the xanax diary

love, loss, healing and humor (in no particular order)

Archive for the category “Essay”

Honoring a Hero of My Heart


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I still check Ken’s email. I’m not sure why. I just like knowing it’s still there and active. And it’s still something I monitor on his behalf should anything of substance ever arrive. It’s one of the more mundane ways I honor him.

I’ve long ago archived all the emails that he sent and received personally–or ones I sent on his behalf. Now I just check the inbox from time to time and delete the spam or long-ago-subscribed-to newsletters. One day last week I clicked on the lone message in the inbox and tapped the delete key. But just as it vanished I saw a few words of the subject: DEADLINE EXTENDED.

Curious, I clicked into the trash and read the entire subject line: “DEADLINE EXTENDED: Nominate your nurse & win a trip!” I read further and was intrigued to learn it was an essay contest to nominate an oncology nurse you feel went above and beyond in caring for you or a loved one. It clicked so easily for me to write about Blanca, “Kenny’s girlfriend,” and main nursing squeeze during his chemotherapy treatments at the Creticos Cancer Center.

With only seven days to write a 700-1,000 word essay, I set to work on this labor of love. But time was of the essence for such a daunting task. So last Sunday I dropped Kallie off at daycare so I could write at my favorite coffee shop. Writing about this time in my life is still very emotional for me, so I figured working in a public forum would force me to hold it together and power through. And it did! For the most part. After multiple read-throughs and edits, I submitted it on Sunday evening, with a few days to spare before the deadline.

I decided to stop by the cancer center yesterday to tell her I’d nominated her for the Extraordinary Healer Award, to give her a printed out copy of the essay and tell her why I nominated her. For Ken, really. (One of the less mundane ways I honor him.) And for me and our family. Our gratitude to her and the nursing staff is boundless. She and I actually had time to sit down for a few minutes so I could tell her about the nomination, and why I nominated her, and–again–how grateful I am for the love and care she showered upon Ken during his treatments.

I have no illusions of winning the competition. I know there are many worthy nurses and more agile writers than I to tell their stories. I’m certain my piece is tinged with more sentimentality that I would have liked. But it’s the only way I can see that time in my life from where I am now.

The real “win” for me is just having someone like Blanca to write about and be grateful for.

With Beautiful Blanca when I stopped by to give her my essay.

With Beautiful Blanca when I stopped by to give her my essay.

Here is the essay I submitted.

Kenny’s Girlfriend

By Ron Stempkowski (March 24, 2013)

Nurses are heroes. There is no doubt in my mind. Nurses who devote themselves to caring for people battling cancer are a special breed of hero; an elite force who lovingly carry out their duties regardless of how the mission might end with each patient. Their dedication is as unyielding as it is impressive.

Blanca Vargas, RN, BSN, OCN, is a first-class example of this type of hero. Her presence at the Creticos Cancer Center transformed the Infusion Room from a cold, sterile facility into a room filled with caring and laughter–and even a touch of cozy.

For my husband Kenny Anderson, Blanca was the face of his infusion treatments at Creticos. Her reassuring smile. Her cooing voice. Her gentle yet capable touch. He never looked forward to the treatment, but always looked forward to seeing “his” Blanca. Her warmth drew us both in and earned her a place on the highest shelf in our esteem.

I accompanied him to most all of his treatments during the year he underwent them. I can still remember meeting Blanca for the first time as she prepared Kenny for his first chemotherapy session. So sweet and jovial as she donned the required and intimidating hazmat garb, she made the whole daunting process seem a little more routine, easing two very unnerved gentlemen’s minds. It was late winter, and she talked about the promise of spring. It so perfectly demonstrated her optimistic point of view.

Ever the performer, having a loyal audience participant helped Kenny pass the time while receiving treatment. Blanca engaged him in conversation, listened intently as he shared stories, and shared stories of her own. It wasn’t long before Kenny and Blanca became the best of “dancing” partners as they played off each other effortlessly, usually resulting in uproarious laughter from their adoring audience–of which I was lucky enough to a part.

Their mutual crush soon became so obvious to me I began referring to Blanca as Kenny’s “girlfriend.” And not long after, she and the entire staff were in it. Their affinity for each other was palpable–and so delightfully palatable. No matter how poorly he was feeling as I drove him to treatment, watching his demeanor transform and lighten when he saw Blanca was a delicious treat I always loved to witness; and one that was so good for him.

With Kenny (and all her patients, no doubt) Blanca understood the subtle yet powerful importance of touch. I can still see the Zen smile that would brighten his face when she would touch his arm or gently rub his back, murmuring sweet words of encouragement to him.

As Kenny’s husband and partner, I watched helplessly as either cancer or chemotherapy drugs devastated his body. I was his constant albeit stressed-out 24/7 caregiver, and taking him to Creticos for treatment was a respite for me, knowing Blanca would tend to his every need and indulgence–even if I was sitting right next to him. She understood not only what Ken was going through, but what I was going through as well. I could breathe a little easier while we were there.

