Here's what T dropped off at my house over a week ago after I helped him empty one of his warehouse sized storage units. He'd had it made 25 years ago, he said. I'd said it was a nice piece, so he decided to give it to me. I didn't know that, though, and when he brought it over, I wasn't home, so he got the tenant to let him in. He dropped it off in the middle of the living room, two pieces, top and bottom. And there it sat.
"Are you going to keep it?" the tenant asked.
"I don't know. I'll have to see how it looks."
I already had a cabinet desk that I bought at Pottery Barn many, many years ago, probably about the time T had this one made. But it was not sturdy, and over the years, the hardware has broken. I'd always had some reservations about it.
T and his wife came over yesterday to put the new desk together. He'd been moving stuff for a week, he said, and he was over it. He looked it. They were going to come over on Saturday, but he texted that he and his wife were "out on the scooter." As much as he's tried to deny the thing, reality is that he is moving. He will be homeless here. He and his wife raised their son in this town and have a long history here. The fact that they are leaving all that behind is undeniably sinking in. This weekend, they were doing their farewell tour.
T looked a bit sadder than she.
We moved the old desk and put the new one into place. O.K. It looked O.K. We were all more than glad.
T and his wife had brought other things, too. They were emptying their freezer and pantry. By the time they left, I had the old desk sitting in the middle of the living room and containers full of food sitting around the house.
Just as they were leaving, the tenant came by to see the new desk. She wants the old one, she said. I understand. It is nostalgic for her. The drawers still held some of her son's old toys.
She looked at the food.
"You'd better get this stuff back in the freezer."
Then she started looking through.
"Do you want this? It's date is December 2023."
Ha! No, I didn't, and so we went through the food. About half the frozen things went out to the garbage.
Back to ma's where I put away all the foodstuff with her looking on. First, though, I emptied her freezer of all the old things she had, too. It took awhile. I poured us the last of yesterday's champagne and I started preparing the beef stew, braising the beef, chopping the onion, potato, and. . . shit piss fuck. . . there were no carrots. My mother went into the pantry and brought out a can of chopped carrots. What the hell? I put them in. All the leftover wine went in. Seasoning. Italian stewed tomatoes. I put on the brown jasmine rice. We took our drinks to the garage/porch and sat for awhile.
"You're going to miss your friend," my mother said.
"Yes. I don't really have any in town anymore."
I do but I don't. My most intimate friends are all living elsewhere now. There are people I see, like C.C., or Travis, but only on occasion, and the Factory Crew recede ever further into the past.
"I'll get new friends," I laughed recalling Brando saying that whenever things looked like they were going south. But I knew as long as I was a caregiver twenty hours a day, that was going to be impossible, and I felt strongly the restrictions of my current life. Just that morning, as I took my long walk coming back along the Boulevard, I realized how much my life had changed. I can no longer decide to have a late breakfast at the wonderful French croissant place, nor to skip breakfast and go to lunch somewhere for adventure. I am a meal preparer and the times are sacrosanct. No, I cannot act with any spontaneity. My life is regimented. It is routine. I'd had an idea after T and his wife and the tenant had left before I loaded the car up with food to bring to my mother's that I would use the new desk to make postcards and write bon mots to my friends around the country. I would use my inkwells and dipping pens. I would make color photo transfers onto them. It would all be poetry.
But I won't be there. The desk, like everything else in my own home, will sit as in a museum. The realization made me. . .
"I'd better check on the stew," I said.
We sat down with dinner and the evening news. As always. Per usual.
I forgot to explain yesterday's picture. I'd seen a fellow make a cyanotype on the page of an old book. Pretty neat, I thought, and it gave me an idea. So, in the few marginal moments I had at home, I looked online for high rez images from old surf magazines, and lo and behold, I found them. So I copied pieces thinking to overlay them on the old surf series, just to see. I found the old Surf Spots map intriguing and decided to use that. But I didn't really have time to experiment, so the map and the surfer girl do not quite gel. I had other ideas but not more time, but being bereft of any other images, I used it for the blog.
There are other ways to do it, though. I'm thinking about trying to do it using photo transfer methods. And I would, too, if. . . .
Driving home yesterday, I played "Exile on Mainstreet" in the car. For a moment, I was tempted just to keep on driving.
And though it wasn't on that album. . . baby, baby, baby. . . please, please, please.





























