Seconds.

Two months later the Tattooed man and I were holding hands on Hollywood Blvd, waiting in line at another club with a group of his LA-based frat brothers. They passed vodka around in a plastic bottle originally meant for green tea. They laughed about their “brothers,” each of whom had a ludicrous code name. The Tattooed man was also known as AMPM.

“Why?” I asked, and a brother half faded put his arm around my shoulder and pointed at the Tattooed man.

“Because when he first got to college he wouldn’t shut up. His mouth was open and yappin’ all the time like a fucking AMPM.”

The Tattooed Man nodded. True story. There was some guy who couldn’t make it out that night named Rim Job. I felt sorry for him. On the outside, with my short skirt and high heels, I may have blended in quite well with the other girls in line, none of whose names I remember.

I spent two nights with him in a cheap motel I found in West Hollywood. I had wanted to save him money even though looking back, I probably shouldn’t have worried so much about saving him anything. From the motel we could walk to the LACMA and the Grove. On Saturday, sporting a massive hangover, he toured the Tim Burton exhibit with me trying to look interested while I tried to gauge if I was as weird as Tim Burton. I pored over the man’s diary entries and was happy to know I wasn’t alone in wanting to save my “earlier” works because someday, they might be worth something. If not to a world-class art museum, then at the very least, to my grandkids.

“Where did we come from if grandma never married?”
“Wax, wire and clay, darlings. Wax, wire and clay.”  

Prior to this we had spent two months texting, a pitifully stunted form of modern communication and godsend for reticent men who would otherwise bumble their feet right through their front teeth; however, a death trap for verbose girls who are used to writing ten-page emails for sport. I didn’t understand that there was a text-message dance of sorts, but I had my coaches: world-class maneaters who knew the “game” well and played by the unspoken rules, had conquered their playboys and brought them home, humbled and fawning, to their mothers and fathers. Large engagement rings sparkled in their horizons.

“Wait on this one,” said Isabel, scrutinizing the Tattooed man’s latest text.

or, “Don’t even respond to this one.”

A childhood friend I’ll call Crystal was even stricter and stayed up late many a night to guide me. She was only a year older but ten thousand years wiser and her voice took on a different tone when she “coached” me through these things.

“If he takes an hour to text you back, wait THREE to text him back.”

“Really?”

“Yes. And if he takes longer than that,” she narrowed her eyes and I trembled, “Give him radio silence for a week.”

It seemed so silly to me, all this calculating with dumb one-liners. Had either I or the Tattooed Man (I know there are two parties at blame here) the good sense to CALL each other, a lot of time could have been saved, but that wasn’t in the cards. I was forced and also forced myself to play a stupid digital game with thumbs because, as some of my contemporaries have observed, to call someone is almost intrusive. No, not almost: it IS intrusive. So we never spoke. Just texted. I refuse to say “wrote.”

Somehow the texting did not “break” things off because there was nothing to break. He made it clear, via text, that he wanted only to be “friends,” and I took it in stride, texting back, “What’d you think I thought we were, MARRIED? VIA TEXT?” Or something like that. He had given me his definition of “friend,” and thankfully and unsurprisingly, it did not match my own.

Crystal’s advice was sound, but more important to me was what I think in Finance is called “insider information.” If anyone needed proof that the world was in fact small, my friendship with Crystal was hard evidence: unbelievably, Crystal was dating a guy who happened to be in the same frat as the Tattooed Man. They attended different colleges but knew each other through frat events, and knew each other in the easy way that guys know each other – not well, but they called each other friends.

This is how I learned that the Tattooed Man was in fact “seeing” a girl back in Chicago. They weren’t exclusive yet, Crystal said, but they were spending a lot of time together and the girl was pretty into him. And the Tattooed Man?

Has he been talking to you? Crystal asked.

The same week the Tattooed Man texted me and asked when was a good time to visit LA.

Summer is a great time, I said, and threw in a smiling emoticon for emphasis. I was smiling. I felt devilish with the information I knew and not just slightly triumphant. These guys, I thought, though in the back of my head I wondered a little sadly if it was “guys” or just “this guy.” I thought about the girl back in Chicago and knew she had no insider information on me – and even if she did, would it matter? I realized then that there was a paradox at stake: nothing and everything.

—————-

The Tattooed man’s plan was to drink himself into oblivion on both nights, though this was quite hard for him as his liver was a well oiled machine – much stronger than mine, so I watched my intake. We went out then back to the hotel, he in much more of a rush than I.

In bed, his breath thick with alcohol, he mistook my willingness to kiss as a willingness to do other things. He tried unsuccessfully to put his hands down my green pajama shorts, super short for looking, but not for touching.

“Just my hands,” he said, his fingertips playing at my waistband. I shook my head no.

On the second night he drank more, I drank less. We kissed, (I felt I was getting quite good), and when his hands went south again, they were pushed away. Visibly frustrated, he eventually gave up and threw himself against the pillow.

Whatever smugness I thought I would feel was replaced by a growing disappointment in the situation. In him. In guys. In myself and in other young women that encouraged this sort of behavior, these perplexing expectations. Both men and women have them, I knew, but which begat which? I thought about the god particle – the Higgs Boson or whatever that was popping up in all the news magazines, and how, sadly, I had a better grasp of what it was than the intentions and thoughts of the frustrated young man beside me. What was it? The age? The culture? Alcohol? Most importantly, what made the Tattoed Man think that putting a disclaimer out there, “Oh we’re just friends,” made it okay for him to put his hands anywhere near my pants? In doing so, he assumed our dictionaries were the same but those two evenings in the seedy motel confirmed the fact that he and I spoke different tongues.

“What are you thinking?” I asked. I wondered if I would have to leave him stranded at the motel. I was the one with the car and the home to return to, just an hour’s drive away.

He sighed heavily, crossing his arms behind his head.

“I think you’re a tease,” he said.

“I thought you might say that.”

He looked at me, eyebrow raised. Was he supposed to think otherwise?

“I’m not a tease,” I said.

He turned to look at me, his eyes seemed to be deciding whether to glaze over. I didn’t get angry – I had a right to, I think, but at that moment, I was simply amused. I had changed, certainly – turned a quarter of a century old and kissed a random dude in Vegas and was now lying in bed with him. I had picked him up from the airport. We had gone to get Korean food, and yeah he was pleasant and we had stuff to talk about, but the frustration he showed told me he wholeheartedly expected to get laid. How strange it all was! Lying in a lumpy motel bed in West Hollywood, next to a boy from Chicago in the middle of July!

I would tell him the truth. Full disclosure, as I have written before, is sometimes not a good thing – but he had disclaimed and so would I.

“That night we kissed in Vegas…”

“Yeah…” he seemed to dread what was coming.

“That was my first kiss.”

He did look at me. His expression didn’t change except for the slightest widening of his eyes. So slight that I don’t think it can be accurately measured but by feeling.

“Ah,” he said, “I thought you were going to say that.”

I spoke slowly about my absolute inexperience with these types of things and how I was still, despite his frustration, having a good time even though it felt very strange.

“Strange,” he said.

“Yes, strange.” I did not think it necessary to explain that I had also never spent the night in bed with a guy, even if all we did was sleep.

We were quiet and then, instead of turn away from me, he pulled me close and “spooned” me, as the lingo goes.

He wasn’t a bad guy, but he wasn’t a good guy, at least not to me. But he wasn’t a bad guy. At that moment, he was just a guy I kind of liked for one hazy night in Las Vegas and for several weeks after until I learned some things about him. Then I saw him again in the flesh in my hometown, in the sunlight, sober, and learned a few things about myself. I didn’t have to give up much, that was for sure, just that first kiss.