As Kenny’s condition deteriorated, he remained steadfast in his optimism–as did Blanca. I so appreciated having another pylon to stand strong with me in support of Kenny. We knew we were going to lose him, but focusing on it would have been paralyzing to him, me, and our family. She was such a great help to me in that regard. Knowing she’d cared for so many patients who had ultimately died and yet remaining so hopeful and positive and light shored up my courage to do the same.

When he was hospitalized across the street from Creticos, Blanca and the other nurses came to visit him. Though his terminal diagnosis was difficult for both he and I to grasp, Blanca’s demeanor didn’t change. She was the same, unwavering fan of Kenny that she’d always been. It’s that kind of loving consistency that I found nothing short of remarkable.

Though Blanca is deservedly the topic of this essay, I’d be remiss in not pointing out that she is but one star among a constellation of other professionals who together spun a lattice of care around my Kenny as he valiantly battled cancer.

Since Kenny died I still visit my heroes at Creticos at least twice a year, taking them the same home-baked goods I brought when Kenny was undergoing treatment. As soon as anyone on the nursing staff sees me, their face brightens and they squeal, “Blanca will be so happy to see you!” before going off to find her for me.

Though the first couple of times were bittersweet–the wounds from losing Kenny were fresh–Blanca is the kind of person you just can’t help hugging. Now it’s like going to see an old friend. And that’s exactly what she is.

Except my friend is a hero.

A Guest Blogger…of sorts


Today’s date is significant for me. It’s the third anniversary of Ken’s hemipelvectomy. (You can read more about it in last year’s blog if you’d like.) Because of this anniversary–like so many that have come and gone, Ken has been heavily on my mind this week. More so than usual. And I think it would be fitting to hear his voice–in a manner of speaking. (If you want to hear his actual voice, head over to the Poop Song.)

What I would like to try doing today–and on any date that is meaningful in a Ken-specific way for me–is share a little of him with you. As I’ve said before he was a prolific writer, leaving behind more things than I’ve yet been able to read/catalog. I ran across this piece and brought it smile to my face. I well remember the incident described. And I think it’s a good representation of him. It’s from January of 2003 when he and I were living in his brother (Craig) and sister-in-law’s (Katie) guest house in Los Angeles. Craig installed a kitchen for us on this particular day.

[Please forgive any errors, I make any edits to it.]

Running on Empty by Ken Anderson (aka kenan derson) – Jan. 3, 2003

Kenan Legs

I empty my last packet of instant oatmeal into the amount of water meant for two packets. I stare into the cloudy, beige liquid imagining the little oats taking on more water than usual. Super oats. I take a sip. The warmth of the oatmeal juice is welcomed to my throat, but the whisper of oats in the juice make my tongue recoil, stand up, walk to the headmaster and say, “More?” Oh, Oliver!

My head is throbbing with the rhythm of this cursor on the screen. I leave work early and go home to rest, but I know full well my ‘rest’ would be like lying next to a cranky Thor since my brother and boyfriend are cussing at the god Ikea as they install a kitchen into our one-room guesthouse.

I descend in the elevator. Sixty floors down. The air is squeezing my head as if my horned helmet is collapsing my skull.

I get into Gypsy, my Toyota hybrid car.

“Ping” she says. “Add Fuel. Ping.” She repeats, haughtily this time, in French to cover her derriere, “Ajoutez Essence”

“Okay, Gypsy.” I tell her “We can make it home. You tell me this when there is about a gallon of fuel left.  (And I get about forty-three miles to the gallon.)

I take it cautiously, the drive home. I coast as much as possible down the mountain foothills, all the time watching the fuel gauge. “Blink, blink” she whispers. I think, “Oh yeah, you told me this morning, thirty miles ago. Well, I can always stop off at a gas station sooner. I know where one is. The second exit ahead.”

“No way!” shouts Gypsy in her own “Ding Ding” way. “No Kenny, I am not feeling well. I am staaarving.”

Gypsy sputters. Then, “Ding, Ding.” Her warning lights flash all over the dashboard. I quickly ask Gypsy to tell me where the nearest fueling station is by tapping the touch screen with POI (Point of Interest). She quickly displays her fuel pump icons, indicating the locations of all stations in the area.

“Yes!” I say seeing a station close by. And click on Gypsy’s turn signal.

There was no traffic a second ago! But now, we are surrounded by cars. Tons and tons of cars. Fucking L.A. “I am not Custer! You can’t just descend upon me like a bunch of Indians. Get the fuck out of my way. Gypsy needs nourishment!”

“Ding…Ding…”  “I can’t go on, Kenny. I…”

“I am sorry, Gypsy.” We pull to the curb and Gypsy rolls slightly back as I take my foot off her pedal. “Blink. Blink.” “I gave it all I could, Captain.” She whispers.

