Intermission
Just a short walk up to the stacks. My memory is still solid as I can easily find the shelves where the BASS live. They are aligned perfectly.
Waiting - and waiting - and waiting.
With the new circulation system there is no longer a need for a due date slip to be place and stamped in the back of the book.
The 2013 edition of BASS is crisp and clean - the pages snap and crackle as I quickly flip them between my thumb. And I have this quickening and shortness of breath as I think that perhaps I am the only one that will ever do this. I pull some of the other volumes down to find one with a due date slip in the back - I need to see when it was last checked out.
It’s funny that I actually feel a physical hurt thinking that these books will sit here for years and years until someday they are discarded - never to have been read - their authors never heard of again.
Finding Natasha – Madison Smartt Bell
Back in October we made our first trip back
to Romania with W. It was a wonderful trip. Plenty of time with the
family and W traveled extremely well.
Going back to Negresti is not just
a trip back to a former home, it’s a chance to time travel.
I knew before the
trip that I would have for time traveling with my son, feeling emotions from
those old days but with a companion from the future so W and I took every
opportunity to get out of the apartment and onto the little streets of
Negresti.
At least twice a day W and I would venture out onto the
cold(somewhat cold), still dusty(not as dusty), still dirty(not as dirty)
streets of Negresti. We’d make our way out of the apartment, taking dark
the uneven stairs with care and onto the sidewalk outside of the apartment
bloc.
Each time, be it the bright light of the morning, a midday glare -
or the dusky evening purple light, I’d take a quick couple of seconds to
assess the surroundings, see who was walking down the sidewalk as a possible
portal to the past. We’d start our walk down the sidewalk and usually
turning right towards the “commercial” street. Heading out onto the
street for W was all about reaching the playground.
He had his
priorities, I had mine.
Heading out onto the street for me was all about
returning to 1998 - reaching back. Things changed in Negresti - but not
much. Infants that were born when I first arrived there were now old
enough to be my students if I were to teach there again. Time failed to
stop for me as I wish it had. I walked with W down the streets doing my best to
casually stroll and to make myself as visible as possible.
Sounds, smells the
light - all were the same. 1998 returned to me often on those walks.
I ran into former students who apologized for their English as I apologized
for my Romanian.
Time travel.
Nervous laughter and smiles - and then it was
over.
We continued down the street. There was a brief tug from the past, a
tug towards the bars with their smoke and cheap vodka. Thinking back to
those days, I determined that a good deal of self-examination and discovery
took place in those “establishments” brought on by the clarifying effects of
the booze.
Walking the streets in 2013 I realized that there would be no
going back. Those smoky rooms were gone for me now.
I would need to
discover myself elsewhere - but honestly, is my discovery all that important in
the role that I now serve as a father? Yes, to some degree I suppose -
but perhaps existing in the present with my son is far more important that
strolling down the dirty sidewalks and dark smoky rooms of my past. It’s
time to remember the past, not live in it - I must live in the present and the
future with my son.
A Kind of Simple, Happy Grace - Richard Bausch
A very strange day today - a day when many
old memories surfaced and pushed my mood towards the slightly melancholic.
It started as I was looking at some old vacation locations on Google
Earth. I then ventured into some of my online photo albums and pulled up
old shots of my father. Not really old - maybe 5-7 years ago. A
lifetime ago really. A time where he knew my name.
Where we could sit at
a table and drink scotch and carry on conversations. In those conversations,
some were pretty banal - others deep and meaningful - either way, I seem to
remember making connections with him that had never before developed.
So,
now, I am stuck with the connections we made then.
We can go no further.
And, I think this is OK.
It’s my opinion that as humans we seek to
make connections.
Richard Bausch in his contributor’s notes concerning
this story writes that - “...I knew I wanted to bring them to some pass that
would mean a sort of helpless embrace.”
I think it’s natural that because of
the divorce I sought out deep and meaningful connections with my father - and
as I matured and wondered where his mind was during the divorce, I sought to
understand him more through our discussions.
When dad and I sat together
and drank, it was our embrace.
I remembered those embraces today and I’ll
remember them tonight as I practice my Thursday night scotch drinking ritual.