“Well, you should know you’re not a bad kisser,” he said, his hand relaxing on my belly, finally accepting that it could go no further south, “I couldn’t tell it was your first time.”

I smiled to myself, wanting to tell him that I was, after all, twenty-five and had seen plenty of movies where kissing was, if not integral to the plot was certainly part of key action sequences. Even in “Jurassic Park” one of my all-time favorite films, there was a hearty kiss here and there between the screaming and carnage. And, I wanted to say, I knew all the Judy Blume books by heart. But I don’t think he would have understood. Instead, I said thank you. I put my hand on top of his and lay there with my head on his pale arm, wondering when he’d move it away.

I Had My First Kiss at a Las Vegas Club

koi_sketch_by_shuheffner
Koi Tattoo Sketch by Shu Heffner

In 2011, I had my first kiss. I traded it for a tattoo, or more accurately, a glimpse of a tattoo, on the back of a boy I met in Las Vegas. I had just turned twenty-five, so it was about time. The tattoo was nothing original – a koi jumping out of a pond – something he’d found on the internet.

“Koi are supposed to be good luck,” he said, leaning against the bar. He was a twenty-something financial analyst from Chicago, in Vegas for a bachelor party with huge group of Asian frat brothers. He had just ordered me a vodka cranberry (with Ketel) and was waving a hundred dollar bill at the bartender, who had too many hundred dollar bills waved in his face to react in a timely manner.

“Good luck?” I smirked, my eyebrows raised in judgment. “So you think you’re a lucky guy?”

He shrugged, the hundred dollar bill poised in mid-air, “Well, you’re here aren’t you?”

Looking back, it was very well rehearsed.

The bartender finally took the bill, gave the Tattooed man his change, and presented me with the strongest vodka cranberry I’d ever tasted. I choked a little bit, wondering if the bartender and the Tattooed man were friends. It was still early and he had not impressed me so much yet, but I wanted to be flirtatious.

“Show me the fish,” I said, batting my eyelashes.

“Maybe I will, later.”

We danced for a bit, talked about nothing, and when later came, I reminded him about the tattoo. My drink was still full and I handed it to a friend, fueling a later incident in which she would almost throw up in my car.

“Ah,” he said, as though he’d forgotten all about it, “That’s right. Okay, I’ll show you. Follow me.” He led me to some tree-lined walkway near the side of the club. It was actually the walkway that led to the bathroom, but it was quieter there. Or maybe things just get quiet when you’re focused on someone. The image of someone. An image on someone. He sat me down on the edge of a planter.

“You want to see my tattoo?”

I nodded. How exciting.

He started to unbutton his shirt, then paused to deliver a line. Looking back, it was very well-rehearsed.

“I’m not just going to show you for free,” he said.

Oh shit.

“You gotta kiss me.”

Oh shit.

Let me be straightforward about things.

Prior to that night, I could count the number of guys I’d kissed with the number zero. I didn’t want to tell him because pop culture and empirical evidence tells me men (and women, to some degree) are uncomfortable with information like this. It reeks of liability. You open yourself up and voila, I am somehow responsible for your organs. And could I blame him for wanting a kiss?

I reviewed my actions leading up to that moment: I had batted my eyelashes furiously. Danced suggestively. Was wearing a short dress from Forever 21 when in fact, I had just turned 25, and which I  had spent the better part of the night pulling downwards, hopefully suggesting the opposite of what the dress suggested. This was not part of my feminine mystique but a common feminine mistake. You want the attention and sure, you can dress the part, but can you remember and deliver the lines? More often than not the attention comes in a tidal wave and suddenly you are drowning because you spent too much time playing badminton and reading during the years when most other people were exploring relationships with the opposite sex.

I blanched for a minute. Maybe longer, but not long enough for the tattooed man to think, “Hey, this girl just zoned out on me…” I thought of how thin my lips were and how dry my mouth was and how horribly tired I must look up close. Was my mascara running? Probably. My hair was flat. I smelled like smoke.

But then one giant question: how do I do this? Where was a Judy Blume novel -open with key passages highlighted – when you needed one?

It was a nice evening though, and I was having a good time. I smiled at him, Oh, what the hell.

Okay, I said, hoping the awkwardness I felt was only a feeling and not a look. I leaned in.

We kissed. I felt his five o’clock shadow scrape against my upper lip and on the corner of my mouth. I thought of a Saint Ives Apricot scrub I used to use but stopped because it was too abrasive. This felt slightly different. He pulled back, looking thoughtful.

The moment had passed and I was amused again. Was he judging my kiss? It must have sucked, but I wasn’t going to admit anything. I remembered my lines. I smiled expectantly. Kiss for tat.

“Alright,” he said, “I’ll show you.”

His skin was paler than I expected, and I laughed at him for it. “We don’t get much sun in Chi-town,” he said. The shirt came off and there it was, the image of a wan-looking fish I had paid a kiss to see. A first kiss. A fish out of water. A night club in Vegas. Called XS, but could now be rechristened Club Cliche. I looked at the fish, nodded and said all the requisite things, “Wow. Did it hurt. How long did it take. Was it expensive.”

It didn’t hurt so much and yeah, it was expensive, but he wanted to get another one. I hoped he wouldn’t.

Later, we kissed again and then again. At three AM he put his skinny black tie around my neck and told me to keep it.

“Maybe I’ll visit LA sometime and get my tie back.”

At four AM he and his friends walked me and my friends to our hotel room. We kissed one last time and I thought, “Hey, am I good at this or what,” though I knew that my lips were probably chapped beyond recognition.

——–

Red Envelopes

$320:
At dinner my mother reminded me to prepare red envelopes for my aunts and grandmother back in Taipei, in celebration of Chinese New Year.

“This is the first year you’re working full time, with a salary. You should share that with them.”

I nodded, wondering how much I ought to give.

“A nice even number,” my mother said, “Even numbers are good luck. Except for 4.”

Four, in Chinese, is almost a homonym for “death.” There is a slight tonal difference, but not much.

——–
$400: 

I read this at work today, during my lunch break. The Modern Love column is the NYTimes’ own nostrum to the bitter feelings their Weddings and Celebrations section might induce. Being multi-faceted, I read both sections religiously.

Today’s column struck a chord. 
“A STORY that haunts me involves a woman I know whose fiancé went out to inspect a potential apartment for their married life and never came back. He wasn’t dead in a ditch. He was just gone, without clarification.”

———

$200:
When she was 30 years old, my grandmother made the very strange decision to marry an 80-year old man. She was introduced to him through a coworker who knew that she’d been jilted in love. 
“Just meet him,” the coworker said, “He’s old, but doesn’t look it. He’s taken good care of himself. And he’s got a good family. They will treat you well.”
My grandmother simply nodded. She was tired. She was always tired after the day she returned to Taipei from her mother’s funeral. She put on an ugly green corduroy skirt and a fuzzy orange sweater, and went to have dinner with the 80-year old man and his family. 
———
$400:
My grandmother’s story haunts me, even though I have only ever heard it from other women’s lips. 
“She was dating a man for a long time. They came up together from the south and took low-paying jobs. Anyone on the outside could tell he was a lowlife. He had a hard time keeping his jobs, but she worked hard and saved almost every penny. She wanted to buy a house, start a family with him. 
“Her mother grew ill then passed away. Your grandma took the train back home to be with her family in the south. She wasn’t gone for long, but he stayed up north, who knows what he told her. When she returned to Taipei, he was gone. He had taken the money too. Every dime she had saved for their life together.”