“Poor girl. I will be right back.” I salute her by pressing ’Lock’ on my remote, then turn to head uphill to the station Gypsy said was about a mile away.

“Geez, this is steep hill. My prosthetic leg is not fitting well at all. With each lift of my leg, my prosthetic slips slightly away then is shoved back on when I step forward. “OUCH! I just have to get up this hill, then make a left and it is, like, two block away. Gosh those flowers are pretty.”

I wait for the walk light to come on at the corner and I see a police car. I fantasize that they see me and know what’s going on, that I am a cripple walking uphill and then need gas.

“Oh, shit,” I think, “I have to walk back too. And walking downhill is always harder. Fuck. Oh, there’s the “White Walk Guy” on the crossing signal. “Yay for me!” I mouth.

I cross the street and look ahead for the station. I do not see it. “It must be just behind this building.” I assure myself.

I clear the building and “you’re kidding me. God dammit!” There is a station right where Gypsy said. All the pumps are gone and a chain-linked fence surrounds it. I walk on. I look to my right and look at the mountains. “Well at least I am not in Chicago. Where it would be ten degrees with a wind chill, making it feel like minus sixty. (Yeah.  So my blood thinned since moving here. What of it? Fuck off.) In the Midwest there would be at least six inches of dirty, slushy snow on the ground. Here, it is seventy-four degrees (without the wind chill) and the sun is out and…hey, there’s Mt. Wilson.

“Hey. There’s a Shell station. It looks like it is only a few blocks away…which, of course, means it is at least six. Shit. I need a container for the fuel.” I don’t want to be ripped of by the gas station. “Albertson’s? What is that,” I wondered. I have heard of them and seen them before, but was not sure what they were. I thought it was a drugstore like Walgreen’s or Osco. But, alas, it is a dingy, dank every skuzzy-old-fat-or-drugged-out-person-in-the-area-shops-here grocery store. So as a cripple with a cold, I fit right in. They did not have a gas container. Which was just as well because I didn’t want to wait in line with those stinky people.

“A Do-It Center store. “ I proclaimed to Mt. Wilson. “They have to have a fuel container. I mean they have, I read, hardware, home decorating, lumber, x-mas dec half off, and garden.” Surely they have some manly, gas-powered, vroom-vroom, kind of thingy and fuel containers are probably right below them. “Yes. I was right.” I said to an old man who didn’t seem to care. I made my purchase and continued on my trek.

Now, of course, everyone that sees me carrying a fuel container will think similarly. “Oh that guy ran out of gas.” “Oh he is so stupid to run out of gas.” “Ran out of gas. That sucks for him. I love my Special Edition Survivor Land Rover. “ “Normal people call those things gas cans.” I try to appear as if they are all wrong. “I’m getting ready to blow some leaves. I am cutting the grass. I am a go-cart racer. Uh, my friend ran out, of gas, he is so stupid.” I swing the container gleefully. I look around and teeter on my feet at stoplights.

I, well, I look like and idiot who ran out of gas.

At the station many, many, many blocks later, I insert my bankcard, punch my PIN and proceed to fill my container. I put the nozzle in the hole and squeeze the trigger. Gas spills out. I put just the tip of the nozzle in and squeeze…nothing. The new fume-catching, foreskin-like device does not allow me to do that. I pull the hood back and begin to fill the can. I have to do it in short bursts then glance at the meter because it is only a one-gallon tank. I play it safe and stop filling at .754 gallons. God, I could really use a smoke. Oh…yeah.

For a change of scenery, I decide to take the other side of the road back. “Hey, there’s a Goodwill store.” I decide not to stop in as I am carrying a can of gas and this is probably frowned upon, yes, even at a Goodwill store.

The sidewalk has ended. “Great.” I take a side road with a sidewalk. The very first house I pass, a woman opens her door for another woman and a dog runs out and greets her happily. Then the dog sees me and runs at me. He stops to sniff the gas can, runs to my right side and smells my gassy hand and starts to bark and snap at me. The woman runs out of her house. “NO!” she yells. The dog continues its barking. “It is just gas,” I say “and I am going to pour it on you and sue her if you don’t go away.” The woman doesn’t even apologize. She simply yells at her mutt, “No! Bad dog. No. No. Bad.” I walk away and her scolds fade into the din of traffic.

“Gypsy. I’m back.” I say as I salute hello by pressing  ‘unlock’ on my remote.

I climb into the captain’s seat. Key in the ignition. I turn the key. “I still don’t feel so well, Kenny.” Ding. Ding.  I can tell she doesn’t feel so well because she is sluggishly lurching forward. I press on the gas and she coughs. And going uphill make me even more nervous for her. It feels like she is about to sleep again. I keep saying, “Just to this corner. Just a little bit more. Stay green. Stay green light, stay green.” I turn fast to make the green. Right in front of a cop. I think of course I will get pulled over. No. I ease on down to the station and pull up to the pump and realize the tank opening is on the other side. “Shit.”

