Thursday, November 15, 2012

Don't talk to me... I'm texting you!

I go out to lunch with our son every couple of weeks and sometimes I pick him up at his local coffee house instead of his apartment. It's pretty routine but one day last month as I was pulling up to the coffee house, a girl stepped off the curb and started to walk right in front of my car.

My car is a quiet little hybrid so people don't always hear me coming. Often in parking lots I get stuck driving behind pedestrians who are moseying along with no idea that I'm even there. So I figured that's what was going on with this girl. But then I noticed she was texting, had earbuds in her ears, and was completely oblivious to everything around her. I didn't want to honk since she was so close and I thought it would scare her to death. I considered shouting from the window or jumping out of the car to wave her off. But just as I was deciding what to do, she walked right smack dab into the front corner of my car. She looked up briefly, changed course ever so slightly, and continued walking across the street, texting and listening to music.

That bothered me but this was even worse. Yesterday late afternoon I went the store to pick up a couple of things for dinner, and I heard a woman with a loud voice taking a business call. Her cart was half full and parked askew by the frozen foods, blocking the aisle. Standing next to her was a little girl with her hands on the cart handle, waiting and watching her mom.

I'm not sure why our electronics madness is suddenly breaking my heart, but it seems like in so many ways it's crowding out the things I treasure in life. Relational connections, physical touch, eye contact, books with pages. When I was in London in September I started chatting with Ashley while checking my emails. She paused for a second and said, "I'm sorry, I don't talk to people when they're using electronics." That was probably the wisest thing I've heard anyone say in a long time. Why would I want to look at emails when I could have an in-person conversation with my daughter who lives a world away?

Someone told me recently about a family that has decided to put their electronics in a basket as they walk in the front door. When you think about it, we all have to drop our electronic devices in bins on the conveyor belt when we go through airport security, so we know it's physically possible to let go of them. Maybe it's the emotional component that keeps us attached and addicted. It's so much the way of our lives that quitting isn't really an option, is it?

Last night I asked Morgan what he thought would happen if suddenly, in a flash, all electronics disappeared. Poof! He said, "I think we'd revert to being cavemen." And cavewomen. And caveteens and cavetweens and cavekids and cavetoddlers and cavebabies. Cavebabies!

Or maybe it's the other way around. Maybe we're currently living in personal caves where our only connection with the outside world is through our electronic devices. It doesn't matter that our caves are dark and silent because our devices are backlit and have built-in speakers.

I'm not anti-electronics at all. I have an iPhone, an iPad, and a MacBook Air. If I didn't have my phone Lynn couldn't have texted me this afternoon: "I'm at your gate... let me in it's raining!" If I didn't have my laptop I couldn't skype with Ollie-O and see his latest Lego creations. I'm pretty sure that having all of my electronics has made my life - in some ways - better, smarter, more fun, safer, and more creative.

But it's none of the above when I sit for an hour in the living room playing Words With Friends with my husband who is lying on the couch opposite me. Now and then he'll shout, "Ha! Take that, JBNease5!" but that doesn't really qualify as a conversation with me. It makes me feel left out. I do it too: taking phone calls when I'm out with someone because I'm sure the person calling me can't wait, it might be an emergency, or nearly possibly maybe an emergency. And if I read a text I know my reply will be so quick that no one will even notice I'm staring at my phone.

Truth is, I regularly text or email my friends instead of talking to them. Quicker, easier, click. I send people little red hearts instead of telling them with my voice how much they mean to me. Cute, clever, click. I don't want to do that anymore. It's lonely and disconnecting to be with people who tell you to wait a minute while they talk, text, play with, or email other people. I'm thinking of being a trailblazer instead. Maybe I can start an "iFast" movement where for one day a week we all agree to put our electronics in a basket at our front doors and fast from using them inside our houses. Maybe I can even get a corner on the "iBasket" market!


















Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Wherever You Go There You Are

      In the early 1970s one of my favorite life philosophies was Wherever you go there you are. Long before it was the title of a book on eastern mindfulness meditation, it was the catch phrase of wanderer-at-heart students who focused on living in the moment. It was the stuff of late night discussions on the meaning of life and the existence of the universe. Evenings that usually ended with midnight runs to VG Donuts in our VW bugs followed by all-nighters chasing early morning paper deadlines. 

As a graduation gift my parents gave Morgan and me round trip plane tickets to Mexico City. It was a generous and thoughtful idea, a great opportunity to relax at a charming bougainvillea covered boutique hotel where we could lounge around the pool in our hammocks with frozen lemonades in hand. But instead we cashed in our tickets, jumped on a dusty, creaky Mexican train and headed south, destinations unknown. Our train compartment had worn red velvet upholstery with leather trim, and polished mahogany window frames. There was a toilet and tiny sink. I'm pretty sure it was exactly like The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly minus Clint Eastwood.