——–

$320: 
Once, upon hearing that my grandma had bought herself a $6000 mattress, my mother asked her why. The mattress stood in for a million other useless things my grandma has bought for both herself and others. She is generous, to say the least and to watch her spend, it would appear that savings accounts had no purpose.
My grandma shrugged, “Life is short,” she said, “I want to be good to myself. I have no children and no parents to leave it to. Whatever I can’t spend, I’ll give away to charity.” 
My mother wanted to frown and say, “Please keep some for a rainy day,” but stopped herself. My grandmother’s rainiest day had come and gone.

The Dead Don’t Care

A shy anonymous member of D’s team passed around decorated sheets of paper (the kind you buy for formal letters and invitations) to the employees and asked them to “write something to D.” I say anonymous because I still do not know her name and only saw her rarely, as her desk was tucked away somewhere I seldom ventured. She passed the sheets of paper around in long manila envelopes with”instructions” pasted on the inside covers, a sort of starter message to get people’s eulogistic juices running. At first I misunderstood.
“Do you want me to copy the words?”

“Write something to D,” she said softly in poor English.

“To him or to his family?”

“To him.”

“Oh.” I took the folder and stared at her blankly, “Okay.”

She asked me to write carefully and to use the same pen. Heaven forbid the messages be in various colors and that the sheets look like a birthday card. The point, I think, was to make a scrapbook for his family. I don’t know. Maybe at the memorial service tomorrow we will throw it into the ground, atop his coffin. Someone set about gathering photographs. I heard that someone had posted on his facebook a photo of D, sandwiched between me and the receptionist, all of us smiling, D more because he was drunk.

I never added him, so I won’t see it.

I did not avoid his desk this morning – there was no reason for me to other than the fear that I would start crying, but I need not have feared so much. I said hello to the receptionist, who had been at Disneyland when she heard the news. I took the front stairs and did not whistle as I do sometimes, but said good morning to the accountants once I got to the top. It smelled and sounded just like any other day, though slightly subdued. I found to my surprise the executives assembled in the boardroom, though it wasn’t Monday. Were they perhaps convening on D’s behalf? The room was dark and I looked to the projector screen on the wall – bar graphs. Line graphs. Dollar signs. Something about revenues and margins and units – things the living occupy themselves with in dark enclosed spaces. I could not blame them. We were running a show of sorts, and the show must go on.

Around noon HR issued a statement about an employee’s passing, advising the time and place of D’s memorial service. It was a Frankenstein email, copy and pasted from various sources. I wrinkled my brow, thinking the mismatched fonts in poor taste, though I would have done the same thing, only taken more care to hide the hurry with which these things are actually done. Then people began to ask around, not unlike the way people check to see who’s going to a party.

“You going to the service?”

“You carpooling?”

“What time are you leaving?”

I asked these same questions. Stopped in front a friend’s cubicle to do s, and then laughed loudly about something or other right after we established that we were carpooling.

In the afternoon I went downstairs to talk to someone who sat opposite D’s desk. I wondered who’s idea it was to set up the desks like a damn labyrinth. Briefly, I thought, “Here it comes. His desk. Don’t lose it.”

And I didn’t. I walked right by, and on my way back, even stopped for a millisecond to see that someone had left a candle, a vase of white flowers and atop his laptop monitor, a note that said, “Please respect D’s desk. Do not touch or remove anything.” Among other things, that’s one difference between being fired and dying: only the latter warrants turning your desk into a shrine. We are not, it seems, in a hurry to find anyone to replace him – and if we are, the person definitely won’t sit there. And if they do sit there, the rest of us will keep our mouths shut.

Later in the afternoon the head of HR called to ask if anyone had ordered flowers for D’s memorial service. I rolled me eyes. Of course not. I was the person who did that sort of thing because I had the corporate card.

“Could you do that?”

“Sure.”

“Great. Thanks.”

I called the memorial park. They didn’t have a floral service and recommended a local florist who asked me, of all colors, “Do you want blue flowers on white?” I talked at length with the woman on the phone about using white lilies in a standing spray. I was an old hand at this now, having ordered flowers for other employees, both alive and deceased. I thought about adding red roses in the spray, because D seemed to like the color red. Or did he? I don’t know. I saw a few red items on his desk. I shook my head, “No, no. All white.”

“And for the message?”

“From your family here, at the company,” I said, without thinking.

“Okay, great.”

They didn’t take American Express. The clock was ticking. I wanted to go home. I did not want to spend my last few minutes at work searching for florists that took American Express. Not when the show must go on.

I took out my personal Visa and rattled off the numbers. Gave the woman the office fax number so she could send me the receipt. I hung up and finished answering some emails. In a month, I will file an expense report for a standing spray, all white.

 “…there is nothing, once you are dead, that can be done to you or for you or with you or about you that will do you any good or any harm; that any damage or decency we do accrues to the living, to whom your death happens, if it really happens to anyone.” 

– Thomas Lynch,  The Undertaking

One for the New Year: Memento Mori

It is not my usual thing, to write about death on New Year’s Day, but a series of unfortunate events has made it almost necessary.

Yesterday afternoon a coworker called me with a worried note in her voice. I was driving my grandfather and cousin home from lunch and tensed at the sound of my work phone’s ring – it is not unlike the theme song to “Jaws” and while I wonder why I have not changed it, I think subconsciously I prefer not to. If the work phone rings on the weekend, it is 99% of the time my boss or my boss’s wife, neither of whom would call unless something were wrong. I risked both a ticket and my grandfather’s peace of mind regarding my driving and reached for it. On the screen shone the pretty Greek name of a pretty coworker.

“Have you heard anything about D?” she asked.

D was our company’s IT guy -at least that is how I knew him in the beginning. We had an IT team, but D was the the go-to guy if your computer, phone or anything electronic broke down or malfunctioned. We called him first and if he sent someone else in his place, you couldn’t help but be slightly disappointed. I knew vaguely that he handled more serious issues like our connectivity and server security, but in my first few days I work I learned D was, to me at least, indispensable.

“No,” I said, “Why?”

“I heard he was in a bad accident and that he didn’t make it.”

I was driving. I had stayed up late the night before, and had just consumed an enormous lunch. It was information I could not readily process.

I stopped at a red light and my grandfather looked at me, not understanding but sensing that something was wrong. Was it my boss? Had I messed up again? Grandpa was always chiding me to take my job more seriously. At that moment, I had a very serious expression on my face.

“Is it true?”

“I don’t know,” my coworker said, “That’s why I’m calling you. I got some cryptic text messages from the receptionist and was wondering if you heard anything.”

“I haven’t,” I said. I wanted to add that I liked D a lot, but we weren’t close. He had asked, indirectly, to hang out after work a few times, but I always declined. I said instead, “I don’t know anything about anything.”

We exchanged a few more pointless affirmations then hung up, though I was certain of two things: that if D was dead, I wouldn’t be surprised and that I was feeling quite tired.

————–

I met D on my first day of work and while normally not attracted to men of his ethnic origin, found him quite handsome. He was lean then and had a strong, regal profile with thick brows, bright, wide eyes and jet black hair which he styled into a subtle rising tide atop his forehead, giving him the appearance of always leaning forward. I was standing in front of the receptionist’s desk, waiting for the head of HR to come and receive me when he walked in the door, holding a motorcycle helmet and wearing a fitted rider’s jacket. He didn’t smile at me and instead nodded hello to the receptionist and started toward his desk.