Filled up I back the car from the pump into a spot by the station and pull out my owner’s manual for Gypsy because even after filling her, she is still warning me. The manual says when certain lights are on, “Pull over as soon as possible and contact your Toyota dealer immediately.”

“Oh my god,” I say. “Okay, what do I do? God! And of course I do not have my cell phone.”  The boyfriend’s voice plays in my head, “It’s called a mobile phone for a reason.”

I find some change in my bag and pull over to a pay phone. I call Ron to tell him I will be late and ask for advice. He doesn’t know what I should do either.  I am really just calling for a voice. Other than Gypsy’s “that’s not right, Kenny”. So I get “Please deposit twenty cents.”

“I don’t have any money. The manual says take her in immediately. The lights are still on. I don’t feel so good either. I am tired. I have no more change. I will ca…boooop.” Dial tone. I’ve been cut off.

I decide I will get in the car and go to another payphone and call AAA or the dealer. I turn the key and Gypsy is fine. “Ping” Fasten your seatbelt. No dings. No warnings. She feels better. And she sounds better. Maybe I don’t have to do anything. I will call home to say I am on my way. I stop at a convenience store and park by the phones. There are two derelict looking guys. Homeless? Maybe? Are slouched against the phone.  Find my quarters and proceed to go ahead and back out of the lot and find a different phone.

I find a phone near a Ralph’s. I call home find out the dealer said I can bring it in tomorrow. I want to be home. I have to go into Ralph’s to get fixings for margaritas. I want to go into that place like Gypsy wants to run out of gas again. I, however do. Once I get to one of the three checkouts that Ralph’s ever has, I discover that the bottle of tequila that took a solid ten minutes to find in their fucked-up organization of liquor, where some is even under lock and key. Skyy under lock and Key?  God dammit. I fucking hate Ralph’s.

Back in Gypsy–still feeling good she is–I head home, following a sign to the freeway.  I look for another, “oh there it is …in my rearview mirror. Shit. Fine, Gypsy is there another way to go? I look at the map and decided, “no fucking way. I will turn around at the next street.” I turn right onto the street and the bottles of beer that I bought come tumbling out of the bag onto the seat. “Shit. “ I secure the bottles in the back seat and finish my u-turn. I turn right. “goddamn it. What the fu…. I have got to get home. “

As not to screw up again, I say, “ Okay. Turn left. There you go. Good, no cars around because you probably would get hit is there was even one. Okay. Make a u-turn. Now since we went left, the direction we need to return to is to your right. To your right. Your right. Right. I made the right.

Now I am free.  Just a quick jaunt on the 210 then to the 118 and we are pretty much home.  Gypsy and I are behind a truck he is going so slowly.  Like 59 mph, and the speed here is normally, like, 80. So we change lanes to get around him and the asshole moves over too. We beep at him to let him know he is going to hit us. Then he flashes his rear work lights at us. Like it is our fault. I pass him and want to flip him off, so I get into the next lane, pass him get up to his driver’s window and give him my patented ‘retard’ look, eyes crossed and tongue hanging out, mouthing, “Only wetarwds flash theiwer lights at people.” I leave him confused and disarmed, I pull ahead and make my exit off the freeway and make my way home.

I park Gypsy in front of the house grab my loot and go to the guesthouse where my nephews greet me.

“Uncle Kenny!” shouts Nathan, my two, almost three, year old nephew. Then he runs throwing his little arms around my knees and squeezes.

“I am sorry you had such a rough ride home,” my sister-in-law Katie says.

“You don’t know the half of it,” I grin.

“Uncle Kenny. Close your eyes,” says Jack Henry. He leads me into the guesthouse and says, “Open your eyes.” I do. “You have a new kitchen!”

That I did.

I love that my home was in my brother’s backyard.

The Year of Living Dangerously (in Uptown)


Mentioning Uptown in my previous post made me think of this.

Since getting Kallie in a new day care situation closer to home I’ve been able to return to my normal route of taking Lake Shore Drive to get to work. (It’s fun to say to co-workers and superiors, “I took LSD this morning.”) As I was driving toward the lake the other morning I took Wilson Ave. When I passed Malden Street I smiled, adjusting the visor against the rising sun, and thought about the long, miserable year I spent in a studio apartment there back in the 90s–and the extraordinary thing I saw happen there.

It was my fifth year living in Chicago. I’d spent the majority of that time living in Lakeview but when my roommate Mark and I decided to get our own places I knew my budget wouldn’t afford me to live there. So I had to look elsewhere. Never one to stray too far from “knowns” and comfort zones I wasn’t too sure what was even around Lakeview. Pricey Lincoln Park was directly south, so I looked north. I found the place on Malden pretty quickly in a neighborhood called Uptown. The building was pretty crappy, but the apartment itself wasn’t bad–a two room studio with an eat-in kitchen, pretty big main room and a big dressing room connecting it to the bathroom. What I liked most is that it was still in walking distance to familiar surroundings (bars and clubs.)