It was one of those formational experiences that led to the discovery of my inner five-star resort self, but at the time I figured that wherever I went there I was -- even if it was stifling hot, sticky, and smelly. Every single day of the trip I wore a summery white cotton dress with bright flowers stitched on the bodice, with my red Dr. Scholl's sandals. I might have enjoyed the two weeks better if I'd taken a few more things in my little day pack but I didn't want to lug anything around. Minimalist travel perfected.

Morgan loved everything about the trip. He brought me roses from local markets before I woke up in the morning. He ordered Huevos a la Mexicana and freshly squeezed juice for breakfast; sipped cold Carta Blancas under umbrellas scattered around town plazas diffusing the noontime heat; and munched on fresh giant shrimp by moonlight. He explored ruins and relics and perfected his Spanish. It was worth getting devoured by mosquitoes at a hidden cove because turquoise water lapped coral sand beaches. And getting "the touristas" was just part of the adventure. In so many ways he was -- and always will be -- a romantic adventurer at heart.

Today I'm sitting on a United Airlines flight from London to San Diego via Chicago. I bought extra legroom, no one's sitting next to me, and the plane is only half full. I have on my noise canceling headphones, cozy cashmere socks, and I'm reading Andre Agassi's autobiography on my iPad.

It's trendy these days to complain about the act of traveling, but I bet few of those complainers traveled hardcore like we did back in the day: no money, no baggage, no plans, lots of adventure. The true wanderers-at-heart might think of grumbling when the flight attendant says chicken or beef? but then they remember and catch themselves.

Personally I can't think of anything to whine about right now. I'm so grateful I got to go on this trip. I was there for Oliver's first week of school, when he was excited and worried in his little uniform, carrying his school book bag. I got to tie balloons in the trees for his fifth birthday party, and hide bouncy balls in stumps of trees and tall grasses for the scavenger hunt. I got to see O learn to skateboard in the park and build Lego masterpieces with his dad. And best of all I got to talk with Ashley over endless coffees and orange brioches, on buses and the underground, at lunch in town, on errands in her neighborhood, everywhere.

It's still true that wherever you go there you are. But whenever you go wherever your heart is, you get to come back with a heart full of treasure. And I'm pretty sure that's what traveling is all about.




Sunday, August 26, 2012

The Beauty Vortex

      I saw my dermatologist last week for an annual checkup. His office is upstairs in an inviting two story Spanish style building in La Jolla. There's a spacious balcony that runs in front of the second story offices and down below is a Saltillo tiled open courtyard. Lush palm trees stand in a center planter and masses of red geraniums circle the base. It looks as if years ago it might have been a seaside motel where glamourous celebrities escaped Hollywood glitz.

Dr. B's waiting room is handsome and personal. There's a glass-front case full of his grandfather's old-fashioned medical instruments and text books. Framed photos of mountains and rivers and ski slopes point to Dr. B's leisure pursuits, and on this visit there's a book of New Yorker cartoons on the coffee table in the corner. An inscription inside says something clever about Dr. B's intelligent wit.

Every year it's the same drill. Dr. B opens the waiting room door, says he's so glad to see me, and ushers me into the examining room. And every year we have this exchange:

                Cathy:  I want my skin to look like yours. 

                Dr. B:  Are you wearing sunscreen? 

I am not at all convinced that Dr. B has flawless skin because he wears sunscreen, no matter how many different brands of it he has on the ledge above his antique writing desk. But knowing him, he probably started protecting his skin at a very young age. I was busy frying my skin with cocoa butter and baby oil back then, which is why I go to the dermatologist now.

Anyway, after inspecting me head to toe, Dr. B sat back in his grandfather's chair that matches his desk, took off his huge black magnifying glasses, and said,

                What have you been doing for skin care? 

I was tempted to give him the old Washing with a mild cleanser and wearing sunscreen ruse, but I decided instead to get brave and go with the truth. I took a deep breath.

                Truthfully? I've been sucked into the vortex of the Nordstrom 
                cosmetic department. 

                Oh no! he said, feigning surprise. Please, not that! 

I insisted unconvincingly that most of my visits to the vortex have involved trying samples, but I also admitted that I've been on a rather expensive personal quest for the perfect eye cream. One that would eliminate dark circles, puffiness, and years. He must have heard this before because without missing a beat he said,

                It's all a waste of money. There's only one thing that works. 
                Here, I'll give you a prescription. 

I left Dr. B's handsome, personal office wondering if maybe I needed a 12-step program for vortex captives. I held a prescription in my hand for the only thing that works and it didn't feel satisfying at all. No subtly elegant packaging design, no marketing enticements, no free gifts or special Nordstrom scent. Nothing.

What I didn't tell Dr. B is that a couple of months ago one of the vortex companies sent me a sample of their eye cream. It was absolutely, totally perfect and I could buy it without a prescription. But when I went to order it online I discovered it cost $600 for a half ounce. Morgan wanted to know why the most expensive vortex company in the world knew my name and address. It does make one wonder. Maybe they knew about my quest and thought that sooner or later I would fall hook, line, and sinker for someone's ploys. Maybe they wanted to reel me in before anyone else snagged me. That's a scary thought.

