanted to go deeper and deeper to where the light was better and I could see the blue nothingness that stretched down and even deeper where the water was heavier and weighted me up but I went down down deep doom down and then there weren’t any more friendly shelves of ice blue but Crystal bubbles all white and blue They fell Even faster than I and Laughed as they blew past me leaving trails of blue silver that got in my noseand my eyes and I laughed too while the bubbles danced through my hair But then the blue water Swirled heavier and heavier and Hard lines grew together and Loved each other and Tried to push me out but The light got brighter and Brighter and Soon I was pushing my way into The heart of a blue crystal and The light was so bright and The lines got harder and Harder and harder and The light was so bright and I cried and Struggled and pushed but No closer no closer No closer Round and around that Burning heart of clear light so blue Crying blue bubbles that Froze next to my eyes and I couldn’t see the Light and A million billion lights all blue ice Froze But I couldn’t see the light And I died. 17 18 Redwood Coast Senior Center July/September 2015 WHERE ARE THE HIPPIES OF YESTERDAY? Where are the hippies of yesterday who burned their draft cards and chained themselves to the gates of the White House? Where are those longhaired, dope smoking demonstrators who shouted "Hell No! We won't go!"? Where is the "counter culture" who sought peace and brotherhood and raised the level of hope for the rest of us? What happened to the brotherhood, the sisterhood, the activism that brought us all into the streets to protest an unjust, uncalled for, disastrous war? Have they all gone back to the fold? Do they march again to the drummer's beat? Are they selling real estate? Insurance? Margin buying on the stock exchange? I call upon you, hippies of the sixties and seventies to rise again from your long sleep, go down into the streets and shake the establishment once more to its senses that peace may have its day and, with hope renewed, we can all live our lives without shaking. Jay Frankston LIKE AN EAGLE Forever flew like an eagle in the liquid primordial sky wings stretched wide across the expanse the flutter and sway of an eternal dance. It had no beginning, no middle, no end, and its white light was pure crystal in a boundless sea of mirth Then time dropped out of the sky and spread over the earth scattering clocks and watches and bells on church steeples to mark the days, the hours wasted counting the sheep, the calories, the ways in which our life goes by while we sit on the sideline and watch. Jay Frankston July/September 2015 Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette 19 Coast Hardware Big City Items in a Small Town Store! Apple iPads, iPods, and Accessories Action, Outdoor Games and Security Cameras TV’s & Accessories, Phones and Accesories Counter Top Appliances, Microwaves Coffee Pots, Toasters, Skillets, Pots and Pans Irons & Ironing Boards, Canning Supplies Housewares, Plumbing, Electrical, Automotive, Hardware Lawn and Garden, Fishing, Hunting, Camping & Pet Supplies Paint, and Computer Color Matching Paintball Supplies and Much More! Coast Hardware & Radio Shack Dealer 300 North Main, Fort Bragg Ca. 95437 Store Hours: Mon-Sat 9 AM - 5:30 PM • Sunday 9 AM - 5 PM 964-2318 MENDOCINO COAST PHARMACY 350 Cypress St • Fort Bragg, CA 95437 (Located between the Police Station and the Hospital on Cypress Street) Mon-Fri 8am-7pm; Sat 10am-4pm Phone: (707) 962-0800 M e n d o c i n o V i l la g e P h a r m ac y I n s i d e H a r v e st M a r ket i n t h e v i l la g e o f M e n d o c i n o a n n o u n ce s o u r n e w lo cat i o n at M e n d o c i n o C o a st P h a r m ac y 3 5 0 C y pr e s s S t r e et N ex t d o o r to t h e h o s p ita l i n Fo r t B ra g g . Great customer service in a caring environment. Competitive prices. Most insurances welcome. Free local delivery available. Se Habla Espanol • Professional service you can depend on. Redwood Coast Senior Center Gazette 20 July/September 2015 A RESTFUL RV PARK AT THE MOUTH OF THE NOYO RIVER FULL HOOKUPS • HOT SHOWER PET FRIENDLY • RIVERSIDE DECK Large selection of sea glass in our gallery store. 707-964-2612 32094 N. Harbor Dr., Fort Bragg SportsmansRVpark.com REALLY REALLY CHEAP ROOFING! is that really what you want to protect your home? real roofing done once, done right. Dunlap Dunlap ROOFING, Inc. Cal. Lic. #806498 964-8735 www.dunlaproofing.com Auto Repair in Fort Bragg Let Gordon’s run a computer diagnostics test on your vehicle. Tires Gordon’s offers competitive prices on brand name tires. Brake Repair Schedule an appointment for brake repair services at Gordon’s Auto Service, Inc. Transmission Repair Gordon’s offers transmission repair for all of the Fort Bragg community. I’m Fernando Gordon, resident of Fort Bragg, California and proud owner of Gordon’s Automotive Service, Inc.. I made professionalism, support and total customer satisfaction the cornerstone of my Auto Repair Business when I first opened it over 20 years ago. I still hold those core values today, all backed by some of the best warranties in town. Call Us: (707) 964-7095 Address: 524 N Main St • Fort Bragg, CA 95437 Shop Hours: Monday - Friday: 8:00AM to 5:00PM Homes of refreshing tranquility The Woods offers beautifully constructed manufactured homes for 55+ adults on 37 acres in the North Coast. Just a few minutes’ scenic drive reaches a pristine golf course, tennis courts, one of six state park beaches, or Mendocino’s famed art galleries, shops, and restaurants. Come see for yourself how active and vibrant, yet comfortable and secure life can be. To tour this exceptional community, contact The Woods at (707) 937-0294. 43300 Little River Airport Road Little River, CA 95456 (707) 937-0294 | ncphs.org The Woods is a community of Northern California Presbyterian Homes and Services.
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