The building manager’s name was Monika with a “k”. Middle aged and German, she was pleasant enough to fool me into not judging the building by its looks, but rather implied there was a hidden charm where none truly existed. But at $360 a month I didn’t have the luxury of arguing with the economics of the situation. Time was running out and it would have to do. I could always get out of it if it was too bad, couldn’t I?

My bestie and her tween kids helped move me in from the lovely vintage apartment to this dreary studio in an iffy neighborhood. In retrospect, I was clearly kidding myself. How would I survive a year in such a desolate place? Kathy kindly assured me the year would speed by before I knew it. I had to fool myself and agree. There was no other choice.

Coming home from work meant climbing the once beautiful staircase and breathing in the odd scent of aqua net, cigarette smoke and body soil to unlock the one unimpressive lock on my door. The halls of the building were haunted by an older woman wearing a house coat who delivered our mail by sliding it under the door. (What a fool I was to assume there were mailboxes around somewhere.) It was an odd system, and it was when I moved there that I only intermittently received my bible…er…TV Guide. I think our mail matron helped herself to my subscription. I often considered turning her into the US Post Master General, but that seemed like it would involve far more work than satisfaction.

There was an elderly couple who lived directly across the hall. They were probably the only people I saw–or heard–on a regular basis in the building, except for mail lady. He seemed to be somewhat of an alcoholic who yelled–and worse–at all hours of the day and night. She was stone faced and wordless when I saw her, a cigarette always dangling from the corner of her mouth. Always.

The neighborhood itself was completely sketch thanks to a well-known methadone clinic over on Broadway. Jittery derelicts drifted around the neighborhood like plastic shopping bags in the wind. I allowed very few friends to visit me there and when my folks dropped me off after holidays I never let them come up. Seeing it in person would be worse than anything they could have imagined. Plus, it would make it real for them–and for me. Not seeing it meant they could thing, “it can’t be that bad.”

My apartment looked down onto what could have been a lovely courtyard, created by closing down the through streets. Sometimes on late nights I’d hear chatter or a commotion and look down to see an African American cross dressing hooker trying to get some “work”. Sometimes she just talked out loud to herself. She was obviously a drug user or a methadone “patient”. On other nights I’d see an older woman–what looked like a grandmother who had her grandson living with her–drunk and stumbling around, also talking to herself. I’d seen them coming and going from my building.

When I saw these two would-be hallucinations meeting in said courtyard, I witnessed a battle so severe I swallowed my gum. The grandma was drunk and looking for a fight. And the hooker was tripping on something and wanted no part of granny, but when she was pushed too far–literally–the two got into a tussle, skirmishing back and forth–as her grandson watched, by the way, holding her purse. It was so ludicrous I was riveted. It was like watching dogs attacking, fighting, then moving back into their respective corners to recoup before lunging again. They were both speaking and yelling incoherently. Maybe they’d missed their appointments at the methadone clinic that day. But it was epic, and is ever etched in my memory in the year I served spent living in Uptown. It was a “perfect storm,” of sorts. And it never happened again. (Sometimes I wonder if it happened at all.)

The year turned out be somewhat of a character builder for me. It was humbling to get off on the piss-ridden L stop and walk down Wilson Avenue, trying to look disinterested and unaffected by the impressive host of crazies that surrounded me. In spite of the skirmishes, missing mail, random noises at all hours of the day and night, as it turned out Kathy was right. That year flew by and before I knew it I was packing up and leaving dangling-cigarette-lady for a much nicer place back in Lakeview.

I took a walk by the building recently–my first time since August of 1997. The whole area looks and feels the same. It was a gray day when I stopped by, which was appropriate. It felt like a gray year when I lived there. Aside from some gentrification creeping up around the area, the building, the court yard–much of it–looked the same.

It was a nice place to visit, but I wouldn’t want t live there…again.

The scene of the age-defying, gender-bending match of the century!

 

Dangerous Liaisons in Pine Valley


While driving home from the Apple Store today in Lincoln Park, I passed a Bank of America branch on Clybourn Avenue. Sitting in traffic near it, waiting for the light to turn, I was reminded that it wasn’t always a bank branch, and was in fact part of my early years in retail hell in Chicago. In the mid-90s, the building I was looking at was a now defunct “upscale” children’s toy store called Noodle Kidoodle whose motto was “kids learn best when they’re having fun.” (Based on their inventory, it should have been “kids learn best when they’re bored.”) Back then it had just moved into the Chicago area when I started there (followed closely on the heels by arch nemesis and demographic rival “Zany Brainy” whose motto was “we will eventually buy you.” The propaganda we heard about the competition was designed to dissuade us from defecting. I didn’t want the job I had. They were in no danger of my quitting for the same job elsewhere.