“D!” the receptionist said, “Meet Betty! She’s new.” Almost reluctantly, he paused to acknowledge me. We shook hands and I smiled his solemn face, thinking (assuming) that he was just a shy Pakistani man with a wife and kids. I painted. He comes to do his job, socializes little, if at all, then quietly goes home. I didn’t put the clues together, that normally men with young families did not ride motorbikes.

The Spirit of Adventure, 1962. Renee Magritte Oil on Canvas

 It was strange in the beginning, our relationship, which mirrored the way I interacted with the rest of the company. As a newcomer, my policy was to be open and friendly to all. Friends and enemies alike would show themselves in time. But D was, for the first month, an enigma. I sensed that he was avoiding me for mysterious reasons, among them my work mobile, for which D was responsible and which I made do without for the first two weeks because he would not give it to me. Each morning I called his desk and asked, as sweetly as I could, “D, is my phone ready?” And he would say, “Oh soon, soon. There is just one more issue,” then promptly hang up.

I grew impatient (so keen was I to become the best assistant ever), but wasn’t ready to joke with him in my usual manner. If he saw me walking towards him, he would go the other way. If he had no other way to go, he would turn and talk to someone else. I wondered if he had been close with the previous assistant and if he resented that I replaced her. Or perhaps he thought I was fake? I worried about this at first: I had unwittingly taken on a “ray-of-sunshine” role at the office and perhaps the solemn Pakistani with a dark past could see right through it. Let him think what he wants, I thought. I just want my damn work phone.

Thus I sat patiently at my desk and hoped that one day, my phone would be ready. And finally it was. He came by my desk one day and dropped it off, explaining to me how it worked and why it had taken him so long (it was some IT issue I don’t remember). I was overjoyed to finally have a work phone (now the bane of my existence) and told him so.

“You’re very welcome,” he said, his slight Pakistani accent coming out, “Let me know if you have any trouble.”

That was perhaps the kindest thing he had said to me in the beginning.

A few weeks later Jane from marketing called to invite me to an informal interview. I thanked her for the invitation, but was it okay that I wasn’t on their team?

“D is coming,” she said, “He’s one of the cool kids,  and we like you, so just come.”

My niceness had paid off, it seemed, but I warned Jane, “I don’t think D likes me. He’s always avoiding me.”

Jane was surprised, “What! D is The. Nicest. Guy. You just have to get to know him.”

I said okay and that evening went out to dinner. Marketing was interviewing a young woman from up north – the formal interviews with the managers and VPs would take place the next morning. The evening out with the younger folks was a way of loosening her up.

The point of the evening then, was for them to get to know the candidate, but I went in with the selfish mindset. I would finally get a chance to know some of my new coworkers and they, me. We drowned her out, certainly, and who knows, might even have scared her away. We exchanged stories about certain VPs and executives, and they corrected or affirmed my many assumptions. We warned the girl, who grew increasingly silent and nervous, not sure if such a rowdy “interview” was a joke, that if she came to work, there were certain people she’d need to avoid. I was learning too, slowly absorbing information about my new colleagues, especially D.

I learned that he had lost both his parents some years ago in an accident, and a week after they passed, his brother died too. This had come up during dinner in a joking manner and I had brushed it off as a joke, until D kindly corrected me, “Yes, it’s true,” with a soft smile on his face as though he too, couldn’t believe his misfortune. What understatement. I marveled at him then, that he was able to come out and socialize and live a relatively productive life. I thought of my parents and brother and the support they provided me, whenever I needed it. I complained often about living at home, at my father’s annoying habit of having the television on too early in the morning and my brother’s definition of “clean,” but they were alive and well. I could reach out and talk to them whenever I pleased.

I learned that D was ten years older, and that we had gone to the same high school. We had taken P.E. a decade apart under the tutelage of the same teacher, one Mrs. Smith whom ten years after D graduated, would still astound my class with effortless pushups. 

I learned from Jane, when he left for the restroom, that he had an ill-defined romance with the girl in legal whom I found annoying. She was a drama queen disguised as a legal counsel who had also gone to Berkeley and had, perhaps for this reason alone, pegged me as someone worthy of being her new bosom buddy. I begged to differ in various ways, begging out of offers to carpool (we live, unfortunately, in the same town) and invitations to dinner. This did not stop her from dropping hints about her love life. She wanted to lure me with “girl talk” as she called it and, when she had a moment’s free time at the office, would stand by my desk and update me on her romantic liaisons. Apparently she was torn between two men, one who was local and treated her like a queen, and the other, an asshole in another state who had treated her like shit until local man started to pay her more attention.

It didn’t take a detective to figure out that local man was a colleague, considering legal girl worked long hours, leaving little time for outside-the-company romances. When I asked her, she grew huffy and said, “I’m not going to answer that question.” This essentially, answered my question, though I still didn’t know exactly who. Thanks to Jane, I now knew. I questioned D’s taste in women, but thought, whatever floats your boat

And then I caught a glimpse of what Jane meant when she said that D was The. Nicest. Guy. Somethings actions/words you will never forget because they come so out of the blue, yet when they do, you realize you had misread someone, or really, it is a culmination of all the subtleties you had sensed but were too busy worrying about things like work phones to evaluate correctly.

At one point over the din, D noticed I had not yet ordered a drink (I was not planning to drink), and with a concerned look, waved for the server.

“Please sir, could we get the lady a drink?”

It was a line from another era and it melted the ice I had frozen around him.

We drank, ate, laughed. The evening ended and we stood in the parking lot saying goodbye.

“This was fun,” I said to D, and he nodded, a cigarette in his hands.

“We used to do this all the time,” he told me, “back then when some other people were here… but the company went through some changes and those people aren’t here anymore. But yeah, we should do this more often.”

I never saw the interviewee again, but was confident then that I would see D et al. the very next morning.

And I did. The next day my boss had an issue with his cellphone, and I brought it down to D. His desk was as a busy IT person’s should be: stacked with old laptops and cellphones and bundles of wires. His many monitors blinked with interfaces I would never understand  – I did not bother to look too closely. On the walls of his cubicle were pinned a small company banner and a photo of a motorcyclist on a race track, leaning dangerously close to the road.

“And how can I help you?”

I turned and there he was, the kind sir who had made sure I got my drink the night before. I handed him my boss’s phone.

“I’ll take care of it,” he said.

Later that afternoon it was ready and to save him a trip upstairs, I said, “I’ll come down and get it.”

“Okay,” he said, “You could use the exercise.”

Ah. The solemn Pakistani jokes. I wrote back, “Great. I’ll start by punching you in the face.”  

He really enjoyed that. We became friends in the tentative way you become friends with someone at work. He was not whom I thought he was and I was certainly not the “sweet and lady-like” whatever he thought I was. His comment opened the doors for me to joke in return and for a few weeks after he would, whenever I appeared, pretend to duck or say, “Oh no, do I need to grab my helmet?”

Around this time legal girl began to pester me more and more about her love life. She was torn. The asshole was coming back and wasn’t so much of an asshole anymore. He wanted her back. Wanted to move in. Did this imply marriage? He told her he loved her, and even though he had treated her like shit, she wanted to be with him. This left local man out of the equation.

“I feel terrible,” legal girl said, “I’m going to tell local man soon that I’m going back to the asshole. He’s going to be so pissed. He’s going to say I led him on.”

I’ll never know what series of events or what train of thought led D from storming around legal girl’s desk, embittered by her rejection of him to his sudden attention to me, but it would not be far-fetched to say the two were related. Legal Girl had said that D was looking to settle down and get married – that he had not proposed to her, but had proposed, in one conversation or other, a future together. He could envision it…could she?