On the way home from my appointment with Dr. B I stopped by a different vortex store at the mall, one that only sells cosmetics. As I walked up and down the aisles I saw women and men of all ages questing for beauty, and I realized my eye cream searching days had come to a quiet end. It was fun for a season, albeit a rather long, expensive, and mostly ineffective season. And sadly, after all the samples and wooing by the vortex, I somehow felt less beautiful than before. As I walked out of the store, I caught a glimpse of myself in one of the mirrors and decided it was time to opt out of the vortex lie and enjoy being me. Set free.









Wednesday, August 15, 2012

The Mexican Lime Tree

     

        We have a 36" green glazed planter in the back half of our patio, just past the wooden arbor smothered with flowering Mandevilla. Terra cotta shows through the glaze and creates the lip of the pot, matching the worn bricks on the ground. It was one of those way too heavy purchases that causes delivery men to groan to each other: Let's quit our jobs before she buys anything else! But I loved the thought of putting something unexpectedly enormous in my patio and bought it on the spot.

The day the planter was delivered, I met my gardener at the wholesale nursery and bought a Mexican lime tree. It's the kind with little round yellow fruit that are juicy green inside. The guys loaded the tree into the back of Maximino's truck with five bags of soil holding it in place. When we got back to my house Max placed and planted the newly adopted tree in the patio and there it grew and flourished. And all was well for three years.

Then about a month ago, when it was time for regular fertilizing, my husband helped me drag a big bag of citrus food out of the shed and offered to help dig it in. It was really nice of him, but instead of measuring out two cups of the grainy mix to sprinkle around the trunk, he dumped almost half the bag into the planter and dug it into the soil. To be fair it was half a bag between three potted citrus trees and it could have been a great idea to give the new tree a super boost, but it didn't turn out to be. (Morgan thought the incident was kind of amusing and he's chuckling right now reading this. Chuckling!)

Anyway, four days after the fertilizer mishap all the leaves from the new tree turned crunchy brown and  fell lifeless onto the bricks. Actually there were still a few leaves on the tree but they were fluttering and falling as I stood watching. It was tragic. I tried to flush out the extra fertilizer with long, deep soaks from the hose but the runoff was a terrible deep copper color that dyed the bricks, so I gave up.

I was kind of a brat about the whole thing, but not a total brat. I tried to focus on how funny this would have been as an additional scene in "Father of the Bride". Steve Martin would kill the new tree while trying to be helpful, the girls would roll their eyes in disbelief, and then they'd call Franc to save the day. That made our real life situation seem semi-funny. Semi-funny.

After several weeks of avoiding the back half of the patio altogether, and after Morgan tried repeatedly  to convince me that "The tree still has life in it!", he agreed to cut it down. We were ready to start over with a new tree and forget the trauma of the old one. It was sad because Morgan truly believed in the tree and was willing to nurse it back to health. I wondered aloud if that meant putting more fertilizer on it and rather quickly morphed into a scary version of the Queen of Hearts. Off with its head! Not my best hour.

So Morgan cut down the tree to 28". I only know the height because I went out there to measure it. It looked - I don't know - odd sticking up out of the dirt with no branches or leaves, in a lovely 36" glazed pot. But after congratulating myself for moving on emotionally -- which I don't do well -- I started to dream about a Bearss lime. Nice, juicy variety, no thorns or seeds.

For a long time the planter and the tree continued to sit right there, outside Morgan's study, looking desolate. I wished he had dug it up and put it in the green recycling bin instead of leaving the stump there to haunt me. It looked lifeless and ugly, a dead monument to what had been.

But then this morning something amazing happened. Morgan was at his desk trying to work and I was leaning back on his massage chair trying to chat with him. I saw him look up from his computer and glance outside, and then suddenly he grabbed the window sill and leaned toward the open window. "Hey, look at that!" he said triumphantly. And there they were - beautiful, lush little green leaves popping out all over the stump. I'm pretty sure I saw Morgan and the leaves do a silent high-five, and the story began anew.

There's a saying that God brings beauty out of ashes. The times I've noticed that happening in my life it seemed like the remaking was completely unrelated to my attitudes or judgments or decisions or endless efforts or faith or lack of faith. It was more like a life force that shoved and pushed its way through the hopelessly dead and abandoned parts, insisting on life. And nothing could stop it. Just like you can't stop (and why would you want to?) the green growth that appears out of the ashes of forest fires, and the new leaves that jump out of unwatered stumps of a trees. Life pushes through.


"He has sent me to comfort all who mourn...
To give them beauty for ashes,
The oil of joy for mourning,
The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness;
That they may be called trees of righteousness,
The planting of the Lord, that He may be glorified."

Isaiah 66:3