I was the “book specialist.” Unlike most of the other employees, I was full-time and dedicated solely to the book department. I didn’t have to float around to “Dress Up Land” with all kinds of costumes that inevitably ended up strewn around the section or “Let’s Build Something” which included Duplo blocks and something called Toobers and Zots. (WTF?) Like most retail situations, there were lots of nice, stable, dependable workers, and there were some big flaky messes. We were lead by the ineffectual manager who everyone suspected of having a drug problem. He was always broke, disheveled, and annoyingly called everyone “sweetie.”

One assistant manager–who seemed normal–stole a sizable amount of money while making a deposit, and was subsequently canned. Prior to this, she seemed pretty normal. After she was let go, she called me and left a message, saying she wanted to get together with me to explain what had happened. Considering we were just co-workers who exchanged pleasantries at work, I didn’t care. I remember shrugging while listening to the answering machine. The call went unreturned.

Another assistant manager (who I’d worked with previously and was referred to NK through her) developed a bitchin’ AOL addiction (back when they charged ~$4/an hour). Sometimes she would come into the store in the morning, looking like hell, never having been to bed, hiding $600 phone bills from her husband. We had been friends, but along with her marriage, our friendship unraveled with her unstable behavior as she chatted with men from around the country and arranged random hook ups. She took our friendship break up VERY badly, underscoring my decision to end it.

But along with the strange, there were also some sweet moments. It was at NK where I had some brushes with celebrity that still make me smile.

One day I was horrified at a co-worker’s behavior when she escorted a woman over to the book department for some assistance in picking out books for her kids to read on an upcoming vacation. My unwitting kidoodler had no idea this woman was soap opera icon, Taylor Miller, who played Nina Cortlandt (half of the Nina/Cliff super couple) on “All My Children.” She had left the show years prior, but had recently made several guest stints–one just concluding weeks before this meeting.

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[Taylor Miller as Nina Cortlandt Warner Warner Warner Connolly Warner}

I quickly shoo'd my co-worker away. I wanted Nina…er…Miss Miller…all to myself. I was a soap opera fiend, and thanks to my sisters' stern loyalty to ABC, I'd been forced to get caught up in the goings on of Pine Valley, Llanview and Port Charles since I was a little boy. I asked the perfunctory questions about her children and the car trip they were taking, (wondered why they weren't chartering a private jet), and tried to discern their interests. As I filled the basket with my recommended books, we moved on to games and toys. We were spending some quality time together, and I quickly felt like I was shopping with an old friend (who I idolized for overcoming all the obstacles she faced from her overbearing millionaire father to marry her young handsome doctor before departing the show the first time.)

Here are some quotes to her as I recall:

  • "You know the girl who replaced you was a terrible. She sure didn't last long."
  • "Your son turned out to be handful for Palmer (her on-screen father). Are you coming back soon to straighten him out?"
  • "I love your hair."
  • "Why in the hell did you walk away from such an incredible gig as AMC's first "super couple." (I didn't really ask that, but it was the biggest burning question on my mind. And she should have known that!

Only in hindsight do I know for sure that Taylor Miller probably felt stalked, violated and annoyed with me. But she was gracious and kind, and grateful for my recommendations--on the merchandise, but probably not so much on character direction and career decisions.

Months later, I turned around from behind the counter and saw Kate Collins standing there pleasatly. She played Natalie on "All My Children" sometime after Nina left. She'd left the show a few years prior to this meeting, was recast, but ultimately returned after I met her--probably thanks to my encouragement. I didn't have as much time with her as I'd had shopping with Taylor Miller, but as I gift wrapped some purchases for her, I gushed about her performance on AMC, railed on her replacement (clearly, a theme with me), and told her I would look forward to her return to the show, should she ever decide to do so. (Since she did, clearly, I was responsible.)

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[La Lucci (left) with one-time nemesis Natalie Marlowe Hunter Dillon Cortlandt Chandler as played by Kate Collins (right)

NK was in the same neighborhood as Chicago's famed Steppenwolf Theatre. I'd heard of some famous visitors stopping in from time to time. Laurie Metcalf. Gary Sinise. One day when I was working John Malkovich sauntered in. As you'd expect in the mid-90s, he was wearing a beret, a dramatic scarf thrown around his neck, and had a cell phone glued to his ear. Plebes like me--like most people of the day--didn't have a "cellular" phone. As a future gadget whore, I envied him. He walked around the store, chatting away, denying every attempt each of us made at trying to help him. By the time he left, I really envied him. Every time I walked into that store, I wished I could have ignored everyone who worked there. Well played, Valmont. Well played.