She had shaken her head vehemently. She was Christian! Her parents were missionaries, for Christ’s sake, literally. He was a Pakistani man with a foggy yet intact Muslim background. She had laughed at the thought of them being together and needless to say, he was enraged, then despondent. All this from legal girl’s lips and never from D’s. I’ll never know the whole story – but regardless of whom pursued who, D was pissed at Legal Girl because according to him, she had pursued him. I surmise he had grown to like her, and then she had turned around and chosen an asshole when from the very beginning, even when D wasn’t interested, he had been The. Nicest. Guy. Ever.

Shortly after legal girl chose, D and I bitched about her on a long drive from our office to LA, where there was a company event. We rode with the receptionist and an IT contractor from Australia who had instantly become one of D’s best friends, and they laughed at our vindictive comments. That evening in LA however, I learned that D could drink far too much and still, frighteningly, feel confident enough to drive us all home.

“You aren’t driving,” I said, “Give me the keys.” And holding a drink, his millionth one that night, he put his hands up and smiled in what he thought must have been a charming manner, but to me, looked purely foolish.

“I can drive, Betty,” he said, “No problem. You seem so fun but now you’re just uptight! Just dance!”

It was nearing two in the morning and I had to work the next day. We all did, but I need more sleep than the average employee and wanted to get home. Alive.

“You’re not driving, D.”

“I can drive.”

“You can’t. You won’t.”

“I can drive.”

It went on like this for several more minutes until it became clear to him that for me and the receptionist, who had already taken off her painfully high heels, the evening was over. I drove them back to the office, a shadow having crossed my overall impression of D. I am judgmental. Undeniable and unapologetic. It irritated me to see a thirty-four year man drink so recklessly. Offer to drive four people home so recklessly.

As the weeks went on, I gathered that that reckless might as well have been D’s middle name. From other coworkers I learned that he liked to drink. A lot. What happened in LA had happened many times in the past: at the company Christmas party, on dozens of happy hours with “the old crowd,” and most likely every night in his apartment. He lived alone with his dog, an aging chihuahua with a bevy of joint and organ problems. He loved the dog dearly and would often go home to walk and feed it in the afternoons. Often he would respond to my emails with a house phone. “What are you doing at home,” I’d ask. “I’m feeding my dog,” he said. “I don’t like to leave him alone for too long.”

From D himself I learned his passion for fast cars, motorbikes and racing.

“Isn’t that dangerous,” I said.

“Nah.” he said, then thought for a moment, “Well, yeah, but I’m not scared or anything.” Later he forwarded me photographs of a car he had totaled – I had driven the same car in high school and knew it was something of a tank, more likely to crush other cars than be crushed. But the photographs showed a vehicle so mangled it seemed impossible that the driver was alive and sending me the photos.

“That’s awful,” I said without humor.

“But I’m fine. It happened. It’s done,” he said lightly. He shrugged as though it were no big deal and I thought about his dead parents and brother. Would I shrug too, if I had lost so many loved ones in a week?

It had not been my intention to create some sort of alliance with D regarding legal girl, nor did I intend to send him an invitation to woo me. Though slowly, uncomfortably, I sensed a redirection of his attention from legal girl to me. I was neither flattered nor mortified, just bemused – what a quick turn of interest! 

Little treats began to appear on my desk. The Australian, an eager wing man, began to make more and more trips upstairs to ask me about my weekend plans on D’s behalf.

“D and I are going to do this or that,” he would say, offering me a chocolate covered cherry or some other sweet treat, “It’s going to be wicked.”

“Sounds fun,” I’d say, chewing.

“Are you interested? D’s gonna drive and he says he can pick you up.”

Thanks but no thanks, I said, and, “The chocolates are great! Thanks for bringing them up.”

“Don’t thank me,” the Australian would say, “Thank D. He told me to bring them up here.”

I was not being coy, but straightforward. Or at least I hoped. And I always did thank D for whatever he did for me, but I invited nothing further. What was the point? I had painted him once, been wrong, and he had repainted himself – the nicest guy, true true, but not my guy. Not in a million years.

——–
In the middle of this, D discovered my blog. In truth, I don’t remember if I shared the link with him or if he found out via his mysterious IT ways. But he began to read. 
I warned him to keep his mouth shut, because I was writing about people we both knew – legal girl included – and he said in that light, no-big-deal way of his, “Of course. Your secret is safe with me.” 
Except it wasn’t. He had seen a post about my boss playing golf in Australia and mentioned it to his boss, an avid golf player, who then wrote me and said, “Your blog is beautiful.” I was angry and warned D again. Don’t tell ANYONE, I said. And he said again, “Of course, of course.” 
A few days later my boss called me into his office. 
“Don’t tell anyone what’s on my calendar. I told you this before,” he said. 
“I don’t tell anyone anything.” 
He stared at me, “You told D that I went golfing in Australia and he told Greg, and Greg, he gets jealous whenever I golf with a celebrity and I have to hear about it.” 
I apologized and made a mental note to really punch D in the face. 
Though I never got the chance. 
Last week. 
His last week. 
On Tuesday after Christmas, I walked in the office and found on my desk a small shopping bag. Atop it lay a small red square of cardstock, cut, it seemed, from a poster. I knew it was from D – I recognized the handwriting. But it was going to be a busy week – my boss had been away on vacation and due back the next day. I had to clean house. I read it swiftly: 
“To a talented writer…” 
I don’t remember the rest because someone called me away and it was many hours later that I finally found the time to open the gift. There were two: the first an angry birds beanie that he perhaps bought on a whim because he thought it was cute, though it almost embarrassed me to hold it up. I quickly stuffed it back to the bottom of the bag, along with the red card. I thought, “Does he know me at all?” The other was carefully selected, which showed me that on some level, he did.
It was a Cross pen, masculine and sleek, not unlike the motorbike D was riding when he lost control at a bend in the road and was hurled into a tree stump.
———–
He “lived” for less than twelve more hours before the game of telephone began, which is how my pretty coworker came to call me on New Year’s Eve with a worried note in her voice. A few hours later my boss called to see if I had heard. 
“I’m not sure of anything,” I said, which was half true, “What have you heard?”
“I heard that D is dead.” 
It was strange to hear the word, “dead” for which “He didn’t make it” is a euphemism. My boss is not one for euphemisms. 
“Let me call HR,” I said. Both our voices were without emotion. I called HR, who sounded as though she’d been crying. 
“I heard that D died,” I said, “Is that true?” 
“Yeah,” she said, “He was in an accident.” 
We exchanged a few more pointless affirmations and I called my boss back. 
“Oh,” he said, his voice then sounded younger, almost childish, and I pictured a seven year old boy watching as his tower of legos came crumbling down, “Ask if there’s anything we can do.” 
“Okay,” I said, though I knew of course there was nothing.
———

On Tuesday, as per my rule of not leading him on, I said nothing until he messaged me.

“Did an angry bird drop by your desk or something?”

I feigned ignorance until then, “So it was you!” I wrote, “Thanks D! That’s so thoughtful of you!”

The rest of the week passed in a blur. The Cross pen sat unopened and unused on my desk at home. I cried in front of my boss on Wednesday. Wondered how long I could stay at my job on Thursday and spoke briefly to D on the phone Friday afternoon because he wanted to know if one of the VPs was upstairs. I answered him absentmindedly, annoyed that he was calling me about this when I was already so busy, and when ten minutes later he appeared he seemed irritated as well.

“Betty, the whole point of my calling you to ask was so you could save me a trip upstairs.”

I wanted to murder him. I was dying, couldn’t he see that? But I remembered the pen and the card – where did I put that small red card? – and apologized. “I’m sorry D. I’m just…not paying attention today.”