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[My favorite Malkovich, sans beret and scarf]

If You Build It, They Will Come (like it or not)


I grew up in the church–or rather I grew up in a church. No, my parents weren’t a pair evangelical ministers–they were a pair of…other “colorful” nicknames throughout the years. I grew up in a church because my dad stumbled upon one for sale in rural town he’d driven through on his travels working for the state of Indiana. Unlike a normal person who would have just started a secret second family in this ideal isolated hamlet, he actually relocated my mom, two sisters and me to live there–after a bit of weekend remodeling.

I barely remember our previous house as little more than blurry snapshots in my head, taken by a one-year-old with a penchant for sneaking sips of grandma’s beer. But I do remember going to the new house on weekends to “assist” my dad and grandfather, and to marvel at the open space of the house and yard. Having been a church, the house was wide open with few internal walls. My folks worked with my grandfather, a carpenter (like Jesus Christ – coincidence?) on creating a blueprint for the new house which cut the house up into the usual rooms you’d expect.

My parents didn’t love my two older sisters enough to build them separate bedrooms. But they loved me enough to give me not only my own room, but a sort of custom upper bunk bed situation where my bed was attached to the wall and rested on my dresser, leaving a secret passage way behind it. A wide ladder was the way up to my loft bed, and thick rope with huge knot hung just at the end near the ladder. It was fun to swing on until pendulous gravity began helping it burrow up my bum. But it looked cool as hell and was the envy of any friend I had who ever saw it–all two of them (one was imaginary, but that still counts.)

Some weekends the renovation was a true family affair. In addition to my dad and Grandpa (his dad), my Pap (mom’s dad) would come down to help. I remember him digging a huge hole on the side of the house–for plumbing or something. When it was done he asked me if I wanted to get into the freshly dug hole and play. As soon as I was deep into the wet earth he told me he was doing to fill the hole back in. I couldn’t prove it in court, but the bury-me-alive part was heavily implied. When some adult finally came to the aid of my cries for help I was retrieved from the cavern and placed safely above ground. I’ll never forget how hard he laughed while I was terrorized, thinking he was going to let me die in that hole. (I’m sure the hole wasn’t as big as I remember; hopefully neither was my Pap’s bloodlust!)

Once we were settled into our new abode my sisters would seek constant revenge against me out of their jealousy. One of the rooms carefully designed was a huge walk-in closet in our entry way. It housed my dad’s suits and served as general storage for miscellaneous junk–and me. When my existence was deemed “a problem”–as it was from time to time by my sisters (one in particular, but there’s no need to name names), I was tied to a chair with fashionable belts from my mom’s terry cloth closet and force-fed ketchup sandwiches. But the joke was on them: a) I had learned to crave adventure–and kidnapping–from a couple of bionic friends and three little girls who went to the police academy, b) I looked amazing in terry cloth, and c) I LOVED ketchup sandwiches!

Other times when they’d set up their shared bedroom as a general store and play “town”, I was only invited at the very end–though I’d been begging to be included since set-up. “Ronnie, do you want to play?” they’d finally ask me enthusiastically. “Yes!” I’d eagerly reply, jumping to me feet ready to dig in knee deep into “town”. “Ok. We’re cleaning up the town.” The joke was back on me. My role in “town” was never more than “streets and sanitation,” and it only worked on me every single time.

Any city family who relocates to the country gets a puppy (who may or may not turn out to be a furry despot.) When it came to household status I wasn’t even a close third compared to our family’s beloved “wonder dog” Buster–who was without dispute lord and master when Dad was traveling as he did back then. In my father’s absence, Buster ran our household with an anything-you-treasure-should-have-my-teeth-marks-in-it attitude. Not unlike like my sisters, Buster liked–needed–to be center of attention. If someone brought a baby into the house, he’d take something from the diaper bag out of jealousy and chew it to a nub in his dark lair under my parents bed.

Sometimes, he’d somehow take something off the counter–mostly Tupperware–and retreat to his bed-framed cavern to decimate it. A simple command from my father would have gotten him to relinquish whatever he’d taken, but in his absence if there was any chance of getting it back with minimal damage, speed and Kraft singles were the answer. A slice of American cheese could sometimes be used in a primitive bartering system the rest of us were reduced to practicing. There were times during the complicated negotiation between my sister and I and Buster when his monotonous and unending growl would increase in volume and ferocity, depending on how close our hands were to whatever treasure he held in his death grip. To add insult to injury (which was inevitable if Dad was out of town) Buster would sometimes throw his paw into the object just to hold it steadier, his brown eyes never leaving us. He had swagger, no doubt about it.

Sometimes after particularly long negotiations we’d get sloppy, and Buster might release the Tupperware only to replace it with my index finger–which would have been too close during the cheese-offering/goods exchange. Gulping the cheese wasn’t enough for him. He liked bargaining chips. And my index finger played tightly gripped hostage more times than Flo told Mel to “kiss her grits.” It was in situations like this when I’d yell “GO GET MORE CHEESE” that more times than not my sister slump back empty-handed. “We’re out of cheese,” she’d shrug. I logged almost more hours on my parents’ cold tile floor than I ever did swaddled in terry cloth in the walk in closet. And it was a far second choice.

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(Buster romping in the foreground completely ignoring my sisters and me. Oh, wait, I’m ignoring them too, so it’s okay. I think I was about to throw gravel in the faces for pay back for my bit part in “town”.)

And what the hell is going on with my wagon? Why aren’t I in it and being pulled around like a little prince by his two older huskier sisters?

Towels, Trips & the Hope Diamond


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It’s hard to remember a time I didn’t live in Chicago. The city feels as much like a treasured friend as the corporeal ones I’ve made since moving here twenty years ago. It offers a comfort and a feeling of “home” like no other place I’ve lived. I consider it a city that hasn’t gotten so big for its britches. It’s colorful, accessible and livable.

When I was growing up in rural Indiana I always anticipated living in Chicago. And though I made one or two trips here up through high school, my first introduction to “a big city” was a pre-college trip my dad took on the weekend before I started at Purdue University. Somewhat of a reward and a definite adventure for us to experience together.

I was doing some spring cleaning/purging recently and I found myself–of all things–staring at a stack of bath towels. I needed to go through them and get rid of the older ones. It was while going through the stack of older towels I ran across a couple of striped ones that weren’t as threadbare as I would have expected for their age.

The day before I was to leave on my weekend adventure with Dad, my sister presented the eight towel set to me along with a long-gone brown plastic laundry basket. I don’t know why the memory is so vivid for me. Maybe because I thought by having my own set of towels I was really an adult. I was going away to college on my own where I’d be responsible for laundry, grocery shopping, cooking and all the other mundane aspects of adulthood. I looked at the towels, trying to fathom how they stuck with me–or rather I stuck with them–over countless apartment moves, including two cross-country ones. These towels were twenty-five years old and as not much of a pack rat I hadn’t been able to part with them. But in thinking about the memories surrounding them my mind was flooded with images of pre-Chicago and pre-who-I-have-become me; before I’d met most (though not all) of the amazing friends I have or the experiences I’ve had since then; before I’d met Ken and realized a life and a love that most people only dream of. A very different me in most respects.

Going to DC was not only a thrill in itself, but it was the very first time I’d ever flown. I remember my dad not being so thrilled with the concept though he’d flown many times before, but when the engines revved and we were all pressed back into our seats during acceleration I felt a rush of excitement–like this feeling was what my life had in store. It was a rush I’ve never forgotten and can still give me goosebumps upon reflection.

While in the nation’s capital we spent an entire feet-aching day exploring the Smithsonian. My brand new zero-support brown leather deck shoes did me no favors that day. But my dad was adamant that we see every single thing we could while we were there. Imagine my “delight” when I realized the famous national museum wasn’t just one large building, but a freaking campus of many! But they were indeed chock full of important things–like Archie Bunker’s chair from “All in the Family”. The biggest treasure (literally) I laid my eyes on was the Hope Diamond. I had been mesmerized by a TV movie a few years earlier detailing (and perhaps dramatizing) the history if its owners and the fates that befell each and every one of them. For months after seeing it I had fleeting thoughts that its curse may have rubbed off on me. “What if…” has been with me for a very, very long time.

One day we walked around the capital and White House and monuments. I saw a man lying on the sidewalk and looked over at my dad who didn’t break his gate–like it wasn’t unusual. We got closer and closer until I eventually had to step over the man. I said, “Did he have a heart attack or something? Should we help him?” I turned my head back to look at him as my dad answered. “No. He’s homeless. Keep walking. We’re almost there.” I’d never remembered hearing the word “homeless” before. Everyone in my little home town had a home to go. I’d seen “Stone Pillow” but I didn’t actually think it was “real”. Plus, it starred Lucille Ball, so I figured it was just some kind of comedy I didn’t understand. Seeing that man lying on the grating was so profoundly sad and so indelibly etched in my memory. It was a loss of innocence I couldn’t possibly understand at the time. It was an introduction to the big city and a glimmer the world that was yet to come.

At the hotel my dad had befriended a man and his wife who were visiting from Verona, Italy. (Where Romeo and Juliet lived!) The husband didn’t speak a word of English. Neither did his wife, but she did speak Spanish as well. I’d had four years of high school Spanish and our conversations were painful and filled with lots of nervous, time-filling laughter. But it did offer its moments brilliance when I realized I had gotten my point across to them. Over the course of the weekend my points became shorter and shorter. “How are you to day?” to “Good morning” to “Hi. We good. Bye.” They were of course more patient and sublime than I would imagine an American being in their position. “Do you speak English? Does ANYONE HERE speak English?! UGH!”

Anyway, long story short…I kept the towels.

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