“You okay?” he asked.

“I’m fine. I’m just tired. I’m sorry.”

“It’s okay, no big deal.” He shrugged in that easy way of his and walked towards the door that led to the back stairs.

I turned away from my computer and watched him go, thinking about the note he had written on the small red card.Where was it? Had I thrown it away? He opened the door, and before it closed, turned to smile. I waved then turned back to my monitor. Emails. So many emails. All urgent.

Or were they? I started to type again, then heard one of the accountants say to another, “See you next year!”

I winced. To D, I had forgotten to say, “Happy New Year.”

Monday Night Lament

I realized just now, five minutes ago, that this was my first winter sans winter break. In all fairness, I did have a winter break: a measly two days tacked onto this whirlwind holiday weekend, but four days(!) pales in comparison to the two week or month long breaks I was accustomed to in the past.

It’s strange to think that this time last year, I was moving out of Berkeley. I was eating at my favorite restaurants one last time, packing all my stuff into my dad’s SUV, waving goodbye to roommates and friends, wondering if I’d ever walk the tree-lined streets of Berkeley again. I was so eager to go home and start “real” life, but of course I was still a solid three months away from real life. My parents generously awarded me a two-month trip to Asia for finishing my degree, for which they’d held their breath two years. Underneath it all I was waiting to hear back from the Fulbright commission – if I got it, I’d be off again, living a (government-funded) student’s life abroad under the guise of writing about family history. As long as there was no envelope in the mailbox I was free to travel here and there and delay job hunting.

That was my last hurrah for a while. I spent January catching up with old friends, going to Vegas, baking, reading, lounging around. February and March were spent in Taipei, with short bouts to Hong Kong, Japan and Shanghai. I was happy to be traveling, but at the same time felt something deservedly ominous growing in my heart – that I was somehow having too much fun, and that it was only a matter of time before God said, “I think you’ve had enough.”

I reasoned with myself that I deserved it. But then Karma’s voice came back: “Yeah, but three months? And if you get the Fulbright, you’re never going to find a job. You’re going to tell yourself, ‘What’s the point, if I have to quit in July anyway?'” Karma was right – I was thinking exactly that. But I had gotten past round one – didn’t that entitle me to enjoy some much deserved time off?

Apparently not. The envelope finally came, a slender, pure white “no, thank you,” and had I not been so happy with my situation at home (most of my closest friends had somehow ended up close by), the color and hope I had held onto for the coming year might have drained from my face.

Karma rewards those who actually want the Fulbright (and a slew of other things) for the right reasons. I was, in all honestly, looking to delay “real life” for as long as possible. For all my talk about hating school and the academic life, I was a prime example of what everyone loves about school: I hated writing the essays, yet reviled in the sense of accomplishment they gave when I turned one in. I hated exams, yet loved exam days because they were short and straightforward. Come in, take out pen, write for two hours, turn in. Done. Nothing passes a long school day like a few lengthy exams – you always want the clock to slow down rather than speed up.

But time flies and I am now a 9-5er, or an 8:30 to whenever, as our company goes. I am often too exhausted to think, and it frightens me because I know my job is nowhere near as exhausting as some other jobs. In college people who were only a few years older but who had been working full time for a while whispered to me, “If you’re smart, you’ll stay in school for as long as possible.” I didn’t understand this because I didn’t recognize that school was a haven of sorts – it didn’t matter if you hated what you were studying – your presence there indicated, for most people (unless you were an Asian kid forced into med school or electrical engineering), that you had made the choice. You had somehow found the funds and were there to learn and discover. I didn’t see it that way and instead spent hours in certain classes scowling at over eager students and pompous professors and the false importance both groups assigned to essays and dissertations and exams – who the hell cares who or what influenced Nabokov? Well, I did, sort of, but not nearly enough to think of pursuing a master’s degree never mind a PhD.

Looking back however, it was for me, the ideal lifestyle. I fancied myself a productive person, but school gave me the perfect balance between making progress in my life overall (I was, after all, working towards a degree, however useless it would prove in the job hunt) and doing nothing at all – sometimes, I wonder where the true progress lay: in the hours I spent in class or the quiet mornings and evenings I spent walking through the tree-lined streets? It provided both structure and absolute freedom – I had a community, and yet I was alone. My parents were an eight-hour drive south, my roommates knew not to disturb me if my door was closed, and friends, if I wished to see them, were a text message and then a short stroll away. I could miss class too, and my professors would not care – (the budget cuts cut more than just money).

Call me stupid. No one likes papers and essay tests (With the sole exception of my friend Elena who annotates her books for fun) – but it’s a small price to pay for that balance I so wish I could have now. And looking back, I could have been mistaken for one of the students who cared too much about grades and had doctorate dreams because I was always lingering outside my professor’s office and starting papers early (so I could turn them in early and go home early for Thanksgiving/Winter Break). But I realized that the happiness I felt when I was out of class, browsing through the massive university library at my leisure, laying around on campus near a running stream, underneath a willow, with the campanile in the background was a happiness almost exclusive to my time as a student. And now, at 10:55 PM on the last day of my meager “winter break,” it makes me wistful. Did I squeeze out every last drop?

Chinese Opera

My grandma likes coleslaw. She fries some dumplings for my dinner, twelve more than I ask for, saying she will eat some as well. But she eats only four and then reaches into the fridge for a leftover carton of coleslaw from KFC.

“I like this…salad,” she says, “It’s one thing Americans make right.”

Before dinner I ask my grandpa if he likes dumplings, as this is my grandma’s specialty. In her heyday she could make over 400.

“That wasn’t news, honey,” she says, holding up her hands as though there were a watermelon sized ball of dough between them. “I could make that many easy. And I did so for many years. But then I fell and had to enlist your grandpa to roll out the dumpling skins.” She gives him a look, “That’s when productivity really went downhill.”

He isn’t listening. His hands are folded in his lap and his head is turned toward the television, where Beijing opera singers are warbling on a sparse stage. A man with a long black beard and fierce eyebrows is crying about something. I can’t understand, but my grandpa shakes his head, the old frown playing on his old face.

I try to make him smile and ask him a favorite question, one I know the answer to.

“Do you like dumplings?”

He shakes his head again, but the frown softens.

“Well you sure did marry the wrong person,” I say.

My grandma sits down slowly, using her arms to hold herself against the table. She has weak legs but strong arms, and she winces slightly from the bruises on her hips and shoulders. Weak legs caused her to fall against the windowsill the day before Thanksgiving. She split her forehead open, doused the carpet in blood and now she sports a Frankenstein cut over her forehead and the world’s most vibrant bruise down the right side of her face. Her right eye is swollen, but I can see it clearly when she rolls it. She is a hardy woman. She fell. Blacked out. Woke up a little dizzy half an hour later, her face covered in blood, and then proceeded to the bathroom to wash the blood off.

My grandfather woke to the sound of water running at 1AM and went to find his wife covered in blood.

My grandfather has a strong heart. He panicked, but dialed my uncle, who drove them both to the hospital. In the car, my grandfather wrung his hands in his lap. He wonders if he is lucky to have heard the water running, or lucky that my grandmother awoke at all, and did not bleed to death on the carpet. The whole way to the hospital, he is thinking this.

My grandmother has weak legs, but strong arms. Arms that were once capable of making over 400 dumpling in one morning, but now can probably only do a hundred and fifty or so.

“Seventy years is a long time to be married to the wrong person,” she says, rolling her eyes and nodding at my grandpa. “He’s a strange creature, that one. Strange.” If she spoke English, she would have said, “and a huge pain in my ass.”

Without a word, my grandpa rises slowly too – he has moderately weak legs and, when he was younger, a scholar’s hands. He walks slowly to the hot water dispenser and presses down on the top, filling his insulated tea mug with the hideous painted swans.

“Seventy years,” my grandpa says, in between pumps. I see him eying the mottled skin on his hands and thinking back, perhaps, to when he did not move so slowly and when the sound of running water at 1AM wouldn’t have meant anything. Seventy years. Seventy years. In Chinese he says, “how cruel life is,” but I know he is thinking, as I am thinking, how strange and wonderful.

“Marriage was different then.” My grandma leans back in her chair and puts one leg up, a sign that she’s about to tell me something. “I got married at eighteen and right away I moved in with your grandpa’s family. I had to take care of four generations. Four! I had to please them all and make sure the house ran smoothly. Women back then were different. We made everything by hand. We weren’t afraid of hard work. We had to make our own clothes, trousers, even shoes!

Camille Pissarro, Madame Pissarro Sewing, 1885

My grandpa’s mug is filled and he has seated himself back at the table. He nods along to my grandma’s words.

“Your grandpa was lucky – he married a smart one.”

I burst out laughing, and I can see a shadow of a smile on grandpa’s lips. But he nods.

“What! It’s true!” my grandma purses her lips. “I learned quickly. My mother raised me to be useful because my father died when I was thirteen. Women had work, but not all women did it. There were plenty of girls that just ran wild in the street, girls that didn’t even know how to hold a needle, but my mother wouldn’t let me become one of those girls.”

My grandma shakes her head sadly, as though I have just come in from running wild in the streets.

“If you weren’t married by 23, you were an old maid. No one wanted you then!”

Now it is my turn to give her a look.

“Well of course times are different now,” she says, “Back then you were defined by your marriage. If you look at me, you wouldn’t say I need a man.” She leans in close to me and lowers her voice, “Just between you and me, your strange egg grandpa would not last a week without me.” I turn to look at him, with his hands folded in his lap, his lips pursed. They would be pursed forever if it wasn’t for my grandma goading him to talk now and then. She leans back, content that I know who’s who in this relationship, then shrugs. “But that’s just how it was.”

“Women back then were different,” my grandpa says suddenly. He gives me a look and this time, smiles for real. I know he is thinking about me at family dinners, how my voice is the loudest. How I talk too fast. Say too much. Laugh too loud, and then says exactly what I expect him to say, “They didn’t talk so much, for one thing.”

My grandpa takes his blood pressure with his glasses on, recording the numbers in a little notebook. They seem wildly different from day to day, and I ask him how accurate the readings are. Not very he says, but continues to write down the numbers.

They are examining their medication cases, those long plastic bars that have a compartment for each day of the week.

My grandpa gives me a serious, thoughtful look.

What day is it?

Sunday.

Ah. I forgot to take these this morning.

My grandma roles her eyes. What else is new.

Ah well, he says, then motions for my grandmother’s arm. Let’s take your blood pressure. She lays it out on the table, one strong arm. Seventy years, I think. At least she must have made 400 hundred dumplings at least once a month. 4800 dumplings a year.

336,000 dumplings, just in the course of her marriage, not including when she wasn’t yet married and made dumplings for her own family.  

I write on my phone as the machine groans and squeezes my grandma’s arms.

146 over 56 my grandpa reads, and diligently writes it down next to his numbers. Blood pressure. Heart beats. Life in numbers listed on a clean white, lined square of paper.

Are you still writing your email? My grandpa asks me.

No no, I’m done with that. I’m writing about something else.

He nods. Someone in the family told him I like to write. He turns to my grandmother. Did you take your medicine?

I’m waiting for the water to cool.

On the screen, the actors wail. My grandpa turns back to watching Beijing opera just in time to see the actor with the long black beard disappear behind a curtain and emerge with a gray beard. My grandma asks him whats going on.

The man’s family was executed by the evil Emperor, and he too, is next on the list. He wants to escape, but cannot leave the palace. All the guards have their eyes on him and he has no way out. But he stays up the whole night fretting and his beard turns white from stress. The actor disappears again, and reemerges with a white beard. He laments his beard turning white, but knows it doesn’t matter, because he will die soon anyway. But the next morning, the executioner does not recognize him and he is able to escape with his life. The audience applauds wildly.

I don’t understand the opera, but with my grandpa’s translation, I can understand the relief the man with the white beard must feel. Or perhaps my grandma can better understand. Her face is bruised and battered, but she still has her strong arms, even her weak legs. She can still tell me stories and roll her eyes and call my grandfather a strange creature. 

It’s a nice story, sighs the strange creature with the strong heart. He sounds a little tired, but happy.

Edward Hopper Two Comedians, 1966 Oil on Canvas

Thanks, Giving

In kindergarten, we were asked, the day before Thanksgiving, to outline our tiny palms on orange construction paper. I remember removing my hand and seeing what my teacher promised would be a turkey and what a turkey it was! We were instructed to color in the lines of our fingers to represent the turkey’s plumage and to give the turkey a face and legs. Carefully with a brown crayon, I drew a wing, a crooked smile, and spindly turkey legs. With a black crayon, I gave it beady-eyed sight. A rudimentary leering bird: a child’s take on a symbol of gratitude.

That was the easy part, not necessarily the art.

On the back there were printed words followed by blank lines: “I am thankful for….”

Gratitude as a concept was rather foreign to me. As a four year old with strong opinions and a sense of self (which would sadly, come and go), I thought I grasped how the world worked. My relationships were simple and so was my life. School, Chinese school, screaming and yelling with my cousins took up the bulk of my time, along with the occasional spanking which resulted in more screaming and yelling.

I doubt I propped my elbows up on my preschool desk and twirled my black crayon in a thoughtful way. I doubt I asked myself: “What am I thankful for? A very good question indeed.”

What happened, (despite my memory being notoriously poor, I am certain this is 99% accurate) is I simply looked around to what my classmates were so furiously scribbling and saw the words, “Mommy”, “Daddy,” “Brother,” “Dog” and other generic words that compose a child’s world being scrawled out in illegible child’s script.

So I followed suit. Not because I was a lemming, but because my classmates reminded me then that “Hey, these bozos have the right idea! I am kinda grateful for my dad, my mother (even though she uses the belt) and my brother, (who saves me from the belt). These people/things are to be grateful for.”

An early lesson in gratitude.

Normal Rockwell Freedom from Want 1943 The Normal Rockwell Museum

Now two decades later I don’t have to think about it anymore because they are always on my mind. Give me the blank lines again and I’ll give you a book.

I am thankful for……

Family.
Friends.
My job and the smiling faces (and kind-hearted reprimands) that come with it, and all the other jobs I’ve had, never for the paycheck (because for many years there was never a paycheck) but for the stories.
Life in general, for more stories.

 And most importantly, because this medium commands it, I am grateful for you literate and “very highbrow” people who make time in your busy days to read my blog. Because writing a blog no one reads is like dancing alone – which on certain days can be just the right amount of fun – but usually, it is better with company.

Happy Thanksgiving.

All of the Lights

Across the street, my neighbors have already put up their Christmas lights. Yesterday, as I was backing out of the driveway on my way to a family dinner, I saw two young men standing on their front lawn, an intimidating tangle of Christmas lights at their feet. 

One of them had his hands on his hips, a concerned look on his face. The other was texting someone – it didn’t seem like they would get the job done anytime soon, but then again, they were professionals. I wished them a silent good luck and drove off. This morning, the “icicles” are up and dripping rainwater.

We used to put up Christmas lights, the only family on the block to get up on a ladder and do it ourselves. My brother, father and I would spend the morning untangling the lights, go in for lunch, and then come back out and hang them up on nails we had driven into the edge of our roof when we first moved here. At our old house we used the giant, multicolored bulbs that now, mostly evoke the 80’s and early 90’s, but moving here, we saw that the neighbors used the smaller white lights so we switched, too. A few years ago we stopped putting lights up. It was, as the excuse goes, “too much trouble.”

Too much trouble. Photo from digsdigs.com.

 And though I missed them at first, I too, was relieved when the holidays were over and there was one less thing to put away. On top of that, we live in a strange area which, once a year is assaulted by the Devil’s breath, also known as the Santa Ana winds. They blow ferociously around the house, knocking over my mother’s potted plants, rolling them into the swimming pool and sometimes, cracks brittle tree branches. They cause fires which is the last thing anyone needs around the holidays and make your skin dry and ashy, which is also blows (pun intended) when you are trying to look your best for friends and family and photographs. They tear the Christmas lights this way and that, and sometimes, damages the bulbs so that when we plug the lights in, half of the strand is dark. Our house then looks like a sullen face with one garish eyebrow.

But the winds can’t touch what’s on the inside (unless some idiot leaves a window or two open). 

—————–

Except for a few outlying years where Christmas was randomly held at my cousin’s or aunt’s house, the party is at our house. Those exceptions however, occurred three years in a row and burned themselves in my father’s brain – he began to think that perhaps Christmas would never be at our house again.

Somewhere in the middle of this, we remodeled our house. During, my father took stock of all the things we had in the garage and made the decision to clear out our junk. He informed me of his decision, and I applauded him. He, my mother and the rest of the Asian immigrants from their generation are notorious pack rats, so it was nice to see that he was making an attempt to be otherwise. And for a while, it did seem like we had more room in the garage. Except when the holidays rolled around and it was decided that our house, newly remodeled, would once again be the place to have the annual family Christmas party, I couldn’t find the Christmas decorations.

To be more specific, I couldn’t find our ornaments – none of which were particularly expensive, but they had great sentimental value – at least to me. There were ornaments my mother and aunts had made for their first Christmas here in the United States and a few others that solely by being manufactured three decades ago, were simply of better quality than ornaments today. Lastly, there were the half-dozen or so handcrafted popsicle stick ornaments my brother and I had made in preschool and elementary school – rudimentary but completely original creations with our childhood photographs in them. We wrote things like, “Merry Christmas Mom and Dad,” in our child’s script on the back of them, and even though they were meant for our parents, I would have been happy to take them with me to my future home.

Inexplicably, my father saw the ornaments as “junk” and kept instead the dozens of empty jars, boxes, paper bags, unused yet outdated appliances and suitcases – all utterly replaceable.

When I discovered that the ornaments were gone, glittering lonesomely in some distant landfill, I berated my father. What a Grinch he was, I cried (though I do not think there is a Chinese word for “Grinch,” and instead must have used the Chinese word for “shitty person”), how could he throw away things with so much history and keep all the junk?

“We stopped putting up lights so many years ago and haven’t had the party here for three years,” my father said, “I imagined it was only a matter of time before we stopped putting up the tree too.”

I was old enough then to accept that what was done was done and I said so.

“What’s done is done,” I said, “but we are going to put up a tree for as long as I live at home. That’s something I don’t ever want to give up.” 

My father nodded, “Yes.” His face was thoughtful, but he did not seem particularly sorry.

A few days later however, he accompanied me to buy the tree, and when we had stationed it in the corner of our newly remodeled living room, he stood back and said, “It is quite nice to have a tree, whether we have a party here or not, isn’t it?”

I nodded.

“Will you go and buy more ornaments?” he asked.

I nodded again, though my heart winced to think of our old ornaments.

“Buy some nice ones you really like,” he said, then with a sigh, “I didn’t know you’d want to put the tree up again.”

I looked at him then and realized he must have been feeling a subtle but supreme regret. He had had the best intentions when he was clearing out the clutter, but erred in his judgement.

It didn’t matter. It was Christmas and in a few days the family would be gathered at our house again, There would be presents and people around the tree; good food, rowdy laughter and fond memories. The ornaments, no matter how old or handcrafted, had never been the focal point of our gathering.

“Thanks Bah,” I said, “I’ll get them tomorrow. It’ll still be a beautiful tree.”

Old Habits, Don’t Die

Many of the things I used to do, I don’t do so much anymore:

  • Read books. (As opposed to the constant stream of news and magazine articles I half-read at work). 
  • Watch movies. (“Drive” was the last film I saw and sitting in the dark room with a large screen felt almost foreign.)
  • Go to the library, which, I suppose, goes along with reading, though more and more I find myself missing the quiet atmosphere and smell. Ah, musty paper.
  • Cook/bake. (We had our Thanksgiving potluck at work today, something I had thought for a long time I would certainly bake something for, but the week rolled by and the only thing I contributed was my appetite). 
  • Clean my room. (Not that I ever needed to do this before; from ages 6-25, I had the energy to keep my room neat as a pin on a daily basis. I made my bed every morning, fluffing the pillows and tucking my sheets in just so – I liked that I could come back to a room that seemed like a freshly turned hotel room. In college, my roommates stared at my half of the room which seemed like a set from a stark, war-time barracks where everything was rationed. They wondered if I had perhaps spent some time at some women’s boot camp. When my roommate’s father visited, he whistled and said, “You could bounce a quarter off your sheets. That was the test back when I was in the army.” I merely shrugged, “I like things neat.”) 

Even after college, when everyone said, “Oh you’re not gonna have time to do that stuff anymore,” I found the time to watch a movie, visit the library and read a book at least once a week. Twice a week, I would bake hearty oatmeal cookies and banana bread to give to my relatives.

I had no idea these were all indicators of unemployment or poorly defined internships.

There are women at work who can do all of the above and their jobs quite well, but they were blessed with enviable energy reserves. Or perhaps not reserves at all, but energy. After a normal week at work I spend weekend mornings zoned out, putting from room to room in my pajamas and standing in front of my bookshelf, wondering if I should attempt to read something longer than a NY Times column. Though I do light up briefly in the evenings – just long enough for me to drive to LA, dance for two hours max (before my feet hurt), and drive back, only to spend the next day in an exhausted daze. On Sunday nights, I often go to bed at 8PM to prepare for the following week.

“You need to exercise,” my mother said, and like a good daughter, I recommenced hot yoga – but that is a false remedy. For some people, exercise is taxing. I feel better in theory; walking out of the studio, I think, “Ah, I am more energetic,” and for two hours following the class, I am – but when I really need to be energetic is at work, between the hours of 8:30AM to 5:30PM, when things need to be done with clarity and precision.

Instead, I smile as brightly as possible; say everyone’s name in a sing-song voice to mask my fatigue, and let my tired tail show anyway, by doing things like making coffee for my boss without that vital element.

This morning he walked into his office and then out again, holding his mug.

“Get me some coffee from the Keurig,” he said, handing me the mug filled with water tinged with brown. It seemed more like a weak earl grey than bold Sumatra roast coffee. “Look at this coffee. What’s the matter with it.” 

I stared at the water, wondering why the coffee had turned out so impressively weak. Painstakingly, I retraced my steps. I had filled the pot, poured the water in, closed the lid, pressed the button…

Damn.

“I forgot the coffee.”

“Yeah, the coffee,” my boss said, then he tapped his head and pointed at mine, “You need to put some beans in here.”